The colourful clouds represent rain gauges that are collecting rainfall right now. As you move around the map, zooming in and out, only the gauges that are visible on your screen will sing.
Most of the measurements will be updated every 15 minutes, and the music will change.
Soundbath is rain like you've never heard it before across England, Scotland or Wales. What does your local area's custom rain song sound like? Try it out!
The music is generated in near real time in response to the data and with some randomness, so every rainsong will always be unique.
Volume and quickness: The melody gets louder and faster the more rain is falling.
Each country has its own unique voice that helps users distinguish where it is raining at a specific moment. Here’s what to expect:
England has a descending melody where each note is lower than the previous one. This repeats in time with a drum. The rhythm of the drum varies between three different rhythms depending on the amount of rain.
Scotland has four instruments playing the familiar melody of the Scottish folk tune “Skye Boat” in harmony with the other countries’ tunes.
Wales has choral instrument randomly choosing an sustaining notes. During high rainfall periods, a rippling shimmering effect is created, sounding like the pitter-patter of drizzle.
Our colour scale ranges from light purple for the lightest drizzle to a deep indigo for the heaviest downpour. In a 15-minute collection period, the average volume of rain is most often between 0 and 0.3 mm: so users will likely see varied shades of purple.
The white area on the map highlights the UK. Unfortunately, Northern Ireland doesn't publish comparable rainfall data, so soundbath only covers Britain.
Yellow elements – like the ? button you just clicked – provide extra information to help understand our project.