Everyone can try synesthesia with a suit that translates music into touch.

SYNESTHETES

Tired: Listening to music.
Wired: Feeling the music.

A mind-bending new suit straps onto your torso, ankles and wrists, then uses actuators to translate audio into vivid vibration. The result: a new way for everyone to experience music, according to its creators. That's especially exciting for people who have trouble hearing.

THE FEELIES

The Music: Not Impossible suit was created by design firm Not Impossible Labs and electronics manufacturing company Avnet. The suit can create sensations to go with pre-recorded music, or a "Vibrotactile DJ" can adjust the sensations in real time during a live music event."

Billboard writer Andy Hermann tried the suit out, and it sounds like a trip.

"Sure enough, a pulse timed to a kickdrum throbs into my ankles and up through my legs," he wrote. "Gradually, [the DJ] brings in other elements: the tap of a woodblock in my wrists, a bass line massaging my lower back, a harp tickling a melody across my chest."

MORE ACCESSIBLE

To show the suit off, Not Impossible and Avnet organized a performance this past weekend by the band Greta Van Fleet at the Life is Beautiful Festival in Las Vegas. The company allowed attendees to don the suits. Mandy Harvey, a deaf musician who stole the show on America's Got Talent last year, talked about what the performance meant to her in a video Avnet posted to Facebook.

"It was an unbelievable experience to have an entire audience group who are all experiencing the same thing at the same time," she said. "For being a deaf person, showing up at a concert, that never happens. You're always excluded."

READ MORE: Not Impossible Labs, Zappos Hope to Make Concerts More Accessible for the Deaf — and Cooler for Everyone [Billboard]

More on accessible design: New Tech Allows Deaf People To Sense Sounds


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