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Pete Townshend's new album
Pete Townshend says the next Who album will be inspired by music made by computers. The guitarist, with the help of mathematician and composer Lawrence Ball and software engineer David Snowdon, has created a computer system called 'The Method' which allows users to make unique pieces of music created by inputting personal information, sounds and a rhythm.
Townshend plans to use the music created on the web on the next Who album as long as his band mate Roger Daltrey gives the project the go-ahead.
Users will 'sit' for the software in the same way a person would pose for a portrait painting, and the compositions created will be posted on the site.
Townshend first had the idea for 'The Method' in 1971 when he wrote a futuristic film script called 'The Life house' in which he prophesied about the coming of the internet, and how it would allow people to "share music, make music and call people together to celebrate".
Despite his passion for computer-composed music, the rocker admits he hasn't been able to get singer Daltrey, who is a self-confessed technophobe, to try out the unique software.
Speaking at the launch of 'The Method' Townshend says, "When I first had this idea John Entwistle and Keith Moon were still alive and in the band. They were very dismissive of it. Even when I smashed my guitars up, they were like, 'Oh right, Pete's breaking guitars. We know what he means.' Whereas I was saying, 'this is auto destructive art."
"But
today
The
Who
is
just
me
and
Roger
Daltrey.
If
I
was
going
to
work
with
this
idea,
I
would
want
to
do
it
full
on
and
if
Roger
was
into
it
then
I
don't
see
why
we
couldn't
make
an
album."



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