T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
740.1 | Sounds interesting.... | JAWS::COTE | Hunting the dread moray eel... | Mon Mar 30 1987 16:35 | 12 |
| Don,
What did the music sound like? Was it any more/less human than...
A. Humans?
B. Quantized sequences?
Did you like the music?
As for untouched by human hands, well, somebody wrote that code!
Edd
|
740.2 | THe one I heard sounded pretty good. | PIXEL::COHEN | Richard Cohen | Mon Mar 30 1987 17:59 | 6 |
| There was an article about a composition system like this a while
back in Computer Music Journal, by Fry. (He only uses his last name,
although I know his first name, heh heh).
- Rick
|
740.3 | | COROT::CERTO | | Mon Mar 30 1987 18:44 | 5 |
|
I heard it; didn't really care for the computer's music, but
he picked a nice instrument! :-)
Fredric
|
740.4 | like the most | GNERIC::ROSS | we have good gnus and bad gnus | Tue Mar 31 1987 09:12 | 10 |
|
uVax indeed....Better odds it was a Mac.
you *didnt* tape it?
Youre recollection implies that funk has a more complex heuristic.
( wah! git down! hooah! brrrrrrrrreeet! )
:*}
|
740.5 | My concerto's been ECO'd | JON::LOW | The medium is the mess | Tue Mar 31 1987 13:44 | 6 |
| It's not *really* computer music until a computer listens to it
and writes a scathing review about what sloppy algorithms the modern
generation has.
David
|
740.6 | | TALLIS::HERDEG | Mark Herdeg, LTN1-2/B17 226-6520 | Tue Mar 31 1987 14:03 | 2 |
|
It was a Mac, half hidden under the table at the front of the display.
|
740.7 | Inspiring? | NIMBUS::DAVIS | | Wed Apr 01 1987 14:01 | 10 |
| Sounds interesting, but I don't see computers taking over the
compositional end of music. On the other hand, one thing I'd like
to try if I had the extra bucks, is a package put out by Dr. T called
the Algorithmic Composer (I think that's the right name). It does
some compostition based on input parameters, but what Dr. T suggests
the user do is to use it for inspiration in teerms of melody and
harmony, and then use it for your own compositions.
Rob
|
740.8 | | REGENT::SCHMIEDER | | Mon Apr 06 1987 16:13 | 12 |
| Sounds like .7 hit the nail on the head. Any technological advance should be
aimed at freeing people from mundane tasks so that a greater percentage of
their time is spent creatively. Studies have shown that, contrary to what one
might think, this INCREASES productivity rather than cutting back on it due to
"fatigue" of applying "too much mental energy" too consistently. I personally
do not believe the initial idea is necessarily where the majority of the
creative energy goes in composing, so a cybernetic composer could possibly
bring out the best in anyone who has the proper training to use it effectively
as a creative tool, rather than resulting in more clinical works.
Mark
|
740.9 | labor-saving indeed! | 16514::MOELLER | Drink & mow, lose a toe! | Mon Apr 06 1987 16:25 | 4 |
| re -1.. so, when you comin' over to help me figure out how to
generate the SYS-EX messages for my Fb-01 from my KX88 ?
k m2
|
740.10 | PK figured it out, see these notes.... | MENTOR::REG | Who is Sylvester McCoy | Mon Apr 06 1987 19:18 | 10 |
| RE .9 (and your mail comments to me today), I think the FB_01
note (463 ?) had something from Paul Kent on almost exactly this.
Somewhere in the range of 463.60 to 463.80 he goes through this,
some detail on what didn't and then what did work. Finally, removing
something that was "intercepting" sys ex's cured his problem.
Good Luck,
Reg
|
740.11 | The REAL value of compositional algorithms | HYDRA::AURENZ | Scot, DTN 226-6229 | Mon Apr 06 1987 20:58 | 51 |
|
I heard this setup a month or so back, and liked it a lot.
I am not much into jazz, though - it all just sounds like
"noodling" to me. However, my friend who also saw the exhibit
is very much into jazz - and she said it sounded nice, but was
just a lot of "noodling"!
Still, though, don't think I am knocking the system - I am still
impressed with what they've accomplished.
And now, like everyone else, I will throw in my two cents on the
destiny/utility of compositional algorithms.
I agree with Mark a little bit. They may be a useful "tool" of the
composition process, doing a lot of the menial tasks while the
composer "experiments and paints with a wide brush" (Mark, is
that a reasonable paraphrase?) It is even fun - I have a demo disk
of a program called "Jam Factory", which improvises on material
you play. Basically, though, it is simply a musical version of
Eddington's Monkey*.
I see the value of compositional algorithms, like computers in
general, as "Tools with which to Explore Music". That is, it is
NOT the OUTPUT that is important, but WHAT YOU LEARNED IN ORDER TO
GENERATE THAT OUTPUT that has lasting value.
To relate this to the Kurzweil Exhibit: I would probably not
buy an album of the music produced by this system, but I know
that the people who built the system learned a LOT about how
to put music together and to understand musical relationships.
It is much the same in computer graphics - someone produces
a picture of a glass ball. It reflects and bends light just
the way you would expect. Sure, the picture is pleasant to
look at, but wouldn't you agree that the REAL VALUE is in what
the modeller learned about reflecting light (and how to describe
those physical laws)?
Scot
* Eddington is the guy credited with the conjecture that
if you put an infinite number of monkeys at typewriters,
they would eventually reproduce great works of Shakespeare,
et al. Certain "markov-chain" algorithms which modify
text have sprung out of this work (one was in Scientific
American a few years ago.) "Jam Factory" does the same thing:
according to the documentation, it builds a markov chain
of your input and then hops around for a while.
|
740.12 | gee, Im right again? | JON::ROSS | wockin' juan | Mon Apr 06 1987 22:22 | 16 |
| to digress,
situation with Kx88 sending Fb01 config change is:
good news: gee, you can do it!
bad news: gee, you need n copies of a canned message with
ONE byte changed to indicate "select config. n "
Still need, and should want, a cheep computer to do the
"footswitch-to-midi-message-initiation(s)" business, Karl.
Or was that another note?
ron
|
740.13 | | 16514::MOELLER | Drink & mow, lose a toe! | Tue Apr 07 1987 13:27 | 12 |
| re -1,-2
uhh, thanks, guys, I've extracted all the Fb01 stuff.
Back to the topic, Cybernetic Composer.. I also have demo disks
for 'M' and 'Jam Factory'.
I now agree with Butch Leitz. On this one point. that is to say,
Bleeeeeaah.
karl
|
740.14 | back after a week and a half of absense | BARNUM::RHODES | | Wed Apr 08 1987 11:21 | 10 |
|
RE: noodling
Yep, sounds like the programmers didn't put any repetition into
the melody lines. Anyone want to fill out a bug report?
Similar question posed in the 'My dinner with Racter' note (good
title, Len - very memorizable): Is the generated 'music' copyrighted?
Todd.
|
740.15 | | REGENT::SCHMIEDER | | Wed Apr 08 1987 14:38 | 5 |
| putting together what i said earlier with what scot said, i think the best
result of this algorthmic composer is it will help people to learn better how
to do it themselves, by stepping through a template approach. just as
learning to use a drum machine can help a person to better understand rhythm
and learn how to play or write for the real instruments.
|