Music 307
Introduction to Computer Music

SPRING 2012

Dr. W. Andrew Schloss
Office: MacLaurin A177
Local: x7931 Office Hours: Weds 4:30-5:30 pm or by appointment
email: aschloss at uvic dot ca

TA: Darren Miller
Office:
Office Hours: TBA
email: emaildfm at gmail dot com

Classes: MacLaurin A168, B008, and the Laboratory for Extended Media (LEM)
(default location: A168)
Tues 2:30-4:20 and Fri 2:30-3:20

TEXT: Coursepack, available in the bookstore. It contains:
1. Jean-Claude Risset, foreward to Electroacoustic Music: Analytical Perspectives, Thomas Licata, editor
2. K. Stockhausen, Four Criteria of Electronic Music, from Stockhausen on Music: Lectures and Interviews
3. Charles Dodge and Thomas Jerse, Computer Music
: Chapter 2, pp 25-61
4. John Chowning, The Synthesis of Complex Audio Spectra by Means of Frequency Modulation, Computer Music Journal 1977
5. David Jaffe, Ten Criteria for Evaluating Synthesis Techniques, Computer Music Journal 1995
6. Gareth Loy, Musicians Make a Standard: The MIDI Phenomenon, Computer Music Journal 1985

Supplementary texts availabe in the library:
Electric Sound by Joel Chadabe
Foundations of Computer Music edited by Curtis Roads and John Strawn
The Music Machine edited by Curtis Roads
Twentieth Century Music by H.H. Stuckenschmidt
Computer Music by Charles Dodge and Thomas Jerse: Chapter 2 and pp 80-85, 322-329
The Rest is Noise by Alex Ross
Grove: Serialism

Articles on reserve in the library
A Tutorial on Digital Sound Synthesis Techniques by Giovanni De Poli
The Dysfunctions of MIDI Computer Music Journal 12(1): 19-28. 1988 by F. R. Moore
Communicating with Meaningless Numbers Computer Music Journal 15(4): 74-77 by David Zicarelli

Grading:
Labs (5) 40%
Midterm 30%
Final Project 30%


Week 1
Introduction, goals, expectations. A brief history of the Twentieth Century.
Technology vs. aesthetics in computer music and contemporary music in general. What is music? What is computer music?
The distinctions have as much to do with aesthetics as with technology/tools. Art vs. Technology: as old as the human race.
Music synthesis/analysis. CCRMA and IRCAM. Access to tools. Cahill, Theremin, Moog, Buchla, Mathews, Boulez, Cage, et alia.
Jan 6 A brief history of Musique concrete. Henry, Schaffer, et alia. Electronic vs. Electroacoustic vs. Computer Music.
LISTENING: Messiaen, Quartet for the End of Time, Oraison Pour Quartout D'Ondes
READING: Risset's foreward to Electroacoustic Music

Week 2 Electronic/Electroacoustic/Computer Music. Aesthetics vs. technology. Non-destructive editing, EDL, what does real-time really mean? The "psychic" editor.
Jan 10
Musical examples of analog vs. digital synthesis.
LISTENING: Cage, Second Construction ("electronic aesthetic" but entirely acoustic music)

Week 3 TRIMPIN -- VISTING ARTIST / Acoustic Sculpture
Multitrack digital recording/editing using Pro Tools and other audio editors.
Field recording with portable flash recording and transfer to disk.
Jan 17 Lab 1 Electroacoustic presentations (continue for next several classes). [Due: Ongoing, beginning on Jan 20]
LISTENING: Schaeffer/Henry, Symphonie pour un homme seul; Beatles, Revolution 9; Koonce, Walkabout
READING: Chapter 2 of Computer Music (pp 25-61) by Charles Dodge

Week 4 MIDI protocol, binary and hexadecimalumber number systems.
Analog synthesis, the Buchla synthesizer, VCA, VCO, Ring modulation, how to record session directly to disk.
Composition/aesthetics: Too many ideas vs. not enough ideas...
READING: Loy's article on MIDI
Jan 24 Lab 2 Musique Concrete using digital techniques [Due: Feb 3]

Week 5
Creating spatial/psychoacoustic effects, Binaural hearing, masking, mp3.
Jan 31

Week 6
Digital recording chain, Nyquest theory, Aliasing, Compositional Techniques.
Feb 7 Lab 3
Buchla synthesizer [Due: March 9]
READING: Stockhausen's article on electronic music techniques

READING BREAK, Feb 14
READING:
Chowning's FM article

Week 7 Additive Synthesis, MSP demo. Chowning's FM article.
Feb 21 Overview of synthesis Techniques, Fixed-waveform synthesis, additive, subtractive, non-linear (FM)
Waveshaping, Physical Modeling.

Week 8
Synthesis, cont'd
Feb 28 READING: Jaffe's synthesis article

Week 9 Introduction to MAX (object-oriented programming).
March 6
Computer Music performance videos (Suite from the Seven Wonders, UNI, etc)
Lab 4
FM synthesis, Fourier Analysis, 3D spectra [Due March 18]

Week 10 More Max, reading from and writing to tables, creating your own sequencer using the seq and multi objects.
March 13 Using tables to produce gaussian or specified-shape random generators

Week 11 Example: turning EEG data into sound and image, piano roll notation, score following.
March 20 SPECIAL GUEST LECTURE: " Buchlas I Have Known and Loved" Rick Smith

Week 12 MIDTERM: MARCH 27 , TIMELINE of Music Technology
March 27 Lab 5 Programming MIDI using Max, creating your own MIDI environments. [Due April 3]
Max/MSP continued, using OSC (Open Sound Control) with arbitrary devices
Final Projects [Due: April 23]

MATERIALS FOR MUS307 STUDENTS

Listening materials (in addition to class presentations regarding Lab 1):

Paul Koonce Walkabout
Pierre Schaeffer and Pierre Henry Symphonie pour un homme seul

 


Final project due Monday, April 23 by 5 pm





Note: for all lab assignments, you must HAND IN A WRITTEN PAGE(s) DESCRIBING YOUR WORK
(Musical materials, tracks, problems (if any), strategy, etc.)
You won't get a grade if there is no writeup!