Art project translates music from a Teenage Engineering's OP-Z synth into AI-generated imagery

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AI-generated art is a new frontier rife with potential. But for every thorny question about
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and the potential for widespread manipulation, generated art can also inspire wonder and awe. For example, look no further than
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that creates kaleidoscopic visual landscapes for composed music.

A collaboration between quirky synth
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brand Teenage Engineering and design studios Modem and Bureau Cool,
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draws inspiration from the neurological condition synesthesia. This rare phenomenon leads the brain to perceive sensory input for several senses instead of one. For example, a listener with synesthesia may see music instead of only hearing it, observing color, movement and shape in response to musical patterns. Conversely, a synesthetic person may taste shapes, feel words from a novel or hear an abstract painting.


The audiovisual experiment uses the Teenage Engineering
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as the music source that is then translated into AI art. In real-time, Modem and Bureau Cool’s “digital extension” translates musical properties into text prompts describing colors, shapes and movements. Those prompts then feed into Stable Diffusion (an open-source tool similar to
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and Midjourney) to produce dreamy and synesthetic animations.

Modem co-founder Bas van de Poel sees the experiment as fuel for artists’ imaginations. “With the project, we see the potential for musicians to explore new forms of creativity, facilitating a joint performance between human and machine,” van de Poel told Engadget today.


If you’re a musician who owns Teenage Engineering’s OP-Z, you can’t yet use the extension yourself — but that may eventually change. Van de Poel tells Engadget that the companies are “exploring the potential of launching a public version.”

This AI-based project isn’t the first to bring synesthetic properties to the masses. Last year, Google Arts & Culture created an exhibition that
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, bringing machine-learning-produced sound to Vassily Kandinsky’s paintings.

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