tapTap
tapTap is a construction toy capturing a fascination with rhythm and fidgeting.
The system is built up of individual knock boxes. Each box has its own memory and is completely self-contained. As you tap on the top of a box, the box waits for a few seconds and then taps back what it has heard. If you want more you add another box, and another, and another, tap, tap, tap.
Stacking the boxes creates longer and more complex rhythm lines as the patterns tumble down the resulting pyramids. By tapping for longer than the delay period you play a duet with the box as it repeats your earlier rhythms.
Audio delays are often only that, audible, tapTap renders them physical. The boxes themselves do not learn or loop, they only repeat. This keeps the system as simple as possible. There is no perpetual motion only tap, pause and tap. At 4 seconds the delay is just long enough to give the boxes a life of their own… just long enough to wonder if they have forgotten.
tapTap comes from an initial development with Louise W. Klinker.
Biography
Andy Huntington is an interaction designer and artist working with software and hardware; prototyping and development.
His main interest is creating playful interactive objects and experiences for galleries, museums and studios. He has worked with a variety of companies and organizations such as theBBC, The Science Museum, Nokia, Orange Labs, Benetton, The Helen Hamlyn Trust,BERG, Snibbe Interactive, and theBartlett School of Architecture.
He completed an MA in Interaction Design at theRoyal College of Art in 2005 where he specialised in developing musical interfaces. Prior to that he gained a BA in Commercial Music at theUniversity of Westminster in 2001, during the last 2 years of which he became increasingly interested in interactive music technologies. In 2000 he joined London based studio Romandson as a sound designer/composer completing a number of projects for web, CDrom and exhibition. Following this period he spent 18 months as a consultant in the interactive department at Fabrica (Benetton’s Communication Research Centre, in Treviso, Italy) creating performance software, DVDs,CDroms, soundtoys, a 4 month interactive exhibition called DARE at The American Museum of the Moving Image (New York) and developingUnited People (a video messaging system for Benetton stores).
He has also worked as a research assistant at theBartlett School of Architecture in Stephen Gage’sInteractive Architecture Unit 14producing a large scale interactive installation in collaboration with theBetty Layward Primary School.
Since 2005 he has co-directed and developedOpen Futures filmit for theHelen Hamlyn Trustwhich provides a simple platform and framework for video making and sharing in primary schools in the UK and India.
He continues to develop music and sound toys — noisily.
tapTap from Andy Huntington on Vimeo.
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