Alan Turing
26 Oct 2012 The concert celebrates the centenary of Alan Turing, who joined The University of Manchester in 1948 where he remained until his death, and is regarded as the father of modern computing. The pieces, by renowned Canadian composer Barry Truax and University of Manchester PhD researcher Mark Pilkington will be part of the four concert series Mantis Festival of Electroacoustic Music at The University's Martin Harris Centre from 27 to 28 October. Although his genius was most recognised in the UK for his work breaking German codes during the Second World War, Turing is seen as the father of the modern computer. Turing was also one of the first pioneers in artificial intelligence, computation theory and computer games. Truax's pieces - Enigma: the life and death of Alan Turing and From The Unseen World for tenor, piano and electronics - are inspired by Turing's work but also his conviction for homosexuality in 1952 and the subsequent effect it had on his life. He said: "Enigma is an unstaged but dramatic rendition of two key periods in Turing's personal life. "The first from his early years when he became infatuated with the brilliant Christopher Morcom who died young, and the second from his final years when he was convicted of gross indecency, eventually committing suicide.
TO READ THIS ARTICLE, CREATE YOUR ACCOUNT
And extend your reading, free of charge and with no commitment.