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| | History of Music Visualization |
 | | During the summer of 2005, the nation’s first large-scale visual music retrospective was presented by the Smithsonian’s Hirshhorn Museum in Washington, D.C., drawing over 20,000 people on opening night alone. |
 | | In fact, developing the ability to visualize music, to quite literally see its shapes, textures, and colors in the mind’s eye, has been a goal of traditional training in composition for some 400 years. |
 | | Arts in Motion's musicians, computer programmers, animators, and video artists are able to translate music into a dynamic and fully immersive visual experience, defining the current state of the art for music visualization while fueling classical music’s evolution into the 21st century. |
| www.boxfive.org /misc/artsinmotion.html (486 words) |
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