Tommy Martinez on Sounding Things Out with Machines (sound art + ML + HCI)—February 17 @1PM Eastern
We will send out the Zoom link for the event and all relevant materials to the email addresses provided below.

On Friday, February 17th from 1-2:30PM EST, artist Tommy Martinez will lead a session on his generative sound pieces. His projects often begin with computational research exploring physical sound models and psychoacoustic phenomena. He is interested in algorithmic approaches to music making, simulation, and manifestations of identity, tradition and history in electronic culture. Check out his work on his website, here!

This session will also include a short workshop on web based music composition lesson in p5js. Sound files will be provided by Tommy, but participants are encouraged to bring their own short (1-3 second wav or mp3) sound files to the workshop! We encourage folks to download Audacity (a free, open-source audio-editing program) before the session as well. 

This event is part of If, Then: Technology and Poetics, a collaborative, public, and interdisciplinary virtual working group and workshop series promoting inclusivity and skills-building in creative computation. Check out our website here and get in touch with Carly Schnitzler (cschnitz@live.unc.edu) or Lillian-Yvonne Bertram (lbertram@northeastern.edu) with any questions or suggestions. 

Supported by Carolina Seminars and the Digital Literacy and Communications Lab at UNC.
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What forms of care do you need to attend this session? We are planning to have captioning and will encourage visual descriptions, along with recordings, transcripts, and materials available after the sessions. We will also have breaks built into the schedule. Please let us know if you have other recommendations/requests—our aim is equitable, care-oriented access for all
This session will also include a short workshop on web based music composition lesson in p5js. Sound files will be provided by Tommy, but participants are encouraged to bring their own short (1-3 second wav or mp3) sound files (as many as you want, aim for 3-5) to the workshop!
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