Music and Engineering play with feeling to create new instrument
鈥淚f the body made music, what would that sound like? As a composer, it鈥檚 an interesting question to ask.鈥
A curious question from an inquisitve person. Dr. Andrew Staniland, associate professor (composition, electronic music) at the School of Music, ultimately funneled that curiosity into a for the 2016 Terra Nova Young Innovator Award.
鈥淚鈥檝e been practicing mindfulness for several years, and I really enjoy it,鈥 said Dr. Staniland, by way of explanation of the genesis of his award-winning project. 鈥淚 thought it would be interesting to make an instrument that would help deepen mindfulness practice and bring together two passions, composition and mindfulness.
鈥淢y vision was to make an instrument to be played not with your physical hands or bow or mallet, but played with signals that would come in from your actual body,鈥 said Dr. Staniland, seated at a suite of equipment in the 色花堂 Electro Acoustic Research Lab (MEARL), housed at the school.
Unique to Atlantic Canada, the MEARL opened in 2012, two years after Dr. Staniland joined the School of Music as a faculty member.
It鈥檚 a research and creative space where you鈥檒l find computers, electronic keyboards, speakers and assorted equipment 鈥 all necessary pieces for musical exploration.
Today, blinking lights, circuits, wires and buttons all come together in an early prototype of the new instrument, the result of the Terra Nova award. It looks kind of like a UFO, albeit one that fits in the palm of your hand.
While it can鈥檛 fly, the instrument鈥檚 speaker does sense motion and responds with sounds like notes on a piano keyboard.
The MEARL instrument prototype
There are three modes that offer a realm of musical possibilities. In mindfulness mode, you can play without ever touching the instrument; while in ambient mode, it plays by itself based on real-time environmental signals.
鈥淥nce you have data coming in, you can interpret it as music, melodies, harmony and rhythm,鈥 Dr. Staniland said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot of fun to explore.鈥
Engineering and music
Fifth-year electrical engineering students Alycia Leonard and Mark Bennett nod their heads as they watch Dr. Staniland鈥檚 demonstration; this is their handiwork.
The pair are Dr. Staniland鈥檚 work-term students, hired last September. It鈥檚 their final work term before graduation.
鈥淚t was a big, blue sky event,鈥 said Dr. Staniland of their first meeting. 鈥淚 showed them the proposal and asked if they could build it and they said, 鈥楽ure.鈥欌
Fortuitously, not only do the students possess the engineering know-how, they鈥檙e both also musically inclined.
Mr. Bennett learned to play guitar growing up in Clarenville, N.L., where his mom taught music. His brother Shawn Bennett is a School of Music graduate and a music teacher in Botwood, N.L.
Ms. Leonard, from St. Philips, studied piano and saxophone.
The translation of engineering expertise to the musical instrument was much easier to achieve in the MEARL, says Ms. Leonard.
鈥淚n terms of getting in and seeing how the sounds interact with Andrew鈥檚 music, this space is crucial for that.鈥
And as it turns out, the work term experience has been fruitful for the students, too.
鈥淚t鈥檚 my dream job,鈥 said Mr. Bennett of the chance to combine his love of music with engineering. He plans to study music technology at graduate school.
Ms. Leonard is also applying to graduate schools and hopes to do a program in sustainable development. She wants to work in rural areas of the developing world to help establish electrical systems. This project has helped her think about knowledge translation.
鈥淭here are so many possibilities for this instrument, beyond my own realm.鈥
For this interdisciplinary team, the entire process has been inspiring.
鈥淭here are so many possibilities for this instrument, beyond my own realm,鈥 said Dr. Staniland. 鈥淚t can be played by someone who isn鈥檛 able to move or touch things. Just think about the social impact it can have in health care, for example. There are so many uses.鈥