• DocumentCode
    3134683
  • Title

    Developing traditions of music notation and performance on the Web

  • Author

    Ingram, James

  • fYear
    2002
  • fDate
    2002
  • Firstpage
    219
  • Abstract
    High level symbolic music notations and performance practices are all related to particular cultural traditions. For example, Gregorian Chant, Elizabethan Lute music, 19th century Romantic, and 20th century Avant-Garde musics all relate to different philosophies of space and time. A universal standard for music notation or its performance is therefore neither possible nor desirable. The Web should, in contrast, allow aural and written traditions to develop freely and independently. Specialists in particular traditions should be allowed to communicate efficiently with their peers, using scores and recordings which reflect those traditions, and which do not distort the subject matter. Living traditions should be allowed to develop. This paper approaches the problem by isolating and describing concepts shared by all music notations, using the architecture of a proposed, general purpose music editor as a framework. The editor uses nested levels of freely definable symbols and interchangeable software libraries to encapsulate information about each individual notation and performance tradition.
  • Keywords
    Internet; music; software libraries; Web; cultural traditions; freely definable symbols; interchangeable software libraries; music editor; music notation; music performance; Clocks; Computer architecture; Concrete; Electronic music; Humans; Multiple signal classification; Programming profession; Proposals; Software libraries; Synthesizers;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Web Delivering of Music, 2002. WEDELMUSIC 2002. Proceedings. Second International Conference on
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-1623-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/WDM.2002.1176214
  • Filename
    1176214