Philadelphia Orchestra to Premiere Drexel-Designed Interactive Concert App for Mobile Devices
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The Philadelphia Orchestra, in collaboration with engineers from 91制片厂鈥檚 Expressive and Creative Interaction Technologies (ExCITe) Center, is launching a mobile app that will change the way audiences experience musical performances. The app, called LiveNote鈩, allows concertgoers to access information about the works they are hearing, following the music with real-time musical, emotional and historical highlights. It will debut at the Free College Concert on Oct. 14 and will be available for use only at selected concerts during the course of the season.
鈥淭he Philadelphia Orchestra has a rich legacy of being at the forefront of technical innovation, and curating new ideas is part of the very fabric of our organization,鈥 said Philadelphia Orchestra President and CEO Allison Vulgamore. 鈥淟iveNote鈩 is the latest initiative to experiment with harnessing the power of technology in service to the power of music, and we look forward to working with our audiences as we test and evolve this long-nurtured application.鈥
LiveNote鈩 works with Android and iOS phones. Its exclusive digital media content takes audience members beyond the music onstage by providing concert program notes, a musical glossary and information about the Orchestra. LiveNote鈩 can also provide text and translations for vocal works. Slides automatically advance with the music on a mobile device鈥檚 screen during a concert, providing key highlights, engaging details and images relating to the composition.
鈥淭oday, we all are finding ways to merge technology with the things that we love in our lives, including listening to music,鈥 said Philadelphia Orchestra Music Director Yannick N茅zet-S茅guin. 鈥淚 welcome the opportunity to facilitate this in the concert hall in a thoughtful manner, providing listeners with the choice to use the LiveNote鈩 application, or not. It is yet another option for our audiences to appreciate and enjoy the music differently.鈥
A critical feature of LiveNote鈩 is that it has been developed to have minimal impact on concertgoers in the hall and thoroughly tested in rehearsals and postlude performances. The application is designed with white text on a black background specifically to minimize light and disruption. The content is custom designed for each piece to optimize the experience of hearing the work without distraction.
鈥淭o develop LiveNote鈩 we had to think deeply about how to enhance the audience experience without detracting from one鈥檚 enjoyment of the music,鈥 said , director of the and an associate professor in Drexel鈥檚 College of Engineering. 鈥淭o accomplish this, we needed not only great technical expertise, but also a depth of knowledge and experience with music performance.鈥
Kim, who founded Drexel's ExCITe Center, has drawn on his background in both engineering and music to advance the LiveNote鈩 project. His team of Drexel undergraduate and graduate students worked closely with the Orchestra鈥檚 information technology staff and cross-organizational team to develop an app that would present information in a manner that complements the performance.
In its debut at the Orchestra鈥檚 Free College Concert, the app鈥檚 interactive features will be available during performances of Rimsky-Korsakov鈥檚 Capriccio espagnol, Bernstein鈥檚 Symphonic Dances from West Side Story, an excerpt from Daugherty鈥檚 Reflections on the Mississippi for tuba and orchestra, Higdon鈥檚 blue cathedral, and Strauss鈥檚 Till Eulenspiegel鈥檚 Merry Pranks. LiveNote鈩 will also be available during concerts from October 16-18, on two of the three pieces the Orchestra will perform: Dvo艡谩k鈥檚 The Golden Spinning Wheel and Jan谩膷ek鈥檚 Glagolitic Mass.
鈥淲e had an amazing multi-disciplinary team working together to create LiveNote鈩 and we鈥檝e been privileged to have the opportunity to collaborate with The Philadelphia Orchestra on such an innovative project,鈥 Kim said.
The LiveNote鈩 content for October鈥檚 concerts was developed by Benjamin K. Roe, the executive director of the Staunton, Va.-based Heifetz International Music Institute, which is dedicated to helping talented young musicians become well-rounded artists by improving their physical and verbal communication skills as well as their technical agility and musicianship, self-confidence, and leadership capacity both on- and offstage.
LiveNote鈩 will be a companion to Playbill which will continue to be distributed at performances when LiveNote鈩 is available.
LiveNote鈩 is the latest in The Philadelphia Orchestra鈥檚 imaginative and original approach to technology throughout its history. During the Orchestra鈥檚 2014 Tour of Asia & China Residency the ensemble鈥檚 May 25 concert at the Shanghai Grand Theatre was the first symphonic webcast from China to an international audience by a Chinese company, and was viewed by nearly 250,000 people. The webcast was broadcast in partnership with Xinhui Media Group.
In addition to being the first Orchestra to be recorded electrically, in 1925, it was the first to perform its own commercially sponsored radio broadcast (in 1929, on NBC), the first to perform on the soundtrack of a feature film (Paramount鈥檚 The Big Broadcast of 1937), the first to appear on a national television broadcast (in 1948, on CBS) and the first major orchestra to give a live cybercast of a concert on the internet (in 1997). The Orchestra also became the first major orchestra to multi-cast a concert to large-screen venues through the Internet2 network.
LiveNote is available now and can be downloaded from the and .
For more information about LiveNote鈩 visit
LiveNote鈩 was funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation with additional support from the National Endowment for the Arts.
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