In 2015, on SoundMorphology, I introduced The Numerics: a compositional archetype that does not merely reimagine notation, but displaces it entirely, reconstituting the score as a computational medium. Rendered through numerical data engineered for modified cello performance, The Numerics proceeds from a single, uncompromising premise: sequences of durations, pitch indices, and micro-dynamics are not supplemental annotations appended to conventional notation. They are the composition itself. Each number functions simultaneously as instruction and structural node, a dual ontology that gives rise to what I call a contextualized numerical architecture, wherein the score and its execution are, in principle, inseparable.
Numeric Scores as Performative Systems
The Numerics poses a question that is, at once, philosophical and technical: what is fundamentally altered when glyphs surrender to values? The cellist receives a tablature built from integers and decimal points, each mapped to pitch, duration, bow pressure, or harmonic index. Reading becomes real-time translation, pattern resolving into gesture, computation dissolving into corporeal music. The performer does not interpret a symbol. They execute a value, and in that execution, become a processing engine of a higher order.
Contextualization and Referential Coding
No datum in The Numerics exists in isolation. A "6" may designate G♯ on the third string under heavy bow pressure; a "0.5" may encode staccato or microglissando. Meaning is never intrinsic; it is always relational, always contingent upon a performative grammar established at rehearsal and internalized through practice. This is not vagueness. It is precision of a different kind: a living code-language in which the performer's intelligence is not a supplement to the score, but its necessary condition of existence.
Generative and Adaptive Performance
Because The Numerics is computational in its essence, it is also generative in its potential. Performers may apply Fibonacci proportions to bow velocity, invert duration sequences, transpose rhythmic arrays, or derive new value sets through algorithmic manipulation of existing ones. The score does not prescribe a singular reading; it establishes a numerical platform from which an indefinite series of structurally coherent performances may be generated. Each iteration is both faithful to the architecture and irreducibly its own event.
Toward a New Notational Paradigm
The Numerics does not extend the history of Western notation. It breaks from it. The score is no longer a static artifact to be transcribed into sound; it is data to be parsed, processed, and performed. It inaugurates a hybrid condition in which scores are computational objects, performers are algorithmic agents, and notation functions as a live interface rather than a historical document. The decimal point, once a mere delimiter of subdivision, becomes something else entirely: not a proscription, but a threshold, a portal into a practice where composition, computation, and performance are no longer distinct acts, but a single, continuous, irreversible operation.



































