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@musictechfest
We’ve moved!
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Umeå: Home of MTF Scandinavia for a whole load of reasons...
MTF Scandi's champion bartender
Emil Åreng is, all by himself, an excellent reason to visit Umeå. Considered one of the world's top drinks mixers, he's gained an international reputation for phenomenal flavours, incredible inventions, and local ingredients collected and prepared by hand.
He is, it's fair to say, an award-winning bartender.
"There are three big competitions here in Sweden," he explains. "You have the World Class that Diageo hold - you know, they do Smirnoff, all the big brands, the single malts... I won that one in Sweden. And that's the biggest competition in the world. And then we have Barcardi Legacy. In that one, you create one cocktail that will be a legacy. Like a new Mojito or a new Dacquiri. And I won that one. And then you have Havana Club Grand Prix. A lot of guys in Sweden want to win that because you get to travel to Cuba and compete there. And I won that one. So I won the three biggest ones in Sweden."
"In the World Class I was 11th out of 36,000. At Havana Club Grand Prix I was top 20 out of 60,000. For Barcardi Legacy I'm currently in the top 50 and I'm going to Sydney to compete - and there were like 48,000 in the beginning. It's a huge competition. So yes. You can call me an award winning bartender."
Emil's bar is called Open / Closed. It's a one table speakeasy, hidden inside a delicatessan - and it's an experience.
"We have 16 places and we do a four course menu, but with spirits. So the first cocktail is like a starter. Then you go to the main course, and then something refreshing before you take dessert. We change the theme every second week - and it's fun themes that people can relate to..."
"Two weeks ago we did Tintin in Tibet, so you could follow the book and see the story made into cocktails. Right now, it's Nintendo. So I take four games and I make them into cocktails in some way."
Suitably, there's a classic Nintendo console set up by the bar at the moment so that you can play the games that the drinks are named for while you're drinking them. You'll start with the brilliantly named Bloody Mario, followed by a Triforce. The Soda Popinski follows to cleanse the palate, and you'll round things off with Ducks and Guns, which features apple whiskey, pecan pie syrup, a whole egg and smoked pimento.
The drinks, it has to be said, are utterly sensational. Emil is an absolute perfectionist.
"We use local flavours and only the best ingredients. We only have one gin. We only have one vodka. We only have one single malt. We only have one bourbon. But we think it's the best. We don't have any connection to anyone - we just buy the thing we think is the best."
"We also make everything in house. We press lemons every day so it's always fresh. We make our own syrups - we never buy anything because we can do it much, much better than all the big companies. And people come in and say "Do you have strawberries?" No, it's fucking December. So we only use the things we can use - like Arctic raspberries because that's a really unique flavour. Like the big chefs do - take the ingredients that they can find just around the corner."
So... want to go to a festival where you can get a particularly good drink? We're very excited to announce that Emil will be running the bar at MTF Scandi in Umeå, May 29-31. And just in case you hadn't worked this out - this will not be your ordinary festival bar.
If it seems unusual that such a highly ranked international champion would base himself in a small, northern Swedish town, Emil has his reasons.
"When you look at Sweden as a whole, everybody's very 'for themselves' - on their own... but Umeå is totally different. It's open, playful and people are curious to try new and interesting things. So for instance, we can announce that we're doing something out here in the courtyard - something new and different - and we sell out in two hours. People are pretty cool here in Umeå - and there's a lot of really interesting stuff going on."
World's northernmost hackerspace?
"And this is our space programme," says Tomas Härdin, pointing to a battered old dining table next to a whiteboard. The whiteboard has schematic drawings on it, but otherwise there is nothing to suggest mission control. Codemill developer and radio engineer Tomas and computer scientist Petter Ericson are pointing out the various features of the Umeå hackerspace - ostensibly the world's northernmost.
"...unless there's something in Tromsø."
"Don't think so."
The hackerspace, like many dotted in cities around the world, features piles of equipment in various states of repair, a mountain of old computer monitors, a 3D printer that looks like it has seen a lot of action - and another that has been stripped for parts. It has an area where you can lounge around and play videogames, a well-ventilated corner for melting down aluminium, a wall of neatly arranged power tools and implements, and a lot of partially-completed projects arranged, where size permits, on shelves and, where it doesn't, on the floor.
Your everyday hackerspace, in other words.
"We have a bunch of big, beefy power supplies, loads of components, all the tools you could want to use, a really big, nice frequency standard... basically, resources to use for whatever project comes around."
The hackerspace doubles as a meeting place for the youth division of the Pirate Party. It also hosts study groups, Free and Open Software projects, rocket enthusiasts, an anime club, the Gentleman Game Association of the North who get together to play board games, and others.
It has a couple of quirks, of course. The no-shoes rule, for a start. And, of course, the space programme.
"Considering the size of the town, it's surprisingly big and well-equipped - which is sort of the mark of many things in Umeå. I mean - we're just 100,000 inhabitants. It's not a big town. But we do have things like the opera. We have a major university. We have these things that are surprisingly big and surprisingly well-funded. So I think that's really what's special about Umeå. Although we're so small, it's still the biggest town around. It's 600km down to Uppsala which is the next town that's bigger. So we can draw from this massive geographical area."
"The nearest proper hackerspace to this one is not actually in Sweden," says Tomas.
With three months to go before the festival, plans for the Music Tech Fest hack camp are already in development. The Umeå hackerspace has spawned a bunch of interesting music hacks in the past and they're looking forward to getting involved in MTF Scandi. Music-related projects to date have included large Tesla coils and propane gas as well as delicate objects with tiny LEDs.
"There's a whole bunch of us who are into this. There are the electronics people, of course - they're definitely going to be into the Music Tech Fest. And of course the fire and the high voltage electricity people will also want to be involved. That will be fun."
"And dangerous..." smiles Petter.
And the space programme?
"Yeah. We're cooperating with one of the Google Lunar XPrize teams which are going to the moon next year," says Tomas. "The team, called Part-Time Scientists, have four probes which are shaped like oversized Toblerone boxes and we're designing an experiment that goes into one of these boxes. It's about one kilo worth of gear that gets sent to the moon. We're going to run a camera during the lunar night. And because it's so cold, the camera will actually run better. But because there's no sun, there's no solar energy - so you have to use batteries."
"The power supply is really the experiment," explains Petter. "Keeping the whole thing running through the whole two-week lunar night is going to be the main problem."
"Yeah - it's really cold. Minus 170 degrees. There are no batteries that survive those temperatures as far as we know. So we have to figure out a way to heat them so they're still pretty cold - but not so cold that they freeze to bits. We need them to be Umeå cold - not dark side of the moon cold."
MTF Scandi runs from the 29th to the 31st of May this year and the 24 hour hackathon runs from Saturday to Sunday. Places are limited, but if you want to get involved, get in touch with MTF hack camp coordinator, Adam John Williams.
And while you're in town, you'll also get to spend time in the world's most northerly hackerspace.
"Oh wait." says Tomas. "There's one up in Vännäs. But that's just one guy in his shed. We should go visit him."
MTF Scandinavia in May will be held in the city of Umeå - home to the fastest broadband in the Western World.
What does the future hold for music? MTF Paris featured on France24. Watch the video here.
New Funding for Music Tech Projects
Congratulations Axoloti
One of the most exciting projects to come out of the Music Tech Fest community has been the Axoloti platform for creating standalone digital audio instruments. We are thrilled to announce that the Axoloti crowdfunding campaign has already reached its funding target less than half-way through the campaign.
Congratulations to Johannes Taelman, the Axoloti inventor, winner of two Music Tech Fest Grand Challenges, and enabler of several more winning projects through the fantastic Axoloti platform. Axoloti is the standalone digital audio platform for makers. If you are one of the few who still hasn't got one - get yours here.
Introducing #MusicBricks, the Music Tech Fund and the Creative Ring
The success of Axoloti is just the beginning of our exciting funding news for music tech innovation. We are thrilled to announce the launch of #MusicBricks - an accelerator for bringing your creative music tech ideas to market. The Music Tech Fest hack camp will give you exclusive access to the latest music technologies and academic research through APIs, GUIs and TUIs (Tangible User Interfaces) currently being developed by IRCAM at the Centre Pompidou in Paris, Music Technology Group in Barcelona, the Fraunhofer Institute in Berlin and the Vienna University of Technology.
MTF Scandinavia will be our first major test bed for seeding ideas for #MusicBricks - and the best of these - whether a piece of software, a device, a new musical instrument, a performance or installation - will be supported to prototype.
We will also be connecting a European Creative Ring of creative individuals, organisations and those city councils interested in supporting the intersection of arts and technology to ensure the widest dissemination of creative innovation.
It is fantastic that the European Commission is supporting the creative industries in this way and allowing for this unprecedented level of experimentation. We are excited that the Commission has seen the value that can be generated from this space and this community, and is encouraging and actively championing this level of creative innovation.
We are also happy to announce that private investors are getting involved with the Music Tech Fest community. We are developing a Music Tech Fund in conjunction with Par Equity to further support and incubate the best prototypes and help us take them to market. The fund will receive backing from commercial and non-commercial partners which will provide seed investment for projects and startups that emerge from the Music Tech Fest community, and follow on funding for those companies that progress to later stages of development.
To participate or contribute to any of these activities, or for more information, contact us at [email protected]
The #MTFParis #YourFry hack award goes to Wiggz Caro, Kaz Zimmerman, Sean Manton, James Traer and Andrew Carvey for the 'Stephen Fry Explores Reverb Spaces Via Scarf' project.
The RS Components 'Internet of Music Things' hack award at #MTFParis goes to a team of hackers: Karl Panek, Johannes Taelman, Stacey Hsueh, Leonardo Impett, Etienne Gigand and Sara Morris - for their "Wearable Axoloti Human Synthesizer".
The winners of our Telejamming hack challenge, supported by Leap Motion: Jonathan Aceituno & Ludovic Potier with their Harmonic Tamer.
The winners of our Sennheiser-supported Fashion Music Wearables hack award at #MTFParis: Matan Berkowitz, Cyril Laurier and Marina Kushnir with their amazing (and stylish) Music Hat - which converts brainwaves to music, and creates a range of different effects depending on the direction the wearer is looking.
MTF Paris: Schedule
Here is the schedule for the weekend, some changes might come up and links to all participants will be added shortly.
FRIDAY
6PM
Norbert Schnell - Collective Soundchecks
Tangible Orchestra
G-Hack
CHDH
7PM
SPECIFI - featuring Emily Williams
Whyd
Kollekt.fm
Serato
8PM
Celio Vasconcellos
John McCallum
Aaron Einbond
9PM
Phonotonic
Miha Ciglar - Ultrasonic
Gunk Jam
SATURDAY
4PM
Barry's Lounge
Glownet
Female Laptop Orchestra
Whojam
Oscilla
5PM
Dualo
Nagual Sounds
Open Stage & Glowbl
Kenneth Alewine
6PM
Traxit
Portrait + friends
Bentrax
Turing's Boobs - The Secret Life of Computers
7PM
Mephistophone
Ironfist
Mogees
Emmanuelle Gibello
8PM
Niland
Radio Kaos Caribou
Ezra
Roli Seaboard: Heen & Yann
9PM
Myriam Bleau
Lossy + Strangers Are People Too
Gunk Jam
SUNDAY
4PM
DJ Barb Nerdy
Oscilla
Lucia Lip
Dirti
openPLAYmusic - Barney Spigel
WHYD
MATAN
CYRIL LAURIER
5PM
QLEEK
ALEX SCHINDLER
DIEMO SCHWARZ
6PM
IANNIX
Rani Dar
Axoloti
7PM
Hacker Awards
8PM
Hacker Awards
MAURICIO DWEK: MOD DUO
9PM
Exomène
Obi Blanche
Gunk Jam
MTF at the Pompidou
Here's how you can be there - and get involved
This weekend (21-23 November), musicians, hackers and visitors will turn IRCAM at the Centre Pompidou into a creative playground for experimentation with new music technologies and new ideas for music performance.
Everything is allowed: hacking into existing controllers, collaborating with professional musicians, experimenting with new ideas in situ, impromptu jumping onto the stage. The Music Tech Fest “Gunk” (Geek Punk) ethos is all about being totally hands-on with technology, rough and ready with noise making, and experimental with the immediacy of self-expression. MTF does not encourage smoothing over cracks, fixing it in the mix, or autotuning. Nothing is a mistake and there are no rehearsals. But you can expect a few surprises... Entry is free - but places are limited.
Attend MTF Paris as an audience member
Get involved as a Music Hacker or Maker
Join the Women in Tech Ghack Web Audio Workshop
Highlights include:
Myriam Bleau / Ultrasonic / Mogees / Scanner / Ezra / Seaboard / Oscilla /Nagual Dance / Dualo / The Secret Life of Computers / Tangible Orchestra /Lossy + Strangers Are People Too... and many more. See http://musictechfest.org for more details.
Music Tech Fest is the global Festival of Music Ideas. It's a free, weekend-long event that provides an experimental and improvisational space where ideas are showcased, performed, demonstrated and discussed. It's a place where musicians and hackers come together to collaborate and try things out. It's about sharing your idea with a community. It's a place where industry and academics, artists and technologists come together to both celebrate and invent the future of music. The festival is possible thanks to IRCAM Forum, RS Components, Serato, Leap Motion, SPECIFI, YourFry, Sennheiser, Soundcloud and a wonderful team of talented and creative enthusiasts and contributors.
Play the world with Mogees - showcasing at #MTFParis at IRCAM this weekend.
Come and join us. Register here --> EVENTBRITE
If you want to get your hands (and ears) dirty at the Music Tech Fest as a music hacker / maker - no coding experience required - then join us here --> Hack-CampTicket
Scanner will be performing and experimenting with us at #MTFParis this weekend. Music Tech Fest is a free event but places are limited. Register HERE Here's a live Scanner recording from a concert at Museum of London Docklands as part of London Live: Sonic City, accompanying the launch of his installation Bridging the World, on 05 September 2014. The show used archive recordings of scanned mobile telephone conversations improvised and mixed live with the Verbos Electronics modular system and sampler.
The incredible Myriam Bleau will be performing at #MTFParis this weekend. It's a free event, but spaces are limited. Register here:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/preview?eid=14137288009
MTF Paris --> 21-23 November 2014
Music Tech Fest is the Festival of Music Ideas. It's an experimental and improvisational space where ideas are showcased, performed, demonstrated and discussed. It's a place where musicians and hackers come together to collaborate and try things out. It's about sharing your idea with a community. It's a place where industry and academics, artists and technologists come together to both celebrate and invent the future of music.
As well as the main festival stage, we also run a 24-hour hack camp where our hackers are challenged to create new types of instruments, performance interfaces and musical experiences and all those get performed on stage on Sunday. RS Components are supplying Arduinos, Raspberri Pi-s etc for hackers to work with and also set some challenges (e.g. musical wearables for performance, musical stage environments etc). We have also been working with the Stephen Fry / Penguin Books ‘YourFry’ campaign and turning his audio recordings into music. All the hacks are going for the grand YourFry prize which is judged by Stephen Fry and Tim Berners-Lee.
At IRCAM, Centre Pompidou, the festival will feature some fantastic artists and innovators showcasing and performing their projects. We want to ensure all of the great ideas from IRCAM and the Paris music tech startup community are demoed / performed on stage.
The festival is filmed and streamed live online to audiences in over 70 countries and all professionally edited videos of presentations are made available for sharing and embedding.
Schedule:
Friday, 21st: 6 PM - 10 PM Saturday, 22nd: 2 PM - 10 PM Sunday, 23rd: 4 PM - 10 PM 24 hours hackathon starts on saturday 2 PM
You want to participate? Just drop a mail to: --> [email protected]
Participant list will follow soon!