Okay ! I'll tell you all about it.
They are composed and played using Amiga game sound samples by a Basic programme of a couple of dozen lines I wrote twelve years ago. It was my first attempt at algorithmic composition. Thousands ? Well, yes, of course there were, as many as could be done at the rate of one every few seconds in fact.
I was going through all my old recordings on the weekend when I found a tape with a few dozen of the fugues.
The aesthetic routines in that first effort were very crude. The motif cells need restricting in rhythmic type and the whole thing needs freeing up in harmonic options. Nonetheless, the code does seem to have its own distinctive personality, and such obvious defects as occur, I am confident I could repair very easily given time and thought.
My end object, unlike that of David Cope and other more serious algorists, is not to produce imitation classical using complicated artificial intelligence, but to write heuristic, simple routines which have personality and capacity to surprise and delight.
To tell you the truth I had forgotten about it and become very busy with my improvisation. Hearing these old things has given me a bit of a kick and I am wondering seriously if I should spend some more time on it.
What do you people think ? Is it worth my giving it another shot ?