STEIM (STudio for Electro Instrumental Music) was a center for
research and development of new musical instruments in the electronic performing arts, located in
Amsterdam
Amsterdam ( , ; ; ) is the capital of the Netherlands, capital and Municipalities of the Netherlands, largest city of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. It has a population of 933,680 in June 2024 within the city proper, 1,457,018 in the City Re ...
,
Netherlands
, Terminology of the Low Countries, informally Holland, is a country in Northwestern Europe, with Caribbean Netherlands, overseas territories in the Caribbean. It is the largest of the four constituent countries of the Kingdom of the Nether ...
. Beginning in the 1970's, STEIM became known as a pioneering center for
electronic music
Electronic music broadly is a group of music genres that employ electronic musical instruments, circuitry-based music technology and software, or general-purpose electronics (such as personal computers) in its creation. It includes both music ...
, where the specific context of electronic music was always strongly related to the physical and direct actions of a musician. In this tradition, STEIM supported artists in residence such as composers and performers, but also multimedia and video artists, helping them to develop setups which allowed for bespoke improvisation and performance with individually designed technology.
Background
STEIM existed since 1969. It was founded by
Misha Mengelberg,
Louis Andriessen,
Peter Schat,
Dick Raaymakers,
Jan van Vlijmen,
Reinbert de Leeuw, and
Konrad Boehmer. This group of Dutch composers had fought for the reformation of Amsterdam's feudal music structures; they insisted on Bruno Maderna's appointment as musical director of the
Concertgebouw Concertgebouw may refer to one of the following concert halls:
* Concertgebouw, Amsterdam, Netherlands
* Concertgebouw, Bruges, Belgium
* Concertgebouw de Vereeniging, Netherlands
{{disambiguation
Buildings and structures disambiguation pages ...
Orchestra and enforced the first public fundings for experimental and improvised electronic music in the Netherlands.
They were offered a budget for their collective multimedia opera "Reconstruction" which was premiered in the
Holland Festival in 1969.
The technology used in this opera was then taken to Amsterdam's Prinseneiland which was STEIM's first location. Soon, in 1971, the studio moved to the
Groenburgwal in the city center, where there was more space for workshops and concerts. From 1986-2015, STEIM was located at the
Achtergracht in the city center's southern area in a building containing including three studios, a concert hall, hard and software workshops, offices, and a guesthouse. Under the direction of Michel Waisvisz (1949-2008, artistic director since 1981), the STEIM residency program attracted international artists to develop individual instruments and interfaces for the performance of electronic music.
After moving to a smaller location near the Lelylaan station in 2015, STEIM officially ceased to exist as an organization at the end of 2020 due primarily to cuts within the Dutch national cultural funding system.
Selected STEIM instruments
Hardware

* Black Box System (Zwarte Dozen), by Rob van de Poel (1972)
* Eemnes Machines, by
Victor Wentink (1975–79)
* Crackle Box (
Kraakdoos), Crackle Synth, by Michel Waisvisz, Geert Hamelberg, Peter Beyls and Nico Bes (1975)
* The Hands, by
Michel Waisvisz (since 1984). One of the world's first gestural MIDI controllers. Two wooden frames for the hands with switches, potentiometers, tilt sensors, and ultrasound.
* Hyperstring Project, by
Jon Rose. Extending a Violin Bow with Sensors. (since 1985)
* STEIM Sensor-Lab. Portable Mini-Computer which translates analogue Sensor data into MIDI Code. (1989)
* The Web, by Michel Waisvisz (1990)
* The Sweatstick, by
Ray Edgar (1990)
* The Lady's Glove, by
Laetitia Sonami (1991)
*
Nic Collins: Midi Concertina (1992)
* Chromasone, by Walter Fabeck (1994)
* Mutantrumpet, by
Ben Neill (2008)
* Stone with Nails, by
Reyes Oteo (2009)
Software
* Lick Machine, by Frank Baldé (1989-1995). MIDI Macro-Controlling Software
*
LiSa
Lisa or LISA may refer to:
People
People with the mononym
* Lisa (Japanese musician, born 1974), stylized "LISA"
* Lisa, stagename of Japanese singer Lisa Komine (born 1978)
* Lisa (South Korean singer) (born 1980)
* Lisa (Japanese musician, b ...
, by Michel Waisvisz and Frank Baldé. Realtime software instrument for live sampling and realtime audio manipulation (since 1995)
LiSa info* Big Eye, by Tom Demeyer. Video to MIDI converter (1995-2001)
* Image/ine, by
Steina Vasulka and Tom Demeyer. Software instrument for realtime video manipulation (1996-2001)
* MIDI Joy, by Frank Baldé. Mapping game controllers to MIDI Code (1997-2002)
* JunXion, by Michel Waisvisz and Frank Baldé. Mapping game controllers, audio, video and sensor data to MIDI and OSC (since 2003
junXion info
STEIM touch philosophy
As a headline for most of STEIM's instrumental developments it can apply that "Touch is crucial in communicating with the new electronic performance art technologies". As in traditional musical instruments, it is believed here that also in contemporary developments the physical touch of a musician contains essential aesthetic factors. These qualities tend to get lost in the non-realtime use of studio technology, in which the process of music production gets rather rational but bodily involved. The Touch philosophy — which can be considered as STEIM's interpretation of the widely used term
interactivity
Across the many fields concerned with interactivity, including information science, computer science, human-computer interaction, communication, and industrial design, there is little agreement over the meaning of the term "interactivity", but ...
— theoretically subsumes several stages of STEIM's developments,
from the analogue touchable "Crackle" surfaces in the 1970s
to today's experimental Gestural MIDI Interfaces.
Structure and people
STEIM was a foundation whose primary financial support came from the
Dutch ministry of Culture. It invited international artists in residence of all different musical and artistic styles and scenes. Aside from offering support in theoretic and practical development of contemporary musical instruments, STEIM also hosted in-house concerts, exhibitions and workshops. The work in progress of supported artists was presented during open studio events.
Artistic/managing directors
*
Peter Schat, 1971-1973
* Working group: Misha Mengelberg, Louis Andriessen, Michel Waisvisz, Victor Wentinck, Gilius van Bergeijk, Huib Emmer, Dick Raaijmakers 1973-1981
*
Michel Waisvisz, 1981-2008
*
Dick Rijken, 2009-2020
Artistic guest directors
*
George E. Lewis;
Joel Ryan;
Clarence Barlow, 1985 - ca. 1990
*
Nicolas Collins
Nicolas Collins (born March 26, 1954, in New York City) is a composer of mostly electronic music, a sound artist and writer. He received his BA and MA from Wesleyan University, and his PhD from the University of East Anglia. Upon graduating from ...
, 1992-1995
*
Steina Vasulka, 1996-1997
*
Sally Jane Norman, 1998-2000
*
Daniel Schorno;
Netochka Nezvanova, 2001-2003
* Daniel Schorno, 2003-2004
*
Jan St. Werner, 2004-2006
*
Mazen Kerbaj;
Atau Tanaka, 2006-2008
*
Tarek Atoui;
Tina Blaine, 2008
*
Takuro Mizuta Lippit; 2008-2013
Artistic residency
*
Kasia Glowicka (2011)
*
Mark Trayle (2010)
*
Henry Vega (2009/10)
*
John Richards (2007)
* Andi Otto (2005-2010)
*
Marko Ciciliani
Marko Ciciliani (born February 23, 1970) is a composer, audiovisual artist and performer.
Life
Marko Ciciliani (born 1970 in Zagreb, Croatia) is a composer and sound artist. His family emigrated to Germany in 1971, where he grew up primarily in ...
(2006/2007)
*
Benton C Bainbridge (1999)
*
Peter Cusack (1996)
*
Art Clay (1993)
*
Tom Cora
Thomas Henry Corra (September 14, 1953 – April 9, 1998), better known as Tom Cora, was an American cellist and composer, best known for his Free improvisation, improvisational performances in the field of Experimental music, experimental jazz ...
(1992)
*
Dominic Alldis (1988)
Technicians, studio staff
* Jan Herrmann Verpoorten (1969-1971)
* Nico Bes (1971-2021)
* Rob van de Poel (1971-1980)
* Wim Wansink (1971-1972)
* Robert Huiskens (1975)
* Johan den Biggelaar (1972-1986)
* Paul Godschalk (ca. 1981-1984)
* Paul Hogeweg (ca. 1981-1984)
* Hans Venmans (ca. 1984-1987)
* Hayo Den Boeft (1983-92)
* Aad te Bokkel (ca. 1980-83)
* Paul Spaanderman (1983-1991)
* Peter Cost (1987-1992)
* Bob van Baarda (1992-1995)
* Rob Keijzer (1993)
* Ray Edgar (1994-1997)
* Jorgen Brinkman (1995-2008)
* Daniel Schorno (1997-2007)
* René Wassenburg (2001-2007)
* Byung-Jun Kwon (2006-2010)
* Marije Baalman (2010-2016)
* Nicolo Merendino (2013-2016)
* Sybren Danz (2013-2018)
Software developer
* Frank Baldé (1986-2020)
* Peter Cost (1987-1992)
* Tom Demeyer (1988-2000)
See also
*
Netochka Nezvanova - artistic guest director at STEIM, 2001-2003
*
V2 Institute for the Unstable Media
*
WORM
Worms are many different distantly related bilateria, bilateral animals that typically have a long cylindrical tube-like body, no limb (anatomy), limbs, and usually no eyes.
Worms vary in size from microscopic to over in length for marine ...
, organisation in Rotterdam
* iii (
Instrument Inventors Initiative), organisation in The Hague
References
External links
*
crackle.org— Archive Site of Michel Waisvisz’ works
*Spekle, Roland and Michel Waisvisz. �
STEIM — A Reconstruction” ''STEIM Writings''.
Artist projects realised at STEIM
*Golden, Barbara. “Conversation with Laetitia Sonami.�
(April 2010). Montréal:
CEC.
*Nowitz, Alex. �
Voice and Live-Electronics using Remotes as Gestural Controllers” ''eContact! 10.4 — Temps réel, improvisation et interactivité en électroacoustique / Live-electronics — Improvisation — Interactivity in Electroacoustics'' (October 2008). Montréal:
CEC.
*Scott, Richard. �
Getting WiGi with It: Performing and Programming with an Infrared Gestural Instrument: A Case Study” ''eContact! 12.3 — Instrument—Interface'' (June 2010). Montréal:
CEC.
{{Authority control
Music organisations based in the Netherlands
Inventors of musical instruments
Music of the Netherlands