Bjork's Newest Album Brings New Audio-Visual Dimension To Listeners

TakeLessons, the nation's fastest growing private music lesson provider, responds to the innovative new album from Icelandic singer Bjork.

Technology has become an integral part of every day life, with new inventions and methods of digital organizing popping up all the time. And now, with Icelandic singer Bjork's newest album release, technology will add a new dimension to listening to music.

As CNN reported, the app-album Biophilia is a collection of games, visualizations and musical scores that accompany each song, and is also available as a standard audio album like we're used to. Each song, in effect, becomes its own visual-and-audio experience, letting Bjork's fans interact with her songs in an entirely new way. Bjork is well-known for her innovative and unique style, and this is no different. To create the album, she collaborated with app developers, scientists, writers, inventors, musicians, and instrument makers to create the full experience.

According to NPR, apps can be purchased individually for $1.99 from the iTunes music store, and each app interacts with its corresponding song in a different way. In "Thunderbolt," for example, users can change the bass line by tapping on a lightning icon.

"You change the speed of the arpeggio, or the range," said Bjork in the NPR article. "Basically, you're like this crazy lightning bass player."

For those who don't want to download the full album, NPR.com reported that a free app for Biophilia is also available, in which fans interact with a universe-like image and hear pieces of the songs as the universe expands and turns.

What's even better is what comes next - instead of going a typical concert tour like most artists, Bjork has planned to embark on a music education tour. In each city that she stops at, she'll play a few nights during the week, and spend the rest of the time at local museums working with kids on music and science projects. Bjork says watching her 8-year-old daughter play with the Biophilia app of the solar system made her she realize its potential.

"She knew more about the solar system than I learned from five years of school - that certain things are not meant to be in a book, you know? If ... it's more like a little game, then you understand it in 3D, like in space," Bjork says. "Music is like this: You cannot learn it from a book."

Mixing music and technology is a great way to engage students of all ages, but especially the younger generation. TakeLessons wants to know - do you use your iPad or iPod during your lessons? What other great ideas are out there? Check out the TakeLessons blog, including their recently posted recognition for Steve Jobs' impact on the music industry, and join in on the discussion on Facebook.

Share:


Tags: music, music industry, music lessons, technology


About TakeLessons

View Website

TakeLessons
350 10th Avenue
6th Floor
92101
United States