Piano Player - An Affordable & Educational Music Tool
The piano player is a handheld musical microcontroller. At it's simplest, it's a small box you drag across an arrangement of black magnets on a board, generating music.
We originally envisioned this as a tool to introduce musical composition and music playing at an earlier age, in a cheap and easy manner. From talk with local teachers coupled with innovative thinking, we've also found that it can be used in a variety of other lesson plans involving pattern recognition, spatial reasoning, and linguistic skills like alliteration and rhythm.
The piano player can be built for about $25. The interface to create music is literally a metal board and magnets--the sort of thing you can easily hand out to kids without worrying about any damage as you might with traditional instruments. A teacher only needs a few of the actual players to scale to a class of 30 or more, and can easily put a cheap board in the hands of every student.
The Piano Player from splatspace on Vimeo.
Our final design video is coming soon....
Our GGHC Project
The Great Global Hackerspace Challenge is a challenge to all hackerspaces worldwide to build an accessible educational tool that utilizes a microcontroller, can be easily reproduced, and can bring something new to the table for educators worldwide. Splat Space entered the challenge and our members been developing an inexpensive, portable "piano player." We see our invention as a way to get music into the classroom, expand on the relationship between music and math, and encourage both students and educators to think beyond their normal interpretation of music education.Sponsors
- Element 14 - The GGHC Sponsor
- Hackerspaces.org - The hackerspace network
