Nigel Stanford - CYMATICS: Science Vs. Music

Started by Elantric, April 08, 2016, 10:01:10 AM

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Elantric



http://NigelStanford.com/Solar_Echoes From the album 'Solar Echoes'.

http://NigelStanford.com/Cymatics Download in 4k / HD. All of the science experiments in the video are real. Watch behind the scenes and see how it was made.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/johnstanfordmusic
Twitter: https://twitter.com/nigel_stanford

Directed by http://ShahirDaud.com
Cinematographer: Timur Civan http://timurcivan.com



http://nigelstanford.com/automatica/

HecticArt

That's pretty bitchin.
Thanks for sharing it.

Elantric


HecticArt

It was really cool at first, but then I got nervous.
I was kept picturing a dystopian future where robot musicians take over the world and play nothing but Nickleback.....
Thank goodness that it's CGI.

Now it's really cool again.

Thanks!

Elantric

#4
QuoteThank goodness that it's CGI.

its CGI only at the end -

https://www.cnet.com/news/nigel-stanford-automatica-robots-video/

QuoteMusician Nigel Stanford doesn't just play alongside his bandmates for the new album "Automatica." He programmed them.

Stanford spent a month in his garage teaching mechanical arms to work piano keys, wield guitar picks and drumsticks and press percussion foot pedals. He taught them well. The head-banging bots are so confident, that by the end of the new video for the album's title song, they rebel against their human collaborator, tossing and smashing their instruments and firing lasers to bring down the warehouse where they're rocking the electronica.

destroy
Pete Townshend would be proud.
GIF by Leslie Katz/CNET
Stanford, a lifelong musician born and raised in New Zealand, has long been fascinated by the intersection of music and science. The robots in the video come from Kuka Robotics, a Germany-based manufacturer of industrial robotic systems. But he insisted on doing all the engineering himself.

"I think it's important to come at the scientific aspects from the perspective of a musician," says Stanford, whose music has been used by NASA and the European Space Agency.

The mad-scientist musician gained a following after a video featuring a song from his 2014 album "Solar Echoes" went viral. That futuristic electro-rock video, "Cymatics," has been viewed more than 13.5 million times on YouTube and many millions more on Facebook.

MORE MUSIC-LOVING ROBOTS
Robot conducts Italian orchestra playing Verdi
Can a robot feel? Humanoid opera singer takes on touchy role
The new album from Sony Music Masterworks features 13 songs and can be downloaded for $9.95 (roughly £7, AU$12.50) from Stanford's site, or on iTunes, Spotify, Amazon Music and Google Play.

Flesh and blood musicians might be pondering a revolt of their own right about now. In a world where machines play rock, star in operas and conduct famous tenors, Nigel's new video, titled "Automatica 4k: Robots vs. Music" suggests the robots might just win.   

https://nigelstanford.com/



Elantric