The weekly weird
Taste your favourite music!
A company in Japan has designed a piece of tech that lets you taste songs you like.
It’s called ‘Squeeze Music’ which, far from being an audio retrospective of Jools Holland’s old band, analyses the emotional content of any track and turns it into liquid form. Imagine a jukebox/juice bar hybrid and you’re almost there.
The software in the jukebox/juice bar mash-up works by analysing waveform of a song then ascribing their myriad moods with corresponding flavours.
So, happy is signified by sweetness, excitement by sourness, sadness by bitterness and saltiness for sentimentality. Therefore, something like Bobby McFerrin’s Don’t Worry (Be Happy) would taste like the kind of sugar rush that might give your dentist a coronary, while Dancing with Tears in My Eyes by Ultravox would be like sucking on a case of lemons. And, while it’s still only in the prototype stage, its makers — The Nomura Open Innovation Lab — are hoping it’ll become a favourite at music festivals where punters can drink the songs as they watch them being played.