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- Newsgroups: rec.music.compose
- Path: sparky!uunet!caen!umeecs!zip.eecs.umich.edu!fields
- From: fields@zip.eecs.umich.edu (Matthew Fields)
- Subject: GEMS 0
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.211205.26578@zip.eecs.umich.edu>
- Sender: news@zip.eecs.umich.edu (Mr. News)
- Organization: University of Michigan EECS Dept., Ann Arbor, MI
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 21:12:05 GMT
- Lines: 83
-
- PROLOGUE
-
- Computer networking is one of the amazing feats of engineering of the
- late 20th century. Vast, all-encompassing networks now make it possible
- for data to be shared among people world-wide. Three basic services
- are now commonly available:
-
- 1) Electronic mail: person-to-person text communication. A message I type
- here in Michigan can be read on a computer screen in New Zealand in minutes.
-
- 2) FTP (File Transfer Protocol): general data-sharing. Libraries of
- programs and other data have been created in various parts of the world
- in such a way that any user can browse or copy these programs to their
- own computers at high speeds.
-
- 3) Network News. Of the tens of thousands of computers networked worldwide,
- some thousands of them form the backbone of a system for mass-distribution of
- information in a newsletter format. Any user can read this news, and many
- users can post a news article to the closest participating computer, which
- in turn mails copies of the article to other computers. Vast amounts of
- information is shared this way, and eventually, some of it has to be
- retired or deleted.
-
- To make network news more manageable, it is grouped heirarchically into
- /Newsgroups/. New newsgroups are created when enough people agitate
- for the existence of them. Currently, most sites carry over a thousand
- newsgroups.
-
- In the summer of 1992, the newsgroup <rec.music.compose> was proposed
- by Joshua Barinstein, as a forum for the discussion of all kinds of
- musical composition. The discussion regarding its creation centered
- on the issues: were the communication needs of composers being served
- by newsgroups devoted to musical performance or synthesizers, and
- could these needs be met by these groups without the overhead of a new
- newsgroup. Several people argued convincingly that mixing apples with
- oranges would force many participating computers to perform the
- redundant job of sorting composition articles from the others, and so
- the overhead of using existing newsgroups would be substantial. But
- the more obvious concern was that composers would not use newsgroups
- not devoted to composition. I participated in that discussion as an
- advocate of the group.
-
- In July 1992, a vote was taken, in which the idea received
- overwhelming support, and in August 1992, <rec.music.compose> came
- into being. After a rocky start in which the participants worked
- to distinguish the group from existing groups, some heavy discussion
- of the complex relationship between compositional craft and intuition
- emerged. In that climate, I posted a short message offering to write
- a series of educational articles regarding bits of compositional
- wisdom that had been passed on to me over the years, with the
- following proposed contents:
-
- 1) Drama and Climax
- 2) About Parallel Fifths
- 3) Shortcuts for Theory Homework
- 4) Strategies for Canon and Fugue
- 5) About Serial Materials
-
- In the discussion that followed, the phrase "gems of wisdom" became a
- sort of /leitmotif/, so the idea hatched in my mind to use the word
- GEMS as the title of the article series, as a way of saying "these are
- the articles that I promised." A variety of people wrote news articles
- or sent me electronic mail strongly encouraging me to write and post
- the series.
-
- The readership of the group ranged from musically-illiterate novices
- to top-notch musical scholars, making every kind of music under the
- sun, from pop songs to serial music to musical happenings and so
- forth. For me, this posed some challenges, because, while my articles
- had to be clear and readable to a variety of novices, the slightest
- misrepresentation or oversimplification could lead to a flurry of
- corrective and explanatory articles, at great expense to the computer
- network. On top of this, I wanted to make sure that my articles would
- be of interest specifically to composers, but at the same time, be
- appealing to a wide variety of composers. My prose style had to be at
- once rather precise and quite informal, in keeping with the informal
- nature of computer network news.
-
- In writing these articles, I am indebted to the many teachers who have
- prodded me towards quality work, especially Richard Hoffmann of
- Oberlin College, Ross Bauer, Alfred Lerdahl, and Leslie Bassett of the
- University of Michigan.
-
-