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NUSID

Digital Sound Desk for DJs (2003)

A complete hardware and software system for live music "production." The foundational NUSID project that questioned the traditional boundaries between DJing and creating music.

NUSID Sound Desk - 2003

The Origin

In the 90s, the Commodore Amiga opened the door to the VJ (Video Jockey) world: generating visuals in real time to accompany electronic music sessions. The problem was obvious — synchronizing digital video with DJs spinning vinyl was a technical nightmare. There was no standard protocol, everything was out of sync.

At the same time, Ibiza and BCN immersed me in the electronic sound culture from within: seeing how a set was built and understanding the dynamics between the DJ and the dance floor. In Girona, direct contact with music producers allowed me to know firsthand the limitations of the equipment of the time.

The solution was not to adapt to existing tools, but to build new ones.

The Music Engine

Twelve simultaneous audio channels: four main tracks, two secondary tracks, and six dedicated exclusively to loops —musical fragments of one or several bars playing in a continuous loop. Everything automatically synchronized by beat and bar under a variable master tempo, without altering the original pitch (timestretch).

Each track could be edited in real time while playing: cutting, reordering sections, moving playback forward or backward by jumping whole bars. If the jump was made mid-bar, the system automatically played the fragment of the new position exactly from the same point within the previous bar — guaranteeing a coherent musical transition without interruptions.

Two independent, fully programmable effect modules synchronized with the master tempo could be freely assigned to any track, loop, crossfader, or final output. The effects knew at all times the exact position within the bar, allowing actions like applying a filter exclusively to the start of each bass drum beat.

Architecture and Engineering

Extreme hardware: Internal computer accompanied by multiple DSPs and microcontrollers. All housed in a metallic chassis and completely water-cooled —including the power supply— to guarantee hours of live performance without overheating inside the extremely "warm" environments of clubs and concert halls.

Examples of functionalities: Smart crossfader programmed through an "equalizer" capable of mixing radically different styles without frequency overlap distortion... MIDI output with Time Code configured especially for computer synchronization and control of digital video switchers (GPI port).

Physical design: Built from scratch with a retro-futuristic design using segment displays, semi-transparent plexiglass, and noble wood finishes.

NUSID Sound Desk Detail - Architecture

Recovered Archive

This is how the concept of New mUSIc Design was described and justified in the original communications over twenty years ago:

...before, DJs spun records and musicians created the music, unlike today when everyone dares to (bootlegs, whitelabels, remixes, and other canned stuff). In part, it is "the art of copying," where DJs are the main protagonists... but in the future, models will change: vinyl, analog mixers, and the concept of the traditional DJ in general will adapt to new times... not because I say so, it is pure evolutionary logic, in fact, changes are already starting to show... well, nusid is a new way of understanding what it means to be a DJ; it is a system where tracks, loops, samplers, and effects are synchronized and prepared to "spin," reconstruct, and remix music live, let's say it is a new concept halfway between the DJ and the music producer... ...the desk allows you to have multiple audio tracks without worrying about synchronization, meaning the beat and the bar align... [...] There is a loop box, effect modules, sampler, EQ, sends... ...what I have now is an operational, oversized prototype... which I designed solely to see if the musical concept is valid...

Intro sessions

Text recited in "spoken word" format live over a House music break when starting the set:

I'm not an industrial designer... I'm not an electronic engineer... I'm not a programmer... I'm not a musician... I'm not a sound technician... I'm not a deejay... I'm not a genius... I'm not a prophet... I'm not a crazy... Only... I'm the prisoner of my dreams, the slave of my imagination... Welcome to the new music design... Welcome to the new mix concept... Welcome to NUSID... Enjoy babies...
NUSID Sound Desk Desk Detail Internal Architecture Desk Detail Wood Detail Interface Wood Detail
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