PlantWave is a new device that allows you to listen to music created by plants. The makers of PlantWave, which was designed to recreate the sensation of being surrounded by nature, figured out how to ...
In 2012, the artists Joe Patitucci and Alex Tyson set up a jungle's worth of tropical plants in the Philadelphia Museum of Art and invited them to perform. People filed in to stand and listen as the ...
Plants can’t talk, but they do sing. In 2014, sound artists Joe Patitucci and Jon Shapiro designed the Midi Sprout, a small gadget that gently attaches to a plant leaf and translates its electrical ...
PlantWave retails for $299. PlantWave, a device created by Marina del Rey-based Data Garden Co. that turns a plant’s biorhythms into music, is starting to blossom. Sales started taking off in October ...
Step inside the sprouting world of composers, coders, and other creators who use cutting-edge tech to help nature sing. On June 22, Gran Teatre del Liceu, a concert hall in Barcelona, reopened its ...
Austin has enough live human musicians, at least the ones who haven't moved to Lockhart or Elgin. The best — and most relaxing — music I've heard all week was made by some plants. I don't mean ...
The music sounds, at first, like it belongs in a power yoga studio: electronic and rhythmic, rising and falling like breaths. But then a higher pitch juts into the mix, and the strains of sound ...
Studies reveal that we spend roughly 90% of our time indoors, and even when we do venture outside, we often remain tethered to technology, with a speaker in our ear, smartphone in our hand, or both.
The allium plant in front of the drums make Nodding Onion a quartet. This plant’s not an accessory. It’s the lead. The band’s human musicians follow the frequencies of plants, playing improv ambient ...
You’ve heard rock and roll at the Middle East, caught bebop at Wally’s, and perhaps enjoyed an Allston house show or two, but now take an afternoon to enjoy the soulful, natural music of the Seaport’s ...
The music sounds, at first, like it belongs in a power yoga studio: electronic and rhythmic, rising and falling like breaths. But then a higher pitch juts into the mix, and the strains of sound ...