Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Replay: Great Exhibit "Seeds" in Chrome Music Lab


I've been working and thinking about music exhibits lately, so I've gone back to play around with Chrome Music Lab because I find so many of the ideas and approaches there so much fun. I think ExhibiTricks readers will find some great exhibit "seeds" by taking another look at this "replay" post.

Chrome Music Lab is a nifty collection of interactive "experiments" that lets users explore the fundamental elements of music like rhythm, chords, and harmonics. 

Google has assembled these collaborations between musicians and coders into one place for anyone with a Web browser to try out.   And best of all,  the Music Lab examples were built with the freely available Web Audio API, so anyone with the time and some technical know-how can put together similar interactive explorations into sound and music.

Even as a non-musician, I really enjoyed playing and experimenting with all the Music Lab modules, but two of my favorites were "Voice Spinner" and "Rhythm" (pictured below.)


In Voice Spinner, you use your computer's microphone to capture your voice and create "sonic circles"  that can then be played backward or forwards at different speeds.  Not only is it super fun, but the Voice Spinner interface really lends itself to repeated experimentation.  (I had fun trying to recreate the backward-tracking sections of old Beatles songs!) 

The "Rhythm" module lets you choose among sets of different cartoony animal musical combos. Each set of animals plays different percussion instruments that you can then control by clicking or un-clicking dots (like musical notes) onto a set of parallel lines.  Once you set everything into motion the animals play different rhythms in time to the dots you placed.   It's a deceptively simple interface that let's you set up really complex rhythmic patterns!  It's also really fun to use to collaborate with someone else.




Bravo to Google for turning Chrome Music Lab loose into the world! It's worth clicking over to the website to play with all the current modules --- each one of which can easily serve as creative inspiration for museum/exhibit/design folks!




Don't miss out on any ExhibiTricks posts! It's easy to get updates via email or your favorite news reader. Just click the "Sign up for Free ExhibiTricks Blog Updates" link on the upper right side of the blog.

P.S. If you receive ExhibiTricks via email (or Facebook or LinkedIn) you will need to click HERE to go to the main ExhibiTricks page to make comments or view multimedia features (like videos!)

No comments:

Post a Comment