Skip to main content

Iconic music venue will present live gigs you can watch in VR from your home

It sounds like ancient history here in the middle of 2020, but there was once a magical time, before social distancing, when large crowds of people would gather together in giant venues to listen to live music. With coronavirus still very much a thing, it could be a long time before this once again becomes a normal occurrence — which is why the U.K.’s O2 Academy Brixton, one of London’s most iconic music venues, is gearing up to host a series of 360-degree virtual reality gigs.

Recommended Videos

The brainchild of promotion company Live Nation and MelodyVR, the “Live From O2 Academy Brixton” events will give fans with the MelodyVR app and an Oculus VR headset the opportunity to be virtually transported to the legendary London music venue (thereby taking care of the whole “can’t travel” problem) for live performances from a number of bands and individual musical artists.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

“We look forward to partnering with MelodyVR and presenting Live From O2 Academy Brixton which will connect artists with fans globally through the latest and exciting 360-degree VR technology, direct from a purpose-built studio set within this iconic and world-famous venue,” Live Nation UK chairman Denis Desmond said in a statement.

We're READY for Wireless Connect

MelodyVR’s technology records music events in immersive VR from a range of different “jump spots” that users can switch between. Essentially it’s a “pick your own camera angle” feature, but one that, in a music context, means that fans can choose approximately where they stand in a venue to get a different perspective on the musical performance.

The Brixton Academy has yet to reveal the names of the artists who will be participating in the virtual event. But the iconic music venue has played host to countless big names over the years, so expect a top-tier lineup. Recently, Melody VR used its cutting-edge technology to create the Wireless Festival’s Wireless Connect 2020 event, in which 70 artists delivered exclusive performances to fans from both London and Los Angeles.

Between innovations like this and the U.K. museum using telepresence robots to allow visitors to check out exhibitions during lockdown, it seems that all kinds of venues are working hard to rethink their offerings for the COVID-19 age. Truly smart cities are arriving later than you might think.

And as far as socially distanced tech goes, this certainly beats yet another Zoom call with your work colleagues talking awkwardly over one another!

Luke Dormehl
Former Digital Trends Contributor
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
The best VR-ready laptops you can buy right now
oculus quest hand tracking hands on review cameras vr 2

While VR headsets need a fairly robust GPU to operate properly, you’re not completely bound to a desktop computer. With the right laptop, you can run VR just fine, making it easier to find the perfect VR setup around your home or on the go.

Virtual headsets like the Vive Cosmos or the Rift S have their own recommendations for how much computing and GPU power you need. And while this is a good starting point, it doesn’t really give you an idea of what laptops can really run VR well.

Read more
Soon you’ll be able to exercise by racing a virtual ghost of your past self
best tech under 100 dollars version 1463523622 vr up

Anyone who has been bingeing Netflix and ESPN’s documentary series The Last Dance, about Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls, knows that the greatest of athletes aren’t just competing against one another; they’re competing against the high standards they set for themselves. This isn’t just reserved for great athletes, however. The same rationale is true for even average exercisers, albeit for very different reasons.

When many of us take up a new form of exercise -- be it cycling, running, or rowing -- we’re not necessarily looking to smash the competition. We just want to know that we’re improving, and a good way to do that is to try and beat our own previous personal best. That’s the idea that’s galvanizing members of the REal and Virtual Environments Augmentation Labs (REVEAL) in the U.K.’s University of Bath.

Read more
Apple patent foresees a smart home that can ID you by reading your heartbeat
apple smart home patent would spy on your life

A new Apple patent would make your house an actual “smart home” in every sense, from reading your heartbeat, to telling who you are, to the ability to coordinate your different smart devices. 

The patent, first reported by Patently Apple, is titled Object Tracking And Authentication Using Modular Wall Units, and was initially submitted in August 2018 and published on February 13. The patent is long and detailed, but basically, Apple wants to create an interconnected smart home that senses and works with other devices and inanimate objects, and even can differentiate between human users. 

Read more