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Newspaper reports
From The Melbourne Age, Wednesday 27th July 1960: CSIRAC - the University's giant electronic brain -
has LEARNED TO SING!
From The Melbourne Herald, Friday 15th June 1956: '. . . When CSIRAC began sporting its musical gifts, we jumped on his first intellectual flaw. When he played "Gaudeamus Igitur," the university anthem, it sounded like a refrigerator defrosting in tune. But then, as Professor Cherry said yesterday, "This machine plays better music than a Wurlitzer can calculate a mathematical problem. . . ."
Acknowledgments
The University of Melbourne Computer Science Department has been extremely helpful and supportive, providing access to people and facilities. Thanks are due especially to Peter Thorne and Leon Sterling for this. Thanks to Museum Victoria, especially Catherine Lovelock and Fiona Kinsey who allowed me unfettered access to CSIRAC, now a prized museum object, to achieve the most faithful recreation possible of the music. I am very grateful to the many other people who have helped 'behind the scenes', providing their time, encouragement, expertise and sometimes equipment. These People are; Lawrence Harvey, John Crawford, Doug McCann, Judith Hughes, the Technical Services staff, Warren Burt and Steven Pass. Chris Burton very kindly provided unique information about early British computers through private correspondence and connection with the Computer Conservation Society. Special thanks to Paul Berg for many years of inspirational mentorship and for reviewing this project. This project was very generously assisted and funded by the Australian Commonwealth Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body.
Sources
Interview with Trevor Pearcey, recorded on 1st
October 1996, interview conducted by Steven Pass, Doug McCann and Peter
Thorne. Private correspondence with Chris P. Burton, Computer
Conservation Society. Bird, J. 1999. "Percy Grainger" Sydney,
Australia: Currency Press. Cage, J. 1967. "Silence" Cambridge, Massachusetts,
USA: The MIT Press Chadabe, J. 1997. "Electric Sound the Past and
Promise of Electronic Music" New Jersey, USA: Prentice-Hall, Inc. CSIRAC Archive, The University of Melbourne Computer Science Department. Dean, J. 1997. "CSIRAC Australia's First Computer" Killara, New South Wales, Australia: Australian Computer Museum Society. Hiller, L. A. and Isaacson, L. M. 1959. "Experimental Music" New York, USA: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc. Manning, P. 1993. "Electronic and Computer Music" Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. McCann, D. and Thorne, P. 2000. "The Last of the First: CSIRAC: Australia's First Computer" Melbourne, Victoria, Australia: Melbourne University Computer Science. Pierce, J. 1995. "Recollections by John Pierce" Part of "The Historical CD of Digital Sound Synthesis. Computer Music Currents 13" Mainz, Germany: Schott Wergo Music Media GmbH. Roads, C. 1980. "Interview with Max Matthews" Computer Music Journal 4(4). Reprinted in C. Roads, ed. 1989. "The Music Machine" Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: The MIT Press Roads, C. 1996. "The Computer Music Tutorial" Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: The MIT Press Williams, M. R. 1997. "A History of Computing Technology" California, USA: IEEE Computer Society Press.
Links
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Created: Mon June 26 18:47:45 EST 2000 Last update: Wed June 28 01:26:01 EST 2000 Maintainer: Paul Doornbusch pauld@koncon.nl Authorised by: David Hornsby djh@cs.mu.oz.au Copyright © 2000 Paul Doornbusch. All Rights Reserved.