Monday, June 15, 2009

Take that, Steve Reich

I've been having fun lately with Andre Michelle's Tonematrix. The site offers a blank 16 x 16 grid representing a musical score on which the x axis is time and the y axis shows ascending notes in three five-note octaves. By filling in squares one can create simple repeating songs that are quite mesmerizing. The rest of this post will make much more sense if you take a moment now to visit the site. Click on a few squares and watch what happens (making sure to have your computer sound ON).

I've found that it's virtually impossible to create an ugly song. You can enter a whole slew of notes completely at random and wind up with a nice mix of chords, interplay, and syncopation. I've entered designs, blocks, letters, figures from Conway's Life. Each one has a unique song that's surprisingly euphonious (and, perhaps unsurprisingly, monotonous).

Curious about the photographic implications, I began playing around with b/w square photographs as the root of my designs. The first was Nancy Rexroth's A Woman's Bed, Logan, Ohio, 1970:


I converted the image into a 16 x 16 pixel array...


Saved it as a two color gif...


Then copied the pattern into Tonematrix...


Here's what it sounds like:



Next up was Arbus' Young Brooklyn Family Going for a Sunday Outing, 1966:



Harry Callahan's Eleanor, 1949:




Irving Penn's Portrait of Truman Capote, 1965:



As you can hear, each image generates its own song which isn't quite the same as any other. I think they're a bit like audio fingerprints or whale songs uniquely keyed to the individual.

Beyond that fact I'm not sure what significance they may have. I thought about creating a quiz in which I'd have people guess an image after hearing its song but quickly realized it would be impossible to solve. For color photographs I can imagine other possibilities like a 3D graph with color representing multiple instruments across the z axis.

I think perhaps these audio clips are best appreciated as bizarre little experiments just weird enough to be of general interest.

5 comments:

  1. Wow, so interesting!!
    I will go and check what music my pics make!!!

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  2. OMG...I'm hooked...the strange thing is I was just looking at QR codes last night.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QR_Code

    Freaky...QR Code Music

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  3. That is interesting stuff. It is more a musical transcription of a visual information though (rather than a transformation), not unlike a music sheet is. But that is an interesting effort.

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