MATRIXSYNTH


Thursday, April 03, 2014

The Gloves That Will "Change The Way We Make Music", With Imogen Heap



Some of you might remember Imogen Heap's musical gloves as far back as 2011 when she presented them at TED Talks and then again in 2012/2013 at the CTM Festival. She has now taken the project to Kickstarter here. At the time of this post, £43,078 of her £200,000 goal has been pledged with 29 days to go. The following are some details from the Kickstarter page and further below is a video interview from Dezeen.

via Kickstarter (be sure to check out the site for more!):

"What Exactly Can the Gloves Do?

The gloves capture the movements and postures of your hands. Our software allows this information to be mapped to musical control messages which can then be easily routed to your favourite music software

Specifically, the gloves track the following:

The orientation of your hand
The “flex” of your fingers
Your current hand posture (e.g. fist, open hand, one finger point)
The direction (up, down, left, right, forwards, backwards) of your hand
Sharp movements such as drum hits
This information is transmitted wirelessly to your computer, over WiFi (via the x-OSC board on the wrist).

In order to turn this information into music, we have developed software allowing you to “map” glove data to musical control signals (e.g. MIDI and OSC). The software also allows you to combine glove inputs to make complex controls. For example, the software would allow you to program the following:

'If I am making a fist with my right hand, and pointing downwards with my left hand, map the ‘roll’ of my right wrist to MIDI control change message 60 on channel 2'.

These mappings can then be used to control third party software such as Ableton Live, Pro Tools, Logic Pro or Max/MSP or plugins such as Kontakt and Omnisphere.

This ability of the software to combine postures and gestures for mapping, combined with other innovative technological advances, means there are literally thousands of independently mappable controls with one pair of gloves (!) - more than most MIDI controllers on the market - all without having to even look at a screen during performance. You can create multiple parallel mappings, switch between sets of mappings, and load and save your projects to share or develop them over time. Finally, you can use the software to listen out for other inputs, as well, further increasing the richness of control and expressive mappability with your favourite music software."



The gloves that will "change the way we make music", with Imogen Heap from Dezeen on Vimeo.

"See more architecture and design movies on dezeen.com/movies

In this exclusive video interview, musician Imogen Heap demonstrates the electronic gloves that allow people to interact with their computer remotely via hand gestures.

The interview was filmed at Heap's home studio outside London, shortly before she launched her Kickstarter campaign to produce a limited production run of the open-source Mi.Mu gloves.

'These beautiful gloves help me gesturally interact with my computer,' says Heap, explaining how the wearable technology allows her to perform without having to interact with keyboards or control panels.

Pushing buttons and twiddling dials 'is not very exciting for me or the audience,' she says. '[Now] I can make music on the move, in the flow and more humanly, [and] more naturally engage with my computer software and technology.'

Each gesture-control glove contains a wifi-enabled x-IMU board developed by x-IO Technologies containing an accelerometer, a magnetometer and a gyroscope.

These work together with a series of motion sensors incorporated into the fingers of each glove that track the degree of bend and the spread of the fingers. The gloves can also understand postures such as an open palm, a finger-point or a closed fist.

The latest version of the gloves feature e-textile technology, where sensors and wiring are integrated into fabric. Heap is now exploring how to make further use of electronically conducting textiles, to reduce the number of hard components in the gloves.

Heap says they will not just change performance, but the production of music too: 'We really feel that they are going to change the way we make music.'

Heap’s Kickstarter campaign aims to raise £200,000 to develop and produce a limited production run of Mi.Mu gloves. If successful, she will make both the hardware and software open source, allowing people to develop their own uses for the technology. 'It’s really exciting to see what people might do by hacking them,' said Heap. The Kickstarter campaign closes on 3 May 2014.

The music featured in this movie is Me, the Machine, a track that Heap wrote specifically to be performed using the gloves.

for more information about the technology in the gloves, read the edited transcript of our interview with Heap.

Dezeen and MINI Frontiers is a year-long collaboration with MINI exploring how design and technology are coming together to shape the future."

ARP 2600 Semi Modular Analog Synthesizer

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

"This is technically a 2600P, the last version with the 4012 Moog clone filter, made before ARP was forced to modify their filter design, and before they switched to the orange/black color scheme..."

Gakken NSX-39 : MIDI playback Test with Rosegarden on Linux


Published on Apr 3, 2014 karenevil·331 videos

Playback starts after 2:19.

"Testing midi playback with Rosegarden on debian wheezy.
This piano sound is generated by NSX-39 with vocaloid voice.
NSX-39 has a micro USB jack and works as a USB-MIDI GM ( General MIDI ) sound generator.

It seems that this NSX-39 is a 'usb midi class compliant' device then no special driver is required, that's why it can be controlled with GNU/Linux.
What did I use for this demo video is 'Rosegarden'.
( Rosegarden : http://www.rosegardenmusic.com/ )

By the way I found this anonymous 'Ave Maria' midi file longtime ago somewhere on the net, thanks to the person who made this midi file :)"

Gakken Synths on eBay

Doepfer A125 VC Phase Shifter Modulation


Published on Apr 3, 2014 Raul's World of Synths·259 videos

"Further exploring with the Doepfer A125 VC Phase Shifter. Examples of basic modulation with an envelope and LFO. Sound and Video by Raul Pena."

Doepfer A125 VC Phase Shifter Modulation Part Two

Published on Apr 11, 2014 Raul's World of Synths·260 videos

"Further exploring with the Doepfer A125 VC Phase Shifter. Examples with Random, Noise and sample and hold.Sound and Video by Raul Pena."

Oberheim Xpander SN Y64005

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

AKAI MX73

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

Never posted one of these before. It appears to be a MIDI only version of the AX-73 minus synth engine. Unfortunately the pics aren't great, but if you zoom in on the jacks in the back they all appear to be pedal and tape related. Tape? There's a manual online if you search for it [mirrored here].

All analog electronic music - Teaser from T H E C A V E


Published on Oct 15, 2013 Steelberry·42 videos

Some nice synth spotting in this one including Meek-FM which you don't see often.

"Listen to the full tracks on SoundCloud:
https://soundcloud.com/t-h-e-c-a-v-e

THE CAVE - a small team of electro enthusiasts has created this electro music portal to share their sounds to all fans of ambient, electro, synth pop, electronica, techno music.

All sounds and music produced with analog synthesizers, drum machines, and fused through modern day music production environments. This video provides a snapshot of some of the sounds you can find in THE CAVE.

Make sure to follow THE CAVE on SoundCloud if you enjoy electronic music.
https://soundcloud.com/t-h-e-c-a-v-e

NOTE: Some video snaps included in this trailer has been found on the internet, although the all songs are copyright owned by the artists. All gear featured has been used plus a whole lot more"

Minimojo - Minimoog Emulation Built in Reaktor


Published on Mar 17, 2014 Steelberry·42 videos

"Minimojo is an emulation of the Minimoog built in Reaktor, available for all registered product owners in the NI Reaktor User Library. http://www.native-instruments.com/en/...

The Minimojo is not in any way a copy of MONARK. The builder did not have access to or ever used MONARK during the making of Minimojo. Instead, the old ensemble Minimood made by NI in 1999, which has then been modified by several users, has been used as the starting point. The basic structure is be recognizable from that early ensemble.
As the Minimoog is the most emulated synthesizer the world probably don't need yet another one. Minimojo should first of all be seen as a proof of concept; how to emulate the should of vintage synthesizers using the Reaktor environment.

The technology developed for this is called Analog Legacy. Analog Legacy is the theory of modulating all functions in a synthesizer at all frequencies to emulate the sound of vintage synthesizers. The key is to find the right balance of the modulation depth for each frequency. Minimojo is the first attempt to use this theory in practice."

Analog Legacy - emulating vintage synthesizers in Reaktor

Published on Mar 17, 2014

"Message from the builder:
'As Reaktor programmer I have been developing synthesizer ensembles with a vintage touch for many years. After a decade locked into the labs I've now managed to finalize a new isomorphic algorithm called Analog Legacy. It's a break away from the perfect generated sounds produced by standard software synths and I'm convinced it will change the world of emulation analog synthesizers.
Just before the release of the ensemble that was the result of a decade of development - then the dominant of software instruments, NI Corporation, releases the Monark. Users were raving about the detail of emulation and character of the instrument. Is it now possible for an independent developer to release an analog emulation of the Minimoog based on the Reaktor platform without being accused of theft?
An ensemble using the Analog Legacy technology has been uploaded to the Reaktor User Library. Will this this ensemble be purged by the Master Control or will it escape through the portal?'

Download at http://www.native-instruments.com/en/..."

Synthrotek 4093 NAND drone synth

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.
Published on Apr 3, 2014 randalllundy·22 videos

"Made this short little demo because I am selling this on eBay"


via this auction

"The 4093 NAND Drone Synth is an awesome little synth that can create a wide variety of sounds! It does low pulsing drones, phasing pulses, odd beeping noises, electronic chirps, UFO sounds, random android noises, laser sounds and a lot more!

Features on/off switches for 2 oscillators and a base pitch control knob. Pitch knobs for the 2 switchable oscillators. Volume knob on the side along with a red power indicator led and an on/off switch for the unit. 1/4" mono output. Rubber feet on bottom."

Korg Minikorg XL ambient sounds


Published on Apr 3, 2014 Polynominaldotcom·67 videos

Korg Microkorg XL 100% demo overdub


for more synth demos, please visit:
http://www.polynominal.com/
PREVIOUS PAGE NEXT PAGE HOME


Patch n Tweak
Switched On Make Synthesizer Evolution Vintage Synthesizers Creating Sound Fundlementals of Synthesizer Programming Kraftwerk

© Matrixsynth - All posts are presented here for informative, historical and educative purposes as applicable within fair use.
MATRIXSYNTH is supported by affiliate links that use cookies to track clickthroughs and sales. See the privacy policy for details.
MATRIXSYNTH - EVERYTHING SYNTH