Enter the Futuristic Music Design Challenge

Update: entries are closed. Stay tuned for the official contestants, and lots more details as the challenge unfolds!
In science fiction and science fact, music has been central to finding a common language to speak to the universe. Music from Bach to gamelan — a mix curated by “DJ” Carl Sagan and his committee — has traveled into space on the Voyager spacecraft. In the digital age, musical interfaces are also often the best way to understand how to interface with technology and information.
Musicians have led many of the most innovative digital technological breakthroughs — the first digital synthesizer (at Bell Labs in the 50s), breakthroughs in modular electronic systems (modular synthesizers of the 60s), pioneering advances in digital storage and processing, unusual wireless interfaces and gestural controls decades ahead of the Nintendo Wii, and touch- and multi-touch tools years before the iPhone and Microsoft Surface.
But that’s all in the past. This is a design challenge for the future. We want to hear the best, most forward-thinking, generally coolest, Second Space Age-worthy instruments and digital music interfaces. If aliens land — as they did when met by a classic ARP synthesizer in Close Encounters — we want to be able to give them a great show.
Need extra incentive? The grand prize winner will take home a Yamaha Tenori-On.
Image: Voyager’s “golden record.” Source: NASA.

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