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		<title>Cycling 74  &#187;  Topic: Computer Music Journal &#8211; Special Issue on Live Coding &#8211; Call for Submissions</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Jun 2013 13:44:15 +0000</pubDate>
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					<title><![CDATA[Computer Music Journal &#8211; Special Issue on Live Coding &#8211; Call for Submissions]]></title>
					<link>http://cycling74.com/forums/topic/computer-music-journal-special-issue-on-live-coding-call-for-submissions/#post-63169</link>
					<pubDate>Tue, 24 Apr 2012 09:16:54 +0000</pubDate>
					<dc:creator>nickcollins</dc:creator>

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						<![CDATA[
						<p>print apologies for cross-posting</p>
<p>We are excited to announce a call for papers for a special issue of<br />
Computer Music Journal, with a deadline of 21st January 2013, for<br />
publication in Spring of the following year. The issue will be guest<br />
edited by Alex McLean, Julian Rohrhuber and Nick Collins, and will<br />
address themes surrounding live coding practice.</p>
<p>Live coding focuses on a computer musician’s relationship with their<br />
computer. It includes programming a computer as an explicit onstage<br />
act, as a musical prototyping tool with immediate feedback, and also<br />
as a method of collaborative programming. Live coding’s tension<br />
between immediacy and indirectness brings about a mediating role for<br />
computer language within musical interaction. At the same time, it<br />
implies the rewriting of algorithms, as descriptions which concern the<br />
future; live coding may well be the missing link between composition<br />
and improvisation. The proliferation of interpreted and just-in-time<br />
compiled languages for music and the increasing computer literacy of<br />
artists has made such programming interactions a new hotbed of musical<br />
practice and theory. Many musicians have begun to design their own<br />
particular representational extensions to existing general-purpose<br />
languages, or even to design their own live coding languages from<br />
scratch. They have also brought fresh energy to visual programming<br />
language design, and new insights to interactive computation, pushing<br />
at the boundaries through practice-based research. Live coding also<br />
extends out beyond pure music and sound to the general digital arts,<br />
including audiovisual systems, linked by shared abstractions.</p>
<p>2014 happens to be the ten-year anniversary of the live coding<br />
organisation TOPLAP (toplap.org). However, we do not wish to restrict<br />
the remit of the issue to this, and we encourage submissions across a<br />
sweep of emerging practices in computer music performance, creation,<br />
and theory. Live coding research is more broadly about grounding<br />
computation at the verge of human experience, so that work from<br />
computer system design to exposition of live coding concert work is<br />
equally eligible.</p>
<p>Topic suggestions include, but are not limited by:</p>
<p>- Programming as a new form of musical exploration<br />
- Embodiment and linguistic abstraction<br />
- Symbology in music interaction<br />
- Uniting liveness and abstraction in live music<br />
- Bricolage programming in music composition<br />
- Human-Computer Interaction study of live coding<br />
- The psychology of computer music programming<br />
- Measuring live coding and metrics for live performance<br />
- The live coding audience, or live coding without audience<br />
- Visual programming environments for music<br />
- Alternative models of computation in music<br />
- Representing time in interactive programming<br />
- Representing and manipulating history in live performance<br />
- Freedoms, constraints and affordances in live coding environments</p>
<p>Authors should follow all CMJ author guidelines<br />
(<a href="http://www.mitpressjournals.org/page/sub/comj" rel="nofollow">http://www.mitpressjournals.org/page/sub/comj</a>), paying particular<br />
attention to the maximum length of 25 double-spaced pages.</p>
<p>Submissions should be received by 21st January 2013.  All submissions<br />
and queries should be addressed to Alex McLean<br />
<alex .mclean@icsrim.org.uk>.</alex></p>
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