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by Rochus
956 days ago
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Thanks for the thesis; looks interesting, will have a close look at it. Actually, I'm not really sure whether "Lisp has always been an elegant and productive way to represent and build music"; from my point of view the optimal way to represent music incorporating all relevant dimensions and relations has yet to be found; actually Dannenberg himself switched to SAL, away from Lisp (see his algorithmic composition book). What's the topic of your PhD? Who is your supervisor? |
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My PhD is an interdisciplinary between music and CS, working with George Tzanetakis and Andy Schloss at University of Victoria in BC Canada, continuing the same work I did for the Masters. So that is Scheme for Max and other Scheme related music work, targeting algorithmic composition, mainstream production, and live coding contexts. Some of the current initiatives include a browser based Scheme algorithmic music system (not yet published, but using a WASM C++ worker for a sample-based scheduler), further work on s4m, s4pd, and Ableton Live tools, integrations with Csound (I wrote the csound6~ port for Max), likely a standalone host (similar to Grace), an object system and score tool, and some actual music!
(EDIT: I was wrong and thinking Nyquist, not SAL!)