Design by Techdesigns.co.uk.

New Rubber Tiles could help with Soundproofing bass

By Alex Massaad

THE rumbling bass from the party animals next door need no longer keep you awake at night. Cheap and effective soundproofing can be yours in the shape of novel tiles made from latex and a few plastic buttons.

Low-frequency sounds, especially, seem to seep through most domestic walls. That’s because of their long wavelength, says Zhiyu Yang at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology in Kowloon. Bass sounds at 100 hertz have a wavelength of over 3 metres in air, “and several times longer in solids”, he says.

To block out all sound, buildings would need walls several metres thick. Now Yang and his team have developed soundproof panels made of latex and plastic buttons, that will do the job (Applied Physics Letters, DOI: 10.1063/1.3299007).

These noise-cancelling panels consist of a latex rubber membrane stretched over a 3-millimetre-thick rigid plastic grid of 1-centimetre-wide squares. In the middle of each square is a small, weighted, plastic button.

When sound waves hit the panel, the membrane and weighted buttons resonate at difference frequencies. “The inner part of the membrane vibrates in opposite phase to the outer region,” says Yang. That means the sound waves cancel each other out and no sound gets through.

Each weighted membrane only cancels out sound waves within a small band of frequencies. But changing the weight of the buttons alters the operational frequency, says Yang. By stacking five membranes together, each tuned to a specific band, you can create a soundproof panel that works in the range from 70 to 550 hertz.

With these panels you can soundproof homes, says Yang. And the panel’s weight is equivalent to ceramic bathroom tiles, “although it’s slightly thicker at 15 millimetres”, he adds.

The panels could be used “in noisy environments such as airports”, says Xuanlai Fang at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign. “If these metamaterials can be manufactured economically, the impact can be very significant.”

Edited: February 27th, 2010

How to Drum on an MPC or similar pad controller

Edited: February 26th, 2010

Florence + The Machine – You’ve Got the Love (Live at the Rivoli Ballroom)

Her voice is just ridiculous! Another great live video from Florence + The Machine. Don’t fall for the false ending, it keeps going!

Check out more Florence + The Machine Videos here.

Edited: February 26th, 2010

Week 12: Intertextuality and Hollywood

Watch: Star Trek (Abrams, 2009)
Read: Jenkins, Henry. “Star Trek rerun, reread, rewritten: Fan writing as textual poaching” Critical Studies in Mass Communication 5.2 (1988). 29 Nov. 2009
< http://www.informaworld.com/10.1080/15295038809366691 >

My last screening returns to the land of fiction as I wanted a good example of the types of borrowing and rewriting that already exists heavily within Hollywood. Hopefully with the previous weeks exposure to liberal copyright politics the students will take a closer look at who has the right to control and change this culture. I went back to revisit our friend Henry Jenkins for another look at the relationship between consumer and producer in the Star Trek fan universe. Jenkins notices a trend of fan “poaching” where fans take away a chunk of the universe for their own personal celebration or use. From “adult interaction games, from needlework to elaborate costumes, from private fantasies to computer programming” Jenkins identifies a multitude of ways that Star Trek fans have recreated elements of the media for the basis of their own creative works. Jenkins concludes that fans are unaware or unafraid of copyright protection laws concerning the Star Trek universe and have continued “undaunted by the barking dogs” to poach cultural texts from copyright owners for celebration in their own way, on their own terms.

Edited: February 22nd, 2010

Lady GaGa Plays the GaGatar, electro-modern style

lady-gaga-gagatar.jpg

We’re not quite sure just what the heck Lady GaGa is playing here, but it looks like she’s got a keytar slash bass slash MPC GaGatar in the Haus.

You can see Lady Gaga’s keytar thing in action in her video for Telephone & Dance in the Dark, below, unless it gets yanked by the YouTube police.

Check it out and let me know what you think of the GaGatar. And if you know anything more about it, leave a comment!

Edited: February 17th, 2010

Guns Don’t Kill People, Lazers Do

Major Lazer is the nom-de-record of the collaboration between producers Diplo and Switch. The name belongs, supposedly, to a one-armed Jamaican commando who fought in a secret zombie war. Instead of prosthetic arms, he now has lasers for hands. Yes, you read that correctly. Given that back story, Guns Don’t Kill People…Lazers Do sounds pretty much exactly how you’d expect it to – complete with off the wall beats, uncontrollable lyrics, and awesometastic videos.

The album isn’t for everybody. It’s not really an old-people-album, it’s not really a jam-band-fan-album, it’s not really an offended-by-off-color-lyrics-album.

Nor is the album for all situations. It’s not really a gradually-wake-up-to-album, it’s not really a mellowing-out-in-your-living-room-album, it’s not really a just-got-bad-news-album.

But for those moments and people that it’s meant for, it’s perfect. Do you often find yourself with a bunch of buzz-chasing kids looking for a dance party? Bingo. Are you a DJ looking for a Santigold cut to mix with (the also Diplo and Switch produced) “Paper Planes”? Bingo. Are you Usain Bolt looking to get pumped up before a race? Bingo. This is the album for you.

I don’t claim to be a dancehall expert in any sense of the word. My exposure to reggae is pretty much confined to people with the last name Marley, I don’t know the difference between dubstep and dancehall, and I used to like Sean Paul in high school. But the fact that I don’t know much about those genres and scenes shouldn’t change the fact that I ride for this album. In fact, it should probably serve as an extra bonus – even people who know nothing about what they’re listening to will dig it!

Guns Don’t Kill People…Lazers Do opens with “Hold The Line”, backed by a Bird Is The Word bassline and fronted by a stutterstepping Santigold. It’s some high energy, high intensity material, and one of the album’s standout tracks. “Anything Goes”, featuring Turbulence, is another highlight. Turbulence’s Jamaican accent is interwoven with synthesized strings, laseresque sound effects, and explosions. It’s here that Diplo’s description of the album is apt: “digital reggae and dancehall from Mars in the future!”

Edited: February 17th, 2010

Week 11: Copyright, copyleft

Watch: Good Copy, Bad Copy (Johnson, Christensen, Moltke 2007)
Read: Pouwelse, J., P. Garbacki, D. Epema, and H. Sips. “Pirates and Samaritans: A decade of measurements on peer
production and their implications for net neutrality and copyright.” Telecommunications Policy 32 (December 2008): 701-712.

My last non-fiction week screens a documentary that takes a close look at fan-created media, sampling and copyright issues around the world. The film interviews Girl Talk who was introduced during week 8 and also DJ Danger Mouse who is another “king” of copyright infringement. What I felt was really valuable in this film was the way they relate the copyright issue to the international scene. Seeing that people in Sweden, Russia and Brazil feel the same about copyright law problems really reinforces the problems that are associated with copy-limiting cultural products. The Pouwelse article is very powerful since it recognizes the creative potential of the Internet and uses p2p file sharing as a springboard into talking about net neutrality and copyright law and how this will lead to “peer production.” They recognize that a pirate version of almost any copyright material is available freely on the Internet and this will soon lead to unenforceability of the existing laws. In the conclusion of the article Pouwelse proposes a new model, possibly a decade away, where millions of users self-organize into a content creating and consuming mass. Pouwelse calls these users prosumers as they are both active producers and consumers.

Edited: February 15th, 2010

Florence + The Machine – Drumming Song

Her voice deviates quite a bit from the version on the album. None the less it’s a solid performance and just goes to show how authentic the performance is.

Check out more Florence + The Machine Videos here.

Edited: February 12th, 2010

Why waste your money at a studio? LCD Soundsystem has the solution

LCD Soudsystem have rented a mansion rather than a studio to record their latest music. This is the future of music, really awesome idea, create space!

clip 1 from lcd soundsystem on Vimeo.

Edited: February 11th, 2010

Lusine – Two Dots video

Here is the music video to this Lusine song that I just heard. I first heard it on Pete Tong as the Nic Faniculli remix (which I cannot find ANYWHERE btw)

I can’t wait to get my hands on this song, its so sexy, and to prove it here is a sexy trig-themed music video:

Edited: February 10th, 2010

Improve the web with Nofollow Reciprocity.