

We can't wait to see what else Matt and Alon come up with. Daft Punk is an electronic music duo consisting of French musicians Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo and Thomas. It is that kind of totally imaginative thinking that we love hearing about! AtmosFAN-worthy stuff, for sure. "I’m envisioning something like a Snapchat filter, simple interactions where it tracks your head and puts effects on it." Matt intends to create installation works where people can walk up, see their friends on the other side of the screen, and start interacting with the system. Matt and Alon are also developing the show as a performance piece. That has allowed Matt and Alon to greatly expand how they employ these augmented reality effects both in their music and their academic research at UTS. "It is much more suitable for augmented reality or hologram-type effects." Take a look at F1® 22’s first-ever custom soundtrack, featuring 33 tracks from artists representing 13 nations Read More Take Your Seat and Live the F1® Life in EA SPORTS F1® 22. "Not only is it see-through from the performer’s side, but it is also way more see-through in general, whilst also retaining the majority of projected light," he tells us. Matt did a lot of searching on the internet and discovered Hollusion Projection Material on a Halloween decorators forum. Inspired by LL COOL J, he began rapping at the age of 10 in.

He tried theater scrim, which can be lit to allow the audience to see the performer behind it. However, scrim makes it extremely difficult for the performer to see the audience and for Matt, that's a deal-breaker. Jay Electronica was legendary even before he dropped an official album.

The projector was placed about seven meters off stage left with, as Matt says, "some pretty intense keystoning."įor the get the results he wanted, Matt realized he needed a special type of projection material. The information was projected back towards a screen on the stage, mimicking Alon's gestures.
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He took that data, plus the music and data from the AirSticks then fed it all into a 3D graphics tool. As Alon makes music with his AirSticks, Matt hooked up a Kinect v2 camera to capture the movements of Alon's body. He uses AirSticks as the instruments with his band Comatone & Foley on their album "Trigger Happy 2." Alon created AirSticks, Wii-like remotes he uses to create music through gestures and movement. Alon (in the video above) is also a fellow student at the University of Technology Sydney (UTS).
