(Image: Toru Hanai/Reuters)
Music may seem the last of human activities that robots would encroach on, but this band, Z-Machines, are only the latest proof of the considerable musical skills of robots.
The robotic trio features Mach on guitar, Ashura on percussion and Cosmo on keyboard. They had their first gig in Tokyo, Japan, yesterday, with a guest appearance from . Ayamo, one of the humans, .
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Their creator Yoichiro Kawaguchi dreams of sending his android protégés to other planets to perform. Here on Earth, though, robots already have a rich musical history – both for the sake of entertainment and for exploring the boundaries between humans and machines.
The completely robotic reveals that , while jazzy marimba-playing Shimon can . The idea is to explore how robots and humans can be coaxed into interacting more fluidly.
Robots have even learned to sing. of the University of Plymouth, UK, created warbling robots that converge on a shared tune to explore the potential for robots to evolve culture. It’s beginning to look like Kraftwerk’s 1978 album really was the shape of things to come.
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