Day 1
Thursday, March 13, 2025
Coffee
Room 426/428
8:30am - 9am
Keynote Address: James McCartney
Room 426/428
9am - 10am
James McCartney studied computer science and electronic music at the University of Texas at Austin. He wrote music for various dance and drama productions in Austin, and later created the SuperCollider programming language for audio synthesis and algorithmic composition. For a few years he worked on the Hubble Space Telescope project on software for observation planning and data analysis. He worked for 16 years at Apple in the CoreAudio group. Now he is retired and pursuing further interests in possibilities for audio synthesis environments.
Paper Session 1
Room 426/428
10:20am - 11:40am
go to abstracts
YAWN
Mike McCormick
10:20am
MIRLCa
Anna Xambó
10:40am
JITModular
James Harkins
11am
supercollider-gst-rtp
Bruno Gola
11:20am
Concert 1
Bloomberg Center Theater
1pm
go to program
Antithesis (this is the part where I scream) by Maxwell Miller
Maxwell Miller, guitar & voice
the New Pulsar Generator by Marcin Pietruszewski
Marcin Pietruszewski, the New Pulsar Generator
RILF by Rachel Devorah Rome
Rachel Devorah Rome, electronics
Here comes a candle to light you to bed by Marcin Pączkowski
Marcin Pączkowski, motion sensors
Workshop Session 1
2:45pm - 3:45pm
Both workshops are one hour and occur simultaneously.
SPRAWL 3.0
Room 430
Led by:
Henrik von Coler
Orlando Kenny
With support from:
Ishaan Jagyasi
Henry Windish
Live4Life
Room 1020
Led by Christophe Lengelé
Paper Session 2
Room 426/428
4pm - 5:20pm
go to abstracts
SCKinect
Evan Murray
4pm
Sound Matching
Gerard Roma
4:20pm
A Case Study of Music Glyph Notation in SuperCollider using SMuFL fonts
Tom Hall
4:40pm
An Exploratory Analysis of SCTweets Classification and Similarity
Fellipe M. Martins
5pm
Concert 2
Bloomberg Center Theater
7:30pm
go to program
Thormulator by Thor Madsen
Thor Madsen, Thormulator
Infinite Movement by Dennis Scheiba
fixed media
Improvisation by Taarof
Matt Wellins, electronics
Parsa Ferdowsi, electronics
Improvisation by de_umbris.idearum
James Annett, electronics