Thought every twist on Tchaikovsky had been exhausted in holiday seasons past? Think again: San Francisco-based composer Flip Baber (aka johnnyrandom, pictured) writes to tell us about a compositional challenge that made him turn bike parts into instruments:

I was recently approached by award winning advertising agency, Goodby, Silverstein & Partners to do a composition for their client, Specialized. Specialized is a bike manufacturer and they needed some Christmas music, but with a twist: They wanted me to create the music from only bike sounds. They didn’t even know if it was possible, so they left the song choice up to me to see what I could come up with. Since Jingle Bells is a little overdone this time of year, I thought Tchaikovsky’s “Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy” would be a great alternative. At first I didn’t think it could be done, but as I recorded sounds from my road bike and mountain bike it started to take shape. Here’s the instrumentation and score:

Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker Suite, Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy

Glockenspiel & Clarinet melody = spokes.
Cello & Violin pizzicatos = plucked derailleur cables.
Triangle = disc brake hit.
Percussion = shifting, coasting, finger over turning spokes, chain pulls, braking, clipping into pedals, back-spinning, air out of tires.

Even knowing what’s being used, it’s pretty unbelievable once you actually hear the results:

MP3, Specialized Nutcracker Suite

Johnny Random composer site (reel, bio, more music)
Specialized Bicycle Components

Updated: Specialized has posted the video that goes with this. Watch through to the end for a sound-by-sound rundown of what each sample is.

Alternative transportation never sounded so sweet; perhaps bicycle part instruments will be the next big thing. Proof there’s little you can’t do with digital sampling. Flip says the visuals are on the way; stay tuned and let us know if you’ve got any questions for the composer. Updated: Flip fills us in on some of the details on the recording process …

I recorded hours of bike sounds and edited the best chunks in BIAS Peak. After that, most of the spokes, cables and disc brakes were fed into the EXS24 Sampler within Logic Pro. It was super tricky since most of these metallic sounds have a pretty warped (no pun intended) overtone series. I interpreted the score by ear from a random mp3 I Limewired for reference. From there it was all about re-arranging the score in my head to compensate for the strange overtones. The source sounds were kept pretty raw besides some mild pitch shifting from keymapping & a touch of impulse response reverb to match the acoustical space of the orchestral reference recording. Between the road and mountain bike, there were octaves of difference (maybe I should get my wheels trued?) and they yielded some great sounds, most of which didn’t even get used…although they will end up on something eventually. Other than that, there were some automated volume swells and plenty of panning since you would associate a bike sounds with stereo movement. I hope this exposes my journey from bike to mixdown!

Flip also adds a link to another great composition (this time, minus the Russian master):

If you dig this, you’d probably love this:

http://johnnyrandom.com/qtp_musicreel/caskey_package.html

The instrument list includes hundreds of everyday object; the familiar into a unfamiliar context for unconventional instrumentation. The film was shot in Brazil, but I can’t share it since it would null & void it from film festivals till it is officially released. Either way, I assure you I fully intend to pursue this vein till I’ve squeezed every last drop of inspiration from it. 🙂

More bicycle music

Music for Bicycles: Ensembles, Symphonies, and Bikelophones

More Musical Mayhem, Instant Art with Bicycles (Pt. III)

67 responses to “Nutcracker Suite Played Exclusively on Bicycle Parts”

  1. Ted Kocher says:

    Creative talents like this are the reason they are an award winning advertising agency.

    Great website too, amazing.

  2. Kevin says:

    Were any of these sounds manipulated in any way? Pitch-shifted, say?

    Can't judge the website. My poor browser got a file not found error when I clicked on the splash page's links.

    Can't wait for the visuals!

    Cheers,

    Kevin

  3. Flip says:

    If you dig this, you'd probably love this:

    http://johnnyrandom.com/qtp_musicreel/caskey_pack

    The instrument list includes hundreds of everyday objects….the familiar into a unfamiliar context for unconventional instrumentation. The film was shot in Brazil, but I can't share it since it would null & void it from film festivals till it is officially released. Either way, I assure you I fully intend to pursue this vein till I've squeezed every last drop of inspiration from it. 🙂

  4. RITTANDOCHO SENORODO says:

    It's cute. I hope the video is as creative too.

  5. […] Create Digital Music has an article on Flip Baber’s version of Dance of the Sugar-Plum Fairy, originally from Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker Suite. […]

  6. CB says:

    Brilliant! Really dynamic and exciting work… I want to hear more!

  7. mark says:

    great work. really nice editing.

    @kevin.. he explains above that he pitch shifted (key mapped) some of the sounds. i'm actually more impressed that he interpreted the score by ear.

  8. Relaxed Fit says:

    Here's an all animal orchestra performing the Dance of the Sugar plum Furry: http://www.switchzoo.com/activities/sugar_plum_fu

  9. Jeff says:

    Cool! Would love to see a video.

  10. jack says:

    I recently found a very interesting website:
    http://alreadylinked.com/
    There you can purchase ad space for your Blog etc.

  11. McD says:

    Nicely done!

    This is the best use of sampling capability. It has a reality to the sound but it's got that quirky humor aspect to it.

    I'm sure you worked tirelessly to get it right… it shows in the result.

  12. flip says:

    Thanks Mark… I thought it would be quicker to do it by ear, till I got snagged on some super quiet string parts that were so delicate that I could barely hear them in the mix. Figuring out the parts was easy compared to wrestling with those overtones. Sometimes I could only use one spoke sound for one note, another for another. I guess we take it for granted that conventional instruments have such a organized, predictable overtone series.

    Ger: I could send you the track stems, or better yet, the whole logic project file. 🙂

  13. gwadzilla says:

    yes….

    images would make it more entertaining

    stills or video

    something to give us an idea what parts are making what notes

  14. Dv8Sean says:

    The full audio/visual package will hit Specialized.com the week of the 4th.

  15. Bird In Macaroni says:

    Can you please put a volume control in your embedded player?

  16. Peter Kirn says:

    Hey Bird, thanks … and, yeah, good idea. Let me see what I can do. 😉

    And Dv8Sean, thanks very much for the update. We'll be sure to point to the finished ad.

  17. […] Link Filed under: music, instruments, sounds, bicycle, Tchaikovsky, Baber, johnnyrandom   |   […]

  18. […] Create Digital Music » Nutcracker Suite Played Exclusively on Bicycle Parts nuff said Tags: [No Tags] Related Posts: [ ] […]

  19. DanWilt.com says:

    […] on Bicycle Parts No Comments so far Leave a comment RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI Leave a comment Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTMLallowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong> […]

  20. Ji Mu says:

    That was excellent! It would be great if you did the entire piece. I'd buy it as an mp3.

  21. […] San Francisco composer Flip Baber (aka johnnyrandom) recreates Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker Suite, Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy using Bicycle Parts. Check out the tune at createdigitalmusic.com […]

  22. martron says:

    After riding across the prairies this summer I caught the touring bug and have decided to go cross canada next summer with a few friends. In order to make it more sustainable I started thinking that I could make it a musical tour, but figured that my sax would just be too big to carry for the whole trip. Sometime in September it dawned on me that we could try and use our bikes as sound sources and bring a few mics and a laptop (running pd and maybe ableton) to create some biketronica. I plan to start experimenting with this in January when I've got some more time (and a better sound card!) and you just renewed my faith in the experiment. Thanks for the proof of concept and sound ideas!

    WTG on the piece, it's definitely well put together and sounds like it took a lot of time and effort.

  23. […] Create Digital Music » Nutcracker Suite Played Exclusively on Bicycle Parts nutcracker on bicycle (tags: music hack bicycle) […]

  24. The Ride of the Sugar Plum Fairy…

    Don’t you just love a novelty song? Especially when it’s played on bike parts………

  25. […] Scott’s Thing – Bicycle Nutcracker Rym’s Thing – Pulp Fiction: The Short Version […]

  26. Dave H says:

    You can make a very respectable Xylophone from a broken rim cut to various lengths and perced on inverted spokes with reverse fitted nipples set into a sounding board. The waveform generated by various dynamos (which are really alternators) is also interesting as most give a dirty sine wave output.

    DH

  27. lisa says:

    flip, you have a true talent. i can't wait to hear more of your work.

  28. Damon says:

    Amazing… it's so convincing it almost denies novelty status…

  29. […] Few covers live up to their premise, especially when they’re classical music played on modern instrumentation. That said, I think that The Nutcracker Suite Played On Bike Parts is great. […]

  30. […] Over at Create Digital Music, there’s a post about sound designer Johnny Random, who was hired by an ad agency to record a holiday composition of his choice for their bicycle company client. The catch? Instead of traditional instruments (or even virtual instruments), he was asked to use sounds made by bicycle parts. He chose “Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy” from Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker Suite. To see the complete post, and to hear the recording of the “bicycle-part orchestra,” click here. […]

  31. Cathy says:

    That's pretty cool. Looking forward to the video. However, I believe Tchaikovsky originally wrote the piece for the celeste (a keyboard instrument) not the glockenspiel. Matter of fact, I think it was the first use of the celeste in a orchestral piece.

  32. flip says:

    Cathy: Really? Well, my orchestration street cred just flew right out the window, eh? You have to admit those two instruments sound very similar though. They are both great for creating a very metallic, clear, crisp melody…unlike some stubborn bike spokes I've encountered. To be honest, I didn't check to see what the actual instrumentation was since the turnaround was so fast. I think I spent about 2 hours total recording sounds and about 4 hours interpreting and composing the arrangement. If I had used sheet music I would have caught the instrumentation. Either way, I'm glad you liked it. NPR aired it yesterday and the response was huge. I had to put my cell phone on silent for about a day since so many people were calling to see if it was part of an album or if they could buy a CD. Little did I know when I was tinkering around with my bikes that this would take off like it has. Crazy, huh?

  33. flip says:

    By the way:

    A very humble thank you to everyone who has enjoyed this track, linked it and emailed it. I give Tchaikovsky full props as the genius behind this timeless composition. I hope he's not turning over in his grave from my arrangement. Who knows…maybe he was an avid cyclist since the bike was invented around 1790 and he was born in 1840? I hope so!

  34. […] So, tis the season, once again. I only decorated my website today, but my tree has been up since mid-November (yes, I bow down to the blatant power of commercialism). By the way, for a truly mind blowing Christmas musical experience, please check out the following link. […]

  35. […] The Bicycle as Musical Instrument turns out to be a surprisingly powerful meme. Last week’s story on the Nutcracker Suite, reconstructed from sampled bike sounds has unleashed links to a whole universe of music produced on bicycles. […]

  36. […] Do mesmo autor, outra música com sonoridade parecida. Tudo originalmente visto aqui, repassado pelo Lilx à lista da bicicletada-sp. […]

  37. […] Appropriate for the season, artist/musician Johnny Random plays the Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy from Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker Suite exclusively with bicylce parts. […]

  38. […] He recorded hours of  sound bits from different odds and ends and then merged them together digitally. He says that: “The source sounds were kept pretty raw besides some mild pitch shifting from keymapping & a touch of impulse response reverb to match the acoustical space of the orchestral reference recording.” Amazing what you can do with a bike, isn’t it? You can read more about the story here. Click on the Picture to see the finished Specialized ad. So here is a nice forward to your bike-buddies for x-mas. Seems like there is some good about this holiday with 6 weeks full of obnoxious  “Last christmas I gave you my heart” and other pop carols… […]

  39. Alethea says:

    Listening to your piece raised my energy level to new heights…… How talented you are … keep it up, bicyle parts or otherwise. I will listen to it over and over…. congratulations!

  40. […] Nutcracker Suite Played Exclusively on Bicycle Parts […]

  41. […] The catch is that the piece is played entirely on bicycle parts. From createdigitalmusic.com: Glockenspiel & Clarinet melody = spokes. Cello & Violin pizzicatos = plucked derailleur cables. Triangle = disc brake hit. Percussion = shifting, coasting, finger over turning spokes, chain pulls, braking, clipping into pedals, back-spinning, air out of tires. […]

  42. […] He recorded hours of sound bits from different odds and ends and then merged them together digitally. He says that: “The source sounds were kept pretty raw besides some mild pitch shifting from keymapping & a touch of impulse response reverb to match the acoustical space of the orchestral reference recording.” Amazing what you can do with a bike, isn’t it? You can read more about the story here. Click on the Picture to see the finished Specialized ad. So here is a nice forward to your bike-buddies for x-mas. Seems like there is some good about this holiday with 6 weeks full of obnoxious “Last christmas I gave you my heart” and other pop carols… […]

  43. […] Listen to/Read about how someone played “Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy” using only bicycle parts and a little post-production. […]

  44. […] It’s “Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy” played exclusively on bicycle parts! […]

  45. […] It’s “Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy” played exclusively on bicycle parts! […]

  46. […] The Garritan Personal Orchestra forum has become more than a place for users of this sampled orchestra library to troubleshoot and ask questions — it really is a community in its own right. From sharing new compositions to assembling an orchestration guide, the GPO users are busy. Their latest creation is an 18-track album of (mostly traditional) holiday music, arranged for the sampled virtual orchestra of GPO. Download the music, or Garritan will even send you a CD. While you’re there, scroll down for a rendering of the Nutcracker in GPO — even if we might start to prefer it on bike parts. Now in its third year: […]

  47. […] via CDN (No Ratings Yet)  Loading … Bookmarking links:      Related articles: Virtual Wavestation Sample CD Pulled From MarketPrecisionsound Intros Persian Santur Sound LibraryAcoustic Legends HD Offers 19 Gigabytes Of Acoustic GuitarsBattery 3 Demo, Update Now AvailableBT-Stealth Tags: samples, soundtrack.   […]

  48. […] Now this is great. Filed under: Classical Music — ssravp @ 3:47 pm Create Digital Music » Nutcracker Suite Played Exclusively on Bicycle Parts […]

  49. […] Music and bicycles do seem to be strangely compatible – CDM’s most-viewed article ever was about an arrangement of The Sugar Plum Fairy performed solely on bike parts. On the Dublin music circuit, The Jimmy Cake’s live sets often featured the playing of a set of bicycle handlebars. CDM also has another article which covers bike ensembles and the delightful bikelophone (see below). Share this Post: […]

  50. […] » Lyssna pÃ¥ musiken » Mer info om hur man gjorde » Kompositören […]

  51. […] Create Digital Music has an article on Flip Baber’s version of Dance of the Sugar-Plum Fairy, originally from Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker Suite. […]

  52. […] #2 Nutcracker Suite Played Exclusively on Bicycle Parts – this is pretty damn amazing. This San Francisco-based composer Flip Baber turned bike parts into instruments and plays the nutcracker, check it out. […]

  53. […] You can see the end result in the video below: Tchaikovsky’s Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy from The Nutcracker Suite, played entirely on bicycle parts. Read how he did it here. […]

  54. […] If you didn’t see it last year, there’s always — through the magic of digital sampling — the Nutcracker Suite played entirely on bicycle parts. […]

  55. […] and turntables made from motorcycles, and bicycle parts turned into DJ setups, ensembles, and The Nutcracker. But The Car Music Project has gone further, building two entire ensembles out a single car, first […]

  56. […] The Boston Ballet is doing the halftime show at the Celtics-Knicks game tonight. Yes, indeed, 14 members of the company will be dancing to a routine choreographed by soloist Melissa Hough. Of course, to make the cultural pill a little sweeter, they’ll be dancing to music by pop-stars like Britney Spears, Keri Hilson, and Timbaland. And in a sly nod to the Ballet’s annual Nutcracker juggernaut, there will be music by San Francisco composer Flip Baber, known for arranging the “Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy” for an orchestra of bicycle parts. […]

  57. […] Aragonaise, Habanera, Seguidilla, Toreadors, Gypsy Dance (Bizet) Strauss Waltz Medley (Strauss) Create Digital Music » Nutcracker Suite Played Exclusively on. Classical music played on lewis hamilton world champion program itv? [Edit categories] Popularity: […]

  58. […] Colin Matthews’ lovely “Alphabicycle Order” for children’s chorus and orchestra, or Flip Baber’s re-orchestration of the “Nutcracker” Suite for bike […]

  59. Wow, incredible weblog format! How long have you ever been running a blog for? you made blogging glance easy. The overall glance of your website is excellent, let alone the content!

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