The Slide-A-Phone: a Tactile Accessible Musical Instrument
Andrew McMillan, and Fabio Morreale
Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression
- Year: 2025
- Location: Canberra, Australia
- Track: Paper
- Pages: 218–223
- Article Number: 31
- DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.15698839 (Link to paper and supplementary files)
- PDF Link
Abstract
This paper details the design and development of the Slide-A-Phone, an Accessible Musical Instrument (AMI). The first author's spinal cord injury in 2004 hindered their ability to play traditional instruments, which motivated the development of the Slide-A-Phone. The Slide-A-Phone utilises tactile interfaces coupled with analogue and digital sensors to replicate the playability and expressive control of a saxophone, the instrument the first author used to play before the incident. The design process incorporated phenomenological perspectives and a blend of design methodologies, with the specific goal of fostering a robust musician-instrument relationship. We report insights into how personal experiences shape design and functionality, and the importance of accessible instruments in enabling creative practice and performance for individuals with limited functionality. We also describe the design and technical implementation of the Slide-A-Phone evaluate the instrument's effectiveness and reflect on its potential to enhance musical engagement, social connections, cultural participation, and professional development.
Citation
Andrew McMillan, and Fabio Morreale. 2025. The Slide-A-Phone: a Tactile Accessible Musical Instrument. Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.15698839 [PDF]
BibTeX Entry
@article{nime2025_31, abstract = {This paper details the design and development of the Slide-A-Phone, an Accessible Musical Instrument (AMI). The first author's spinal cord injury in 2004 hindered their ability to play traditional instruments, which motivated the development of the Slide-A-Phone. The Slide-A-Phone utilises tactile interfaces coupled with analogue and digital sensors to replicate the playability and expressive control of a saxophone, the instrument the first author used to play before the incident. The design process incorporated phenomenological perspectives and a blend of design methodologies, with the specific goal of fostering a robust musician-instrument relationship. We report insights into how personal experiences shape design and functionality, and the importance of accessible instruments in enabling creative practice and performance for individuals with limited functionality. We also describe the design and technical implementation of the Slide-A-Phone evaluate the instrument's effectiveness and reflect on its potential to enhance musical engagement, social connections, cultural participation, and professional development.}, address = {Canberra, Australia}, articleno = {31}, author = {Andrew McMillan and Fabio Morreale}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression}, doi = {10.5281/zenodo.15698839}, editor = {Doga Cavdir and Florent Berthaut}, issn = {2220-4806}, month = {June}, numpages = {6}, pages = {218--223}, title = {The Slide-A-Phone: a Tactile Accessible Musical Instrument}, track = {Paper}, url = {http://nime.org/proceedings/2025/nime2025_31.pdf}, year = {2025} }