Turntablist Transcription Methodology (TTM).

The formalization of a practice through a system of signs becomes, in fact, the creation of a language, with which you can communicate complex meanings in their abstract symbols. The turntablism, however, is a complex practice, with a decent instinctive component that is realized in the live performance of the DJ, through its experience, expertise and improvisation. For these peculiar characteristics the Turntablist Transcription Methodology (TTM) may be valuable. Born from the collaborative effort of John Carluccio, Ethan Imboden and Raymond Pirtle jr. consists of a formal method to transcribe the codified gestures, including the many ways of scratching, in signs of a space divided by individual beats in amplitude and rotation of the disc height. This method of transcription follows the transition from an oral transmission of these practices, a written, and thus more durable and with greater standardization that if one side cut away inevitably virtuous nuances of individual performer, on the other ensures a longer transmission reliable of this type of knowledge. The structuring of timing from the common background of its creators (architecture, filmmaking, industrial design), and the breakdown by simple linear features, without the need for tools is iconic in itself a success, however, has the objective of promoting a greater complexity of orchestrations and the design of innovative techniques. Moreover, the sharing of information has always favored the evolution of techniques, precisely because it fails to activate the virtuous mechanisms of collective intelligence.