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The BodyHarp: Designing the intersection between the instrument and the body

  • Stanford University

Research output: Conference Article in Proceeding or Book/Report chapterArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Mutualizing the body and the instrument offers a different way of thinking about designing embodied musical interfaces. This research presents the design of the BodyHarp, a wearable instrument that combines large bodybased gestures with the fine control of hand-based instruments. This reflects a desire to create a single interface that both captures expressive, dance-like, body movement as well as nuanced gestural interactions. The BodyHarp was not designed as a separate artifact, but rather it was crafted as an augmentation to the human body. This fusion seeks to enhance the sense of intimacy between the player and the instrument and carries a different type of aesthetic - like playing a traditional instrument (the harp) but as part of the body. In other words, the BodyHarp aims to capture creative body movement and placing it in an instrumental context. In
doing so, we aim to blur the transition between two gestural mediums (dance and playing an instrument) by mutualizing them — or, in a sense, by designing the interface as a part of the body.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the 15th Sound and Music Computing Conference: Sonic Crossings, SMC 2018
PublisherZENODO
Publication date2018
Pages1-6
ISBN (Print)9789963697304
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • embodied musical interfaces
  • wearable instruments
  • gesture-based control
  • body augmentation
  • dance–instrument fusion

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