Published on Nov 5, 2013
Ezi-Servo put together this robot guitar to demonstrate the capabilties of their servos and actuators at RobotWorld 2013 in Seoul, Korea.
Cyther, musical robot by Scott Barton and Nate Tucker
Published on Oct 6, 2015
Cyther (human playable robotic Zither), a cooperative musical robot created by Scott Barton and playing together with Nate Tucker.
This one is the first prototype of its kind
All instruments present (in the frame, the other two are not played in this video) are made by EMMI (expressivemachines.com) and WPI's Music Perception and Robotics Lab.
Trio for percussion, motion-tracking performance system and robot-controlled pipe organ, excerpt
October 7, 2015
Excerpt of Wayne Siegel's Trio for percussion, motion-tracking performance system and robot-controlled pipe organ.
Henrik Knarborg Larsen, percussion
Wayne Siegel, computer
organ by Klais Orgelbau, Bonn
Article "Robot Rock: Will Artificial Intelligence Replace Musicians?"
New music creation technology is trading artists for algorithms
by Cortney Harding
January 29, 2016
"Will Robots Disrupt Live Music? How Artificial Intelligence, Algorithms Could Boost Ticket Sales"
Artificial intelligence may be set to disrupt the world of live music. Using data driven algorithms, AI would be able to calculate when and where artists should play, as well as streamline the currently deeply flawed means through which fans discover concerts happening in their area.
by Cortney Harding
February 13, 2016
Man builds robot just so he can beat iPad piano game
Published on May 19, 2016
Everyone hates getting stuck in a video game and not being able to beat it, but one software engineer took his frustration to a whole new level. When his daughter showed him an iPad piano game, he built a robot capable of successfully playing the fast-moving game.
Stanford students teach robots to play dominoes, the xylophone
Published on Jun 21, 2016
After learning new software and programming languages, Stanford students in the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory have an opportunity to choose a creative task and design a robot to perform the task for demonstration. The tasks call for a wide range of fundamental skills, but generally require the robot to sense where it is in space, detect objects around it, and then autonomously interact with those objects in its environment. Recent projects include dominoes, playing the xylophone, and sketching out an image.
Robot choir sings Beethoven's Symphony No. 9
Published on Jun 22, 2016
A video, recorded in April, shows 14 robots and two humans singing Ludwig van Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 while another robot conducts them.
The robots, all named 'Pepper' are humanoid creations by SoftBank Mobile and Aldebaran Robotics, designed with the ability to read emotions. Each one is controlled through a computer that is programmed to identify different singing parts. The choir is called the "Mirai Capsule", mirai means 'future' in Japanese.
The choir has been criticised by fans of classical music who say the machines ruin a masterpiece.
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