Joel Chadabe’s influence extended to the distant shores of Australia, even as far back as 1981 (and possibly before that).
In 1981 there was a conference held in Melbourne called the "International Music and Technology Conference” and it is chronicled in the article by Hubert S. Howe as ... Report on the International Music and Technology Conference Hubert S. Howe, Jr. Computer Music Journal , Summer, 1982, Vol. 6, No. 2 (Summer, 1982), pp. 45- 51.
It makes fascinating reading all these years later.
International attendees at the conference were: Invited speakers: Tristram Cary, Peter Zinovieff, Jean-Claude Risset, John Chowning, and Joel Chadabe. Other internationals presenting papers were: Barry Truax, F. Richard Moore, and Hubert S. Howe Jr. Papers were also presented by Australian participants and a feast of concerts presented music by all of the paper presenters.
Reading Hubert Howe’s article all these years later, it is infused with many anecdotes like the title of Zinovieff’s paper: “Don’t Teach Mozart Fortran” and references to Melbourne’s wet and cold weather in August (Southern Hemisphere’s Winter). Sometimes brutally candid, Howe described Chadabe’s paper entitled “Paths to a Point in a Musical Landscape” as “…vague and philosophical, discussing both compositional and performance aspects of his own and of some other composers. His main point was something he called ‘interactive composition’, which is basically a kind of improvisation on pre-programmed synthesising equipment.” Howe also describes that Chadabe’s equipment drew some of the most enthusiastic responses of the conference. It used portable components of the Synclavier surviving the trip to Australia, by far the longest it had done.
Describing how his work Solo came about in the 1970s, Chadabe writes that he was able to obtain a model of the Synclavier and "I also asked Robert Moog to build two antennae, as modified theremins, to control the Synclavier as a conductor. Moog’s antennae were more than five feet tall and a half-inch in diameter. After using them in initial concerts and demonstrations, I changed to Volkswagen car antennae, which could be collapsed to fit into a suitcase for travel and placed on small tables for performing.”
Well those antennae also made it to Australia and Joel continues the story; "In 1981, I gave a keynote address at the International Music and Technology Conference in Melbourne, Australia, at which time I coined the term interactive composing.” See
https://joelchadabe.net/solo/
He also performed with his antennae at La Trobe University where I was an honours student at the time. His performance, plus the above IMTC were the kick start for my lifetime interest and involvement in CM/EA music.
I’ll always remember Joel as a kind, considerate, encouraging and compassionate champion of Electronic Music and a wonderful human being.
Hubert S. Howe’s CMJ article on the IMTC 1981, referred to above, can be found here:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/3679677?seq=1 I can recommend it for its other commentary on the other speakers above, which reads like a who’s who of computer music at the time.
David H
Associate Professor David Hirst, PhD | Honorary Principal Fellow
Melbourne Conservatorium of Music | Faculty of Fine Arts and Music
Melbourne Conservatorium of Music, The University of Melbourne, Southbank, Victoria, 3006 Australia
M: +61 3 413 325 001 E: d.h...@unimelb.edu.au
https://finearts-music.unimelb.edu.au/about-us/mcm
We respectfully acknowledge the Elders, past and present, of the Boonwurrung and Wurundjeri people of the Eastern Kulin nation.

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