Professor Eran Egozy co-founded Harmonix Music Systems with the mission of letting everyone in the world experience the joy of making music. While instrumentalists (and vocalists) feel great pleasure from performing, people who have not mastered an instrument do not have access to this great creative experience. Eran will discuss how technology can be used to create virtual performance experiences, drawing on examples from his work at Harmonix and current research at MIT.

This is a free event for MIT faculty, students, and staff. Register Now!

The “delicious joy” of creating and recreating music

Leslie Tilley combines deep experience as a musician with cultural and formal analysis, to see how people refashion music anew.

Seen and heard: The new Edward and Joyce Linde Music Building

Until very recently, Mariano Salcedo, a fourth-year MIT electronic engineering and computer science student majoring in artificial intelligence and decision-making, was planning to apply for a master’s program in computer science at MIT. 

Travels with Rambax

KAOLACK, Senegal – The MIT students have just finished dinner and are crumpling soda cans into trash bins when they get the summons: “Grab your drums, grab your drums, grab your drums …” 

MIT launches new Music Technology and Computation Graduate Program

A new, multidisciplinary MIT graduate program in music technology and computation will feature faculty, labs, and curricula from across the Institute.