KPFA-FM Music Dept. ➔ Synthesized Speech Music by Charles Dodge

Analog Audio


Event Type
Music
Origin
KPFA
Identifier
P.DOD.CHA.01
Program Length
35 min
Dates
| broadcast
| 402 | created
Description
Three compositions for synthesized speech by Charles Dodge. Long before Laurie Anderson and others, made the vocoder a staple of avant-garde performance art, Charles Dodge was experimenting with the first generation of voice synthesis software being developed at such places as the Bell Laboratories and Columbia University. Starting in the early 1970s, with the assistance of Max Matthews and Joseph Olive, both pioneers in computer music, Dodge gained access to Bell Labs computers after hours, and began composing, often using poems by Mark Strand as his jumping off point. Limited to such basic parameters as changing the speed and pitch of the computerized voices, Dodge managed to create a series of playful and surreal pieces, that still engage the active listener even in an age where synthesized speech has become an commonplace part of voice mail systems, mass transit announcements, and much more. In doing so Dodge not only made music with words, he actually explored the very nature of speech itself, while at the same time entertaining, educating, and inspiring a generation of electronic music composers and performers.
Dodge, studied music with Darius Milhaud and Gunther Schuller, receiving his Masters and Doctorate degrees from Columbia University where he also taught in the 1970s. Later he went on to found the Center for Computer Music in New York, and and has taught at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York , and Dartmouth College in New Hampshire.
Genres
Electro-Acoustic / Electronic
Musical Selections
Speech Songs: When I Am With You (1:38) ; He Destroyed Her Image (2:00) ; A Man Sitting In The Cafeteria (1:23) ; The Days Are Ahead (2:05) [texts by Mark Sands] (1972) -- The Story of Our Lives [text by Mark Sands] (1974) (17:00) -- In Celebration [text by Mark Sands] (1975) (10:00)
Subjects
Electronic music
Computer music
Sound poetry
Text-sound compositions
Synthesized speech music
Acknowledgment
Funding for the preservation of this program made possible through a grant by the National Endowment for the Arts.