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Published: Thursday, 26 December 2024 at 10:00 AM


Read on to discover just how good – or not – robotic conductors are…

Are robotic conductors really the future for symphony orchestras?

All I want for Christmas is a massive robot conductor. Too much to ask? If Tamagotchi are back – those electronic pets returning from two decades ago to take over Christmas 2024 – then why can’t I be opening an animatronic maestro under the Christmas tree?

We could finally be near the utopia of so many orchestral musicians. Imagine never having to deal again with the all-too-fallible vicissitudes of human conductors. Instead, give those pesky time beating responsibilities to the robots who will never get a beat wrong: down with Abbado, all hail Asimo!

Robotic conductors: Honda’s Asimo

Asimo is Honda’s robotic project, whose zenith of creativity was reached in 2008, when it conducted the Detroit Symphony in The Impossible Dream. Honda quoted a mere $2.5m if you too wanted Asimo to conduct your next concert. But there was a wee problem: it took engineers six months to programme the two minutes of Asimo’s performance, and the robot could neither react in the moment nor come up with an encore. In fact, so impossible was Asimo’s robotic dream that Honda shut the project down in 2018.