Biography - James Dashow
James Dashow has had commissions, awards and grants from
the Bourges International Festival of Experimental Music, the Guggenheim Memorial
Foundation, Linz Ars Electronica Festival, the Fromm Foundation, the Biennale
di Venezia, the USA National Endowment for the Arts, RAI (Italian National Radio),
the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, the Rockefeller Foundation,
Il Cantiere Internazionale d'Arte (Montepulciano, Italy), the Koussevitzky Foundation,
Prague Musica Nova, and the Harvard Musical Association of Boston. In 2000,
he was awarded the prestigious Prix Magistere at the 30th Festival International
de Musique et d'Art Sonore Electroacoustiques in Bourges.
A pioneer in the field of computer music, Dashow was one of the founders of
the Centro di Sonologia Computazionale at the University of Padova, where he
composed the first works of computer music In Italy, and has taught at MIT,
Princeton University, the Centro para la Difusion di Musica Contemporanea in
Madrid and the Musica Viva Festival in Lisbon; he lectures and conducts master-classes
extensively in the U.S. and Europe, most recently for the Conservatorio di Musica
Benedetto Marcello in Venezia (december, 2004) where he taught an intensive
series of workshop/master classes in digital sound synthesis techniques applied
in particular to compositional practices, and to various aspects of the spatialization
of sound.
He served as the first vice-president of the International Computer Music Association,
and was for many years the producer of the radio program "Il Forum Internazionale
di Musica Contemporanea" for Italian National Radio. He has written theoretical
and analytical articles for Perspectives of New Music, the Computer Music Journal,
La Musica, and Interface. Most recently he was the subject of an extended interview
published in the Computer Music Journal (Summer, 2003). He is the author of
the MUSIC30 language for digital sound synthesis. His music has been recorded
on WERGO (Mainz), Capstone Records (New York), Neuma (Boston), RCA-BMG (Roma),
ProViva (Munich), Scarlatti Classica (Roma), CRI (New York), and Pan (Roma).
Dashow makes his home in the Sabine Hills north of Rome
March 2005