Presenting Composers on the Web
  
We looked at the way composers normally present their music: 
    detailed biography and a complete list of works. This is a borrowing from 
    the world of printed music, where a publisher's catalogue presents information 
    to performers. The web though does not attract performers, it attracts listeners.
    
    As composers we asked: what is it in our world and work most people
    listening to our music don't get to hear or see? The answers lie in the composer's 
    voice, environment, views on music outside his own, verbal interactions with 
    other composers, scores, the personal flow of the pen. To convey these, we 
    chose aspects of a single work and a constellation of material surrounding 
    the music. They help us understand the human behind the sound.
    
    Since about the Sixties of the last century, composers have used a scientific 
    language for writing about music. This language is a lingua franca 
    for experts. aAmplify believes, though, that it should not be used when addressing 
    non-specialised audiences. That is why we embrace the pithy style of the web 
    in our texts.
    
    aAmplify's aims are threefold: to produce first-class recordings of 
    new music, to build a site that is a breeze to use and peruse, to spread 
    art music via the most novel publishing medium since bound books were printed.
    
    S.F.