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Website title: MIDI.org – Expanding, promoting, and protecting MIDI technology for the benefit of artists and musicians around the world.

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The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s exhibition Musical Bodies explores a powerful idea: the human body is itself a musical instrument, and musical instruments often reflect the shape, movement, identity, and imagination of the people who play them.

For anyone interested in the future of music technology, one of the most striking objects in the exhibition is t...


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At the 2026 Berklee AI Music Summit, Jordan Rudess showed the audience what happens when one of the world’s most innovative keyboardists meets a real-time AI improvisation system built for the stage.

The performance featured JAM_BOT, a collaborative music system developed through a partnership between Jordan Rudess and researchers at the MIT Media ...


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The MIDI Association welcomes the launch of the Interactive Audio Special Interest Group’s new Audio Education Working Group and encourages educators, students, and industry professionals to participate in the growing conversation around music technology, game audio, and interactive sound education.

The IASIG Audio Education Working Group is a new initiative design...


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At the Music Hackspace Boston Hackathon in June 2026, composer and technologist Rob Jaret received the MIDI Association-sponsored Most Accessible Product award for Emotional Magenta, an innovative project that explores how facial expressions and emotional input can be used to create and shape music.

Emotional Magenta is based on Go...


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Modern synthesizers are powerful, expressive instruments, but they are often built around visual feedback. Screens, menus, LEDs, soft buttons, and multi-function controls can make it difficult or impossible for blind and low-vision musicians to fully explore, program, and perform with electronic instruments independently.

Researchers and artists connected with ...


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