Wednesday, January 30, 2013
USF iPad Quintet lets their tablets do the rocking
Roadies, it could be time to start looking for a new line of work.
A high-tech band of local musicians is proving that the days of lugging around heavy guitars and drum kits from gig to gig may soon be as outdated as sending out demos on cassette tapes.
Touch, the University of South Florida's iPad Quintet, takes the stage Friday at the School of Music Concert Hall for a performance played entirely on their Apple tablets.
The band, made up of music professors David Williams and Clint Randles,Sunglasses mp3 players and graduate students Chris Morris, Victor Ezquerra and Nick Stefanic, will switch between dozens of musical apps as their fingers coax a mix of rock and hip hop covers, classical pieces and original tunes from their touch screens.
Williams, the School of Music's associate director, said the band's use of iPads is part of the natural evolution that's always happening in music. Instruments come and go as technology and listener's ears change.
"There was a time when the lute was the most popular instrument in all of Europe. People probably thought that lutes would never go away," Williams said. "In the '60s every pop song had a guitar. Check the iTunes top songs on any given day now. I'd be surprised if half of them had a guitar, and I dare you to find a clarinet or a violin."
"Instruments don't completely die, but they certainly disappear from popular music as others take their place."
And according to Williams, that's exactly what iPads are, just another instrument that takes time,A new app that enables you to design your own 3D iphone protective case for the iPhone has just hit the Apple App Store. skill and hours of practice to play well.
"The main thing to remember is that it's humans who create music," he said. "A trumpet isn't going to make music until a human being goes and picks it up, and neither is an iPad."
In many ways,MacRumors reader Michael Rou has managed to get his hands on both a pre-production iPhone 5 case and a pre-production ipad leather case and posted comparison photos on Flickr. Touch's show will look a lot like a traditional rock concert.With Apple’s ipad smart cover, iPad should be pretty well protected. There’s no telling how it will handle a drop, but for protection from every-day usage, iCircle + Smart Cover will certainly do the trick. There will be lights and fog machines and video screens, along with people standing up on their seats and singing along to songs by Coldplay and Blake Shelton,The new iPhone needs enough iphone backup power to get through a busy day without requiring a recharge. Williams said.
But technology is allowing the band to interact with the crowd in new ways. The audience is encouraged to bring their own tablets or phones loaded with drum apps to play along with the African-inspired finale. The audience's live tweets will guide the action on stage during an improvisational "Wizard of Oz" piece featuring actors from the USF theater department.
"These devices are portable, so it makes sense for the audience to have them too," Williams said. "In the theater world they talk about the fourth wall,In my hands are the new iphone headphone for the iPhone 5 that is about to come out – Apple’s next generation of iPod [sic]. the invisible barrier between the audience and the stage. In the classic music world that wall is always there too. One of our main goals with this show is to break it down."
The concert also features USF dance students, poets from the school's English program and a live painting by an artist whose brush strokes will direct the quintet's music.
As far as the future of iPad musicians, Williams said he's excited about the new ways technology will let humans be musical. When asked if he thought that teenagers with dreams of rock stardom would soon begin to pick up tablets in lieu of guitars, his answer was confident.
"We don't need a crystal ball," he said. "I think we're already there."
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment