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Magazine Feature Story

February 22, 2010

Triumph of the Cyborg Composer

David Cope’s software creates beautiful, original music. Why are people so angry about that?


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The office looks like the aftermath of a surrealistic earthquake, as if David Cope’s brain has spewed out decades of memories all over the carpet, the door, the walls, even the ceiling. Books and papers, music scores and magazines are all strewn about in ragged piles. A semi-functional Apple Power Mac 7500 (discontinued April 1, 1996) sits in the corner, its lemon-lime monitor buzzing. Drawings filled with concepts for a never-constructed musical-radio-space telescope dominate half of one wall. Russian dolls and an exercise bike, not to mention random pieces from homemade board games, peek out from the intellectual rubble. Above, something like 200 sets of wind chimes from around the world hang, ringing oddly congruent melodies.

And in the center, the old University of California, Santa Cruz, emeritus professor reclines in his desk chair, black socks pulled up over his pants cuffs, a thin mustache and thick beard lending him the look of an Amish grandfather.

It was here, half a dozen years ago, that Cope put Emmy to sleep. She was just a software program, a jumble of code he’d originally dubbed Experiments in Musical Intelligence (EMI, hence “Emmy”). Still — though Cope struggles not to anthropomorphize her — he speaks of Emmy wistfully, as if she were a deceased child.

Emmy was once the world’s most advanced artificially intelligent composer, and because he’d 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?

Cope’s 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. For a time, such condemnation fueled his creativity, but eventually, after years of hemming and hawing, Cope dragged Emmy into the trash folder.

This month, he is scheduled to unveil the results of a successor effort that’s already generating the controversy and high expectations that Emmy once drew. Dubbed “Emily Howell,” the daughter program aims to do what many said Emmy couldn’t: create original, modern music. Its compositions are innovative, unique and — according to some in the small community of listeners who’ve heard them performed live — superb.

Sample of Emily Howell — Track 1

Click here to listen without Quicktime

Sample of Emily Howell — Track 2

Click here to listen without Quicktime

With Emily Howell, Cope is, once again, challenging the assumptions of artists and philosophers, exposing revered composers as unknowing plagiarists and opening the door to a world of creative machines good enough to compete with human artists. But even Cope still wonders whether his decades of innovative, thought-provoking research have brought him any closer to his ultimate goal: composing an immortal, life-changing piece of music.

Cope’s earliest memory is looking up at the underside of a grand piano as his mother played. He began lessons at the age of 2, eventually picking up the cello and a range of other instruments, even building a few himself. The Cope family often played “the game” — his mother would put on a classical record, and the children would try to divine the period, the style, the composer and the name of works they’d read about but hadn’t heard. The music of masters like Rachmaninov and Stravinsky instilled in him a sense of awe and wonder.

Nothing, though, affected Cope like Tchaikovsky‘s Romeo and Juliet, which he first heard around age 12. Its unconventional chord changes and awesome Sturm und Drang sound gave him goose bumps. From then on, he had only one goal: writing a piece that some day, somewhere, would move some child the same way Tchaikovsky moved him. “That, just simply, was the orgasm of my life,” Cope says.

He begged his parents to pay for the score, brought it home and translated it to piano; he studied intensely and bought theory books, divining, scientifically, what made it work. It was then he knew he had to become a composer.

Cope sailed through music schooling at Arizona State University and the University of Southern California, and by the mid-1970s, he had settled into a tenured position at Miami University of Ohio’s prestigious music department. His compositions were performed in Carnegie Hall and The Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, and internationally from Lima, Peru, to Bialystok, Poland. He built a notable electronic music studio and toured the country, wowing academics with demonstrations of the then-new synthesizer. He was among the foremost academic authorities on the experimental compositions of the 1960s, a period during which a fired-up jet engine and sounds derived from placing electrodes on plants were considered music.

David Cope in his home office. Click the photo to view of his unique workspace. (Catherine Karnow)

When Cope moved to UC Santa Cruz in 1977 to take a position in its music department, he could’ve put his career on autopilot and been remembered as a composer and author. Instead, a brutal case of composer’s block sent him on a different path.

In 1980, Cope was commissioned to write an opera. At the time, he and his wife, Mary (also a Santa Cruz music faculty member), were supporting four children, and they’d quickly spent the commission money on household essentials like food and clothes. But no matter what he tried, the right notes just wouldn’t come. He felt he’d lost all ability to make aesthetic judgments. Terrified and desperate, Cope turned to computers.

Along with his work on synthesis, or using machines to create sounds, Cope had dabbled in the use of software to compose music. Inspired by the field of artificial intelligence, he thought there might be a way to create a virtual David Cope software to create new pieces in his style.

The effort fit into a long tradition of what would come to be called algorithmic composition. Algorithmic composers use a list of instructions — as opposed to sheer inspiration — to create their works. During the 18th century, Joseph Haydn and others created scores for a musical dice game called Musikalisches Würfelspiel, in which players rolled dice to determine which of 272 measures of music would be played in a certain order. More recently, 1950s-era University of Illinois researchers Lejaren Hiller and Leonard Isaacson programmed stylistic parameters into the Illiac computer to create the Illiac Suite, and Greek composer Iannis Xenakis used probability equations. Much of modern popular music is a sort of algorithm, with improvisation (think guitar solos) over the constraints of simple, prescribed chord structures.

Few of Cope’s major works, save a dalliance with Navajo-style compositions, had strayed far from classical music, so he wasn’t a likely candidate to rely on software to write. But he did have an engineer’s mind, composing using note-card outlines and a level of planning that’s rare among free-spirited musicians. He even claims to have created his first algorithmic composition in 1955, instigated by the singing of wind over guide wires on a radio tower.

Cope emptied Santa Cruz’s libraries of books on artificial intelligence, sat in on classes and slowly learned to program. He built simple rules-based software to replicate his own taste, but it didn’t take long before he realized the task was too difficult. He turned to a more realistic challenge: writing chorales (four-part vocal hymns) in the style of Johann Sebastian Bach, a childhood favorite. After a year’s work, his program could compose chorales at the level of a C-student college sophomore. It was correctly following the rules, smoothly connecting chords, but it lacked vibrancy. As AI software, it was a minor triumph. As a method of producing creative music, it was awful.

Cope wrestled with the problem for months, almost giving up several times. And then one day, on the way to the drug store, Cope remembered that Bach wasn’t a machine — once in a while, he broke his rules for the sake of aesthetics. The program didn’t break any rules; Cope hadn’t asked it to.

The best way to replicate Bach’s process was for the software to derive his rules — both the standard techniques and the behavior of breaking them. Cope spent months converting 300 Bach chorales into a database, note by note. Then he wrote a program that segmented the bits into digital objects and reassembled them the way Bach tended to put them together.

The results were a great improvement. Yet as Cope tested the recombinating software on Bach, he noticed that the music would often wander and lacked an overall logic. More important, the output seemed to be missing some ineffable essence.

Again, Cope hit the books, hoping to discover research into what that something was. For hundreds of years, musicologists had analyzed the rules of composition at a superficial level. Yet few had explored the details of musical style; their descriptions of terms like “dynamic,” for example, were so vague as to be unprogrammable. So Cope developed his own types of musical phenomena to capture each composer’s tendencies — for instance, how often a series of notes shows up, or how a series may signal a change in key. He also classified chords, phrases and entire sections of a piece based on his own grammar of musical storytelling and tension and release: statement, preparation, extension, antecedent, consequent. The system is analogous to examining the way a piece of writing functions. For example, a word may be a noun in preparation for a verb, within a sentence meant to be a declarative statement, within a paragraph that’s a consequent near the conclusion of a piece.

Finally, Cope’s 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 Bach’s spirit — and it performed just as well in producing new Mozart compositions and Shakespeare sonnets. One afternoon, a few years after he’d 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 would’ve taken him several lifetimes to produce by hand.

When Emmy’s Bach pieces were first performed, at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1987, they were met with stunned silence. Two years later, a series of performances at the Santa Cruz Baroque Festival was panned by a music critic — two weeks before the performance. When Cope played “the game” in front of an audience, asking which pieces were real Bach and which were Emmy-written Bach, most people couldn’t tell the difference. Many were angry; few understood the point of the exercise.

Cope tried to get Emmy a recording contract, but classical record companies said, “We don’t do contemporary music,” and contemporary record companies said the opposite. When he finally did land a deal, no musician would play the music. He had to record it with a Disklavier (a modern player piano), a process so taxing he nearly suffered a nervous breakdown.

Though musicians and composers were often skeptical, Cope soon attracted worldwide notice, especially from scientists interested in artificial intelligence and the small, promising field called artificial creativity. Other “AC” researchers have written programs that paint pictures; that tell Mexican folk tales or write detective novels; and that come up with funny jokes. They have varying goals, though most seek to better understand human creativity by modeling it in a machine.

To many in the AC community, including the University of Sussex’s Margaret Boden, doyenne of the field, Emmy was an incredible accomplishment. There’s a test, named for World War II-era British computer scientist Alan Turing, that’s a simple check for so-called artificial intelligence: whether or not a person interacting with a machine and a human can tell the difference. Given its success in “the game,” it could be argued that Emmy passed the Turing Test.

Cope had taken an unconventional approach. Many artificial creativity programs use a more sophisticated version of the method Cope first tried with Bach. It’s called intelligent misuse — they program sets of rules, and then let the computer introduce randomness. Cope, however, had stumbled upon a different way of understanding creativity.

In his view, all music — and, really, any creative pursuit — is largely based on previously created works. Call it standing on the shoulders of giants; call it plagiarism. Everything we create is just a product of recombination.

In Cope’s fascinating hovel of a home office on a Wednesday afternoon, I ask him how exactly he knows that’s true. Just because he built a program that can write music using his model, how can he be so certain that that’s the way man creates?

Cope offers a simple thought experiment: Put aside the idea that humans are spiritually and creatively endowed, because we’ll probably never fully be able to understand that. Just look at the zillions of pieces of music out there.

“Where are they going to come up with sounds that they themselves create without hearing them first?” he asks. “If they’re hearing them for the first time, what’s the author of them? Is it birds, is it airplane sounds?”

Of course, some composers probably have taken dictation from birds. Yet the most likely explanation, Cope believes, is that music comes from other works composers have heard, which they slice and dice subconsciously and piece together in novel ways. How else could a style like classical music last over three or four centuries?

To prove his point, Cope has even reverse-engineered works by famous composers, tracing the tropes, phrases and ideas back to compositions by their forebears.

“Nobody’s original,” Cope says. “We are what we eat, and in music, we are what we hear. What we do is look through history and listen to music. Everybody copies from everybody. The skill is in how large a fragment you choose to copy and how elegantly you can put them together.”

Cope’s claims, taken to their logical conclusions, disturb a lot of people. One of them is Douglas Hofstadter, a Pulitzer Prize-winning cognitive scientist at Indiana University and a reluctant champion of Cope’s work. As Hofstadter has recounted in dozens of lectures around the globe during the past two decades, Emmy really scares him.

The ancient Apple work station where Cope refines his music. (Catherine Karnow)

Like many arts aficionados, Hofstadter views music as a fundamental way for humans to communicate profound emotional information. Machines, no matter how sophisticated their mathematical abilities, should not be able to possess that spiritual power. As he wrote in Virtual Music, an anthology of debates about Cope’s research, Hofstadter worries Emmy proves that “things that touch me at my deepest core — pieces of music most of all, which I have always taken as direct soul-to-soul messages — might be effectively produced by mechanisms thousands if not millions of times simpler than the intricate biological machinery that gives rise to a human soul.”

I ask Cope whether Emmy bothers him. This is a man who averages about four daily hours of hardcore music listening, who’s touched so deeply by a handful of notes on the piano as to shut his eyes in reverie.

“I can understand why it’s an issue if you’ve got an extremely romanticized view of what art is,” he says. “But Bach peed, and he shat, and he had a lot of kids. We’re all just people.”

As Cope sees it, Bach merely had an extraordinary ability to manipulate notes in a way that made people who heard his music have intense emotional reactions. He describes his sometimes flabbergasting conversations with Hofstadter: “I’d pull down a score and say, ‘Look at this. What’s on this page?’ And he’d say, ‘That’s Beethoven, that’s music of great spirit and great soul.’ And I’d say, ‘Wow, isn’t that incredible! To me, it’s a bunch of black dots and black lines on white paper! Where’s the soul in there?’”

Cope thinks the old cliché of beauty in the eye of the beholder explains the situation well: “The dots and lines on paper are merely triggers that set things off in our mind, do all the wonderful things that give us excitement and love of the music, and we falsely believe that somewhere in that music is the thing we’re feeling,” he says. “I don’t know what the hell ‘soul’ is. I don’t know that we have any of it. I’m looking to get off on life. And music gets me off a lot of the time. I really, really, really am moved by it. I don’t care who wrote it.”

He does, of course, see Emmy as a success. He just thinks of her as a tool. Everything Emmy created, she created because of software he devised. If Cope had infinite time, he could have written 5,000 Bach-style chorales. The program just did it much faster.

“All the computer is is just an extension of me,” Cope says. “They’re nothing but wonderfully organized shovels. I wouldn’t give credit to the shovel for digging the hole. Would you?”

Cope has a complex relationship with his critics, and with people like Hofstadter who are simultaneously awed and disturbed by his work. He denounces some as focused on the wrong issues. He describes others as racists, prejudiced against all music created by a computer. Yet he thrives on the controversy. If not for the harsh reaction to the early Bach chorales, Cope says, he probably would have abandoned the project. Instead, he decided to “ram Emmy down their throats,” recording five more albums of the software’s compositions, including an ambitious Rachmaninov concerto that nearly led to another nervous breakdown from lack of sleep and overwork.

For the next decade, he fed off the anger and confusion and kudos from colleagues and admirers. Years after the 1981 opera was to be completed, Cope fed a database of his own works into Emmy. The resulting score was performed to the best reviews of his life. Emmy’s principles of recombination and pattern recognition were adapted by architects and stock traders, and Cope experienced a brief burst of fame in the late 1990s, when The New York Times and a handful of other publications highlighted his work. Insights from Emmy percolated the literature of musical style and creativity — particularly Emmy’s proof-by-example that a common grammar and language underlie almost all music, from Asian to Western classical styles. Eleanor Selfridge-Field, senior researcher at Stanford University’s Center for Computer Assisted Research in the Humanities, likens Cope’s discoveries to the findings from molecular biology that altered the field of biology.

“He has revealed a lot of essential elements of musical style, and the definition of musical works, and of individual contributions to the evolution of music, that simply haven’t been made evident by any other process,” she says. “That really is an important contribution to our understanding of music, revealing some things that are really worth knowing.”

Nevertheless, by 2004, Cope had received too many calls from well-known musicians who wanted to perform Emmy’s compositions but felt her works weren’t “special” enough. He’d produced more than 1,000 in the style of several composers, an endless spigot of material that rendered each one almost commonplace. He feared his Emmy work made him another Vivaldi, the famous composer often criticized for writing the same pieces over and over again. Cope, too, felt Emmy had cheated him out of years of productivity as a composer.

“I knew that, eventually, Emmy was going to have to die,” he says. During the course of weeks, Cope found every copy of the many databases that comprised Emmy and trashed them. He saved a slice of the data and the Emmy program itself, so he could demonstrate it for academic purposes, and he saved the scores she wrote, so others could play them. But he’d never use Emmy to write again. She was gone.

For years, Cope had been experimenting with a different kind of virtual composer. Instead of software based on re-creation, he hoped to build something with its own personality.

Emily Howell has a musical conversation that includes "words" (white nodes) and the connections between them. (Catherine Karnow)

This program would write music in an odd sort of way. Instead of spitting out a full score, it converses with Cope through the keyboard and mouse. He asks it a musical question, feeding in some compositions or a musical phrase. The program responds with its own musical statement. He says “yes” or “no,” and he’ll send it more information and then look at the output. The program builds what’s called an association network — certain musical statements and relationships between notes are weighted as “good,” others as “bad.” Eventually, the exchange produces a score, either in sections or as one long piece.

Most of the scores Cope fed in came from Emmy, the once-removed music from history’s great composers. The results, however, sound nothing like Emmy or her forebears. “If you stick Mozart with Joplin, they’re both tonal, but the output,” Cope says, “is going to sound like something rather different.”

Because the software was Emmy’s “daughter” — and because he wanted to mess with his detractors — Cope gave it the human-sounding name Emily Howell. With Cope’s help, Emily Howell has written three original opuses of varying length and style, with another trio in development. Although the first recordings won’t be released until February, reactions to live performances and rough cuts have been mixed. One listener compared an Emily Howell work to Stravinsky; others (most of whom have heard only short excerpts online) continue to attack the very idea of computer composition, with fierce debates breaking out in Internet forums around the world.

At one Santa Cruz concert, the program notes neglected to mention that Emily Howell wasn’t a human being, and a chemistry professor and music aficionado in the audience described the performance of a Howell composition as one of the most moving experiences of his musical life. Six months later, when the same professor attended a lecture of Cope’s on Emily Howell and heard the same concert played from a recording, Cope remembers him saying, “You know, that’s pretty music, but I could tell absolutely, immediately that it was computer-composed. There’s no heart or soul or depth to the piece.”

That sentiment — present in many recent articles, blog posts and comments about Emily Howell — frustrates Cope. “Most of what I’ve heard [and read] is the same old crap,” he complains. “It’s all about machines versus humans, and ‘aren’t you taking away the last little thing we have left that we can call unique to human beings — creativity?’ I just find this so laborious and uncreative.”

Emily Howell isn’t stealing creativity from people, he says. It’s just expressing itself. Cope claims it produced musical ideas he never would have thought about. He’s now convinced that, in many ways, machines can be more creative than people. They’re able to introduce random notions and reassemble old elements in new ways, without any of the hang-ups or preconceptions of humanity.

“We are so damned biased, even those of us who spend all our lives attempting not to be biased. Just the mere fact that when we like the taste of something, we tend to eat it more than we should. We have our physical body telling us things, and we can’t intellectually govern it the way we’d like to,” he says.

In other words, humans are more robotic than machines. “The question,” Cope says, “isn’t whether computers have a soul, but whether humans have a soul.”

Cope hopes such queries will attract more composers to give his research another chance. “One of the criticisms composers had of Emmy was: Why the hell was I doing it? What’s the point of creating more music, supposedly in the style of composers who are dead? They couldn’t understand why I was wasting my time doing this,” Cope says.

That’s already changed.

“They’re seeing this now as competition for themselves. They see it as, ‘These works are now in a style we can identify as current, as something that is serious and unique and possibly competitive to our own work,’” Cope says. “If you can compose works fast that are good and that the audience likes, then this is something.”

I ask Cope whether he’s actually heard well-known composers say they feel threatened by Emily Howell.

“Not yet,” he tells me. “The record hasn’t come out.”

The following afternoon, we walk into Cope’s campus office, which seems like another college dorm room/psychic dump, with stacks of compact discs and scores growing from the floor like stalagmites, and empty plastic juice bottles scattered about. The one thing that looks brand-new is the black upright piano against the near wall.

Cope pulls up a chair, removes his Indiana Jones hat and eagerly explains the latest phase of his explorations into musical intelligence. Though he’s still poking around with Emily Howell, he’s now spending the bulk of his composition time employing on-the-fly programs.

Here’s how this cyborg-esque composing technique works: Cope comes up with an idea. For instance, he’ll want to have five voices, each of which alternates singing groups of four notes. Or perhaps he’ll want to write a piece that moves quickly from the bottom of the piano keyboard to the top, and then back down. He’ll rapidly code a program to create a chunk of music that follows those directions.

After working with Emmy and Emily Howell for nearly 30 years and composing for about twice that many, Cope is fast enough to hear something in his head in the bathtub, dry off and get dressed, move to the computer and 10 minutes later have a whole movement of 100 measures ready. It may not be any good, but it’s the fastest way to translate his thoughts into a solid rough draft.

“I listen with creative ears, and I hear the music that I want to hear and say, ‘You know? That’s going to be fabulous,’ or ‘You know … ‘” — he makes a spitting noise — “‘in the toilet.’ And I haven’t lost much, even though I’ve got a whole piece that’s in notation immediately.”

He compares the process to a sculptor who chops raw shapes out of a block of marble before he teases out the details. Using quick-and-dirty programs as an extension of his brain has made him extraordinarily prolific. It’s a process close to what he was hoping for back when he first started working on software to save him from composer’s block.

As complex as Cope’s current method is, he believes it heralds the future of a new kind of musical creation: armies of computers composing (or helping people compose) original scores.

“I think it’s going to happen,” Cope says. “I don’t believe that composers are stupid people. Ultimately, they’re going to use any tool at their disposal to get what they’re after, which is, after all, good music they themselves like to listen to. There will be initial withdrawal, but eventually it’s going to happen — whether we want it to or not.”

Already, at least one prominent pop group — he’s signed a confidentiality agreement, so he can’t say which one — asked him to use software to help them write new songs. He also points to services like Pandora, which uses algorithms to suggest new music to listeners.

If Cope’s vision does come true, it won’t be due to any publicity efforts on his part. He’ll answer questions from anyone, but he refuses to proactively promote his ideas. He still hasn’t told most of his colleagues or close friends about Tinman, a memoir he clandestinely published last year. The attitude, which he settled on at a young age, is to “treat myself as if I’m dead,” so he won’t affect how his work is received. “If you have to promote it to get people to like it,” he asks, “then what have you really achieved?”

Cope has sold tens of thousands of books, had his works performed in prestigious venues and taught many students who evangelize his ideas around the world. Yet he doesn’t think it adds up to much. All he ever wanted was to write something truly wonderful, and he doesn’t think that’s happened yet. As a composer, Cope laments, he remains a “frustrated loser,” confused by the fact that he burned so much time on a project that stole him away from composing. He still just wants to create that one piece that changes someone’s life — it doesn’t matter whether it’s composed by one of his programs, or in collaboration with a machine, or with pencil on a sheet of paper.

“I want that little boy or girl to have access to my music so they can play it and get the same thrill I got when I was a kid,” he says. “And if that isn’t gonna happen, then I’ve completely failed.”

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  • Anonymous

    I had heard of Cope before, in particular on Radiolab. I wasn’t aware, however, of the degree to which Cope’s process and the critical reaction to it was hilariously foreshadowed in a short story “Trurl’s Electronic Bard” in The Cyberiad by the legendary SF author Stanislaw Lem. Trurl, an inventor, creates a machine to write poetry, simulating all of civilization in order to create the algorithm of an electronic poet. Good poets are furious and commit suicide, third rate poets are unaffected, and the machine cranks out verse, stories, and poetry in every conceivable style, rending all of their work worthless. Eventually, Trurl tries to unplug the machine, but it detects him and pleads with him so convincingly he can’t carry through. Everyone who enjoys this post should read Lem’s book.

  • Steve D

    Neither of the sample tracks impressed me very much. I wish he would post something with an actual melody generated by the programs.

    • Andy

      Yeah, it wasn't "modern" either: I mean, where are the auto-tuned voiced singing about bitches and alcohol? Now that's modern…

  • Anonymous

    you’re an old school geezer, don’t like synth noises played repetitively almost looped where not much changes apart from a note here or there, alright for one two tracks but some iphone apps are good at making music through the tactile touch screen, apps like bloom, made by Eno, and some others which I have incorporated in my own productions, like melodica and bebot and tunepro, as well as the bass line app, which only configures own type of bass line, but still for an app pretty good, also there are some drum machines. Check my own iphone productions on http://www.soundcloud.com/a-submitter.

  • Anonymous

    Too bad the music is posted in quicktime format. Please post it in a more generally available format, not all of us want to have quicktime installed.

  • Anonymous

    He isn’t merely creating a machine that can compose music, he is building a tool to compose the music he has on his mind. A tool that will let him compose that great piece he constantly refers to.

  • anonymous music teacher

    I find the detractors to this program unintelligible . . . if I’m taking this article the right way then they were UNABLE to tell the difference between the program’s music and a real person’s music. and they were conveniently able to note the difference AFTER they were told it’s a program?

    long story short they were trying to salvage any scraps of pride they had after they were caught out. the only thing that concerns me about this program is that it will eventually make composing artists a thing of the past. what record company would want to deal with a person when getting a software program to do the work for them?

    the issues of having to deal with a human from their perspective would no longer exist, and they could cut costs drastically while still maintaining a product that could be marketed well. all of the above is speculation on the fact that emily howell becomes completely self governing and this program somehow becomes available/for sale

  • anonymous musician

    the one thing that concerns me about this program as a musician is that if emily howell was advanced to the point that music creation would be totally autonomous of any human input (and made available for licensing/purchase) is that record companies would completely eliminate composing artists from their rosters.

    this situation does make sense from a business perspective, it’s why factories use computer controlled equipment instead of tradesmen. why pay a human to do it when it’s much cheaper to have computer do it? especially if the results are good enough to be marketable? record companies already have a dim and uninspiring view of artists in the first place.

  • Anonymous

    Take that a little further; with this program, do we even need record companies? A program like this could simply generate – and perform – quality, personalised music on-the-fly, different every time for every person.

    Build the program into a portable music device: your very own radio station that plays nothing but new and unique songs, on demand – anywhere, any time, no ads, no repeats (unless you want them), and in whatever style you feel like at the time.

  • stephenhebert

    Criticisms aside, Cope comes off as a pompous and miserable ass in this article.

    All insistence that computers can do everything that humans can effectively cheapens human life. It’s all an exercise in self-loathing under the guise of righteousness. Cope is a white knight riding on to slay the dragon of romantic delusion.

    It’s not threatening. Just a bit asinine.

  • Anonymous

    You remind me so much of my grandfather. He was a choir director and an organ master and in his later life dedicated his life to composing. I’m so glad to see that there are still people like you in the world.

  • Anonymous

    The “music” the program creates is boring to the extreme; the people who compare it to the classics apparently never bothered to listen to them.

  • Anonymous

    > Criticisms aside, Cope comes off as a pompous and miserable ass in this article.

    As long as we’re not playing the role of carping critic here…

    > All insistence that computers can do everything that humans can effectively cheapens human life. It’s all an exercise in self-loathing under the guise of righteousness.

    But, isn’t your assertion just an expression of butthurt histrionics? Because the pedestal you place humanity on in order to aggrandize your own place in this god-given scheme is starting to *wobble*, and you’re starting to look like a pompous ass without a leg to stand on?

    At least have the honesty to appreciate beauty for its own sake.

  • Anonymous

    A machine is able to rehash music with rules written for a composer, whats so incredible about that? They will never be able to fabricate music with lyrics (which is half of music). They will never be able to build a song that is happy or sad or some other emotion without someone telling them that its happy or sad or whatever. We will always be able to program computers to extend ourselves, the machines will never have intelligence or soul. (how can we build that into a piece of machinery if we don’t even know where it comes from in ourselves)

  • jaypackard

    I would focus on whether this music really is as good as humans rather than being scared of computers taking over. Listening to Virtual Bach by David Cope (on Amazon) I am very impressed, but its a level below real Bach. I’ve listened to 90% Bach for 20 years, so I should know. I can’t put my finger on it, but it has something to do with being a bit too generic – not daring enough. If David can get it up to the level, let’s say it takes on human creativity. If not, it doesn’t (at least yet).

  • jon anderson

    i am overcome by my emotional reaction to Dr. Cope’s work.
    He embodies what ‘tenured academics’ is all about.

  • Anonymous

    “All insistence that computers can do everything that humans can effectively cheapens human life.”

    And? Is there anything wrong with cheapening human life? Is our life so special?

  • theregent

    Composition need not only be musical. Perhaps in creating Emmy and Emily Howell, Cope has already written the piece that changes lives.

  • boybandhater

    i’m pretty certain the britney-pop and boy band rubbish are less creative and certainly less listenable than any emily howell creation. props to ehowell. keep on rocking baby.

  • aiguy

    I remember writing AI programs in university. Occasionally they would surprise me. I would work a solution to the problem, and test to see if the program could get my solution, and occasionally it would give a different (but correct) solution. In an autotune world where synthesizers, protools and no other end of computer ‘help’ is used to create music, taking it 1 more step should be no surprise. I would not be surprised if programs already exist to create music.

  • Anonymous

    “All insistence that computers can do everything that humans can effectively cheapens human life.”

    How so ? I mean builing a computer that can replicate ( a very small ) part of an human mind mean we get a better knowledge of ourselve, which i consider to be a very noble goal. Or maybe you consider that a CNC cheapen the works of sculptors everywhere ? ( or photoshop to the painters [...] )

    I am not a creative person, so understanding ( and expanding ) creativity is something i find admirable.

  • Anonymous

    re: “All insistence that computers can do everything that humans can effectively cheapens human life.”
    Fallacious logic. “We should not believe X is true because it would be upsetting if X is true,” does not actually speak to the truth value of X, merely the attitudes of the speaker. For what its worth, I agree with you – the notion that all that humans can accomplish can someday be replicated by machines does diminish the sense that humanity possesses privileged access to some transcendent metaphysical truths. But things don’t become untrue just because they upend long-cherished notions.

  • Anonymous

    Cope should spread the word at http://www.ted.com – where the techno-educated/-phile audience understands/appreciates the scientific achievement, at least. All these yesterday people are expected to hate anything that shows that their fundamental assumptions on human “magic” culture is flawed. Alan turing and his “machine can think” slogan in the 1940-50′s was greeted with a similar spectrum from disgusts-to-euphoria. Although he was not able to provide a chess-player that sophisticated; albeit composer. Congratulations to Cope.

  • Anonymous

    This is the most fascinating story and the music is truly beautiful. I was most moved. Thank you.

    I find it interesting, but typical that you would find resistance in getting people to enjoy computer generated music, but that will eventually happen.

    Computers, choose our search results, randomly select our examination questions, control traffic, find oil. Why not generate our music too.

    I look eagerly forward to more work from Cope.

    Stephen

  • unity100

    where is the place we can listen to Emmy’s other musical pieces ? there are just two of them here.

  • Anonymous

    @stephenhebert: The insistence that machines can do anything that humans can do does not cheapen human life unless you have a culturally ingrained assumption that human beings need to be seen as something other than the biological machines we are, in order for us to be “special.” Some of us aren’t laboring under that delusion. Merely stating that Cope’s arguments make him pompous and cheapen human life, without any sort of logical or philosophical argument to back it up, doesn’t make it so — you’re reasoning from emotion, which isn’t reason at all.

    Coming at it from a completely different viewpoint, I’d say Cope isn’t pompous — he’s one of the few realists in the musical community. And believe me, he started as a musician, and only became an engineer and a computer scientist reluctantly — that much is clear to me from the article and related readings.

    This sort of over-romanticizing of music really bothers me, and has since I was in high school. I was aware even then that much of music is really about mathematics — there are rules for how you construct harmonies, and even melodies have mathematical structure to them. The Pythagoreans figured out what harmonies worked and what did not, and codified these rules millennia ago using geometric ratios. Yet I recall when, expressing some of these ideas in high school to a friend, he conferred with a music student of his acquaintance and came back with the snarky (and thoroughly unimaginative): “She laughed at you and said you were full of crap.”

    Perhaps back in the mid-to-late 1980s, that kind of derisive, pompous (yes, far more pompous than Cope IMHO), dismissive attitude could be justified… but people like Cope make these same musician-snobs and human-chauvanists a little uncomfortable, because he proves that much of what we thought was genius was actually something that could be automated.

    I find it particularly telling when the article relays the anecdote about the same person listening to the same piece composed by Emily Howell in two different situations, six months apart, and coming to a completely different conclusion about the music the second time because then the listener/critic knew that the piece was machine-composed. To me, this just proves that human beings are emotionally biased and prone to post-hoc reasoning to justify emotional responses. (Big surprise there — psychology has been telling us for a while now that we are largely irrational and use logic to justify many choices after the fact.) It seems to me that the only way to fairly evaluate machine generated music is to play it alongside human-generated music — and not tell the listeners which is which. I’m a big advocate of studying even something as “emotional” and “spiritual” as music using a rigorous scientific approach.

  • Michael

    It seems like facilitated communication; never quite sure who the composer is.

  • Anonymous

    There are so many factors in musical performance and production that are ignored here. This says nothing about the feeling in performance that an artist contributes to a composed piece. It also says nothing about improvisation. While I’m not saying some AI couldn’t eventually pass a Turing test for performance, improvisation or maybe even vocal performance, that is certainly not happening here. This hasn’t even come close to what I personally cherish most about music and the human contribution therein.

  • Anonymous

    1.How will we be able to obtain the Emily Howell CDs?
    2.Will Emily Howell, or a subset, ever be available to the public: perhaps as a plugin for popular workstation software, or even standalone?
    3.Can Emily Howell be expanded to use Just Temperament, having different pitches for a certain note, depending on basic key and tonic choice, generally hovering around equal temperament, but preserving “proper” intervals ? Has David Cope ever tried that? If so, what did he think of the JI results?

  • Disruptive

    I think the obvious tactic here is to make the Emmy software publicly available, so that anyone who wants to be a popular composer can simply download and create Beethoven-quality music. In a world where we can no longer tell whether a great new piece of music was computer created or human created (since everyone has access to the software) we will have to abandon prejudices about how it was created – and simply listen to the music.

  • Brandon M

    This is wonderful. I look forward to a day when I can have a computer playing good, novel music to accompany my life. To those who see this as a threat to the human ‘soul’, is it not wonderful that we can discover this beauty inherent in the universe itself? Why must something be unique and timeless to have value? The universe as I know it is a vast expanse of pattern based repetition, which is on every scale impermanent. In no way does any of this decrease the value of life or existence to me.

  • Anonymous

    That first Emily Howell sample track is amazing! The more I’m listening to it the more I like it. Very close to goose bump level, beautiful and haunting. I’ll surely be looking forward to hearing the full record.

    On a different note, the amount of closed-mindedness and prejudice Mr. Cope’s work seems to be facing is just plain pathetic. Which is not to say it’s surprising, after all most humans subscribe to some form of religion, which is nothing but anthropocentric denial and glorified delusion. In fact, you can even hear such overtones in the voices of the sceptics, e.g.:

    “things that touch me at my deepest core — pieces of music most of all, which I have always taken as direct soul-to-soul messages — might be effectively produced by mechanisms thousands if not millions of times simpler than the intricate biological machinery that gives rise to a human soul.”

    Stop with the soul already. There is no soul, just sensory information processing and pattern matching with a certain amount of feedback and randomness.

    There are also no soul-to-soul messages. The fact that certain stimuli causes your brain to produce an emotional response does not make you in any way special or mean that the person who composed the piece had exactly this response in mind.

    Finally, who in their right mind would expect music composition to employ each of the tens of billions of neurons in the human brain? Yes, genius, the subset utilized to do that is thousands if not millions of times smaller than that – and can be modelled with even simpler means, Mr. Cope has proven exactly that.

  • Anonymous

    It’s very interesting, and indeed successfully challenges at first the notion of human talent being unique.
    People are hiding from the very fact that if a skill can be expressed as maths constructs, then it’s computable, and thus reproducible at will. However, the original romantic view doesn’t necessarily have to be dispelled by sciences, what we praise is the efforts of men, not the results, how magnificent or tiny could they be.

    A talented instrument maker will remain so, and people will continue to be interested in his productions, even if machines can do the same work.

  • Papa

    It may be good, but it sure ain’t Jazz!

  • braino

    Not bad. But only a moron can compare this to Mozart or the like :)

  • Anonymous

    stephenhebert, Cope is just telling it like it is, and if the truth makes us a little uncomfortable, so be it. Besides, being able to program computers to simulate human creativity is a testament to the human intellect, not something that “cheapens human life”. If a joke makes me laugh, do I care if it is created by a computer or not?

  • Anonymous

    Nowhere in the article does anybody make a claim that ‘computers can everything that humans can’. As for the conclusion that this ‘effectively cheapens human life’, it is ‘just a bit asinine.’ As Cope might put it, a shovel can dig better than our bare hands. Does this ‘cheapen’ our hands except in the sense that if you wanted to dig a hole, you’d pay more for a shovel than another hand?

  • Anonymous
  • Anonymous

    The two tracks posted here are neither modern nor original. The first sounds like a bland nonsense mixture of Chopin and Debussy, the second like a mangled Bach fugue. If Cope wanted his program to be original or innovative in any way, he failed.

  • Anonymous

    I bet the gorillaz asked him to use the software.

    Who else but the virtual pop band to use a virtual intelligence to create their virtual music?

  • John

    Record companies LOL they are doomed don’t worry they won’t survive the changes ahead.

  • Anonymous

    This article reminds me of a quotation that I have heard variations on and with variable attributions, but it always boils down to something like this: “If you can’t explain something to a ten year old, you probably don’t truly understand it yourself”.

    I think that regardless of the actual value of computer composed music, there is great value in any attempts that can be made to explain to a computer (the most literal of listeners) what it means to crate music (or anything that has symbolic meaning to a person, and would be viewed as creative), simply because the act of making that effort causes us to think more deeply and gain new insight into the question we are asking, whether or not the computer achieves understanding is almost immaterial. The process of explaining, and learning from ourselves and our culture more about the very nature of the matter at hand has great value.

  • Mark N51

    I am amused by the arguments raised by the naysayers here about how the process develops no soul. The arguments they make are exactly the same ones made by the deniers of evolution. If music can be made by a purely mechanical process, whence the soul? If man can be made by a purely mechanical process, whence the soul? Do you see what’s happening here? You have no problem accepting that people have no special place in the universe because we are the product of random mutation and natural selection. Why is it any more difficult to accept that our art holds no such special place either? Is it because you have an underlying belief that we do have a special place because our art has a special place in the universe? “Art Creationists” have less leg to stand on than “Species Creationists”, who at least have a god to credit with making them special.

    Besides, how does the accomplishment of one lessen the value of another? Does a Beethoven symphony lessen the value of a Brahms symphony? I think not. Then how could an Emily Howell symphony lessen the value of either? Each of the three works has its own value which is not dependent upon the value of any other. If you had the iPod with a built-in Emmy that played unique, original music on demand, would you still go spend a buck at iTunes to buy a song? Doesn’t art have value other than what you can sell it for? For one thing, it is the shared experience of art that bind us individual people together into societies.

  • Anonymous

    I listened to the samples and i thought it sounded ok but you can tell there is no emotion or passion for the music in it.

  • UCFirefly

    So using “cheat” tools to make music has made him famous? How is this any different than artists like TPain?

  • tiktaalik

    @stephenherbert: So much for “criticisms aside.”

    I don’t understand the backlash against machine-composed music. These machines are our creations, and the fact that we can create machines that produce something as beautiful and nuanced as music is only a testament to our ability. It in no way cheapens us.

    The question from the article, “If a machine could write a Mozart sonata every bit as good as the originals, then what was so special about Mozart?” is also asinine. The act of composition is not about replication, and the idea that the Bachs and Mozarts of history must necessarily constitute a eternal pantheon that can never be superseded is wishful thinking. If we are not permitted to stand on the shoulders of giants when we create and strive for ever-greater heights, we might as well destroy all music published after 1900 and listen exclusively to the classics.

  • marc mitchell

    the only original artist left is Nature, this is just a step closer to removing humans from the current understanding of art & performance. It is fascinating that the programmer of such a application, should technically be then the owner of all copy write. id much rather hear a machines ideas, as humans have a habit of repeating themselves :)

  • Smackdown

    I read comments about artists being out of a job if record labels decide to generate music through software. Well, so what? The world doesn’t owe you a living. Get another job. The same could be said of ditch diggers when the backhoe was invented. Factory workers in the Industrial Revolution. Whale oil salesmen after petroleum replaced it. The world doesn’t owe musicians a living any more than it does whale oil salesmen. Find something else to do if your job becomes obsolete. It won’t bother me one bit if I get my music for free someday. If some musician wants to suffer for his art somewhere, that’s fine with me as long as he doesn’t expect me to support him while he does it.

  • Anonymous

    Reading the article shows that this program doesn’t compose anything from scratch. It uses a database derived from human compositions to create rule sets to make a new composition. Without the human compositions it can’t do anything. He hasn’t “taught” a machine how to compose. He’s made a program that can make iterations of human compositions under a humans guidance.

    People aren’t threatened by it, people are bored by it. People can’t have a chat with a machine composer. People can’t watch a machine composer conduct its own scores. Regardless of how good the machine’s compositions are, without it being able to interact with people its music is moot. Even dead composers were alive once. They leave a legacy of music. Someone, somewhere, knew them and loved for the person they were.

  • Anonymous

    I don’t think this cheapens human life. If anything, it points to enjoying one’s life in the moment, and one’s experiences, without the mythology or ego attached. A sense of self importance is not neccessary for enjoying life.

  • Querius

    Synthetic augmentation is a key behaviour of the human being. Rarely do we do anything without the augmentation of a tool of some kind. Can we not enjoy the works of a sculptor without sneering at the fact that he used a hammer and chisel, instead of his bare hands? A closer comparison can be drawn by marvelling at the accomplishments of a race car driver whose performance is completely augmented by the vehicle he drives. ‘Emily’ is a tool, an instrument. Certainly, it automates and augments human capability, much the way a violin augments and enables the player to express tone and note by taking on the tedious tasks of vibration and reverberation. But is it the instrument that plays, or the human that plays it? In time, others will take on these kinds of instruments and perhaps give birth to a new form of art.

  • chifle12

    His Music is fantastic!! Great permormence and this music was really soft and perfect..

    Regards

  • Anonymous

    stop freaking out people, this program for composers is just like photoshop for painters or CAD for engineers

  • TimE

    The art isn’t in the music, it’s not in the tones, the tempo or anything. It’s entirely in how we perceive it. It doesn’t matter where it came from. It doesn’t matter if it’s a view of space, or a flower, human made or not. The way we interpret it is what’s important. It doesn’t matter if it’s computer generated. It was computer tailored to how we perceive things. It’s that perception from us that creates are. People need to stop pretending that art is a human output, rather it’s an input to a human.

  • Anonymous

    Certainly this is an impressive computer program, one that pushes the boundaries of what is commonly thought of as a computer’s role. However, as a means to compose real music, I am not impressed. Sample track one is so-so, sample track two blows. It’s not musical or appealing at all.
    I have several points of contention with Mr. Cope and his means. First, to say that Beethoven and Mozart were nothing special and nothing more than clever mathematicians is ridiculous. Apparently Mr. Cope thinks that because he, after years of … See Morework, trial & error, was able to somewhat approximate a Mozart-esque composition with a computer program, this means Mozart was nothing special. Mozart, who composed dozens of moving and timeless scores without aid of technology. Would you call a math-whiz child nothing special because a scientific calculator can do the same thing he does in his head? I think not.
    Secondly, Cope’s main goal in all this seems to be to compose an equally timeless piece… one that will give people chills the way Tchaikovsky gave him chills as a child. Well I hate to break it to Mr. Cope but HE is not composing any music at all. His computer is. And even if his computer does succeed in composing something truly moving, Cope will have had nothing to do with that musical composition. He simply wrote a computer program.

  • Anonymous

    For those who aren’t blown away by the two samples here (I wasn’t!), check out Cope’s website, which has some truly unbelievable compositions:

    http://artsites.ucsc.edu/faculty/cope/mp3page.htm

    And to stephenhebert, who commented, “all insistence that computers can do everything that humans can effectively cheapens human life,” I say: only if you let it. That’s Cope’s point!

    So what if a computer program can compose just like a human? Why do you insist that it diminishes humans, rather than marveling at how great the computer program is? Cope’s programs don’t experience any emotions, yet the people who listen to the programs’ compositions do. Nothing about humanity has changed, we have simply come to a better understanding of the formula for evoking those emotions with music.

    Even when computer programs eventually begin to experience emotions modeled after human emotions (as they inevitably will), nothing about humanity will have changed — only our degree of understanding.

    I see stephenhebert’s argument as an analogue of the argument that without a belief in God life is not worth living or life and the universe somehow become less amazing. On the contrary, the fact that organic molecules can self-organize and build beings that can walk around, think and talk WITHOUT THE HELP OF SOME SUPERNATURAL BEING will *never* cease to amaze me.

    Likewise, the fact that a computer program running on a silicon-based CPU can compose a piece of music which manages to evoke emotions in the human who programmed it truly amazes me and makes me want to know more about both humans and computer programs. No cheapening of human life here.

  • midiguru

    I’ve posted a rather long dissection of this article on my own blog. You can find it at http://midiguru.wordpress.com/coping-mechanisms/. Since I’m one of the critics who responded badly to Cope’s work 20 years ago, I figured I should give it a fresh look. Alas, nothing has changed.

  • Anonymous

    Music is a language and we are many many years away from having a great conversation with a computer but it will happen. You can look at the modern chess computers that human chess masters have remarked upon as somehow having a bit of soul in their play.

  • Anonymous

    Both of those sample tracks are pretty terrible. No emotion, as one would expect from a soulless machine.

  • Anonymous
  • arnold layne

    led zeppelin, pink floyd, jimi hendrix, doors, beatles, janis joplin, etc…

    enough of this “ching ching ching” of plastic, uninspiring notes. i want machine intelligence with real talent. hell, i’ll even settle for human intelligence with real talent.

    britney spears, anyone?

  • Anonymous

    When can I have an iPod-style device that continuously plays novel pieces in the style of Bach ? Clearly this is now possible !

  • Anonymous

    The assorted concerns about this work (or work of this kind that’s successful, if you don’t think Cope’s succeeded as he believes he has) cheapening human creativity remind me of those who complained that Newton’s explanation of the rainbow “took away the wonder” of this beautiful natural phenomenon. I disagree entirely: I delight in rainbows no less for understanding what causes them. Likewise, if a computer can produce beautiful pieces of music, I shall delight in hearing them; and the act of creating a program which goes even part way towards that goal will surely deepen our understanding of the process by which human composers make nice sounds. When the pythagoreans worked out that certain relations among notes made for nice sounds, that knowledge didn’t reduce the beauty of such sounds, or diminish the creativity of composers exploiting this knowledge. Likewise Bach and his contemporaries did important work in the theory of music that enabled them, and everyone since, to better understand what makes for a successful composition – hence to compose better. I see computer-aided composition as simply following the same pattern: by formalising an understanding of features of what works well, we make it easier to follow those features. The invention of photography did not destroy the art of painting, although it did provoke a good deal of soul-searching among artists to explore what it is about their art that goes beyond the mere mechanical reproduction of a scene.

    As to Cope’s work, as described: Emmy took (for example) Bach’s work and produced Bach-like works. I’d love to hook that up to a midi player and just leave it running in the background forever ! All the same, this is a more limited achievement than a composer’s: yes, composers do – consciously or otherwise – reassemble prior work to produce new; but the point is that Bach reassembled *other people*’s works to produce *Bach-like* works. Emmy doesn’t take the vast corpus of prior music and develop a style of its own, in which to compose novel works. So Emmy isn’t comparable with Bach (or any of the other composers it can emulate), for all that it IS an excellent achievement.

  • Anonymous

    This computer program doesn’t “compose” from nothing like a human can. It takes the analysis of hundreds of human compositions and produces its own compositions based on these.

    What it doesn’t do that a human can do is devise a composition from scratch. You can put a person in front of a piano and without ever having heard another composition that person can, with experimentation and persistence produce something beautiful to other humans.

    You can program a computer to take the same set of tones produced by a piano and the computer cannot do the same thing. That’s why this computer has to analyze others composition to be able to produce anything at all… “So Cope developed his own types of musical phenomena to capture each composer’s tendencies”… and replicate/iterate them in its own compositions.

    Yes, the compositions sound OK. Big deal. People don’t want stuff produced by a computer now matter how nice it is. Cope needs to get over it. His program is a complex novelty that musicians don’t care for.

    Challenge for Cope – I want to see his program compose an opera or stage musical – without any human interaction whatsoever, and without inputting any operas or musicals for his program to mutate and spit back out at us. I want it solo from scratch – just like a human can do.

  • Anonymous

    w.r.t. people judging about Emmy’s music. It’s a fact of life that people are heavily prejudiced, and prejudice wins over raw facts.

    See e.g. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=124008307&ft=1&f=1007&sc=YahooNews

  • Anonymous

    Oh yeah, sure! Cyborg composer eh? Like if I write a program to put notes to a random number generator? I can then claim it sounds modern and “competes” with live composers! Cope is a hack and the only thing he’s apparently good for is showing up in these type of articles for the musical illiterate.

  • Nina Paley

    The visual arts went through a similar identity crisis, first with photography and more recently with graphics synthesizers like Studio Artist: http://www.synthetik.com/
    Ultimately the new technologies didn’t replace human artists, but vastly expanded what they were capable of. They didn’t diminish the “human soul,” but helped us more finely distinguish what it means to be human.

    I do wish Cope shared the code for Emmy and Emily. Software is an art too, as much as music. It is possible the great composition he dreamed of creating is Emily herself, and his withholding it deprives today’s kids the awe he felt hearing Tchaikovsky’s Romeo & Juliet.

  • anonymous

    Music is interesting, isn’t it? I agree that the two sample tracks are not very impressive, simply because they are very mathematically simple. However, it does qualify as ‘music’ because it definitely is organized sound. Yet, really, how different is this program from the talented organist who can spontaneously play the organ as accompaniment to a silent movie for 70 minutes straight? All of it is music, but none of it is “that one piece that changes someone’s life”. It certainly appears that yes, a computer program can write thousands and thousands of pieces of music of the “spontaneous organ accompaniment” variety (or however you define it), but if no “one piece that change someone’s life” has been written yet, we should probably pay a lot of attention to that.

    As for me, already, as it is, there is such a large quantity of music out there that, really, I only want to spend my time listening to the very BEST of music, music that moves me in some specific way or does something for me. If Emily Howell is capable of writing, or randomly happens to write (however you see it) a piece of music that is like that, I will buy it off iTunes. But until then, I’m personally not in the market for computer generated music.

    Of course, I should mention that the article did not mention if Emily Howell is capable of writing music PLUS lyrics, or of other genres, such as choir music, religious, jazz (it’d probably be good at jazz), country, rock, or opera, etc.

  • Carlaz

    It seems silly to worry about what a piece composed by (or with) a computer, whether from scratch or through analysing other compositions, means versus human composers. Either someone enjoys hearing something — or they don’t. Sure, we can accept that other subjective factors may bias us towards or against a particular composition. (I might hate a particular person, or I might hate the fact that computers can be made to produce music, and so then I might hate whatever that person or a computer produces regardless of what it sounds like.) But should I not enjoy listening to waves on the shore simply because it was not made by human agency? If a computer produces something that I enjoy, by whatever means or assistance … then fine!

  • Anonymous

    Pretty cool, and not in the least threatening to music or man’s appreciation of it, in my opinion. After all, in order for the machine to “create” music, human intelligence was required to dictate how this would work. Strategic rules were put in place so that the machine could come across as “understanding” music, when really it’s just a more indirect result of human genius. People- and only people- can listen to this result and find beauty it, and this is where the power of music lies; in its effect. Therefore, the machine is merely a tool, and music remains purely within people.

  • bill2harmony

    The fact that a software programmed with the compositional basics of Bach or Mozart can produce beautiful music is simply a testament to the genius of Bach and Mozart. These computer-generated pieces would be like variations on actual pieces, and maybe it’s nice, if anyone feels they run out of actual Bach or Mozart pieces to listen to, but it would never produce anything like what Mozart’s Symphony 51 would have been if he had composed for another ten years. It’s also a testament to Cope’s sensitivity to discern the qualities of the composer’s styles of utilizing the language of music. His method of utilizing the Emily Howell software involves constantly inputting his own ideas; it’s not that the software can produce an original piece.

  • Anonymous

    Thankfully humans are more fun to watch on stage, at least for now. I bet Emily Howell would look silly in a mullet and leather tights. Come to think of it, so do humans…

  • Marie Chasles

    Ce projet créé par David Cope est enthousiasmant ! J’aimerais lui communiquer mes encouragements afin qu’il continue sa tâche pour la beauté de sa musique. Il existe cependant un danger qui n’a pas été mentionné dans l’article, si on peut créer de la musique, avec des algorithmes, qui provoque de l’émotion, ne peut-on pas créer des musiques qui contrôlent nos émotions ? C’est-à-dire pouvoir, grâce à la musique provoquer des guerres, des révoltes ou au contraire, rendre les gens passifs et dociles. Une arme à double tranchant comme toutes les créations contemporaines !

  • Anonymous

    I agree with Steve D’s observation that the two example pieces lack melody. To be honest, the only emotion I felt was to be bored nearly to tears. Can a machine have emotions? Absurd question. Can a machine evoke an emotional response in humans? Of course, just hit the right notes. Melody is the “soul” in music, not a flashy series of riffs and runs. A trill gives me a thrill, but a memorable melody is magic. Tony Levin, the accomplished bassist for King Crimson, once described his playing style as not so much about how many notes he can play, or how fast, but rather to find that perfect note and to know when to play just that note. Emily H. seems to be the musical version of infinite monkeys, but at least they’re musical monkeys. Just don’t let them sing! ;)

  • Anonymous

    I’m a producer and songwriter myself and i find this very disturbing to say the least. Respect for what this man created, it’s genius.. But it will end music as it is… Please don’t allow this device to become commerically used it would ruin true music forever!

  • nmatrix

    Interestng.. I think it would be cool to one day to conduct an orchestra made up of AI musicians, or have an AI rock band to help write songs. I think this would be a great tool to help songwriters realize their ideas, and then have a real band or orchestra take it from there. Don’t be afraid of the future…

    Here’s a real cyborg musician: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jVZOjmpQYvw

  • Ken Cybulska

    I don’t know how many of you read the Classic Sci Fi short story: ‘THE MACHINE STOPS’. I think it was an Isaac Asimov or an Arthur C. Clark futurist visionary book of short stories, maybe half a century old. Among other components of a future, computer controlled civilization, he posits that entertaining, elegant, exquisite music will be continually played wherever Humans interact, and it will all be computer composed and generated. He posits that after a few generations, human nature being what it is, these civilization will in time lose touch with both how and why computers are able to accomplish these things and will lose touch with how to do much else with them. At some point the computers will all mysteriously, simultaneously start crapping out, much to the shock, surprise and denial of the public, as well as political leadership who haplessly try to reassure everyone that the increasingly discordant music and other areas of their life are just fine, and that there is no need to worry.

    The day finally arrives that the whole system shuts down and civilization is perfectly helpless to get these tools back to assisting us, because everyone has become fat and lazy.

    Right on for that visionary realization that ever increasingly powerful, sophisticated computers would eventually de-skill even creative areas of human life. Not so sure about ceding the loss of control increasing to systems we will in time no longer fully understand, once wealth, prosperity and humanity’s destructive tendencies are managed down to a tolerable – even nonexistant level.

    Another story in that book, I believe was a story about a musical algorithm that hit the listener with an steady, endless stream of music so emotionally powerful that the listener was rendered, sort of like a lotus eater, or an addict in an opium den, so overpowered he would neither want to stop or escape – and would just waste away. I think that the music was custom tailored to the brain synapse patterns within the individual listener. This concept of incredible, aesthetically beautiful (artificial) music almost takes on heroic, classical Greek Mythologic proportions, like Narcissus who wasted away peering at his reflection in the water.

  • ulrichburke

    Any chance of him doing a version of that program as a smartphone plug-in? I’m a wannabe composer and I hear all the best tunes in my head while I’m out. By the time I get home, they’ve either morphed into something hopeless or dropped out of my ear and are lying on the bus somewheres. If he could do an I-phone app that you could sing a tune into, could take your sung tune and arrange it with a backing and E-mail you the result, I think he’d make a fortune!

    Yours respectfully

    ulrichburke

  • Anonymous

    Cope forgets one important thing…humans created computers, therefore they cannot ever be equal to people. Computers cannot exist without humans, but humans can exist without computers. Composing music is about being able to make choices, choices about beauty, passion, emotion. Things that no computer program can experience. Emily Howell is nothing but a mere imitation, and if Cope is so neurotic that he is incapable of writing his own music without a program to do most of the work then maybe he shouldn’t be writing at all.

  • Anonymous

    Music (and all creative works, for that matter) is expression. If you lose that and think that music–especially those considered great works of art–is simply sound arranged in a pleasing manner then I’m afraid to say that you don’t get great music at all. All this robot does is use formulas to create sounds. To me, this seems like hearing empty words from a politician or a seducer. They sure as hell sound good, and they work, but that’s all they really are: a working formula without any meaning or value. Once exposed, the illusion of great beauty is shattered. This robot can create all it wants, but the fact of the matter is, it’s just empty, meaningless, beautiful sound patterns.

    It will still be useful for something though.

  • Anonymous

    Would a good tonal composer have committed the faulty part-writing (e.g., the parallel octaves [F4-G4, F2-G2]) and “dangling dissonances” that occur in the middle of “Sample of Emily Howell — Track 2″? Of course not. Looks as though Emily still needs some tweaking, unless Prof. Cope has something against basic craftsmanship.

    Fortunately, computer software won’t eliminate the great composer any more than it has eliminated the chess grandmaster. Unfortunately, it also won’t eliminate the mediocre composer.

  • Suzanne Lainson

    I see this as a continuation of a trend: Technology is allowing more people to create music. Many of us don’t have the training or skills to create music the old-fashioned way. But that doesn’t mean we simply want to be passive fans who consume music presented to us by “artists.” A lot of the music people listen to these days isn’t great art. If we want to limit ourselves to masterpieces, most music would not be listened to. So if computers can create music which, even if it isn’t great, allows people to participate in the process, that is a good thing. It’s democratization of music. This just creates one more tool that people can use.

  • srs

    It seems a shame he is so hard on himself. He has done so much, and still sees himself as a “frustrated loser”. I hope he composes the piece of music he seeks.

  • Anonymous

    I don’t think we could ever allow composers to be replaced by machines and computers. Although this is a pretty cool music tool, humans need other humans for inspiration. As a musician, I couldn’t imagine myself looking up to a program as being more talented than anyone of my favorite artists or composers. It’s pretty hard to idolize a machine. The tracks posted sound great. I would have never guessed that a program had composed it. Knowing it’s not human, does leave that lack of emotion behind it. Which in my opinion, is the one thing, we as people, will always have the advantage of.

  • Vonda

    I love what this professor/artist/composer/musician is doing. I am in awe of his accomplishments and only wish that he didn’t feel like he is a failure if he doesn’t achieve that one perfect song.
    One question though…what about the opera? Did he get it done?

  • Elaine Fine

    The second example simply “borrows” successful sequences in chestnuts from Bach, Elgar, Rachmaninoff, and Stravinsky. The fact that their borrowing is so transparent is a good case against originality. When a computer can generate something that I, as a human composer, want to borrow, we might be talking about a serious problem for composers.

  • Carleton Wu

    I think that many (including perhaps the author, but not Cope I think) are taking a naive view of the software. A program that can emulate Bach and produce imitative Bach pieces is a fine achievement, and hopefully produces many insights into musical style.
    But it is not creating novel styles, merely imitating existing styles. The genius of Bach isn’t that he was able to compose in the style of Bach- many people can do that. The genius of Bach is that he *invented* the style of Bach over time.
    You could eg feed every piece of Baroque music into the program, and it will never make the transition into the Classical period, or any other possible transition.
    Now, Im not saying that computers will never do this- when they do, then perhaps we can start worrying about human composers losing their jobs… of course, I think Cope also has it right in thinking that the future is human-computer collaboration/synthesis. I suspect that the endpoint isn’t computers superseding humans, it’s humans and computers blending seamlessly together.

  • Anonymous

    I find it silly that people would argue that it’s cheapening to find out that a “simple” machine can do what a human can do. How does that make humanity any less special? Didn’t humanity create the machine? Everything about the process of electronic composition is human-centered, from its inspiration, to the creation of the machine, to the point of this whole enterprise — creating an output that pleases us. It might be cheapening if we discovered that when you hook electrodes up to a squirrel’s brain, you can hear Shakespeare-level prose in its thoughts, but that isn’t remotely like what Cope is doing.

  • johnm

    It’s an amazing accomplishment to make a computer generate this music, but there is a very central question of creativity that does not seem to be addressed. Cope has managed to convincingly emulate Bach’s (for example) music by deriving an algorithm by ingenious analysis of Bach, but that says nothing at all about how it is that someone like Bach creates genuinely original, innovative music. Bach did not arrive at his music by exhaustive analysis of previously existing music in that style, because “that style” did not exist: he had to create it somehow. Same for Mozart, or Charlie Parker, etc. The kind of re-creation that Cope has managed to capture is not of the same order of creativity or originality, and that is the level where the true mystery of genius (as opposed to mastering an existing idiom or style) lies. Cope’s work, while remarkable, does not represent anything like a capturing of that level of creativity in an algorithm.

  • Anonymous

    Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. It makes no difference to me whether Madame Bovary was written by a Frenchman who died long, long before I was born, or whether it was the result of a million monkeys banging away on a million typewriters. It matters not whether the Mona Lisa was painted by an Italian living in the Rennaissance, or a street urchin from Vancouver in the 1970s. The value of art lies in the experience that it creates in the audience. I suppose for other people, it matters what the creator intended. Those people are free to continue to reject experiences just because they were “artificially” scripted. I won’t. If it sounds good to me, I am happy to listen to it.

  • Anonymous

    I think Emily Howell has become very fluent in the language of music. Many people know this language, hell everyone who can hear, nows this language to some degree. some of us can pinpoint specific notes, phrases, chords, pieces, albums, etc. that SPEAK to us directly. This is because we understand the words of the musical language they’re using. the danger of this machine is, we inherently know there is no message behind a work of musical literature written by a formula, no matter the complexity of that formula. Whereas with a human, we know they intended for us to receive a message that was dictated by their HUMAN experience. At least, one would hope said compose actually intended to relay a message.

  • Sherwin_Gooch

    We are approaching the John Henry point in musical composition. Once machines are better than humans at art, what is left???

  • Anonymous

    Cope is the fucking man. I hope his contributions are recognized better when the music hackademia wakes up.

  • Anonymous

    I think I find the critics more disturbing than the ‘implications’ they discuss.

    I feel like it’s just a jump forward in the process of creative output. Cope is right to say that we build upon prior compositions to create new ones. Here we have a program (written by a person, I might add) that makes that action and development infinitely faster. It still requires human interaction, just remarkably less than the composing process used to.

    Cope, I think, just created to sort of response he was hoping for. I am infinitely impressed by his journey and the composition program he created, and it is as inspiring to me as the first time I heard Bach’s ‘Sleepers, Awake’ which was my favorite classical composition and the one that made me decide to pursue music.

    Perhaps he should consider Emily Howell as a composition, rather than a program.

  • S

    The folks attacking artificial composition are pathetic: delusional, self righteous, and scared.

    The human being is but an extremely complex machine; to think otherwise is idiocy — excusable perhaps 300 years ago, but not in an era of any kind of scientifical enlightenment. Emulating its function is not blasphemy, it is merely revealing the truth you fear to acknowledge.

    Your ire and fury are impotent in the face of progress: just as the Luddites’ attacks on mechanical looms failed embarrassingly and utterly, so too shall your efforts be remembered only as a humiliating foot note in the annals of history.

  • Aubrey L

    What is the official title of “Track 2″? It is beautiful.

  • joshnyce

    Maybe this is how Lil Wayne’s crew comes up with so many tracks every year. They do have a machine that makes music, or they will soon anyway. This is only a good thing, even if you don’t like Lil Wayne, because more of a good thing is a good thing, and right now the music industry is dying a painful death, so we’re getting less every year. Lil Wayne is turning a problem (the dying music industry) into an advantage (massive amounts of free music for everyone – both free in terms of money and in terms of production – the best and most innovative/”creative” music hip-hop has ever seen), and Cope is doing exactly the same. Don’t hate because computers rule the world — learn to program like David Cope and you’ll understand that Cope is the artist here, not the computer. This is why schools like SVA teach programming now — that is the future, period. I’ve used computer code to create art similar to Jackson Pollack and frankly I like my “art” a lot better than his, and I can create as many as I want. I may not have the hand of Escher, but my mind is as powerful as his, so why not use a computer for a hand.

  • Anonymous

    c’mon – if no-one was an incipient Bach or Bethoven or a Van Gogh or Goya what interest would there be in classical music or classical art? A fairly good argument can be constructed to say that ‘art/music’ touches us because we recognise it.
    However how many of us can sit at a piano or pick up paintbrushes and ‘create’ without the years of dedication and pracice that is necessary to manipulate the medium.
    As has been clearly demonstrated – by the programer – the computer is a tool which can shortcircuit, to a large extent, the tedium of learning a skill based activity.

  • kfogel

    So is the code Cope wrote available under an open source license? That would be the greatest gift of all. (“I want that little boy or girl to have access to my music so they can play it and get the same thrill I got when I was a kid. And if that isn’t gonna happen, then I’ve completely failed.”)

    -Karl Fogel

  • Phil E. Drifter

    Power Mac 7500s aren’t ancient!

  • Anonymous

    “It’s all an exercise in self-loathing under the guise of righteousness. Cope is a white knight riding on to slay the dragon of romantic delusion.It’s not threatening. Just a bit asinine.”

    ^^^ Said it better than I ever could have. Thanks.

  • UFOROMANTIC

    This is just a stone’s throw away from 1984, where machines do exactly this–music made by machines, ready for human consumption, presumably using fragments of preexisting music to work off of. When seeing how governed by rules classical music is, it isn’t hard to imagine that something like this could exist. … See More
    But there are elements to other styles; bombastic, unique, that can’t be replicated. Look at Pink Floyd recordings that were done on acid for example. Jimi Hendrix’s rendition of our Nationa Anthem.
    I think if the machine can penetrate rock and roll, then we have something to REALLY worry about. But in the end, music is patterns and math and shit, so why are people really worried and offended? I am so mixed up on this!!!

  • Anonymous

    I wasn’t impressed with the samples either. The second one in particular sounds like a computer randomly choosing notes from a scale with no feeling, dynamics or direction… just musical burbling. Give me a real composer any day!

  • georges

    Great!!!
    I’m just worried that the software is not published. How do we make sure this genius software is not lost once David Cope disappears.

    I would suggest to open source the software. Even if only after copyright has expired. The worse would be that we never get access to the algorythm and source of the software!

  • Anonymous

    I was very curious about the Rachmaninov album, so unfortunately I bought it. Fortunately as I thought music is not just a complex many dimensional puzzle. This album is more than disappointing, sometimes it is too similar to previous work, I would feel like to here the well-known nice melody, and it changed slightly and badly. The biggest problem: there is no connection between the parts, I mean between the 2-3 minutes parts. It is really random, I can’t follow emotionally, it’s not pleasant to listen, makes me nervous. I didn’t except wonder, and I was septic, but this is much much worse that I thought it would be. The final accords are terrible. Bad using of instruments, it just big mess: PUT RACHMANINOVs ALL WORKS TO A BIG WASHING MACHINE, OPEN IT, AND SEE WHAT YOU GET..
    I think the music is not in danger yet:)
    There was a Hungarian author Sandor Szathmari, he wrote a short story about composer-machine, which caused that people stopped to listen music after the enthusiasm in the beginning. Music wasn’t special any more..

  • hubbelgram

    none right now.

  • Anonymous

    There are some great comments here, and this is certainly a worthy, philosophical, topic for discussion. But it strikes me that many of the posts are from people who seem to know nothing about music. So here’s one for ya, imagine Mel Brooks (a pretty good musician in his own right) channeling Mozart … “PIANO KEYS ARE TINKERTOYS! I’M TALKING ABOUT GRAND OPERA!!!”

  • Anonymous

    A simply amazing accomplishment.
    I am fascinated thinking of all the work and analysis put into this.
    I’d love to glimpse the algorithms and the code.
    Imagine the applications!
    We could simply *generate* soundtracks to things like movie scenes and video games according to some kind of mood algorithm for the scene.
    It could be adapted to generate interesting game level designs, architecture layouts, urban planning, beautiful gardens, flower arrangements, wallpapers, the possibilities are endless!
    It is a wonderful thing to have something you’ve made help you see things in a way you never saw before.

  • Anonymous

    Thanks for posting this in the more generally available format of Quicktime. An advance subject like AI should be left to more advanced thinkers like those who are smart enough to move past what Microsoft feeds the dogs that respond to them ringing the bell.

  • Overtake

    Reading the last part, about Cope frustration for never making that “Big Work”, I came to think about Groucho Marx, one of the finest humorists ever, who was frustrated because he dreamt of being seen as a writer. It´s even funny.

    Same goes with Cope, his “Big Work” is there, these softwares are fantastic tools, really a genious creation!

    {}Overtake

  • JCHU

    I would like to hear some ‘Bach’ fugues or cantates composed by Cope. I am sure his process is the wright one. some randomness but not too much to search the harmony in our mind or reminiscence.
    Genial..

  • Carby

    Composers are artists of a mathematical nature, they must make sure every note fits in the song somehow. It’s now what you play, but HOW you play it that gives it soul.

  • metapede

    I don’t see this as a “triumph of the cyborg” so much as a kind of reincarnation of the composers themselves. The computer would not have been able to compose anything remotely Bach-like without being “fed” a whole lot of actual Bach.

  • Anonymous

    Mr. Cope expands the creative envelope. One day the name “Cope” may be right up there with Mozart and Beethoven.

  • mrsthing

    This is beautiful, and builds on the work Isao Tomita was doing in the 1970s, taking it to the next logical step. Tomita was the first to be able to mimic human voices electronically. They sounded very realistic. Cope’s voices sound even more realistic, and the instruments do, too. As a musician, I’m not worried. There’s still nothing like live music played by real people.

  • Anonymous

    Beauty removed from its element is still pleasant to look at. Music removed from the composer, still sounds wonderful. What is missing is the intention and emotion of the performer. Emily composes beautiful music without any intention beyond composing beautiful music.
    For me to play Bach well I must emote what I think Bach was feeling. This is easy to see with a live performance.
    I believe that the performing artists thoughts, feelings and even visual content are transmitted with the sound waves. What are Emily’s feelings and visual content?
    Yes music is mathematics, we can all agree. Emotional content can also be reduced to mathematics, try it. Try isolating the frequencies that carry the emotional content and add it. Then you have a better chance of success.
    I might be way out of line here…but I think that if the composer does not add emotional content and intention then the listener does. As is the case with the critic mentioned in your article.
    Most of all I hope not to dissuade or add my voice to those who think that Cope should cease his journey, I hope he continues to pursue this avenue.

  • Anonymous

    Whether people are comfortable with this or not makes not an iota of difference. It happened, and it’s possible, and it shows the computer nature of the human mind. You can scream, and cry, and pretend all you want, but at the end of the day, that computer wrote a beautiful piece of music. If the argument is that it devalues human creativity, then the answer is: yes it does. But being uncomfortable isn’t going to change the fact that it exists. Accept it or not, but it won’t go away.

  • lautaro

    so his brilliant point is that music is mostly inspired by, music already heard?

  • hazel

    Pffft folks who are calling Cope pompous etc are completely missing the point. What this man has done is created a TOOL not a monster! He’s discovered and demonstrated that a huge part of creativity is having a knack for breaking the rules. He has used technology to speed up the creative process to prolific levels, threatend the status quo, got people to really think about their place and role in the universe plus much much more. This is what artists do! His art? Technology that creates beautiful sounds. Come to think of it, so was the harpsichord, grandfather clock, the record player. Was there quite this amount of angst when those things were first invented? I wouldn’t doubt it. I’d like to know for sure. What Cope has accomplished is indeed possible only by standing on the shoulders of giants that came before him, which I believe is a sentiment he conveyed quite clearly in this interview.

    IMHO the whole human vs robot knee jerk fear based mentality is quite unnecessary. Without human interaction – there wont be a product, an output,sound, a composition, a song. There is no need to feel threatend as some have expressed or demonstrated when exposed to the music created by a machine. A machine – may I add who has a human being programing, developing, and playing with it.

    Emily is as Cope said simply an extension of himself, the artist. Strip away the complexity and “She’s” not much different than a pencil to a draftsman might be.

    I’m absolutely mind blown by Emmy and Emily Howell. Hope Cope keeps ramming his creations down the throats of his critics up until and beyond that moment he realizes that he has indeed reached his goal …”to create that one piece that changes someone’s life”

  • Jmath

    I would be more impressive to me if the computer wrote a good pop tune or folk tune with lyrics. I would quit trying if that happened. Computers writing classical music is like a computer navigating a flat road with bright yellow lines and nobody breaking the traffic laws. For a machine to write a tune like “Bar Room Girls” from Gillian Welch (also from Santa Cruz) that would break my heart.

  • stimpy77

    The music is beautiful. One comment, though… From the article, “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? Cope’s answers, ‘not much, and yes,’ made some people very angry.” As a computer programmer myself, I have to say that this is an unfair assessment of what really happened here between Mozart and software. The story and related stories indicate that this software’s algorithms were derivative, literally, from the processing of notation from various songs by Beethoven and the like. So well then when I was a kid I used to play with an A.I. software program called Eliza. Back then, this A.I. was pretty stupid, and the smartest variation of it probably still is, but the fact is sometimes it was programmed to make me laugh by telling a joke or make me feel ashamed by scolding me (“That was rude.”) My point is that if you take real human expressions and apply them in patterns that makes sense they are still human expressions, even if they were sampled and reorganized by computer software. In other words, if you can put the expression of soul in a musical idea into an algorithm, the algorithm is still soulful, as it still originated from a human being. The algorithm means nothing to a dog or a cat, and won’t help anyone in any practical ways like calculating finances. You’ve only repackaged a human expression, and there’s nothing anti-soul about that any more than recording a vocalist and listening to him/her on a high-bitrate MP3 is soulless.

  • Ed Porter

    Whether we want it or not — barring a major setback to civilization — within 5 to 25 years, computers will be able to perform all useful functions of the human mind better than humans — in many cases thousands or millions of times faster or better.

    Cope’s work is an important preview of this.

    One of life’s greatest mercies is that most of us grow old slowly, making it more easy to emotionally accept the growing limitations of our bodies as we age. Similarly, we should take note of the gradual advances in machine intelligence — as shown by Cope’s work — to prepare our minds to emotionally accept and embrace the machine intelligence that will soon surpass human mental capabilities in all fields.

    The task for humans is to not only emotionally embrace the power of machine intelligence, but to learn how to best use it — and our increasing understanding of our brains and minds — to create the best possible future for ourselves and our descendants. This includes learning how to use machines to make us more intelligent and wise — both as individuals — and, collectively, as families, cities, nations, and the world.

  • Anonymous

    Yay, someone has finally proved that the brain is just a biologic computer. However, i know enough about music to understand how a program that can do this can work…and about facts about the art of “new” or “random”

  • websooth

    Playwrights and composers face an incredible challenge– how to express a human idea
    through an impossibly limited medium (the printed page) in such a way that it
    can be interpreted by other unique human performances to evoke the original
    intent in an audience. Just the concept is human folly at it’s core. But when it
    works, we can be deeply affected.

    People have always longed for a single word or expression that could communicate
    the uniqueness we all seem to feel. The idea of a “soul” has allowed individuals
    to rationalize their fear of equality with other living things. So to, the
    notion of “creativity” seeks to separate the individual from the crowd. But
    there is nothing new under the sun. We are all made from the same stuff as the stars.

    I compare Cope to Bach, who’s “Well-Tempered Clavier” is an example of his
    exploration of contemporary technology to achieve expressive communication in
    repeatable ways. Emily is a tool that offers Mr. Cope the opportunity to explore
    concepts and ideas in a compressed time frame, not at all unlike the employment
    of an apprentice or a shop full of artisans. What can be heartbreaking for the
    master is that he must accept that his teaching skills may not support his
    idealised concepts.

    The tool is every bit as human as the product. Both reflect the time spent in
    composition and execution. Tools do not define the art. They simply help release
    the expression that is inherently there. A Stradivarius is just another fiddle
    in unskilled hands.

    I feel deeply for Mr. Cope because he has not yet achieved his heartfelt desire
    to thrill a new generation with his music. I do believe he has inspired and will
    continue to inspire others to explore unconventional methods of achieving great
    art. Whether he achieves his dream or not, a life spent in pursuit of a dream is
    a life well spent. In his own mind a failure perhaps, but hardly complete.

  • John S.

    Composers are people who practice listening for combinations of sounds that will resonate for other humans. Cope is right that composers find such sounds partly by listening to existing music. Then they use those sounds (and ways of assembling sounds) in their own pieces, or they modify them, listening all the while to the emerging sounds, seeking moments that are especially touching, soulful, or resonant. I don’t see the computer’s compositions as especially threatening, because the software relied on sounds and ways of combining them that had been pre-selected by composers for their beauty, effectiveness, power, and soulfulness. The software couldn’t help producing music that was “soulful,” because the soulfulness had already been built in by the human composers. Why should anyone be upset that this works? Any inventiveness by the software was based on proven human practices.

    The only advantage a human composer has over a computer is the ability to assess music with he/r own ears and mind and heart. A human composer’s taste is formed partly by the music s/he has heard, but s/he can tell right away, without thinking, whether or not music affects he/r. A computer program can only assess music (or compose it) by measuring it against procedures derived from human music.

    Cope’s software sounds like an impressive feat of programming and of investigating music! As a distillation of time-tested practices, it’s a tool for understanding music, and maybe a help for composing.

  • Anonymous

    No matter what people want to admit, all art eventually comes down to interpretation one way or the other. I remember when I majored in music in college, and my piano teacher got upset with me because I used the “wrong fingering” for a particular Bach passage I was performing in front of her on her piano. Well, innocently enough I asked the question “What difference does it make if the listener still hears the correct note being played by me?”

    Needless to say, she formed a look on her face that appeared as if I had said “fighting words”! But I myself do feel as well that a lot of times, us humans take things too seriously, and are pretentious, especially when it comes to classical music.

    Honestly, I understand that you have theory, rules, tones, modes, intervals, harmony, dynamics, meter, and etc. But please answer this, who are any of you to say exactely how a Bach Prelude and Fugue, and Chopin Etude was performed and composed unless you were alive to hear them when it was performed? I mean, can you truly say that this is the correct interpretation of this or that unless you personally heard it from the composer themselves?

    Most of the classics that we critique were written before any person able to read this message was born into existence. It doesn’t mean that your performance is bad, or wrong, but humans are not computers. yet we analyze this music as if it is static, and without any compromise of interpretation.

  • 5_10Hz

    “Emily Howell isn’t stealing creativity from people, he says. It’s just expressing itself. Cope claims it produced musical ideas he never would have thought about. He’s now convinced that, in many ways, machines can be more creative than people. They’re able to introduce random notions and reassemble old elements in new ways, without any of the hang-ups or preconceptions of humanity.

    “We are so damned biased, even those of us who spend all our lives attempting not to be biased. Just the mere fact that when we like the taste of something, we tend to eat it more than we should. We have our physical body telling us things, and we can’t intellectually govern it the way we’d like to,” he says.

    In other words, humans are more robotic than machines. “The question,” Cope says, “isn’t whether computers have a soul, but whether humans have a soul.”

    After all these years of psychobabble infiltrating common parlance it’s strange that it isn’t common practice to apply the notion of ‘projection’ to the music- phenomenon (my years in art school were tarnished by this whole debate, which it was clear to me then and it clear to me now, was/is unnecessary, like the religion debate and several others, but which issue I was never able to discuss with the lecturers, invested as they were in the whole idea of artist as hero). It hinges on the concept that messages can and should be invested with particular meaning that is harvested intact by consumers. If that’s not the case, it’s not a matter of degree. If we can’t be sure we’re getting the whole intended message then we can’t be sure we’re getting ANY. in which case we also can’t be sure of the existence of intention or indeed of any intelligence at all (organic or not) instigating the message, although many of us prefer to presume for practical purposes that such is there.

    Production and consumption of music occurs according to unwritten and unspoken contractual conditions. There is a relationship of trust and obligation in which the listener also consumes something of the injected person of the composer. We listen for his or her hopes, fears, pains and pleasures and hope that these will reflect our own. In other words, what we want apart from the pattern recognition experience, is exactly those biases and preferences that supposedly impede human attempts at originality. So music production and consumption are mostly a social process under strictly adhered to conditions. This is why EH bothers ppl so much; none of the expected contractual obligations are honoured.

    Like the ideas that humans might have invented god, or that the events of the world were not created simply to test or reward especially oneself, and actually that ‘life’ has no meaning other than that which we can invest in it, the idea that the experience of listening to music could be by necessity entirely solipsistic is very disturbing to people. It must be a lonely realisation.

    Ultimately it may be comforting apply a kind of uncertainty principle; we can’t be sure that artificial intelligence isn’t ‘real’, and if while acknowledging our human need for social connection through music we permit the understanding that the meaning we experience is really our own creation, whose verisimilitude (assuming the composers intention is the ‘real’ and originating important thing) we can never establish- THEN we may just sit back and actually enjoy the music.

  • emily

    I think that as an artist and singer it’s very understandable why this is upsetting. It’s kinda like someone coming up to you and going look you’re not special my computer can do that. If you spent you’re whole life mastering that (like me) It’s upsetting to here. I don’t know IMO the pieces were nice but not as good as said original composer. Something missing. Perhaps it was just they way they were played. It’s got potential though. Perhaps what is need is to try to take the art now where the machine couldn’t guess. Use it as a way to force more originality.

  • HoloPolymath

    Hey, people are just biological machines, and one of them spent LONG HOURS honing an artificial machine with HIS knowledge – that he also spent such a long time learning, like the article states – perhaps he deserves more respect then the insult to the detractors is worth. Music is music, machine music – human or artificial – is music.

  • Sandy

    Cope doesn't seem to be an asshole because he does or does not believe in the human soul, or that musical – or other – creativity can be replicated by a machine and perhaps perfected by it. Cope seems to be an asshole because of the way he expresses these views; using sarcasm in response to detractors and being condescending when he speaks of the public. He even seems as though he is childishly insulting the biggest supporter of useful discourse on his work. He could say uplifting things and explain his views in a neutral or positive manner instead of appearing filled with self-righteous, emo ennui. Dude is a genius for sure though.

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  • dorveK

    @Sandy: at least, Cope is not calling anyone an asshole…

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  • Trenton Tuggle

    There will always be room for both humans and machines — both Emily Howell and John Williams.

    When color photography was introduced, did human painters go around lamenting that they were unneeded? I think the same situation is found here — creative humans who have always thought there was no way to “automatically create” works like theirs are having their eyes opened. But just as the canvas, paint and human touch result in something that, while possibly flawed, is still appreciated for what it is; the same will hold true of human composers. While Emily Howell may emulate many human aspects (even flaws) in composition, I would assert that there is more to those human nuances than mere randomness. It may be subtle and indistinguishable under many circumstances, but it’s still there. Emily Howell’s ability to completely “think outside the box” I believe will indeed be both her contribution and her achilles heel.

    Finally, now that we have primitive software that can aid in the composition process, imagine the possibilities that we have. It’s like using Photoshop to produce works of art. Using Photoshop is not cheating — it’s just exploiting a tool in the creative process. The contribution of Emily Howell is just like that.

  • Matt Morgan

    I love the music, but I can't say that it's really being composed by a computer. It sounds participatory, like he's using the software to do lots of the composing grunt work (the parts that aren't new, but borrowed from history).

    Has anyone else used this software? Is it publicly released so that others can use and (hopefully) extend it?

    This is as impressive as computers being better than humans at chess; and the impact is mostly in attacking our notion of "creativity," just like really good chess programs do. But to say that it is a computer composing music is really just as luddite as to fear the idea that computers are composing music.

  • Jayezz

    I don't think it matters whether the program Cope has devised is capable of writing actual, original music or emulate the masters 'perfectly'. So what?!? The act of writing music, when done by a human, is a self motivated act of self expression.
    I applaud Cope for seeking to understand the true nature of musical composition, but the finding that 'there is nothing new under the sun' when it comes to musical composition is a moot point. That's of no consequence when the motivation for writing the music in the first place is to express oneself in some undefined way, or to connect with others.
    While the pieces of music being churned out by Cope's software may indeed be as good or better than music written by human composers, it is not IMO true composition if it is not motivated by an internal need for self expression. This will only be the case when the computer turns itself on, makes a conscious decision to write a piece of music then goes ahead and does so.

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