A record player that plays slices of wood

Gramofon, explains 24-year-old author Bartholomäus Traubeck, generative sound more like a machine that uses data from the wood as a source of rhythm. When grain is analyzed, says the young artist, strength, thickness and growth rate. Just to speak to the generative process that emits with piano music.
The basis for the music of the defined rules of programming and hardware settings, but data from trees različitoinerpretiraju these rules.
If you are not really clear explanation of this young German artist is best to listen to the sound of a gramophone.
Enjoy!

http://vimeo.com/30501143
 
lux12 said:
Gramofon, explains 24-year-old author Bartholomäus Traubeck, generative sound more like a machine that uses data from the wood as a source of rhythm. When grain is analyzed, says the young artist, strength, thickness and growth rate. Just to speak to the generative process that emits with piano music.
The basis for the music of the defined rules of programming and hardware settings, but data from trees različitoinerpretiraju these rules.
If you are not really clear explanation of this young German artist is best to listen to the sound of a gramophone.
Enjoy!

http://vimeo.com/30501143

This is wonderful.Thanks for sharing.
 
WOW, incredible find lux12,

Truly all is frequency, it brought to mind Plato's music of the spheres, and all of creation being sung into existence, and the C's comparing some of the members of the chateau crew to instruments in a symphony.

It seems literally every hour mind blowing stuff is being revealed, what will the next moment bring? If i have learned anything its that i haven't a damned clue. :D

Thanks for sharing lux12.
 
Fascinating. The dark streaks in the wood, where the tree was likely injured by insects or disease, makes a soft moan. The wood remembers it's trauma.

Likely, every hurt and every joy, from this life and perhaps past lives, is recorded in our physical and emotional being.

It brings to mind the discussions on the unconscious. We carry all this history with us every day flowing under the surface.

The Universe is alive, every particle.

Mac
 
Thanks for Lux12, have looked at a lot of tree section in life and never thought about this.

Mac said:
Fascinating. The dark streaks in the wood, where the tree was likely injured by insects or disease, makes a soft moan. The wood remembers it's trauma.

Likely, every hurt and every joy, from this life and perhaps past lives, is recorded in our physical and emotional being.

It brings to mind the discussions on the unconscious. We carry all this history with us every day flowing under the surface.

The Universe is alive, every particle.

Mac

Indeed Mac
 

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