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Music Technology Information

Music technology is a term that refers to all forms of technology involved with the musical arts, particularly the use of electronic devices and computer software to facilitate playback, recording, composition, storage, and performance. This subject is taught at many educational levels including k-12 through college and university. Furthermore, music technology encompasses the technical and scientific aspects of music such as acoustic science, programming, music psychology & sociology, and music industry business practices. In many contemporary experimental musical instruments new music technology inventions are being used to create new sound possibilities.

The concept of music technology is intimately connected to both musical and technological creativity. People are constantly striving to devise new forms of expression through music, and physically creating new devices to enable them to do so. Because of this, our definition of what music technology encompasses must continually expand. Although the term is now most commonly used in reference to modern electronic devices, such as a monome, the piano and guitar are also examples of music technology. In the computer age the ontological range of music technology has greatly increased. It may now be mechanical, electronic, software or indeed even purely conceptual.

Sequencer software is perhaps the most widely-used form of software music technology. Such programs allow the user to record audio or MIDI musical sequences, which then may be organized along a time line. Musical segments can be copied and duplicated ad infinitum, edited and processed using a variety of audio effects. Music Technology includes many forms of music reproduction. Music technology and sound technology both refer to the use of sound engineering in a commercial or leisurely manner. The two may sometimes be classed as the same but actually refer to different fields of work, the names of which are self explanatory but where sound engineering may refer primarily to the use of sound technology for media logical purposes.

External links

· · Music technology
Sound recording Multitrack recording · Binaural recording · Microphone · Music sequencer · Mixing console · Outboard gear · EQ
Recording media Gramophone record · Magnetic tape · Compact Cassette · Compact Disc · DAT · Hard disk · MiniDisc · MP3
Analog recording Reel-to-reel audio recording · 8-track cartridge · Amplifier · Analog vs. digital · Cassette player · Experimental musical instrument · Loudspeaker · Phonograph · Pianola · Tape recorder
Digital audio Digital recording · Digital signal processing · MIDI
Live music PA system · Radio · Reverberation · Effects unit · Guitar amplifier · Guitar effects
Electronic music Synthesizer · Sampler · Music workstation · Theremin · Electronic musical instrument · Sound module
Software Digital audio editor · Digital audio workstation · Software synthesizer · Software sampler · Software effect processor · Scorewriter
People and organisations Audio Engineering Society · Lejaren Hiller · Max Mathews · Robert Moog · SMPTE
Related topics Car audio · Home audio · High fidelity · Home cinema · NIME

Categories: Music technology

 

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