The Jambé takes bits of electronic drums, hand bangers and
finger ШУУД ҮЗЭХ tappers and
mashes them all up into one traditional-looking percussive instrument. Its makers say that a special combination of materials and sensors allow it to read every playing nuance, transforming the mighty wallop of a drum stick into thunderous sounds or a gentle tinkle from light finger taps with the help of an iPad or iPhone processing brain.
"SensorPoint was founded around the idea of developing products that
integrated advanced electronics with everyday objects," the company's
John Worthington told us. "Essentially trying to bridge the gap between
the maker world and professional production. We were approached about
consulting on the design of an electronic musical instrument. Mark Bain,
my co-founder, and I have a background in music, so this seemed
perfect. Unfortunately, companies can be fickle and the project went
nowhere. But by that point, we had done a lot of thinking about what we
wanted in an electronic instrument. We decided we to start with a drum."
That drum is called the Jambé, a digital instrument designed to look and
feel like a traditional drum and one that allows accomplished
percussionists to put their skills to good use straight away or start
from scratch to create brand new playing techniques. The aim was to
create a playing surface that was mechanically resilient, could
efficiently transfer force to the sensors underneath it and had a good
bounce for use with sticks but was also easy on the hands. Worthington
reckons that "based on the feedback we've received, I think we got it
exactly right."
Within a sustainable hardwood rim sits a 10 geometric play zone
interface which transforms actions registered by its thin multilayer
membrane with force-sensing resistors into dynamic sounds via
proprietary software running on an iOS device.
"When the pressure on the sensor increases, there's a proportional
change in the resistance," explained Worthington. "There's one sensor
per pad. We digitize the state of the sensor at 10-bits and pass that
back to the iOS application. We have algorithms in the app that
recognize playing gestures based on the result. The sensor is mounted
beneath a foam playing surface. The unique feel of the instrument is a
result of the foam, the substrate the sensor is mounted to and how that
substrate is supported."
The design team reckons that each sensor is capable of detecting more
than a thousand different pressure levels and different hits, strikes
and touches can be programmed into the system allowing, for example, one
sound to fire with an open hand strike and another for a closed hand
hit.
Where some electronic drums might employ a gate time or default duration
to specify note duration after a strike on the surface has been
detected, with Jambé the player can have the sound continue until the
pressure on the pad is released, similar to playing a keyboard. The
SensorPoint team is currently working on adding modulation similar to
polyphonic aftertouch.
The app presents the user with a number of large icons that change the
sounds assigned to each sensor zone. Kits and sounds can be changed in
real time by tapping the screen and sounds or kits can be added to the
arsenal that comes with the Jambé app from an in-app store. The app can
also be used to create custom kits and adjust the instrument's
sensitivity.
Players will need a smart device running at least iOS 8 to use the Jambé
and, for the moment at least, the Android OS will not be supported.
"Audio on Android is a mess at the moment," Worthington told us. "We
continue to track this, but it's not really an option at the moment
given the limitations of the OS."
Official up time stats are still to be confirmed, though Worthington did
say that he ran a first gen on battery power and a pre-production Jambé
prototype from a wall socket at the NAMM Show back in January and got
almost 9 hours of use before the iPad Air needed some juice. He also
said that he's managed a good 4 hours running the Jambé and app from the
iPad Air's battery alone.
Developed as a feature-rich yet inexpensive digital music instrument for
professional players and students of music alike, the Jambé project has
launched on Kickstarter. Successful funding will enable the SensorPoint
team to finish hardware production tooling and testing and polish up
the app (which is currently in beta) for release.
Early Bird Specials in a choice of light or dark stain for the wooden
rim are still available for US$499 as of writing, which represents a
saving of $300 on the expected retail price. The campaign is set to run
until April 28, with shipping due to start in August if all goes to
plan.
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