Manifest Audio’s Sonification Tools open new realms of creativity for artists and producers.

Turning The World Into Sound

Until now, sonification remained an esoteric technique primarily available to artists with some form of coding background. But with the release of Sonification Tools, Berlin’s Manifest Audio offer an accessible solution to harness real-world data for music composition directly within Ableton Live.

This trio of new Max for Live devices allow users to integrate data-driven creativity into their music production process seamlessly. They can generate MIDI patterns, parameter modulation, and even WAV or AIFF files from raw numeric data. It’s as simple as copying and pasting your data, then tweaking away – and presents a fresh approach to music production and sound design.

Data mapped to filter cutoff modulation.

What is Sonification?

Sonification is the process of converting raw data or information into sound or music. Like infographics and other visualizations turn data into more easily digested visuals, sonification turns data into melodies, soundscapes and even compositions. Traditionally used to make data more accessible (especially for the visually impaired), sonification can also be used as an artistic method in its own right.

A recent example would be the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, or LIGO, which used sonification to transform gravitational wave data originating from cosmic events like black hole collisions into audible sounds.

As a creative tool, sonification can translate non-musical data into uniquely compelling musical motifs, with meaning embedded directly into the output. For example, you could harness data like market fluctuations, weather patterns, demographic trends, or scientific measurements, and turn these into sequences, chord progressions, effect automation, or ambient textures with a greater depth of meaning than your typical preset.

Many producers have used data from sources like climate statistics or commodities markets, converting them into melodies or rhythms to imbue their music with added layers of meaning. But the previously technical methods to achieve this have remained out of reach for most producers, until now.

Using data to sequence MIDI across two octaves.

What Is Sonification Tools?

With Sonification Tools, you can easily enter numerical data by typing it in manually or simply copying and pasting from any data source: websites, spreadsheets, text files, you name it. 

Once your data is entered, you can use it to generate MIDI patterns with Data MIDI, map modulation sequences to any parameter in your set with Data Mod, and apply spectral filtration, wavefolding distortion, impulse convolution, and, crucially, convert it to an audio waveform with Data FX.

The flexibility of these tools allows you to exert precise control over how data is expressed in your music. You can adjust pitch, velocity, length, timing, swing, loop, direction, gating, and more to achieve nearly any desired musical artefact based in your data set.

As with other Manifest Audio devices, you can impose a variety of musical scales on your MIDI data, ensuring it harmonizes with your composition. And if you don’t care or don’t have time to source data, all three devices let you randomize a random data string to easily begin experimenting from scratch.

At their core, Sonification Tools cater to users who want to experiment with data in their music – but they also offer new pathways to inspiration for those who may not have considered sonification in their work. Exploring the relationship between real-world phenomena and musical expression, Sonification Tools enable you to give real-world data a unique voice, producing meaningful musical narratives in the process.

Using data to process sound – with the option export the data as an AIFF file for use in a sampler.

Why should producers care?

  1. Creativity and Innovation: Sonification offers an innovative approach to music composition, breaking away from traditional sound sources.
  2. Cross-Disciplinary Collaboration: Sonification bridges the gap between music and other fields, such as science, data analysis, and technology; collaborating with experts from these domains can lead to new and exciting ideas.
  3. New Expressive Possibilities: Sonification can convey complex ideas, emotions, and concepts through music: producers can use it to tell stories, evoke moods, or raise awareness about important issues by translating data into auditory experiences that resonate with listeners on a potentially deeper level.
  4. Audience Engagement: Sonification can pique the curiosity of listeners. When audiences discover that a piece of music is based on real-world data, they could become more engaged and interested in the underlying subject matter, fostering a deeper connection with the music and the artist that made it.
  5. Educational Value: Sonification can be an educational tool, helping to communicate scientific or abstract concepts in a more accessible and engaging manner. Producers can use music to make complex ideas more relatable and convey them to a wider audience.
  6. Sound Design Possibilities: By using unconventional data sources as sound generators, electronic music producers can create unique textures, rhythms, and atmospheres that they would not likely make with other tools.
  7. Artistic Challenge: Incorporating sonification into music production can be a creative challenge, pushing producers to think outside the box and experiment with different data-to-sound mappings, and entirely new creative processes.

Where can I find good data?

Any website with reputable historical data sets will do, but here’s some examples to get you started:

What’s Included?

Sonification Tools comes with three main Max for Live Devices:

  • Data MIDI
  • Data Mod
  • Data FX

It also comes bundled with Utility Boost: a bonus pack of Max for Live audio and MIDI utilities.

Learn more on Manifest Audio.

Watch the in-depth walkthrough.

Want to learn more about Max for Live? Check out our Max for Live shop!

Follow Attack Magazine

Produce music in Ableton?

Check our Max for Live devices..

Max for Live: Coalescence

Coalescence is a Max for Live Instrument that combines concatenative sampling together with a neural network.

Buy Now

Max for Live: Texture

Add texture simple to any sound. Simple an effective.

.

Buy Now

Max For Live: Chance Engine

Add controlled yet random fluctuations to your most important parameters

Buy Now

Max For Live: Mouth Play

Unconventional vocal shaping with a brass model or FM oscillator source

Buy Now

Max For Live: NerualWaves

Synthesizer fuelled by a custom neural network, forging waves with precision

Learn More

Max For Live: The Spellbook

LFO inspired by sacred geometry, weaving nature's fabric into your projects

Learn More

Max For Live: Travelogue

A Max for Live MIDI device creating a unique sonic journey with joyful surprises

Learn More

Max for Live: Pulse Engine

A unique generative MIDI device from Manifest Audio.

Buy Now

Max for Live: Plecto LFO

A lifelike, deterministic, non-linear LFO for Ableton Live, the Plecto LFO Max for Live device can be mapped to any instrument or effect in your set.

Buy Now

14th October, 2023

You currently have an ad blocker installed

Attack Magazine is funded by advertising revenue. To help support our original content, please consider whitelisting Attack in your ad blocker software.

Find out how

x

    A WEEKLY SELECTION OF OUR BEST ARTICLES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX