Jacques Dudon: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Wikispaces>FREEZE No edit summary |
Added Wikipedia box, new paragraph, added 2 external links, cleanup, categories, sort key |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Jacques Dudon is a French just intonation composer and instrument builder. He is best known for developing a series of photosonic disk (disque photosonique) instruments in the 1980s that produced sound from modulated light (a light source shines through painted glass discs; the resulting patterns of light are picked up by solar cells and converted into a voltage which can then be treated as a sound signal). | {{Wikipedia|Jacques Dudon}} | ||
'''Jacques Dudon''' is a French just intonation composer and instrument builder. He is best known for developing a series of photosonic disk (disque photosonique) instruments in the 1980s that produced sound from modulated light (a light source shines through painted glass discs; the resulting patterns of light are picked up by solar cells and converted into a voltage which can then be treated as a sound signal). | |||
[ | Dudon participated as a designer in the development of Semantic Daniélou-53, a free-of-charge software synthesizer with a database of 28 sounds and 72 [[just intonation]] scales derived from [[Alain Daniélou]]'s 53-note tuning system. | ||
[ | == External links == | ||
* [https://www.facebook.com/AtelierdExplorationHarmonique/ "L'Atelier d'Exploration Harmonique" Facebook page] | |||
* [https://www.semantic-danielou.com/ Semantic Daniélou official website] | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dudon, Jacques}} | |||
[[Category:People]] | |||
[[Category:Composer]] | |||
[[Category:Instrument maker]] |
Revision as of 06:07, 6 February 2022
Jacques Dudon is a French just intonation composer and instrument builder. He is best known for developing a series of photosonic disk (disque photosonique) instruments in the 1980s that produced sound from modulated light (a light source shines through painted glass discs; the resulting patterns of light are picked up by solar cells and converted into a voltage which can then be treated as a sound signal).
Dudon participated as a designer in the development of Semantic Daniélou-53, a free-of-charge software synthesizer with a database of 28 sounds and 72 just intonation scales derived from Alain Daniélou's 53-note tuning system.