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Perception-Based Orchestration for Composer-Performers

Five day workshop on contemporary research in music perception and cognition relevant to orchestration and composition

By CCRMA Summer Workshops

Date and time

August 19 · 10am - August 23 · 5pm PDT

Location

Online

Refund Policy

Contact the organizer to request a refund.

About this event

  • 4 days 7 hours

Course Description

This intensive online workshop aims to expose participants to contemporary research in music perception and cognition relevant to orchestration and composition (broadly defined) and to help the participants apply this knowledge to their composition and performance in practice. This is achieved through two main modes of teaching: theoretical lectures and practical application in creative projects.


Schedule

Each day starts with a theoretical lecture curated for an intended audience of active musicians with diverse practices. The topics of these lectures range from music cognition and psychoacoustics to musical repertoire examples and considerations in notation. The lecture portion of each day is followed by a group session where course participants apply theoretical ideas through discussion, critique, and realization of each other’s works.


Who Can Apply

Anyone who is interested in the course topics should apply. We have a limited number of spots for this workshop, and registration is on a first-come-first-served basis. We do not have any expectations of style or genre for participants of this course, and we believe the topics we discuss can be broadly applicable across different practices. However, the workshop is best suited to musicians that compose and perform music, have some experience with sound recording, can read and write notation, and that are comfortable working collaboratively in a group. We will strive to accommodate a large range of practices; electronic musicians, vocal artists, folk musicians, orchestral composers, and any other sonic practitioners are all encouraged to apply.


Participation Fee: $300

No Application Fee

Registration Deadline: Monday, July 15th, 2024

Instructors

Nick Virzi, D.M.A. in Music Composition from Stanford University. He also completed the H&S Dean’s Fellowship at Stanford, where he was a Lecturer in the Department of Music and a researcher at the Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA) and the Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve. Dr. Virzi is a composer from New York City whose work includes acoustic, electronic, and electroacoustic music, as well as intermedia pieces and multichannel installations.

Yuval Adler, PhD Candidate at McGill University. His research is based at the Music Perception and Cognition Laboratory (MPCL), the Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Music Media and Technology (CIRMMT), and the Analysis Creation and Teaching of Orchestration (ACTOR) partnership. He has an MA in Music Science and Technology from Stanford University. Yuval is a composer, researcher, music-technologist, and trumpet player.

Organized by

The Stanford Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA) is a multi-disciplinary facility where composers and researchers work together using computer-based technology both as an artistic medium and as a research tool.

Pronouncing "CCRMA": CCRMA is an acronym for the Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics it is pronounced "karma" (the first "c" is silent).

Areas of ongoing interest:

  • Composition
  • Applications Hardware
  • Applications Software
  • Synthesis Techniques and Algorithms
  • Physical Modeling
  • Music and Mobile Devices
  • Sensors
  • Real-Time Controllers
  • Signal Processing
  • Digital Recording and Editing
  • Psychoacoustics and Musical Acoustics
  • Perceptual Audio Coding
  • Music Information Retrieval
  • Audio Networking
  • Auditory Display of Multidimensional Data (Data Sonification)
  • Real-Time Applications.

The CCRMA community:

Administrative and technical staff, faculty, research associates, graduate research assistants, graduate and undergraduate students, visiting scholars, visiting researchers and composers, and industrial associates. Departments actively represented at CCRMA include Music, Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Computer Science, Physics, Art, Drama, and Psychology.

Center activities:

Academic courses, seminars, small interest group meetings, summer workshops and colloquia. Concerts of computer music are presented several times each year, including exchange concerts with area computer music centers. In-house technical reports and recordings are available, and public demonstrations of ongoing work at CCRMA are held periodically.

Research results:

Are published and presented at professional meetings, international conferences and in established journals including the Computer Music Journal, Journal of the Audio Engineering Society, the Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, and various transactions of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE). Compositions are presented in new music festivals and radio broadcasts throughout the world and have been recorded on cassette, LP, compact disc, and in the cloud.

$300