eHow launches Android app: Get the best of eHow on the go.

How to Circuit Bend on a Kid's Xylophone

Video Preview

    Part of the video series: All About Circuit Bending and Equipment

    Summary: Learn how to bend a circuit on a kid's xylophone in this video series that will help you understand how and when to utilize this unique way of making music.

    Views:
    926
    Presenter
    By Amanda Claire
    eHow Presenter

    Amanda Claire is a leather artist currently living in Austin, Texas, where she specializes on custom pieces that blend traditional technique with modern designs. She designs and...read more

    Post a Comment

    Post a Comment

    Video Transcript

    "AMANDA CLAIRE: All right. So here's another example. This was another kid's toy I got it at a thrift store. I think it was kind of like a little xylophone on wheels, you can kinda see the holes where the wheels were, and I took the wheels out and this one didn't have any switches or buttons on it but does have a lot more of these metal contacts that are connect to different places on the circuit board. So if you connect them with your own body by touching it, you act as a resistor in the circuit. You can change the pitch so something--so here's kind of the sounds that this thing would normally make by pressing this button, plays little songs like this, "Itsy Bitsy Spider," but now I've got these body contacts so I can go. So you know, that's an example of a circuit bent instrument or you know. I've also--as you can see I've got a 1/4-inch guitar jack in here. So I can plug this in to an amplifier and run it through a distortion pedal or delay pedal or reverb or anything and you can get all kinds of crazy sounds out of it. I like to kinda make them my own too, I mean, this has got--I put some of these little beads on it that have a letters on it; if you can see, it says "trilobite". I call this thing the trilobite 'cause it kinda looks like a fossil trilobite I think. You know, here the eyes, and there's the body and everything. So, the point of that is, is that circuit bending is really creative and you know, you're not just rewiring something to make it, make new sounds but a lot of people like to kinda make it look interesting too. And just really have it be kinda of this crazy instrument that really no one else has ever seen before."

    eHow Article: How to Circuit Bend on a Kid's Xylophone

    Related Ads

    • Have you done this? Click here to let us know.
    Get Free Arts & Entertainment Newsletters

    Copyright © 1999-2009 eHow, Inc. Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the eHow Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.   en-US Portions of this page are modifications based on work created and shared by Google and used according to terms described in the Creative Commons 3.0 Attribution License.

    Demand Media
    eHow_eHow Arts and Entertainment