In this lesson, we will see how music can be visualised as shapes, or how shapes can make sound. We’ll use Music Lab’s Kandinsky.
At moments in this video for “Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)”, by the Eurythmics, it looks like acoustic instruments are playing. This is not the case! Synthesised sounds have been used in their place!
The title suggests that the song is all about sweet dreams. However, the sounds used in the song give it a spooky feeling. The songwriter, Dave Stewart, said
It’s actually a very sort of existential, spooky record asking if this is what the world has come to. Is this what our dreams are made of?
Wassily Kandinsky (1866 - 1944) was a Russian painter who compared painting to making pieces of music.
Three of his paintings are shown in a timeline below. They show how he changed his style from quite figurative in 1901, through to very abstract in 1913. He was always a master of colour.
This video shows a collaboration of art and music inspired by his work. What does collaborate mean?
Becomme Kandinsky by collaborating music and art! Draw shapes, lines and scribbles on the screen and hear them turn into sound. Open Kandinsky
Find out what happens and what controls there are.
Draw a simple picture. Label it with the sounds you would like to hear. Think about:
Play your drawing! Try it with the different colours.