During
this year’s Amsterdam-based Music Hack Day, two intrepid hackers
originating from Berlin created a musical umbrella that produces a
random series of lo-fi 8-bit tones. The tones are triggered by raindrops
striking the outside surface of the umbrella's canopy and the abstract
results bring to mind a warped soundtrack for the first generation
Nintendo Game Boy.
The Music Hack Day event was first held in the London offices of U.K. newspaperThe Guardian in 2009 and has since spread to Berlin, Amsterdam, Boston, Stockholm, San Francisco, Barcelona, New York and Montreal, drawing over two thousand participants and sponsorship from some heavy hitting music-tech companies. Each of this year’s events are now over, though those interested in attending next year can sign up by visiting the Music Hack Day website.
Put simply, the musical umbrella works as follows: When raindropsstrike the outside surface of the umbrella canopy, they are converted totones by
the the presence of twelve piezo pickup sensors which are taped to the
underside of the umbrella and respond to vibration. The piezo’s are then
fed into an Arduino Uno - an inexpensive and open source
micro-controller popular with hackers and hobbyists, which is in turn
connected to two speakers.
Twelve piezo pickup sensors trigger the lo-fi 8-bit tones
The musical umbrella was constructed during the Amsterdam-based Music Hack Day
The musical umbrella was created by Berlin-based Alice Zappe and Julia Lager
The Music Hack Day event was first held in the London offices of U.K. newspaperThe Guardian in 2009 and has since spread to Berlin, Amsterdam, Boston, Stockholm, San Francisco, Barcelona, New York and Montreal, drawing over two thousand participants and sponsorship from some heavy hitting music-tech companies. Each of this year’s events are now over, though those interested in attending next year can sign up by visiting the Music Hack Day website.
There’s no word as to whether the musical umbrella is ever intended to be sold, but according to the BBC the
umbrella’s creators, Alice Zappe and Julia Lager, have decided to
create a new and improved version of their Music Hack Day prototype.
This new iteration will introduce wires and sensors that are sewn into
the canopy, rather than gaffer-taped on, in addition to providing a
wider sonic palette to choose from.
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