Futuristic Music Design Challenge: Meet the Competitors, Judges

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What’s the big idea in designing new interfaces for music? Just about everything, judging from the finalist entries for our Futuristic Music Design Challenge. A sequencer with bubblegum balls? A synth that works with surface temperature data and maps? Microtonal guitars, sound-making boxes, Nintendo games, digitally-connected saws and tape on bicycle wheels? Gloves, buttons, lights, strings, turntables? Yep, we’ve pretty much got the gamut here. We told contestants to make the Second Space Age proud. Now we get to see how they hold up.

Check out some of the videos and photos of what’s to come to get a sense of the projects, and if you’re attending Yuri’s Night Bay Area, be sure to get there by 2:30pm to watch these artists compete with each other in front of our expert judging panel. (See the Yuri’s Night Bay Area event schedule.)

Join this event on Facebook — and say hi!

After the show, get up-close-and-personal with the artists later on at the Create Digital Music booth. On the same stage, at 3:30 pm, our friends at Instructables.com have a show-and-tell session for even more DIY goodness. And then there are the installations, acrobats, space things, major scientists and thinkers… and, of course, stick around for a huge lineup of incredible music all night long. I’m going to figure out how I can be three places at once, personally, because there’s loads I want to see.

See you Saturday afternoon, California-bound peoples. Those of you not lucky enough to be in the Bay Area, stay tuned right here for more online coverage following the competition — plus the winner.

Enter the Futuristic Music Design Challenge

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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.

Preview: Weather Report Tangible Music Interface for Surface Temperatures


Weather Report video

Space exploration has brought not only views of the outer cosmos, but critical views back of the planet. So, among the new instrument designs coming to Yuri’s Night are at least two music devices built around sonifying data about planet Earth. (I’ll be bringing one, as well — more details soon.)”Weather Report”, by Cal Arts students Jordan Hochenbaum and Owen Vallis, uses a multi-point, tangible interface to surf temperature data and translate it into music. Full details over on Create Digital Music:Weather Report: Multi-Touch + Surface Temperature = Music on Earth

The underlying technology comes from the open Reactivision library, as used in the ReacTable (popularized recently on the Bjork tour).

If you’re bringing a music or visual project to Yuri’s Night, be sure to let us know.