Overview

Designing an innovative musical instrument with a community of young musicians and professional artists.

In November 2020 CLIP, my music education social enterprise, reached a memorable milestone in our journey. The launch of the Photon Smasher represents not only our first product, but an incredible opportunity to extend our mission to a wider audience and create exciting opportunities for the musicians and artists we work with.

Hidden Sounds

In Summer 2019, I was commissioned by BBC Arts to produce a soundscape of Walton Pier. Hidden Sounds of Coastal Arcades is an experimental documentary exploring the sounds of a place centred around play. As well as recording the people, I took about recording the machines themselves. I had great fun using my Elektrosluch mic, which allows me to hear the magnetic fields of the machines. It was here that I began to experiment with the notion of ‘hidden sounds’ – those outside our range of hearing, but accessible with technology.

In September 2019, CLIP invited artist Loula Yorke to run a girls only synth building workshop as part of our Youth Music funded music club at Firstsite, Colchester. The group set about building Atari Punk Consoles (small DIY synthesisers) and creating brilliant improvised performances using them. On a whim, we combined the circuits with some LDRs (light dependant resistors) and looked at how light could control the circuit. This was a wildly successful test with the sounds being triggered and modulated by light. After fellow CLIP co-founder Simon Keep did some initial tests at home, another workshop followed in February 2020 where we hooked up solar panels directly to amplifiers and began listening to light itself.

This workshop cemented the idea. The synchronisation of light and sound was spectacular, and a huge hit with the young musicians at our music club. They were jamming along to the rhythms of bicycle lights and putting the sounds through guitar pedals, creating other-worldly soundscapes.

The workshop was crammed with learning outcomes all as a result of play. There were conversations between the musicians about how microphones work, and what the electromagnetic spectrum is (answered by our students at GCSE age). But alongside these traditional STEM (science technology engineering maths) topics, the creative outputs were beautiful too. The workshop created incredible opportunities for dramatic soundscapes and room-filling light installations.

Prototyping

Developing the prototype was an iterative process with funding coming from a variety of sources mainly centring around artist development opportunities. In late February 2020, I successfully applied for the Francis Chagrin Award from Sound and Music, a small grants program of quick financial top-ups to help get composers to the next stage in creating a new work. I used this money to buy a variety of parts to test and experiment with different ideas. Not only was I starting to understand the physics of the instrument, but also what was possible artistically, as illustrated by my track Pulsar. In the performance, I’m not only processing the sound of light through effects, but also using a second solar panel as a “clock source”, meaning the speed of the flashing light is controlling the tempo of the drums.

It was around this time that three pivotal things happened. First, Joe Carr from Britten Pears commissioned me to make him a ‘light mic’ device for his physics of sound educational work at Aldeburgh Red House. Second, CLIP successfully applied for the Mercury Creatives Program, a creative business support scheme. Third, the coronavirus pandemic showed that we can’t rely on face-to-face delivery as our sole income stream.

Joe’s commission demonstrated that there was a clear interest in the concept as both an educational and musical product. The invaluable support from Owen McNeir via the Mercury Creatives scheme was the perfect opportunity to develop the product in a structured way. And the pandemic showed how important it was for CLIP to explore earning our own income.

Summary

The launch of our own product is an exciting milestone in the CLIP story. From beginning in 2016 as a monthly meetup at Firstsite gallery to registering as a CIC in December 2019, it’s been an incredible journey focused around play centred learning, creating opportunities for young musicians and making incredible music. The Photon Smasher extends the reach of our mission to a far wider audience. I can’t wait to hear what people create with it.

The Photon Smasher is available to buy now here, limited numbers available.

Project

Photon Smasher 

Role

Instrument Builder