*1959 US
Composer
James Paul Sain (b. 1959) is an American contemporary/electroacoustic composer, professor of music at the University of Florida, director of the Florida Electroacoustic Music Studio, board member of the American Composers Alliance, president and executive committee head of the Society of Composers, Inc. Sain studied composition with Frederic Goossen, David Ward-Steinman, Hubert S. Howe, Jr., Merle E. Hogg, and Brent Dutton. He founded the internationally acclaimed Florida Electroacoustic Music Festival and directed it for 17 years. Many renowned artists had been composers-in-residence at the festival, including Cort Lippe, Jon Appleton, Joel Chadabe, Larry Austin, Barry Truax, Richard Boulanger, Paul Lansky, James Dashow, Morton Subotnick, John Chowning, Charles Dodge and Annea Lockwood. The composer also curated exchange concerts with Stanford University's Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics and University of Washington's DXArts program. In the fall of 1993, James Paul Sain took a residence at The Royal Swedish Academy Of Music as part of the Swedish-American Exchange program. He returned to work at the Elektronmusikstudion two years later and initiated the "Recontextualization of Granulated and Concrete Sonic Resources" project at EMS, which was awarded a Bicentennial Swedish-American Exchange Fund grant. Sain also organized and curated a concert of American electroacoustic music at the German Institut für Computermusik und Elektronische Medien in 1998. Sain participated in the cooperative interdisciplinary project to develop 'MIDI Movement Module' (M3), an alternative controller for dance. In 1994, he presented a techno-ballet Ender's Game at the University of Utrecht. The M3 hardware received an Award for Technological Innovation in Sound (1998) from the editors of Discover Magazine.