Brazil's live orchestra to turn Bitcoin price moves into music

Cointelegraph
BTC0,77%

An experimental orchestral project in Brazil aims to convert Bitcoin price data into live music, after receiving approval to raise funds through one of the country’s tax-incentive programs for cultural initiatives.

According to Brazil’s Federal Register, the authorization allows the project to seek up to 1.09 million reais ($197,000) from private companies and individual donors for an instrumental concert that uses financial data to generate music, drawing on concepts from art, mathematics, economics and physics.

The publication does not specify whether any blockchain or onchain infrastructure will be used in the performance. The performance will take place at the country’s federal capital, Brasília.

The project description says it will convert monetary figures into musical notation by using an algorithm to track Bitcoin (BTC) price movements and related technical data in real time during the performance. These data inputs are intended to guide melody, rhythm and harmony as the orchestra plays live.

![](https://img-cdn.gateio.im/social/moments-b35faf206b-4a6d96a69f-153d09-6d5686)

_Excerpt from Brazil’s official government gazette. Source: _Diário Oficial da União

The approach is designed to give audiences an audible representation of Bitcoin’s volatility by translating market behavior into sound, blending traditional orchestral instruments with data-driven composition.

The approval confirms that the project met the requirements of Brazil’s Rouanet Law and cleared technical review, formally allowing sponsors to deduct contributions from taxes.

Fundraising must be completed by Dec. 31, with the initiative classified under the “Instrumental Music” category, which determines how tax incentives apply.

**Related: **__AI can compose good music, but humanity still holds the creative baton

Earlier experiments in algorithmic crypto art

The Brazil initiative builds on earlier experiments in algorithmic art that have treated crypto-native and other real-world data streams as raw material for creative expression.

In 2020, a San Francisco–based group working in programmable digital art unveiled an artwork designed to change its appearance in line with Bitcoin’s price movements. The project, Right Place & Right Time by artist Matt Kane, used BTC market data as a live input, allowing shifts in the cryptocurrency’s value to drive visual changes in the piece.

The work was released through Async Art, a platform known for programmable NFTs, where Kane structured the artwork into a central “Master” image composed of multiple independent layers. Each layer responded to Bitcoin price action, with changes in the data influencing elements such as scale, rotation and positioning over time.

![](https://img-cdn.gateio.im/social/moments-5cd1272982-e0b177422e-153d09-6d5686)

_A one-of-a-kind programmable artwork that generates a new image daily, with 24 layers synced to Bitcoin’s price volatility. Source: _Asynchronous Art

Another artist working in a similar vein is Refik Anadol, whose practice uses artificial intelligence, algorithms and large datasets to produce immersive installations that translate sources ranging from environmental data to archival records into continuously evolving visual works.

The artist has released several non-fungible projects in recent years, including Winds of Yawanawá, an NFT collection created and launched in July 2023 as a collaboration with the Yawanawá Indigenous community of the Brazilian Amazon, combining real-time environmental data and traditional art into a generative digital series.

![](https://img-cdn.gateio.im/social/moments-71e9ce829c-fe18049832-153d09-6d5686)

_Winds of Yawanawa NFTs listed on OpenSea marketplace. Source: _Opensea

**Magazine: **__Quantum attacking Bitcoin would be a waste of time: Kevin O’Leary

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