Deep algebra for deep beats: The beautiful sounds of musical programming
Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson / Getty Images)
Musicians have spent centuries flirting with technology to push the boundaries of the art, from the Theremin to mid-century tape experiments. Despite this fascination, only a tiny niche have gone so far as to programmatically generate music via code. In a span of roughly 70 years, the few who've done so comprise a Venn diagram of intersecting programmers and avant-garde musicians.
The results are unlike anything you've ever heard-and some of the most ambitious music to blend the realms of analog and digital sound.
I talked with people who are using code to make a wide variety of music, from sample mangling to a live algorithmic radio show to preaching the Marxist qualities of open source software. Despite the technological complexity and deep algebra involved, they are all seeking something very simple: a creative sandbox unbound by conventions of time and theory.
Read 31 remaining paragraphs | Comments