Duncan Boehle – Looking Outwards 2
The Virtual Choir
The Virtual Choir isn’t a traditional data visualization project – the project was created by conductor/composer Eric Whitacre in order to show hundreds of simultaneous singers performing his work, even though each track was recorded asynchronously. Although it could be considered a music video, seeing so many singers performing together, yet on their own, with the beautiful visualization is very awe-inspiring.
The project is rich in data, and I can imagine that the process of editing, synchronizing, and compositing all of the videos with all of the effects was an immense undertaking. But the project also has a lot of personal meaning for the singers involved, and there’s even a global visualization for where the singers came from. I’m sure there are plenty of other interesting ways to visualize and experience all of the singers’ videos other than for the sake of a balanced performance – the first thing that comes to mind would be blending/morphing the faces and voices of similar voice parts, to create an “average” voice part. It’d be very interesting to try to search for all of the original YouTube video auditions and recombine them in such a manner.
You can watch the video of the second Virtual Choir here:
[vimeo=22960177 width=550px]
Planetary
Planetary is an iOS app that visualizes a user’s music library as a planetarium of sorts, where each artist is represented as a star, albums are planets, and tracks are moons.
It didn’t take long for the bloom.io team to translate the relationships within a music library to the concept of celestial bodies, but the most interesting part of their work is the effort that went into optimizing and beautifying their display. I can completely see how they started off completely in 2D with only primitive graphics, but reading about the progression from 2D to 3D, stars to planets, and seeing the final visualizations of planets was very inspiring.
After only seeing their progression, however, it’s hard to get a sense of how well the planetary analogy works for browsing a music collection. Throughout my years of seeing documentaries and educational videos of planets and galaxies, seeing stars rush past and orbiting bodies inspires an immediate sense of scale and exciting exploration. Being able to look at music in a more emotional way seems like a great way to explore music just for the fun of it.
You can check out a video demo here:
[vimeo=23168163 width=550px]