Georgia Tech s Guthman Musical Instrument Competition Announces Judges for 2024 Event – Music Connection Magazine musicconnection.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from musicconnection.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A metre-long cross between a piano and electric guitar, the harpejji is earning famous fans and millions in revenue. But can ‘chaos bells’ or an abacus-powered synth do the same?
Every year, musicians, engineers, and inventors introduce the world to sounds we’ve never heard before.
The Guthman Musical Instrument Competition is an annual event hosted by the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta. The big reveal may have been virtual instead of in-person this year, but the creations were no less incredible! Here are the five amazing, never-before-seen instruments that took home the biggest prizes in 2021.
1. First Place: the Segulharpa.
It took Ulfur Hansson of Reykjavik, Iceland, seven years to make this gorgeous electro-acoustic instrument! The circular walnut body holds 25 steel strings that are “bowed” by magnetic fields. Musicians use touch sensors in the wood to vibrate the strings, producing an eerie yet beautiful sound.
Listen to Five of the Worldâs Newest, Wildest Instruments
A Lego guitar and a âwar tubaâ are among the highlights of this yearâs Guthman Musical Instrument Competition.
The segulharpa, an electromagnetic harp, is one of the entrants in this year’s Guthman Musical Instrument Competition, organized by the Georgia Institute of Technology.Credit.Elísabet Davíðsdóttir, via Georgia Tech School of Music
By Corinna da Fonseca-Wollheim
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What possesses someone to invent a new instrument? Ask the finalists of this yearâs Guthman Musical Instrument Competition, and you get different answers â among them boredom, curiosity, frustration.