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<HTML><HEAD><TITLE>See what the Press has to say...</TITLE></HEAD>
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<h2>
See what the Press has to say about us!!
</h2>
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<br>
<p>
<hr>
<p>
<h3>Yahlin Chang, Newsweek, July 29, 1996</h3>
<ul>
<p>
Machover unveils his "hyperinstruments" on a grand scale this
week with the "Brain Opera." Part concert, part interactive
fun house, it debuts in New York at
Lincoln Center's much-anticipated Festival '96, and will travel to a
dozen cities including Chicago, Paris and Tokyo. Don't expect a plot,
sets or the fat lady. And caffeinate before you go, because
you'll hav to work. The opera's not finished; each night
the audience -- both live and online -- will help compose it.
</ul>
<p>
<hr>
<p>
<h3>The Village Voice, July 23, 1996</h3>
<ul>
If most operas stem from the heart, Tod Machover has aimed higher,
at least anatomically. MIT's star musical technohead, Machover has
a track record of science fiction theater...now, spurred by the vision
of brain activity advanced by artificial intelligence expert
Marvin Minsky, he's brought his computerized instruments together
for a multimedia extravaganza available both live and via the
Internet.
</ul>
<p>
<hr>
<p>
<h3>The New Yorker, July 22, 1996</h3>
<ul>
<p>
"Brain Opera" is an homage of sorts to the work of Machover's mentor,
Marvin Minsky, the Yoda-like mega-intellectual who has spent the
past forty-odd years examining the relationship between music,
our brains, and society. Minsky often asks questions like, Why
do we spend so much time on music when it has little
or no practical value?
<p>
"I think one of the big taboos is this kind of 'right-brain, left-brain'
thing," Machover explains. "One of the things that 'Brain Opera'
puts on the table is that thinking and feeling are a lot closer than
we ever thought--that logic ain't so logical."
</ul>
<p>
<hr>
<p>
<h3>New York, July 22, 1996</h3>
<ul>
<p>
An opera whose conceptual dimensions make Wagner seem a miniaturist,
whose production utilizes some of the world's most dazzling
media technology, and whose cast includes professional and
amateur musicians, playing in towns and cities around the country--at
the same time. Machover sits between the worlds of futurist new
music and hyper-advanced technology--the perfect person to
shepherd serious music into the cyber age.
</ul>
<p>
<hr>
<p>
<h3>K. Robert Schwarz, The New York Times, July 21, 1996</h3>
<ul>
<p>
Mr. Machover, 42, directs the Experimental Media Facility at M.I.T., where
he acts as an American counterpart to his onetime mentor Pierre Boulez,
even though his music owes as much to jazz and rock as to
Serialism. ....
<p>
"Brain Opera" is something altogether different. "It does just about everything
differently than a traditional opera," Mr. Machover said, and
he was not exaggerating.
</ul>
<p>
<hr>
<p>
<h3>Herbert Muschamp, The New York Times, July 19, 1996</h3>
<ul>
<p>
Lincoln Center Festival '96, the performing-arts jamboree
that opens on Monday, should at least offer the charm of contrast.
The three-week festival, organized by John Rockwell, features
works by Robert Wilson, Merce Cunningham, Tod Machover, and other
famously progressive artists.
</ul>
<p>
<hr>
<p>
<h3>Edward Rothstein, The New York Times, May 27, 1996</h3>
<ul>
<p>
Mr. Machover, standing in one corner, holds a wired baton
in the air, conducting an invisible synthesized chorus
whose sounds react to his gestures.
<p>
These are prototypes, works in progress, for a huge musical
composition Mr. Machover is calling "The Brain Opera," which
will be performed at Lincoln Center in July. It
requires a forest of computers, fast interaction with the Internet
and software that is state of the art; much of it is still being
refined. It will be a piece of participatory musical theatre,
a high-tech arcade, a celebration of technological
possibility and an attempt to demonstrate a theory of
intelligence.
</ul>
<p>
<hr>
<p>
<h3>WIRED, May, 1996</h3>
<ul>
<p align="center">
Fantastic Voyage
<p>
Tod Machover, a composer and professor at the MIT Media Lab,
wants to do for musical performance what AI guru Marvin Minsky did for
cognitive science -- blow it wide open.
<p>
In cognitive science, "Minsky showed that there are a lot of
relatively dumb 'agents' that work together"
to coordinate thinking, explains Machover. Machover is using
that idea to create Brain Opera, a musical experience in
which audience members -- instead of a single composer -- help
drive the sound.
</ul>
<p>
<hr>
<p>
<h3>The Financial Times, Monday, November 27, 1995.
</h3>
<ul>
<P align="center">
Brain Opera ushers in a new aria.
<p>
Machover's dream is to use technology to turn everyone into a musician. "I
was reading this 1965 article by [virtuoso pianist] Glenn Gould," says
Machover, "and I came across a part in which Gould says that in the ideal
world, people should be able to attune performance recordings of his work to
their own preferences.
<p>
"'The audience would be the artist and their life would be art', were Gould's
words. And it struck me that that is what I'm trying to do: turn audiences
into artists."
</ul>
<p>
<hr>
<p>
<h3>Popular Science, October, 1996</h3>
<ul>
<p>
In the long term, Machover aims to do more than
concoct neat interactive gadgets. He wants to
transform the nature of performance itself. All
of Machover's ambitions will come together in the Brain
Opera, his biggest, most outrageous, and most mysterious
project to date. Big, because it will premiere at
New York's Lincoln Center Festival next summer, then become part of
the InterOpera, a yearly music festival in Tokyo.
Outrageous, because "it will be unlike anything the
world has seen, heard -- or interacted with -- before,"
Machover promises. Somehow, you believe him when he says
this. Mysterious, because even Machover isn't sure what the
end musical result will be.
</ul>
<p>
<hr>
<p>
<h3>Opera News, August, 1992</h3>
<ul>
<p>
Machover is a musico-techno bilingual who seems born
to steer music into the twenty-first century. He and
his MIT buddies are working in a field so young that it
is analogous to the dawn of the automobile, when inventors,
not yet totally grasping the implications of their breakthroughs,
were basically putting engines on bicycle or wagon chassis.
As in early television, which was little more
than radio with pictures, Machover not only is making
music for a new era, he is scrambling to invent new
instruments and performance spaces to fit the music as he
goes along.
</ul>