Winter Solstice

Monday, May 20, 2024

Music of Tree Rings




Music in the rings inside a tree trunk?

It is well known that the rings of a tree trunk tell a lot about a tree, primarily regarding the water availability during each season of its existence.

Have the tightly packed circles ever reminded you of a larger version of a vinyl record, though? 

Well, artist Bartholomaus Traubeck thought it did. 

He was curious to find out what those rings would “say,” so he invented a type of record player that reads the color and texture variations of the rings inside the cross-section of a tree trunk. 

It interprets the rings into audible sounds, a type of music if you will.

How is something like this even possible? 

Traubeck’s “record player” uses light to interpret the color and texture variations of a tree’s rings into musical notes and instruments.



All it took was PlayStation eye camera and motor for the arm of the record player.

The data was first collected by the camera and then transferred to a computer. 

Using a program called Ableton Live, that data was interpreted into a piano track.

This video lets you listen in on what nature sounds like through Traubeck’s record player. 

If you think you would hear a bunch of crackling or other noises, you’re wrong. 

While these “songs” aren’t traditional harmonies and chords, it’s still eerily beautiful.

Since every tree’s rings are unique, this means that every tree has its own song. 

What this artist has done is essentially create a limitless library of records that are solely one-of-a-kind. 

It’s a completely new way to listen to nature.