Inside Computer Music is an investigation of how new technological developments have influenced the creative possibilities of composers of computer music in the last 50 years. This book combines detailed research into the development of computer music techniques with nine case studies that analyze key works in the musical and technical development of computer music. The book's companion website offers demonstration videos of the techniques used and downloadable software. There, readers can view interviews and test emulations of the software used by the composers for themselves. The software also presents musical analyses of each of the nine case studies to enable readers to engage with the musical structure aurally and interactively.
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Michael Clarke (2 spaces): adaptations of ancient writings Michael Clarke (3 spaces): GRs’ author of All Day, Every Day Michael Clarke (4 spaces): non-fiction, past director of RUSI, Visiting Professor of Defence Studies King’s College London Michael Clarke (5 spaces): cricketeer Michael Clarke (6 spaces): GRs’ author with books on marketing and social media Michael Clarke (7 spaces): late martial artist Michael Clarke (8 spaces): non-fiction, specializes in China and the Far East Michael Clarke (9 spaces): Director of the Scottish National Gallery Michael Clarke (10 spaces): tween book series Pick Pock, Tick Tock Michael Clarke (11 spaces): non-fiction, late sociology professor from Universities of Birmingham and of Liverpool Michael Clarke (12 spaces): non-fiction, Irish professor of classics at National University of Ireland
This book presents the sort of wisdom one gets from talking to someone who's been working in computer music for a long time, written in a well-tied-together narrative missing from basically any other computer music book I've encountered. Each chapter presents a historical account of a specific technical feature culminating in how it relates to a piece of music. Where most books usually present either decontextual technique or inaudible history, this book integrates them together in a way that makes it quite possibly the clearest and most provocative text I've ever seen on classic computer music.
I should note I haven't gone through all of the supplemental resources---I've skipped through some of the videos, but I don't have the space on my computer to install the software. But, you can go to the accompanying website if you want to poke around. In general, the software is tailored to demonstrate specific features pointed out in the text, again analogous to what one might encounter in a particularly good class on electronic music.
I do have two quibbles with the text. The first is that in picking a set of pieces there's inevitably a danger of either implicitly or explicitly creating some sort of canon, and saying which pieces are included or excluded. Although thinking about that is beside the point of the book, it would have been nice to have a clearer delineation of scope---this book really is centered on IRCAM, the French government contemporary music institute. The second is that the chapters might be a bit too strictly chronological, to the point that some topics come up briefly but aren't explained because they don't fit as neatly (ring modulation is mentioned a few times but never defined or in the index), and they do get a bit repetitive in structure if not in content.