OCARINA MAKES BEAUTIFUL MUSIC ON AN IPHONE
We
live in interesting times especially when it comes to technology. I
can't wait to see what's in store for us ten years from now. I'm
also gratified to know that I really won't have to wait ten years to
see some pretty amazing stuff. There's always something new and
exciting happening right now and just around the corner. This year's
Consumer Electronics Show
(CES) being held in Las Vegas in January has been teasing some new
innovations scheduled to hit dealer shelves this year. In the
meantime, something pretty amazing was just introduced for the
iPhone and already there's a major buzz about it. I've been
practicing on it for a few weeks now and I get big reactions from
anyone who's seen and heard me playing it. Ocarina is an application
that converts your iPhone into a wind instrument.
Music on the iPhone isn't news as it's already a very cool mp3
player. And there are a number of apps that let you play things like
a mini piano keyboard so you can bang out some synthesized music and
such. But they were never intended to be anything with which you
could be serious. But Ocarina takes it to that next level by
transforming the iPhone into something that's close to a real
musical instrument.
I guess it's all in how you actually define a musical instrument. If
it's something you can just pick up and play without any practice,
chances are it's not a musical instrument. Of course there are
always exceptions like the Triangle, Cymbals, Maracas and other
similar percussive instruments. But an instrument that plays notes
usually requires lots of practice and Ocarina certainly falls into
that category. The app is named after the little wind instrument
that produces a hauntingly beautiful, rich monophonic tone. It
sports little holes which you cover and open using your fingers. By
blowing into the Ocarina, you can control the volume as well as a
tremolo or quavering effect. The Ocarina app on the iPhone does one
heck of a job simulating the real thing.
Ocarina's imaginative and creative programmers are to be commended
for using iPhone abilities in a way that was never intended. For
example, the iPhone's little microphone intended for speech is now
used to sample the intensity of your breath. As you blow into the
microphone, the Ocarina app translates how hard or soft you are
blowing into a corresponding volume. The harder or softer you blow,
the louder or softer the sound. This allows you to add expression or
"feeling" as you play, just as you can do with the real instrument.
Modulating your breath will also produce a tremolo. Using the
accelerometer, you can also tilt the iPhone to change vibrato rate
and depth. The screen shows four "holes" you manipulate to produce
notes on a chromatic scale allowing you to play most any tune one
note at a time. As you play the sounds, the screen depicts an
animation of intersecting, expanding sound waves that correspond to
what you are playing, making the observer's experience both aural,
visual and hypnotic. You can also select alternative musical modes
that produce different types of scales.
As if that weren't enough, you can select a screen that displays an
animated image of the globe where you can actually hear others
playing their Ocarinas! If you find someone who's really good you
can bookmark them for future enjoyment. Additional options let you
configure the Ocarina's hole positions and shape, and choose to
share your playing with others or keep it private until you become a
virtuoso. You can set up an account on the Smule website to view
fingering diagrams for a wide variety of songs and more. Or just go
to the Smule website to hear a quintet of Ocarinas playing along
with a guitarist performing Stairway to Heaven. It's wonderful. As a
musician myself (I play the piano), this has given me many hours of
enjoyment and entertainment. And while I'm still not very good on
it, the reactions I get from those seeing me play my cell phone are
priceless. Most amazing of all is that it sells for just 99 cents.
Now go out there and blow them away.
www.smule.com
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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