Tod Machover

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Mixed Messiah 00:00 Tools
Explosion and Overture 00:00 Tools
First Narrative 00:00 Tools
Fat's Sacrament 00:00 Tools
Beach Scene 00:00 Tools
Fat's Dream 00:00 Tools
Valis Song 00:00 Tools
Dr. Stone Scene 00:00 Tools
Exegesis I 00:00 Tools
Dr. Stone's Aria 00:00 Tools
Exegesis II 00:00 Tools
Gesegnet Song 00:00 Tools
Lampton Scene 00:00 Tools
Parsifal Narrative 00:00 Tools
Slippers Song 00:00 Tools
Finale I 00:00 Tools
Sophia's Scene 00:00 Tools
Suffering Song 00:00 Tools
Mini's Solo 00:00 Tools
Final Narrative 00:00 Tools
Finale II 00:00 Tools
Flora 00:00 Tools
With Dadaji in Paradise 00:00 Tools
Sophia's Aria 00:00 Tools
Begin Again Again...for Hypercello Solo - Intro 00:00 Tools
Loneliness Transition 00:00 Tools
Mixed Messiah (after G.F. Handel's Messiah) 00:00 Tools
Begin Again Again...for Hypercello Solo - Delicate And Varied 00:00 Tools
Light 00:00 Tools
Interlude 1 - “After Bach” 00:00 Tools
Lonliness Transition 00:00 Tools
Bug-Mudra 00:00 Tools
Begin Again Again...for Hypercello Solo - Energetic 00:00 Tools
Famine 00:00 Tools
Interlude 2 - “After Byrd” 00:00 Tools
Delicate and Varied 00:00 Tools
Intro 00:00 Tools
Soft Morning, City! 00:00 Tools
Sparkler 00:00 Tools
Energetic 00:00 Tools
Begin Again Again...for Hypercello Solo - Very Rapid And Precise 00:00 Tools
Emphatic - Warm and Singing 00:00 Tools
Timbre Dream 00:00 Tools
Begin Again Again...for Hypercello Solo - Timbre Dream 00:00 Tools
Lyrical and Intimate 00:00 Tools
Fluttering - Interior 00:00 Tools
Begin Again Again...for Hypercello Solo - Broad - Intense 00:00 Tools
Song Of Penance For Hyperviola, Computer Voice, And 17 Instrumentals - Intense 00:00 Tools
Begin Again Again...for Hypercello Solo - Emphatic - Warm And Singing 00:00 Tools
Growing - Majestic 00:00 Tools
Begin Again Again...for Hypercello Solo - Lyrical And Intimate 00:00 Tools
Begin Again Again...for Hypercello Solo - Coda: Powerful And Steady 00:00 Tools
Begin Again Again...for Hypercello Solo - Growing - Majestic 00:00 Tools
Begin Again Again...for Hypercello Solo - Fluttering - Interior 00:00 Tools
Very Rapid and Precise 00:00 Tools
Intense 00:00 Tools
Broad - Intense 00:00 Tools
Nature's Breath 00:00 Tools
Three Hyper-Dim-Sums: I. Glade 00:00 Tools
Toward The Center 00:00 Tools
Song Of Penance For Hyperviola, Computer Voice, And 17 Instrumentals - Buoyant 00:00 Tools
Buoyant 00:00 Tools
Resolute 00:00 Tools
Spectres Parisiens 00:00 Tools
Forever And Ever For Hyperviolin And Chamber Orchestra - Intro 00:00 Tools
...But Not Simpler... 00:00 Tools
Song Of Penance For Hyperviola, Computer Voice, And 17 Instrumentals - Resolute 00:00 Tools
Forever And Ever For Hyperviolin And Chamber Orchestra - I Gently Flowing 00:00 Tools
Forever And Ever For Hyperviolin And Chamber Orchestra - Ii Calm 00:00 Tools
Coda Powerful And Steady 00:00 Tools
Three Hyper-Dim-Sums: III. Punchy 00:00 Tools
Jeux Deux: III. Buoyant and Precise 00:00 Tools
Three Hyper-Dim-Sums: II. Winding Line 00:00 Tools
Song Of Penance For Hyperviola, Computer Voice, And 17 Instrumentals - Coda: Full And Sweet 00:00 Tools
Coda Joyous 00:00 Tools
Jeux Deux: II. Freely Lyrical 00:00 Tools
Jeux Deux: I. Swift and Stealthy 00:00 Tools
Forever And Ever For Hyperviolin And Chamber Orchestra - Coda: Joyous 00:00 Tools
I Gently Flowing 00:00 Tools
Iii Jaunty And Light 00:00 Tools
Ii Calm 00:00 Tools
Coda Full And Sweet 00:00 Tools
Forever And Ever For Hyperviolin And Chamber Orchestra - Iii Jaunty And Light 00:00 Tools
Real Time Processing II 00:00 Tools
20 Real Time Processing II 00:00 Tools
Soft Morning City! (excerpt) 00:00 Tools
26 Soft Morning City! (excerpt) 00:00 Tools
Soft morning City 00:00 Tools
Towards the Center 00:00 Tools
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Tod Machover (b. 1953 in New York) has been called "America's most wired composer" by the Los Angeles Times. He is widely recognized as one of the most significant and innovative composers of his generation, and is also celebrated for inventing new technology for music, including Hyperinstruments which he launched in 1986. Machover studied with Elliott Carter and Roger Sessions at The Juilliard School and was the first Director of Musical Research at Pierre Boulez 's IRCAM in Paris. He has been Professor of Music and Media at the MIT Media Lab (Cambridge, USA) since it was founded in 1985, and is Director of the Lab's Hyperinstruments and Opera of the Future Groups. Since 2006, Machover has also been Visiting Professor of Composition at the Royal Academy of Music in London. Tod Machover's music has been acclaimed for breaking traditional artistic and cultural boundaries, offering a unique and innovative synthesis of acoustic and electronic sound, of symphony orchestras and interactive computers, and of operatic arias and rock songs. Machover's compositions have been commissioned and performed by many of the world's most prestigious ensembles and soloists, including the Ensemble InterContemporain, the London Sinfonietta, Ensemble Modern, Speculum Musicae, BBC Scottish Symphony, San Francisco Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Boston Pops, Houston Grand Opera, Bunkamura (Tokyo), Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, Carnegie Hall, Deutsches Symphonie Orchester Berlin, the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Collage New Music, Speculum Musicae, Ars Electronica, Casa da Musica (Porto), American Composers Orchestra, Tokyo String Quartet, Kronos Quartet, Ying Quartet, Yo-Yo Ma, Joshua Bell, Kim Kashkahian, David Starobin, Matt Haimovitz, and many more. His work has been awarded numerous prizes and honors, among others from from the Fromm and Koussevitzky Foundations, the National Endowment for the Arts, the German Culture Ministry, and the French Culture Ministry, which named him a Chevalier de l'Order des Arts et des Lettres. In 2007 he was awarded the Steinmetz Prize from the IEEE. Machover has been particularly noted for his operatic compositions, which include: VALIS (1987), a science fiction opera – called 'the first opera of the 21st century" by The New York Times – commissioned for the tenth anniversary of the Centre Georges Pompidou; Media/Medium (1994), a "magic" opera for magicians Penn & Teller; the audience-interactive Brain Opera (1996/8), commissioned for the first Lincoln Center Festival, toured worldwide, and permanently installed at the Haus der Musik in Vienna since 2000; and Resurrection (1999), based on Tolstoy's last novel and commissioned by Houston Grand Opera. In addition, Machover has created numerous large-scale music installations for the general public, including the building-size underground art experience Meteorite (2000-2005) in Essen, Germany, a collaboration with media entrepreneur Andre Heller. His opera, Skellig, based on the award-winning novel by David Almond and commissioned by the Sage Gateshead (UK), received its world premiere there to public acclaim and rave reviews in November 2008. His latest opera, Death and the Powers: The Robots' Opera, with an original libretto by U.S. poet laureate Robert Pinsky and directed by Diane Paulus, received its world premiere in Monaco in September 2010 and U.S. premieres in March and April of 2011, in Boston and Chicago. Tod Machover has invented many new technologies for music, most notably his Hyperinstruments that use smart computers to augment musical expression and creativity. He has designed these hyperinstruments for some of the world's greatest musicians, from Yo-Yo Ma and Joshua Bell to Prince, as well as for the general public and for children, as in his Toy Symphony project (www.toysymphony.net) – called "a vast, celebratory ode to the joy of music and its power to bring young and old together, diversity into unity (Boston Globe)" – which has been touring worldwide since 2002. Machover's Hyperinstrument research has long been supported by major companies such as Yamaha, and several of his Music Toys have recently been made commercially available by Fisher-Price and others. In addition, the music composition software Hyperscore – originally developed by his team at the MIT Media Lab for children in the context of Toy Symphony – is fast gaining worldwide recognition as a popular creative tool for people of all ages and backgrounds. In awarding Machover the first Kurzweil Prize in Music and Technology in 2003, celebrated inventor and entrepreneur Raymond Kurzweil wrote: "Tod Machover is the only person I am aware of who contributes on a world-class level to both the technology of music creation and to music itself. Even within these two distinct areas, his contributions are remarkably diverse, and of exquisite quality." Machover's music is published by Boosey & Hawkes and Ricordi Editions, and has been recorded on the Bridge, Oxingale, Erato, Albany and New World labels. Much of his music is also available via iTunes and CDBaby. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.