I just realized why I´m doing the Marble Machine Project

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Sisyphus and the impossible dream:
• Sisyphus and the Impos...
A very interesting perspective on the MMX:
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Пікірлер: 2 700

  • @Flako-dd
    @Flako-dd2 ай бұрын

    "It has to be cool" is a perfectly valid non-functional requirement.

  • @bradley3549

    @bradley3549

    2 ай бұрын

    Especially for something that is as close to the point where art and engineering intersect as this whole journey has been.

  • @Flako-dd

    @Flako-dd

    2 ай бұрын

    @@bradley3549 exactly, finding the perfect balance between engineering, music and the art of the machine itself is really the goal to call it a success. For me at least ☺️

  • @Uryendel

    @Uryendel

    2 ай бұрын

    it's a functional requirement, it's even the main one who care about a boring machine that play music, I have a mp3 player that do that

  • @dmacpher

    @dmacpher

    2 ай бұрын

    And a critical requirement for functioning Nuclear Reactors oddly enough!

  • @thomasbecker9676

    @thomasbecker9676

    2 ай бұрын

    @@dmacpher We don't use the word "cool," we use specific temperature values, as "cool" is relative.

  • @TonySteinbach
    @TonySteinbach2 ай бұрын

    This video genuinely feels like a relief. The joke of “Martin is eventually going to scrap the marbles and design a synthesizer” felt like it was getting closer and closer to the reality.

  • @NeonNijahn

    @NeonNijahn

    2 ай бұрын

    So much this!

  • @Bee-ih5uy

    @Bee-ih5uy

    2 ай бұрын

    Absolutely agree!

  • @abbywoodhead2764

    @abbywoodhead2764

    2 ай бұрын

    a few videos ago he was so hung up on "it needs to play to note at EXACTLY the right rythm or im scraping the whole thing" he really was trying to make a synthe that used marbles. im so glad he remembered his roots

  • @alexkfridges

    @alexkfridges

    2 ай бұрын

    Agree 100%

  • @akumabito2008

    @akumabito2008

    2 ай бұрын

    Absolutely! When he started on this journey, loads of people warned him for EXACTLY that outcome. It would sound boring, it would look boring. Bring back the rule of cool! 😎

  • @EdwinSteiner
    @EdwinSteiner2 ай бұрын

    Martin rediscovers not only engineering but also the importance of beauty in art. What a great journey through human creativity!

  • @johncarey9149

    @johncarey9149

    2 ай бұрын

    Very well put Sir, I wish I could have come up with something quite so eloquent.

  • @mr.textwall5327
    @mr.textwall53272 ай бұрын

    I was struck when I first saw _the_ Marble Machine. It looked like a dream - surreal, impossible and illusory. There it stood, a hand-cranked piece of plywood on thin legs with pencil-labelled handles, bent wire tracks that rumbled and shuffled as it played. The background was plain white, only accentuated by scattered wires and marbles. Yet it was the most beautiful thing I've ever seen, a raw piece of imagination brought into reality. So, my congratulations! Whatever you create next will be indescribably phenomenal.

  • @sphygo

    @sphygo

    2 ай бұрын

    Beautifully written! I agree 100%

  • @rikardottosson1272

    @rikardottosson1272

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes! But also, part of the coolness was the thought that it actually worked. The fact that it didn’t actually work , I mean that it had reliability issues to the point that they could barely film believable B-roll - took a lot away, and I understand why Martin was chasing reliability for so long, but yes, in third place of priorities coolness definitely belongs. Sure, Martin needs to keep his limbs whilst playing, and the songs need to be on time, harmonious and groovy BUT nobody is going to care unless it actually looks cool.

  • @akumabito2008
    @akumabito20082 ай бұрын

    Martin, my dude, for a long time people have warned you in the comments that you’re engineering all the art, heart and soul out of the MM. I am SO happy you FINALLY came to the same conclusion on your own accord! Let's go!! Design requirement #3: Rule of cool!

  • @pvic6959

    @pvic6959

    2 ай бұрын

    i cant believe AGILE SCRUM with the user stories got him there LOL

  • @grahamsnyder762

    @grahamsnyder762

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@pvic6959 It's unironically a really good testimonial. Wild

  • @Basuko_Smoker

    @Basuko_Smoker

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@pvic6959never would of guessed my work made more sense than ever lol

  • @mal2ksc

    @mal2ksc

    Ай бұрын

    The Rule of Cool, at least in running RPGs, is that it's fine and fun to add flash and style, but not at the cost of compromising balance. In this case, if he inadvertently improves the machine while prettying it up, I think he'll let that result stand -- but the first priority needs to be on not breaking it.

  • @jamescondon1222
    @jamescondon12222 ай бұрын

    Being both an artist and an engineer, I'm genuinely so happy to see you realise this! Having watched you for the past 5 years, and even based my own university project around making a marble machine, I was disappointed to see you go towards the functional pragmatic version. I cannot wait to see you create an awesome artistic machine!

  • @Kandy96

    @Kandy96

    2 ай бұрын

    It's like we are watching an internal battle between his inner engineer and artist! But in the end, there was never any need to fight.

  • @Kandy96

    @Kandy96

    2 ай бұрын

    It's like we are watching an internal battle between his inner engineer and artist! But in the end, there was never any need to fight.

  • @SpeedyGwen

    @SpeedyGwen

    2 ай бұрын

    I also saw the same thing, I always thought that he cared WAY too much with timing and the "no compromise" which ended up never finishing the second machine

  • @prebenkul

    @prebenkul

    2 ай бұрын

    @@SpeedyGwen Yeah if he wanted it to be perfect, he should of just bought a midi keyboard. The imperfection is what makes us human, without it, it'd be like listening to audio and not an actual performance.

  • @takanara7

    @takanara7

    2 ай бұрын

    @@prebenkul This is just delusional, he wanted a machine that could play music that didn't sound bad to his ears, and to be able to go on tour with it, which he couldn't do with the MMX, that is he needed a machine that was reliable and consistent. I also think the engineering stuff is interesting.

  • @dvandamme00
    @dvandamme002 ай бұрын

    it takes a massive amount of fortitude to look at such a large body of work and say, 'no this isn't going how I want', then to try again and again and again to get the trajectory to match the goal... hats off to you Martin.

  • @FIIRdesu
    @FIIRdesu2 ай бұрын

    Solving the mechanical problems first (marble dropper, power input, programming wheel, timing etc) with prototypes was a prerequisite to solving the beautiful complete machine. With the engineering journey you've been through, now you are in a better position than ever to approach that goal.

  • @Cynbel_Terreus
    @Cynbel_Terreus2 ай бұрын

    He finally gets it, it might have taken a few years, but Martin finally understands what we've all been trying to tell him.

  • @faithful451

    @faithful451

    2 ай бұрын

    Speak for yourself, I enjoy the engineering

  • @AdelaeR

    @AdelaeR

    2 ай бұрын

    The best helmsmen stand on the shore. In other words: it's easy to criticize while doing nothing instead of appreciating those who do the work. Martin has made a transition from artist to designer and engineer. That in itself has been an interesting and entertaining coming-of-age-story. Now he's at the point where he's looking for harmony between it all. "Happiness is a journey, not a destination".

  • @wassupbros4629

    @wassupbros4629

    2 ай бұрын

    @@faithful451Yeah i like the engineering but what i dont like is him edging us for 2 years working on the mmx then just blue balling us by just scrapping it all together without even playing a song on it

  • @AdelaeR

    @AdelaeR

    2 ай бұрын

    @@wassupbros4629The MMX continued and did play a song.

  • @jeremiahfink9709

    @jeremiahfink9709

    2 ай бұрын

    @@wassupbros4629 He doesn't owe you anything

  • @ianandrews7198
    @ianandrews71982 ай бұрын

    The thing that made me love the marble machine was that the machine reciprocated the energy that you put into it. The machine was playing with you by it's movement, it's sound, it's quarks and it's beauty.

  • @TheGreatAtario

    @TheGreatAtario

    2 ай бұрын

    And don't forget its electrons!

  • @ZenOwl
    @ZenOwl2 ай бұрын

    I KNEW we would get to this point again! Function over form is great and all, BUT half the reason I want to see the Marble Machine live is because the previous iterations looked SO COOL! Not to mention the music is pretty great too xD

  • @arfink

    @arfink

    2 ай бұрын

    I think the important thing to remember is, he couldn't tour with either previous machine, because marble machine 1 was too fragile, and both mm and mmx were not tight enough for live performance without correcting the timing in post in the studio.

  • @wiebel7569
    @wiebel75692 ай бұрын

    I still can't point at what is the best about Wintergatan. The transparency of Martin's thought process, the walking the edge on giving up, constantly changing everything, the massive deep-dive into whatever needs be be dived, the constant change between art/engineering, pragmatism/ideology, giving up/going live, welding/cutting. I'm not even sure if I want to know. I'm still amazed by your development, a musician doesn't simply go out and end up needing the autodesk staff to bring up their product to his specs, of course after having mastered TIG welding, CNC, 3D-printing, supply-chain management, working with tho most complex spreadsheet known to men. It boggles the mind. The only thing that I do know for sure is I don't want it to stop. Of course giving up due to being overwhelming would be the totally natural for like everybody since day one. But somehow your volition seems to prevent you from failing. I will follow in awe.

  • @MicheleeiRettili

    @MicheleeiRettili

    2 ай бұрын

    great comment! Completely agree

  • @alexylva

    @alexylva

    2 ай бұрын

    It's like a live fight between the right and the left side of his brain!

  • @nathanaelletchford7987
    @nathanaelletchford79872 ай бұрын

    Martin, I've been a constant viewer, watching since the original marble machine, through the MMX series and on this most recent iteration. I'm an engineer by training and an artist when I can be. This is one of the best videos you've put out, ever. I'm ecstatic to see the future of the project, approached with this attitude. I believe!

  • @Mister_Ben

    @Mister_Ben

    2 ай бұрын

    YASSSSS!!!

  • @HANIMEME
    @HANIMEME2 ай бұрын

    You finally get it!!

  • @erylkenner8045
    @erylkenner80452 ай бұрын

    This makes me incredibly happy. After seeing the original marble machine when it came out, I watched every video of yours up until the day you stopped working on the MMX. The journey was fantastic, but the negative view you had of it and the decision to abandon was sad for myself and many others and made it made it hard to watch someone so obviously go down a path I didn't agree with. I check in every 6 months or so now, just to see if you've realized the artistry you have when you don't focus on function over form, and seeing this today made me so happy. I'm an engineer myself, so of course I appreciate excellent function, but the whole point of this project was function given difficult form. That's what made it beautiful. I'm glad you realized exactly this!

  • @sphygo

    @sphygo

    2 ай бұрын

    Same!

  • @Antiath

    @Antiath

    2 ай бұрын

    On the other end, if he wants to go on tour and his machine can barely play one song and he has to repair it after every concert...that's not practical. I see why if he decided to completly change the design but ...yeah same as you. I'm not convinced this new design was the way to go.

  • @Guru13666
    @Guru136662 ай бұрын

    FALLING MARBLES ARE COOL! FALLING MARBLES ARE COOL! FALLING MARBLES ARE COOL! Gears are pretty cool but I want to see falling marbles! Maybe Fluorescent marbles + UV light would be really epic!

  • @LukaszKisala

    @LukaszKisala

    2 ай бұрын

    Imagine coming back from a show with a marble you managed to pick up from the floor - so cool!

  • @liampeterson5976

    @liampeterson5976

    2 ай бұрын

    Wait oh my god fluorescent marbles would be sick

  • @_InTheBin

    @_InTheBin

    2 ай бұрын

    I definitely would autograph one by Martin!!! As a drummer it's THE thing coming from a concert with a "won" stick from the Artist themselves. Finally noone cares at all and comments it as a fail that they dropped it, though, we hate it as drummers but fans love it!

  • @ksflyinghigh

    @ksflyinghigh

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes!! You could take it a step further and make the UV light a strobe. Then you can mess with the strobe timing... make the marbles "fall upwards", or hang mid-air etc. That would be an awesome surprise to switch on during one special song in a full concert.

  • @Do_Odles

    @Do_Odles

    2 ай бұрын

    I vote for UV marbles with UV-lit section of marble machine ...would look amazing on stage!

  • @alexkirwan7146
    @alexkirwan71462 ай бұрын

    Yay! My Wilson's back. Martin, I love that you have taken this direction again. Remember, you are doing this for a lot of things, but don't forget you're also doing this for you. ❤

  • @stonebayrocker
    @stonebayrocker2 ай бұрын

    Came for the original mm, stayed for the exciting personal art & engineering journey! Thank you for giving so much of your self to us! The fascinating wooden marble machine that was just ridiculous cool and magical! Simple but yet so complex! - can't wait for this journey to start!

  • @heliogenesi
    @heliogenesi2 ай бұрын

    Yessssssssss, finally Martin. That's what I have been thinking about your project for years now. There is no point in a machine that plays music through dropping marbles if it doesn't feel like some mad person did a mad attempt at creating something insane, literal sense of the word. You were almost taking out the soul from the whole thing. It was a relief to watch this video.

  • @shalankwa
    @shalankwa2 ай бұрын

    Im really glad to came to this conclusion. The Art of the first two machines was what made it interesting to many people. It's still definitly very interesting to see the engineering involved with making a successful machine at playing tight music, but it somehow lacks the magic of the first two

  • @montanaotter5681
    @montanaotter56812 ай бұрын

    YAY!!! You have finally come back to your senses! I skipped a lot of videos when you went down the rathole of "tight" music to the millisecond, to the detriment of everything else. So glad you see that Fun and Cool Looking are what attract most of us to this crazy project. Enjoy the process! Have fun!

  • @DM-wi8wb
    @DM-wi8wb2 ай бұрын

    We have to find a way for Martin to visit Walt Disney Imagineering. The *experience* is the why -- to make people marvel and laugh and gape in awe. The amazing engineering exists to serve *that* purpose. The Marble Machine Project is no different, and I'm so happy to see Martin coming to understand it!

  • @dacasman
    @dacasman2 ай бұрын

    What you said in the first 30 seconds is exactly why for the past year Ive been feeling kind of sad about the almost obsessive drive for near perfect engineering on this current marble machine. And to hear you realize this and have a total change of direction makes me so incredibly happy, relieved and excited!

  • @TBMVD
    @TBMVD2 ай бұрын

    One of the things I like about the first marble machine is the sounds the machine makes. It makes it feel alive and honestly it feels like it adds onto the music and doesn't disrupt it.

  • @lazy_ape
    @lazy_ape2 ай бұрын

    The most functional marble machine is just a MIDI keyboard where the marbles are the electrons in the circuits. The marble machine has to be a piece of art and creativity because Martin is an artist at heart, not an engineer. Look at Wintergatan's old live shows. They are filled with creativity, like playing on a typewriter or using a very crude music box with a noisy Lego motor running it. That worked absolutely fine! :)

  • @ianmcdaniel8261
    @ianmcdaniel82612 ай бұрын

    Marvin, your discussion here is spot on. I never realized why I didn’t like the spread out modular design until you talked about it here. The meld of art and engineering was the allure in the first place! Super happy to see you coming back to it!

  • @Particelomen
    @Particelomen2 ай бұрын

    Good morning Martin! I can't express how happy and excited I am that you woke up from your engineering drowse and found your way back to the heart of the two first machines! I kept on following you because I wanted to support you as a person, but now however, I'm back to being as excited for this artistic adventure as we all were all those years ago!

  • @Agisek
    @Agisek2 ай бұрын

    I'm glad Martin finally realized that the only way Marble Machine would be perfectly reliable, playing tight music and also safe, was to make a little black box with a track for a single marble, which presses a button to start an MP3 player. Now we can finally build the Marble Machine.

  • @nielsencs
    @nielsencs2 ай бұрын

    Thank goodness! My heart sank when you published the mega-stage-multi-platform-hidden-marble-machine design. I have followed your work since before the MM - I stumbled on a Wintergatan music video that blew me away and subscribed. I've loved watching you build the MM and MMX. You're back on track and I love it!

  • @yeahboi686
    @yeahboi6862 ай бұрын

    The first time I became excited about the MMX was with the sound of marble stepper stairs... the noise just sounds so cool! Make it look cool Martin.

  • @gmlr
    @gmlr2 ай бұрын

    This genuinely makes me very happy, Martin! You refer(ed?) to the MMX as a failure, but for me it brought so many great memories. The „I moved to France“ video was pure magic with the sky timelapse… and the videos that followed were so creative and just joyful to watch. Whenever you started on your „I want to be a serious engineer“ detour, for me some of the magic was lost. I really really really hope that this new perspective on the marble machine primarily makes you happy. Or at least enables you to decide to be happy with what you do! A happy Martin is a creative land wonderful Martin! I wish you all the best on your further journey and will remain a faithful watcher of your videos :)

  • @MarcelE80
    @MarcelE802 ай бұрын

    You are so right. Whenever I saw the design of the new marble machine it didn't appeal to me as much as the first two, but I didn't question it. This is the way to go!

  • @DaOptika
    @DaOptika2 ай бұрын

    Hallelujah! My wife (artsy) and me (Engineer) watched every single of your videos for years, and starting with the MM3, we both started screaming at the screen because you just forgot the most important things about the whole project: Fun, creative construction ...and jank! In the initial MM video, seeing all those marbles on the floor, seeing all those handcrafted gears rattling around, super noisy switches, hand written channel names, but still playing great music: that was just super cool!

  • @Fubuki43
    @Fubuki432 ай бұрын

    I’m so happy with everything you’ve said in this video ❤ The only thing I would say is that it IS in fact possible to ask “Why?” for art, and the answers can be: Because it’s beautiful, because it’s cool, because it excites people, because it conveys emotion :)

  • @TheMoonWatcher
    @TheMoonWatcher2 ай бұрын

    I'm willing to bet that you sharing your journey has helped a lot of people learn a whole lot. I know I have learned a lot from it for sure. Even now, I just shared a screenshot(and a link) with the 5 steps of Document Setup with a friend of mine(we're both developers), since it can be applied to pretty much anything you make. I believe that someday you'll manage to complete the marble machine that you really want to make, even if that vision continues morphing as you're working towards it! In the meantime - thank you for sharing your journey and all the things that you learn and discover along the way!

  • @63banshe
    @63banshe2 ай бұрын

    Martin, you have just done what I do with my clients as a business consultant. I think your insight is brilliant, I would love to show it to all my clients to make them realize how important it is to ask themselves these questions before making decisions or investing money and effort.

  • @Nico_Dica
    @Nico_Dica2 ай бұрын

    I was in love with the (not final) look of the MMX and I actually had stopped watching your videos since you "gave up" on it. I'm very glad to hear that you are back with the spirit I appreciated the most about this project, making cool stuff. 😊😊

  • @Achaegus
    @Achaegus2 ай бұрын

    Amazing that you have had this realisation. I had faith in you so I have still been following the new machine but couldn't help but feel the soul or the project was gone. the form of the MMX was perfect from an art perspective. You definitely pivoted too hard to "I'm fed up of form stopping function I want my machine to work" Keep going Martin. When you finally finish this project it will be a masterpiece!

  • @EricLippert1972
    @EricLippert19722 ай бұрын

    Thank goodness! When I saw the sketch of the whole-stage machine I knew that you were deeply in the grip of "second-system-syndrome" -- the tendency to replace elegant and simple solutions that do one thing well, with bloated broken systems that try to do everything badly. The joy of marble machines is precisely that they shouldn't work but somehow they do. I'm glad you're getting back to that attitude.

  • @cartanfan-youtube
    @cartanfan-youtube2 ай бұрын

    YESSS!!!! BRING BACK THE ART AND PERSONALITY!! The rule of cool on thr first marble machine was insane and a feel like its a big reason why it resonated with so many people. This whole project started with the spectre of watching marbles fly around and seeing the marvelous mechanical movements the machine made; the clicks, the marbles falling on the floor, the deep low noise of the wooden gears. I was honestly devastated when you got rid of the marble dropper fingers on the mmx (not to say i dont totally understand it, they were a bit of a nightmare). Imo, It marked the beginning of all the art getting engineered and optomized away. I understand you wanted reliability, but the compexity and things you often saw as failure (machine noise, marbles on the floor, loud clicks and shunts) gave them so much personality!!!! (Sorry for rambling on a bit in the end, this has been an amazing project though highs and lows, and has been an extremely important part of my life through middle and highschool, and now adult life (crazy how time does that)). Love you martin, and i hope you can learn to love all parts of yourself and your machine.

  • @wellsee123
    @wellsee1232 ай бұрын

    #1 for me is your Music. It always has been - I can't wait to hear more Wintergaten! #2 is the cool marble machine #3 pvc pipe bending, welding, cycling and philosophy

  • @Monty-ce6vf
    @Monty-ce6vf2 ай бұрын

    OMG, Martin, I was so happy watching this video! I've watched your videos for six years and never commented, but I can't hold back any longer! I am literally a requirements engineer (aka Systems Engineer) and have experienced what you described in your video for my entire career. "I'm busy designing! I don't have time for requirements." I'm SOOOO glad you had this realization that saved you all this time before you built something. This is EXACTLY what systems engineering is for! You are singing my song, my man!!! Also, I love the skeleton clock concept. I have multiple wrist watches and pocket watches and they are ALL skeleton clocks! You are exactly right that the interest in this machine is the balance between engineering and art. I was going to say that if you can figure out how to quantify what "looks cool" looks like then you can write some killer requirements, but you are already ahead of my with the skeleton clock idea. Keep it up!!

  • @ProfSimonHolland
    @ProfSimonHolland2 ай бұрын

    as a sculptor working with machines...i totally agree. the inspiring 'look' of the mechanical sculpture is what inspires my audience. solving the engineering issues is fun but secondary to the big picture of being fun and creative.

  • @daniellurussek8124
    @daniellurussek81242 ай бұрын

    Welcome back Martin! After following every step of your journey, it is such a relief to hear these words. My marble machine poster is going back up on my studio wall tomorrow!

  • @robertholtz
    @robertholtz2 ай бұрын

    Martin! Martin! I've only said this to you about 14 times over these many years. You are an ARTIST. You make ART. Making a machine that makes music from marbles is your audacious artistic quest. One thing though. Gears ARE cool but marbles are COOLER. This is the MARBLE machine not the gear machine. What we mostly want to see is marbles dropping in musical time. Marbles are mesmerizing. Gears are too. Don't get me wrong. But the marbles are the star. I highly recommend you explore the realm of KINETIC SCULPTURE as a category. Take a look at works in that category for inspiration. If you look there, I think you will find the sweet spot. It must have the precision and reliability of a well engineered machine but ultimately above all else it is an artistic statement. Cheers my friend.

  • @JK-mo2ov
    @JK-mo2ov2 ай бұрын

    This is why we all get frustrated every time multiple episodes and many months are focused on submillisecond accuracy.

  • @Ammoniummetavanadate

    @Ammoniummetavanadate

    2 ай бұрын

    I love those to be fair

  • @OculusUniversale

    @OculusUniversale

    2 ай бұрын

    To be fair I loved those videos too, it'd be great to incorporate those improvements (and the huygen drive especially, for example) into the MMX form factor I was just saddened at the whole stage-like machine, as Martin said that lost the soul of the Marble Machine

  • @AdelaeR

    @AdelaeR

    2 ай бұрын

    The best helmsmen stand on the shore.

  • @thomasbecker9676

    @thomasbecker9676

    2 ай бұрын

    You can't convince the culties that your frustration is justified, though.

  • @AppliedCryogenics

    @AppliedCryogenics

    2 ай бұрын

    @@thomasbecker9676 what is up with your crusade to shit on martin's dream? Did he steal your girlfriend or something?

  • @gregfraser4052
    @gregfraser40522 ай бұрын

    There where stretches over the years where I was convinced that we'd never see a working MM in the form that Martin was envisioning. But it never mattered to me. Because every weekly video was a new insight into someone's wholly unique journey with an unknown outcome. It was always interesting to learn about struggles, creative solutions, epiphanies, going back on previous decisions, doubts, commitments, unproductive lulls, hi-energy sprints and every other conceivable aspect of this creative endeavour. It's the epitome of "The journey is the destination" and I'm all for it. That being said, I do highly favour your resurfaced notion of this machine also being a spectacular piece of art over just an assembly line of ideal engineering solutions.

  • 2 ай бұрын

    Martin, what was mesmerizing for me when watching the first video was seeing the marbles being captured by funnels after hitting the instruments. I couldn't believe this thing was real. Also, turning a crank and changing levers was absolutely cool. The Marble Machine song was something amazing, too. The melody doesn't leave my head for days after I watch the original video.

  • @erkalanger
    @erkalanger2 ай бұрын

    What is even more important than visible gears is to see where the marbles hit the instruments, so that cameras can zoom in on the action. This is where the music happens.

  • @riuphane
    @riuphane2 ай бұрын

    Oh man... It has been a long time coming... I'm glad you're here with us. I started watching this channel because you had a cool and fun machine and ambitions to make something fun to watch and listen to. I've stayed for the interesting self education on engineering and problem solving. I've struggled with how quickly you dismiss things simply because it's not precise enough. It's good leaning and discussion, but most of your viewers don't care about the last .1% of "slop". I think you're on the right path now and I wish you all the luck, not just with KZread, but with your art and self actualization!!!

  • @Slitheringpeanut
    @Slitheringpeanut2 ай бұрын

    I am happy you've reached this point. I was one of those who liked the original design. The best answer is another question is "Why NOT?" And all I can say is, thank you. I'm glad you stuck with it for so long.

  • @MicheleeiRettili
    @MicheleeiRettili2 ай бұрын

    the full circle martin did during this project is so amuzing and cool to watch! Kudos, Martin!

  • @Dretnep
    @Dretnep2 ай бұрын

    I'm so glad to hear this. I fell in love with your project due to your iterative, almost evolutionary approach to engineering, trying to balance the beauty of both elegant engineering and artsy marble movement. This is making my day.

  • @nopenope6834
    @nopenope68342 ай бұрын

    This is a crucial turning point in the series. I love how this art project has slowly morphed into something bigger: by now it is just as much about character growth as it is about marbles and music. It obviously wasn't always easy, but it's a beautiful story. I am more excited than ever about the marble machine Martin will build now.

  • @nnm35
    @nnm352 ай бұрын

    My prayers are answered! So elated you are returning to making a mezmerizing sculpture! Thanks for all these years of sharing your learning, struggles, ups, downs, and sideways! It's all been great and I look forward to MM XI (you ARE turning it up to Eleven!)

  • @overbehindunder
    @overbehindunder2 ай бұрын

    This might well be my favourite video in all the wintergatan videos, 2nd only to the MMX playing a drum track whilst you played guitar over the top - THAT's my favourite because it was so fun and cool, which I believe is the point. Thank you for continuing to inspire and tell your story, it really is all about the journey for me.

  • @realsammyt
    @realsammyt2 ай бұрын

    This is one of my most favourite videos of all time, and somehow IMO the best video you have ever made so far (I love all your Marble Machine process and final performance pieces and share them with my kids as inspiration). THIS IS TRUE ART, this is what makes us HUMAN.

  • @zacpark1574
    @zacpark15742 ай бұрын

    Beautiful journey Martin, love hearing you share the story of coming full circle! 💫

  • @GrandCorbeau
    @GrandCorbeau2 ай бұрын

    That's awesome! So excited to see what cool designs you and the community will come up with!

  • @legoguy500
    @legoguy5002 ай бұрын

    This is a pivotal moment in your Marble Machine journey. I’ve been here since the start of your MMX project, fascinated by the challenges you faced and the myriad of solutions that you developed to address them. I’m happy to hear that you’ve recognized the true spirit of the original playful, imperfect, artistic machine that started it all, and now see the whole point of your continued pursuit of this project. Here’s to the next MM version!

  • @giannisprokopos9377
    @giannisprokopos93772 ай бұрын

    Martin, I'm a greek fan from the start and even though years and years I'm watching all of your videos, it's the first time I'm commenting on one, just to say that I really loved your epiphany and your decision. I was enjoying and waiting for like crazy this new marble machine to finish, yet something was off, something was missing from the process. Your decision made it clear and obvious at last. Keep up!

  • @MichaelTheGuy
    @MichaelTheGuy2 ай бұрын

    I've been watching religiously every single one of your videos since 2018 and I'm constantly impressed with the quality, depth, and perspective you have. And this doesn't only apply to the design of the machines, but to your work ethic and out look to your goal. Your videos motivate me and always have me rooting for you! Please please please continue the super hard work you've always been putting in! I'm absolutely thrilled for this new adventure!

  • @gottliebwurst
    @gottliebwurst2 ай бұрын

    This is such a great video, thank you for sharing your thoughts and describing your journey, it's so beautiful ❤️

  • @nathanbarraud4349
    @nathanbarraud43492 ай бұрын

    YEEEEESSS !!! Thank you Martin, thank you ! It is just amazing to hear you talking about the other machines, art and beautifulness again, it's like seeing the old Martin but stronger, with we tools and tricks in his hands ! I have been watching you litteraly since the beginning, and I feel that this video is a very important and very refreshing one for the project. It is amazing that you managed to have the hindsight to realise it. I cannot wait to see where you will take this project in the future. THANK YOU !

  • @nikmidttun
    @nikmidttun2 ай бұрын

    “The heart of project is playfulness” amen! This whole video really hit me in the feels. I’ve honestly been struggling to stay engaged with the “hardcore engineering” theme of the recent videos. I fell in love with the idea of a marble machine instrument during the MMX days (and it honestly hurts to hear Martin call that a failure). I miss the music that was a constant part of that era. I’m so excited to see how this new approach goes, and I’ll be watching closely now. I’m so happy for Martin!

  • @aguynamedryan
    @aguynamedryan2 ай бұрын

    Martin, thank you for taking me along your circuitous journey of discovery and creation for all these years. I have learned so much from you and I appreciate you sharing so much with me.

  • @Siemah
    @Siemah2 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for taking us on this journey with you ❤️

  • @benjaminerne
    @benjaminerne2 ай бұрын

    So psyched for this chapter. Keep us updated!

  • @tambunico4282
    @tambunico42822 ай бұрын

    awerssome man, really nice to see you process, please keep up

  • @Nooticus
    @Nooticus2 ай бұрын

    spot on. glad you finally arrived at this conclusion Martin! excited for the future

  • @pontusjoakim
    @pontusjoakim2 ай бұрын

    It's so inspiring to take part of your process! Thank you for sharing ❤

  • @SRMWorkshop
    @SRMWorkshop2 ай бұрын

    I have been building a prototype for work and it's taken me years (still not done), but I continue to fight it just because I want to get it over that hill and into the world. Keep at it Martin, I have faith you will complete your machine as well and share it with the world as well.

  • @targz_art
    @targz_art2 ай бұрын

    We are also here for the process Martin, we like the process, the steps you're going through. I'm happily will keep watching you found the balance between engineering and coolness, this is where the art is.

  • @chilonthebw
    @chilonthebw2 ай бұрын

    This is so nice to hear. I am genuinely excited for this realization. I think the idea of "perfect" and millisecond things strayed so far away from the dream made it seem like it was never going to get anywhere or not going to be thrilling to see and be a part of. I am super happy!

  • @daggadaggadaggadagga
    @daggadaggadaggadagga2 ай бұрын

    So glad to hear this update, I love this project principally because it is a massive awesome marble run (that happens to play music) I just want to follow the marbles running about and seeing them drop onto instruments. Keep those marbles visible throughout their journey around the machine, it's the soul of this project

  • @Rotemsa
    @Rotemsa2 ай бұрын

    YES! Thank you! I was following the channel from the first wooden marble machine and loved every step of the way. every problem solved, every idea implemented. The new machine, even though from a technical perspective it is superior in every way, something was just off... the artistic element was gone. seeing the gears work, the marbles in the tubes, the channles clicks and clanks... all of that was magic that cannot really be replaced by bowden tubes and 100% technical efficiency. I'm glad you decided to go back to what this machine really is - a statue. an art! and when making art, perfection can be put aside.

  • @hollowman36
    @hollowman362 ай бұрын

    I am so happy to watch this Martin. You have perfectly described why, without understanding the reason, I have felt a sense of loss watching your channel in recent times. I have loved the journey into engineering and functional design, but it somehow felt like the project had lost its soul. I’m so excited to see where it goes now, with all the things you have learnt about how to execute your vision, now that your vision is clear again.

  • @travelchoice89
    @travelchoice892 ай бұрын

    🤯🎶 This video blew my mind! It's amazing how passion and creativity drive your Marble Machine Project. Keep up the fantastic work! Can't wait to see where your inspiration takes you next! 🌟🔧

  • @eyaesmaraldalykkesandvej-l6992
    @eyaesmaraldalykkesandvej-l69922 ай бұрын

    I am so EXCITED!! 😍😍😍 I love your machines so much and your playful music makes my soul happy ^^ .. But in the videos I love your journey most of all ❣️

  • @jcb0trashmail
    @jcb0trashmail2 ай бұрын

    This is great! I'm happy to be back following this new approach to the MM!

  • @Moonlitdream88
    @Moonlitdream882 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for posting this video! I’m definitely taking some tips from your design process! 🥰

  • @beanAwake
    @beanAwake2 ай бұрын

    Great video. I think all your hard work and prototyping freed you for this moment.

  • @julianapaolamedina6386
    @julianapaolamedina63862 ай бұрын

    I enjoy a lot this videos where Martin evaluates again "Why am I doing this?". I think that going back to the beginning, reassessing, understanding and continuing is a very good process, especially in a project like this. Your marble machine is a project that I have been following for a while and I found fascinating all your process. keep going! I don't think I have to say it but... don't give up. The marble machine is almost there to be completed :)

  • @dntkatz
    @dntkatz2 ай бұрын

    I watched the video with the folks working with the X they are really having a good time with it. It's never going to be perfection but it has always been fun. I hope that you can find a happy place with this endeavor that will make you happy. I always follow to see what you are up to so I guess you could say I like to watch your process. Keep moving forward You have already done great things.

  • @lavahawk
    @lavahawk2 ай бұрын

    Ive thought this the whole time!! Im so glad you have come around. At the same time ive loved learning to be an engineer with you while watching your videos, im now halfway through college becoming an engineer

  • @jannath1
    @jannath12 ай бұрын

    Really cool to hear all of your thoughts on how you built the machine, and additionally, WHY! You expressed really interesting thoughts in that approach, and it makes me appreciate the way we can approach living each day more. All of your works are thrilling, and intriguing :)

  • @AnimilesYT
    @AnimilesYT2 ай бұрын

    This is amazing to hear. I've been feeling the same way about the large machine you've created. I was still interested in seeing the journey and seeing the engineering challenges along the way, but it isn't what first caught my eye. Either way, I really love every step in this process even though you've gone full circle ❤

  • @johnfrian
    @johnfrian2 ай бұрын

    Been enjoying this series a lot in all its forms and directions. Can't wait to see what the latest version of Martin will cook up!

  • @AaronHarlow
    @AaronHarlow2 ай бұрын

    Excited that the journey has brought you full circle and I'm excited to see the marriage of your fabulous art and engineering process skillset.

  • @exogamer7787
    @exogamer77872 ай бұрын

    I'm so happy seeing Martin come back to his roots. I've been watching since the beginning of the MMX and I cannot wait to see Martin complete this project. Seeing Martin regain his artistic self really spoke to me, i myself have been in a musical rut and it inspiring to see him come back from that. Thank you Martin for sharing your journey will all of us, you are an inspiration to us all!

  • @sticlavoda5632
    @sticlavoda56322 ай бұрын

    Thank you! I loved this video. I felt so happy hearing these news. Art is revived! You are an amazing artist!

  • @tolliko4974
    @tolliko49742 ай бұрын

    Martin! I’m so happy for you! Glad to see such an openmindness. It takes a lot of effort to recognize the failures and even more to recognize the failures in the decisions you thought were solutions to the initial failures! I’m glad you listen not only to your audience but also to your heart. Keep doing a great work you do, keep listening to your heart. And most important - keep having fun, being it an engineering perfection or cool looking machine or whatever makes you happy. And thanks a lot for a possibility to travel along this harsh path with you!

  • @brucepwalker
    @brucepwalker2 ай бұрын

    What an amazing journey you've been on, and are taking us on

  • @mrpennywize
    @mrpennywize2 ай бұрын

    I am genuinely convinced this was the best video i could have watched right now. I am in the midst of finding inspiring projects and ideas and I take so much inspiration fron this. You are an amazing guy and I wish for you to find the secret, the mystery, the wonder that brought us all here in hope to find more of it. So many elements played their part in your first success: The simple design of the machine that so plainly showed all its complexity, you in black turning the wheels, the color of wood and background, the music and unusual sound of marbles dropping and the pure video showcasing an idea and reality without need for explanation. You know, maybe it's not the machine you want to create. I'm sure you'll have your fun with it but maybe you want to create more. A story that uses it? A movie? A tool? As you said, you are an artist and you are capable of creating what is not words but yet clear in concept and beautiful. A moving, interacting, living thing that mesmerizes is what you created. So maybe you can show us where it lives and what else there is. The marble machine is sort of like a clock. There's beautiful clocks but you can argue that no clock will ever entice the same wonder as the first one ever made. Maybe it's time for you to build something like a telescope now that you realized you are an artist at core ;)

  • @xepota
    @xepota2 ай бұрын

    - Почему ты это делаешь? - Потому что могу! Всё, что сделано правильно с позиции инженера, будет красивым с позиции художника. Успехов! 💪

  • @mystere_p2596
    @mystere_p25962 ай бұрын

    Keep going ! Your work is really inspirational and I think that you are on the right way to make a masterpiece !

  • @ThatDudeGuru
    @ThatDudeGuru2 ай бұрын

    YES DUDE! ~ from a 3d artist for Marbles on Stream who is consistently inspired by your work. Thank you for the wonderful community and project.

  • @siristhesalamander4186
    @siristhesalamander41862 ай бұрын

    I'm loving everything you've made! Sharing your personal journey, teaching design philosophy, beautiful music, fantastic machines, and lots of silly Wilson-related shenanigans! Keep up the wonderful work, and even more so now that you've been rediscovering your passion yet again!

  • @sabovano274
    @sabovano2742 ай бұрын

    i barely understand it all but gosh i truly love your toughts, it's like a helpful therapie. love you love marble love art love nerd

  • @TheZerovirus1000
    @TheZerovirus10002 ай бұрын

    I can't wait to see the new direction of this project! I love it

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