The computer music movement of the 1960’s, 70s and 80’s created the technology that established the sound of music as we know it today. We unearth the stories behind that movement, as well as some trippy music that demonstrates how music grew into the electronic sounds we take for granted now. In Season 2, we take a deep dive into the music of Stanley Jordan, a jazz master who combines musical vir... more
Publishes | Weekly | Episodes | 12 | Founded | 2 years ago |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number of Listeners | Categories | MusicTechnologyMusic History |
Followers of this podcast will remember two central characters from Season 1: Milton Babbitt, the Princeton Music professor and avant-garde composer who was an early devotee of electronic music; and Babbitt’s protégé, Godfrey Winham, a composer whose... more
In this episode, Stanley Jordan does something remarkable: He recreates a lost computer music composition, and premieres it here for the first time. more
Stanley Jordan was about to play The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, and with seconds go before cameras rolled, the sound wasn’t coming out of his guitar. His guitar tech was sweating bullets. Was he able to hit his mark? And what lesson did he lear... more
Stanley Jordan ’81 grew up in Silicon Valley, making circuits as a kid, watching his father become one of the world's first professional computer programmers. But it wasn’t until Jordan arrived at Princeton that the young musician learned how to fuse... more
Stanley Jordan. Innovator of the two-handed touch technique to coax a sweet, percussive sound out of an electric guitar. After graduating from Princeton University in 1981, he went on to become an acclaimed jazz musician known for his guitar pyrotech... more
In our epilogue episode, we look at how an engineering professor, Naomi Leonard, is collaborating with dancers to show how birds fly in a flock without bumping into each other; how robots can reflect our humanity back at us; and how other peoples’ rh... more
Has digital music reached the point of diminishing returns? Has it all been done, and heard, before? At the start of a new millennium, a crew of Princeton engineers and musicians answered this question with a resounding no, building the now-famous Pr... more
Paul Lansky is the most celebrated and musically influential of the computer musicians at Princeton, and it isn’t only because he was famously sampled by Radiohead on their classic album “Kid A.” more
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Apple Podcasts | #22 | Canada/Music/Music History |
Apple Podcasts | #161 | Canada/Music |
Apple Podcasts | #139 | Italy/Music/Music History |
Apple Podcasts | #139 | Germany/Music/Music History |
Apple Podcasts | #39 | Mexico/Music/Music History |
Apple Podcasts | #42 | Netherlands/Music/Music History |
Apple Podcasts | #72 | Denmark/Music/Music History |
Apple Podcasts | #90 | South Africa/Music/Music History |
Apple Podcasts | #91 | Belgium/Music/Music History |
Apple Podcasts | #95 | Sweden/Music/Music History |
Apple Podcasts | #122 | Brazil/Music/Music History |
Apple Podcasts | #133 | Norway/Music/Music History |
Apple Podcasts | #228 | Russia/Music/Music History |
Listeners, engagement and demographics and more for this podcast.
Listeners per Episode | Gender Skew | Engagement Score | |||
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Primary Location | Social Media Reach |
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Composers & Computers launched 2 years ago and published 12 episodes to date. You can find more information about this podcast including rankings, audience demographics and engagement in our podcast database.
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