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Oxford Handbook of Computer Music [Kietas viršelis]

3.57/5 (14 ratings by Goodreads)
Edited by (Research Professor of Sonic Communication, University of Western Sydney)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 624 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 173x249x48 mm, weight: 1211 g, 9 black and white halftone, 43 line illustrations
  • Serija: Oxford Handbooks
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Oct-2009
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195331613
  • ISBN-13: 9780195331615
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 624 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 173x249x48 mm, weight: 1211 g, 9 black and white halftone, 43 line illustrations
  • Serija: Oxford Handbooks
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Oct-2009
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195331613
  • ISBN-13: 9780195331615
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The Oxford Handbook of Computer Music offers a state-of-the-art cross-section of the most field-defining topics and debates in computer music today. A unique contribution to the field, it situates computer music in the broad context of its creation and performance across the range of issues - from music cognition to pedagogy to sociocultural topics - that shape contemporary discourse in the field.
Fifty years after musical tones were produced on a computer for the first time, developments in laptop computing have brought computer music within reach of all listeners and composers. Production and distribution of computer music have grown tremendously as a result, and the time is right for this survey of computer music in its cultural contexts. An impressive and international array of music creators and academics discuss computer music's history, present, and future with a wide perspective, including composition, improvisation, interactive performance, spatialization, sound synthesis, sonification, and modeling. Throughout, they merge practice with theory to offer a fascinating look into computer music's possibilities and enduring appeal.
Contributors ix
Introduction: The Many Futures of Computer Music
3(8)
Roger T. Dean
Part I. Some Histories of Computer Music and Its Technologies
A Historical View of Computer Music Technology
11(33)
Douglas Keislar
Early Hardware and Early Ideas in Computer Music: Their Development and Their Current Forms
44(41)
Paul Doornbusch
Sound Synthesis Using Computers
85(24)
Peter Manning
Part II. The Music
Computational Approaches to Composition of Notated Instrumental Music: Xenakis and the Other Pioneers
109(24)
James Harley
Envisaging Improvisation in Future Computer Music
133(18)
Roger T. Dean
Sounding Out
Computer Music: Some Reflections
151(10)
Trevor Wishart
Some Notes on My Electronic Improvisation Practice
161(6)
Tim Perkis
Combining the Acoustic and the Digital: Music for Instruments and Computers or Prerecorded Sound
167(24)
Simon Emmerson
Part III. Creative and Performance Modes
Dancing the Music: Interactive Dance and Music
191(23)
Wayne Siegel
Gesture and Morphology in Laptop Music Performance
214(19)
Garth Paine
Sensor-Based Musical Instruments and Interactive Music
233(25)
Atau Tanaka
Spatialization and Computer Music
258(16)
Peter Lennox
The Voice in Computer Music and Its Relationship to Place, Identity, and Community
274(20)
Hazel Smith
Algorithmic Synesthesia
294(18)
Noam Sagiv
Roger T. Dean
Freya Bailes
An Introduction to Data Sonification
312(22)
David Worrall
Electronica
334(20)
Nick Collins
Generative Algorithms for Making Music: Emergence, Evolution, and Ecosystems
354(29)
Jon McCormack
Alice Eldridge
Alan Dorin
Peter Mcllwain
Part IV. Cognition and Computation of Computer Music
Computational Modeling of Music Cognition and Musical Creativity
383(38)
Geraint A. Wiggins
Marcus T. Pearce
Daniel Mullensiefen
Soundspotting: A New Kind of Process?
421(36)
Michael Casey
Sounding Out
Interactivity and Improvisation
457(10)
George E. Lewis
From Outside the Window: Electronic Sound Performance
467(6)
Pauline Oliveros
Empirical Studies of Computer Sound
473(20)
Freya Bailes
Roger T. Dean
Part V. Cultural and Educational Issues
Toward the Gender Ideal
493(25)
Mary Simoni
Sound-Based Music 4 All
518(18)
Leigh Landy
Framing Learning Perspectives in Computer Music Education
536(21)
Jøran Rudi
Palmyre Pierroux
Appendix: A Chronology of Computer Music and Related Events 557(28)
Paul Doornbusch
Index 585
Roger Dean is Research Professor of Sonic Communication at the University of Western Sydney, and Founder and Artistic Director of austraLYSIS. He is also author of Hyperimprovisation: Computer Interactive Sound Improvisation (2003) and Sounds from the Corner: Australian Contemporary Jazz Since 1973 (2005)