Xref: utzoo comp.music:2831 rec.music.classical:20766 soc.women:32312 Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!wuarchive!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!zazen!uwvax!heurikon!vme.heurikon.com!gtaylor From: gtaylor@vme.heurikon.com (Gregory Taylor) Newsgroups: comp.music,rec.music.classical,soc.women Subject: Women Composers [the digital variety] Message-ID: <213@heurikon.heurikon.com> Date: 21 Mar 91 15:24:00 GMT References: <7204@ecs.soton.ac.uk> Sender: news@heurikon.heurikon.com Reply-To: gtaylor@vme.heurikon.com (Gregory Taylor) Organization: Heurikon Corporation, Madison, WI Lines: 19 Here we are in comp.music, and not a peep about women who use computers to make music. How about Maria ** [Teresa?] des Oyens, Kaaija Saariaho [just did a 2 hour show of her for womyn's history month on my radio show, only to have a couple of womyn call me to tell me that this was not "womyn's music!"], and Frances White [who I believe bagged the big one at Bourges this year for her "Still Life with Piano."] There's also Mara Helmuth at Columbia.... Of course, here I am stuck out in dairyland unable to do much other than guess at the rest. Can the left/rightcoasters aid us in this task so that the list does not consist solely of dead, white northern European womyn? -- I am so lonely for the twentieth century,/for the deeply felt, obscene graffiti/of armed men and the beautiful bridges/that make them so small and carry them/into the hearts of cities written like words/across nothing,/the dense void history became in my beautiful century/gtaylor/608-828-3385