Otamatone
The Otamatone (オタマトーン) is an electronic musical instrument developed in Japan by the Cube Works Company along with Maywa Denki,[1] an art group consisting of the brothers Masamichi and Nobumichi Tosa,[2] the latter one being the leader of said group.
It is a singing toy whose body is shaped like an eighth note (it also somewhat resembles a ladle, "otama" being Japanese for "ladle"), with sound emerging from a "mouth" on the notehead. It requires two hands to play: while one hand holds and squeezes the "head", the other hand controls the pitch of the tune by placing the finger on a ribbon controller on the stem; a higher position on the stem creates a lower sound.[3] The ribbon controller is deliberately delinearized to resemble a guitar, so there is a shorter distance between higher notes than between longer ones. Varying the pressure on the head (thereby opening and closing the "mouth" of the instrument) creates a wah-wah effect, and shaking the neck (and thereby slightly changing pressure on the head) creates a vibrato effect. Switches on the back of the head allow users to change octave, turn it off or on, or change the volume.
The sound made by this instrument can be compared to the sound of a theremin,[4] synthesizer, or jinghu. Multiple versions are available:
- The original Otamatone in black, white, yellow, blue, and pink, and two transparent "skeleton" colours;
- The Otamatone Melody, or Otamatone Mini, a tiny variant which has no note selection slide and thus plays only predetermined tunes, also available in multiple colors;
- The Otamatone Deluxe, a slightly larger version (44 cm) with a longer neck, a line-out jack, a power entry, a three-level pitch switch and an analog volume knob. Available in black and white only;
- The Otamatone Wahha GoGo, similar to the original but with an alternate design with teeth based on the Wahha Gogo "laughing machine" developed by Maywa Denki in 2009, available in silver and gold;
- The Otamatone Digital, which replaces the slide-based note selector with a small piano-style keyboard, it allows chords to be played as well as multiple notes simultaneously. It is also capable of reproducing electric guitar or percussion sounds;
- The Otamatone Jumbo, a much larger version played side-slung like a guitar and incorporating a clamp to use to squeeze the mouth, used only at demonstration events.[5]
References
- ↑ Anthony Dunne; Fiona Raby (22 November 2013). Speculative Everything: Design, Fiction, and Social Dreaming. MIT Press. pp. 25–. ISBN 978-0-262-01984-2.
- ↑ "Maywa Denki". Retrieved 21 May 2014.
- ↑ Sarah M. Schlachetzki (March 2014). Fusing Lab and Gallery: Device Art in Japan and International Nano Art. transcript Verlag. pp. 35–. ISBN 978-3-8394-2026-3.
- ↑ "About Otamatone". Retrieved 24 May 2014.
- ↑ "Otamatone shop". Retrieved 24 May 2014.