Concert Hands, a new product for teaching music, hopes to assist musicians struggling to learn the piano by gently guiding fingers to the correct keys with a system of finger sleeves, pulses and software. The rather cumbersome series of wires and wrist pilots will introduce music to those that learn best through direct muscle memory.
The system uses software that converts a song file into a key combination for the piano that a controller box then distributes to the wrist and finger pilots. The repetitive motions stimulate muscle memory and apparently work well with anyone from 8 to 80 years old [...]
August 20, 2009
Pulse-Assisted Piano Playing
June 25, 2009
Free Pianos Beg Londoners to be Played
As part of this month’s Sing London festival, thirty pianos—part of artist Luke Jerram’s ‘Play Me, I’m Yours‘ traveling art tour—have been dispersed throughout the city, encouraging spontaneous pedestrian music. The instruments, either donated or purchased on the cheap off eBay, are free to use and available to anyone who wishes to take a seat—and each piano comes with a songbook of location-inspired music. The project even retains a bicycling piano tuner to keep each in shape. The concept has been executed in Sao Paulo and Sydney, and Jerram plans to repeat it in Bristol next.
Read more...



