Dan Tepfer: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert
Вставка
- Опубліковано 21 жов 2024
- Watch Dan Tepfer play "Canon At The Octave", "Tremolo", "TriadSculpture" and "Constant Motion" at the Tiny Desk.
More from NPR Music:
Tiny Desk Concerts: www.npr.org/ti...
Twitter: / nprmusic
Instagram: / nprmusic
Aug. 29, 2019 | Colin Marshall -- Dan Tepfer has transformed the acoustic piano entirely with his new project, Natural Machines. Watch the keys and you'll see this Disklavier - a player piano - plucking notes on its own. But it's not a prerecorded script.
Here's how it works: Tepfer plays a note, and a computer program he authored reads those notes and tells the piano what to play in response. Tepfer can load different algorithms into the program that determine the pattern of playback, like one that returns the same note, only an octave higher. Another will play the inverted note based on the center of the piano keys. These rules create interesting restrictions that Tepfer says make room for thoughtful improvisation. In his words, he's not writing these songs, so much as writing the way they work. To better communicate what's happening between him and the piano, Tepfer converted these audio-impulse data into visualizations on the screen behind him, displaying in real time the notes he plays followed by the piano's feedback. We dive even deeper into this project in a recent Jazz Night in America video piece.
Perhaps the trickiest part here, unlike a human-to-human duo, is that the computer plays along with 100 percent accuracy based solely on Tepfer's moves. He compares it to dancing with a robot that never misses a beat. Tepfer has to play in kind to keep the train on the tracks, but if he falls out of step, so does the computer. On the other hand, Tepfer has unlocked a new frontier of music available to acoustic piano players: He's essentially given himself more limbs to play the piano at once, and at times we see more than 10 keys pressed at a time or a sequence of notes played at seemingly superhuman speeds. It's a central idea to what innovative technology enables for us - that which is impossible for us to achieve on our own.
SET LIST
"Canon At The Octave"
"Tremolo"
"TriadSculpture"
"Constant Motion"
MUSICIANS
Dan Tepfer: piano, coding
CREDITS
Producers: Colin Marshall, Morgan Noelle Smith; Creative Director: Bob Boilen; Audio Engineers: Josh Rogosin, James Willetts; Videographers: Morgan Noelle Smith, Bronson Arcuri; Associate Producer: Bobby Carter; Production Assistant: Paul Georgoulis; Photo: Olivia Falcigno/NPR
“I like to think of music as Living at the intersection of algorithmic and spiritual”. I love this!
i'm so happy this exists
Everyone gangsta till the piano starts playing itself
I was with my mouth open watching the shapes. just wow.
It's always amazing to see a person discuss a topic that they are truly passionate about, you can see it particularly around the 10:00 minute mark in his explanation.
This is amazing. It's neat to hear him humming too.
Gorgeous, fun and I love the name. Bravo, Dan.
Tiny Desk does it again! Jazz is always on another level, a different plane. This ain't no top 40 pop music, it's way beyond that!
Like Top100? /s
Nah I prefer to listen to other musical genres (with less arrogant people)
@@mrkeng1 Such as?
Actually you don't need to announce it like it's a big deal
@@mrkeng1 Well that statement certainly had no arrogance to it did it?
very cool...love the visual of the audible geometry
A perfect example of humans and technology working together in a positive way 🙂
When Tiny Desk meets TED Talks 🤘
I feel like all I can say is thank you
Guy is way too smart for this world. Amazing!
Amazing. Congrats Dan!
It’s a fascinating cross-pollination of Acoustic and electric old school and high tech . Tonality and atonality , it’s very complex and interesting .
You blew me away Dan! Such a cool musical performance and so visually enchanting. Nicely done!! 🙏☺
What a mind, what an ear. Quarantine could not be better. Thank you.
This is both fascinating and beautiful. So flipping cool!
Bob, you sure know how to pick 'em. Another win for TDC, with the selection of another fantastic artist & Obi-Wan Rogosin's ability to make the sound translate so well it feels like its not coming from my simple computer speakers! Bravissimo!!!
NPR, thank you very much for giving him and his instrument the platform.
Imagine Ludovico Einaudi collaborating with Dan Tepfer... sweet dream
Not only is the music beautiful, but the program visuals are also beautiful!
Beyond brilliant! Gorgeous!
Amazing. Tiny Desk always upping their game.
Amazing, incredible, fantastic!!
This man’s a genius.
this was genuinely fascinating to watch and equally enjoyable to listen to.
Very cool. I love smart, creative people. And the graphics are a trip.
Wow, fascinating project! Love the polarisation which is inherent in music and seeing it in a visual context aswell as the audio experience, had no idea a piano could do that, it's very cool how technology is becoming more and more integrated into a musical performance.
I like this version of the future :)
lovely playing conceptual breadth and interesting moving music
He's going to make the universe explode!
the word genius gets thrown around a lot, but Dan truly warrants the title. mesmerizing performance. thanks tiny desk for curating this!
And he's got a degree in astrophysics too... some people are too talented!
Did he write all these?
botw vibes for sure. get this dude on the team for the next game this is super impressive
my first thought listening to this
Breath of The Wild, for those unaware, one of the entries in the Legend of Zelda game series.
Thought the same when I heard the first piece. Last one sounds very much like a battle theme.
he is a wizard
i really enjoyed this trip! thanks
I slightly understanding what is contemporary music and how it works! WOW it’s awsome
when he clicks four times with one hand and five times with the other .... that is a talented man 😂😂
@9:42
Fantastique , j, adore bravo.
Totally mesmerizing
Someone should show this guy lights that change to music. It would probably make his week.
As someone who's worked as an audiovisual tech, I choked so hard with laughter!
heh I'm using app, while listening to this
love it
www2.meethue.com/en-us/entertainment/hue-sync
That was incredible!
very engaging...very creative..kudos!
lo mejor que veo desde hace tiempo los NPR TINY DESK CONCERT. Hagan uno con Frusciante por favoooorrr!!!
Wow!!! great project, awesome improvisations and graphics! Completely different aproach of music.
Incredible!
Awesome!
I'd love to see Dan and Steve Reich together one day. Amazing performance!
¡Ah!... ¡Maestro 🎵! Qué buena calidad interpretativa y buen gusto 💕. Felicidades
Obviously a crazy genius
Reminds me of the one with Ólafur Arnalds. But I love the visual design!
He's printing complex sounds....nuts
Absolutely fascinating
love it!!
thank you , would love to hear you in person ,...
awesome
Wow, that's amazing! So interesting and so beautiful!
That was cool!
This is exactly what I want at 5am.
This is like the first minutes of DISNEY Fantasia (the visualization of the music) ♥️
Get Say Anything. Everyone would love it.
I was sold after the 1st 5 seconds
Vu hier en concert à la maison de l’océan, alors que j’étais venu pour l’autre partie ; découverte et fascinant !
Genius
WHoα this was awesome even if you could not see the visualizations, Pen one hand ✍️ , tiny journaling 📓 in the other, letting your own mind wander, divining the recesses of mind and body synapses, guiding the ouija_ic like a
one lone man operett_ic
ouija tactilliation
Suede of the blues clarity
I really love tiny desk! If you could have the band Good Morning play that would be awesome! i dont know if you guys take requests like that but i think they would be great for this platform and theres no good live footage of them!! pls do!
Cool vibes bro
First and foremost a great pianist, but to the have the brain to add all that extra... just amazing. Would love to see how other artists would respond to this technology, Brad Mehldau obviously, but Thom Yorke, Nahre Sol, Jacob Collier to name a few.
Jacob Collier was the first person I thought of
The idea to incorporate all the algorithmic interaction & visualization stuff is great and pretty novel, I'm not trying to minimize that, but techy stuff like that really isn't that hard to get into if anyone has an interest in it. There are so many tools out there today that simplify the pipelines to get it all going, that anyone with an idea can realistically implement it without devoting a decade of their life to studying how (: It's a lot more intimidating at face-value than it is difficult, once you get down to it.
Omg,Brad Mehldau & this Set Up...
TriadSculpture reminds me of the later stuff from Esbjörn Svensson Trio.
*I like*
I'm not sure if this was answered, but do the keys that react to his actions respond with the same force? or is it strictly digital and recognizes a press or non press?
"Strictly digital" doesn't have to mean binary. MIDI has provided for 128 levels of velocity since at least the 80s, so that would be the bare minimum resolution for something like this I'd say. What's heard in the clip pretty much confirms this. The notes the program is playing clearly vary indynamics.
nice ted talk here
Bill Laurance needs a Tiny Desk ASAP.
Wow
Grateful for the auto play that bright me here
14:39 like reverse Piano Hero
Dude invented the visualizer from windows media player
Does anyone know how I can implement similar algorithms but with a midi controller ?, I saw another video where the supercollider screen is seen but I don't know if this is how it creates them, does anyone know something or if it can be done and how can it be done in max?
Amazing.... Sigh... Thank you.
Get Robin Fox and his lasers on Tiny Desk
Very innovative and challenging to still do music with a twist
We see you Casper,, nobody's fooled!
You should get AJR !,!
looks close to DNA with the models, can you backwards engineer DNA to a sound then?
weirdly, unravelling dna sequences and reinterpreting them as musical notes is actually "old hat" in the algorithmic music circles.
WinAmp: it's 1997, we should have audio visualizations for any music (ua-cam.com/video/r4mockrHexo/v-deo.htmlm13s)
NPR: it's 2019, we should have some jazz audio visualizations
LOVE XXX
@adamneely what you think
I accidentally clicked on this and I am not disappointed.
🤯🤯 what in the world...
How do some keys play themselves?
This is so underrated, 45,752 views in 4 days. smh, as soon as they hear jazz or classical they just stop watching
Tobe Nwigwe has the best Tiny Desk of all time
that's so fucking cool
Did he grow two extra invisible hands??? How the crap is this happening?!?!? This is some dark magic
player pianos has existed forever, they just look like normal pianos now : - )
❤❤❤
🔥🔥
That piano 🧐🧐🧐
You like jazz?
Nope
@11:00 This should be called the Radiohead algorithm.
So this is what synethsesia is like?