Realtime Concert Program Notes on a PDA 120
PoisonousPhat writes "NPR has an article on a new idea for concertgoers at the Aspen Music Festival. Dubbed the 'Concert Companion', the concept used a PDA (a Sony Clie PEG-NX73V for those of you that MUST know) as a 'listener's guide...that updates you with information about what you're hearing, in real time.' The concept seems similar to the audio headsets available in museum tours. Read the bleeping article here."
A review for (Score:1)
PDA in the audience (Score:3, Insightful)
I sit on the fence. On one hand, I would find it horribly distracting to have a gadget in front of me. However, it's nearly as distracting as all of the other people in the world who are so important that they need to be fucking with their cell phones at every moment of the day. Perhaps the PDA would at least turn their attention away from a device that does a poor rendition of Beethoven's Fifth everytime someone calls.
doubt it (Score:1)
Re:PDA in the audience (Score:1)
What worked better the next year was a Kiosk-style computers setup at a booth where we created a website that had infin
Re:PDA in the audience (Score:3, Insightful)
This could have some usefull benefits. For example, I know that actively listening to music is not natural for me - my mind wanders. Having something that points out things in the music may actually help me pay attention to the music more rather than distracting me
Just what we needed (Score:2, Insightful)
Sample commentaries (Score:5, Funny)
Oooh, now here comes the soloist. Did you know she's having an affair with the conductor? And they're both married! Can you believe it? I KNOW!
Ahhh, I love this next part. It reminds me of the time I went to Aspen. It's SO nice there. Have you ever been? [Click here to book a flight now!]
Re:Just what we needed (Score:2)
If you would just, I don't know Read The F-ing Article, you might realize that they're sending TEXT.
A billion neurons firing in your skull, and not one coherent thought, while I'm trying to read slashdot. I hope they take the keyboard away from you.
Whatever happened... (Score:4, Interesting)
What a good concert is all about... (Score:2)
Turn off your damn PDA/cell/pager and if you are so important that you HAVE to be reachable at least set it to vibrate, nobody needs to know that somone is trying to get ahold of you, but you. And walk away before starting your conversation, answer it and tell them to hold while you exit the performance area.
Re:Whatever happened... (Score:2)
I might never have gone to the symphony, but now that I know there are electronic toys to play with...
Too bad you were modded a troll... (Score:1)
Re:Whatever happened... (Score:2)
Re: new data received... (Score:1)
> you are still listening to crap...
No, that's the one for radio programming.
Or get a bloody booklet (Score:3, Funny)
Better idea. (Score:1, Flamebait)
The glow of a PDA wouldn't bother me, but the asshole using it would. For example, I was at a concert in July, and some douchebag was complaining that I was blocking his view. The jackass was actually sitting down (he's lucky not to have been trampled) and talking on his cell phone. Sitting down is bad enough, but to actually be on the phone at a fucking concert defies a
Streaming Video (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Streaming Video (Score:1)
When it's up and running you can be my Zaurus and I are going to be there.
Re:Streaming Video (Score:2)
I could have used something like at the performance of Chicago I saw recently. We sat so far over to one side, I had to duck down to peer below a stage light just to see the right half of the stage. But we had the privilege of paying the same price as the folks who sat front row center, so I was grateful for that.
Excellent, innovative idea, but -- (Score:1, Funny)
Encore! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Encore! (Score:2)
Re:Encore! (Score:1)
Reality is so much better (Score:2)
Reality is so much better.
Before you know it the same people will be checking their email on these devices at the same time.
why not also.... (Score:4, Insightful)
The screen is a bit small but with a half-vga resolution (320x480) in landscape mode it should be feasible to show 2-3 staffs and at least 3-4 measures.
The user would probably also be able to select what instruments they're interested in (say, violins & brass, or choir & organ, or whatever) because you wouldn't obviously be able to show all the staffs at the same time.
I'd find this much more useful than comments like the ones written in the article.
Re:why not also.... (Score:2)
Re:why not also.... (Score:1)
With the score viewer, you can listen to a selection and follow along on the score at the same time. You can bookmark pages in online scores for future use, and score views can be changed according to your preferences. If the score you
Re:why not also.... (Score:1)
Couple of years ago I managed a pianist, who then played a live recital in London, which was consequently released on an Audio-DVD (actually the first one with a piano recital ever).
The music was by Chopin and Scriabin, whose works are in the public domain. I got in touch with the German publisher (who only holds the copyrights for his edited version of the score) and we intended to use the spare capacity
Look on the bright side (Score:1)
This will help? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This will help? (Score:2)
Uh, yeah... when they built the new Kroger grocery store near me and installed the fancy in-cart computers with the LCD panels that could display a map of the store, direct you to specific items in the store, display a list of sale items in the aisle that you're in, etc I switched and
poor Beethoven (Score:1)
Well, It's certainly better than a talking guide.. (Score:3, Insightful)
But what was wrong with paper? guess their just trying to save a few trees.
I've seen PDA's used for guides for conferences, seminars etc.. and they always seem like overkill. But I like the techy stuff as mutch as the next guy and I've been looking for a reason to use those little dinks so bring on the toys hehe.
[stupid]
Wonder if the'll be supported at the next metallica concert 'round here
[/stupid]
Ah, Progress (Score:1)
Hardware listed is inappropriate. (Score:2)
Re:Hardware listed is inappropriate. (Score:2)
well, if you do things right (the synchronization/messages in the concert hall do -not- go out of the hall itself) and you put a pinger in the foyer, if you receive any pongs it means that somebody has 'forgotten' to return a device...
Or you could just count them every night. (Score:3, Insightful)
With a $450 piece of hardware, the only solution is to get a credit card deposit. This presents its own set of hassles.
Re:Or you could just count them every night. (Score:2)
I agree... (Score:2)
I only brought it up as one reason not to try to emulate a simple device with an expensive, complex one.
Similarly, they could use Tablet PC's for audio tours of museums and for restaurant-queue-pagers. But they don't.
This might... (Score:2)
But then again, it's still opera.
Re:This might... (Score:3, Interesting)
At the met in NYC they already have a little unobtrusive LCD display on the back of each chair in front of you for line by line translation in real time.
It was nice to be able to follow along the text or just listen without too much technical trouble (like a PDA)
"Read the bleeping article here." (Score:1)
-Anonymous Coward
Opera ... (Score:2)
Re:Opera ... (Score:2)
Personally, I still swat up beforehand, and don't need to bother too much with tragedies, but for comedies it's good. And much better than awful translations.
something similar (Score:1)
except for the bastards that turn the volume up all the way so they can hold it a foot away from their heads like a n
oh no... (Score:3, Insightful)
I go to a museum to see the art, not be annoyed by loud, stupid people. I go to a show to hear the music, not be annoyed by flashing PDAs and stupid people.
Re:oh no... (Score:1)
ok, so it's not the concept that is flawed but the medium used to deliver it.
Re:oh no... (Score:3, Insightful)
Any orchestra concert I've been to has always had a pap
In other news (Score:2, Funny)
Read the article? I'd like to. (Score:2)
Hyperlinks are like drugs; they can be addictive, they can make your life happier or worse, and perhaps most importantly, abuse of them ought to be punishable by law.
I like it, but maybe not for concerts? (Score:3, Interesting)
The other day I was at the ALMS race at Laguna Seca and was craving a real-time view of the leader-board and lap times since we were too far away from the screens they have there to be able to see things. Turns out ALMS does offer a product that uses the Gameboy Advance to give you that information over radio-waves. Why not just send the same data over WiFi or GPRS?
The thing they use is icardus [icardus.com]. Sorry for the plug. Never used it, and no affiliation.
--D
PDA... (Score:1)
Re:PDA... (Score:1)
Re:PDA... (Score:1)
PDAs vs. Projector (Score:5, Interesting)
At any rate, we elected to use a subtle projected numbering system that corresponded to each movement or theme. In the paper program for the concert, these themes/comments/history were listed. We called it "Keeping Score". (Yeah, I know...)
It was a brilliant success, however. The festival saw something like a 10% attendance/revenue increase this season. For a Colorado arts organization, that's huge: Our governor removed all funding for the arts this year, including blocking millions of dollars in matching funds from the National Endowment. Arts orgs in the state have been collapsing left and right.
I think that having a cheap solution like Aspen implemented is fantastic for smaller orchestras. Don't get me wrong, CMF is pretty big, but it's no Aspen. I'd love to see both options next season though -- a subtle projector *and* a handheld option. We had a few pieces this year that had opera or spoken parts which we were able to project English translations for; I'd love to be able to push different languages to our international attendees.
Re:PDAs vs. Projector (Score:2)
Maybe all you need is a subliminal auditory track. Then you can just put "4" just outside perception, and see how many golfers duck.
I heard about this weeks ago. (Score:1)
marketing in action (Score:1)
Brilliant. Just brilliant. Let's take the idea we had to get people listening to the music in the first place, and then charge people extra money for it. With marketing sense like this I'm not *surprised* they're going out of business.
It'd be like an airline proclaiming "Now, all our seats have TVs mounted in them, so you can watch video without strai
Sports arenas is a better application (Score:3, Interesting)
Personally I like to read the program notes before the orchestra starts to play, and somehow I'm thinking there's not much you need to add on-the-fly to your notes about the Symphonie Fantastique. What's the breaking news?
This sort of thing would make tons more sense for sports events, where drilling down to see someone's stats against this pitcher (or whatever) would add to your experience without detracting from others'. For concerts? We're replacing rustling paper with the chit chits of styluses scrabbling over PDAs, but what did we gain, again?
At least now (Score:1)
I know I'm a cultureless slob
Next : Baseball games. (Score:1)
Tech Geek: "See, honey?"
PDA: "Foul ball"
Tech Geek: "It's cool because you can read in realtime..."
PDA: "Headed for the stands."
Tech Geek: "... about what's going on in the..."
[Thunk]
Announcer: "Oooh, that's gotta hurt."
Similar Technology @ Purdue (Score:3, Informative)
Show your hate for SCO [anti-tshirts.com]. Get a cool t-shirt and donate to the Open Source Now Fund.
Sporting Events (Score:2)
Re:Sporting Events (Score:1)
"Scoring" baseball via PDA is sterile and it doesn't react well to spilled beer. A dog-eared scorebook from each season though is priceless.
THis is fucking cheese. (Score:1)
Re:THis is fucking cheese. (Score:2)
All this stuff is just technology for technology's sake. Next thing someone will suggest providing an RSS feed of the scores.
I go to concerts and operas to get away from this.
No wonder the orchestras are going bankrupt. (Score:2)
N
Re:No wonder the orchestras are going bankrupt. (Score:1)
SImple fun facts, like the number of mallets the percussion section uses... might make the musical experience more interesting, to the untrained ear
Single bigscreen instead? (Score:2)
Seems like a single screen would be much cheaper than loaning everyone a PDA.
Re:Single bigscreen instead? (Score:1)
At a performance this past July at the Syndey Opera House, there were projector-screen subtitles and plot elements provided to assist the audience. Perfect for opera newbies who aren't fluent in italiano. A PDA in this case, while perhaps fun, would have been impractical. Also, I think the screen illumination could be distracting for others.
Re:Single bigscreen instead? (Score:1)
I think there's a lot of difficulty balancing the desire to have functional visual stimulation on stage against the actual visual artistry inherent in a live orchestral production. It's done a lot of ways, and sometimes fails miserably -- and that's ju
Not for Theaters, but this is... (Score:1)
What worked better the next year was a Kiosk-style computers setup at a booth where we created a website that had infin
Purdue's PDA idea is cooler (Score:1)
http://news.uns.purdue.edu/UNS/html4ever/030906.B o ttum.eathletics.html
Should be no spaces in the actual URL
"Boilermaker football fans at Purdue University's Ross-Ade Stadium this fall will be able to score up-to-the-minute statistics, player and coach biographies and other electronic "infotainment" using personal digital assistants (PDAs) while cheering on the home team."
This information seems more useful to me.
"Read the bleeping article here." (Score:2)
This is about educating perception (Score:1)
Sony Clie PEG-NX73V (Score:1)
Not for me (Score:2)
For myself I'd have to rank the idea right down there near the bottom with those projected subtitles they give you at the opera. I don't even think I'd enjoy it at a football game.
One good way to attract concertgoers and stave off bankruptcy for any more symphony orchestras might be to
I listen because I like it. (Score:2)
Look at Metallica and their classical gig. I'm sure M
Symptomatic of the decline of classical music (Score:3, Interesting)
This isn't bad by itself, of course. Poetry with a 300 word vocabulary is pretty crappy (think nursey rhymes or bad rap). The development of this new vocabulary for music helps make it more expressive, but at the same time less accessible.
People can still respond to the purely emotional parts of a piece like Beethoven's 9th, the majority sit there twidling their tumbs waiting for the "Ode to Joy" part to start. Why spend years listening to classical music and reading music theory when you can just pop in the latest nursery rhyme (e.g. Brittany) and get instant gratification?
I guess, the PDAs just treat the symptom and gives yuppies something to say at cocktail parties to make themselves look sophisticated, but the solution is better (maybe mandatory) music education in school.
Instant Bootlegs! (Score:2)
Get a buddy and you can do stereo
Professor Schickele did it first (Score:3, Interesting)
Frankly, I prefer Professor Peter Schickele's New Horizons in Music Appreciation [schickele.com] as a way of distributing performance notes during a concert.
Making mobile devices more powerful. (Score:3, Interesting)
I really like this idea and I've been implementing it myself with California traffic Information [knowtraffic.com]. It makes you PDA or cellphone much more useful to get you context'ed information in real-time.
-- Greg
The only way I'd want this... (Score:2)
So, I could watch a concert or opera, and maybe pause it and read up on a particular section, or get notes that way.
When I go out, it's different. I may sit at home and follow the libretto of an opera to understand it better, but I do that so I can enjoy it without watching the subtitle screen when I go out.