Harris Wulfson

His work employed algorithmic processes and gestural controllers to explore the boundary where humans encounter their machines.

[2] For the 2006 Look and Listen Festival in New York City, Wulfson presented his 'SensorBall,' a small electronic device, slightly larger than a baseball, with pressure-sensitive controls, all wired to a laptop computer and the results channeled through loudspeakers.

[4] His teachers included Stephen Mosko, Morton Subotnick, James Tenney, and Lew Spratlan.

[5] Wulfson was also an accomplished violinist, accordionist, and mandolin player, an active performer of experimental music, and an avid folk musician.

He was a member of the Object Collection ensemble and the Society of Automatic Music Notators,[6] which initiated the LiveScore real-time music notation project,[7] and has performed with the World on a String band, King Wilkie, Metropolitan Klezmer, Golem, and Margot Leverett.