 This is Roly Blox. Blox is a modular music studio. Yeah, so you can see that basically this is like the main piece of the box. Are they not the same those two? They are the same. Yeah, I was just showing you one at a time. So the Lightlight Block basically is a really expressive music controller. And it's because it has a silicone interface that can react to how hard you press into it. Movement left and right can be like pitch bend on a string instrument. You can move up and down. You can lift off. You can strike it. Basically any way that you can interact with a physical surface, you can interact with this to create music. What is the technology of the touch? Well, I mean it's basically, you know, I won't go too specific, but basically the top... Is it capacitive or something more than that? It's not capacitive, so it's pressure sensitivity. So basically the top layer is a silicone surface. Is it flexible electronics kind of technology? So the top layer is silicone and then beneath it is a bed of sensors that detect really precise pressure sensitivity. And it also detects independent finger movement so that you can control all of the gestures independently. So you can pitch bend one note and the other one can stand the same place. But basically you can use it to create any type of music you want. That's actually pretty good. What is that? What are those? So these are visual blocks. Basically these give you control over different aspects of the app. So this is noise, which is a free iOS app that we've created. Is that Android? It will be Android. Right now it is not. But basically it's the brain behind the whole blocks. This is where your sounds are created. This is where you can record songs. There's lots of things going on. So you can change the scale that you're using using different chords, arpeggios. And so the control blocks give you access to all of those things. But in a much quicker way. Exactly. It is a MIDI controller at the end of the day. And that's why they can use it with Logic, GarageBand, Ableton, Reaper, whatever program you have to be using. So are they employees in the company of DJs or what? What are you guys? Who am I? I don't know. I'm Marco, very easy to check. We are duo. We are duo. What do you think about this? Literally, I mean, I'm using blogs since we're as a prototype, literally. We work on the project since the beginning. I literally changed the way we approach music in the sense that we are musicians. I'm a piano player. He's a drummer. And we used to work every day in the studio. And what's cool about it is that, of course, I mean, on an acoustic instrument like a viola, like a cello, like a bass, you can control this in a very expressive way. And he's on drums, for example. He can shape the sound in a different way, on blogs. What are you doing here? You have each different thing going on, right? Exactly. So I'm playing bass in this case. I have this kind of synth control on the bass. Octaves. Okay, so this is the way it works. Everything is chromatic here. I start from left to right, from the bottom to the top. I have C. Is it multi-touch? Of course. Of course it's multi-touch. And what's cool about it is that every note is independent. So I can open the filter only on this C. Controlling drums. This is like a game changer. This has drums now. Yeah. So the beautiful thing of blogs is that if I want to play, like, in this case, a normal, like, drum machine, drum part, I can do it. What if I want to play? First time ever on a pad controller where I can, like, control the hi-hat shaping my fingers on the surface. You know, the way we play drums is binary. It's on-off. Now we can modulate each spell, and we can press into it, move our fingers left and right, up and down. It's like having, I don't know, like, it's a totally different way of playing. Yeah. So we use this in our production now. How much is it gonna cost, you know? This should be, like, $179. $179? Yeah, for the likewise. Is that a great price, what do you think? Yeah, absolutely. I mean, like, Japanese expressivity is like, I mean, there's no way you can achieve this if you don't have blogs. No way. Have you used a lot of hardware? Of course, yeah. If you come to our studio, we have so many stuff. You have lots of stuff. Lots of stuff, too much. Yeah. And the beautiful thing of blogs, if you see, if I click this button when I'm using MIDI, I can change grid. How do you change? Yeah, so it's like the first time that I can choose if I want to play a 4x4 or a 5x5 or a big grid or a 2x2. If I, like, want to play a 4x4 and then I need a 5x5, I need to buy, like, more stuff on blogs, I can just press a button. What's the big beat? What's going on? Can you show a little bit? So, and you get, like, choose whatever sound you want and use only, like, the big pad. Oh, nice. Can you show us something? Let me show that for example. Like, I have a saxophone sound now, and I can control how much, the amount of the bread while I'm pressing into it. So, I can decide to read. If you do this kind of stuff, you need blogs for a real saxophone, literally. You need a real sax to play. Yeah. So it's like, it's a game changer. Yeah. Basically, this is called an iPhone, right? So if I want to use this one to loop a track in real time, I can do that on the iPad and on the iPhone. So I can connect this over there and loop a track, and I can also use this one on the MacBook. You're going to study some MIDI controllers, right? It is. Like, so I can, like, connect this here and build my system. That's why it's amazing. Like, I can start just with one. For example, like, when we play live, we use, like, 4x5 each. And now we start, like, you know, we play all our, like, sequences and things using the loop block. And we can loop in real time, so it's pretty amazing. What do you see on this? So, with this one, I can change mode. So I can, you know, like, what Jack was doing, like, this button, I can do the same here. I have the volume of the track, I have the metal, I have the quantize. So also if I play off beat, I can quantize everything in silence on this. Then I have undo, play pause, record, and a learning tool. So basically, if you want to learn how to play it, you click over there, and you're going to see some trails, and you just have to follow the trails and you can play. So where is this company from? London, we're London-based. London? Yeah, it's a four-year-old company we started with the Seaboard. The Seaboard is amazing. It's the invention of the piano. This is the instrument where, like, I start playing with Roly, basically. So, and, yeah. Is it possible to have all kinds of stuff coming? That's just the beginning, man. Of course. Do you want a bigger one? Yeah, maybe. The future. Actually, yes. We would love to. And, yeah, I mean, the system is modular. This is not a key point. When you buy other products, other stuff, when you buy the new ones, you don't lose the old ones anymore. You waste a lot of money, a lot of time. Over there, you can always build your system. You can say, okay, I mean, all the future products you're going to buy, like, you know, click together. It's a modular system, so you will never trash these ones. I think so. I don't know. I don't know. Maybe? I really like that. So, you can connect to and have a bigger drum. Yeah. Yeah. If you want, like, you can, like, choose to connect more like together. I have a bigger drum. That covers two. Two of that, only to one device. Because this one is connected here. This one is connected here. So, how soon is available? Sorry? Of course. This is already available. And this is in every Apple store. Sorry, I didn't get the term. I mean, it's going pretty well, actually. So, we're happy. And, you know, like, it's something new. So, the good thing about it is that you have to try to understand what it means. You have to feel it. You have to touch it. You have to feel it. So, you know, like, I mean, you have to feel it. Yeah.