Can a computer program produce classical music compositions that rival the works of Bach or Mozart?
Emmy was once the worlds most advanced artificially intelligent composer, and because hed managed to breathe a sort of life into her, he became a modern-day musical Dr. Frankenstein. She produced thousands of scores in the style of classical heavyweights, scores so impressive that classical music scholars failed to identify them as computer-created. Cope attracted praise from musicians and computer scientists, but his creation raised troubling questions: If a machine could write a Mozart sonata every bit as good as the originals, then what was so special about Mozart? And was there really any soul behind the great works, or were Beethoven and his ilk just clever mathematical manipulators of notes?Copes answers not much, and yes made some people very angry. He was so often criticized for these views that colleagues nicknamed him The Tin Man, after the Wizard of Oz character without a heart.
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Finally, Copes program could divine what made Bach sound like Bach and create music in that style. It broke rules just as Bach had broken them, and made the result sound musical. It was as if the software had somehow captured Bachs spirit and it performed just as well in producing new Mozart compositions and Shakespeare sonnets. One afternoon, a few years after hed begun work on Emmy, Cope clicked a button and went out for a sandwich, and she spit out 5,000 beautiful, artificial Bach chorales, work that wouldve taken him several lifetimes to produce by hand.
Although the article is fascinating, I must confess that my primary reason for posting about it was to provoke a rantand defense of Bachfrom David Goldman.
(Via: Kottke )