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@grahamthorne
Glastonbury, The Temple iPhone Video. Better video to follow but here is some footage from off my iPhone:
Mud, sun, rain, more rain, great music and a kick-ass projection system. That was Glastonbury 2014, in The Common field, at the Temple arena. Wow – what an experience…. I don’t know where to even begin with this one!
Let’s start from the beginning. I got a really nice email via this very blog from a guy called Ryan asking if I was interested in a gig. He wanted something a little different and asked if we could talk more if I was interested. I won’t lie – I thought it may have been a small VJ gig or some kind of install using isadora – I get a lot of questions, emails and comments each week. I reply to them all but admit – I though this one was no different.
After the initial hello emails Ryan casually said it was a venue at Glastonbury. I had to read the message about nine times over to believe it. I had never been to Glastonbury, but like many reading this, knew it was an amazing opportunity. I knew this could not be done solo – this was a job for me and Dan and his place of work; guildhall school of music and drama. I work quite a lot with Dan, we get each others workflow and being a lecturer for many years he knows I am professional and reliable around students – not only this I love getting student involved in real world gigs. In my opinion it’s the best place to learn and experience things first hand. If I had the opportunity to work at Glastonbury it would have been amazing!
So you get the idea, we then had various emails, phone calls and Skype sessions, we bounced ideas around and got the ball rolling. We looked at lots of hardware and software options but decided that Isadora was the tool for us. The video mapping features that we had custom made for Lux, Helsinki had been developed to a very high standard and whilst still under a beta we were confident we could use it.
A year passed and the gig was just around the corner, we all contributed to the video content using After Effects, Cinema 4D and a really talented student called Neville built the main Isadora patch. We all helped map the structure in a variety of roles once on site. My main job was to keep an eye on isadora, make subtle tweaks, maintain performance and spot any crucial errors, make any last minute programming changes and be on stand by incase of any crashes or errors (there were none by the way!).
The pictures show the Temple and surrounding fields aesthetic, we wanted the Mayan/Aztec like structure to come alive with a nice blend of historical symbols, images and custom graphics. There was a hint of hi-tech alien like sci-fi VJ loops also. The lighting, pyro and music all worked really well. The mapping looked great despite a few set-backs; the main one was losing half a day due to extreme rain, wind and an electrical storm; so bad that the electrical company shut down all non-essential power. This was not cool – but al part of the experience.
It’s hard to describe the full set up so I am going to keep it simple.
Two Mac Pro’s 9not the new black (‘dustbins’).
Each Mac pro had two Touch Screens for triggering video. (one screen for DJ booth, the other for exterior)
Two Lindy DVI switches
Two Spark D-Fuser Video mixers
Then into a Datapath X4
DJ Booth had four Panasonic 16500 lumens projectors on it.
Exterior had four Christie Roadsters 26000 lumens each.
Everything was run over Cat5 once it left the Datapath.
We used a custom beta of Isadora (the soon to be version 2.0)
Modified APC20 from Akai for MIDI effects and control via Isadora.
A few TFT monitors via splitters for monitors, etc.
We also had Blackmagic capture cards running into one mac for CCTV feeds, etc.
We had a great experience, a few crashes when programming things and trying stuff out before shows (during the day) but no crashes during live sets. Because we had two Macs mixing between each other , both doing inside and outside, if one machine was to crash we had the other as a back-up, however we treated them both as live machines.
We got to VJ for some great artists, I can’t name them all here but it was a privilege to hear them, meet them and talk to them over the course of the three days. Likewise the whole team at the common were amazing. We were very well looked after and I can’t thank them enough. I can safely say we delivered what we said we would. We made it happen. The pictures and video are great – but it’s never as good as seeing it live. The arena felt alive. It felt like it had an energy oozing out the walls.
A few highlights for me:
Seeing a huge que of people wanting to come in at 5:45 in the morning even though we closed at 6:00. Not that I liked people not being able to come in but it was great to see the demand.
Seeing people walk up and touch the wooden lock gates when they were being projected onto. Granted some people were ‘out of it’ but that magical element you can see in peoples faces is amazing – you can see the cogs working in their heads going ‘how is that moving’, ‘where is he light coming from?’.
Watching the sun come up (and down) multiple times whilst working, with a nice breeze in your face, time flew by and was just an experience I will never forget.
Seeing the DJ Booth mapped for the first time was a true OMG moment. It wasn’t even fully Dark yet and it was so so bright! Seeing the visuals you had been working on for months and months finally on the structure was amazing.
Waking up at 3 in the afternoon and dancing to old school jungle before going for breakfast – which was actually tea… strange, but amazing.
I went to see DJ’s Above & Beyond play at the Sonic tent – incredible! This was my only 2 hours off I had the whole week and it was well worth it.
Last but not least – just being n Glastonbury was a highlight. It’s so hard to explain. It’s not just another music event. It’s like a mini city. A fantasy world were anything goes. It was so cool.
So. It was quite an experience. There is some video being made which I will add soon. But for now… a few pictures (click to open gallery):
Glastonbury, The Temple arena, 2014. Mud, sun, rain, more rain, great music and a kick-ass projection system. That was Glastonbury 2014, in The Common field, at the Temple arena.
Interview with Jigsaw 24
Interview with Jigsaw 24
I was asked to do an interview a while ago with http://www.jigsaw24.com I recently found it and decided to put it on here… I am no longer a lecturer but my work still helps in my current job as a Digital Creator at York Museums Trust.
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Bazik & Isadora via Syphon.
Bazik & Isadora via Syphon.
I recently stumbled across this amazing audio responsive software called Bazik.
I have been after an audio visualisation tool for a while to incorporate into my Isadora VJ patches. And wow this one really hits the nail on the head.
I also love that “You can add Quartz animations or Shader GLSL” effects!
Here is a short demo on how I set it up.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7rFpukf7nE&w…
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How to: Send virtual MIDI from Isadora to Ableton Live.
How to: Send virtual MIDI from Isadora to Ableton Live.
A short tutorial about how to send Virtual MIDI from Isadora to Ableton. I have used Live 9 but it will work the same in 8 and 7 i’m sure.
You may need to pause the video as it’s pretty short but I believe it will help.
Please note: If you wanted to add a second control then you need to change ONLY the controller number in the Send…
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On the 11th October 2013 I received an email via my website asking me for some help and guidance with an interactive dance performance in Vienna. I presumed one or two Skype sessions to help them with a bit of motion tracking (commonly most of my Sundays are spent helping people on Skype :) ) I had no idea that I was going to become friends with two lovely people.
I enjoy ALL of my sessions online but Alexander Nantschev popped up on screen with the biggest smile on his face saying Hello! Shortly followed by his partner Elke Pichler and they made me smile right away; very down to earth, happy and interesting people. After the initial adjustment to internet lag, my weird Liverpudlian (Liverpool, UK) accent we discussed their performances and the problems that lay in front of them. I will be honest and admit I was a little skeptical when I heard that Alexander had very little knowledge of Isadora and said from the get go – keep it simple (but effective). It is always difficult to get the balance between “Yes that is a great idea – we/you can do this” and “but – it’s very difficult and took me 5/6 years to learn… you have 6/8 months…”.
Saying this I could tell the duo would be hard-workers and I could see the passion in the eyes via the slightly pixelated webcam interface. I was excited after the first talk and knew this was something a little different. The idea of ‘Aura’ was one that I looked at during my MA Degree so it resonated with some memories of mine which was nice.
We spent nearly every Sunday talking for an hour a time. A almost daily flurry of emails back and forth with ideas, links, isadora patches and similar. Alexandra met my wife, my teacup chihuahua all via Skype (or FaceTime) and we genuinely started to talk as friends – one highlight was hearing a strange machine which turned out to be an iRobot…. a hoover! I was very impressed . It was also devastating to hear their tales of thefts, people not doing work for them despite being paid and a few of the technical problems they had. Equally they both asked about my wife who in between all this has been in and out of hospital for operations on her lower back.
The pair conquered some amazing technological problems. From arduino based triggers, advanced mapping, online audience tool – the “Choreomixer”, clever syncing of multiple machines and even (very wisely) implemented a back up system, to name just a few.
I really felt I was helping and I was kindly sent small snippets of video from rehearsals to show how Elke was creating visuals or interacting with live feed video, etc. It was really cool. The piece was very well thought out and the theme (aura) seemed from my point of view, despite never seeing the final piece, was well portrayed. The feedback from critiques was great and the images I have seen looked stunning. Due to work commitments I could not attend the piece which was sad but I hope they both understood.
Alexander is now a well established Isadora user, he is now very active on the forum and regarded highly in the Isadora community. Elke – although I did not talk to you as much online it is clear you did amazing and the pictures look brilliant.
I have to admit… I miss our Sunday afternoon talks. I hope they hurry up and plan another performance soon! :)
A quote from Alexander about my input:
„Graham Thorne hat in unglaublich sympathisch und geduldiger Art und Weise uns in die „harte“ Welt der interaktiven Medien eingewiesen. Seine nette und zuverlässige Hilfe war eine unentbehrliche Hilfe zur Realisierung unseres größenwahnsinnigen Projektes. Mit Beständigkeit hat er uns motiviert, unterstütz und Mut gemacht unsere Ideen zu verwirklichen.”
Google translate:
“Graham Thorne has sent to incredibly sympathetic and patient manner us in the “hard (I think Jamie [Griffiths] said with a smile: its tough interactive world outside)” world of interactive media. His nice and dependable assistance was an essential aid to the realization of our megalomaniac project. With passion he has motivated us, supported us and given us courage (in order to) make us realize our ideas.”
(images above from: http://www.reinhardwinkler.at/feinsinn_aura/)
More pictures here: http://www.reinhardwinkler.at/feinsinn_aura/
FeinSiin: http://feinsinn.org/
Working with FeinSinn On the 11th October 2013 I received an email via my website asking me for some help and guidance with an interactive dance performance in Vienna.
Don't let Apple kill Open Ni
Don’t let Apple kill Open Ni
http://petitions.moveon.org/sign/apple-let-apple-kill
Written by Mark Coniglio:
Artists, designers, makers, and tinkerers around the world have leveraged the power of 3D cameras like the XBox Kinect and XTion Live to create innumerable interactive installations, performances and other compelling works of art. The OpenNI SDK is a key technology behind many commercial and open-source software…
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Eye-Fi card, WIFI, Isadora and a USB dilemma!
It’s not that often that my 9-5 day job crosses paths with my interest and passion for Isadora. But…
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Interview: Michel Weber
Could you tell us a little bit about yourself? I was born in South Africa and lived there for the first 10 years. Then we moved back to Switzerland to my parent’s hometown.
I bought my first computer when I was 21 and only then started to explore the…
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My blog review for 2013.
The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2013 annual report for this blog.
Here’s an…
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Inspring Videos.
Every now and again I like to post some video that I’ve seen. Here they are;
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxMX5TwGQH0&w=620&h=379]
A music video/live performance all done using Z-Vector; VJ Julius Tuomisto and his Z Vector software from Delicode
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World Stage Design; Free Patch
If you came to my World Stage Designtalk in Cardiff a few weeks ago then you will recall me…
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Leap Motion
I like my gadgets. I am admittedly a bit of a gadget freak… but I don’t often actually buy them. Normally because they are expensive and I know deep down I won’t use them as much as my mind believes I will. But the Leap Motion is different.
http://uncrate…
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Projection Documentation Tool
Matthew Haber has yet again blessed us with another cool isadora/projection tool called the…
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How to add a custom Plugin into Isadora.
There are many custom actors written for Isadora if you search the forum.
They are pretty handy and increasingly becoming more popular (you clever people!) I myself can’t code so I do not have any of my own. These are NOT to be confused with user actors.…
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Barbican Video Mapping (Isadora Mapping)
I managed to get some footage of a project I was helping with a few weeks back.
This was held at the Barbican Theatre/Performance Venue in London, UK. My friend Dan Shorten (from Anomic) who works as Guild Hall School of Drama had students help out and we…
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