Eric Whitacre started out college wanting to be the fifth member of Depeche Mode. But he discovered choir and it changed his life.
Now Eric Whitacre composes classical choral works of music. In a TED conference talk (I lasted about 3:45 minutes before my first tear,) he told an audience how a young women sang a portion of one of his works on youtube. It inspired him to try an experiment. He would assemble a choir made up of youtube videos of people singing from all over the world.
He created a soundless youtube video of him conducting a song, then made another with with a piano background for the song and made the music available.
Eventually, over 2050 people from over 50 countries created their own personal videos of their part of the song. Some of them did over 50 "takes" to get the recording they were satisfied with.
He was fortunate to get one volunteer to weave and "render' them all together.
Describing his experience coordinating this extraordinarily beautiful production, he described how he discovered, "Human beings will go to any lengths necessary to find and connect with each other. It doesn't matter the technology. People seemed to be experiencing an actual choir. They never met. I feel an esprit de corps."
Technologically, for the audo engineers reading this, he added, "With 2000 syncronized youtubes videos the render time is atrocious. "
The TED video briefly shows his first experiment, then walks us through more on how he put a bigger project together and shows the first two minutes of the actual Bottom Up Virtual Choir. Below that, you can listen to and view the full performance. This new, extraordinary art form seems to be one more way for humanity to build bridges of connection between us. I'd love to see this kind of art included in movies and TV. Imagine James Cameron's sequel to Pandora with a choir of thousands creating the sound for his next 3-D adventure.
And Here's the entire Performance:
This is an earlier Bottom up Virtual Choir Whitacre ... I'm not sure what to call it-- coordinate, created, recruited, assembled... Lux Aurumque
Rob Kall is an award winning journalist, inventor, software architect,
connector and visionary. His work and his writing have been featured in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, CNN, ABC, the HuffingtonPost, Success, Discover and other media.
He's given talks and workshops to Fortune
500 execs and national medical and psychological organizations, and pioneered
first-of-their-kind conferences in Positive Psychology, Brain Science and
Story. He hosts some of the world's smartest, most interesting and powerful
people on his Bottom Up Radio Show,
and founded and publishes one of the top Google- ranked progressive news and
opinion sites, OpEdNews.com
more detailed bio:
Rob Kall has spent his adult life as an awakener and empowerer-- first in the field of biofeedback, inventing products, developing software and a music recording label, MuPsych, within the company he founded in 1978-- Futurehealth, and founding, organizing and running 3 conferences: Winter Brain, on Neurofeedback and consciousness, Optimal Functioning and Positive Psychology (a pioneer in the field of Positive Psychology, first presenting workshops on it in 1985) and Storycon Summit Meeting on the Art Science and Application of Story-- each the first of their kind. Then, when he found the process of raising people's consciousness (more...)