Creation of an Electronic Music Studio
In the 1980s, before the computer revolution, the UW–Madison School of Music acquired a smattering of electronic music hardware that is now antiquated. In the intervening years, music professors Daniel Grabois and Mark Hetzler have built small computer-based recording setups, and produced ground-breaking recordings. But experimentation in this area by UW–Madison staff and students has been limited by the expense and space required to assemble equipment that could serve a larger group of musicians.
With UW2020 support, a broad group of music faculty will equip a permanent space in the School of Music with state-of-the-art tools for the production and recording of electro-acoustic music by soloists or collaborative researchers.
The studio will dramatically improve the opportunities to record, which is the coin of the realm of music research. Faculty and graduate students alike will be able to create new kinds of music, different from anything they had played before. Small groups of graduate students can form improvisatory ensembles to produce sounds never before heard — in styles of music that do not yet exist, but lie at the borderlines of many musical styles. The opportunities for faculty and graduate student collaborations would rise. And all of these efforts could lead not only to commercial recordings, but also to smaller scale publications such as iTunes songs, YouTube videos, and SoundCloud postings.
Principal Investigator
- Daniel Grabois
Assistant professor of horn
School of Music
Collaborators
- Mark Hetzler
Professor trombone
School of Music - Stephanie Jutt
Professor of flute
School of Music - Marc Vallon
Professor of bassoon
School of Music
- Soh Hyun Park Altino
Assistant professor of violin
School of Music - Paul Rowe
Professor of voice
School of Music - Jessica Johnson
Professor of piano and piano pedagogy
School of Music - Anthony Di Sanza
Professor of percussion
School of Music
- Stephen Dembski
Emeritus professor of composition
School of Music
- Laura Schwendinger
Professor of composition
School of Music
- Teryl Dobbs
Associate professor of music education
School of Music