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Posts Tagged ‘Sound Visualization’

Neon in New Zealand

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

I’m happy to announce that New Zealand based artist Rita Godlevskis has integrated graphics from my Neon Splines sound visualization into her installation Connections: Music and Mind at the Do You Mind? exhibition in Auckland.

Do You Mind 01

Do You Mind 02

The video is from the actual exhibition and also shows Rita’s piece.

More pictures and information after the break.

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FAVKit

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

It’s been an incredibly long time since my last post and there’s been a reason for that: I finished my last semester at school! Aside from going through a lot of fun final exams and lectures, I wrote a thesis on audio visualization in Flash which involved the development of a prototype AIR application.

favkit_teaser_blog

More information on the prototype and the thesis after the break.

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Sound Force

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

I’ve been playing around a lot with gravity and repulsion for force based layouts recently. I guess it’s no surprise that I eventually had to turn it in to another sound visualization. Here’s the result:

Sound Force Screenshot

Open Visualization as Layer - Open Visualization in a New Window

(Click the fullscreen icon in the options menu for optimal performance.)

There are three emitters, one for each frequency range: lows, mids and highs. Every emitter either has an attractive or repulsive force which depends on the volume of the emitter’s frequency range. If for example the base is strong, that emitter will act as a repulsive field and force all particles away. If at the same time another frequency range is weak it will attract all particles surrounding it, basically sucking them up.

In addition to a force, each emitter has its own color which influences all particles surrounding it. The closer a particle gets to an emitter the more it will take its color. To keep the particles from being randomly scattered around the stage there is an invisible fourth emitter which acts as a counter-weight to all the other emitters. If the sum of all emitters’ repulsive forces is high, the fourth emitter will attract particles so that they aren’t just blown off the stage.

Spectracular Music

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

I recently had some time to experiment with Papervision at Big Spaceship and try out a new visualization. You can read my BSS Labs Post “Spectracular Music” to learn more about the making of.

Click the image below to see the visualization:

candy_sound_small

If the fps seem low you can try to turn off the backfaces, go fullscreen or reduce the overall size with the size slider in the options panel.