Animusic (2001)
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Wayne Lytle — Conceptual Design
Episodes 7
More Bells and Whistles
More Bells and Whistles was a computer animation created by Wayne Lytle in 1990. Wayne Lytle now owns and operates a company called Animusic, creating music-driven animation similar to the techniques demonstrated in the More Bells & Whistles video. Compared to the newer videos, however, this video is primitive.
This piece was created using Wavefront version 2.7. Wayne created it while he was an employee at Cornell University Theory Center. This institution owns all rights to the piece.
Read MoreBeyond the Walls
In 1995 Lytle brought computer artist David Crognale on board to produce a music animation for a commercial client. Animusic produced a 5-minute stereoscopic music animation for VRex, a manufacturer of stereoscopic glasses and projectors. The award-winning stereoscopic version was entitled "Concerto in 3D", while the regular version was called "Beyond the Walls".
Read MoreAnimusic 2 (Sneak Peak)
Sneak Peak of Animusic 2!
Read MoreAnimusic (Play All)
Play all Animusic videos.
Read MoreFuture Retro (Cam 1)
Solo cam for the animation "Future Retro!"
Read MoreFuture Retro (Cam 2)
Solo cam for the animation "Future Retro!"
Read MoreFuture Retro (Stage Construction)
Stage construction for the animation "Future Retro!"
Read MoreStick Figures (Cam 1)
Solo cam for the animation "Stick Figures!"
Read MoreStick Figures (Cam 2)
Solo cam for the animation "Stick Figures!"
Read MoreStick Figures (Cam 3)
Solo cam for the animation "Stick Figures!"
Read MoreStick Figures (Stage Construction)
Stage construction for the animation "Stick Figures!"
Read MoreAqua Harp (Solo Cam)
Solo cam for the animation "Aqua Harp!"
Read MoreAqua Harp (Stage Construction)
Stage construction for the animation "Aqua Harp!"
Read MoreDrum Machine (Cam 1)
Solo cam for the animation "Drum Machine!"
Read MoreDrum Machine (Cam 2)
Solo cam for the animation "Drum Machine!"
Read MoreDrum Machine (Cam 3)
Solo cam for the animation "Drum Machine!"
Read MoreDrum Machine (Stage Construction)
Stage construction for the animation "Drum Machine!"
Read MorePipe Dream (Cam 1)
Solo cam for the animation "Pipe Dream!"
Read MorePipe Dream (Cam 2)
Solo cam for the animation "Pipe Dream!"
Read MorePipe Dream (Cam 3)
Solo cam for the animation "Pipe Dream!"
Read MorePipe Dream (Stage Construction)
Stage construction for the animation "Pipe Dream!"
Read MoreAcoustic Curves (Cam 1)
Solo cam for the animation "Acoustic Curves!"
Read MoreAcoustic Curves (Cam 2)
Solo cam for the animation "Acoustic Curves!"
Read MoreAcoustic Curves (Cam 3)
Solo cam for the animation "Acoustic Curves!"
Read MoreAcoustic Curves (Stage Construction)
Stage construction for the animation "Acoustic Curves!"
Read MoreHarmonic Voltage (Cam 1)
Solo cam for the animation "Harmonic Voltage!
Read MoreHarmonic Voltage (Cam 2)
Solo cam for the animation "Harmonic Voltage!"
Read MoreHarmonic Voltage (Cam 3)
Solo cam for the animation "Harmonic Voltage!"
Read MoreHarmonic Voltage (Stage Construction)
Stage construction for the animation "Harmonic Voltage!"
Read MoreFuture Retro
The robotic drummer (surrounded by a percussion set) has four arms and one bass drum mallet foot; two of the arms hold 2B Drum sticks while the other two hold the vibraphone mallets. The Three-Necked Electric Guitar has metallic fingers that pluck the strings of the electric bass, and a metallic arm that strums the strings of the lead and rhythm guitars in both plucked and arpeggiated styles. As a whole instrument, the body is colored green and sports various plugs and lights. There are also giant loudspeakers in the background, connected to the electronic instruments, with VU displays that light up when the instruments are played.
Read MoreStick Figures
This is the most famous Animusic animation. It's also seen on the cover. In this animation, "Mr. Stick" (aka "Mr. Bass Man") the instrument, the 3-stringed acoustic guitar, the double bass, and the violins all have "arms" (fingers for the guitar) which they use to play themselves.
Read MoreAqua Harp
The room in which this animation takes place is completely enclosed. Its ceiling is painted a dark blue or black with a crescent moon and stars that appear to glow. The room is filled with about one foot of water in which the harp sits right in the middle. Between instrumental refrains, the lighting changes between warm-toned lamps on the wall and cool-toned, blue-ish underwater lights. All of the instruments are connected to the harp. In the background, water gently ripples throughout the piece. Some lights are set on top of the wooden columns.
Read MoreDrum Machine
Like machines in the factory, the gears rotate automatically to play the percussion instruments. As the drum kit keeps playing, two more kits descend with the control of the chains. At the end of the performance, the gears stop moving.
Read MorePipe Dream
This performance begins with the ball firing testing on the bass/bongo double instrument. The vibraphone fountain and the tubular bells appear to be made of gold. Also, this video is the second most famous Animusic animation, partially in thanks to an email hoax stating that the set was a real machine built at the University of Iowa using farm equipment. The hoax mail also said that it took 13,000 hours to make the performance (equivalent to about a year and a half), including building, calibrating, etc.
Read MoreAcoustic Curves
In the beginning of this animation, the instruments are introduced one at a time, coming from either the ceiling or the abyss floor, and disappear at the end. They seem to play automatically.
Read MoreHarmonic Voltage
This animation's lead instrument is an electronic laser conducted by a tower. Curiously, in this animation, the electronic drums seem to be supported entirely by wires, which act like springs when these drums are struck.
Read MorePipe Dream 2 (Widescreen)
Widescreen format of the main feature, "Pipe Dream 2!"
Read MoreAnimusic 2 (Play All)
Play all Animusic 2 videos.
Read MoreStarship Groove (Cam 1)
Each camera is a single shot for the entire animation, locked on to follow one performer (or two, in the case of the drummers).
Read MoreStarship Groove (Cam 2)
Each camera is a single shot for the entire animation, locked on to follow one performer (or two, in the case of the drummers).
Read MoreStarship Groove (Cam 3)
Each camera is a single shot for the entire animation, locked on to follow one performer (or two, in the case of the drummers).
Read MorePogo Sticks (Rehearsal)
The band runs through the entire piece in a backstage rehearsal room before going onstage. Each performer is present from the start, rather than being introduced one at a time as in the main animation. The music fades out later on this rehearsal version, revealing a little extra flailing at the end.
Read MoreResonant Chamber (Multi-view)
The full instrument model is very complex and has many obstructions, making it difficult to simultaneously view all six instrument components. In this special feature, each component is shown in its own window allowing you to clearly see each part, and how they play together. The music begins right after the intro, and is mixed to clearly bring out each musical part.
Read MoreCathedral Pictures (Construction)
The cathedral structure and major instrument groups are faded on one at a time to reveal the construction of the set, concluding with some unusual camera angles not used in the actual animation. For the audio track a distant organ plays the music from Mussorgsky's "Promenade".
Read MorePipe Dream 2 (Wired, Solid, Shaded)
The entire music animation plays while cycling through wireframe (see-through), white plastic, and final shaded renders, smoothly transitioning from one format to the next. Midway through this feature, it switches to a 3-way split screen to show a simultaneous comparison of all three render styles.
Read MoreFiber Bundles (Mix 1)
A unique application of multiple "angles" and audio streams: four different video blends/audio mixes, from a single front-on camera view. In the first three you only hear and see certain instruments. The last blend/mix shows everything combined together like the completed animation.
Read MoreFiber Bundles (Mix 2)
A unique application of multiple "angles" and audio streams: four different video blends/audio mixes, from a single front-on camera view. In the first three you only hear and see certain instruments. The last blend/mix shows everything combined together like the completed animation.
Read MoreFiber Bundles (Mix 3)
A unique application of multiple "angles" and audio streams: four different video blends/audio mixes, from a single front-on camera view. In the first three you only hear and see certain instruments. The last blend/mix shows everything combined together like the completed animation.
Read MoreFiber Bundles (All)
A unique application of multiple "angles" and audio streams: four different video blends/audio mixes, from a single front-on camera view. In the first three you only hear and see certain instruments. The last blend/mix shows everything combined together like the completed animation.
Read MoreGyro Drums (Quad-view)
Watch the entire animation from 4 different viewpoints symultaneously. The upper right quad-view window shows the entire rig, while the upper left camera is locked on to the inner core player. The bottom two windows show each of the satellite players. All three player cameras move as if attached to their respective player, so (from that perspective) the "world" seems to move and rotate while the players seem stationary.
Read MoreHeavy Light (Construction)
Each of the hundreds of stones and instrument components is inserted in its place. Then the sky evolves over four different versions, ending with the final image used in the animation (that sky is also used on the DVD printed insert.)
Read MoreHeavy Light (Close-ups)
Wayne Lytle's favorite section of Heavy Light is seen from cameras showing some extreme close-ups of the instruments as they play. As these models were never intended to be viewed from this close, you get a “behind-the-scenes” peek at their structure.
Read MoreInside Animusic 1
Interview with Wayne Lytle and David Crognale. Originally released in 2005, it was included in the Animusic HD Blu-ray (2010).
Read MoreInside Animusic 2
Interview with Wayne Lytle and David Crognale. Originally released in 2005, it was included in the Animusic HD Blu-ray (2010).
Read MoreMoving Stills
Slideshow
Read MoreStage Assembly
As released in the Animusic HD Blu-ray. This single video contains all of the stage constructions from Animusic 1 as well as Cathedral Pictures and Heavy Light from Animusic HD. Future Retro, Stick Figures, Aqua Harp, Drum Machine, Pipe Dream, Acoustic Curves, Harmonic Voltage, Cathedral Pictures, Heavy Light.
Read MoreAnimusic HD (Play All)
Play all Animusic HD videos.
Read More