James Dashow Explained

James Dashow (born November 7, 1944,[1] in Chicago, Illinois)[2] is an American composer of electro-acoustic music, instrumental music and opera.[3]

Life and career

Dashow was born in 1944, outside of Chicago. His musical studies began in high school with Horace Reisberg; his principal teachers at the university level were J. K. Randall, Arthur Berger and Seymour Shifrin. In 1969, Dashow went to Italy on a Fulbright Fellowship to complete his studies with Goffredo Petrassi. For many years, he studied the music of Luigi Dallapiccola independently.

One of the first to compose music for digital audio synthesis ("computer music"), Dashow was invited by Graziano (Giuliano) Tisato to work at the computer center of the University of Padua, where he created the first computer music compositions in Italy. He was the first vice president of the International Computer Music Association, has taught at MIT and Princeton University, and continues to actively hold master classes, lectures and concerts in Europe and North America. In 2003 he was composer-in-residence at the 12th Annual Florida Electroacoustic Music Festival in Gainesville, Florida.[4]

For several years he and coproduced a weekly contemporary music program for RAI. He is the author of the MUSIC30 language for digital sound synthesis, and invented the Dyad System, a method that both integrates pitch structure based on dyads into electronic sounds as well as develops the pitch structure itself in terms of dyadic elaborations.

Following on his extensive use of audio spatialization as an integral part of the compositional process, Dashow composed the first opera designed to be performed in a planetarium (Archimedes), taking advantage of the depth projection capabilities of the digital planetarium projectors and the multichannel audio systems that together provide a full immersion theatrical experience. He continues to develop the idea of a double approach to spatialization, through the complementary concepts of movement space, and movement space.

His most important recognitions include the Prix Magistere at Bourges in 2000, Guggenheim (1989) and Koussevitzky Foundation (1998) grants, and in 2011 the Fondazione CEMAT[5] distinguished career award Il CEMAT per la Musica in recognition of his outstanding contributions to electro-acoustic music.

Principal compositions

Bibliography

Dashow's writings include:

Awards and recognition

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Famous Birthdays on 7th November . History Orb . January 7, 2013.
  2. Web site: James Dashow. Classical-composers.org . October 1, 2003 . February 21, 2014.
  3. [Nicolas Slonimsky|Slonimsky, Nicolas]
  4. http://arts.ufl.edu/composition/femf/fest12prg.html "April 3–5, 2003 – University of Florida – Composer-in-Residence, James Dashow"
  5. Web site: Federazione CEMAT – Composers . Cematitalia.it . January 19, 2014.
  6. Web site: Le Tracce di Kronos, i Passi by James Dashow for clarinet, electronic sounds and dance on Vimeo . Vimeo.com . September 15, 2011 . February 21, 2014.
  7. [Allan Kozinn|Kozinn, Allan]
  8. Web site: Federazione CEMAT – 2011 . Cematitalia.it . January 19, 2014.
  9. Web site: Society for Electroacoustic Music . Cibulka.com . November 21, 1999 . January 19, 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150923203319/http://www.cibulka.com/musnova/1.htm . September 23, 2015 .
  10. Web site: Prix Ars Electronica. Ars Electronica. January 19, 2014.