Posts Tagged ‘technology’

Live Looping: Going Solo

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

Having no friends and being unpopular does have its advantages. It give you plenty of time to learn how to program and play musical instruments.

I spent many a happy hour with a knackered out electric guitar, microphone, trashed drum kit and a tape-driven 4 track (Tascam Portastudio 414 MKII if I remember correctly) layering up tracks and bouncing them down.

Part time jobs helped fund my obsession and I eventually bought some effects pedals including the Boss DS 1. This gave me the ability to digitally loop small sections of guitar and vocal parts to create some wild and wonderful experimental sounds.

Live Looping is now very popular and takes many forms. In its purest form, live looping is a single musician creating an entire track from scratch and on-the-fly without the aid of pre-generated backing tracks.

Here’s a few of my favorite live looping artists, they all have something different to offer and cover loads of musical genres.

Enjoy!


Artist: Andrew Bird
Track: Section 8 City
Pedal: Line 6 DL 4 x 2

 


Artist: KT Tunstall
Track: Tutorial Black Horse & the Cherry Tree (part 2)
Pedal: Akai E2 Headrush

 


Artist: Emily Wells
Track: Symphony 1 (In the Barrel of a Gun)
Pedal: BOSS RC-50

 


Artist: BEARDYMAN
Track: Monkey Jazz
Effects unit: Kaoss pad 3 x 2

 


Artist: Dub FX
Track: made
Pedal: BOSS RC-50

 

London stays catwalks ahead at embracing digital

Tuesday, October 26th, 2010

Since my last post covering the use of interactive technologies at London Fashion Week 09, I thought I’d take a fresh look at how the fashion industry is using technology to bring itself closer to its audience this season.

Live Streaming of Shows

London Fashion Week continued to expand their Digital Schedule this year, almost doubling the number of shows that were available to watch live online. This is a further step to increasing the accessibility of London shows to a global audience, allowing not only fashion bloggers a front row seat, but also giving the wider public a live ‘insider’ experience of shows which would previously not have been accessible to them.

lfw-digital

Real-Time Pre-Ordering

Realising the potential of this new ‘public’ audience, Burberry set about  introducing their own ‘Retail Theatres‘. By installing huge 20ft wide screens, a real-time shopping experience was created using iPads for in-store shoppers to pre-order items as they were walked down the catwalk. Even the makeup used in the show was available to pre-order via the iPad app, all live and seamlessly integrated.

“We are now as much a media-content company as we are a design company, because it’s all part of the overall experience. So it’s a big deal. It’s changing the whole system of buying, and the whole cycle of production. Basically you can buy every bag that goes down the runway and every coat and all the make-up as well.” - Christoper Bailey – Creative Director at Burberry

lfw-burberry

Following Henry Holland’s ‘buy beside the catwalk’ Blackberry app last season, an increasing number of smaller designers have also been taking pre-orders alongside their online steams. JW Anderson reported that boots from his last show completely sold out from real-time website pre-orders, before his show had even finished.

jwanderson

Physical technology

Being a popular phone brand of choice amongst the fashion community, Blackberry themselves decided to launch their own campaign ‘London Fashion Catwalk‘. Combining green-screen video and integration between their website and users phones, Blackberry invited users to ‘Strut their stuff’ on a virtual catwalk which superimposed participants onto a Blackberry video runway.

lfw-blackberry

High-Tech Barbie

Showstudio decided to take their fashion week coverage to a new level, recruiting a high-tech Barbie as the latest member of their blogging team. Armed with a built-in camera and microphone, Barbie captured all of the latest action from both catwalk side and backstage, all of which was frequently uploaded to her own blog throughout London Fashion Week.

lfw-showstudio

Augmented Reality Using Face-Tracking

We also saw designers themselves bringing technology directly into their shows. Following her world-first Augmented Reality presentation last season, Carrie Mundane aka ‘Cassette Playa’ yet again wowed audiences with an interactive installation to present her latest work. Using touch-screens and face-tracking technology, pieces from her latest collection were magically augmented onto a live video of the users face, allowing them to virtually ‘wear’ her designs.

lfw-cassetteplaya

New York shows some serious competition

‘Target’ completely blew audiences away with their amazing interactive dance and light show, which took over a whole building and all of it’s windows in one of the biggest fashion spectacles New York Fashion Week has ever seen. Check out the video here:

And finally…

Back in London and continuing the theme of light, JW Anderson used lasers to create his catwalk finale spectacle. Lastly, taking a slightly different approach to lighting, wig maker Charlie Le Mindu literally lit up the runway with an electronic LED headlamp and light-up bra pieces. Definitely one of the more unusual ways we’ve seen a designer integrate technology into their work this time round…

lwf-charlielemindu

So, that’s all for this season! Until next time you can find out more about Digit’s research into Luxury and Digital in our latest white paper here. Look out for Digit’s latest fashion project also launching in our portfolio very soon…

FOLLOW ME

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Digit 'Follow Me' data visualisation tool

Follow Me – a new R&D project designed especially for the Digit homepage – is now live! It’s a data visualisation tool mapping local journeys that Digitees make around work. And no, despite many a sarcastic comment to the contrary, this is not a clandestine attempt to track the whereabouts of members of staff, thereby squeezing more productivity out of an already assiduous workforce. It’s just a little idea that visualises human behaviour.

Follow Me uses an app installed on your smart phone which reports back a GPS position at regular intervals during the day. Why not take a look for yourself?

Don’t judge a Kindle by its cover…

Friday, May 15th, 2009

kindle
Feel like adding fuel to the fire? Burn your books and buy a Kindle.

Compared to the rest of the trendy gadgets out on the market, from a purely aesthetic point of view, the Kindle falls a bit flat. In a world where we walk around with all kinds of electronic devices that play music, store images, record videos and send text messages, the Kindle seems to be a one trick pony. It has clearly deviated from the shiny exteriors of the newest phones and the eye catching colours of the ipod family. In fact, holding the device feels almost a bit budget. (Never mind the fact that there was a huge waiting list to order these online at Christmas, Ebay auctions were going through the roof and the only way to find one for my mother before Santa was to buy one second hand for almost twice the price.) (more…)