Music

Sound, light, water all merge in Spica loudspeaker

Sound, light, water all merge in Spica loudspeaker
Close up of the dancing liquid within the transparent tube
Close up of the dancing liquid within the transparent tube
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View from above Spica shows the array of bright white LEDs below the liquid
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View from above Spica shows the array of bright white LEDs below the liquid
The light escapes from the sides and top of the device
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The light escapes from the sides and top of the device
As the music plays, the patterns change
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As the music plays, the patterns change
From the side, the liquid bounces to the beat of the music
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From the side, the liquid bounces to the beat of the music
Yuki Yamamoto with Spica
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Yuki Yamamoto with Spica
Close up of the dancing liquid within the transparent tube
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Close up of the dancing liquid within the transparent tube
Spica on a bedside table
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Spica on a bedside table
On display at Design Tide Tokyo recently
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On display at Design Tide Tokyo recently
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Spica is the brightest star in the constellation of Virgo and also the inspiration for this visual loudspeaker lamp system where sound vibrations force illuminated liquid within a transparent tube to dance to the music and makes the spectrum analyzer on my hi-fi appear somewhat dull by comparison.

Designed by 24-year-old Yuki Yamamoto, a recent graduate of the Kanazawa College of Art, the Spica has a loudspeaker at the base of a transparent tube which is separated from liquid above by a clear thin impervious material. The liquid above vibrates and dances as the music from a connected audio player or PC is played through the speaker.

Yamamoto chose to shine white light from LEDs at the base to "make a primary model that expresses my pure concept". This creates a beat-driven light show through the sides and above. He told Gizmag that adding a stain to the liquid in the tube would add a splash of color to the light show.

The 400 by 115 by 115mm (15.75 by 4.53 by 4.53 inch) work was recently displayed at the Design Tide Tokyo trade show (as you can see in the video below) which is a "venue for designers, manufacturers, buyers and journalists to gather and confront design head-on":

Yuki Yamamoto - Tokyo Design Report 2009

Yamamoto's prototype will next appear at Pecha Kucha on December 2. He told us that he has had a few offers to take the device beyond the prototype stage and into the marketplace, we'll keep you posted.

Watch more footage of the Spica in action, set to Drop by Cornelius:

"Spica" PlayMovie

View gallery - 8 images
1 comment
1 comment
Mark Klapheke
Sorry guys, but Dr. Stephen M. Grohmann came up with Hydrocamphonics in 1972. Yuki, you a little late.