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By TOM CHESHIRE
This article was taken from the September 2013 issue of Wired magazine. Be the first to read Wired's articles in print before
they're posted online, and get your hands on loads of additional content by subscribing online.
They're dancing, but it's weird: the smell is of engines, oil and worn metal; the crowd
occupies the hold of an old German merchant ship docked in London, the MS Stubnitz.
The DJ isn't really a DJ: she's a Colombian composer and programmer called Alexandra
Cárdenas. She has no decks. Instead, she's working on a laptop. A projection behind
shows about 20 lines of code, which she is toying with, stripping some away, modifying
the parameters of others. The minimal techno starts piling up, reversing on itself.
Complex rhythms emerge, fall away, then come back stronger, energising the crowd.
Cárdenas is completely lost in the music. This is an "algorave", where humans dance to
algorithms.
This is Cárdenas's first algorave; she only heard the term in September last year, at a
music coding festival in Mexico City, where she lives. "It was very rhythmical -- it was the
first time I wanted to dance to a live code session," she says. But the 37-year-old
composer says the scene is growing. "It's becoming a movement. I know we are small
now, but I see it growing so strong and fast. It's a point where technology, geek stuff and
this hacker philosophy come together with clubbing."
In London, the music veers between the sublime and the cacophonic; at the end, one
audience member -- and she's entirely serious -- shouts: "Play something good!" Algorave
is messy, but that's partly the point: these are not the pristine algorithms that fetch your
search results on Google; they're built live, for a crowd. As the algorave site says: "It's up
to the good people on the dancefloor to help the musicians make sense of this and do the
real creative work in making a great party."
https://www.wired.co.uk/article/algorave