Telemetron - Musical instruments are designed to play in a zero gravity environment
This is what humans "discover the evolutionary way of design and creativity, when we don't simply survive in space."
There is no denying and undeniable: the Earth civilization possesses the most interesting culture in the universe. There is one thing in common that small cultural groups on the Blue Planet have, that is music. So it is not surprising that we want to bring music into the Universe, bringing our culture to new horizons.
Sands Fish and Nicole K'Huillier.
We used to bring guitar, flute, or other instruments to space but nothing like Telemetron , an instrument designed to play in a zero gravity environment . Instead of stripping or blowing air, the astronauts keep Telemetron flying back and forth in space to create music.
The ringer is located inside an empty cavity of the 12-sided block that transmits each other to the rotation, the perceived bumps, the signals between the bells will be transformed into musical melody, with the same sounds like music being played under water.
The people behind this project are Sands Fish and Nicole K'Huillier from the MIT Media Lab who talked about this idea as a way to "bring emotional expression beyond the limits of musical instruments and artists on Earth " , besides " discovering the evolutionary way of design and creativity when we don't simply survive in space ".
L'Huillier and Fish have successfully tested this instrument in a zero gravity environment.
Telemetron has not officially flown into space, but L'Huillier and Fish have successfully tested the instrument in a zero gravity environment. In the worst case, if Telemetron is not allowed to put on the Space Station or to other planets, we can still happily see that human creativity is limitless and an artist will have endless ways to express your feelings, it is not necessary to use Telemetron on some distant planet.
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