The Absolut Quartet is essentially a marimba played by rubber balls that fall on to the keys after having being shot into the air by 50 miniature robotic cannons. You can "interact" with the quartet using an on-screen keyboard.
But if you think that sounds cute and no big deal, think again.
First, the quartet doesn't just reflect back what you keyed in. It "creates" its own music based on your composition, and plays that back.
What is more, the music you and the rest of the world hear and see on screen isn't just the video and sound of the marimba being "played" by flying rubber balls - the quartet's other no less bizarre instruments are also played at the same time.
They include a number of percussive, drum-like sound-producing devices, and a set of spinning wineglasses rubbed by robotic fingers.
Dan Paluska and Jeff Lieberman are the two US robotics, artificial intelligence and contemporary music developers who built the quartet for Swedish vodka company, Asbolut.
They are seriously off-beat characters, both previously postgraduate students at MIT's famous artificial intelligence and media labs. Since graduating both have been involved in projects blending art, music and technology.
Paluska, for example, attracted attention with his Holy Toaster, a device that is said to "miraculously produce a perfect imagine of holiness on every piece of toast that emerges from it." (smh.com.au)
I used to use this blog to keep a record of news items, artists, inventions and ideas that relate in various ways to my projects and research. Now it just sits here quietly.
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The current iteration of my blog, which includes everything here, can be found at remotedevice.net
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