Dan Deacon Credit: Courtesy of Dan Deacon

If you’re going to see Dan Deacon at ArtsRiot in Burlington this Friday, April 18, don’t forget to turn your phone … on?

In what is either a stroke of technological evil genius or fallout from the recent Supreme Court ruling in the case of Beat ‘Em v. Join ‘Em, Deacon has recently been employing a unique smartphone app at his concerts that allows audience members — and their phones — to be part of the show like never before.

As the trailer below explains, the app “turns your phone and all other smartphones in the audience into a dense, coordinated light and sound spectacle.” Without using WiFi or data, Deacon’s app syncs with music from the show to, “turn your screen into a light show, your speaker into an instrument and your LED into a strobe light.”
Deacon’s app is undoubtedly an intriguing concept, and if viewed as a solution to the scourge of phone use at shows, kinda brilliant. Though we have to admit that the shots in the trailer of slack-jawed audience members staring blankly into their glowing phones instead of, y’know, watching the concert, elicits uneasy, 1984-type willies.

In a related story, Deacon will headline a brunch dance party the following morning at August First, at which the first 300 people through the door using the app get a free scone. (OK, we made that part up.)


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Dan Bolles is a culture coeditor at Seven Days. He joined the paper in 2007 as its music editor, covering Vermont's robust music, comedy and nightlife scenes for a decade before deciding he was too old to be going to the Monkey House on weeknights to...