Say you have a handful of solenoids, a copy of MaxMSP, an Arduino, and access to a whole bunch of parts in a textile museum. What do you do? If you’re like [Luke], you’ll probably come up with an Arduinofied performance of Stomp, played on dozens of old gears, light fixtures, and various other metal parts.
To control what noise sounds when, [Luke] used a Touch OSC interface running on an iPad to send MIDI information to Ableton. From there, MAX/MSP sends messages to an Arduino to actuate the solenoids on cue. The interface is set up so anyone can make their own compositions by reusing patterns into loops of solenoids making noise. Sure, it’s not the dulcet tones you would expect from a more traditional instrument, but [Luke] manages to put on a good show.
While [Luke]’s instrument may sound overly mechanical and dissonant, it’s entirely possible to replace the objects he’s hitting with the solenoids with something a little more melodious. Putting a few solenoids in a cave wouldn’t be a bad idea; too bad it’s already been done.
These google play videos are annoying. I do not have time to RTFM right now, but so far, all the links to google play videos only play the “Introducing Google Play” video. No obvious link to click on that page to play the “hack” video. WTF? I am using Google Chrome, BTW… :-(
Hmm… That’s interesting… The link now takes me to a youtube video. I wonder why it took me to google play before. ???
I think maybe the google play video was actually an advertisement that LOOKED like an embedded video (probably intentional).