Ujino Muneteru’s electric bento

Following my post about Dekotora, I thought I’d talk about japanese artist Ujino Muneteru who could have been a Dekotora driver from an aesthetics standpoint.

Since 2004, he’s been building instruments called “Rotators” which are a well crafted mix of sundry household appliances. When I discovered “Rotators” I was amazed how carefully assembled they were. It wouldn’t make sound yet it’d be still beautiful pieces of art. But it’s actually designed for making sounds. Muneteru controls “Rotators” through a kind of mixer which turns on/off the instruments. Beat patterns are made by sticking small cubes on vinyl discs and using custom turntables.

The Love Arms Series is nice too.

Website: http://the-rotators.com

Menuteru playing rotators
Menuteru's instruments

There’s an interesting interview of Muneteru on pingmag.jp.

“I set up everything on the table and control everything from the Rotatorhead, so it ends up looking like a cooking show on TV. As for the instruments, the permanent members of the Rotators are: the blender, for its heavy, low frequency sounds - like a punchy kick drum; the drill, set up too for its snappy, tight snare drum sound; and the hair dryer, which is always involved with my performances because it resembles a fuzzy bass but sometimes takes the role of vocals. Then, I control the Rotatorhead and program it to play in a variety of ways.”

More videos on http://www.youtube.com/rotators

1 Comment

  1. tokoloten » Back in time said,

    July 1, 2008 @ 6:26 pm

    […] thought it’d be a good following to the post about Rotators; John Cage performing his brilliant “Water Walk” composition on NBC in […]

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