Jackson Moore

Jackson Moore is an alto saxophonist and composer living in New York. In the 1990s he studied with Jackie McLean and Anthony Braxton in Connecticut.[1] He organizes an annual Jazz Festival, the New Languages Festival.[2][3] He is also known for designing Moss, a musical language modeled on pidgins.[4]

Discography

With Anthony Braxton
gollark: That's later.
gollark: You would also want some sort of telescope array, so you can more accurately view the Andromedans to generate a more targeted insult.
gollark: I'm not sure if it's particularly *possible* that they could eventually somehow end up doing general-intelligence stuff well, but it might be interesting as a story.
gollark: We already have neural networks optimizing parameters for other neural networks, and machine learning systems are able to beat humans at quite a few tasks already with what's arguably blind pattern-matching.
gollark: One interesting (story-wise) path AI could go down is that we continue with what seems to be the current strategy - blindly evolving stuff without a huge amount of intentional design - and eventually reach human-or-better performance on a lot of tasks (including somewhat general-intelligency ones), while working utterly incomprehensibly to humans.I was going to say this after the very short discussion about ad revenue maximizers but left this half written and forgot.

References

  1. Day, Steve. liner notes, Two Compositions (Trio) 1998. http://www.leorecords.com/?m=select&id=CD_LR_367/368&ln=1
  2. "New Languages Festival Makes Avant-Garde Inviting, if Not Compromising", The New York Times, 15 May 2006. https://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/15/arts/music/15lang.html
  3. "For Jazz’s Avant-Garde, an Annual Gathering and a Little Competition" The New York Times, 6 June 2008. https://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/06/arts/music/06visi.html
  4. "Musik - när inte språket räcker till" Sveriges Radio, 26 October 2010. http://sverigesradio.se/sida/artikel.aspx?programid=1012&artikel=4132316


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