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My message is to forget about dichotomies. The Brain Opera is an opera, even if it does not tell a story in the usual way. It is a psychological journey with voices - so I do consider it an opera.
Tod Machover
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Tod Machover
Age: 70
Born: 1953
Born: November 24
Composer
Music Pedagogue
Pianist
Mount Vernon
New York
Stories
Messages
Doe
Consider
Dichotomies
Even
Journey
Dichotomy
Way
Brain
Opera
Forget
Usual
Story
Voices
Voice
Psychological
Tell
Message
More quotes by Tod Machover
I started thinking, my gosh, all this sophisticated software for measuring how Yo-Yo plays, and how he moves and this technique of the bow, I should be able to use similar techniques for measuring the way anybody moves, and so somebody who is not a professional or a trained musician, I should be able to make a musical environment for them.
Tod Machover
My work on hyper instruments started with simple instruments, like the piano.
Tod Machover
I had grown up and gone to high school in New York, so I wanted to get out of the east coast.
Tod Machover
There's just an incredibly rich and interesting relationship between our listening to music and the way our minds engage.
Tod Machover
The one obvious thing is that the devices are so good now that you can also see their limitations extremely well.
Tod Machover
Music seems to stimulate more parts of our mind than almost every other activity. It combines more parts of our minds. It synchronizes our minds. It allows people in groups to do a non-verbal immediate activity together.
Tod Machover
I love the cello, I love the physical sense of an instrument that's about the size of your body that vibrates enough that even if you play an open string, you feel it.
Tod Machover
I think from age 13, 14, 15, I thought, yes, this rich studio produced music is the future, but it can't be the future to go run away into the recording studio. How can we take that kind of complexity and richness and make it possible for people to touch it and play it live. That's what hyperinstruments are.
Tod Machover
I've done a lot of operas. I've probably done more different kind of operas than anybody.
Tod Machover
The Beatles realized that what they were making in the studio could never be performed. And they had already given up on performing because there were too many screaming fans and they were playing in larger and larger venues so they couldn't even hear what they were playing, it just wasn't any fun any more.
Tod Machover
I almost never these days sit down with a CD or my laptop and just listen to a piece with a score. I probably would do that while I'm exercising.
Tod Machover
Any Beatles song is perfect. It gets to you right away.
Tod Machover
I think in many ways, the texture of technology actually diminishes human beings. It doesn't augment them.
Tod Machover
I went to the University of California, Santa Cruz for a year, which turned out to be a really vibrant, very intensive intellectual atmosphere where you could do a lot of aspect of music without it being a conservatory. And that's why I went there.
Tod Machover
I'd studied piano first and switched over to cello when I was about seven. I played mostly chamber and solo classical music. I got really involved with rock music when I was a teenager. I wired up my cello.
Tod Machover
I like the idea of imagining a sound and feeling a sound and then having it come out through your body, through an instrument. That's an important way to make music.
Tod Machover
One of my interests in music has always been what it means, why it affects us the way it does.
Tod Machover
I have a big barn that I converted to my music studio, so I go there early in the morning and the first thing I do is rowing. And that's when I listen to a lot of music.
Tod Machover
The English learned, in my view, how to use harmony much earlier than the French or the Italians, or the Germans.
Tod Machover
Nobody talks about music as having intrinsic meaning, how it engages the mind.
Tod Machover