Noise for Airports

Vibrations and how they get to your ears.

Noise for airports is a blog about culture, sound, music, and technology.

You can filter the posts to see just things I wrote or made.

Updated (sometimes) by Nick Seaver.  

Then/Now

The Music Trades, 1924:

Entire Piano Industry to Profit by Work of Newly Organized Research Department of American Piano Company

“Among other things,” said Mr. Stoddard in discussing the plans of the new department, “we shall make a careful research into tone analysis. […] We doubt if there has been enough absolutely accurate knowledge in this whole subject of tone production. We cannot, of course, predict what we will find out, but we propose to go into the matter as thoroughly as is humanly possible. The manner in which we are approaching this subject is revolutionary.”

The Music Trades, 2011:

Zenph Software Creates Opportunity: Interactive Technology Delivers Unique Educational and Performance Experience That Promises to Expand the Keyboard Market

RePerform provides a user-friendly environment for recording and editing performance data at up to eight times time resolution of normal MIDI data. The program measures a wide range of parameters that correspond to even the subtlest nuances of a musician’s performance — from hammer velocity to pedal technique — ultimately replicating the gestures, timing, and physicality that define an artist’s individual imprint on a piece of music. “Representing the artist’s unmistakable signature, this incredibly rich, highly-detailed data set can then be used to create new music,” says Litterst.

Axel Boman & The Radioactive Orchestra featuring Rubidium 88 & Cobolt 60

(via @christianbok)

Fight the (Tympanic) Power

A really awesome Kickstarter project ends in 5 days and is about $800 short of its funding goal. Here’s the description:

Expressive Machines Musical Instruments (EMMI) is comprised of Troy Rogers, Steven Kemper, and Scott Barton. Since 2007, the group has been designing, building, and composing music for robotic musical instruments on a shoestring budget. EAR Duo—Dana Jessen (bassoon) and Michael Straus (sax)—is an incredibly gifted, innovative, and engaging force in new music. The duo is ready to tap into the power and promise of EMMI’s musical robots. EAR Duo is commissioning EMMI to create an ensemble of next generation robotic string and wind instruments for a series of upcoming performances across the US and Europe.

EMMI has done some interesting work with robot-only performance, but this new band, MARIE, is going to be designed for performance with humans. If you’ve been following this blog (while I was still updating regularly…), you know I’m a fan of mechanical music and experiments with non-speaker-based “automatic” music performance. These are the kind of cool projects that will help feel out the boundaries of what it is possible to do with musical robotics.

As they write on the kickstarter page:

The current state of musical robotics resembles that of electronic music 50 years ago. Robotic instruments are poised to explode forth from research institutions onto the larger musical scene, creating new genres and transforming existing ones.

But, as in the era of modular synths created by people like Buchla and Moog, it’s going to take extraordinary machines—both in terms of design and sound—to instigate such a revolutionary transformation. It’s clear that these machines must be designed by musicians, for musicians.

I’ve pitched in already, and it would be a pity for an adventurous project like this to go unfunded, so please think about giving!

A lego tribute to Jean Tinguely. I wish they made those lego kits for things like this.

(by roman gerold)

From zedequalszee, a very fun-looking public sculpture:

Erwin Stache, “87,3 Kilo Ohm”

My favourite thing about this sound sculpture is that it encourages people to play together in public.

When it rains, it pours.

(via Vulture)

Sound poet Anne-James Chaton performs his piece “Évênement nº 1” in this video.

Reading against a constantly repeating recording of his own voice, Chaton produces a densely layered sound-world that immediately drew me in. It’s a disorienting and propulsive work, and I just wish I knew enough French to get that extra layer of meaning out of it!

(Source: youtube.com)

This installation looks fantastic:

Five modified toy pianos circulate the gallery on five elevated wooden tracks. Each piano is equipped with small speakers to play amplified sounds picked up from conductive tape on the tracks. Each piano also contains small motors which intermittently spin to strike the toy pianos’ tone bars, adding acoustic elements to the overall soundtrack of the work.

Needless to say, the idea of toy pianos riding atop magnetic tape and picking up samples as they go is a brain-tickler.

Fantasie no. 1 for Mobile Pianos (by Joe Winter)

[p.s. I disappeared again, due to the curse of saying “I’ll be back” on one’s blog. Turns out the 1st year of a PhD program is work-intensive. No promises, but I will try to squeeze in the funs here as much as possible.]

A musical mechanical cigarette lighter, designed for and used by (!) Leonard Bernstein. It would appear that the marvelous tremolo is the result of that sound coming from that speaker, spinning Leslie-style at the top of the device.

(via kindofbleu.tumblr.com)

(Source: accidentalcharm)

Robots play “Rock Lobster,” by the B-52s

(via Boing Boing)