Interface Amnesty is an event run by SoundNetwork. It shows off new interfaces that artists have been working to control sound/vision/bubbles/and much more. This was the third Interface Amnesty (Noise Club have been at all three), and was part of the Abandon Normal Devices festival. This time the event was held in Noiselab in Manchester.
It was a double-whammy for me, as I was there not only with Noise Club, but with the Inari Noodle project I had been working on.
For the Noise Club stall, we demonstrated a few of the new instruments we'd been working on. Mike Loftus, always the prolific builder, had modified a cello with brake pedals (see clip below), and was also demonstrating his new electronic instrument he'd built with home-made capacitors. I showed off some of the work I've been doing on controlling feedback with physical objects (more of this to come in future posts).
Inari Noodle is an audiovisual noodle bar project by Japanese artist, Inari Nishiki. My role in the project was quite extensive: writing computer-game-type music to use as the project's theme; creating a media player for the audiovisual clips, and getting them to play when a particular type of noodle was selected; and controlling the noodle dispenser using servos controlled by an Arduino. It was really interesting working on the Arduino - so many possibilities - and I think I'm going to use the knowledge I gained in the process to create a robotics project at some point in the future. More to come, then...
In the meantime, here's a short clip of the moment I got the Arduino controlling its first servo.
Showing posts with label SoundNetwork. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SoundNetwork. Show all posts
Monday, 29 November 2010
Interface Amnesty 3
Labels:
Abandon Normal Devices,
Arduino,
C#,
circuit bending,
experimental,
feedback,
hide and seek,
Inari Noodle,
interactive,
Manchester,
noise,
Noise Club,
Noiselab,
noodles,
sound art,
SoundNetwork
Noise Club at the World Museum, Liverpool
The DIY Music Day was a co-production between the World Museum in Liverpool, music producer Ross Dalziel and the PRS for Music Foundation. There were quite a few different groups involved, from a restored vintage fairground organ to members of the band a.P.A.t.T. playing some of the gamelan instruments in the museum's collection.
Noise Club was stationed in the insect house. What a great place for making noise, surrounded by bees and ants and all kinds of crazy stuff! This was part performance, part installation, part exposition. We placed pre-recorded compositions around the floor we were on (my favourite being behind the giant model of a fly, complete with moving head), then demonstrated some of the instruments we'd been working on recently; and, of course, always accompanied by the sounds of insects from around the world.
Listen to a recording of some of the day...
Noise Club was stationed in the insect house. What a great place for making noise, surrounded by bees and ants and all kinds of crazy stuff! This was part performance, part installation, part exposition. We placed pre-recorded compositions around the floor we were on (my favourite being behind the giant model of a fly, complete with moving head), then demonstrated some of the instruments we'd been working on recently; and, of course, always accompanied by the sounds of insects from around the world.
Listen to a recording of some of the day...
Labels:
aPAtT,
DIY Music,
experimental,
insects,
installation,
noise,
Noise Club,
performance,
PRS,
sound art,
SoundNetwork,
soundscape,
World Museum
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