Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics
CCRMA Summer Workshops
Summer 2024 Workshops: CCRMA Summer Workshops Announced! There are a wide variety of offerings, some in person, some on line, and some hybrid. Have a look! More will be announced as they're organized, so check back with us frequently!
[Check out the schedule] [Register for workshops]
There will be opportunities for financial assistance for some workshops - check specific pages for more details.
CCRMA Open House 2024
Upcoming Events
Leslie Famularo on Differentiating and Optimizing an Auditory Model
New software paradigms such as JAX and PyTorch allow one to specify arbitrary computations in a way that can be differentiated. And if we can differentiate a function we can optimize it. Hurray. How can we express an auditory model in a differentiable fashion?
Recent Events
nostalgica utopica futura
In a special performance at Stanford University, Luigi Nono's La lontananza nostalgica utopica futura will be presented by violinist Marco Fusi and Patricia Alessandrini, who will perform the electronics. They will also perform their own homage to Nono, in the form of a brief improvised prelude, entitled Proximity, distance. This performance and its prelude were developed during a residency at the Curtis R. Priem Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC).
Bing Star | The Spatialized Audissey
FREE and Open to the Public | In Person + Livestream
Carolina Santiago - Solo Piano Concert | Engin Daglik's DMA Final Project Presentation
FREE and Open to the Public | In Person + Zoom
Interventions, Installations | Intermedia Workshop
Featuring solo and collaborative works from:
Kimia Koochakzadeh-Yazdi & Pedro Gonzalez
Spark Wu & Ningxin Zhang
Nolan Miranda & Daiki Nakajima
Nick Shaheed & Yuer Liu
Alice Grace & Taiyo Myrthil
Jonathan Laderman & Celeste Betancur
Brian Brown
Garrett Kukier
Past Live Streamed Events
Recent News
Music Gaming and Neuroplasticity at CCRMA
This is Your Brain on Opera
Sound Makers Unite at Stanford
The fun, welcoming event was an amplified (pun intended) meetup, where makers could show off their projects and prototypes to each other. The public was invited to interact with the makers and the instruments and there were several performances throughout the afternoon as well. Read more here...
More than a Stanford concert hall, Bing is a high-tech music research lab
(Stanford News article by Nate Sloan)