This is likely to push the buttons of various folks here, including
myself. Very interesting experiment. Please see here [1][2] for some
more context.

Udhay

[1] http://www.youtube.com/v/ffWVlG8rK9k&rel=0
[2] http://www.youtube.com/v/1kNj9ufIHyM&rel=0

http://www.fastcompany.com/1782352/mastodon-twists-reality-to-turn-metalhead-fans-into-three-jawed-minotaurs

Mastodon Turns Metalheads Into Three-Jawed Minotaurs
BY Joe Berkowitz Fri Sep 23, 2011

Go behind the scenes of the band's very metal adventures in augmented
reality.

Blame iTunes and its instant digital gratification. Blame YouTube and
Vevo for making music videos ubiquitous. And blame pirates for hijacking
music files and spreading them around the web before artists get to
present them in pretty packages. But the fact is, "You can’t just put
out an album with songs on it anymore," says Brann Dailor, drummer for
Atlanta-based, Grammy-nominated metal band Mastodon.

For the last seven years, the group has written album-length stories
about the elements: Leviathan (2004) was their water album, inspired by
Herman Melville; Blood Mountain (2006) was the earth record; Crack the
Skye (2009) was set in air and space and was loosely based on the story
of Rasputin (with references to astral-projection and the death of
Dailor's sister, Skye, at age 14). You get it. These dudes and their
music--which bounces between progressive rock and big, gut-rumbling doom
metal--are complex.

"We just always push ourselves to be weird and try something new and
apologize for it later,” Dailor says.

But for the first time, they've written 14 Black Sabbath-y, Pink
Floyd-ian tracks that sound more straight-ahead than anything they've
ever done. The Hunter, out Tuesday (streaming via YouTube below), is the
band's first non-concept album. Instead, they've poured that creative
energy into a fully interactive digital experience based on the art of
A.J. Fosik (who did the cover of The Hunter and is creating set pieces
for the live show), tapping the technical wizardry of digital production
house Total Immersion.

Augmented reality (AR), the integration of live video and 3-D art in
real time (think: the yellow line that marks a first down in televised
football), is becoming more and more a part of daily life, owing to
mobile visual search apps. It’s also becoming much more sophisticated.
Now, the many uses of AR are rapidly evolving, and innovators are taking
advantage.

Plenty of metal acts of the last 15 years have established their mythos
by donning grotesque masks (think: Gwar, Slipknot). And there certainly
is precedent for musicians using AR to connect with their fans. Mastodon
is putting their masks on fans, using augmented reality triggered by the
album art. They're also the first band of their genre to create this
kind of experience, a three-way partnership between the musicians, their
label (Warner Bros), and Total Immersion, a software solutions company
that has worked on the AR used in Avatar and in experiences for brands
such as Coca-Cola and Mattel.

Anyone who owns both the album and a webcam and has Internet access can
go to the band’s landing page and hold up the album cover to the camera
to trigger facial recognition software in the form of an oval-shaped
outline in the center of the screen. The user frames his or her face
inside that oval, and once the program maps the dimensions of his or her
head, it locks in the cover image of The Hunter. Onscreen, the user is
now wearing a fully realized 3-D replica of the album artwork--the head
of a mythical goat/minotaur hybrid with four mouths full of razor sharp
teeth--and this mask moves around with the user, during headbanging or
whatever.

The experience differs, depending on whether it’s the regular or deluxe
version of the album triggering the AR. On the deluxe version, the
Hunter head can violently shake from side to side, with louder sounds
and bigger animations such as tendrils of smoke that emanate from the
creature’s nostrils. In both versions, users can record themselves
wearing the Hunter head and upload videos to YouTube. So much for “just
putting out an album with some songs.”

Album art has always been important to the band. “As fans ourselves, we
still like having a piece of vinyl in our hands with cool packaging,”
Brann Dailor says. “That’s even more important now that most cover art
gets reduced to a 1 x 1 inch thumbprint on someone’s computer screen.”
All four members of the band are fans and collectors of visual art.
They’ve commissioned a variety of artists including Mars1 and A.J. Fosik
to design T-shirts and psychedelic backdrops for their live shows. The
album art on the first four albums was mostly handled by Paul Romano,
who supplied the band’s signature font and baroque imagery of those
releases. For the band’s first non-concept album, Mastodon opted to work
with A.J. Fosik, whose work they’d been following for years.

"The band and I talked, they gave me a rough idea of the intention and
themes of the album and then they let me loose," Fosik says. The
artist’s medium is wood and his specialty is carving heads of
mythological creatures, with some kind of fracturing element (e.g. the
Hunter’s multiple rows of teeth.) He then paints the finished sculpture
in phosphorescent colors. The band wanted something that nobody had seen
before for the cover of their newest album, and they picked out a rough
version of a minotaur head that Fosik went on to develop into the Hunter.

The 3-D image of the sculpture Fosik created was exactly what was needed
to create the Augmented Reality experience online; the process couldn’t
have worked with the art featured on Mastodon’s previous albums. “We
wanted to do something different and this sounded unique,” Dailor said
about creating the augmented reality component. “We were willing to be
guinea pigs for it.”

“People use AR to try on clothes and glasses from home,” says Rick
Deweese, West Coast Sales Director for Total Immersion. “Now they can
use it to interact with their favorite bands.” Deweese introduced the
concept of AR when the label contacted the company. All parties agreed
it was a natural fit for the band’s collective identity and its
particular fan base--an advanced level of metalheads who more than
likely own a 20-sided die. Soon they began collaborating on a vision for
the project. Total Immersion designed the AR for The Hunter while the
band was on tour, but the group’s members were able to weigh in from the
road.

“We need to be excited about what we’re doing,” Dailor says. “We have to
reinvent ourselves or we risk getting boring.” By providing fans a
chance to literally get inside their head on its latest release,
Mastodon has forged some seriously new metal.



-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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