Andrew Schloss

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Andrew Schloss ( Walter Andrew Schloss; born 1952 Hartford, Connecticut) is an American musician and computer engineer.

Career

Schloss is perhaps best known for his work with the radiodrum, a three-dimensional midi-controller. Schloss is a pioneer in computer-music technology, and worked at IRCAM and the CCRMA in the 1980s. He has performed with Léon Theremin, Laurie Anderson, Tito Puente, Chucho Valdés, David A. Jaffe and Peter Brook. He has collaborated extensively with David A. Jaffe, who has composed a variety of works for him, including "The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World," for radiodrum-performed Disklavier and ensemble. Schloss teaches at the University of Victoria and heads the Music Computer Science joint degree program. Schloss earned a PhD in 1985 from Stanford University, where he worked at CCRMA – the Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics.

Selected technography

<ol type=square start="10"> <li> <li> <li> Part 1: "Sonata "Sacre" <li> Part 2: "The Most Religious" <li> Part 3: "Reversed Orbits" <li> Part 4: "Oracular and Prophetic" <li> Part 5: "Edible Trance"</ol></ol> [Centaur](https://bliptext.com/articles/centaur-records) CRC 2190 [Discogs](https://bliptext.com/articles/discogs) [release ID 1773079](https://bliptext.com/articles/undefined). [Allmusic](https://bliptext.com/articles/allmusic) [album ID mw0001371262](https://bliptext.com/articles/undefined). </ol>

Primary sources

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