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On Mon, Sep 22, 2008 at 7:26 AM, Travis Hartnett <travishartnett@gmail.com> wrote: > SoCal officials to pave over music-making asphalt > > THE ASSOCIATED PRESS > > LANCASTER, Calif. -- Residents of northern Los Angeles County are not > grooving to this music. > > Lancaster city officials said this week that they're paving over a > quarter-mile strip of asphalt grooved to play the William Tell Overture >when > auto tires speed over it. > > The road was completed this month as part of an ad campaign for Honda. >It's > engineered to play the overture - also known as the theme to "The Lone > Ranger" - at perfect pitch for motorists driving Honda Civics at 55 mph. > > But neighbors aren't amused. One says the road music sounds like a > high-pitched drone. Another says it keeps him and his wife up at night. > > Lancaster officials plan to pave over the grooves Tuesday. Such a funny idea! While each driver will hear only his own generated playback those poor neighbors will be hearing all the generated versions at the same time, non synchronized. This makes me remember an idea for a "music art installation" I have been amusing myself with in my imagination but without ever getting the founding to make happen in the real world: Twenty gettho blaster machines hanging from the ceiling at normal ear height from the floor and all set to instant random playback. Would probably sound similar if the boxes were loaded with the same CD. -- Greetings from Sweden Per Boysen www.boysen.se (Swedish) www.looproom.com (international) www.myspace.com/perboysen www.stockholm-athens.com