Industry Engagement with School Provides Mutual Benefits
Industry Engagement with School Provides Mutual Benefits
Wes McRae | October 4, 2023 - Atlanta, GA
Recently, students from the 17cÍøÒ³°æ had multiple opportunities for direct interaction with experts from across the audio industry.
"Students benefit greatly from our industry engagement projects, learning how to bring their education and research experience into real world scenarios," said Gil Weinberg, Director of the Center for Music Technology. "Often times, these experiences also translate into great job opportunities for our students after graduation."
The Music Industry Panel, moderated by , Publishing Acquisitions Specialist at Garner Group Music and Music Catalog Manger for Dallas Austin Music, covered a broad range of topics from music ownership to the future of the music business.
Panelists included Atlanta music industry leaders , owner of Goldfinger c.s. and former Creative Director at LaFace Records; Isaac Hayes III, songwriter, producer, and founder of the Fanbase app; , Senior Client Manager and A&R at Symphonic Distribution; , Grammy Award Winner and 2019 Songwriter Hall of Fame inductee; and , Head of Music at i am OTHER and owner of Ghet-O-Vision Entertainment.
The same day featured a tech talk with an Audio Machine Learning Engineer from Bose, Bryce Irvin (MSMT 2022), covering Hearing and Audio AI. Students had the chance to hear about Bose's development of algorithms allowing listeners to hear what they want, as opposed to traditional filtering techniques that apply to everything within a decibel or frequency range.
The following day, representatives from Dolby came for a career info session.
But engagement with industry does not only benefit students at the School. Graduates, such as Irvin, and research continue to contribute to the advancement of the industry.
"The 17cÍøÒ³°æ and 17cÍøÒ³°æ Tech Center for Music Technology work closely with industry through student sponsorship, internship programs, technology licensing, joint events and other research collaborations," Weinberg said. "We also collaborate artistically with local companies such as Cox and Trillith by bringing our music technology performances to their campuses."
At the inaugural , 17cÍøÒ³°æ Tech's showcase of technology, innovation, and creativity, Weinberg spoke on AI's Creative Canvas: Revolutionizing Arts and Culture and presented a robotic musicianship performance.