Pheromones [Disquiet0352] by Suss Müsik published on 2018-09-29T13:59:10Z Next time you misplace your keys, try thinking like an ant. Ants solve problems collectively by secreting messages to other ants. When an ant finds a source of food, it walks back to the colony leaving pheromone markers. As other ants discover that the pheromone trail leads to food, they populate the path with their own markers. The more ants who travel the path, the more pheromones are dropped. Once the food source is depleted, the ants cease populating the trail and any remaining pheromones slowly decay. Scientists who study this behavior refer to something called the Ant Colony Optimization (ACO) metaheuristic. That’s a fancy way of saying that ants tend to prefer shorter trails with stronger pheromones, not unlike how computer algorithms disambiguate search terms. When someone types the word “cars” into Google, for example, it’s important to differentiate the intended task of buying an automobile from watching a movie or listening to a 1980’s new wave band. For this piece, Suss Müsik treated a single piano melody as an “algorithm” by layering each permutation. As the base path is developed, other instruments randomly travel outside the melody, perhaps resembling how ants continue scouting for additional food sources. The sequence ultimately “optimizes” with all musical pheromones aligning toward a single discovery. The piece is titled Pheromones and composed for piano, violin, woodwinds, cello and brass. More on this 352nd weekly Disquiet Junto project (Layering Permutations / The Assignment: Play something melodic atop two variations) at: https://disquiet.com/0352/ More on the Disquiet Junto at: https://disquiet.com/junto/ Subscribe to project announcements here: http://tinyletter.com/disquiet-junto/ Project discussion takes place on llllllll.co: https://llllllll.co/t/disquiet-junto-project-0352-layering-permutations/ There’s also a Junto Slack. Send your email address to twitter.com/disquiet to join in. Genre Disquiet0352 Comment by demochx nice introduction 2018-10-08T15:59:01Z Comment by Vonna Wolf This would be really interesting to watch with ants working. Too bad we cant see inside, just need more aluminum. The abrupt ending was brilliant. 2018-10-04T13:17:22Z Comment by Hypoid What a wonderfully urgent energy you've created here, your description is so fitting :-) 2018-10-03T23:37:12Z Comment by ikjoyce @daniel-diaz: Couldn't agree more - great piece. 2018-10-02T15:49:20Z Comment by RuediRena I like your approach and the result a lot. 2018-10-02T15:06:54Z Comment by Ya Wha? Reminds me of a tune I need to have heard before.... 2018-10-01T23:45:56Z Comment by Suss Müsik @robertknote: Thank you as always! 2018-09-29T19:37:01Z Comment by Suss Müsik @daniel-diaz: That is high praise. Many thanks as always! 2018-09-29T19:36:52Z Comment by Suss Müsik @ernie92071: Go glad to hear that. Thank you! 2018-09-29T19:36:39Z Comment by ernie92071 Really enjoyed this 2018-09-29T19:17:08Z Comment by Daniel Diaz Wow, this is really good, could be the best part of Einstein on The Beach. The way the violins are ignoring the repetitive at the very beginning pulse and start to get into it is magical. Reminds me Penguin Cafe Orchestra but with a twist. Bravo. 2018-09-29T17:24:20Z Comment by Robert Knote Awesome piece! Love the drive of its base! Cool sound effects! 2018-09-29T14:41:44Z