Jason Freeman

Jason Freeman is a Professor of Music at Georgia Tech. His artistic practice and scholarly research focus on using technology to engage diverse audiences in collaborative, experimental, and accessible musical experiences. He also develops educational interventions in K-12, university, and MOOC environments that broaden and increase engagement in STEM disciplines through authentic integrations of music and computing. His music has been performed at Carnegie Hall, exhibited at ACM SIGGRAPH, published by Universal Edition, broadcast on public radio’s Performance Today, and commissioned through support from the National Endowment for the Arts. Freeman’s wide-ranging work has attracted support from sources such as the National Science Foundation, Google, and Turbulence. He has published his research in leading conferences and journals such as Computer Music Journal, Organised Sound, NIME, and ACM SIGCSE. Freeman received his B.A. in music from Yale University and his M.A. and D.M.A. in composition from Columbia University.

All Members

Sandeep Bhagwati

Concordia University
Montreal, Canada

Jean Bresson

IRCAM
Paris, France

Edmund Campion

Center for New Music and Audio Technologies (CNMAT)
Berkeley, USA

Ricardo Dal Farra

Concordia University
Montreal, Canada

Dominique Fober

Grame
Lyon, France

Jason Freeman

Georgia Institute of Technology
Atlanta, USA

Ichiro Fujinaga

McGill University
Montreal, Canada

Daniele Ghisi

Conservatory of Genova
Genova, Italy

Georg Hajdu

Hamburg University of Music and Drama (HfMT)
Hamburg, Germany

Richard Hoadley

Cambridge, UK

Cat Hope

Monash University
Clayton, Australia

David Kim-Boyle

The University of Sydney
Sydney, Australia

Thor Magnussen

University of Sussex
Sussex, UK

Chris Nash

University of the West of England (UWE Bristol)
Bristol, UK

Ryan Ross Smith

Monash University
Melbourne, Australia

Eldad Tsabary

Concordia University
Montreal, Canada

Paul Turowski

University of Liverpool
Liverpool, UK