Charles Dodge (composer)

Charles Dodge ( born June 5, 1942 in Ames, Iowa, United States) is an American composer.

Dodge studied from 1960 to 1964 at the University of Iowa and to 1968 at Columbia University in New York City with Otto Luening, Jack Beeson Hamilton and Chou Wen-chung. In addition, he worked with Vladimir Ussachevski with electronic music. He is an instructor at Columbia University and works at the IBM research center in the field of computer music. In the work of Speech song of 1972, he experimented with synthetic speech.

In addition to orchestral works Dodge created compositions for various instruments with piano accompaniment, a work for three trombones, two pianos and percussion as well as works for digital audio tape.

He was awarded the SEAMUS Lifetime Achievement Award in 1996.

Works

  • Changes
  • Earth's Magnetic Field, 1970
  • Speech Songs, 1972
  • In Celebration, 1975
  • Synthesized Voices, 1978
  • Any Resemblance Is Purely Coincidental, 1980
  • The Waves 1984
  • Viola Elegy, 1987
  • Violin Etudes, 1993
  • Fades dissolves Fizzles, 1996

Writings

  • Ch Dogde, Thomas A. Jerse Computer Music: Synthesis, Composition, and Performance
  • Composer of classical music ( 20th century)
  • American composer
  • Born in 1942
  • Man
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