Mogees contact mic audio mosaic – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
Skip to main content

Mogees turns a contact mic and any hard surface into a gestural audio input

PhD student Bruno Zamborlin’s Mogees allows you to turn a contact mic and any rigid surface into a touch interface for triggering audio samples.

PhD student Bruno Zamborlin’s Mogees allows you to turn a contact mic and any rigid surface into a touch interface for triggering audio samples.

mogees
mogees
mogees

Banging on lunchroom tables, the favored pastime of teenaged noisemakers everywhere, has just been brought into the 21st century courtesy of Bruno Zamborlin, a PhD student at Goldsmiths, University of London. Zamborlin’s creation, Mogees (short for “mosaicing gestural surface”) allows a simple contact microphone and any hard surface to act as the trigger interface for a database of audio samples. Where it differs from more traditional trigger systems is that every time Mogees gets a new input (i.e., someone bangs, scratches, or rubs the connected surface) it scans its database and plays the most similar piece of audio it has access to. A finger swipe would trigger a different kind of sound than a slap, for instance, and gestures on metal would trigger different sounds than the same gestures on wood.

As far as triggers go, Mogees isn’t limited to just percussive hand gestures – the software can also handle other tools such as the coin in the video below, as well as old-fashioned vocals and acoustic instruments. The system isn’t commercially available, but we’re sure you could cobble one together easily enough with a contact mic, a laptop, and a couple thousand hours of computer research.


Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.