This present invention relates generally to musical instruments, and in particular to the design, application, and use of modular structures in creating customized and aggregated musical instruments. Currently, customization of musical instruments has been a. specialized, limited, and expensive affair, and the formation of particular aggregations of musical instruments into a common “aggregated” musical instrument has not yet been perfected.
An assortment of field-customizable, mainstream and exotic electronic musical instruments will be presented, with a particular focus on providing extensive support for the easy and robust creation of a broad range of aggregated instruments. Some embodiments provide extensive functional customization of instruments within the mainstream accepted instrument modalities, as well as opening a wide range of completely new instrument modalities. The invention further facilitates entirely new manufacturing, marketing, and sales paradigms permitting a broad range of open industry development and commerce, thus making an individual musician's creation of new exotic instrument arrangements an economically viable sector for both mass manufacturing and the niche cottage industry. New opportunities are provided for the creation of multiple-vendor standardizations, multiple-vendor manufacturing, multiple-vendor competitive features. This will provide the music equipment user and music industry as a whole, access to an extensive range of instrument customization, diversification, and education.
The above and other aspects, features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent upon consideration of the following description of preferred embodiments taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing figures, wherein:
a-1c depict the relationship among traditional instruments, aggregated instruments, customization, hierarchies of modularity, and applications as they relate to the invention;
a-2b show two exemplary aggregated instruments;
a-3e depict a number of supporting and playing arrangements for aggregated instruments including the use of floor stands, straps and open access areas;
a-4c depict two exemplary rotating arrangements for securing instrument modules;
a-f show exemplary module fastening approaches for securing instrument modules (and additional related modules, such as signal processing or sound production modules) to an aggregation frame;
a-6b depict an illustrative lightweight supporting frame facilitating a staggered arrangement with an exemplary profile;
a-7g illustrate the structure and application of a rotating mounting arrangement for use in a wide range of aggregate instrument configurations;
a-9e show a more general arrangement for the handling of audio and control signals within an aggregate instrument (or complex instrument module);
a-10b illustrate possible techniques for incorporating various types of sound production modules into an instrument frame;
a-12c show a number of exemplary configurations where an array of tuners are configured within the confines of the frame boundary;
a-13b depict an exemplary stringed instrument module;
a-14i depict a number of exemplary playing-surface neck inserts for installation in the more generalized stringed instrument module shown in
a-18c illustrate how hierarchical frames allow for wide ranges of additional customization for the musician's performing, recording, or composing needs for a hand-operated instrument;
a-19j depict a number of examples of purely electronic instrument aggregations (i.e., only comprising electronic instrument modules) flexibly facilitated by the invention;
a-20b depict exemplary applications of the invention to the implementation of key functional aspects of two stringed instruments of Harry Partch (the “Harmonic Cannon” and “Kithara”);
a-21b depict further exemplary applications of the invention to the implementation of key functional aspects of the “Boo” percussion instrument of Harry Partch;
a-22d illustrate exemplary modules useful in demonstrating the principles of the invention as applied to floor controllers;
a-23c illustrate an evolving heterogeneous aggregation of the floor controller modules of
a-24b depict an initially homogenous single-level aggregation of the floor controller modules evolving into a heterogeneous two-level aggregation of the floor controller modules.
In the following descriptions, reference is made to the accompanying drawing figures which form a part hereof, and which show by way of illustration specific embodiments of the invention. It will be understood by those of ordinary skill in this technological field that other embodiments may be utilized, and structural, electrical, as well as procedural changes may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.
Furthermore, in the figures, it is to be understood that a significant emphasis has been placed on depicting functionality, structure, and methods regarding many aspects of the invention. In choosing this emphasis, little treatment of aesthetics and visual appeal has been included. It is to be understood that a plethora of additional techniques of encasement, overlay bezel, alternate structure, ornamental embellishment, etc. may be used to obtain a wide range of aesthetic value and effect.
Over the years, musical instruments have evolved in a number of isolated and interacting ways. Although very complex and subject to rigorous debate, in broad terms a particular kind of instrument, such as a violin, keyboard, flute, reed, brass, drum, etc., would evolve within a conceptual and contextual framework defining that instrument or variations of it. For example, a harpsichord, virginal, bentside, clavichord, etc, versus the group of pipe organ, portative organ, etc., versus the group of fortepiano, pianoforte, etc., versus the group of celleste, carillon, etc. In some instances, one type of instrument would borrow technology developments and enhancements perfected within another, but essentially key defining elements comprising the ‘canon’ or formal ‘institution’ of a specific instrument would largely remain invariant over time. As presented herein, these types of instruments will be referred to as “traditional instruments.”
Every so often a new instrument, perhaps an entirely new type of instrument, would be introduced and over time itself become considered a traditional instrument. Similarly, some established traditional instruments may fall out of favor or be replaced, eventually becoming ‘period instruments,’ such as the recorder or rebec, ‘ancient instruments,’ such as the Greek Lyre or Chinese Bone Flutes, or in fact ‘lost instruments,’ such as the “lira da braccio” used by Italian court poet-musicians in the Renaissance. Referring to
In the case of traditional instruments, variations on the same instrument have sometimes been combined to create a larger “aggregate” instrument. Long-standing examples are the multiple keyboards found in harpsichords and organs, and later, the trap drum set. More recent examples are the multi-necked guitars such as the classic ESD 1275 Gibson double neck (first available in 1958, Gibson Guitar Corporation, Nashville, Tenn.) or the more contemporary Roberts Rotoneck guitar (see for example U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,981,063 and D3 11,750 by Roberts—more recent versions include the Roto-Caster™ which secures the rotating neck on one end to a traditional guitar-body; Roberts Rotoneck, Brea, Calif.). In some cases the component instruments within an aggregate instrument share some of the same internal components (for example, multiple keyboards of harpsichords and organs may share the same instrument housing and “stops”) and in ‘other cases effectively do so in a very limited manner (for example, shared supporting arrangements in trap drums and multi-necked guitars). Additionally, some of the component instruments are specifically laid out to permit playing of two or more of the components simultaneously (for example, harpsichords, organs, and trap drums) while others (such as multi-necked guitars) are not (at least in original intent)
Referring to
The present invention addresses these issues by targeting, for example, the creation of an open evolvable family and architecture of modular instrument components. Each such module may, for example, be a functionally self-contained instrument, controller, signal processor, interface, sound production module, or novelty module. Various types of mounting frames can be provided for facilitating the physical aggregation of these modules. The mounting frames can further be enhanced to provide additional supporting infrastructure for signal routing, power distribution, control distribution, interface consolidation, etc. Each of the modules may utilize one or more predefined signal, control, and power interfaces. The family of modular instrument components and mounting frames can be designed for simple consumer manipulation, allowing aggregate instruments and controllers to be easily assembled and reconfigured by end users. Referring still to
With these ideas established, the above notion of ‘aggregations’ 120,130 may then be adapted to extend the applicability of this group of ideas. Referring to
The creation of traditional instruments from modularized components, i.e. ‘customization’ 144, has been informally with us in the form of a few coexisting de facto standards (for example, modularized components such as guitar pickups, bridges, tuning heads, tail pieces) for some time but has nearly universally required the expertise of specialists.
Leveraging, differentiating, abstracting, and reorganizing these ideas and observations, the invention provides for, among other things, for some or all of the following aspects:
Aspects 1 and 2 together lead to musical instruments that can easily be customized, creating entirely new forms of value to the user and entirely new manufacturing, sales, and marketing opportunities. The market segment and principle user value of these aspects is rooted within familiar traditional musical instruments, driven by motivations of largely taste-defined personalization.
Aspects 2 and 3 together enable users to easily create aggregate instruments with an extensive degree of customization capability. This creates yet other entirely new form of user value and new manufacturing, sales, and marketing opportunities. The market segment and value to the user of these aspects lies in aggregating familiar traditional musical instruments to create new and exciting aggregations of functionality with rich cooperative or synergistic possibilities.
It is noted that this exemplary three-layer model depicted in
Setting
Open unfretted stringed module 211 may be a modest group of bass strings, as used in an archlute or Gibson “Harp Guitar™”, a bank of sympathetic strings, an adapted harp, etc. They are positioned here to be played with the thumb while playing fretted instrument module 212, but could also by intent or circumstance be plucked in isolation. Similarly, open unfretted stringed module 213 may comprise a larger number of bass strings, a bank of sympathetic strings; an adapted harp, etc., positioned here to be played with the thump while playing fretted instrument module 214, but could also by intent or circumstance be plucked in isolation. A small-format keyboard 215 may be used as a “proximate keyboard” as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,570,078, and is here shown supplemented with an additional electronic controller 216. An additional electronic controller 216 is depicted here comprising sliders (controlling perhaps volume and timbre) and fingertip-actuated impact sensors for responsively triggering electronic percussion modules, but could additionally or alternatively comprise one or more strumpads, touchpads, switches, buttons, etc. as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,570,078, for example. A full-sized keyboard 217 could be used for conventional keyboard playing and soloing with one or both hands.
Either or both fretted stringed instrument modules 212, 214 could be played with one hand (using one-handed tapping techniques), perhaps facilitated by either or both of 212, 214 being instrument modules of a touch variety (such as that described in U.S. Pat. No. 2,989,884 by Bunker, and U.S. Pat. No. 4,142,436 by Chapman, and other touch-style stringed instruments, typically with damped open strings). It is also noted that open stringed instrument modules 211, 213 can readily be played with one hand. The aggregate instrument 200 may be readily configured to support playing modules 211 and 212 simultaneously with one hand, perhaps also including some or all of 213; similarly modules 213 and 214 may be played simultaneously with one hand, perhaps also including 215 and perhaps 216; similarly modules 214 and 215 may be played simultaneously with one hand, perhaps also including 216; and similarly modules 215 and 216 may be played simultaneously with one hand. Also note the exemplary arrangement 200 also includes gaps 221, 222 for traditional under-neck hand access to fretted necks of fretted stringed instrument modules 212, 214, respectively.
b depicts another layout format for an aggregate instrument emphasizing electronic keyboards 261,262 and other electronic controllers 271-276 but also including an electronic stringed component module 263 that may be played by extending the arms—the latter may be, for example, of a touch variety (such as that disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 2,989,884 by Bunker, or U.S. Pat. No. 4,142,436 by Chapman, or other touch-style stringed instruments, typically with damped open strings), an unfretted adapted harp, a non-uniformly fretted dulcimer format, etc.
This arrangement comprises a lightweight supporting frame facilitating a staggered arrangement with an exemplary profile such as that shown in
An additional example that combines various functional and ergonomic aspects of the previous two examples is the shoulder strap-supported configuration generally depicted by
It is further noted that the invention provides for any of the configurations shown in
One last illustrative example for this part of the discussion is a rotating type of mounting arrangement for the instrument modules, which is similar in some respects to the Roberts Rotoneck guitar neck configuration (see for example U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,981,063 and D3 1 1,750). Referring to
The various configurations described illustrate a number of concepts. Clearly these functionalities are of value in performance situations, but there are other venues for value as well. In composing, the ability to have flexible simultaneous access to multiple types of instruments and controllers allows for broad new areas of compositional trial and experimentation. One or more default configurations may be used as a compositional mainstay, and special aggregation configurations may be created as needed for unusual or new instrumentation situations. When learning about music theory, applying specific instrument techniques, working with timbre alternatives, etc. aggregated instruments offer a rich interactive and staged approach for exploration and comparative analysis.
In addition to the visible and functional aspects described above, the invention provides for interface modules for getting signals to and from the aggregate instrument, and in some cases power to the instrument. Further, the invention provides for on-board modules of various types and implementations for signal switching, signal mixing, signal processing, and sound production, as well as various types of novelty modules (lighting, special effects, video cameras, visual display, computer interface, etc.). Overall then, at a high comprehensive level, the invention provides for arrangements and configurations of modular and aggregated instruments comprising the following broadly classified types of constituent elements:
The remainder of the specification is organized as follows. First various types of exemplary aggregation frames will be described, including mechanical aspects, signal routing, and power routing provisions. Each such aggregation frame allows for the interchangeable incorporation of a variety of instrument modules. In many cases it may, be advantageous to support a variety of instrument module sizes. Next, a wide variety of exemplary instrument modules will be described. In many cases it may also be advantageous for at least some instrument modules to support interchangeable types of instrument submodule species. A number of such exemplary instrument sub-modules are also described. Then some illustrative exemplary novelty modules are discussed. Based on the preceding frame, module, and sub-module descriptions, a number of illustrative exemplary configurations are then provided. It is then shown how some aspects of the invention are readily extended to other forms of music technology and instrument formats, using as an example a modular floor controller. Finally, the interlaced matters of standardization, multivendor manufacturing opportunities, and instrument/market evolution are briefly considered.
2. Instrument Aggregation Frames and their Infrastructure
Although exemplary instrument modules have not yet been discussed in detail, the introductory discussion and associated figures provide enough background to explain instrument aggregation frames and related infrastructure which may be provided to hosted instrument modules.
In general, the instrument aggregation frames and their infrastructure may comprise the following:
In some embodiments, the invention provides for a wide range of mechanical types and implementations of the aggregation frame. Only a few exemplary approaches are provided here, but the invention provides for additional implementations deriving from or alternative to these as one skilled in the art would appreciate.
Next,
c and 5d show variations where the function of one of the mounting straps 500a, 500b is replaced by individual mounting plate segments 510 or 520, each sized to separately secure an individual instrument module. These arrangements are typically far more practical as each instrument module may be separately installed or swapped without disturbing the mounting of other instrument modules. The arrangement of
e shows several single-fastener mounting plate segments 510 attached to a common mounting plate; here the mounting strap 500 is flat, and adjacent mounting plate segments 510 abut one another. The abutment may be a simple alignment of adjacent edges, or may include securing embellishments such as tongue-and-groove, complementary notching, etc. Similarly, as shown by
It is understood that adjacent mounting plate segments 510 and 520 in
a-6b are a more detailed view of staircase configuration of a mounting frame. More specifically,
Some exemplary rotating mounting arrangements will now be considered. In some situations it is desirable for the rotation mounting arrangements to accept instrument modules—thus acting as an aggregate instrument mounting frame—and in other situations it is desirable for the rotating mounting arrangements to themselves serve as a module within a standardized aggregate instrument mounting frame. In some cases, it may be desirable for a rotation mounting arrangement to serve both of these roles. In these cases, it would be highly advantageous if the instrument modules, the rotating mounting arrangements, and the aggregate instrument mounting frames all work within a standardized size format so that a given instrument module could fit in either the rotating mounting arrangement or an aggregate instrument mounting frame that could also simultaneously hold the rotating mounting arrangement. The invention provides for this as well, and an example systems-level strategy will be provided.
Returning to
Note that the mounting arrangements depicted in
It is also possible to secure a rotating mounting arrangement similar to that depicted in
c shows a more comprehensive view of rotating mounting arrangement 401, including a complementary pair of end-supporting members 701a, 701b, each configured to be supported in a mounting frame (for example such as those depicted in
It is noted that various systems-level mechanical design strategies may be devised to allow various instrument modules to be interchangeably mounted directly into mounting frames (such as those depicted in
d is an example of such a systems-level mechanical design strategy. This figure provides an example of how an instrument module or related structure may be standardized with an isolated profile 750 which can either be mounted onto a rotating mounting arrangement such as 401 (or equivalently 451) within a composite mountable structure 760. In the exemplary systems-level mechanical design strategy, the instrument module or related structure may alternatively be supplemented with attachable mounting structures 751a, 751b to form an elongated module 770 of standardized profile matching that of the composite rotating supporting structure 760. In a nested standardization, a given instrument module or related structure 750 may be mounted in a fixed position structure 770 or a rotating structure 760, and instances of each may be interchangeably or simultaneously mounted in a common frame 201a, 201b.
With the various types of aggregate instrument mounting frames and related systems-level mechanical design strategies of equal, broader, or lesser scope, established, it is further noted that it is also possible to use the same instrument modules in other settings. Some additional examples are disclosed in later figures (using standardized instrument modules as ad hoc components in constructing “home-made” functional replicas of Harry Parch instruments, illustrated in
e-7g show body 780 securing a single rotating mounting arrangement 401. Within the rotating mounting arrangement 401 various instrument modules may be added.
g shows another configuration where one of the instrument modules is a multiple-octave miniature keyboard 791. It is noted that a readily-playable miniature keyboard of the scale of 4 inches per octave of keys, similar to that used in the Realistic™ Concertmate-350 (Radio Shack Cat. No. 42-4008, Tandy Corporation, Forth Worth, Tex.), is such that the length of a standard guitar neck would readily accommodate 4 to 6 octaves of keys. Other types of modules, such as sensor or control arrays of more arbitrary form than that suggested by
The next two subsections discuss signal routing, shielding, grounding, and power distribution to the various types of infrastructure modules, instrument modules, instrument sub-modules, and novelty modules. The various types of modules may access signal routing, shielding, grounding, and power distribution through connectors. In many implementations, shielding, grounding, and power distribution may be largely implemented in a distribution bus fashion. At the connector point, localized isolation circuits may be provided to isolate electrical noise processes within the bus and within modules from one another.
Signal interconnections may be point-to-point among specific pairs of connectors, or may be implemented using multiple-access signal busses. The use of multiple-access signal busses is particularly natural for the distribution and exchange of control signals, but could be viewed as a significant new step over long standing traditions in intra-instrument audio signal handling. Due to the many configuration advantages and flexibilities afforded by the introduction of a digital audio signal bus (such as the natural I/O utility in conjunction with digital mixing and digital signal processing), along with the radically dropping prices of digital audio analog-to-digital converters (ADCs), among other factors, a digital audio signal distribution bus may be readily implemented. The audio signal bus and control signal bus could be a shared bus, and the bus technology may be either electrical or optical. The combination of optical busses and a digital audio signal bus could push noise floors within the instrument to very low levels.
The invention provides for a wide range of signal routing, signal shielding, and signal grounding types and implementations to be associated with the aggregation frame. Only a few exemplary approaches are provided herein, but the invention provides for additional implementations deriving from or alternative to these examples, as one skilled in the art will appreciate. Exemplary signal types include:
Incoming instrument control signals 801 are passed from the interface 800 (as “control in” signals 831) to a multiple-destination control signal fan-out arrangement 811 which may also include within itself control processing. In smaller-scale instruments there may be no need for multiple-destination control signal fan-out but still a need for control signal processing in which case 811 serves only a control signal processing role. The control signal fan-out and/or processor 811 may be controlled by a control signal 836 which may originate from a controller on the aggregate instrument, or from the control signal merge and/or processor element 812, described in more detail below.
Outgoing instrument control signals 802 are provided to the interface 800 (as “control out” signals 822) from a multiple-source control signal merging element 812, which may also include control processing. In smaller-scale aggregated instruments there may be no need for multiple-destination control ‘signal fan-out, but still a need for control signal processing in which case 812 serves only a control signal processing role.
Outgoing instrument audio signals 803 are provided to the interface 800 (as “audio out” signals 863). by an audio switching and/or mixing element 815; this element may also potentially include audio signal processing.
In this moderate complexity example, the aggregate instrument also includes a control signal extraction element 814 which transforms attributes of provided audio signals 864 into derived control signals 834. In this example, the derived control signal transformation process provided by the control signal extraction element 814 is itself controllable in some manner by transformation control signals 824.
The aggregate instrument in this moderate complexity example also includes a vibrating element feedback excitation arrangement (using, for example, the techniques taught in U.S. Pat. No. 6,610,917) comprising a feedback control and signal processing element 817 controlled by control signals 827 and producing one or more drive signals 867 responsive to sense signals 857 originated by vibration-sensing transducers. These sense signals 857 may be originated by one or more dedicated vibration-sensing transducers or may be originated from shared vibration-sensing transducers, either directly or indirectly from the audio switching and/or mixing element 815 as described above, or from another signal source. For example, the feedback control and signal processing element 817 may be part of a self-contained module that further comprises dedicated internal vibration-sensing transducers (producing dedicated sense signals 857) and dedicated vibration-drive transducers (driven by dedicated drive signals 867). Alternatively, not only may the feedback control and signal processing element 817 obtain its sense signals 857 from elsewhere (such as audio outputs from the audio switching and/or mixing element 815), but the vibration-drive transducers may also be positioned at various locations within the instrument module, and also could serve (in another modality) as vibration-sensing transducers. These approaches enable, for example, the following demonstratively flexible configurations:
It is noted that the audio switching and/or mixing element 815 may be controlled with incoming control signals 825 that may originate within the instrument and/or from the control fan-out and/or processor 811. The control signal fan-out and/or processor 811 itself may be controlled by incoming control signals 801 originating outside the instrument and/or by other control signals 815 that may originate within the instrument. Similarly, control signals originated from within an aggregate instrument (or complex instrument module) may be directed to a control signal merge and/or processor 812 which creates at least an outgoing control signal 802 for the aggregate instrument.
The control signal merge and/or processor 812 may also serve as the immediate source for the incoming control signals 825 and 827, and itself receive and be responsive to a control signal 826 provided by, for example, the control signal fan-out and/or processor 811 or other control signal source. It is noted that the instrument interface 800 may be implemented using known types of generalized instrument interfaces. Specific examples of suitable types of generalized instrument interfaces are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,570,078.
The invention also provides for the incorporation of interfaces for other types of signals, for example computer data signals employing interfaces such as RS-232, USB, VGA, Ethernet, FireWire™, etc.; in general these interfaces may have a signal direction that is bi-directional (outgoing and incoming), incoming-only, or outgoing-only.
It is understood by one skilled in the art that the configuration depicted in
b illustrates a comparable general framework for the handling of controls signals within an aggregate instrument (or complex instrument module). Control signal inputs 951 from various sources within an aggregate instrument (or complex instrument module), and possibly from the instrument interface (such as 800 in
An aggregate instrument (or complex instrument module) may include additional novelty items useful in performance. Novelty items may include lighting, special effects, video cameras, visual display, computer interfaces, etc. Of these, it is noted that a video camera can be used as a musical instrument or music system control interface, as in the examples described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,570,078. For example, various types of image processing and recognition steps may be employed to derive control signals responsive to images or motions within the captured video signal. Thus an instrument module or submodule may use video internally to create control signals, but video need not travel to or through other parts of the aggregate instrument or instrument module. In other arrangements, particularly if video is used for other purposes than creating or controlling musical sounds, video may indeed travel through other parts of the aggregate instrument or instrument module. Should the aggregate instrument employ video signals outside the context of an instrument module or sub-module, an embodiment of the invention may provide a video signal infrastructure. Typically the video capabilities, if present, would be considerably simpler than that of the audio and control signal environments. However, as may be required or desired, video switching, video signal processing, video merging (blend, fade-to, etc.), and video mixing (mosaic, split-screen, wipe, etc.) may be included, and video signals incoming and outgoing from the aggregate instrument may be included in the instrument interface.
Lighting and special effects are typically driven by control signals.
d shows this taken to the extreme where a single comprehensive intelligent interpreting element 990 directly creates more primitive control signals 952a-952n for all of the relatively non-intelligent lighting or special effect elements 970a-970n.
Within an aggregate instrument (or complex instrument module) the various audio and control signals having internal sources or destinations will typically need to connect with various instrument modules or related systems. Connectors with space-division (one physical path per signal) wiring may be used, or signals may be multiplexed together utilizing time-division, frequency-division, wavelength division, or other suitable multiplexing methodologies. Signal connections may be electrical, optical, or both in combination. Electrical signals may be carried over balanced or unbalanced circuits. Connectors may connect with various instrument modules or related systems via a flexible cable harness or a fixed-position connector, which may comprise part of the physical mounting arrangement involved in securing the various instrument modules or related systems to the mounting frame.
The invention provides for various individual interconnection fabrics (audio 902, control 952, video, etc.) to be realized in part or in whole with a multiple I/O port signal bus. Further, the invention provides for two or more signal types (audio in, audio out, control in, control out, video in, video out, etc.) that are carried across the connector to be multiplexed together as may be required or desired in a particular application. In one very flexible and evolvable arrangement, all signal types are multiplexed together and connectors with the various instrument modules or related systems share at least a common interconnection fabric. Finally, the invention provides for any needed signal ground to either be included in the connectors, provided by the mechanical mounting arrangements (for example, mounting-screw 504 sites 503 with the mounting frames), or an appropriate combination of both methodologies. It is noted, however, that in certain implementations, for example where all signals are carried optically, no signal ground may be needed.
The invention provides for a wide range of power routing and protective grounding types and implementations to be associated with the aggregation frame. Only a few exemplary approaches are provided herein, but the invention provides for additional implementations deriving from (or alternative to) these as one skilled in the art appreciates.
Exemplary powering classes include:
Exemplary standard low-current powering may involve a two-wire single power supply, a three-wire complementary split power supply, a four-wire arrangement involving a three-wire complementary split power supply for signal electronics sharing a common power ground with a logic supply, or a five-wire arrangement involving a three-wire complementary split power supply for signal electronics and a two-wire single logic power supply not sharing a common power ground with the signal complementary split power supply. Exemplary standard moderate-current powering may involve a two-wire single power supply that may or may not share a common conductor with other powering and grounding arrangements.
At each connection site in the power distribution, power supply decoupling may be employed. Such power supply decoupling may comprise low-pass filters, ferrites, bypass capacitors, series inductors, etc., and may be located within instrument modules and related systems, the mounting frame, cable harnesses, connectors, or elsewhere, and may be distributed among two or more of these systems and components. It is also understood that various voltage regulation schemes may be used. In some configurations, a common regulator may serve the entire instrument frame, but in most situations it is usually preferable to perform voltage regulation within each module. In situations where a module permits additional sub-modules that require active powering, the hosting module may provide regulated or unregulated power to the sub modules, which in turn may contain their own regulation. Certain types of modules, for example lighting or electro-mechanical devices, may not need regulation but provide controlled voltage conditions to internal elements (such as light elements, motors, solenoids, etc.) via controllable voltage-source circuitry such as emitter followers or high-current op-amps.
Protective grounding could be provided on the same connectors used for signals, on the same connectors used for powering, separate connectors, or in the mechanical mounting arrangements. In certain configurations protective grounding may share a conductor with powering. In some specialized low-power situations, the protective grounding, one conductor associated with power, and the signal ground could share a common conductor.
The previous section described the role of instrument interfacing, switching, mixing, merging, and processing, particularly in conjunction with FIGS. 8,9a and 9b. The following provides a more detailed description of how these features may be implemented.
2.5.1 Instrument Interfaces with External Equipment
A wide range of instrument interface types and implementations may be associated with the aggregation frame. Only a few exemplary approaches are illustratively provided here, but the invention provides for additional implementations deriving from or alternative to these as one skilled in the art appreciates.
As previously noted, a number of different types of generalized instrument interfaces may be used, including, for example, the generalized instrument interfaces disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,570,078. A suitable generalized instrument interface may generally include single or multiple connectors, signals in space-division or multiplexed formats, media of electrical, optical fiber, wireless, or combinations of these. Signals carried by the generalized instrument interface include an instrument's incoming and outgoing audio signals, incoming and outgoing control signals, and incoming and outgoing video signals, as relevant to the instrument and supporting systems. Outgoing audio signals in particular, and often outgoing control signals as well, may comprise multiple channels which are well suited to the aggregated instruments described herein.
a shows an abstraction of this exemplary case to a more general setting featuring possible audio switched interconnect functionality 902 and audio mixing functionality 904 which provide interconnect and mix operations on incoming audio signals 901, outgoing audio signals 905, and audio signals to and from various audio signal processing modules which may exist (such 903a and 903b). Note audio signal processors may have one input, as depicted by 903a, or multiple inputs, as indicated by 903b, as well as single or multiple outputs. The audio switched interconnect functionality 902, audio mixing functionality 904, and signal processors 903a, 903b may each be controlled by exogenous control signals (as provided in
The example of
Video signals, if utilized in a particular aggregated instrument configuration, are likely to be sparsely existent and require little handling or special consideration. An aggregated instrument may simply have one or more video cameras and/or video displays, and all video signals would be directly connected between these components and the instrument interface 800, as augmented to include video signals using, for example, the techniques disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,570,078 as explained earlier. In more complex arrangements, video switching, video signal processing, and video signal mixing and merging may be included. Further, video may be converted into control signals or rendered under the direction of control signals using, for example, the techniques provided in U.S. Pat. No. 6,570,078. Therefore, an exemplary general arrangement may be akin to that shown by
A wide range of on-instrument sound production module types and implementations may be associated with the aggregation frame. Only a few exemplary approaches are illustrated, but additional implementations are possible within the teachings of the present invention.
Sound production modules may be implemented using a number of physical formats, output powers, sound distribution patterns, etc. For example, multi-channel configurations may be implemented in a unitary housing, a group of functionally associated modules (separate left and right tweeters/midrange, woofers, etc.), or by a plurality of individual modules of differing or equivalent types. Examples of the latter include a self-contained wide-range single-channel module that could be used for a left channel or a right channel, a subwoofer module that could be shared between the left and right channels, etc. With the modular format, additional channels of various types can be added for special purposes—for example a hexaphonic amplification system, short-throw and long-throw amplification systems, etc.
It is also readily possible for sound production modules to support one or more submodules. For example, the sound production modules may be limited to speaker and baffle combinations with insertable amplifier modules of various types associated with various brand-name manufacturers or differentiated by functions (internal equalization, distortion characteristics, damping at low frequencies, etc.). Further, the amplification modules may be limited to power amplification and co-exist with insertable pre-amplifier modules of various types associated with various brand-name manufacturers or differentiated by functions (internal equalization, distortion characteristics, double-integrator at low frequencies for sound production below the resonance frequency of a speaker enclosure). Particular examples of suitable systems that may be used to implement the amplification module are the Bag End™ Extended Low Frequency ELF™ system or the system described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,481,662 by Long and Wickersham. Alternatively, such pre-amplifier functions may be segregated out of the sound production modules altogether and be treated as a signal processing module as discussed above in Section 2.5.4.
At a higher level,
a and 10b also depict an additional module 1003. This module could be a signal processing module, pre-amplifier module, control module, or even miniature instrument modules (one octave keyboard, mini-zither, mbira, etc.). In the case of
In many situations, it may be desirable to mount the sound production modules such as 1004a, 1004b in other locations. For example, the locations shown in
A wide range of instrument module types and implementations may be associated with the aggregation frame. Although a few exemplary approaches are illustrated, additional implementations may be implemented to accommodate the requirements of a particular application.
In-accordance with some embodiments, a wide range of stringed instrument modules and associated sub-module configurations may be implemented. These include, but not limited to, various forms of guitars, basses, dulcimers, banjos, mandolins, mandolas, sitars, pipas, biwas, violins/cellos, ouds, shamisans, kotos, harps, zithers, and many other related instruments.
Some basic aspects of stringed instrument modules and associated sub-module configurations will be described with reference to the exemplary guitar module 1100 shown in
In this figure, the exemplary guitar module 1100 is shown with an array of tuners (“tuning heads”) 1106 which may use gears, screw cantilevers, etc. to vary the tension of strings. This particular module also features a fretted neck array 1107 which may be an integral part of the module 1100, or an installable sub-module (as will be described in conjunction with
The exemplary guitar module 1100 is shown having a string termination structure 1104 which may or may not include a bridge for the strings. This illustration also shows an open volume 1101 in which a sub-module 1102 of various types may be inserted. The submodule 1102 may or may not include a bridge for the strings, and may or may not include vibration-sensing transducers and vibration-drive transducers. These transducers and/or the bridge (which may also include a transducer) may be integrally built into the sub-module 1102, or may in turn themselves be sub-modules 1103a, 1103b that may be installed in the sub-module 1102. This arrangement may be configured so that such transducer and/or bridge sub-modules 1103a, 1103b may be installed directly (or via a mechanical adapter) into the open volume 1101.
Of demonstrable interest depicting flexibilities of the invention is the example cases where the transducers may not only be mounted in arbitrary fixed positions along the string length, but also actively movable along the string length during performance by mechanical or by electrically-controlled motorized means. These arrangements are applicable to a wide range of transducer and instrument types.
a-12c show a number of exemplary configurations where the array of tuners lies within the confines of the frame boundary.
b shows a stringed instrument module 1230 with the array of screw cantilever tuners 1236 lying between the mounting areas 1235a, 1235b. This configuration the screw cantilevers tuners 1236 serve as the bridge (although other arrangements are of course possible) and the “set-screw” hand adjustment keys for the tuners extend outwards and forwards, orthogonal to the plane of the instrument neck surface as is found on some electric guitars and basses. Also depicted are transducers 1233a, 1233b.
c shows a stringed instrument module 1270 with the array of tuners 1276 lying between the mounting areas 1275a, 1275b. This configuration shows the hand adjustment keys for the tuners extending outward parallel to the plane of the instrument's neck surface, as is traditional for many electric guitars. Alternatively, these tuning keys may be configured to point outward and forward, orthogonal to the plane of the instrument neck surface. Also depicted is a bridge 1273a (which may include a transducer) and transducers 1273b, 1273c. In each of the configurations of
Furthermore, as to the modular flexibility provided in accordance with some embodiments,
b shows the configuration of
A number of exemplary playing-surface neck inserts for installation in the open volume 1301 are depicted in
b shows a playing-surface neck insert with a fretting system similar to that traditionally employed in Asian instruments, such as the Chinese pipa. In this Figure, the frets 1402a are the angular edges of triangular wedges 1402b. This style of fret allows for the strings to be deeply displaced into the triangular cavities between adjacent frets. The resulting method of changing the string tension naturally permits a distinctive type of vibrato and pitch bend compared to the universal practice, common to almost all fretting systems, of dragging the string transversely across the fret.
c illustrates a playing-surface neck insert featuring curved broad frets 1403 that are often used in the Indian sitar, esraj, and dilruba. This style of fret allows for the strings to be significantly displaced across the arc of the curved fret by dragging the string transversely across the fret. Here, however, a substantially longer vibrating string length is realized during string displacement due to the curvature of the fret. This configuration causes the string to enlarge, resulting in yet another dynamic of changing string tension, and naturally creating a distinctive type of vibrato and pitch bend.
d shows a playing-surface neck insert comprised of a smooth, fretless playing-surface 1404, as may be used with a violin, cello, fretless electric bass, Turkish oud, Japanese shamisen, Korean kum, and other related instruments. The surface 1404 may be flat, slightly curved, as found on a typical electric fretless bass or shamisen, or more significantly curved, as found on a conventional violin, cello, or kum.
e shows a playing-surface neck insert comprised of a smooth, fretless playing-surface 1415 similar to that of
f illustrates a playing-surface neck insert featuring broad step-like frets 1406 that are commonly used in Asian instruments such as the Japanese biwa. The large gaps between the broad step-like frets permit vibrato and pitch bend not unlike that of the pipa style frets depicted in
g illustrates a playing-surface neck insert featuring high fin-like frets 1407 that are often used in Asian instruments such as the Chinese ruan, Korean wolgurn, and Korean komun'go. The large gaps between the high fin-like frets permit vibrato and pitch bend not unlike that of the pipa style frets depicted in
h illustrates a playing-surface neck insert featuring an escalloped neck surface area 1408 between pairs of frets 1408a and 1408b, which, similar to the pipa type neck depicted in
i illustrates a playing-surface neck insert featuring a neck surface 1409 fitted with a plurality of partially-spanning frets, such as 1409a, 1409b, and full-span frets, such as 1409c, each typically positioned in association with specifically designated scales and open string tunings. Note that in principal the use of partially spanning frets may be applied to other configurations (such as, those depicted in
In the various configurations described above, the playing-surface neck inserts may simply be isolated neck playing surface sub-modules or, may include appropriately configured bridges, transducers, etc.
In addition to the various types of playing-surface neck inserts described above in conjunction with
The electronic keyboard instrument modules that have been described include the modules shown in
Considerable description has been provided relating to instrument modules. of larger size format, including
It is noted that the relative size and spacing configurations of the various module formats depicted in the figures is exemplary and that other configuration may be implemented as may required or desired. For example, the hierarchical frame 1600 shown in
These hierarchical frames allow for wide ranges of additional customization accommodating a particular performing, recording, or composing musician's needs. Some illustrative examples from the extensive range of possibilities are shown in
On the left side, a second one-octave keyboard 1640b is configured to face in the opposite direction to be readily reachable and by from the left hand positioned on the stringed instrument's neck. The musician can thus access the second one-octave keyboard 1640b in a fashion familiar to a guitarist playing a multiple neck guitar.
c depicts another scenario where a musician may be working with a complex set of percussion sounds and need a large array of percussion-triggering impact sensors. This musician populated the hierarchical frame 1600a with second-level hierarchy frames 1610 or 1620 to host a large number of impact sensor “sub-modules.”
Later a musician may replace some or all of these sensor sub-modules with actual touch pad sensor “sub-modules” 1672 providing additional control to the musician by allowing control of the sound modification based on where and how the sensor is contacted during and after the impact (using, for example, the sensor designs taught in U.S. Pat. No. 6,570,078). The modularity provided for by the invention readily facilitates these types of incremental changes.
A musician may want to expand upon the general idea of the Buchla “Thunder” product (Buchla & Associates, Berkeley, Calif.) and use a configuration similar to the arrangement in
As described above, an aggregate instrument may be configured using a number of electronic control modules and sub-modules. These modules and sub-modules include, but are certainly not limited to the following, which may be provided individually or in groups:
Most of these individual or ganged items may serve as sub-modules, but some of these items (such as strumpads, joysticks, ribbon controllers, null-contact touchpads, and pressure sensor array pads) may also serve as modules themselves. In groups, the resulting configuration may be targeted for module or sub-module roles. The invention also provides for sub-modules to interchangeably serve as small-format instrument modules, as described in Section 3.3 above. In some implementations, it may be desirable to limit the types of electrical signal formats and protocols. In such a configuration, a simple low-cost chip with a small physical profile (for example, a surface-mount technology) may be used. A simplistic implementation could include the use of control signals in MIDI format (perhaps augmented by protocol and/or speed extensions).
In addition to the various keyboard and electronic control modules described thus far, additional variations include the use of a wide variety of small format musical instrument modules that contain physical vibrating elements. Particular examples include, but are not limited to:
Another valuable use of separate electrical signals is the individual signal processing of one or more selected transducer signals; for example, selected vibrating elements may be individually pitch shifted, chorused, reverbed, etc. to produce desired utility or special effects. A further use of separate electrical signals is the individual restructuring of the dynamics (via envelope generators, compressors, etc.) and/or overtone series-(via, for example, nonlinearities or overtone rearchitecting, as found in the Roland COSM technology, manufactured by Roland Corporation, Los Angeles, Calif.) of the transducer signal. Alternatively, a single vibration-sensing transducer may be utilized for a plurality of individual vibrating elements to produce a common electrical signal for the entire plurality of vibrating elements; here the plurality may be a subset of, or the full collection of, vibrating elements in the instrument module.
In addition to vibration-sensing transducers, such small format musical instrument modules may be provided with drive transducers for stimulating vibrating elements with electrical signals. The drive transducers may be used to create sympathetic vibration environments driven by arbitrary audio signals, such as those from other instrument modules within an aggregate instrument configuration. Drive transducers may also be used for the synthetic stimulation of vibrating elements within the instrument module, such as emulation of the rhythmic excitation of the strings of a South Asian tamburi as is common in raag performance tradition.
Such small format musical instrument modules may be placed in the open volume of a hierarchical frame, such as the open volume 1601 of the hierarchical frame 1600, 1600a. Further, such small format musical instrument modules may be positioned in an aggregate instrument configuration so that it may be readily playable by available fingers, or may be coupled acoustically to another instrument module comprising physically vibrating elements, or set in other arrangements.
A wide range of instrument sub-module-types and implementations may be associated with the aggregation frame. Only a few exemplary approaches have been described, but it is to be understood that other implementations are possible. A first level of sub-modules may include signal generation or receiving items such, as the following exemplary signal generation and receiving items:
Control signal:
Mechanical:
With respect to the items requiring signal interfaces, it may be desirable to limit the types of electrical signal formats and protocols. In such a configuration, a simple low-cost chip with a small physical profile (for example, in using surface-mount technology) may be used. A simplistic implementation would include the use of control signals in MIDI format (perhaps augmented by protocol and/or speed extensions). Similarly, all audio signals from these transducers could be of a common analog format. Alternatively, and preferably, when the creation of a simple low-cost high-fidelity mixed-signal chip becomes commercially viable, all audio signals could be of a common digital audio format and protocol. The latter neatly solves the problem of multiple-channel transducers housed in a single package as the associated plurality of digital audio streams may be multiplexed together into a common electrical circuit or optical path of a physical level interface.
A second level of sub-modules may include items such as the following:
Audio signal:
Control signal:
Aggregate:
If desired, other types of controls and signals may be employed such as those for computer controls and computer data signals. It is envisioned that a second level sub-module may host open sites permitting the installation of one or more first level sub-modules, as well as the creation of sub-modules that interchangeably serve as small-format instrument modules, such as described earlier in Section 3.3.
With properly standardized mechanical, electrical, and protocol formats, novelty modules can freely evolve to include a wide variety of systems and structures. Some exemplary novelty modules may include, for example, the following:
Novelty modules may be implemented using full-sized instrument module formats, smaller formats, and/or sub-module formats. In addition, the smaller format novelty modules may interchangeably serve as sub-modules, as described in Section 3.3.
Thus far it is clear that a wide range of modular and aggregated instrument types and implementations may be implemented with the aggregation frame. Some additional examples of these will now be described.
4.1 Aggregate Instrument Configurations with Purely Electronic Instrument Modules and Size Variations
The various exemplary aggregate instrument configurations discussed up to this point have largely included at least one instrument module comprising vibrating elements (e.g., vibrating strings), and many have included a mix of such vibrating element instrument modules and purely electronic instrument modules such as keyboards, touchpads, controls (buttons, switches, sliders, etc.), and the like.
a shows a moderately large “wearable” multiple keyboard instrument aggregation 1900 comprising three keyboard modules 1902a, 1902b, 1903c coupled to a staircase frame 1901 of sleek austere profile supported by an optional, flexible shoulder strap 1946. Some or all of the keyboard modules 1902a, 1902b, 1903c may be configured as a contiguous holistic module, or be constructed from a hierarchical frame 1600a having a number of small-format keyboard modules 1640 to form a composite module 1700 as shown in
b depicts an exemplary variation 1910 of the instrument aggregation of
Continuing with the gallery of exemplary illustrations,
d illustrates another exemplary arrangement 1930 where the electronic control modules 1650a-1650e are positioned on the side of the keyboards 1700a-1700e. In one realization of this configuration, the underlying frame holding keyboards 1700a-1700e may be wider than those described above to provide an extra open volume for mounting the electronic control modules 1650a-1650e (for example, permitting electronic control modules 1650a to be put on one side of the same hierarchical frame 1700a. In another realization of this configuration, the size of the underlying frame may be the same or similar to the frame size utilized in the embodiments depicted in
e and 19f illustrate electronic controller module aggregations that implement non-keyboard instrument modules. In general, the various individual modules may be used to control music synthesizers, sample players, lighting, signal processing, etc. When used to control music synthesizers or sample players, these arrangements may be used for electronic percussion or musical timbre “finger painting.”
e begins this sequence with a small format configuration 1940 configured using shorter hierarchical frames. One of these shorter hierarchical frames has two open volumes in which two touchpads or pressure sensor array pads 1921a, 1921b have been mounted or otherwise secured. The other frame is shown having three openings. In one of these openings, two of the electronic control modules 1650a, 1650b have been mounted. The third opening has a smaller hierarchical frame 1941, which may be the same or similar size as the electronic control modules 1650a, 1650b. The smaller hierarchical frame 1941 is shown configured with four openings for smaller touchpads, smaller pressure sensors, impact sensors, lights, etc. 1942a-1942d. The configuration of
The exemplary configuration depicted in FIG. l9f returns to the use of the 6-opening hierarchical frame 1600a (as shown in
The exemplary configuration 1960 depicted in
The exemplary configuration 1970 depicted in
Completing this gallery of illustrations of electronic instrument module configurations,
It is to be understood that many possible configurations, variations, approaches to standards, and standardized methods for transcending the standards (as with the hierarchical frames of reduced width, longer width, and double-width double-length) are possible.
Next the rich flexibility, extensible value, and artistic implications provided for by the invention are further illustrated by recasting notable aspects of the majestic instruments and musicology of American Composer Harry Partch (1901-1974).
Partch created a new world of 43 note-per-octave scales of integer-ratio relative pitches, and a large varied ensemble of instruments to render them in a wide range of timbres and dynamics. These instruments brought astonishing compositional aspects and possibilities to light, as showcased in his masterwork “Delusion of The Fury.” However, only a select few musicians can access these instruments since they were never commercially manufactured. Further, it is arguably that these instruments may never become commercially viable to commercially manufacture in the absence of some interest provoking occurrence. As a result, much of the Partch musical world and endeavor is likely to remain indefinitely isolated from new musicians.
Many of the more sophisticated available music synthesizers provide support for at least some types of microtonal scales. In principle, these could be adapted to the Partch scales, and in fact some of the original Partch instruments were adapted retuned reed organs (with a highly physically-adapted traditional Western keyboard featuring staggeredly-layered keys. However, with so many notes-per-octave, and an odd-number (43) of divisions at that, correspondences of the complete Partch scale with traditional (even-number of divisions) 12—key-per-octave Western keyboard without extensive physical modification is extensively problematic. In many of his instruments (including his adapted Western keyboards), Partch addressed this matter through the use of two-dimensional tonal layouts with his instruments' playing areas (which were usually part of the vibrating elements themselves), as in the Diamond Marimba, Quadrangularis Reversum, and other Partch instruments to be discussed. In many of these instruments, the two dimensional arrangement reflects the components of the numerical pitch scaling fraction relating the sounding pitch of a given element to the fundamental pitch of the scale; i.e., numerators of the fraction sequence increase in one layout dimension and denominators sequentially increase in the other layout dimension. A very few MIDI-based controllers, such as the ZBOARD, GBOARD, AND MAGNATAR 1223 by STARR SWITCH (Starr Switch Company, San Diego, Calif.), offer a two dimensional array of buttons, and some multiple element percussion controllers such as the Roland “Octapad” (Roland Corporation U.S., Los Angeles, Calif.) and Simmons “Turtle Trap” (Simmons, West Hills, Calif.) offer small two-dimensional arrays of percussive pads, but no straight-forward way to aggregate these. In contrast, the Partch stringed instrument configurations are essentially unsupportable with available products without extensive customized construction.
Embodiments that have been described provide, among other things, flexible elements that may be readily assembled into functional replicas of key aspects of Partch instruments.
b shows the same collection of stringed instrument modules 2002a-2002f arranged in a “stacked” sequence to create an adaptation 2050 of the 72 string “Kithara” (ibid, pp. 200-231). In this configuration, the mounting straps 2001, 2201b of
a shows the use of six tiers of hierarchical frames 2161-2166 of at least two spacing styles arranged in a staircase frame and populated with impact sensors 2111, 2118, 2121, 2133 and others to form a functional adaptation 2100 of the Partch “Boo” (H. Partch, Genesis of a Music, Da Capo Press, New York, 1974, pp. 282-292).
5. Application to Floor controllers
A variety of hand-operated instruments have been described, and the principles and techniques that have been disclosed apply equally to other types of instruments. A particular example may be the application of these principles and techniques to floor controller devices. Particular examples of suitable floor controller devices are presented in U.S. Patent Application 2002/0005111. Employing the notions of formalized modules, mounting frames, and hierarchical frames to floor controllers, a wide range of floor controller types may be implemented using a given aggregation frame. Only a few illustrative approaches are described, but those of ordinarily skill will appreciate that a vast assortment of variations are possible within the teachings of the invention.
a-22d depict a few exemplary modules that are possible in implementing a floor controller.
c shows a touchpad or pressure sensor array pad configured for operation by a user's foot. In principle the same touchpad or pressure sensor array pad hardware described earlier for hand operation may also be used for foot operation. However a mode change (from “hand” to “foot”) in pattern recognition and parameter extraction may be advantageous, but not necessarily required for useful operation. As with the hand-operated configurations described earlier, the pad may be fitted with an impact sensor for supporting percussion applicants. In this illustration it is assumed that visual status and context indications are incorporated into the pad itself, using a transparent pad and underlying visual display. However, other arrangements or omissions of these are of course possible. The transparent pad and associated underlying visual display may be implemented using conventional techniques, such as those disclosed in U.S. Patent Application 2002/0005111.
d illustrates a rocking foot pedal module 2130 comprising a rocking foot pedal 2121, again, with exemplary visual indication provided by optional alphanumeric display 2122 (or other suitable display device). The rocking foot pedal module 2130 width may be kept narrow, or widened enough to allow other degrees of motion, such as pivoting rotation. Such additional degrees of motion and/or the addition of other structures can be used to obtain greater parameters of control with a common pedal (examples of such techniques may be found in U.S. Patent Application 2002/0005111). Thus, a common module size and format of rocking foot pedal module 2130 may serve as a simple rocking foot pedal 2121 and a variety of multiple parameter foot pedals for both varying styles and complexities. Note the modules shown in these figures are purely exemplary—other possibilities may include foot-operated strumpads, individual foot-operated impact sensors, Western pipe-organ style bass pedal board pedals, etc.
Further to the example of
Employing this dimensioning scheme,
Composing now done, the musician may find that during recording it would be advantageous to restructure the configuration of the pad by moving it closer to the foot's normal standing position and moving the modules around to result in the configuration of
6. Standardizations, Multi-Vendor Manufacturing, and the Evolution of Instruments and their Commercial Markets
As seen from the discussions above, the invention provides for a wide range of opportunities for multiple-vendor standardizations, multiple-vendor manufacturing, multiple-vendor competitive features, etc., while offering the music equipment user and the music industry as a whole, access to a spectacular range of instrument customization, diversification, and education. Only a few exemplary approaches are illustratively provided here, but the invention provides for additional implementations deriving from, or alternative to, these as one skilled in the art, business, and marketing appreciates. The principles of the invention create a rich environment for instrument, user, feature, music, and market. In this sense the principles of the invention when properly applied and marketed could provide market-opening potential comparable to the introduction of the MIDI protocol.
While the invention has been described in detail with reference to disclosed embodiments, various modifications within the scope of the invention will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in this technological field. It is to be appreciated that features described with respect to one embodiment typically may be applied to other embodiments. Therefore, the invention properly is to be construed with reference to the claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. provisional Ser. No. 10/737,043 filed on Dec. 15, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. ______ issued on ______.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10737043 | Dec 2003 | US |
Child | 12786438 | US |