::vtol:: prankophone from ::vtol:: on Vimeo.
If you pick up the phone and instead of a robocall or someone pocket dialing you, you get what sounds like a synthesizer that’s lost its mind, blame the Prankophone.
Since we’re going to cover the latest from Ableton and Korg and so on in detail, we practically need a column for the quirky, prolific inventions of one vtol, aka Dmitry Morozov. Call it the Internet of Insane Things. (IoIT?)
Prankophone is a synthesizer plus telephone plus logic module. It sits alone in a gallery, and dials up recipients at random (or, if you prefer, pre-selected victims), then plays them generative sounds, composing an algorithmic tune from their phone number, and relaying sound from whomever picks up. You can also “communicate” with the caller from a music keyboard, if you’d like to talk to them in song. (Close Encounters, anyone?)
Now, this might sound weird – okay, it is pretty weird. But believe it or not, there’s some history inspiring it.
Elisha Gray’s Musical Telegraph attached a piano/organ keyboard to a telegraph for relaying melodies. Thaddeus Cahill’s Teleharmonium could be played over phone lines. That instrument was a precursor to the Hammond Organ, an additive tonewheel synth, but decades before live Internet streaming, the Teleharmonium could transmit its noises via phone line. And Dmitry notes that because of poor interference protection, it was very likely some callers got an unwanted and unexpected organ performance while trying to make calls.
And while it’s hard to imagine a world before the typewriter keyboard (like the one on my MacBook as I write this), early telegraphs like David Hughes’ printing telegraph also made use of piano-style keyboards.
All of this makes for a fascinating project. And the readiness of embedded computer tech like the Raspberry Pi means other similarly weird inventions and projects can be yours, too. That could get interesting. By the way, is your refrigerator running? Have you got Prince Albert in a can? Never mind.
The latest on this project in Portugal:
hardware:
– raspberry pi 2
– arduino mega
– Nokia mobile phone
– 2 channel sound system
– GE telephone as button board
– 1 octave keyboardsoft:
– Pure Data
– Python scriptsOficinas do Convento, Montemor-o-Novo, Portugal, 2015
And I’ll see you with Dmitry in Moscow later this year. Can’t wait. More on that soon.
http://vtol.cc/filter/works/prankophone