When I learned this I thought: this could explain why I don’t like big music festivals, with all those flashing lights, super loud noises, and information overload. This inspired the following experiment: how might we design both musical instruments and live experiences for highly sensitive people? What might this look like in terms of lighting?
La luz juega un papel clave en la manera en que vivimos la música en vivo: es lo que define el ambiente de cualquier espacio. Hace poco descubrí el cuestionario de la Escala de Personas Altamente Sensibles
Al aprender sobre esto pensé: ah, esto podría explicar por qué no me gustan los festivales grandes de música, con todas esas luces relampagueantes, ruidos muy fuertes, y exceso de información. De ahí surgió la idea para este experimento: ¿cómo podríamos diseñar instrumentos musicales y experiencias en vivo para personas altamente sensibles? ¿Cómo podría verse esto en términos de iluminación?
INTERACTION
I wanted to design an interaction with an instrument that invites you tune into a kind of “hyper awareness” of the present moment, a contemplation of our aliveness and all the infinite changes that are constantly happening in both visual and sound fields.
TECH STACK
Software: Ableton Live
Hardware: Microphone, audio interface, and laptop. (For future iterations, the Max patch could be be exported to a standalone hardware device using RNBO
For the lights, I wanted to avoid harsh DJ lights so I went with a home lamp with diffused light, and a Philips Hue light bulb.
Philips Hue released an Entertainment API
I would also need a Hue Bridge
To learn more about the Philips Hue Entertainment API, you can sign up for a Hue developer account and access the documentation here
If you are curious about the technical implementation, visit this link