Saturday, June 28, 2025

Fwd: [DMRN-LIST] CMMR 2005 - paper deadline extension + all further tracks live






  [apologies for cross-posting]

CMMR 2025 'Sound, Music: Space, Place' - Extended deadline (regular papers) + all further tracks now live (tutorials, demos, workshops)

By popular request, the submission deadline for regular papers has been extended. The new deadline is 1 July at 12:00 AM Pacific Time, which is 2 July at 8:00 AM UK time.

17th International Symposium on Computer Music Multidisciplinary Research (CMMR 2025) - this year's theme is 'Sound, Music: Space, Place' hosted by UCL in East London, 3 - 7 November 2025

Conference website: https://cmmr2025.prism.cnrs.fr/
CMT submission site: 
https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/CMMR2025 


CMMR 2025 welcomes contributions focusing on the multidisciplinary intersection of sound, music, and computing.

Under this year's theme 'Sound, Music: Space, Place' we particularly encourage submissions that engage with the spatial and situated dimensions of sonic practice.

The conference is hosted by 
UCL's internationally renowned departments of UCL Anthropology (within the forward-thinking UCL School for the Creative and Cultural Industries) and the The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. The conference is co-organised with the CNRS-AMU PRISM laboratory (Perception, Representations, Image, Sound, Music).

CMMR creates an open and inclusive space dedicated to sharing a wide range of insights and innovations that bridge sound, music, and computing. CMMR 2025 will feature a diverse range of activities across the following tracks: regular papers, demonstrations, sound & music works, tutorials, and workshops. CMMR 2025 is planned to be an in-person event; all presenters are required to attend and present onsite.


Important Dates (deadlines are set at midnight Pacific Time (PT) on the specified dates.)


Regular paper deadline (extended): 1 July 2025 
Notification of acceptance: 15 August 2025
Camera-ready version deadline: 12 September 2025
Author registration deadline : 21 September 2025

Demo Track deadline: 14 July 2025 
Notification of acceptance: 15 August 2025

Tutorial track deadline: 15 July 2025 
Notification of acceptance: 15 August 2025

Workshop Track deadline: 15 July 2025 
Notification of acceptance: 15 August 2025

Sound & Music Track deadline: 25 July 2025 
Notification of acceptance: 15 August 2025



Registration
Early registration: 22 August - 6 October 2025
Normal registration: 7 October - 26 October 2025
Late registration: 27 October - 7 November 2025


Conference dates: 3 - 7 November 2025

CMMR 2025 is committed to fostering an inclusive and welcoming conference environment. We especially encourage submissions from individuals traditionally underrepresented in computer music,  including women, people from the Global Majority, LGBTQIA+ communities, disabled people, non-traditional scholars (such as those in indurty or otherwise outside academia, or from interdisciplinary fields), and individuals from diverse socioeconomic, cultural, and educational backgrounds. 


Further information including submission requirements can be found online. Conference logistics will follow soon.

For all enquiries, including 
accessibility needs, please contact us at: 
cmmr25@ucl.ac.uk



We look forward to your submissions!

The CMMR 2025 Organising Committee

Sunday, June 15, 2025

Fwd: Special Collection in Music & Science on "Explaining music with AI" published



Dear list members,

 

We are delighted to announce the publication of a special collection in the journal, Music & Science, on the topic of 'Explaining music with AI: Advancing the scientific understanding of music through computation'. The collection has been guest edited by David Meredith, Anja Volk and Tom Collins.

 

The special collection has been published open access and is available online at

https://journals.sagepub.com/topic/collections-mns/mns-1-explaining_music_with_ai/mns

 

The collection includes an editorial overview and seven articles as follows:

 

Perception of Chord Sequences Modeled with Prediction by Partial Matching, Voice-Leading Distance, and Spectral Pitch-Class Similarity: A New Approach for Testing Individual Differences in Harmony Perception, by Matthew Eitel, Nicolas Ruth, Peter Harrison, Klaus Frieler, and Daniel Müllensiefen.

https://doi.org/10.1177/20592043241257654

 

The Interconnections of Music Structure, Harmony, Melody, Rhythm, and Predictivity, by Shuqi DaiHuan Zhang, and Roger B. Dannenberg

https://doi.org/10.1177/20592043241234758

 

End-to-End Bayesian Segmentation and Similarity Assessment of Performed Music Tempo and Dynamics without Score Information, by Corentin Guichaoua, Paul Lascabettes and Elaine Chew

https://doi.org/10.1177/20592043241233411

 

Revealing Footprints of Ancient Sources in Recent Eurasian and American Folk Music Cultures Using PCA of the Culture-Dependent Moment Vectors of Shared Melody Types, by Zoltán Juhász

https://doi.org/10.1177/20592043241228982

 

Melodic Differences Between Styles: Modeling Music With Step Inertia, by Matt Chiu and David Temperley

https://doi.org/10.1177/20592043231225731

 

Mel2Word: A Text-Based Melody Representation for Symbolic Music Analysis, by Saebyul Park, Eunjin Choi, Jeounghoon Kim and Juhan Nam

https://doi.org/10.1177/20592043231216254

 

Understanding Feature Importance in Musical Works: Unpacking Predictive Contributions to Cluster Analyses, by Cameron J. Anderson and Michael Schutz.

https://doi.org/10.1177/20592043231216257

 

We hope that collection will provide a useful resource for researchers interested in using computational methods to advance our understanding of music.

 

Kind regards,

David Meredith

 

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Fwd: Book Launch for Sonic Pasts - acoustical heritage and historical soundscapes

**This list is managed by Professor Evangelos Himonides, University College London (UCL). Before 2015, this list was managed by the Institute of Musical Research (IMR).** MESSAGE FOLLOWS:
Hi everyone!

Next Monday 9th June we are hosting the book launch for my book 'Sonic Pasts: acoustical heritage and historical soundscapes' It's a hybrid event with options to attend in person in York or to join online. You can book a free ticket here.

Best wishes,
Mariana 
--
Professor Mariana López
Professor in Sound Production and Post Production
Principal Investigator 'Enhancing Audio Description II'
School of Arts and Creative Technologies, University of York
Deputy Director, Humanities Research Centre, University of York
Pronouns: She/Her

Friday, May 30, 2025

Fwd: [DMRN-LIST] AURORA³ announcement and Research Engineer job opportunity (deadline 18 June 2025)



---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Enzo De Sena <00007eea1c298d8e-dmarc-request@jiscmail.ac.uk>
Date: Fri, 30 May 2025 at 15:57
Subject: [DMRN-LIST] AURORA³ announcement and Research Engineer job opportunity (deadline 18 June 2025)
To: <DMRN-LIST@jiscmail.ac.uk>


Dear Digital Music Research Network, (Apologies for cross-posting!)

I am writing to share two pieces of news.

First, we secured funding from EPSRC (Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council) to build new acoustic research infrastructure. AURORA³ (Anechoic and Universal Research Observation Rooms for Audio, Acoustics, and AI) will incorporate a state-of-the-art anechoic chamber equipped with a spherical loudspeaker array and a variable acoustics room combining adjustable wall panels and a moving wall system, enabling both room volume and reverberation times to be controlled.

The aim is to provide precisely controlled acoustic conditions for fast, accurate and reproducible physical and perceptual data collection. This is valuable, for instance, in machine/deep learning research, where large, high-quality, and diverse datasets captured under realistic conditions are important to build effective models.

AURORA³ is UK National Strategic Infrastructure, but it will be accessible to researchers worldwide, from both industry and academia. In addition to welcoming on-site visits, we also plan to support remote collaborations by conducting certain experiments on behalf of external researchers. If this sounds relevant to you, please follow our LinkedIn page:
https://www.linkedin.com/company/aurora3-uk

Second, we are looking for a Research Engineer to help us bring AURORA³ to life. The position is initially for two years. The job advertisement is included below. If you know a graduating PhD student or a promising MSc graduate who might be interested, please feel free to share. Thank you!

Best regards,
   Enzo


RESEARCH ENGINEER IN AUDIO, ACOUSTICS & AI

Institute of Sound Recording, University of Surrey
Location: Guildford (35 minutes by fast train from London)
Salary: £37,174 p.a. - £45,413 p.a.
Post Type: Full Time
Closing Date: 23.59 hours BST on 18 June 2025
Interview Date: 27 June 2025 (online)

An exciting opportunity to join the AURORA³ team to pioneer next-generation infrastructure for audio, acoustics, and AI.

AURORA³ is a new strategic facility at the University of Surrey supporting cutting-edge research in audio, acoustics, and artificial intelligence (AI). It will incorporate a state-of-the-art acoustic anechoic chamber equipped with a spherical loudspeaker array and a world-first variable acoustics room enabling reverberation times as well as room volume to be precisely controlled. Our vision for AURORA³ is to bring the A³ (audio, acoustics and AI) community together, produce high-quality data resources that enable substantial advances in the development of technologies and science relating to sound and hearing, and foster a mindset that encompasses inclusion, rigorous inquiry and pathways for realising societal and economic benefit.

AURORA³ will establish National Strategic Infrastructure, accessible to researchers in industry and academia alike. It is supported by a £2.2 million investment from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), in addition to significant contributions from the University of Surrey and the 18 AURORA³ partners.

We are seeking to appoint a Research Engineer to help design, implement, and operate AURORA³. The successful candidate will be appointed at Level 4, with salary depending on experience. The post is full time and initially offered for a fixed term of 2 years (end date currently capped at 30/June/2027). The preferred start date is as soon as possible, with the earliest possible start on 1/July.

YOUR PROFILE

You will have a strong background in acoustics and audio engineering, software development, and technical writing/documentation. Ability to collaborate with colleagues and stakeholders will be essential. We particularly welcome candidates with experience in psychoacoustic listening tests and machine/deep learning. A PhD in a relevant area is desirable. Depending on experience, the role may additionally involve shaping strategic direction, including co-writing of grant proposals and mentoring PhD students.

WHAT WE CAN OFFER

The University of Surrey is a global university with a world-class research profile and an enterprising spirit, located in one of the safest counties in England, within 35 minutes of London by train and minutes away from the Surrey Hills, an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.

The successful candidate will be hosted by the Institute of Sound Recording (IoSR), an internationally-recognised centre for acoustic engineering research. The IoSR is also home to the renowned Tonmeister degree in Music and Sound Recording, which has produced a stream of highly successful graduates who have collectively received numerous accolades, including three Oscars, twelve Grammys, six Emmys, and twelve BAFTAs. AURORA³ is delivered in collaboration with the Centre for Vision, Speech and Signal Processing (CVSSP), globally recognised for pioneering 3D computer vision and spatial audio, founder of Surrey Institute for People-Centred AI (PAI), and host of the new £8 million CoSTAR AI compute facility. This network of expertise will provide the post holder access to a thriving, world-class research environment, state-of-the-art facilities, and opportunities to engage with both academic and industry stakeholders.

We offer a competitive remuneration package, including relocation assistance where applicable,  market-leading pension scheme, and staff development opportunities.

HOW TO APPLY

Informal enquiries by email are welcomed to Professor Enzo De Sena (e.desena@surrey.ac.uk).

Please apply using the link below with your CV and cover letter outlining why you are interested in the position also answering the criteria questions. Applications received via email will not be considered. Interviews will be held on 27/June.

https://jobs.surrey.ac.uk/Vacancy.aspx?id=14845



--
Enzo De Sena
Professor (Full Professor)
Director, Institute of Sound Recording
Department of Music & Media
University of Surrey
Stag Hill, University Campus, Guildford GU2 7XH, UK

Office: 08aBC03
Email: e.desena@surrey.ac.uk
URL: desena.org
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/enzodesena

Friday, May 9, 2025

Fwd: [DMRN-LIST] Survey on the landscape of computational musicology

Dear Colleagues,

As part of the Laudare ERC project, we are conducting a research
focused on computational musicology. Our specific aim is to identify
current gaps and understand the needs within the existing suite of
tools available for researchers.

We kindly invite you to contribute your valuable expertise by
participating in a brief survey. It is designed to take approximately
10-15 minutes of your time and can be conveniently completed from your
smartphone or computer.

Access the survey here: https://forms.gle/tvy3S6raKK76qkgN7

Please feel free to reach out if you have any questions.

Best regards,



--
Federico Simonetta
Post-doc Researcher @ Laudare ERC project
Visiting Researcher @ LIM - Music Informatics Laboratory
GSSI - Gran Sasso Science Institute
https://federicosimonetta.eu.org | https://gssi.it | https://laudare.eu
| https://lim.di.unimi.it

Thursday, May 8, 2025

Fwd: Survey on the landscape of computational musicology

Dear Colleagues,

As part of the Laudare ERC project, we are conducting a research
focused on computational musicology. Our specific aim is to identify
current gaps and understand the needs within the existing suite of
tools available for researchers.

We kindly invite you to contribute your valuable expertise by
participating in a brief survey. It is designed to take approximately
10-15 minutes of your time and can be conveniently completed from your
smartphone or computer.

Access the survey here: https://forms.gle/tvy3S6raKK76qkgN7

Please feel free to reach out if you have any questions.

Best regards,


--
Federico Simonetta
Post-doc Researcher @ Laudare ERC project
Visiting Researcher @ LIM - Music Informatics Laboratory
GSSI - Gran Sasso Science Institute
https://federicosimonetta.eu.org | https://gssi.it | https://laudare.eu
| https://lim.di.unimi.it

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Fwd: [DMRN-LIST] Mon,12 May 2025, 4PM, KCL Strand S1.12: Ville Pulkki (Aalto University) career contributions in acoustics and sound


Please see below for an upcoming MARC seminar at King's College London.  If you do not have access to the Strand Building at King's, please sign up here so we know to send someone to meet you in the Strand Building lobby 10 minutes before the event.  Professor Ville Pulkki is hosted by Professor Zoran Cvetkovic and Dr Julie Meyer.

__

KCL Music and Acoustics Research Centre Seminar

Ville Pulkki from Aalto University to give presentation on career contributions in acoustics and sound

Monday, 12 May 2025, Strand Campus, King's College London... Professor Ville Pulkki will visit King's and give a talk on his career contributions. Ville's main contributions include Vector Base Amplitude Planning (VBAP), Directional Audio Coding (DirAC), and Cross-Pattern Coherrence (CroPaC). In addition, Ville contributed to research outputs on lasers, psychoacoustics, simplified room acoustics rendering, studies on yelling against wind, rendering of thought voice in VR, and aurora borealis sounds.
Ville's talk is an in-person event. The event will take place in room S1.12 at the Strand building (Strand Campus, Strand, London, WC2R 2LS) between 16:00pm – 17:00pm on Monday, 12 May 2025.

__


Elaine Chew | eniale.kcl.ac.uk
Professor of Engineering | King's College London
NMES: Engineering | FoLSM : BMEIS : Cardiovascular Imaging
Becket House, BH5.16 | 1 Lambeth Palace Rd, London, SE1 7EU, UK

Thursday, May 1, 2025

Fwd: PhD Scholarships at the University of Leeds (Deadline: 2 June)




Dear all,

 

The School of Music in the University of Leeds invites applications for two PhD scholarships from prospective postgraduate researchers who wish to commence study for a PhD in the academic year 2025/26.  

 

School of Music Opportunity Research Scholarship

This scholarship is open to prospective postgraduate researchers from Black, Asian and other minoritised ethnic groups who are eligible for the Home/UK rate of tuition fees.

Further information can be found here: https://phd.leeds.ac.uk/funding/385-school-of-music-opportunity-research-scholarship-2025-26

 

Stanley Burton Research Scholarship

This scholarship is open to prospective postgraduate researchers who are eligible for the Home/UK rate of tuition fees.

Further information can be found here: https://phd.leeds.ac.uk/funding/23-stanley-burton-research-scholarship-2025

 

The awards provide full academic fees and a maintenance grant (£19,237 in Session 2024/25) for full-time study (with pro-rata awards available for part-time study).

 

The School of Music at the University of Leeds has an international reputation for research, and we bring together a community of scholars, composers and performers. We particularly welcome applications that connect to the School of Music's core research areas:

- Music as Culture (musicology exploring the role of music within historical, theoretical, literary, aesthetic, technological, popular, and interdisciplinary contexts)

 

- Music, Science and Technology (including music psychology, music and wellbeing, music technology, musical instrument studies, sound studies, and scientific perspectives on music)

 

- Making Music (composition, performance, and practice-based research methodologies)

 

- Pedagogic Research in Music (research regarding teaching and learning processes, experiences, and contexts in music)

How to apply

Full information, including details of the application process can be found through the links above. Applicants must submit both PhD study and scholarship applications no later than 5pm (UK time) Monday 2 June 2025.

 

All best,

 

Emily Payne

 

Dr Emily Payne (she/her) (hear my name)

Associate Professor of Music

Director of Postgraduate Research Studies, School of Music

 

School of Music, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK

https://ahc.leeds.ac.uk/music/staff/396/dr-emily-payne

 

Payne, E. (2022). Instrumental Interaction and Subversion in John Cage's Concert for Piano and Orchestra. Contemporary Music Review.

Schuiling, F. & Payne, E. (Eds.) (2022). Material Cultures of Music Notation: New Perspectives on Musical Inscription (Routledge).

Doffman, M., Payne, E., & Young, T. (Eds.) (2021). The Oxford Handbook of Time in Music (OUP).

Thursday, April 10, 2025

Fwd: [cfp] Interdisciplinary and intercultural perspectives on musical care



[sent on behalf of the Musical Care International Network]

We are delighted to report that a call for papers for the Special Collection "Interdisciplinary and intercultural perspectives on musical care" is up on the Music & Science journal website:

 The final deadline for submissions is 8 September 2025, but papers are welcome at any time before that date.

How did we get here?
 
The idea for this collection came from the Network's Research and Funding group meeting in January 2024 where the need for routes to submission were discussed and the idea of a special issue raised. Since then, the three of us applied to the journal Music & Science to guest edit a special collection on the topic. This journal seemed an appropriate home for this collection as the Network and the Journal share much in their respective goals, including our emphasis on interdisciplinary work and of communication among researchers from a range of disciplinary backgrounds in order to understand music and the roles it can play in our lives. The application was immediately successful, so we formulated a call for papers about which we consulted with the Network's Research and Funding group.
 
What do I need to know now?
 
As a first step, do take a look at the call
 
As with any submission to a peer-reviewed journal, if you'd like to submit, please familiarise yourself with the journal's submission guidelines: https://uk.sagepub.com/en-gb/eur/music-science/journal202491#submission-guidelines.
 Submissions will need to fit with the quality and scope criteria of the journal. Some papers may not fit – if that's the case, that may indicate we need another special collection/issue in another journal but in the meantime, we can suggest alternative journals to submit to.
 
The journal charges an article processing charge (APC) of 854 USD. If you work at a university, you can check whether the university has an arrangement with the publisher with respect to the APC. If you don't work at a university or if your institution does not have such an arrangement, a fee waiver might be an option (https://uk.sagepub.com/en-gb/eur/gold-open-access-article-processing-charge-waivers). 

Finally, all members of SEMPRE get a 50% discount (https://sempre.org.uk/membership).
 
How can I be involved?
 
We have designed the call to reflect the Network's values and scope and we do hope you will consider submitting your research. The collection will be guest edited by us and (conflicts of interest permitting) we hope to draw on your expertise during the review process. Moreover, if you would be open to mentoring someone in the Network as they work up their paper, please let us know.
 
The call is not exclusive to Network members, do pass the link along to anyone who might be interested. It would be particularly helpful if you have links to organisations who can share the link with their members.
 
Whether you end up being an author, reviewer, mentor, and/or reader of the final papers, we hope you find this initiative helpful.
 
Warm regards,
Musical Care International Network

Fwd: AHRC PhD studentship: Soundscapes of domesticity: music and lived experiences in non-elite English homes, 1780–1870


Dear all,

 

Matt Ingleby and I have secured a fully-funded, 4-year PhD studentship with the Museum of the Home on music and lived experiences in non-elite English homes, 1780-1870.

 

Please do share with anyone you think might be interested:

 

Alastair (and Matt)

--

 

AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Partnership (CDP) studentship

Soundscapes of domesticity: music and lived experiences in non-elite English homes, 1780–1870

 

Queen Mary University of London with the Museum of the Home

 

The deadline for applications is: 1700 BST, Friday 23 May 2025

Interviews will be held during the week commencing: Monday 2 June 2025

 

Queen Mary University of London and the Museum of the Home are pleased to announce the availability of a fully-funded Collaborative Doctoral Studentship from October 2025 under the AHRC's Collaborative Doctoral Partnership (CDP) scheme. The studentship is funded for four years full-time, or up to eight years part-time.

 

Project overview and key aims

This project will explore the significance of music to lived experiences in non-elite English homes from the late-eighteenth to the mid-nineteenth century. Focusing on examples of different types of home from working-class cottages to petit-bourgeois households, lodging houses and institutional homes, it aims to provide understanding of the role played by music in relation to three key areas of domestic experience: (i) how music was entwined with embodied domestic practices and how it shaped expressive responses, emotional capacities and movement within the home; (ii) how music enabled and sustained familial relationships and other domestic social interactions; and (iii) how music connected homes to the places around them, and the commercial, social, cultural and political networks of the wider world.

 

Alongside a PhD thesis presenting original new research on a neglected area of historical and musicological investigation, the findings of the project will contribute to the Museum of the Home's redisplay of its eighteenth and earlier nineteenth-century period rooms. The production of musical soundtracks for museum visitors and the organisation of a 'Festival-Symposium' on 'Music in the Home', with contributions from researchers, curators and musicians, will be additional outputs.

 

This project will be jointly supervised by Alastair Owens (Professor of Historical Geography), and Matthew Ingleby (Lecturer in Victorian Literature) at Queen Mary; and, at the Museum of the Home, by Louis Platman (Curator and Research Manager) and Gaynor Tutani (Creative Programming Officer).

 

Click here for further details and the application process.

 

For enquiries, or an informal discussion, please contact Alastair Owens (a.j.owens@qmul.ac.uk)

 

Professor Alastair Owens

Professor of Historical Geography and Director of Education

Chair of Trustees, The Geographical Association

 

School of Geography | Queen Mary University of London | Mile End Road | London | E1 4NS | UK

How to contact me:

Telephone: 0776 560 1782 | Email: a.j.owens@qmul.ac.uk | Using Microsoft Teams? Click here to chat with me |X: @AlastairHackney |Bluesky: @alastairhackney.bsky.social

 

Recent work:

Artists, other creative practitioners and COVID-19: personal experiences and policy reflections (Report, 2022)

At home in London during COVID-19: policy recommendations and key findings (Report, 2022)

Anglicanism, race and the inner city: parochial domesticity and anti-racism in the long 1980s (History Workshop Journal 94, 2022)

Working better together: geographers and collaboration (Teaching Geography 48, 2023)