Roland Lamb

Roland Lamb is a British entrepreneur, electronic instrument designer, and CEO of ROLI, a music technology firm. ROLI makes the ROLI Seaboard, a line of digital keyboards that use a pressure-sensitive, squishy surface instead of traditional keys, to provide more different types of responsiveness.

Roland Lamb, CEO pf ROLI, giving a talk at the Web Summit 2017 at Altice Arena in Lisbon.

Early life and career

After high school, Lamb went to Japan, where he studied Zen Buddhism at Antai-ji.[1] He then went to Harvard University, where he studied Chinese philosophy and Sanskrit philosophy.[2] He founded ROLI in 2009 while a graduate student at Royal College of Art in London, an institution he graduated from.

His first prototype of the Seaboard was a response to the design limitations of the piano keyboard as a mechanical interface.[3] As a jazz pianist, he wanted to create on a piano keyboard the effects of pitch and timbre that are often associated with string and brass instruments.

His concept of the pliable, continuous "keywave surface" was the technological foundation of the Seaboard and the firm's related instruments. After Lamb designed the Seaboard, he contacted famous musicians to get them to try it.[4]

The Seaboard digital keyboard won the 2014 Swarovski Emerging Talent award from the 2014 London Design Medals.[5]

gollark: ++delete möld
gollark: OR ARE THEY?
gollark: I would nuke that food and any near it from orbit.
gollark: It's clearly evolved into a new, more dangerous form.
gollark: Pink möld?

References

  1. Cook, James (29 September 2015). "ROLI is the London startup that's building a totally new kind of musical instrument". www.insider.com. Business Insider. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  2. Cook, James (29 September 2015). "ROLI is the London startup that's building a totally new kind of musical instrument". www.insider.com. Business Insider. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  3. "Revolutionary keyboard is music to ears of big investors".
  4. Cook, James (29 September 2015). "ROLI is the London startup that's building a totally new kind of musical instrument". www.insider.com. Business Insider. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  5. "Inside the studio of Roland Lamb". www.wallpaper.com. Wallpaper. Retrieved 17 February 2020.


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