Smart Dust
Smart Dust
for Piano
disponible en 3-4 semanas
Thomas Larcher
Smart Dust
for Piano
Smart Dust
Escuchar 1 demo Escuchar 2 demo

Thomas Larcher
Smart Dust

for Piano

  • Formación Piano
  • Compositor Thomas Larcher
  • Dificultad
    (Difícil)
  • Edición Partituras
  • Editorial Schott Musik
  • Nº de pedido ED13581
disponible en 3-4 semanas
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Descripción de la:

  • Publicado en: 31.12.1999
  • Duración: 00:12:00
  • Género: Clásico
  • ISMN: 9790220134685
Smart Dust' devices are tiny wireless microelectromechanical sensors (MEMS) which are able to sense everything from light to vibrations. Thanks to new developments in silicon processing, these 'motes' are no larger than a sand grain even though they are provided with sensors, circuits, wireless communications and a power supply. They collect enormous amounts of data, perform calculations and are able to exchange such information even over distances of 300 metres. Today, one is developing commercial application possibilities, such as for the search for manufacturing defects or for the care of patients, but of course this 'Smart Dust', this barely visible intelligent dust, is particularly suited to spy on people and detect movements of the enemy in the case of war. Perhaps, one day, we will get rid of a potential observer when rubbing a sand grain from our eyes.

They are tiny cells which are able to communicate with each other, build up a network among themselves, observe the environment and, above all, they can be blown through open windows into rooms without being noticed. The music too is about similar tiny cells, about strange sounds of a sound-reduced piano, 'simple circuits', i.e. basic information which are retransmitted, musical motifs from the everyday urban environment which then have to be aligned with each other and processed in a control centre, in the head of the listener. Omnipresent, dangerous elements. The motor energy (the power from the battery) decreases in the course of the little pieces, the flow of information slows down. The piano is deprepared during its course, the elements become more readable and audible. A broad stylistic expanse is traversed in a very brief space, as if a 'smart dust transmitter' lands on the turban of a muezzin and the next one a hundred metres farther in a discothèque. Or even better: one transmitter in a Lachenmann score, the next one in the beard of Arvo Pärt.

Thomas Larcher