Hydraulophone: Water Jet/Fountain/Underwater MIDI Keyboard Instruments

Steve Mann, Chris Aimone, et al of the University of Toronto have developed a system for using streams of water to play a musical instrument. They describe the results in theoretical terms for the academic community, referring to ancient Greek water organs and the ability to have greater tactile feedback than other alternative instruments. But let’s get to the bottom line: this is a fun water toy that is not only tactile, but wet. You can play the instrument by manipulating streams of water directly:
The “FUNtain” (hydraulophone) is an interactive multimedia fountain that responds when people block, one or more of the water jets, or touch, restrict, or interact with the jets. In particular, it can function as an extremely expressive musical instrument in which each jet of the fountain is a soft key that can be pressed in infinitely many ways to obtain fine control of note volume, pitch, and timbre.

I find that people overuse the term “infinitely”, but it does look like an expressive and open-ended instrument, not to mention one that’s going to be fun to play on a summer day. (And ironically, they introduce it in Canada, not Florida.) The good news: they’re going beyond their earlier, simpler water fountains, which produce sound acoustically, to outfit their water instruments with a MIDI interface. That’ll make this the world’s wettest MIDI controller.
Keyboards made from rows of water jets, sprays, and nozzles as direct user-interfaces to water-based, fountain-based, and underwater musical instruments [Paper; that's the actual title, not an abstract, though it could be an abstract!]
Abstract of presentation to International Conference on Multimedia & Expo
FUNtains, with gallery, which include more acoustic instruments as well as these digital interfaces
Steve Mann’s page / WearCam.org with the latest on this and many other projects
For a somewhat less-direct water interface (using camera and sound tracking of water), see the MOcean project, which was just shown here in New York.
Thanks to Matt Fellers for this one, who sums it up neatly: “Crazy Canadians…”
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11 Comments
Leave a CommentDaniel O
For anyone in Toronto (Ontario, Canada), one of these FUNtains is being introduced at the Ontario Science Centre:
http://www.ontariosciencecentre.ca/aoc/part.asp
There is also a video here.
I will tell you what I think later on this Summer when I get a member’s preview of the exploration plaza (if anyone cares!).
July 26, 2006 @ 1:45 pm
Peter Kirn
That’s great, Daniel. I care, at least. ;)
If you get any photos, etc., let us know — not only for this site, but for Create Digital Motion, as well.
Now I have to get up to Toronto; this stuff looks great.
July 26, 2006 @ 2:34 pm
Andy
Truly useless.
July 26, 2006 @ 2:53 pm
matrix
That video is a trip. Now I can play while swiming around. : ) The eyes! ; )
July 26, 2006 @ 11:03 pm
Kevin
Where’s the video? Where’s the audio?
July 27, 2006 @ 12:20 pm
Peter Kirn
There is a video here, as Daniel O pointed out; it’s in the margin:
http://www.ontariosciencecentre.ca/aoc/part.asp
… and if you click on the speaker just below it, you’ll get sound. (Loud; be careful!)
I also see some videos here, in other formats:
http://funtain.ca/nessievideo/
The websites are extremely hard to navigate, sorry. I guess they were busy building the things and teaching. Or the part of your brain that lets you do engineering is separate from the bit that lets you do web design. ;)
July 27, 2006 @ 12:53 pm
J-chot
I don’t need no midi controller!!!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWZe2zMZSEw
July 27, 2006 @ 9:06 pm
hydraulist
Someone was walking past the hydraulophone and started playing some Bach on it. There is an inline video in http://wearcam.org/ and some pictures in http://wearcam.org/osc/opening/
September 27, 2006 @ 10:27 am
minimalist
Waterproof Fretlless Bass
http://metalbass.com
October 20, 2006 @ 1:54 pm
S. Mann
You can see and hear another version of the hydraulophone:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tgU0OZkGhGI
November 12, 2006 @ 11:00 am
Jeff Winkworth’s IMM Blog » Blog Archive » “Its much more than a toque, it has ear flaps!”
[...] concepts such as water and the inner child. Thus, he created Nesse. Nesse is what he calls his hydraulophone, which is a flute-like instrument that blows water out of a pump instead of air through your lungs. [...]
February 19, 2008 @ 1:42 pm
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