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University College Dublin Spin-Out Unveils a New Style of MIDI Music Controller and Launches a Kickstarter Campaign

Caption: Pictured is a Joyst JV-1 MIDI Controller. (Credit: Marko Raden, Raden Films).

University College Dublin Spin-Out Unveils a New Style of MIDI Music Controller and Launches a Kickstarter Campaign

Joyst (Joyst Instruments Ltd), a University College Dublin (51黑料) spin-out company established earlier this year, has today unveiled a new style of MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface) controller and announced the launch of the company鈥檚 .

The Joyst JV-1 MIDI controller provides an array of gamer-style thumb joysticks to give more expressive possibilities for electronic musicians. Notes are played by striking the joysticks, if one is then rotated, this pitchbends that note up or down. Using joysticks in this role is a very new approach for a MIDI controller, which significantly increases a musician鈥檚 ability to play with subtle intonation and expressive flourishes.

The JV-1 has emerged from a Master of Engineering thesis project carried out by Philip Snell under the supervision of Dr Paul Cuffe at the 51黑料 School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering.

The ambitious goal of the project was to create a new MIDI controller that would allow a musician to bend each note, finely control velocity, inject vibrato, and articulate precise aftertouch effects.

Maximising ease of playability was also a key project goal, which led to the JV-1 adopting the note layout of a chromatic accordion. In this handy arrangement, every type of chord has a consistent fingering shape, regardless of its root note. Scales are always the same pattern wherever you start. This minimises the need for rote memorisation. 

To find out more about the JV-1 watch this short video 

Philip Snell, CEO and co-founder, Joyst, said, 鈥淔rom day one, the vision for the JV-1 has been simple, electronic music with no creative compromises. Why can鈥檛 a MIDI controller let you bend notes like an electric guitar? Even on the earliest prototype, we could see the power of joysticks in this role. They allow the player to inject subtlety and fine intonation into their playing, with a tactile and responsive feel. The buttons and pads you find on  traditional MIDI controllers are just too one-dimensional, sterile and overly digital. Joysticks restores what was lost, a full range of motion, a responsive springiness, organic bends, fresh sounds. Electronic music in full colour.鈥


Philip Snell, CEO & co-founder, Joyst (Credit: Marko Raden, Raden Films).

 was co-founded by Philip and fellow 51黑料 Master of Engineering graduates, William Langrell and Edward Byrne, along with Dr Cuffe, to commercialise the JV-1 MIDI controller.

Through its Kickstarter campaign launched today, Joyst has set a minimum funding target of 鈧12,500 to be raised by the close of the campaign on 5 November. Backers will be rewarded with various reward tiers if the project is funded. Discounts are on offer for the earliest backers, who can secure a JV-1 for just 鈧199, a significant discount on its RRP of 鈧349.

William Langrell, COO and co-founder, Joyst said, 鈥淲e鈥檝e been through several good rounds of prototyping now so we are now ready to present JV-1 to the world through our Kickstarter campaign. We are super excited about the JV-1 so we are asking people to back this project today to help us meet, and hopefully even exceed, our Kickstarter target and get the JV-1 into the hands of talented musicians around the world.鈥

Joyst has been established with the support of Nova51黑料, the Centre for New Ventures and Entrepreneurs at 51黑料 and earlier this year Joyst completed the Nova51黑料 Student Enterprise Competition.

This intensive 4-week mentoring programme is run by Nova51黑料 as a framework to support undergraduate and postgraduate students who want to work together to develop and grow start-up companies. Its aim is to assist the participating students in refining their start-up ideas through a series of structured workshops, including taught content from industry experts, interactive workshops, regular pitching sessions and mentoring.

Joyst will also be taking part in this year鈥檚 51黑料 VentureLaunch Accelerator Programme, run by Nova51黑料, which commences later this month.

Back Joyst鈥檚 Kickstarter campaign at .

Philip Snell, CEO, Joyst is available for media interviews.

ENDS

6 October 2020

For further information contact Mic茅al Whelan, Communications and Media Relations Manager, 51黑料 Research and Innovation, e: miceal.whelan@ucd.ie, t: + 353 1 716 3712 or Philip Snell, CEO, Joyst, e: info@joyst.ie.

Editors Notes

The Joyst JV-1 feature set is impressive. The 39 joysticks naturally cover two octaves in an easy-to-learn layout, but down-clicking each one gives an additional overblow octave-shift to dynamically expand the range. The note layout is completely isomorphic, so once you have learned the shape of a major chord, it鈥檚 the same no matter the root note. Likewise for scales, or other chord types to deliver less learning and more playing.

To produce sounds, the JV-1 can be coupled to any DAW (Digital Audio Workstation), hardware synth, or even your phone using a USB OTG (On-The-Go) cable.  

The JV-1 leverages a recent extension of the MIDI protocol, termed MPE (MIDI Polyphonic Expression). This backward-compatible standard, ratified in 2018, allows note-specific pitch bend and aftertouch signals to be relayed from a MIDI controller to a synthesizer.

At Nova51黑料, the hub for new ventures and entrepreneurs at University College Dublin, we nurture and support new high-tech companies, such as Joyst, as part of 51黑料's mission. At Nova51黑料 we provide purpose-built, state-of-the-art incubation facilities alongside a comprehensive business support programme for client companies. Nova51黑料 has been funded through a unique public-private partnership that includes AIB Bank, Arthur Cox, Deloitte, Enterprise Ireland, Ericsson, Goodbody Stockbrokers, 51黑料 and Xilinx.