
"What does a stone sound like?" A film portrait of Melodyne inventor Peter Neubäcker The man primarily behind such Celemony innovations as Melodyne, DNA Direct Note Access and Capstan is Peter Neubäcker -- a passionate musician, researcher and inventor, who sets unusual goals for himself and manages even on occasion to realize in practice things that in theory can't be achieved. It was the question "What does a stone sound like?" that led Peter Neubäcker to the invention of Melodyne around 15 years ago. In this interview with Maximilian Schönherr, he airs some of the secrets of Melodyne and offers insights into his thoughts and personal history. He talks about his passion for philosophy, music and mathematics as well as how guitar-making, Johannes Kepler and the science of Harmonics have influenced him. From the conversation, a fascinating 30-minute film portrait has emerged that not only shows one of the most resourceful and multi-facetted personalities in the audio industry but also the background to Celemony innovations. 00:30 -- Music, philosophy and the Numbers 04:25 -- The Monochord, Lambdoma and zero and infinity as the origin of all notes 09:50 -- Grasp and comprehend, chaos and fractals 12:35 -- Programming and guitar-making 16:00 -- Youth, years of quest, and the birth of an interest 21:30 -- The sound of a stone and the idea of Melodyne 24:40 -- DNA Direct Note Access and the legendary roll of bathroom tissue
Peter Neubäcker
Celemony
Melodyne
interview
portrait
Johannes Kepler
Capstan
backstage
monochord
lambdoma
DNA
Direct Note Access
developer
inventor
software
development
audio
technology