L J Rich explains how you can record musical thoughts directly from your brain with new ‘music neurotechnology’.
Most weeks during my classical music degree I would stare at an empty sheet of manuscript paper and wish for some kind of shortcut that would allow me to "think" the music onto the page.
Nowadays I compose on a computer, swapping pencils for pixels.
But I've always hoped that one day I could record my musical thoughts directly from my brain.
So, while staring at a laptop at Plymouth University, I'm about to try a system that promises to make my musical dream a reality.
The project is the brainchild of Professor Eduardo Miranda, a composer who has made a living out of his fascination with what he calls music neurotechnology... (Click here to read more)
Most weeks during my classical music degree I would stare at an empty sheet of manuscript paper and wish for some kind of shortcut that would allow me to "think" the music onto the page.
Nowadays I compose on a computer, swapping pencils for pixels.
But I've always hoped that one day I could record my musical thoughts directly from my brain.
So, while staring at a laptop at Plymouth University, I'm about to try a system that promises to make my musical dream a reality.
The project is the brainchild of Professor Eduardo Miranda, a composer who has made a living out of his fascination with what he calls music neurotechnology... (Click here to read more)