Sunday performance at Cleveland Institute of Music features innovative, real-time compositions from ĂÛÌÒAPP physics professor, CIM instructor
Physics, mathematics and music will collide in real time in an unusual joint concert Sunday afternoon at the Cleveland Institute of Music (CIM).
âCrystals of Soundâ is the result of a novel research and musical composition project conducted over the last year by , an associate professor of physics at ĂÛÌÒAPP and , composer and theorist.
The performance of nine pieces from the two collaborators and student performers is at 4 p.m. at CIMâs Mixon Hall (11021 East Blvd., Cleveland). The concert is free and open to the public, but, where the program will also be livestreamed.
But while Berezovskyâalso classically trained viola playerâand Cooke collaborated to bring the concert together, the program lists them not as composers, but as conducting algorithms that the computer uses to compose the music that will be played.
Each of the nine original pieces will be played live on stageâsometimes even as they are being âcomposedâ by a computer programâby student musicians from Case Western Reserve and CIM.

In some cases, a string quartet responding in real time to a score being manipulated by Berezovsky as his computer generates the melody, harmony and rhythm.
For others, a human performer interprets pieces composed by a computer. Or in a piece named âCriticality,â a solo violin part composed by Cooke is accompanied by a computer harmonizing the accompaniment generated in real time.
âNearly every piece on Sunday will have something brand new in it,â Berezovsky said. âIn some cases, that will mean a computer âplayingâ something new, but in others it will mean the computer feeding a new score to musicians who will play it live, in real time.â
Berezovsky will sit at a computer and software system he calls âThe Composer,â housed in a wooden cabinet he and several students built at the Larry Sears and Sally Zlotnick Sears think[box], Case Western Reserveâs innovative 50,000-square foot, seven-story makerspace.
The student musicians will sit in front of music stands they call âSmart Stands,â also built at think[box]. The stands show the computer-generated score being altered by Berezovsky so the students can play along.
In the final piece, âFree Energy,â members of the audience will be invited on stage to manipulate the various aspects of the composition using the Smart Stands. The stands also have smaller versions of The Composer, featuring knobs and dials that can tell the computer to change the beat, harmony or rhythm of the piece of music as it is being composed.
âItâs actually somewhat terrifying because no one knows what youâre going to end up with,â Berezovsky said. âIn some cases, the chord progression is something that might sound familiar, almost boring, but other times, itâs borderline chaotic. It should be a lot of fun.â
Collaboration with support

Berezovsky and Cooke met about a year ago. A student working alongside Berezovsky and also taking courses at CIM suggested the two meet and compare notes on their shared interest in the science behind sound.
They did, and their common interest in music, math and physics led them to begin thinking about whether they could actually write algorithms to create music.
"Itâs no secret that there are deep connections between music and science, but what weâre seeing now are parallels in their fundamental construction, which is something rather remarkable," said Cooke, who has studied the statistics of musical patterns in Western music and developed his own algorithms for generating harmonies. "What weâre doing isnât meant to replace the human composer or performer; rather, it is meant to highlight that every time we write a bar of music or play a piece, we are tapping into something quite profound, and there is a lot left to be explored there.â
Cooke also holds a Master of Science in Applied Mathematics from Case Western Reserve, where his thesis was Algorithmic Stochastic Music, combining mathematics and music into a system of composition and theoretical analysis.

A 2021 grant from the Berezovsky-Cooke collaboration.
âProjects like this one are the precise reason that the Expanding Horizons Initiative was created,â Ward said. âWatching the departments across the College and other Cleveland institutions bridge their expertise to create new innovations is incredible, and this collaboration of music and physics is a brilliant representation of that.â
Phase transitions behind the music
Sundayâs concert is an extension of of music emerges from the general chaos of sound.
The answer in physicsâand music, Berezovsky arguesâis called âphase transitionsâ (think of water boiling into vapor at it's boiling point, or turning into solid ice at its freezing point) and comes about because of a balance between order and disorder, or entropy.
âWe can look at a balanceâor a competitionâbetween dissonance and entropy of soundâand see that phase transitions can also occur from disordered sound to the ordered structures of music,â he said.
The theory also speaks to why we enjoy musicâbecause it is caught in the tension between being too dissonant and too complex.
That research was , but said he and Cooke are working on a paper explaining their project.
For more information, contact Mike Scott at mike.scott@case.edu.