By February 2021, AI-assisted composition (OpenAI’s Jukebox, Magenta’s Piano Genie) was no longer science fiction. CM 291’s “content” would logically include critical discussions of generative models . But with social isolation, the algorithm also filled a psychological role: a non-judgmental, always-available improvisation partner. Students likely grappled with whether a Markov chain or a GAN could replace the missing energy of a live ensemble.
Before 2020, computer music pedagogy relied on communal listening—the critical A/B test in a treated room. In February 2021, students were listening on laptop speakers, Zoom-compressed audio, and mismatched earbuds. The “content” of CM 291 thus shifted from perfecting stereo imaging to understanding codec compression and perceptual audio coding as creative constraints. Assignments likely asked: How does music behave when it knows it is being heard through an algorithm? Computer Music 291 February 2021 -CONTENT-
In a typical year, a course titled “Computer Music 291” might focus on the technical bedrock of digital audio: sampling theory, FFT analysis, granular synthesis, and perhaps introductory Max/MSP or SuperCollider programming. However, the February 2021 context forces a deeper question: Students likely grappled with whether a Markov chain