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  1. Programming (music) Programming is a form of music production and performance using electronic devices and computer software, such as sequencers and workstations or hardware synthesizers, sampler and sequencers, to generate sounds of musical instruments. These musical sounds are created through the use of music coding languages.

  2. Program music or programmatic music is a type of instrumental art music that attempts to musically render an extramusical narrative. The narrative itself might be offered to the audience through the piece's title, or in the form of program notes, inviting imaginative correlations with the music. A well-known example is Sergei Prokofiev 's Peter ...

  3. Apr 15, 2010 · computer music, history, language, programming. Abstract. Computer music now has a practical history of more than fifty years, though Ada Lovelace had anticipated applications in 1843. An involvement of computers in music, with their potential for fantastical automations, necessarily saw the use of programming languages.

    • Wang, G.
    • A History of Programming and Music
    • Book Chapter
    • 2008
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  5. Jan 1, 2008 · In 1968, MUSIC V broke the mold by being the first computer music programming system to be implemented in FORTRAN , a high-level general-purpose programming language (often considered the first).

    • Ge Wang
  6. Sep 28, 2011 · The programming language acts as a mediator between human intention and the corresponding bits and instructions that make sense to a computer. It is the most general and yet the most intimate and precise tool for instructing computers. Programs exist on many levels, ranging from assembler code (extremely low level) to high-level scripting ...

  7. 20.9. 1950s: The First Synthesis Language. Max Mathews, working at the acoustics research department Bell Laboratories in New Jersey, conducted experiments in analog to digital conversion (ADC) and digital to analog conversion (DAC) 1957: Music I is used on an IBM 704 to render compositions by Newman Guttman.

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