Last night, a reasonably-sized mob squeezed between workbenches at Etsy Labs to enjoy the latest Handmade Music night, organized by myself and CDM, Etsy.com, and Make Magazine. At this point, I’d normally try to explain what the concept behind Handmade Music is, but, like so many things, it sounds way cooler in Spanish. Mangas Verdes writes (responding to the latest video from Etsy):

Son músicos, son artesanos y son modernos. ¿Quién quiere pagar miles de euros por un sampler o un sintetizador? ¿Quién dijo que en en el campo de los instrumentos musicales tampoco hay nada nuevo bajo el sol? Handmade Musical Creations: interesante, irreverente y divertido. Luthiers, pero en versión tecno.

Luthiers de la música digital

And yes, luthier means in Spanish exactly what it means in English. I love it.

In a night filled with handmade circuits driving tape players, webcam MIDI controllers, a giant wall of switches, and a din of bleeps and bloops, one could well say “this sounds like chaos” or “aren’t these all just gimmicks?” I wouldn’t argue — quite the contrary. “Weird device that makes noise” is, after all, the first stage of any musical instrument. Already, people were practicing with these instruments as you would a cello. A cello takes years to master. So I’m eager to see where all this leads.

Last night’s highlights: an extended ambient-esque set from Richard Lainhart, a hand-wired cassette Mellotron from the good folks at Make (more on that coming later today), the public debut of the Monome 256, a great 40h performance (very different from Brian’s last time, showing the versatility of the instrument), Eric making the world’s least-practical yet most-fantastic controller in the form of a giant wall of household switches, and all sorts of unusual sound-making boxes.


Coverage Elsewhere

MAKE NYC & Handmade music night! JAM PACKED!! [MAKE:Blog]
Phil Torrone’s Photostream [Flickr.com]

Yes, last night featured not one but two DIY-themed events at Etsy. Make held its first-ever Make NYC night, constructing 555 timing circuits. I didn’t make it, but there are slides of the circuit, and this is a very useful basic element for music stuff. Phil has some additional photos, too, including a terrific project based on an Atari 600.

MIDI Ironing Boards, Theremin Crutches Squeal at Handmade Music Event [Wired.com]

Glenn Gamboa wrote a terrific and thoughtful piece for Wired on the event. Ultimately, this is about not only technology, but an expanding culture of musicians. Ranjit Bhatnagar responds to some of the objections that raises:

“A common objection, when the topic of encouraging everyone to make music comes up, is that there will be a lot more crap music out in the world,” continues Bhatnagar, who recently programmed his theremin-playing robot Lev to play the Gnarls Barkley song, “Crazy.”

“My answer: There’s already a lot of crap music in the world and it hasn’t killed us. If people are getting together and making their own music with their friends, they’re having fun, making connections and developing their souls or something like that…. And if what they make turns out to be really good, there’s a better chance that you will hear it and you’ll be happier for it.”

Glenn talked to me, Ranjit (of MIDI ironing board fame), and Eric (of giant wall of switches and crutch-Theremin fame). And he made us all sound great, as a good writer does. Well worth reading.

And some more photos …

13 responses to “Luthiers de la Musica Digital: Handmade Music Makes a Racket, Draws a Crowd”

  1. oliver says:

    last night was rad and i'm stoked to go to the next one! however, next time hopefully they'll move those huge tables that kept half of the crowd far enough from the stage that you had no clue what was going on. Also it would help the people in the back hear if artists had a microphone when they spoke. i was one of those unfortunate people who got lodged behind tables and heads and couldn't hear a thing. also, i plan on NEVER riding that elevator again!

    kudos to cdm, etsy and make for a really awesome event!

  2. Peter Kirn says:

    Oliver, I think we're with you on ALL those points. We had a mic last time; by the time I realized we were without one, we were busy jumping over the table and figuring out how to get people untrapped from the elevator(!)

  3. Beautiful photos. Nicely done.

  4. sasarasa88 says:

    I don't think "luthier" is a spanish word. You won't find a spanish word containing "th".

    Actually, if you do check the english wikipedia, luthier is a french word 😉

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luthier

  5. Peter Kirn says:

    Yeah, sorry, that was my point — luthier is an English and Spanish word in that we both adopted it from French. But I love the French/Spanish mix. Also cool. I expect in Spanish you would pronounce only the 't', much as we say "errrr."

  6. […] la Red. ¿qué es esto? Se lee en 0’09 minutos | Ver los enlaces a este post |  Imprimir Technorati tags: artesania, instrumentos, luthier, tecno,thecno […]

  7. […] He displayed ‘em this week at Handmade Music Night hosted at Etsy Labs. More info and pics at Create Digital Music (first and last pic of collin’s stuff) and Make. […]

  8. […] Peter Kirn from Create Digital Music has a wrap up from last week’s “Handmade music night” – Link & more @ Wired. […]

  9. […] Peter Kirn from Create Digital Music has a wrap up from last week’s “Handmade music night” – Link & more @ Wired. […]

  10. […] Peter Kirn from Create Digital Music has a wrap up from last week’s “Handmade music night” – Link & more @ Wired. […]

  11. […] Peter Kirn from Create Digital Music has a wrap up from last week’s “Handmade music night” – Link & more @ Wired. […]

  12. […] As we discovered when the elevator broke at the 6th-Floor Handmade Music party last month (ahem), actual analog gear is heavy, to say nothing of expense. There’s nothing quite like the real thing, in terms of sound, behavior, and tactile feedback. But the “next best thing” has some definite advantages. And competition for virtual alternatives is heating up. IK Multimedia and Arturia pack an unprecedented number of analog models into a single package for a pretty low price; Arturia now even throws in a keyboard to seal the deal. […]

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