Bailey-Salgado Project

The Bailey-Salgado Project (often abbreviated to BSP) is an audiovisual ensemble formed in 2010 by musician and composer Tom Bailey (Thompson Twins/Babble, International Observer) and astronomer and visual artist José Francisco Salgado. They combine music with photography, video, and motion graphics to create multimedia works that have as subject the physical world. Their first work together, a short film entitled Sidereal Motion, was previewed in Bath, England in October 2010.

Bailey-Salgado Project
OriginChicago, United States
London, UK
GenresAmbient, electronica
Years active2010–present
Associated actsBabble, International Observer
WebsiteBaileySalgadoProject.com
MembersTom Bailey
José Francisco Salgado

History

Formation

In early 2010, José Francisco Salgado, an astronomer and science visualizer at the Adler Planetarium in Chicago, edited nighttime footage he had taken at the Paranal Observatory to the track Spirit by Babble, an electronic band led by Tom Bailey after the Thompson Twins disbanded. Salgado called the piece "Under Paranal Skies" and presented it at the 215th Meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Washington, DC.[1] The reception given to "Under Paranal Skies" prompted Salgado to contact Bailey to share the piece and get official permission to use the music. Bailey was pleased to learn how well his music suited Salgado's project and suggested composing new music for a future project.[2]

Their first project together was Sidereal Motion, a four-movement film about the night sky[3] as photographed from five astronomical observatories around the world. "Under Paranal Skies" is the fourth movement of the film but with new music inspired by the visuals.

First Presentations

On 27 October 2010 the Bailey-Salgado Project previewed Sidereal Motion at the 7th international conference on the Inspiration of Astronomical Phenomena (INSAP) at the Bath Royal Literary & Scientific Institution in Bath, England[4] with Bailey improvising on keyboard.

List of Works

YearTitleDuration
2010Sidereal Motion15:06
2011Staring at the Sun10:36
2011Clouds3:36
2011The Great Nebula in Carina5:33
2011Sketches for Moonrise5:41
20112011 Show Intro1:41
2012Moonrise23:04
2012A Brief History of Space4:21
2012The World in Infrared3:36
20122012 Show Intro1:17

KV 265

The Bailey-Salgado Project is involved with KV 265, a non-profit organization founded by Salgado and whose mission is the communication of science through art. Through its works BSP seeks to create multimedia experiences that provoke curiosity and a sense of wonder about the physical world while promoting better education in science and the arts. BSP presentations are supported and coordinated by KV 265.

gollark: But then I wouldn't have a computer. I need that.
gollark: Well, it's unsafe.
gollark: Really? I've seen a bunch of random Linux programs written in C.
gollark: I agree that writing everything in intensely horrific JS is bad. I just don't think that much application software which is currently written in C would become worse if written in something safer and higher level.
gollark: I'm quite confident that the majority of user-facing ~~ones~~ computer systems have most of the development effort invested in random applications software which doesn't need to be hyperoptimized.

References

  1. Francisco Salgado, Jose (2010). "Astronomical Video Suites". 42: 309. Bibcode:2010AAS...21520603F. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. http://findarticles.com/p/news-articles/examiner-the-washington-dc/mi_8118/is_20100730/nso-adler-planetarium-team-planets/ai_n54654012/
  3. http://blogs.nationalgeographic.com/blogs/news/breakingorbit/2010/07/planets-holst-pluto-orchestra.html
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-06-18. Retrieved 2010-11-29.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.