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Sospeso
performs with Miller Puckette at the Boulez
tribute concert on May 10, 2005, at Zankel Hall.
Puckette
obtained a B.S. in Mathematics from MIT (1980) and Ph. D. in Mathematics
from Harvard (1986). Puckette was a member of MIT's Media Lab from
its inception until 1987, and then a researcher at IRCAM
(l'Institut de Recherche et de Coordination Musique/Acoustique,
founded by composer and conductor Pierre Boulez).
There he wrote the Max program for MacIntosh computers, which was
first distributed commercially by Opcode Systems in 1990 and is
now available from Cycling74.com.
In 1989 Puckette joined IRCAM's "musical workstation"
team and put together an enhanced version of Max, called Max/FTS,
for the ISPW system, which was commercialized by Ariel, Inc. This
system became a widely used platform in computer music research
and production facilities. The IRCAM real-time development team
has since reimplemented and extended this software under the name
jMax, which is distributed free with source code.
Puckette joined
the Music department of the University of California, San Diego
in 1994, and is now Associate Director of the Center for Research
in Computing and the Arts (CRCA). He is currently working on a new
real-time software system for live musical and multimedia performances
called Pure Data ("Pd"), in collaboration with many other
artists/researchers/programmers worldwide. Pd is free and runs on
Linux, IRIX, and Windows systems. Since 1997 Puckette has also been
part of the Global Visual Music project with Mark Danks, Rand
Steiger, and Vibeke Sorensen, which has been generously supported
by a grant from the Intel Research Council.
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