By tyler on Aug 16, 2008 in Art, Garden Instruments, Homemade/DIY, Metal, Nature, Percussion Instruments | 0 Comments
Browsing through Madrid, New Mexico today, I stumbled across some wonderful wind bells/gongs on display at the Range West gallery. These bells, made by the Truchas, NM artist Bill G. Loyd, are cut from recycled gas tanks (e.g. scuba tanks, CO2 canisters, O2 firefighter tanks, etc.). From Loyd’s bio, “the qualities of each [...]
By tyler on Jun 16, 2008 in Art, Garden Instruments, H2O Instruments, Idiophones, Metal, Motion Detection, Nature, Percussion Instruments, Woodwind Instruments | Comments Off
Music of the Spheres, Inc. is the “Stradivarius of wind chimes.” Handmade out of powder-coated, aluminum alloy tubing, the chimes range in size from the average garden chime to the extraordinary 14-footer. Their chimes can be ordered in a surprisingly large variety of familiar or “exotic” tunings and you can even create your [...]
By tyler on Jun 7, 2008 in Art, Garden Instruments, H2O Instruments, Metal, Nature | 2 Comments
These are magical garden sculptures. Each one is designed to have water pumped through the trunk and out along the leaves.
By tyler on May 14, 2008 in Electronic/Digital, Experimental, H2O Instruments, Homemade/DIY, Inventions, Nature, Public, Recordings | 0 Comments
Alex Metcalf’s “Tree Listening Installation“:
Taken directly from Alex’s website:
As you approach the installation you will see 9 sets of headphones suspended from the branches of a very large and impressive Sessile Oak tree, and a beautiful Chestnut Leaved Oak. From these headphones the public is given the opportunity to listen to the sound of the [...]
By tyler on May 2, 2008 in Art, H2O Instruments, Metal, Public | 2 Comments
They are best described as self-cleaning, musical, water-fountain keyboards. Hydraulophones are very similar to woodwinds, but hydraulophones run on incompressible fluid (usually water) rather than compressible fluid (air). Hydraulophones are sometimes called ‘woodwater’ instruments. Hydrolophones have the characteristic of polyphonic embouchure, meaning that the player can dynamically “sculpt” each note by obstructing [...]
By tyler on May 1, 2008 in Art, Garden Instruments, Metal, Nature, Percussion Instruments, Public | 0 Comments
The quarter-inch pipes are between 6 and 9 feet long with a diameter of six-and-a-half inches. They produce the most beautiful tones I’ve ever heard, soft and sweet. The entire instrument, tuned to a pentonic scale in D, is about 16 feet tall, weighs 400 pounds and is currently accessible to the public [...]