We did it!
Human Instruments raised £20 from 1 supporter
or
Start your own crowdfunding page
Closed 11/11/2018
Weʼve raised £20 to Create the new wave of musical devices for people with physical disabilities.
- London, UK
- Funded on Sunday, 11th November 2018
Don't have time to donate right now?
Story
We are on a quest to develop a connectable family of beautifully crafted musical devices that give absolutely everyone the chance to make music.
We have a vision for the future. In this future people who have special needs are not special any more. In this future you will not be able to tell the difference between someone who is disabled and someone who is not. You will not be able to tell the difference because society has evolved to understand and accept differences as collective strengths. You will not be able to tell the difference because new technologies will extend from people to empower them to perform. People that have been empowered to perform in music, in art, in sport, in work or in play. And from there people will invent totally new art forms. They will build from the work and the art forms that we know and explore today, and they will create totally new ones.
We want to change music culture forever - and to do this we need yo
Updates
0
Updates appear here
Human Instruments started crowdfunding
Leave a message of support
Supporters
1
Rolf Gehlhaar
Jun 25, 2018
What is crowdfunding?
Crowdfunding is a new type of fundraising where you can raise funds for your own personal cause, even if you're not a registered charity.
The page owner is responsible for the distribution of funds raised.
Great people make things happen
Do you know anyone in need or maybe want to help a local community cause?
Create you own page and donʼt let that cause go unfunded!
About CrowdfundingAbout the fundraiser
Human Instruments
London, UK
Human Instruments is a not for profit dedicated to the design and production of digital musical instrument interfaces for people with varying physical ability. We are developing the worlds first instruments for disabled people.