Studio: Cerebellum Corporation Release Date: 04/27/2004 Run time: 75 minutesWatching Animusic is like being mesmerized by the world’s most elaborate Rube Goldberg devices: You’re so astonished by their ingenuity that you can’t look away. This “computer animation video album” is the brainchild of Wayne Lytle, a progressive-rock keyboardist and 1988 graduate of Cornell University’s Program of Computer Graphics. Modifying techniques originally applied to the visualization of scientific data, Lytle partnered with graphic artist and 3D modeler Dave Crognale to create elaborate virtual stage sets and imaginary musical instruments that are driven via MIDI interface to virtually “play” the music that Lytle has composed for them. “The music drives the instruments,” explains Lytle in his engaging DVD commentary, “and not the other way around.” Using proprietary software called MIDImotion™, Lytle and Crognale have invented self-playing musical instruments that exist in a magical realm of musical and mathematical precision, perfectly synchronized to the kind of fully-synthesized prog-rock that Lytle obviously enjoys (and if you’re a fan of Keith Emerson and Rick Wakeman, you will, too). It’s the kind of audiovisual bombast that appeals to some more than others (and there’s something oddly impersonal about removing humans from the performance of music), but Animusic is so intricately clever that anyone can be captivated by the meticulous novelty of these beautifully engineered musical marvels.
Take, for example, the most popular track, “Pipe Dream,” in which thousands of animated balls take on a life of their own, popping out of an intricate system of pipes and barrels and bouncing, with percussive precision, onto all varieties of strings, drums, xylophones, timbales, cowbells… it’s just hypnotically amazing. The same holds true for all of these videos, and while the colorful 3D rendering of Animusic (first released in 2001) is no longer state-of-the-art, the underlying mechanics remain timelessly appealing. For this special edition DVD released in 2004, Lytle opens his toy-box to reveal the creative process of Animusic from conceptual drawings to final 3D rendering. There’s also a “solo-cam” function allowing viewers to switch angular focus from one instrument to another, along with animated set-construction demonstrations to show how everything fits together in the realm of Animusic. The 5.1-channel surround mix makes Animusic a perfect demonstration disc for high-end video systems (this is nothing if not a geek’s delight), and Lytle’s first animation (from 1996) is included along with a sneak-peek at Animusic 2, the follow-up DVD released in 2005. –Jeff Shannon
Buy “Animusic – A Computer Animation Video Album “ For Only $14.60
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March 22, 2010
#1
I will admit that a ton of work must go into doing the animation and syncing it up with music – but our local PBS station loves this stuff, yet it makes me laugh and smirk more than anything. The music is pretty painful, and the animations are kind of hokey.
Babies might love this though. I’ll give you that.
March 22, 2010
#2
I work at Best Buy, and we have clips of these running constantly it seems. Maybe the oversaturation is the problem, but I honestly couldn’t understand why anyone would buy this- It has no plot, of course, but the music isn’t good, and the video is just weird. When would you watch this? Stoned and lonely? Anyways, the weird “string-instrument-pogo-stick things” are extremely annoying, I don’t understand that segment at all.
the one with the balls flying through the chutes and playing the drum set was semi-captivating, but again, the music is lame.
Sure, it took a lot of time and effort to produce this I’d assume, but it just doesn’t seem like something anyone would want to buy. There really isn’t anything appealing about this.
Again, maybe I just don’t get it.
March 22, 2010
#3
I don’t know what to say about this…it was interesting but not wowing by any standards. It was semi-enjoyable to watch with interesting graphics and the concept is novel too. But the music SUCKS and thats half the DVD right there. Recommend renting or borrowing from a friend. I wouldn’t buy this DVD again.
March 22, 2010
#4
Each of the seven cuts on this DVD explore combos of imaginative robotic instruments playing interesting, if not memorable, music.
Some of the instruments are ingenious, and you will certainly find favorite cuts that you will want to revisit. The problem I had with this video is the lack of continuity. Based on the reviews, I expected to be more drawn into the video. I hoped to be mesmerized for about an hour. Didn’t happen! I highly recommend this video for those of short attention-span.
March 22, 2010
#5
If you need an audio test for your home theater system don’t hesitate to acquire it!
The video is not at top level for the quality but is the most beautiful computer exercise I have ever seen!
Bye