LA Times music Editor Craig Marks with Beatie Wolfe, Linda Perry, Jason Flom & Craig Marks
The Design Podcast on Beatie Wolfe
"When what you do is what you love it’s just wonderful doing that. I feel very blessed in that way.” That was the start of my conversation with Beatie Wolfe – a musician, storyteller and an innovator.
New track Barely Living by Beatie Wolfe - Now Out
Barbican trailer of their documentary on Beatie Wolfe goes live
Playing to people living with dementia in Silver Lake
Playing forward in Los Angeles with the support of The Utley Foundation.
Learn more about Beatie Wolfe’s work exploring the benefits of Music on those living with dementia here (+)
Thank you for the generous support of The Utley Foundation for making this possible.
*Please note person faces have been obscured to protect their privacy.
Talking at USC Iovine Young Academy
LA Times Festival with Wolfe, Perry, Brown & Flom
SXSW19 hosting Mercedes-Benz's EQ Home
She Innovates interview Beatie Wolfe for a UN Women initiative
Visionary Arts on the UN Women's "Impossible to Ignore" Campaign and Beatie Wolfe
UN Impossible to Ignore Campaign
Super proud to be 1 of 9 innovators representing the UN Women “Impossible to ignore” She Innovates campaign for #IWD with our portraits appearing all across the 🌍 from Times Square to London Underground. Billboard portrait taken by Ross Harris, awesome NYC shots by Veanne Cao
New York’s World Trade Center
Few of the 300,000 daily commuters to stream through
Every one of Manhattans 3,750 LinkNYC boards
London’s Liverpool Street Station
Manhattans Fulton Station and its 300,000 visitors that day
She Is Now Impossible To Ignore
MAA on UN Women IWD Campaign
Campaign feature UN's Impossible to ignore with Beatie Wolfe
UN Women celebrate IWD with Beatie Wolfe & co
Raw Space Album Deck Out
Dezeen on Beatie Wolfe's Raw Space Album Deck
Beatie Wolfe's "intelligent" Raw Space album reveals itself as a deck of cards
Musician Beatie Wolfe has uploaded her latest album onto a pack of cards that listeners tap on a phone to play each song.
Each card in the eight-track "album deck" is embedded with a near field communication (NFC) chip that allows listeners to access a song per card when tapped against a device, using technology similar to a city travel card or Apple Pay.
Scanning the card using a NFC-reader app reveals an individual page for the track, which is complete with lyrics, the music video, photos, song notes and information about the card itself.
The content on each card is updated periodically to give the "intelligent" album – called Raw Space – a "living" or "dynamic" quality.
The London-based musician wanted to "reimagine the vinyl experience for the digital age" by adding a tangible element to the listening experience.
"I fell in love with albums as a kid and saw opening up a physical record as a tangible gateway into the world of the album," Wolfe told Dezeen.
"I like that it brings back the tangibility, the story, the artwork and a sense of ceremony to the experience of listening to a record," she explained.
"But at the same time it presents a new way to experience music, so that it feels different and magical. In this sense, it encourages you to go deep and sit down with an album as an art form again," she continued.
Wolfe worked together with eight international designers to make unique graphics for each of the eight cards based on a black and gold foil colour-scheme – a reference to a gold mylar-wrapped space chamber installation she created for the Victoria and Albert Museum last year.
Erik Spiekermann, Marian Bantjes, Astrid Stavro, Lucienne Roberts, Rafael Prieto, Sean Adams, Yuma Naito and design studio Atlas were tasked with creating graphicsfor each card based on their visual response to an assigned song.
"With the gold mylar being a key feature, the idea was then to have each song card freely designed by eight leading international designers to reflect their own visual response to the music. I didn't want to lead this aspect but have it be their own interpretation," said Wolfe.
According to the musician, it is the first time gold foil has been incorporated into a NFC card.
Many designers are embarking on projects exploring the relationship between music and technology.
Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design graduate Liron Gino designed a set of jewellery-like devices that allow deaf and hard-of-hearing people to experience music through vibration.