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[Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away

Date2025-06-17 18:58
From"Dr. Richard Boulanger"
Subject[Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away
Hello Csounders,

It is with great sadness that I bring you the news of the passing of my dear friend and mentor, Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound.  


On Father’s Day, I received a call from his son, Scotty, who told me that he had passed.  


Although Barry’s health had been failing, I am happy to report that I was able to Zoom with Barry this past October, before the International Csound Conference in Vienna. I was able to share with him how Csound continues to live and grow and inspire: on the Web, on the Bela, on the Daisy, in the Qu-Bit Nebulae and Scanned Eurorack Modules, in VCV Rack, through the support for Live Coding, through the incredible Cabbage IDE, through the cool Puremagnetik plugins, in VR and XR via CsoundUnity and CsoundMeta, and especially Csound in the “Kia” EV6 car, (and the ‘Movement’ Csound-Cabbage synth https://worldwide.kia.com/int/sounds-in-nature/our-instrument that they designed and gave away with the car https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4egz2QiKzE), and in the cool hardware and software Csound-synth by “Coke” called Sound-Z (https://www.coca-cola.com/us/en/offerings/cokesoundz).  He was pretty excited!  


In the summer of 1979, I attended Barry’s Workshops in Computer Music at MIT and composed “Trapped in Convert.” While working on my PhD at UC San Diego with Dick Moore between 1981-85, Barry visited and installed “music11” on our PDP11 so that I could continue, secretly, composing and designing instruments and effects with his software, while focusing my research on Moore’s “cmusic” language.  When I returned to Boston in 1985, Barry invited me to work with him at MIT on his new Csound project, and it is there and then that our lifelong collaboration and deep friendship developed.  


I would meet him at 6 a.m. every morning, and we would leave at 6 p.m. every evening. I would spend the days testing his code and making sounds and instruments with all the new opcodes he was adding as he built upon his “music11” foundation and turned it into the mighty Csound.  I wrote a set of tutorials that Barry added to the manual. Over the years, we delivered papers, we gave demos, and we played concerts. We worked on The Csound Book.  We worked on the Analog Devices’ SHARCsound project (with Scotty Vercoe, Lee Ray, and John ffitch), and we worked on the $100 laptop project (One Laptop Per Child - OLPC), and so much more.  


I have so many wonderful memories and am so grateful for all the support and knowledge that Barry shared with me.  He built me the synthesizer of my dreams.  He built all of us the most amazing and inspiring instrument.  And he gave it away.  I can’t begin to thank him for all the gifts his work bestowed on me, my teaching, my career, and my musical life.  


I will end this note with one last story.  


Last week, I gave a keynote at the 50th International Computer Music Conference (ICMC2025).  A lot of it was about Max Mathews and Barry Vercoe and how their friendship was the spirit from which the field of computer music has blossomed.  In the middle of my keynote, I premiered a new work entitled “Csound Dreams in the MetaVerse.”  The piece features all of my instruments from “Trapped” (and many new ones too) that can now be hit, squeezed, stretched, and tossed about in immersive AI-generated 3D worlds.  Our “CsoundMeta” software, which brings the Csound language into the “Unity” game engine, allows me to jam and play with musicians locally and remotely - to bring players together from all over the world and play with them in my studio, or on the moon!  And so, playing with me live on stage were five alumni from Berklee, and we were joined remotely on stage by two alumni, one from Ohio (the CsoundMeta genius software developer, Strong Bear), and another from Paris, France.  As you might well imagine with any premier, especially in a new venue with limited setup and soundcheck time, there were a lot of technical (Wi-Fi router) issues. Things sort of worked, but just barely, and so we were all praying that the piece would not crash.  The visuals I was casting for the audience did lag a bit, but things seemed to be going smoothly.  Then, a few minutes before the very end of the piece, we all hear the sound of my Quest3 headset running out of power…. du..du..du..du..du…du… By some miracle, and I think I know now who was watching and listening from heaven, the system kept running and we made it to the end of the piece, an end that featured a beautiful lullaby, for Barry, that I was humming, and that Bethanie Liu, on acoustic recorder, was imitating. Both of our “voices” were shimmering in a heavenly landscape on another world.  When I told my students about Barry’s passing, one shared her belief with me that Barry was joining us from heaven, sharing my and his “Csound Dream.”  


I have always believed that music speaks to us, resonates in us, and connects us on a deeply spiritual level. Barry’s spirit lives in me and in all of us who use Csound, who contribute to Csound, and who continue to learn, discover, and create with Csound.  Barry, I miss you.  We all miss you.  And I hope that you knew, and now know, how grateful I am, and so many of us are, for this amazing gift that continues to teach and inspire all of us.


- Dr.B


Dr. Richard Boulanger

Professor

Electronic Production and Design

Berklee College of Music

Professional Writing & Technology Division

Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here

Date2025-06-17 19:16
FromMarcelo Carneiro de Lima
SubjectRe: [Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away
This is a sad day for all.  My condolences for you Dr. B and to all his friends and family.
Marcelo

Em ter., 17 de jun. de 2025 às 14:59, Dr. Richard Boulanger <rboulanger@berklee.edu> escreveu:
Hello Csounders,

It is with great sadness that I bring you the news of the passing of my dear friend and mentor, Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound.  


On Father’s Day, I received a call from his son, Scotty, who told me that he had passed.  


Although Barry’s health had been failing, I am happy to report that I was able to Zoom with Barry this past October, before the International Csound Conference in Vienna. I was able to share with him how Csound continues to live and grow and inspire: on the Web, on the Bela, on the Daisy, in the Qu-Bit Nebulae and Scanned Eurorack Modules, in VCV Rack, through the support for Live Coding, through the incredible Cabbage IDE, through the cool Puremagnetik plugins, in VR and XR via CsoundUnity and CsoundMeta, and especially Csound in the “Kia” EV6 car, (and the ‘Movement’ Csound-Cabbage synth https://worldwide.kia.com/int/sounds-in-nature/our-instrument that they designed and gave away with the car https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4egz2QiKzE), and in the cool hardware and software Csound-synth by “Coke” called Sound-Z (https://www.coca-cola.com/us/en/offerings/cokesoundz).  He was pretty excited!  


In the summer of 1979, I attended Barry’s Workshops in Computer Music at MIT and composed “Trapped in Convert.” While working on my PhD at UC San Diego with Dick Moore between 1981-85, Barry visited and installed “music11” on our PDP11 so that I could continue, secretly, composing and designing instruments and effects with his software, while focusing my research on Moore’s “cmusic” language.  When I returned to Boston in 1985, Barry invited me to work with him at MIT on his new Csound project, and it is there and then that our lifelong collaboration and deep friendship developed.  


I would meet him at 6 a.m. every morning, and we would leave at 6 p.m. every evening. I would spend the days testing his code and making sounds and instruments with all the new opcodes he was adding as he built upon his “music11” foundation and turned it into the mighty Csound.  I wrote a set of tutorials that Barry added to the manual. Over the years, we delivered papers, we gave demos, and we played concerts. We worked on The Csound Book.  We worked on the Analog Devices’ SHARCsound project (with Scotty Vercoe, Lee Ray, and John ffitch), and we worked on the $100 laptop project (One Laptop Per Child - OLPC), and so much more.  


I have so many wonderful memories and am so grateful for all the support and knowledge that Barry shared with me.  He built me the synthesizer of my dreams.  He built all of us the most amazing and inspiring instrument.  And he gave it away.  I can’t begin to thank him for all the gifts his work bestowed on me, my teaching, my career, and my musical life.  


I will end this note with one last story.  


Last week, I gave a keynote at the 50th International Computer Music Conference (ICMC2025).  A lot of it was about Max Mathews and Barry Vercoe and how their friendship was the spirit from which the field of computer music has blossomed.  In the middle of my keynote, I premiered a new work entitled “Csound Dreams in the MetaVerse.”  The piece features all of my instruments from “Trapped” (and many new ones too) that can now be hit, squeezed, stretched, and tossed about in immersive AI-generated 3D worlds.  Our “CsoundMeta” software, which brings the Csound language into the “Unity” game engine, allows me to jam and play with musicians locally and remotely - to bring players together from all over the world and play with them in my studio, or on the moon!  And so, playing with me live on stage were five alumni from Berklee, and we were joined remotely on stage by two alumni, one from Ohio (the CsoundMeta genius software developer, Strong Bear), and another from Paris, France.  As you might well imagine with any premier, especially in a new venue with limited setup and soundcheck time, there were a lot of technical (Wi-Fi router) issues. Things sort of worked, but just barely, and so we were all praying that the piece would not crash.  The visuals I was casting for the audience did lag a bit, but things seemed to be going smoothly.  Then, a few minutes before the very end of the piece, we all hear the sound of my Quest3 headset running out of power…. du..du..du..du..du…du… By some miracle, and I think I know now who was watching and listening from heaven, the system kept running and we made it to the end of the piece, an end that featured a beautiful lullaby, for Barry, that I was humming, and that Bethanie Liu, on acoustic recorder, was imitating. Both of our “voices” were shimmering in a heavenly landscape on another world.  When I told my students about Barry’s passing, one shared her belief with me that Barry was joining us from heaven, sharing my and his “Csound Dream.”  


I have always believed that music speaks to us, resonates in us, and connects us on a deeply spiritual level. Barry’s spirit lives in me and in all of us who use Csound, who contribute to Csound, and who continue to learn, discover, and create with Csound.  Barry, I miss you.  We all miss you.  And I hope that you knew, and now know, how grateful I am, and so many of us are, for this amazing gift that continues to teach and inspire all of us.


- Dr.B


Dr. Richard Boulanger

Professor

Electronic Production and Design

Berklee College of Music

Professional Writing & Technology Division

Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here


--
Marcelo Carneiro
Prof. of Composition
Instituto Villa-Lobos- Rio de Janeiro State Federal University, UNIRIO
Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here

Date2025-06-17 20:06
FromPartev Sarkissian <0000060b2ef1338e-dmarc-request@LISTSERV.HEANET.IE>
SubjectRe: [Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away

noooo,... Emoji 

-PBS 



On Tuesday, June 17, 2025 at 10:59:45 AM PDT, Dr. Richard Boulanger <rboulanger@berklee.edu> wrote:


Hello Csounders,

It is with great sadness that I bring you the news of the passing of my dear friend and mentor, Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound.  


On Father’s Day, I received a call from his son, Scotty, who told me that he had passed.  


Although Barry’s health had been failing, I am happy to report that I was able to Zoom with Barry this past October, before the International Csound Conference in Vienna. I was able to share with him how Csound continues to live and grow and inspire: on the Web, on the Bela, on the Daisy, in the Qu-Bit Nebulae and Scanned Eurorack Modules, in VCV Rack, through the support for Live Coding, through the incredible Cabbage IDE, through the cool Puremagnetik plugins, in VR and XR via CsoundUnity and CsoundMeta, and especially Csound in the “Kia” EV6 car, (and the ‘Movement’ Csound-Cabbage synth https://worldwide.kia.com/int/sounds-in-nature/our-instrument that they designed and gave away with the car https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4egz2QiKzE), and in the cool hardware and software Csound-synth by “Coke” called Sound-Z (https://www.coca-cola.com/us/en/offerings/cokesoundz).  He was pretty excited!  


In the summer of 1979, I attended Barry’s Workshops in Computer Music at MIT and composed “Trapped in Convert.” While working on my PhD at UC San Diego with Dick Moore between 1981-85, Barry visited and installed “music11” on our PDP11 so that I could continue, secretly, composing and designing instruments and effects with his software, while focusing my research on Moore’s “cmusic” language.  When I returned to Boston in 1985, Barry invited me to work with him at MIT on his new Csound project, and it is there and then that our lifelong collaboration and deep friendship developed.  


I would meet him at 6 a.m. every morning, and we would leave at 6 p.m. every evening. I would spend the days testing his code and making sounds and instruments with all the new opcodes he was adding as he built upon his “music11” foundation and turned it into the mighty Csound.  I wrote a set of tutorials that Barry added to the manual. Over the years, we delivered papers, we gave demos, and we played concerts. We worked on The Csound Book.  We worked on the Analog Devices’ SHARCsound project (with Scotty Vercoe, Lee Ray, and John ffitch), and we worked on the $100 laptop project (One Laptop Per Child - OLPC), and so much more.  


I have so many wonderful memories and am so grateful for all the support and knowledge that Barry shared with me.  He built me the synthesizer of my dreams.  He built all of us the most amazing and inspiring instrument.  And he gave it away.  I can’t begin to thank him for all the gifts his work bestowed on me, my teaching, my career, and my musical life.  


I will end this note with one last story.  


Last week, I gave a keynote at the 50th International Computer Music Conference (ICMC2025).  A lot of it was about Max Mathews and Barry Vercoe and how their friendship was the spirit from which the field of computer music has blossomed.  In the middle of my keynote, I premiered a new work entitled “Csound Dreams in the MetaVerse.”  The piece features all of my instruments from “Trapped” (and many new ones too) that can now be hit, squeezed, stretched, and tossed about in immersive AI-generated 3D worlds.  Our “CsoundMeta” software, which brings the Csound language into the “Unity” game engine, allows me to jam and play with musicians locally and remotely - to bring players together from all over the world and play with them in my studio, or on the moon!  And so, playing with me live on stage were five alumni from Berklee, and we were joined remotely on stage by two alumni, one from Ohio (the CsoundMeta genius software developer, Strong Bear), and another from Paris, France.  As you might well imagine with any premier, especially in a new venue with limited setup and soundcheck time, there were a lot of technical (Wi-Fi router) issues. Things sort of worked, but just barely, and so we were all praying that the piece would not crash.  The visuals I was casting for the audience did lag a bit, but things seemed to be going smoothly.  Then, a few minutes before the very end of the piece, we all hear the sound of my Quest3 headset running out of power…. du..du..du..du..du…du… By some miracle, and I think I know now who was watching and listening from heaven, the system kept running and we made it to the end of the piece, an end that featured a beautiful lullaby, for Barry, that I was humming, and that Bethanie Liu, on acoustic recorder, was imitating. Both of our “voices” were shimmering in a heavenly landscape on another world.  When I told my students about Barry’s passing, one shared her belief with me that Barry was joining us from heaven, sharing my and his “Csound Dream.”  


I have always believed that music speaks to us, resonates in us, and connects us on a deeply spiritual level. Barry’s spirit lives in me and in all of us who use Csound, who contribute to Csound, and who continue to learn, discover, and create with Csound.  Barry, I miss you.  We all miss you.  And I hope that you knew, and now know, how grateful I am, and so many of us are, for this amazing gift that continues to teach and inspire all of us.


- Dr.B


Dr. Richard Boulanger

Professor

Electronic Production and Design

Berklee College of Music

Professional Writing & Technology Division

Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here

Date2025-06-17 21:02
FromArthur Hunkins <000001e1d761dea2-dmarc-request@LISTSERV.HEANET.IE>
SubjectRe: [Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away
A great loss indeed. He gave all of us Csounders a great gift. My life as a composer would have been substantially impoverished without Barry's wonderful contribution to the electro-acoustic world.

RIP

Art H.

abhunkin@uncg.edu
http://www.arthunkins.com

From: A discussion list for users of Csound <CSOUND@LISTSERV.HEANET.IE> on behalf of Dr. Richard Boulanger <rboulanger@BERKLEE.EDU>
Sent: Tuesday, June 17, 2025 1:58 PM
To: CSOUND@LISTSERV.HEANET.IE <CSOUND@LISTSERV.HEANET.IE>
Subject: [Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away
 
Hello Csounders,

It is with great sadness that I bring you the news of the passing of my dear friend and mentor, Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound.  


On Father’s Day, I received a call from his son, Scotty, who told me that he had passed.  


Although Barry’s health had been failing, I am happy to report that I was able to Zoom with Barry this past October, before the International Csound Conference in Vienna. I was able to share with him how Csound continues to live and grow and inspire: on the Web, on the Bela, on the Daisy, in the Qu-Bit Nebulae and Scanned Eurorack Modules, in VCV Rack, through the support for Live Coding, through the incredible Cabbage IDE, through the cool Puremagnetik plugins, in VR and XR via CsoundUnity and CsoundMeta, and especially Csound in the “Kia” EV6 car, (and the ‘Movement’ Csound-Cabbage synth https://worldwide.kia.com/int/sounds-in-nature/our-instrument that they designed and gave away with the car https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4egz2QiKzE), and in the cool hardware and software Csound-synth by “Coke” called Sound-Z (https://www.coca-cola.com/us/en/offerings/cokesoundz).  He was pretty excited!  


In the summer of 1979, I attended Barry’s Workshops in Computer Music at MIT and composed “Trapped in Convert.” While working on my PhD at UC San Diego with Dick Moore between 1981-85, Barry visited and installed “music11” on our PDP11 so that I could continue, secretly, composing and designing instruments and effects with his software, while focusing my research on Moore’s “cmusic” language.  When I returned to Boston in 1985, Barry invited me to work with him at MIT on his new Csound project, and it is there and then that our lifelong collaboration and deep friendship developed.  


I would meet him at 6 a.m. every morning, and we would leave at 6 p.m. every evening. I would spend the days testing his code and making sounds and instruments with all the new opcodes he was adding as he built upon his “music11” foundation and turned it into the mighty Csound.  I wrote a set of tutorials that Barry added to the manual. Over the years, we delivered papers, we gave demos, and we played concerts. We worked on The Csound Book.  We worked on the Analog Devices’ SHARCsound project (with Scotty Vercoe, Lee Ray, and John ffitch), and we worked on the $100 laptop project (One Laptop Per Child - OLPC), and so much more.  


I have so many wonderful memories and am so grateful for all the support and knowledge that Barry shared with me.  He built me the synthesizer of my dreams.  He built all of us the most amazing and inspiring instrument.  And he gave it away.  I can’t begin to thank him for all the gifts his work bestowed on me, my teaching, my career, and my musical life.  


I will end this note with one last story.  


Last week, I gave a keynote at the 50th International Computer Music Conference (ICMC2025).  A lot of it was about Max Mathews and Barry Vercoe and how their friendship was the spirit from which the field of computer music has blossomed.  In the middle of my keynote, I premiered a new work entitled “Csound Dreams in the MetaVerse.”  The piece features all of my instruments from “Trapped” (and many new ones too) that can now be hit, squeezed, stretched, and tossed about in immersive AI-generated 3D worlds.  Our “CsoundMeta” software, which brings the Csound language into the “Unity” game engine, allows me to jam and play with musicians locally and remotely - to bring players together from all over the world and play with them in my studio, or on the moon!  And so, playing with me live on stage were five alumni from Berklee, and we were joined remotely on stage by two alumni, one from Ohio (the CsoundMeta genius software developer, Strong Bear), and another from Paris, France.  As you might well imagine with any premier, especially in a new venue with limited setup and soundcheck time, there were a lot of technical (Wi-Fi router) issues. Things sort of worked, but just barely, and so we were all praying that the piece would not crash.  The visuals I was casting for the audience did lag a bit, but things seemed to be going smoothly.  Then, a few minutes before the very end of the piece, we all hear the sound of my Quest3 headset running out of power…. du..du..du..du..du…du… By some miracle, and I think I know now who was watching and listening from heaven, the system kept running and we made it to the end of the piece, an end that featured a beautiful lullaby, for Barry, that I was humming, and that Bethanie Liu, on acoustic recorder, was imitating. Both of our “voices” were shimmering in a heavenly landscape on another world.  When I told my students about Barry’s passing, one shared her belief with me that Barry was joining us from heaven, sharing my and his “Csound Dream.”  


I have always believed that music speaks to us, resonates in us, and connects us on a deeply spiritual level. Barry’s spirit lives in me and in all of us who use Csound, who contribute to Csound, and who continue to learn, discover, and create with Csound.  Barry, I miss you.  We all miss you.  And I hope that you knew, and now know, how grateful I am, and so many of us are, for this amazing gift that continues to teach and inspire all of us.


- Dr.B


Dr. Richard Boulanger

Professor

Electronic Production and Design

Berklee College of Music

Professional Writing & Technology Division

Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here

Date2025-06-17 21:19
FromRichard Knight
SubjectRe: [Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away

Sad news, and a fantastic tribute, Dr. B.

 


On 2025-06-17 18:58, Dr. Richard Boulanger wrote:

Hello Csounders,
 

It is with great sadness that I bring you the news of the passing of my dear friend and mentor, Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound.  

 

On Father's Day, I received a call from his son, Scotty, who told me that he had passed.  

 

Although Barry's health had been failing, I am happy to report that I was able to Zoom with Barry this past October, before the International Csound Conference in Vienna. I was able to share with him how Csound continues to live and grow and inspire: on the Web, on the Bela, on the Daisy, in the Qu-Bit Nebulae and Scanned Eurorack Modules, in VCV Rack, through the support for Live Coding, through the incredible Cabbage IDE, through the cool Puremagnetik plugins, in VR and XR via CsoundUnity and CsoundMeta, and especially Csound in the "Kia" EV6 car, (and the 'Movement' Csound-Cabbage synth https://worldwide.kia.com/int/sounds-in-nature/our-instrument that they designed and gave away with the car https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4egz2QiKzE), and in the cool hardware and software Csound-synth by "Coke" called Sound-Z (https://www.coca-cola.com/us/en/offerings/cokesoundz).  He was pretty excited!  

 

In the summer of 1979, I attended Barry's Workshops in Computer Music at MIT and composed "Trapped in Convert." While working on my PhD at UC San Diego with Dick Moore between 1981-85, Barry visited and installed "music11" on our PDP11 so that I could continue, secretly, composing and designing instruments and effects with his software, while focusing my research on Moore's "cmusic" language.  When I returned to Boston in 1985, Barry invited me to work with him at MIT on his new Csound project, and it is there and then that our lifelong collaboration and deep friendship developed.  

 

I would meet him at 6 a.m. every morning, and we would leave at 6 p.m. every evening. I would spend the days testing his code and making sounds and instruments with all the new opcodes he was adding as he built upon his "music11" foundation and turned it into the mighty Csound.  I wrote a set of tutorials that Barry added to the manual. Over the years, we delivered papers, we gave demos, and we played concerts. We worked on The Csound Book.  We worked on the Analog Devices' SHARCsound project (with Scotty Vercoe, Lee Ray, and John ffitch), and we worked on the $100 laptop project (One Laptop Per Child - OLPC), and so much more.  

 

I have so many wonderful memories and am so grateful for all the support and knowledge that Barry shared with me.  He built me the synthesizer of my dreams.  He built all of us the most amazing and inspiring instrument.  And he gave it away.  I can't begin to thank him for all the gifts his work bestowed on me, my teaching, my career, and my musical life.  

 

I will end this note with one last story.  

 

Last week, I gave a keynote at the 50th International Computer Music Conference (ICMC2025).  A lot of it was about Max Mathews and Barry Vercoe and how their friendship was the spirit from which the field of computer music has blossomed.  In the middle of my keynote, I premiered a new work entitled "Csound Dreams in the MetaVerse."  The piece features all of my instruments from "Trapped" (and many new ones too) that can now be hit, squeezed, stretched, and tossed about in immersive AI-generated 3D worlds.  Our "CsoundMeta" software, which brings the Csound language into the "Unity" game engine, allows me to jam and play with musicians locally and remotely - to bring players together from all over the world and play with them in my studio, or on the moon!  And so, playing with me live on stage were five alumni from Berklee, and we were joined remotely on stage by two alumni, one from Ohio (the CsoundMeta genius software developer, Strong Bear), and another from Paris, France.  As you might well imagine with any premier, especially in a new venue with limited setup and soundcheck time, there were a lot of technical (Wi-Fi router) issues. Things sort of worked, but just barely, and so we were all praying that the piece would not crash.  The visuals I was casting for the audience did lag a bit, but things seemed to be going smoothly.  Then, a few minutes before the very end of the piece, we all hear the sound of my Quest3 headset running out of power.... du..du..du..du..du...du... By some miracle, and I think I know now who was watching and listening from heaven, the system kept running and we made it to the end of the piece, an end that featured a beautiful lullaby, for Barry, that I was humming, and that Bethanie Liu, on acoustic recorder, was imitating. Both of our "voices" were shimmering in a heavenly landscape on another world.  When I told my students about Barry's passing, one shared her belief with me that Barry was joining us from heaven, sharing my and his "Csound Dream."  

 

I have always believed that music speaks to us, resonates in us, and connects us on a deeply spiritual level. Barry's spirit lives in me and in all of us who use Csound, who contribute to Csound, and who continue to learn, discover, and create with Csound.  Barry, I miss you.  We all miss you.  And I hope that you knew, and now know, how grateful I am, and so many of us are, for this amazing gift that continues to teach and inspire all of us.

 

 

- Dr.B

 

Dr. Richard Boulanger

Professor

Electronic Production and Design

Berklee College of Music

Professional Writing & Technology Division

Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here

Date2025-06-17 23:08
FromOeyvind Brandtsegg
SubjectRe: [Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away
Sad news. But good to hear them from you.
Warmly
Øyvind

tir. 17. juni 2025 kl. 22:19 skrev Richard Knight <richard@1bpm.net>:

Sad news, and a fantastic tribute, Dr. B.

 


On 2025-06-17 18:58, Dr. Richard Boulanger wrote:

Hello Csounders,
 

It is with great sadness that I bring you the news of the passing of my dear friend and mentor, Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound.  

 

On Father's Day, I received a call from his son, Scotty, who told me that he had passed.  

 

Although Barry's health had been failing, I am happy to report that I was able to Zoom with Barry this past October, before the International Csound Conference in Vienna. I was able to share with him how Csound continues to live and grow and inspire: on the Web, on the Bela, on the Daisy, in the Qu-Bit Nebulae and Scanned Eurorack Modules, in VCV Rack, through the support for Live Coding, through the incredible Cabbage IDE, through the cool Puremagnetik plugins, in VR and XR via CsoundUnity and CsoundMeta, and especially Csound in the "Kia" EV6 car, (and the 'Movement' Csound-Cabbage synth https://worldwide.kia.com/int/sounds-in-nature/our-instrument that they designed and gave away with the car https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4egz2QiKzE), and in the cool hardware and software Csound-synth by "Coke" called Sound-Z (https://www.coca-cola.com/us/en/offerings/cokesoundz).  He was pretty excited!  

 

In the summer of 1979, I attended Barry's Workshops in Computer Music at MIT and composed "Trapped in Convert." While working on my PhD at UC San Diego with Dick Moore between 1981-85, Barry visited and installed "music11" on our PDP11 so that I could continue, secretly, composing and designing instruments and effects with his software, while focusing my research on Moore's "cmusic" language.  When I returned to Boston in 1985, Barry invited me to work with him at MIT on his new Csound project, and it is there and then that our lifelong collaboration and deep friendship developed.  

 

I would meet him at 6 a.m. every morning, and we would leave at 6 p.m. every evening. I would spend the days testing his code and making sounds and instruments with all the new opcodes he was adding as he built upon his "music11" foundation and turned it into the mighty Csound.  I wrote a set of tutorials that Barry added to the manual. Over the years, we delivered papers, we gave demos, and we played concerts. We worked on The Csound Book.  We worked on the Analog Devices' SHARCsound project (with Scotty Vercoe, Lee Ray, and John ffitch), and we worked on the $100 laptop project (One Laptop Per Child - OLPC), and so much more.  

 

I have so many wonderful memories and am so grateful for all the support and knowledge that Barry shared with me.  He built me the synthesizer of my dreams.  He built all of us the most amazing and inspiring instrument.  And he gave it away.  I can't begin to thank him for all the gifts his work bestowed on me, my teaching, my career, and my musical life.  

 

I will end this note with one last story.  

 

Last week, I gave a keynote at the 50th International Computer Music Conference (ICMC2025).  A lot of it was about Max Mathews and Barry Vercoe and how their friendship was the spirit from which the field of computer music has blossomed.  In the middle of my keynote, I premiered a new work entitled "Csound Dreams in the MetaVerse."  The piece features all of my instruments from "Trapped" (and many new ones too) that can now be hit, squeezed, stretched, and tossed about in immersive AI-generated 3D worlds.  Our "CsoundMeta" software, which brings the Csound language into the "Unity" game engine, allows me to jam and play with musicians locally and remotely - to bring players together from all over the world and play with them in my studio, or on the moon!  And so, playing with me live on stage were five alumni from Berklee, and we were joined remotely on stage by two alumni, one from Ohio (the CsoundMeta genius software developer, Strong Bear), and another from Paris, France.  As you might well imagine with any premier, especially in a new venue with limited setup and soundcheck time, there were a lot of technical (Wi-Fi router) issues. Things sort of worked, but just barely, and so we were all praying that the piece would not crash.  The visuals I was casting for the audience did lag a bit, but things seemed to be going smoothly.  Then, a few minutes before the very end of the piece, we all hear the sound of my Quest3 headset running out of power.... du..du..du..du..du...du... By some miracle, and I think I know now who was watching and listening from heaven, the system kept running and we made it to the end of the piece, an end that featured a beautiful lullaby, for Barry, that I was humming, and that Bethanie Liu, on acoustic recorder, was imitating. Both of our "voices" were shimmering in a heavenly landscape on another world.  When I told my students about Barry's passing, one shared her belief with me that Barry was joining us from heaven, sharing my and his "Csound Dream."  

 

I have always believed that music speaks to us, resonates in us, and connects us on a deeply spiritual level. Barry's spirit lives in me and in all of us who use Csound, who contribute to Csound, and who continue to learn, discover, and create with Csound.  Barry, I miss you.  We all miss you.  And I hope that you knew, and now know, how grateful I am, and so many of us are, for this amazing gift that continues to teach and inspire all of us.

 

 

- Dr.B

 

Dr. Richard Boulanger

Professor

Electronic Production and Design

Berklee College of Music

Professional Writing & Technology Division

Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here
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Date2025-06-18 12:56
Fromthorin kerr
SubjectRe: [Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away
This is a very moving tribute Dr. B.

Such a loss. Barry has been something of an idol to me. I feel very privileged to have met him. 
And yes, so very grateful for a gift as profound as the means by which I express music.

Thorin

On Wed, Jun 18, 2025 at 3:59 AM Dr. Richard Boulanger <rboulanger@berklee.edu> wrote:
Hello Csounders,

It is with great sadness that I bring you the news of the passing of my dear friend and mentor, Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound.  


On Father’s Day, I received a call from his son, Scotty, who told me that he had passed.  


Although Barry’s health had been failing, I am happy to report that I was able to Zoom with Barry this past October, before the International Csound Conference in Vienna. I was able to share with him how Csound continues to live and grow and inspire: on the Web, on the Bela, on the Daisy, in the Qu-Bit Nebulae and Scanned Eurorack Modules, in VCV Rack, through the support for Live Coding, through the incredible Cabbage IDE, through the cool Puremagnetik plugins, in VR and XR via CsoundUnity and CsoundMeta, and especially Csound in the “Kia” EV6 car, (and the ‘Movement’ Csound-Cabbage synth https://worldwide.kia.com/int/sounds-in-nature/our-instrument that they designed and gave away with the car https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4egz2QiKzE), and in the cool hardware and software Csound-synth by “Coke” called Sound-Z (https://www.coca-cola.com/us/en/offerings/cokesoundz).  He was pretty excited!  


In the summer of 1979, I attended Barry’s Workshops in Computer Music at MIT and composed “Trapped in Convert.” While working on my PhD at UC San Diego with Dick Moore between 1981-85, Barry visited and installed “music11” on our PDP11 so that I could continue, secretly, composing and designing instruments and effects with his software, while focusing my research on Moore’s “cmusic” language.  When I returned to Boston in 1985, Barry invited me to work with him at MIT on his new Csound project, and it is there and then that our lifelong collaboration and deep friendship developed.  


I would meet him at 6 a.m. every morning, and we would leave at 6 p.m. every evening. I would spend the days testing his code and making sounds and instruments with all the new opcodes he was adding as he built upon his “music11” foundation and turned it into the mighty Csound.  I wrote a set of tutorials that Barry added to the manual. Over the years, we delivered papers, we gave demos, and we played concerts. We worked on The Csound Book.  We worked on the Analog Devices’ SHARCsound project (with Scotty Vercoe, Lee Ray, and John ffitch), and we worked on the $100 laptop project (One Laptop Per Child - OLPC), and so much more.  


I have so many wonderful memories and am so grateful for all the support and knowledge that Barry shared with me.  He built me the synthesizer of my dreams.  He built all of us the most amazing and inspiring instrument.  And he gave it away.  I can’t begin to thank him for all the gifts his work bestowed on me, my teaching, my career, and my musical life.  


I will end this note with one last story.  


Last week, I gave a keynote at the 50th International Computer Music Conference (ICMC2025).  A lot of it was about Max Mathews and Barry Vercoe and how their friendship was the spirit from which the field of computer music has blossomed.  In the middle of my keynote, I premiered a new work entitled “Csound Dreams in the MetaVerse.”  The piece features all of my instruments from “Trapped” (and many new ones too) that can now be hit, squeezed, stretched, and tossed about in immersive AI-generated 3D worlds.  Our “CsoundMeta” software, which brings the Csound language into the “Unity” game engine, allows me to jam and play with musicians locally and remotely - to bring players together from all over the world and play with them in my studio, or on the moon!  And so, playing with me live on stage were five alumni from Berklee, and we were joined remotely on stage by two alumni, one from Ohio (the CsoundMeta genius software developer, Strong Bear), and another from Paris, France.  As you might well imagine with any premier, especially in a new venue with limited setup and soundcheck time, there were a lot of technical (Wi-Fi router) issues. Things sort of worked, but just barely, and so we were all praying that the piece would not crash.  The visuals I was casting for the audience did lag a bit, but things seemed to be going smoothly.  Then, a few minutes before the very end of the piece, we all hear the sound of my Quest3 headset running out of power…. du..du..du..du..du…du… By some miracle, and I think I know now who was watching and listening from heaven, the system kept running and we made it to the end of the piece, an end that featured a beautiful lullaby, for Barry, that I was humming, and that Bethanie Liu, on acoustic recorder, was imitating. Both of our “voices” were shimmering in a heavenly landscape on another world.  When I told my students about Barry’s passing, one shared her belief with me that Barry was joining us from heaven, sharing my and his “Csound Dream.”  


I have always believed that music speaks to us, resonates in us, and connects us on a deeply spiritual level. Barry’s spirit lives in me and in all of us who use Csound, who contribute to Csound, and who continue to learn, discover, and create with Csound.  Barry, I miss you.  We all miss you.  And I hope that you knew, and now know, how grateful I am, and so many of us are, for this amazing gift that continues to teach and inspire all of us.


- Dr.B


Dr. Richard Boulanger

Professor

Electronic Production and Design

Berklee College of Music

Professional Writing & Technology Division

Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here
Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here

Date2025-06-18 17:56
Fromjoachim heintz
SubjectRe: [Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away
thanks, dear richard, to let us know in such a personal manner the sad 
news of barry's passing.

it was very impressive for me to meet him at the boston csound 
conference 2013.  if there are human beings who are born as programmers, 
i think barry was one of them.

as you say, we would not know each other without him, and we would not 
be able to use csound without his willingness to share it, as open and free.

	joachim


On 17/06/2025 19:58, Dr. Richard Boulanger wrote:
> Hello Csounders,
> 
> It is with great sadness that I bring you the news of the passing of my 
> dear friend and mentor, Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound.
> 
> 
> On Father’s Day, I received a call from his son, Scotty, who told me 
> that he had passed.
> 
> 
> Although Barry’s health had been failing, I am happy to report that I 
> was able to Zoom with Barry this past October, before the International 
> Csound Conference in Vienna. I was able to share with him how Csound 
> continues to live and grow and inspire: on the Web, on the Bela, on the 
> Daisy, in the Qu-Bit Nebulae and Scanned Eurorack Modules, in VCV Rack, 
> through the support for Live Coding, through the incredible Cabbage IDE, 
> through the cool Puremagnetik plugins, in VR and XR via CsoundUnity and 
> CsoundMeta, and especially Csound in the “Kia” EV6 car, (and the 
> ‘Movement’ Csound-Cabbage synth https://worldwide.kia.com/int/sounds-in- 
> nature/our-instrument  our-instrument> that they designed and gave away with the car https:// 
> www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4egz2QiKzE  v=w4egz2QiKzE>), and in the cool hardware and software Csound-synth by 
> “Coke” called Sound-Z (https://www.coca-cola.com/us/en/offerings/ 
> cokesoundz ).He 
> was pretty excited!
> 
> 
> In the summer of 1979, I attended Barry’s Workshops in Computer Music at 
> MIT and composed “Trapped in Convert.” While working on my PhD at UC San 
> Diego with Dick Moore between 1981-85, Barry visited and installed 
> “music11” on our PDP11 so that I could continue, secretly, composing and 
> designing instruments and effects with his software, while focusing my 
> research on Moore’s “cmusic” language.When I returned to Boston in 1985, 
> Barry invited me to work with him at MIT on his new Csound project, and 
> it is there and then that our lifelong collaboration and deep friendship 
> developed.
> 
> 
> I would meet him at 6 a.m. every morning, and we would leave at 6 p.m. 
> every evening. I would spend the days testing his code and making sounds 
> and instruments with all the new opcodes he was adding as he built upon 
> his “music11” foundation and turned it into the mighty Csound.I wrote a 
> set of tutorials that Barry added to the manual. Over the years, we 
> delivered papers, we gave demos, and we played concerts. We worked on 
> The Csound Book.We worked on the Analog Devices’ SHARCsound project 
> (with Scotty Vercoe, Lee Ray, and John ffitch), and we worked on the 
> $100 laptop project (One Laptop Per Child - OLPC), and so much more.
> 
> 
> I have so many wonderful memories and am so grateful for all the support 
> and knowledge that Barry shared with me.He built me the synthesizer of 
> my dreams.He built all of us the most amazing and inspiring 
> instrument.And he gave it away.I can’t begin to thank him for all the 
> gifts his work bestowed on me, my teaching, my career, and my musical life.
> 
> 
> I will end this note with one last story.
> 
> 
> Last week, I gave a keynote at the 50th International Computer Music 
> Conference (ICMC2025).A lot of it was about Max Mathews and Barry Vercoe 
> and how their friendship was the spirit from which the field of computer 
> music has blossomed.In the middle of my keynote, I premiered a new work 
> entitled “Csound Dreams in the MetaVerse.”The piece features all of my 
> instruments from “Trapped” (and many new ones too) that can now be hit, 
> squeezed, stretched, and tossed about in immersive AI-generated 3D 
> worlds.Our “CsoundMeta” software, which brings the Csound language into 
> the “Unity” game engine, allows me to jam and play with musicians 
> locally and remotely - to bring players together from all over the world 
> and play with them in my studio, or on the moon!And so, playing with me 
> live on stage were five alumni from Berklee, and we were joined remotely 
> on stage by two alumni, one from Ohio (the CsoundMeta genius software 
> developer, Strong Bear), and another from Paris, France.As you might 
> well imagine with any premier, especially in a new venue with limited 
> setup and soundcheck time, there were a lot of technical (Wi-Fi router) 
> issues. Things sort of worked, but just barely, and so we were all 
> praying that the piece would not crash.The visuals I was casting for the 
> audience did lag a bit, but things seemed to be going smoothly.Then, a 
> few minutes before the very end of the piece, we all hear the sound of 
> my Quest3 headset running out of power…. du..du..du..du..du…du… By some 
> miracle, and I think I know now who was watching and listening from 
> heaven, the system kept running and we made it to the end of the piece, 
> an end that featured a beautiful lullaby, for Barry, that I was humming, 
> and that Bethanie Liu, on acoustic recorder, was imitating. Both of our 
> “voices” were shimmering in a heavenly landscape on another world.When I 
> told my students about Barry’s passing, one shared her belief with me 
> that Barry was joining us from heaven, sharing my and his “Csound Dream.”
> 
> 
> I have always believed that music speaks to us, resonates in us, and 
> connects us on a deeply spiritual level. Barry’s spirit lives in me and 
> in all of us who use Csound, who contribute to Csound, and who continue 
> to learn, discover, and create with Csound.Barry, I miss you.We all miss 
> you.And I hope that you knew, and now know, how grateful I am, and so 
> many of us are, for this amazing gift that continues to teach and 
> inspire all of us.
> 
> *
> *
> 
> *- Dr.B*
> 
> *
> *
> 
> *Dr. Richard Boulanger*
> 
> Professor
> 
> Electronic Production and Design
> 
> *Berklee College of Music*
> 
> Professional Writing & Technology Division
> 
> Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie 
>  https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/ 
> wa?A0=CSOUND  Send bugs 
> reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues  csound/csound/issues> Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here

Csound mailing list
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Send bugs reports to
        https://github.com/csound/csound/issues
Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here

Date2025-06-18 19:21
FromMichael Rhoades
SubjectRe: [Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away
Hello Everyone,

My heart goes out to Dr. B. and to all who have known Barry Vercoe. I am 
thankful to have met him first at SEAMUS 2004, in San Diego, and then 
again at the Csound conference in Boston, 2013.

In San Diego I presented my first lecture ever to a large group of 
experts in the field. Among them were Richard Boulanger and none other 
than Barry Vercoe. No pressure there! Afterward, Barry introduced 
himself to me and was very kind in his response to my talk and my work. 
I will be forever grateful for his encouragement and more so for 
creating Csound. I struggled as a composer until I found Csound and then 
immediately found my voice. I have been composing with it ever since... 
a life-altering event.

I also met Dr. B. at that conference and will never forget our 
insightful and inspiring interactions.

The two of them are the epitome of the exemplary people, both 
technically and personally, in the Csound community.

Be well,

Michael


-- 
Dr. Michael Rhoades
http://www.perceptionfactory.com

Lead HCI Artist/Researcher/Instructor
Institute for Digital Intermedia Art
Ball State University
https://idialab.org/

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Date2025-06-19 15:24
FromDave Seidel
SubjectRe: [Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away
I'm very sorry to hear this. I never had the honor of meeting Barry, but I am very grateful for all that he has given us or paved the way for. Through our continued work, we can and will celebrate his legacy for all time to come (or at least as long as humans exist, and perhaps even beyond that).

- Dave

On Tue, Jun 17, 2025 at 1:59 PM Dr. Richard Boulanger <rboulanger@berklee.edu> wrote:
Hello Csounders,

It is with great sadness that I bring you the news of the passing of my dear friend and mentor, Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound.  


On Father’s Day, I received a call from his son, Scotty, who told me that he had passed.  


Although Barry’s health had been failing, I am happy to report that I was able to Zoom with Barry this past October, before the International Csound Conference in Vienna. I was able to share with him how Csound continues to live and grow and inspire: on the Web, on the Bela, on the Daisy, in the Qu-Bit Nebulae and Scanned Eurorack Modules, in VCV Rack, through the support for Live Coding, through the incredible Cabbage IDE, through the cool Puremagnetik plugins, in VR and XR via CsoundUnity and CsoundMeta, and especially Csound in the “Kia” EV6 car, (and the ‘Movement’ Csound-Cabbage synth https://worldwide.kia.com/int/sounds-in-nature/our-instrument that they designed and gave away with the car https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4egz2QiKzE), and in the cool hardware and software Csound-synth by “Coke” called Sound-Z (https://www.coca-cola.com/us/en/offerings/cokesoundz).  He was pretty excited!  


In the summer of 1979, I attended Barry’s Workshops in Computer Music at MIT and composed “Trapped in Convert.” While working on my PhD at UC San Diego with Dick Moore between 1981-85, Barry visited and installed “music11” on our PDP11 so that I could continue, secretly, composing and designing instruments and effects with his software, while focusing my research on Moore’s “cmusic” language.  When I returned to Boston in 1985, Barry invited me to work with him at MIT on his new Csound project, and it is there and then that our lifelong collaboration and deep friendship developed.  


I would meet him at 6 a.m. every morning, and we would leave at 6 p.m. every evening. I would spend the days testing his code and making sounds and instruments with all the new opcodes he was adding as he built upon his “music11” foundation and turned it into the mighty Csound.  I wrote a set of tutorials that Barry added to the manual. Over the years, we delivered papers, we gave demos, and we played concerts. We worked on The Csound Book.  We worked on the Analog Devices’ SHARCsound project (with Scotty Vercoe, Lee Ray, and John ffitch), and we worked on the $100 laptop project (One Laptop Per Child - OLPC), and so much more.  


I have so many wonderful memories and am so grateful for all the support and knowledge that Barry shared with me.  He built me the synthesizer of my dreams.  He built all of us the most amazing and inspiring instrument.  And he gave it away.  I can’t begin to thank him for all the gifts his work bestowed on me, my teaching, my career, and my musical life.  


I will end this note with one last story.  


Last week, I gave a keynote at the 50th International Computer Music Conference (ICMC2025).  A lot of it was about Max Mathews and Barry Vercoe and how their friendship was the spirit from which the field of computer music has blossomed.  In the middle of my keynote, I premiered a new work entitled “Csound Dreams in the MetaVerse.”  The piece features all of my instruments from “Trapped” (and many new ones too) that can now be hit, squeezed, stretched, and tossed about in immersive AI-generated 3D worlds.  Our “CsoundMeta” software, which brings the Csound language into the “Unity” game engine, allows me to jam and play with musicians locally and remotely - to bring players together from all over the world and play with them in my studio, or on the moon!  And so, playing with me live on stage were five alumni from Berklee, and we were joined remotely on stage by two alumni, one from Ohio (the CsoundMeta genius software developer, Strong Bear), and another from Paris, France.  As you might well imagine with any premier, especially in a new venue with limited setup and soundcheck time, there were a lot of technical (Wi-Fi router) issues. Things sort of worked, but just barely, and so we were all praying that the piece would not crash.  The visuals I was casting for the audience did lag a bit, but things seemed to be going smoothly.  Then, a few minutes before the very end of the piece, we all hear the sound of my Quest3 headset running out of power…. du..du..du..du..du…du… By some miracle, and I think I know now who was watching and listening from heaven, the system kept running and we made it to the end of the piece, an end that featured a beautiful lullaby, for Barry, that I was humming, and that Bethanie Liu, on acoustic recorder, was imitating. Both of our “voices” were shimmering in a heavenly landscape on another world.  When I told my students about Barry’s passing, one shared her belief with me that Barry was joining us from heaven, sharing my and his “Csound Dream.”  


I have always believed that music speaks to us, resonates in us, and connects us on a deeply spiritual level. Barry’s spirit lives in me and in all of us who use Csound, who contribute to Csound, and who continue to learn, discover, and create with Csound.  Barry, I miss you.  We all miss you.  And I hope that you knew, and now know, how grateful I am, and so many of us are, for this amazing gift that continues to teach and inspire all of us.


- Dr.B


Dr. Richard Boulanger

Professor

Electronic Production and Design

Berklee College of Music

Professional Writing & Technology Division

Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here
Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here

Date2025-06-19 17:29
FromSteven Yi
SubjectRe: [Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away
I'm both sad to hear of this news, as well as grateful for all that Barry has done for the world of computer music. He carried on the work and spirit of Max Matthews and leaves his own legacy as a pioneer in the world of computer music and art as a whole. Feeling thankful and appreciative. 

On Tue, Jun 17, 2025 at 1:59 PM Dr. Richard Boulanger <rboulanger@berklee.edu> wrote:
Hello Csounders,

It is with great sadness that I bring you the news of the passing of my dear friend and mentor, Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound.  


On Father’s Day, I received a call from his son, Scotty, who told me that he had passed.  


Although Barry’s health had been failing, I am happy to report that I was able to Zoom with Barry this past October, before the International Csound Conference in Vienna. I was able to share with him how Csound continues to live and grow and inspire: on the Web, on the Bela, on the Daisy, in the Qu-Bit Nebulae and Scanned Eurorack Modules, in VCV Rack, through the support for Live Coding, through the incredible Cabbage IDE, through the cool Puremagnetik plugins, in VR and XR via CsoundUnity and CsoundMeta, and especially Csound in the “Kia” EV6 car, (and the ‘Movement’ Csound-Cabbage synth https://worldwide.kia.com/int/sounds-in-nature/our-instrument that they designed and gave away with the car https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4egz2QiKzE), and in the cool hardware and software Csound-synth by “Coke” called Sound-Z (https://www.coca-cola.com/us/en/offerings/cokesoundz).  He was pretty excited!  


In the summer of 1979, I attended Barry’s Workshops in Computer Music at MIT and composed “Trapped in Convert.” While working on my PhD at UC San Diego with Dick Moore between 1981-85, Barry visited and installed “music11” on our PDP11 so that I could continue, secretly, composing and designing instruments and effects with his software, while focusing my research on Moore’s “cmusic” language.  When I returned to Boston in 1985, Barry invited me to work with him at MIT on his new Csound project, and it is there and then that our lifelong collaboration and deep friendship developed.  


I would meet him at 6 a.m. every morning, and we would leave at 6 p.m. every evening. I would spend the days testing his code and making sounds and instruments with all the new opcodes he was adding as he built upon his “music11” foundation and turned it into the mighty Csound.  I wrote a set of tutorials that Barry added to the manual. Over the years, we delivered papers, we gave demos, and we played concerts. We worked on The Csound Book.  We worked on the Analog Devices’ SHARCsound project (with Scotty Vercoe, Lee Ray, and John ffitch), and we worked on the $100 laptop project (One Laptop Per Child - OLPC), and so much more.  


I have so many wonderful memories and am so grateful for all the support and knowledge that Barry shared with me.  He built me the synthesizer of my dreams.  He built all of us the most amazing and inspiring instrument.  And he gave it away.  I can’t begin to thank him for all the gifts his work bestowed on me, my teaching, my career, and my musical life.  


I will end this note with one last story.  


Last week, I gave a keynote at the 50th International Computer Music Conference (ICMC2025).  A lot of it was about Max Mathews and Barry Vercoe and how their friendship was the spirit from which the field of computer music has blossomed.  In the middle of my keynote, I premiered a new work entitled “Csound Dreams in the MetaVerse.”  The piece features all of my instruments from “Trapped” (and many new ones too) that can now be hit, squeezed, stretched, and tossed about in immersive AI-generated 3D worlds.  Our “CsoundMeta” software, which brings the Csound language into the “Unity” game engine, allows me to jam and play with musicians locally and remotely - to bring players together from all over the world and play with them in my studio, or on the moon!  And so, playing with me live on stage were five alumni from Berklee, and we were joined remotely on stage by two alumni, one from Ohio (the CsoundMeta genius software developer, Strong Bear), and another from Paris, France.  As you might well imagine with any premier, especially in a new venue with limited setup and soundcheck time, there were a lot of technical (Wi-Fi router) issues. Things sort of worked, but just barely, and so we were all praying that the piece would not crash.  The visuals I was casting for the audience did lag a bit, but things seemed to be going smoothly.  Then, a few minutes before the very end of the piece, we all hear the sound of my Quest3 headset running out of power…. du..du..du..du..du…du… By some miracle, and I think I know now who was watching and listening from heaven, the system kept running and we made it to the end of the piece, an end that featured a beautiful lullaby, for Barry, that I was humming, and that Bethanie Liu, on acoustic recorder, was imitating. Both of our “voices” were shimmering in a heavenly landscape on another world.  When I told my students about Barry’s passing, one shared her belief with me that Barry was joining us from heaven, sharing my and his “Csound Dream.”  


I have always believed that music speaks to us, resonates in us, and connects us on a deeply spiritual level. Barry’s spirit lives in me and in all of us who use Csound, who contribute to Csound, and who continue to learn, discover, and create with Csound.  Barry, I miss you.  We all miss you.  And I hope that you knew, and now know, how grateful I am, and so many of us are, for this amazing gift that continues to teach and inspire all of us.


- Dr.B


Dr. Richard Boulanger

Professor

Electronic Production and Design

Berklee College of Music

Professional Writing & Technology Division

Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here
Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here

Date2025-06-27 19:06
FromAaron Krister Johnson
SubjectRe: [Csnd] Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound - has passed away
What a legacy Barry Vercoe left to all of us!

Dr. B., thank you for the touching and wonderful tribute. My condolences to you and all who knew Barry well.



On Tue, Jun 17, 2025 at 10:59 AM Dr. Richard Boulanger <rboulanger@berklee.edu> wrote:
Hello Csounders,

It is with great sadness that I bring you the news of the passing of my dear friend and mentor, Barry Vercoe - the father of Csound.  


On Father’s Day, I received a call from his son, Scotty, who told me that he had passed.  


Although Barry’s health had been failing, I am happy to report that I was able to Zoom with Barry this past October, before the International Csound Conference in Vienna. I was able to share with him how Csound continues to live and grow and inspire: on the Web, on the Bela, on the Daisy, in the Qu-Bit Nebulae and Scanned Eurorack Modules, in VCV Rack, through the support for Live Coding, through the incredible Cabbage IDE, through the cool Puremagnetik plugins, in VR and XR via CsoundUnity and CsoundMeta, and especially Csound in the “Kia” EV6 car, (and the ‘Movement’ Csound-Cabbage synth https://worldwide.kia.com/int/sounds-in-nature/our-instrument that they designed and gave away with the car https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4egz2QiKzE), and in the cool hardware and software Csound-synth by “Coke” called Sound-Z (https://www.coca-cola.com/us/en/offerings/cokesoundz).  He was pretty excited!  


In the summer of 1979, I attended Barry’s Workshops in Computer Music at MIT and composed “Trapped in Convert.” While working on my PhD at UC San Diego with Dick Moore between 1981-85, Barry visited and installed “music11” on our PDP11 so that I could continue, secretly, composing and designing instruments and effects with his software, while focusing my research on Moore’s “cmusic” language.  When I returned to Boston in 1985, Barry invited me to work with him at MIT on his new Csound project, and it is there and then that our lifelong collaboration and deep friendship developed.  


I would meet him at 6 a.m. every morning, and we would leave at 6 p.m. every evening. I would spend the days testing his code and making sounds and instruments with all the new opcodes he was adding as he built upon his “music11” foundation and turned it into the mighty Csound.  I wrote a set of tutorials that Barry added to the manual. Over the years, we delivered papers, we gave demos, and we played concerts. We worked on The Csound Book.  We worked on the Analog Devices’ SHARCsound project (with Scotty Vercoe, Lee Ray, and John ffitch), and we worked on the $100 laptop project (One Laptop Per Child - OLPC), and so much more.  


I have so many wonderful memories and am so grateful for all the support and knowledge that Barry shared with me.  He built me the synthesizer of my dreams.  He built all of us the most amazing and inspiring instrument.  And he gave it away.  I can’t begin to thank him for all the gifts his work bestowed on me, my teaching, my career, and my musical life.  


I will end this note with one last story.  


Last week, I gave a keynote at the 50th International Computer Music Conference (ICMC2025).  A lot of it was about Max Mathews and Barry Vercoe and how their friendship was the spirit from which the field of computer music has blossomed.  In the middle of my keynote, I premiered a new work entitled “Csound Dreams in the MetaVerse.”  The piece features all of my instruments from “Trapped” (and many new ones too) that can now be hit, squeezed, stretched, and tossed about in immersive AI-generated 3D worlds.  Our “CsoundMeta” software, which brings the Csound language into the “Unity” game engine, allows me to jam and play with musicians locally and remotely - to bring players together from all over the world and play with them in my studio, or on the moon!  And so, playing with me live on stage were five alumni from Berklee, and we were joined remotely on stage by two alumni, one from Ohio (the CsoundMeta genius software developer, Strong Bear), and another from Paris, France.  As you might well imagine with any premier, especially in a new venue with limited setup and soundcheck time, there were a lot of technical (Wi-Fi router) issues. Things sort of worked, but just barely, and so we were all praying that the piece would not crash.  The visuals I was casting for the audience did lag a bit, but things seemed to be going smoothly.  Then, a few minutes before the very end of the piece, we all hear the sound of my Quest3 headset running out of power…. du..du..du..du..du…du… By some miracle, and I think I know now who was watching and listening from heaven, the system kept running and we made it to the end of the piece, an end that featured a beautiful lullaby, for Barry, that I was humming, and that Bethanie Liu, on acoustic recorder, was imitating. Both of our “voices” were shimmering in a heavenly landscape on another world.  When I told my students about Barry’s passing, one shared her belief with me that Barry was joining us from heaven, sharing my and his “Csound Dream.”  


I have always believed that music speaks to us, resonates in us, and connects us on a deeply spiritual level. Barry’s spirit lives in me and in all of us who use Csound, who contribute to Csound, and who continue to learn, discover, and create with Csound.  Barry, I miss you.  We all miss you.  And I hope that you knew, and now know, how grateful I am, and so many of us are, for this amazing gift that continues to teach and inspire all of us.


- Dr.B


Dr. Richard Boulanger

Professor

Electronic Production and Design

Berklee College of Music

Professional Writing & Technology Division

Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here
Csound mailing list Csound@listserv.heanet.ie https://listserv.heanet.ie/cgi-bin/wa?A0=CSOUND Send bugs reports to https://github.com/csound/csound/issues Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here