00:00
185
More
See all Show me
53. SuperPong
3 months ago
50. Samba Surdo
9 months ago
47. EletroAxé
10 months ago
46. Atomos
1 year ago
39. Video Slicer
1 year ago
32. Wave in OF
1 year ago
In January 2011 I spent new years in Bahia and was introduced to Carlinhos Brown by a close friend. Knowing that Brown is one of the most talented percussionists and musician we have in Brazil, we talked about creating a full body suit with ten sensors, which were activated each time they were hit, acting as percussion instruments on Brown's body. The project, called EletroAxé, consisted in 10 drum pads developed with laser cutting and CNC techniques, piezo sensors, electronics, Arduino, and Processing. It was a collaboration with myself and Kyle McDonald and it was managed/ produced by Acere F.C. It involved transmitting wireless midi data, a great amount of work in production design, code, and infinite testing.

We presented the project during Carnaval in Salvador, which occurred between March 4th through March 10th. Carnaval in Salvador is one of the biggest festivals/ parties in the world. Brown played for more than 50 thousand people while commanding percussionists, musicians, and his innovative experiments for Caranval 2011.

The experiment ended up working very well. We were all extremely happy with the results, he got great feedback, and people were stunned by what he was bringing into one of the greatest festivities on earth.
  • Kyle McDonald plus 10 months ago
    wish i could have been there on that last day, it's amazing to see everyone singing along even with a simple rhythm.
  •  
  • Jai.Tronik plus 10 months ago
    love the story about the last minute discovery of radio interference. way to work it out!
  •  
  • Psicoff 10 months ago
    good job dude!
  •  
  • Lichtschutzfaktor56 10 months ago
    Very interesting! Go on.
  •  
  • Resonate Arts & Media 10 months ago
    Cool, but I wouldn't call it revolutionary. I saw a similar midi drum trigger suit performance in the late eighties (albeit sans arduino).
  •  
  • Lucas Werthein 10 months ago
    Thanks for the compliments. We know this was previously done by other artists in other places of the world. The artist you mentioned is probably Laurie Anderson and she did it in 1979. However, I think it's important to understand the scenario this was done in. This technology was taken to a very uncommon scenario, where Carlinhos was able to introduce innovation into a culture, a country, and a major party that is not used to seeing or dealing with this. By doing this, he is motivating other people to produce, build, and think about possibilities and scenarios within the field of art, technology, and education. We don't really care about the technology and the fact that it has been previously made, since we are completely aware. What we really care about is the impact a piece like this can have over the people within the context it is presented.
  •  
  • luisaph 9 months ago
    Amazing –adorei! Nicely documented too. And I completely agree: it's not about the technology. Great work guys!
  •  
This conversation is missing your voice. Take five seconds to join Vimeo or log in.

Advertisement

About this video

MP4
00:03:05
  • 1280x720, 58.93MB
  • Uploaded Sat March 26, 2011
  • Please join or log in to download

Statistics

Date Plays Comments
Totals 13.5K 39 7
Feb 24th 0 0 0
Feb 23rd 4 0 0
Feb 22nd 13 0 0
Feb 21st 8 0 0
Feb 20th 13 0 0
Feb 19th 5 0 0
Feb 18th 9 0 0

Related lessons from Vimeo Video School

Check out these lessons to learn more about how you can make videos like this one!