Showing posts with label instrument. Show all posts
Showing posts with label instrument. Show all posts

Thursday, 15 January 2015

Moolodeon - Arduino Midi Melodeon

And next up... I've also been following this one for a while and is another of my favourite projects out there. Lee O'Donnell aka Bassmaker has this great hack of a cheap Chinese import Melodeon that he's dropped an Arduino into along with buttons and a pressure sensor to make a fun little instrument.

Lee also has some excellent pictures showing off the design and the electronics. It's just a little bit of a shame that the source code isn't also posted. Here's some pictures of the construction:


I'm not going to comment more than this as Lee has done such a good job on his site, but here are the YouTube links of it in action.


Lee also has a cracking project explaining his SD Card Midi sample player that generates the fantastic sounds from this instrument. I'll probably blog on that separately later, but check it out!

Ocarduina - Arduino Ocarina

Another New Year's resolution - there's quite a few interesting musical instrument projects and technology hacks that I have been following a looking at for a while. One of the things that I wanted to do with this blog was to start to highlight the ones that I've seen that are really cool. Last week I updated on the interesting Hurdy-Gurdy projects I'd seen, this week it's time to point out one of the first projects I saw and was an early inspiration for the Arduino.

This is still one of my favourite projects. The Ocarduina. I came across this on the Mountain Ocarina forum, I think after my wife saying that these little instruments were getting some ground vs. learning on the recorder and I'd had a look at one of the original iOS cool apps from Smule.

This is just such a fantastic project enhanced even more by Nephiel talking about it on the forum as he goes through the development and putting videos up on YouTube.

Here's the first prototype demo:


And then a few more as the project evolves - see how the micro-switches have been changed to thumb-tacks and are using capacitive sense instead which allows some additional effects such as note slide-off.

Playing some scales:

Playing Cumberland Crew


And Tam Lin


And finally the finished concept packaged up into a tiny little box... what a great electronic musical instrument!