Need to find out about designing bodily interactions for music from the creator of the MPC and LinnStrument, the one and solely Roger Linn, plus bodily interplay and sound arts skilled Sasha Leitman? Registrations are open now for a category from June 17-21. You’ll be able to even be a part of on-line.
Pictured: LinnStrument early prototype.
Roger writes us to tell us about this one at Stanford’s legendary CCRMA. Roger is joined by sound artist, composer, inventor, and artistic technologist Sasha. She has 20 years expertise on this stuff and says she believes that “music is a essentially bodily exercise.” For those who’re close to Stanford, you’ll be able to take part particular person ($500), however anybody anyplace on the planet can be a part of on-line ($250), and no earlier expertise – technical or in any other case – is required.
What you’ll do is construct a brand new digital instrument across the Teensy microcontroller board (or a pc, if you happen to want), with some novel approach of working bodily. I see some attention-grabbing contraptions (ooh, that factor with the shadows) from final 12 months’s workshop, pictured. It simply appears implausible.
Full particulars and hyperlinks to the course define, and so on. There’s even a assets web page in progress which is enjoyable to browse even if you happen to can’t make this one.

https://www.rogerlinndesign.com/more/stanford-workshop
I might be a part of if I might! Take pleasure in!
In the meantime, talking of Roger and LinnStrument, he’s posted some terrific movies in current months, together with working with the superior free Surge XT and talking of prototyping, going into LinnStrument’s creation.
Tags: arduino, ccrma, courses, code, DIY, training, studying, linnstrument, MPE, bodily interplay, bodily interfaces, Roger Linn, Sasha Leitman, stanford, Surge XT, teensy
