Ryan Holladay: To hear this music you have to be there. Literally
Ryan Holladay: För att höra den här musiken måste du bokstavligt talat vara där
Brothers Ryan and Hays Holladay explore the intersection of art and technology with an emphasis on music and sound, with projects ranging from multichannel audio installations to interactive performances to mobile apps. Full bio
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or lived in New York City,
börjar verka bekanta.
komponerade och planerade
developing over the last few years,
more and more interested
och mer intresserade
som levde kvar i oss
till Washington, D.C.
"The National Mall",
inbyggda GPS-funktion
melodier och rytmer
som värmer upp,
ljudet från en mellotron
från böljande fioler.
kommer en hel kör in
musikaliska galenskaper,
i omvänd ordning.
the perimeter of the park,
utkanten av parken
people in other parts of the world
människor från andra delar av världen
på den här skivan.
eller medföljer en traditionell skiva.
ett platsspecifikt album
the size of the National Mall,
som National Mall,
från Sheep's Meadow
Media Art-institution
location-aware album to date,
platsspecifika album
att integrera GPS med musik,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Ryan Holladay - MusicianBrothers Ryan and Hays Holladay explore the intersection of art and technology with an emphasis on music and sound, with projects ranging from multichannel audio installations to interactive performances to mobile apps.
Why you should listen
The Holladay brothers have done pioneering work in location-aware music composition: music created and mapped to a physical space, released as mobile apps, that use a mobile device’s GPS to dynamically alter the music as the listener traverses a landscape. Their first production, “The National Mall,” a location-aware piece mapped to the Mall in Washington, DC, was described by music critic Chris Richards “magical...like using GPS to navigate a dream.” They went on to create similar works for Central Park in New York and for SXSW Interactive in Austin, Texas, and are engaged in a long-term project of sonically mapping the entirety of the Pacific Coast Highway. Ryan is a 2013 TED Fellow.
Ryan Holladay | Speaker | TED.com