Musical Robots Invade Juilliard 115
roboRob writes "RoboRecital, a recent concert at the Juilliard School, featured four robot performers: GuitarBot, a self-playing guitar; an automated fifty-seven rank pipe organ; a Yamaha Disklavier, a modern player piano; and ModBots, a collection of robotic percussion instruments. This New York Times article and it this Juilliard Journal article discuss it." This beats the band-in-a-box automaton at Wall Drug by a fair stretch.
Yes But, (Score:2)
Captured! By Robots (Score:2)
Re:Captured! By Robots (Score:2)
Re:Captured! By Robots (Score:1)
I take it no-one else knows... (Score:2)
Took a while for the guitar to catch up, eh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Took a while for the guitar to catch up, eh? (Score:1)
Re:Took a while for the guitar to catch up, eh? (Score:3, Insightful)
There is more to playing than simply hitting the right keys. There is the duration, force, rythm, etc, etc, etc...
Granted it's been a few years since I played last but from where I was [grade 7 conservatory] it was a lot more than just "hit these notes in 1/4 time".
Tom
Re:Took a while for the guitar to catch up, eh? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Took a while for the guitar to catch up, eh? (Score:2, Troll)
That's like saying Violins suck because they can't play good piano solo music or something. Different techniques for different instruments.
Besides the best part of music [not just piano] isn't just the sweet sweet notes, it's also the performers method/variation. Everyone plays slightly different and getting the performers take on something is equally cool.
Let's just say given the chance I'd rather see live performances than hi-quality super recordings.
Re:Took a while for the guitar to catch up, eh? (Score:1)
I don't see the difference between a piano and a player piano. The latter only had the ability to "record" the pianists work to be played back identically to the original performance. I am not looking at the keyboard aspect of the piano, only the sound production. Once you do a conventional recording of that player piano you have to factor in a whole lot of other factors to make the playback as close to the original as possible.
In any case, I am not trying to suggest that pianos suck because of what they
Re:Took a while for the guitar to catch up, eh? (Score:2)
They're able to reproduce music with stringed instruments and capture things like vibrato, volume bends, etc...
I think a mechanical "player guitar" may be harder but automating guitar music isn't impossible.
Tom
Re:Took a while for the guitar to catch up, eh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Took a while for the guitar to catch up, eh? (Score:1)
Re:Took a while for the guitar to catch up, eh? (Score:1, Interesting)
To get a robot slide guitar player that plays in tune is very difficult with mechanical methods. While there were fairground organs with violins, they really were more like hurdy-gurdys. The pitch resolution is in microtones. To do that without electronics would be impossible.
Even humans find it tricky.
Re:Took a while for the guitar to catch up, eh? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Took a while for the guitar to catch up, eh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Took a while for the guitar to catch up, eh? (Score:1)
Some assembly required. (Score:5, Funny)
A: Assembly, assembly, assembly.
In related news.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:In related news.... (Score:2)
Much better imagery. ;-)
[OT] Kilroy woz 'ere? [was Re:In related news....] (Score:2)
- Derwen
The spirit of Jacques Vaucanson (Score:2)
But Philip Glass was the first robot at Juilliard (Score:3, Insightful)
"The player performs "1 + 1" by tapping the table top with his fingers or knuckles. Two rhythmic units, which build the block of "1 + 1", are combined in regular arithmetic progressions."
What! No Brittany Spears? (Score:2)
I'm disappointed.
Re:What! No Brittany Spears? (Score:1)
Yamaha Disklavier, a modern player piano (Score:2)
I really like the concept. You can play interpretations of classic pieces performed by top-notch pianists of today at your dinner party. Even if I would play the piano that well, I would definately have other obligations at said party.
Re:Yamaha Disklavier, a modern player piano (Score:2)
Re:Yamaha Disklavier, a modern player piano (Score:2)
"Disklavier plays the piano part."
i would understand that to mean that things like violins & etc are played through speakers while the piano is played by the piano as a piano.
Re:Yamaha Disklavier, a modern player piano (Score:2)
Douglas Adams predicted this (Score:4, Funny)
'At these times of special celebration a choir of over two million robots sing the company song "Share and Enjoy". Unfortunately - again - another of the computing errors for which the company is justly famous means that the robot's voices are exactly a flattened fifth out of tune and the result sounds something like this, only slightly worse.'
assuming... (Score:2)
sorry... nerds to the rescue.
Why not playing it back from a recording? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Self Playing Organ (Score:1)
Re:Why not playing it back from a recording? (Score:1)
Re:Why not playing it back from a recording? (Score:2)
Re:Why not playing it back from a recording? (Score:3, Insightful)
Another is that it's a lot easier to feel the vibrations from a live organ than it is from a recording.
Re:Why not playing it back from a recording? (Score:2)
Now, when you remove the "i" from the "RoboRecital" it approaches similar functionality...
Re:Why not playing it back from a recording? (Score:1)
God, what I wouldn't give for a self-playing organ...
While I respect the hard work... (Score:1)
Multiple Points of Failure (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Multiple Points of Failure (Score:1)
Not as impressive as it sounds.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Not as impressive as it sounds.... (Score:1)
In this case the performance is being done on a MIDI enabled pipe organ instead of a synthesizer. Is it any surprise that a computer could fire MIDI signals to the pipes better than 10 fingers and two feet working away at a console? I guess I'm still not impressed.
@ the Beall Center (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Technology and Aesthetics (Score:1)
Exhibition (Score:1)
First March (Score:2)
Orchestrion (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Orchestrion (Score:1)
I did RTFA. The first pipe on a pipe organ is a triumph, subsequent pipes are redundant, a matter of how many you can afford. Percussion instruments are similarly unimpressive; from a technological perspective, a simple solenoid can achieve any percussion effect you want.
The robotic guitar was far more impressive, but that too has been "done" electromechanically (see the banjo on the orchestrion). A robotic violin would be most impressive, as that is an instrument that would require feedback to accompl
When I saw this... (Score:3, Funny)
Technology and Aesthetic Issues (Score:1)
This concert raises aesthetic issues that are more interesting than the tech stuff--here's a blip from the composer's program notes [brendanadamson.com]:
"Automation of acoustic instruments allows a composer to transcend limitations of performer ability and offers new sound possibilities that could not be reproduced by a live performer. While other techniques of computer music may seem more practical, the automated instrument approach retains the richness of the source acoustic instrument and offers the visual interest of liv
Re:Technology and Aesthetic Issues (Score:1)
Limitations of mechanical instruments (Score:2, Interesting)
That said, an acoustic instrument like a disklavier or midi-controlled pipe organ is a far
Unimpressive... (Score:2)
It sounds like whoever designed this robot just got bored of it and decided to abandon the project as soon as it could play notes. This is reminiscent of the attitude that
So What? (Score:1)
Re:So What? (Score:1)
Re:So What? (Score:2)
Re:So What? (Score:1)
Re:So What? (Score:1)
So at the end of the concert... (Score:1)
Vonnegut (Score:2)
Pipe Dream (Score:1)
I for one.... (Score:1)
Ahead of his time.. (Score:2)
Self-playing organ (Score:1)
Guitarbot (Score:1)
This one's right up my alley (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This one's right up my alley (Score:1)
Re:This one's right up my alley (Score:1)
Disaster Area (Score:1)
uuuuhhh. (Score:1)