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music sequencers

Articles about music sequencers:


http://www.vimeo.com/3165011

The Siftables Music Sequencer lets you drop samples into a looping track, add gesture-controlled effects and alter the sequence of samples in real time.

The sequencer is one application of MIT researcher David Merrill’s Siftables:

Imagine overturning a container of nuts and bolts, then looking through the resulting pile for a particular item. Or spreading photographs out on a tabletop and then beginning to sort them into piles. During these activities we interact with large numbers of small objects at the same time, and they utilize all of our fingers and both hands together. We humans are skilled at using our hands in these ways, and can effortlessly sift and sort – focusing on our higher level goals rather than the items themselves.

Siftables aims to enable people to interact with information and media in physical, natural ways that approach interactions with physical objects in our everyday lives. As an interaction platform, Siftables applies technology and methodology from wireless sensor networks to tangible user interfaces. Siftables are independent, compact devices with sensing, graphical display, and wireless communication capabilities. They can be physically manipulated as a group to interact with digital information and media. Siftables can be used to implement any number of gestural interaction languages and HCI applications.

Do you think that a physical sequencer like this makes sense for increasingly software-driven music?

via Peter Kirn

 

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This video offers a look at the new features in Ableton Live 8, via SonicAcademy. Read more…

 

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      Classical music is music without Africa. It represents old-fashioned hierarchical structures, ranking, all the levels of control. Orchestral music represents everything I don’t want from the Renaissance: extremely slow feedback loops. — Brian Eno

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