But I am curiose.

how the programmers of the robots find out of how the air must be blow for
the instruments sounds...?
For the violin robot player and the durmmer player it seams really easy but
for brass?, they sure have a buzz mechanism, but how the air stream is
controlled would be great to know, or wich dificulties the programmers found
to play high or low notes?, forte or piano? or the rubber for the mouthpiece
set up?

Anyone???

Rafael


2010/7/11 Jay Anderson <[email protected]>

> On Sun, Jul 11, 2010 at 8:17 AM, Milton Kicklighter
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Ahhhhhhhhh,  Interesting.  Now we just add a robot conductor and.....
> "louder
> > trombones"  "don't rush"  "My God can't you play in tune"  and oh yes,
> "One a
> > for the strings and one for the winds, and of coarse a different a for
> each. :)
>
> Well there is a contest to eventually get a full robotic orchestra:
> https://www.artemisia-association.org/artemis_orchestra/. I believe
> synchronization would be electronically instead of visually with a
> physical conductor (Though that would be more interesting).
>
> -----Jay
> _______________________________________________
> post: [email protected]
> unsubscribe or set options at
> https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/rafaelefucho%40gmail.com
>



-- 
Si hoc non legere potes tu asinus es
_______________________________________________
post: [email protected]
unsubscribe or set options at 
https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org

Reply via email to