Air instrument

In the context of musical performance, air instruments are imaginary musical instruments for which people mimic the sound-producing gestures in the air without touching a real instrument. In simple words air instruments are the musical instruments which could be played without touching the real instrument.[1][2] Air instruments include:

There are other air instruments as well.[1][2]

Origins

The playing of air instruments has been documented through the 20th century (see: Air guitar). However, no sources have been found that exclude the playing of air instruments in ancient times, during private performances, such as for air flute or air lyre (for lyres or harps). One gesture musical instrument which won first place in the 2008 Chicago Makers Faire at the Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry is an instrument named Airheads that demonstrates the ability to simulate different musical instrument using only your hand gestures moving in the air.

Air Drums

Invented by John R. Folaron see www.Air-Instruments.com a gesture musical instrument which won 1st place in the 2008 Chicago Makers Faire at the Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry, This instrument named Airheads demonstrates the ability to simulate different musical instrument using only your hand gestures moving in the air. Using the Instrument as a Drummer would has been achieved very effectively for the use in live concert performances.

Air Piano

For the air piano, both left and right hands can be used, as well as moving the feet to mimic pressing the piano floor pedals.

Besides the imaginary air piano, there is a motion-activated musical instrument interface called an "AirPiano" which is controlled by waving the hands above the top.[3][4]

The AirPiano is a musical computer interface (from 2007) which allows playing and controlling software instruments simply by moving hands in the air over the device,[3] connected by USB cable.[4] Above the AirPiano is an invisible matrix of virtual keys plus faders, each pre-assigned with MIDI messages and waiting to be triggered, via infrared sensors.[4] The length of each triggered note is determined by the time the hand is placed over the corresponding virtual key. Beyond the feedback of the sounds changing, hand placement is also confirmed by LED feedback.[3] The first version of AirPiano generated polyphonic sound, with 24 keys using 8 faders.[3]

The AirPiano software provides for the loading/saving of presets and transposing notes. The AirPiano technique has been filed as a Provisional U.S. Patent Application (Number: 60/989,986).[3]

Air Violin

Besides the gestures to accompany real violin performances, playing the air violin can also be a form of sarcasm, to indicate that another person seems to be rambling with a sob story or whining excessively, in self-pity.[5]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Rolf Godøy1 et al., "Playing 'Air Instruments'...", 2006 (see: References).
  2. 1 2 3 4 Steven Appleby et al., Better Living Through Air Guitar, 2005.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "airpiano", 2007, webpage: www.airpiano.de: in patent note, the word "filled" is interpreted as "filed".
  4. 1 2 3 "Student creates AirPiano", Ben Rogerson, MusicRadar.com, 2008-07-01 (Tuesday), webpage: Musicradar-2525.
  5. "What I wish I could have said to my teachers", Nogie Demirjian, 2002, L.A. Youth, Los Angeles, CA; webpage: LA-Youth-1175.

References

External links

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