• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • RSS
June 5, Friday, 2026
  • Login
CELEBRITY LAND!
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Celebrity Land
No Result
View All Result
Home Music

“FUTURE PHASES” showcases new frontiers in music technology and interactive performance | MIT News

Story Center by Story Center
February 10, 2026
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0
“FUTURE PHASES” showcases new frontiers in music technology and interactive performance | MIT News

RELATED POSTS

Stream Vince Staples’ New Album ‘Cry Baby’

Taylor Swift Leads Week’s Best New Music: Friday Music Guide

Best things to do this weekend in LA and SoCal: June 5-7

Music technology took center stage at MIT during “FUTURE PHASES,” an evening of works for string orchestra and electronics, presented by the MIT Music Technology and Computation Graduate Program as part of the 2025 International Computer Music Conference (ICMC). 

The well-attended event was held last month in the Thomas Tull Concert Hall within the new Edward and Joyce Linde Music Building. Produced in collaboration with the MIT Media Lab’s Opera of the Future Group and Boston’s self-conducted chamber orchestra A Far Cry, “FUTURE PHASES” was the first event to be presented by the MIT Music Technology and Computation Graduate Program in MIT Music’s new space.

“FUTURE PHASES” offerings included two new works by MIT composers: the world premiere of “EV6,” by MIT Music’s Kenan Sahin Distinguished Professor Evan Ziporyn and professor of the practice Eran Egozy; and the U.S. premiere of “FLOW Symphony,” by the MIT Media Lab’s Muriel R. Cooper Professor of Music and Media Tod Machover. Three additional works were selected by a jury from an open call for works: “The Wind Will Carry Us Away,” by Ali Balighi; “A Blank Page,” by Celeste Betancur Gutiérrez and Luna Valentin; and “Coastal Portrait: Cycles and Thresholds,” by Peter Lane. Each work was performed by Boston’s own multi-Grammy-nominated string orchestra, A Far Cry.

“The ICMC is all about presenting the latest research, compositions, and performances in electronic music,” says Egozy, director of the new Music Technology and Computation Graduate Program at MIT. When approached to be a part of this year’s conference, “it seemed the perfect opportunity to showcase MIT’s commitment to music technology, and in particular the exciting new areas being developed right now: a new master’s program in music technology and computation, the new Edward and Joyce Linde Music Building with its enhanced music technology facilities, and new faculty arriving at MIT with joint appointments between MIT Music and Theater Arts (MTA) and the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS).” These recently hired professors include Anna Huang, a keynote speaker for the conference and creator of the machine learning model Coconet that powered Google’s first AI Doodle, the Bach Doodle.

Egozy emphasizes the uniqueness of this occasion: “You have to understand that this is a very special situation. Having a full 18-member string orchestra [A Far Cry] perform new works that include electronics does not happen very often. In most cases, ICMC performances consist either entirely of electronics and computer-generated music, or perhaps a small ensemble of two-to-four musicians. So the opportunity we could present to the larger community of music technology was particularly exciting.”

To take advantage of this exciting opportunity, an open call was put out internationally to select the other pieces that would accompany Ziporyn and Egozy’s “EV6” and Machover’s “FLOW Symphony.” Three pieces were selected from a total of 46 entries to be a part of the evening’s program by a panel of judges that included Egozy, Machover, and other distinguished composers and technologists.

ADVERTISEMENT

“We received a huge variety of works from this call,” says Egozy. “We saw all kinds of musical styles and ways that electronics would be used. No two pieces were very similar to each other, and I think because of that, our audience got a sense of how varied and interesting a concert can be for this format. A Far Cry was really the unifying presence. They played all pieces with great passion and nuance. They have a way of really drawing audiences into the music. And, of course, with the Thomas Tull Concert Hall being in the round, the audience felt even more connected to the music.”

Egozy continues, “we took advantage of the technology built into the Thomas Tull Concert Hall, which has 24 built-in speakers for surround sound allowing us to broadcast unique, amplified sound to every seat in the house. Chances are that every person might have experienced the sound slightly differently, but there was always some sense of a multidimensional evolution of sound and music as the pieces unfolded.”

The five works of the evening employed a range of technological components that included playing synthesized, prerecorded, or electronically manipulated sounds; attaching microphones to instruments for use in real-time signal processing algorithms; broadcasting custom-generated musical notation to the musicians; utilizing generative AI to process live sound and play it back in interesting and unpredictable ways; and audience participation, where spectators use their cellphones as musical instruments to become a part of the ensemble.

Ziporyn and Egozy’s piece, “EV6,” took particular advantage of this last innovation: “Evan and I had previously collaborated on a system called Tutti, which means ‘together’ in Italian. Tutti gives an audience the ability to use their smartphones as musical instruments so that we can all play together.” Egozy developed the technology, which was first used in the MIT Campaign for a Better World in 2017. The original application involved a three-minute piece for cellphones only. “But for this concert,” Egozy explains, “Evan had the idea that we could use the same technology to write a new piece — this time, for audience phones and a live string orchestra as well.”

To explain the piece’s title, Ziporyn says, “I drive an EV6; it’s my first electric car, and when I first got it, it felt like I was driving an iPhone. But of course it’s still just a car: it’s got wheels and an engine, and it gets me from one place to another. It seemed like a good metaphor for this piece, in which a lot of the sound is literally played on cellphones, but still has to work like any other piece of music. It’s also a bit of an homage to David Bowie’s song ‘TVC 15,’ which is about falling in love with a robot.”

Egozy adds, “We wanted audience members to feel what it is like to play together in an orchestra. Through this technology, each audience member becomes a part of an orchestral section (winds, brass, strings, etc.). As they play together, they can hear their whole section playing similar music while also hearing other sections in different parts of the hall play different music. This allows an audience to feel a responsibility to their section, hear how music can move between different sections of an orchestra, and experience the thrill of live performance. In ‘EV6,’ this experience was even more electrifying because everyone in the audience got to play with a live string orchestra — perhaps for the first time in recorded history.”

After the concert, guests were treated to six music technology demonstrations that showcased the research of undergraduate and graduate students from both the MIT Music program and the MIT Media Lab. These included a gamified interface for harnessing just intonation systems (Antonis Christou); insights from a human-AI co-created concert (Lancelot Blanchard and Perry Naseck); a system for analyzing piano playing data across campus (Ayyub Abdulrezak ’24, MEng ’25); capturing music features from audio using latent frequency-masked autoencoders (Mason Wang); a device that turns any surface into a drum machine (Matthew Caren ’25); and a play-along interface for learning traditional Senegalese rhythms (Mariano Salcedo ’25). This last example led to the creation of Senegroove, a drumming-based application specifically designed for an upcoming edX online course taught by ethnomusicologist and MIT associate professor in music Patricia Tang, and world-renowned Senegalese drummer and MIT lecturer in music Lamine Touré, who provided performance videos of the foundational rhythms used in the system.

Ultimately, Egozy muses, “’FUTURE PHASES’ showed how having the right space — in this case, the new Edward and Joyce Linde Music Building — really can be a driving force for new ways of thinking, new projects, and new ways of collaborating. My hope is that everyone in the MIT community, the Boston area, and beyond soon discovers what a truly amazing place and space we have built, and are still building here, for music and music technology at MIT.”

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source news.mit.edu ’

Tags: A Far CryAI in musicAnna Huangaudience participationAyyub Abdulrezakcellphone musiccomputer musicedXelectronic musicEran EgozyEV6Evan ZiporynFLOW SymphonyFUTURE PHASESLamine TouréMariano SalcedoMatthew CarenMIT Edward and Joyce Linde Music BuildingMIT Media LabMIT music and theater artsMIT Music BuildingMIT music technologyMIT Music Technology and Computation Graduate ProgramMIT performancesOpera of the Future GroupPatricia TangTod Machover
Story Center

Story Center

Related Posts

A cartoon baby with a yellow curl cries loudly, wearing a diaper with the American flag pattern, on a red background.
Music

Stream Vince Staples’ New Album ‘Cry Baby’

June 5, 2026
Taylor Swift, Luke Combs, Leon Thomas & More
Music

Taylor Swift Leads Week’s Best New Music: Friday Music Guide

June 5, 2026
A Black man stands onstage; in the foreground a cellist plays with his back to the camera, and in the background two men work on a set that resembles a small town.
Music

Best things to do this weekend in LA and SoCal: June 5-7

June 5, 2026
BUZZ (B) WHITE.png
Music

Mute the Madness Confront Modern Uncertainty on New Album Echoes Everywhere

June 5, 2026
New Music Friday (02/13/26): Brent Faiyaz, Charli XCX & Central Cee
Music

New Music Friday (06/04/2026): Vince Staples, Lizzo & Taylor Swift

June 5, 2026
Jalen Brunson Says He'd Pay $7,500 to See Michael Jackson Perform Live
Music

Jalen Brunson Says He’d Pay $7,500 to See Michael Jackson Perform Live

June 5, 2026
Next Post
Rajpal Yadav

After Sonu Sood, celebrities and politicians rally behind Rajpal Yadav: Tej Pratap Yadav pledges Rs 11 lakh, KRK offers Rs 10 lakh | Bollywood News

Google News

YouTube TV is finally getting separate plans for Sports, Entertainment and more: what you need to know

Recommended Stories

#celebrity #celebritynews #viral #shorts #celebrities

#celebrity #celebritynews #viral #shorts #celebrities

November 14, 2025
Celebrity Cruises Unveils Entertainment Offerings on Celebrity Xcel

Celebrity Cruises Unveils Entertainment Offerings on Celebrity Xcel

October 15, 2025
Las comadres que hablan con el cuerpo😂

Las comadres que hablan con el cuerpo😂

October 3, 2025
Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Ads

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

A cartoon baby with a yellow curl cries loudly, wearing a diaper with the American flag pattern, on a red background.

Stream Vince Staples’ New Album ‘Cry Baby’

June 5, 2026
Taylor Swift, Luke Combs, Leon Thomas & More

Taylor Swift Leads Week’s Best New Music: Friday Music Guide

June 5, 2026
A rare Edith Wharton story is unearthed about the gap between everyday life and the horrors of WWI | Celebrity News

A rare Edith Wharton story is unearthed about the gap between everyday life and the horrors of WWI | Celebrity News

June 5, 2026

Categories

  • Artists
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Horoscopes
  • Music
  • Royalty
  • Videos

Contact Us

  • Privacy & Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2020 Celebrity.Land

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty

© 2020 Celebrity.Land