Elainie Lillios: Composer
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Student Successes in EA
Students enrolled in the BGSU Music Technology classes (including Experimental Audio/Animation) have had their music played at regional and national conferences and festivals. Here are a few recent successes:

Tim Stulman's electroacoustic piece 5 Sense Off (created in Music Technology 2) was presented at Electronic Music Midwest 2007.

Steven Kemper's video Neoga (created in the Experimental Audio/Animation class) performed at the 2006 Florida Electroacoustic Music Festival.

Student electroacoustic pieces have also been presented at Florida ElectroAcoustic Music Festival, SEAMUS National Conferences, Third Practice, June in Buffalo, and Imagine2.

Teaching Assistantships
Many BGSU students hold doctoral teaching assistantships in music technology. Here's the current list:

Gregory Cornelius (MM 2003) University of Texas
Corey Knoll (MM 2007) Louisiana State University
Matthew McCabe (MM 2005) University of Florida
Steven Rice (MM 2005) Eastman School of Music

BGSU Electroacoustic Studios

BGSU boasts three high-end facilities for creating electroacoustic music. We also have a high-end recording control room. More information about our classes and studios is available through the BGSU Music Technology webpages. Below you'll find my own pages on the two studios I designed and maintain at BGSU.

Flexible 10.2 and first order cube Ambisonics at Bowling Green

Thanks to a grant from the Ohio Board of Regents, the College of Musical Arts is now the proud owner of a flexible 10.2 plus cube 8.4 multichannel electroacoustic studio, currently speced for thirteen different speaker placement possibilities. Housed in the New Media and Emerging Technology Center, this studio is available to students who want to pursue high end research and production in Ambisonics, multi-channel audio, interactivity, and multimedia (including video.) Click here to see photos and an equipment list.

Stereo Mastering in Style

The other BGSU Electroacoustic studio facility is housed in the Moore Musical Arts Center. It consists of four Macintosh G5 workstations outfitted for research and creative production in stereo, including real time interactivity and multimedia (including video). Click here to see photos and an equipment list.