Richard Boulanger
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for biographies. (February 2014) |
Richard Boulanger (born 1956) is a composer and professor of "Electronic Production and Design" at Berklee College of Music. He holds a Ph.D. in computer music from the University of California, San Diego, and is associated with computer music gurus Max Mathews and Barry Vercoe. His students include Elaine Walker.
For me, music is a medium through which the inner spiritual essence of all things is revealed and shared. Compositionally, I am interested in extending the voice of the traditional performer through technological means to produce a music which connects with the past, lives in the present and speaks to the future. Educationally, I am interested in helping students see technology as the most powerful instrument for the exploration, discovery, and realization of their essential musical nature – their inner voice.
Boulanger wrote the first vocal composition using the microtonal Bohlen-Pierce scale, "Solemn Song for Evening", which also uses a radio baton. His compositions have appeared on albums including iChamber (Centaur Records, 2003: Virtual Encounters) and Electro-Acoustic Music, Vol. 1 (Neuma, 1990: From Temporal Silence).
Bibliography
- Boulanger (1986). "Toward a New Age of Performance: Reading the Book of Dreams with the Mathews Electronic Violin", Perspectives of New Music 24, no. 2 (Spring–Summer): 130–55. Errata in 25, nos. 1&2 (Winter–Summer 1987): 655.
- Boulanger, ed. (1999) The C Sound Book. ISBN 978-0262522618.
- Boulanger, ed. (2011). The Audio Programming Book. ISBN 978-0262014465.
References
- ^ "Richard Boulanger", Berklee.edu.
- ^ "Dr. Richard Boulanger", CSounds.com.
External links
- "Dr. Richard Boulanger", EPD.Berklee.edu.
- BoulangerLabs.com.
- "The CSound Book: Chapter One", CSounds.com.
- Boulanger's "Solemn Song for Evening" on YouTube (& [1])