Sound Maestro Splits Songs into 4 Speakers You Conduct with a Baton
Sound Maestro Splits Songs into 4 Speakers You Conduct with a Baton
Experience music like never before with Sound Maestro, a modular speaker system that lets you conduct songs using a baton and gestures.
The Future of Home Audio: From Silent Boxes to Interactive Orchestras
If you’re anything like me, most smart speakers just fade into the background—silent cylinders or pucks waiting patiently for your voice commands. Sure, they’re convenient, but where’s the fun? Sound Maestro modular speakers dares to break that mold by turning your living room into a mini orchestra pit, where you become the conductor, waving your baton to control your favorite tracks.
This isn’t just another speaker. It’s inspired by the very spirit and motion of a conductor orchestrating a symphony. The system is made up of three core parts: the conductor’s podium, the instruments (four modular speakers), and the baton. When docked together, they form a sleek, unified piece of tech art, but each speaker can be detached to represent a distinct musical element—vocals, drums, bass, and melody—each glowing softly in its own LED color beneath the grille.

Four Speakers, Four Musical Parts – AI-Powered Sound Separation
Now, here’s where Sound Maestro gets really clever. Using AI, it splits any track into four separate stems and sends each part to a different speaker. You’re no longer just hearing music; you’re seeing it spatially mapped out in your room.



Imagine walking around your room, pointing at the drum speaker to lower the beat or raising the volume on the vocals cube with a flick of the wrist. The LEDs light up in unique colors, making it easy to identify which sound is coming from where—transforming your living space into a dynamic audio playground.
Conducting Made Simple: The Baton as Your Magic Wand
The star of this show is undoubtedly the baton-shaped controller. In "Maestro Mode," twisting a dial locks the regular buttons and lets you control playback by pointing and gestures. Picture this: a quick left-right wave skips tracks, a slow up-and-down motion raises or lowers the volume—indicated visually by brightness changes in the LEDs—and drawing a circle pauses or plays the music with all the LEDs turning off or on as confirmation. It’s intuitive, playful, and honestly, a ton of fun.



But if you’re not in the mood for a conducting performance, the baton has your back in "Remote Control Mode." Here, it acts more like your classic remote — you point at a speaker and press buttons to mute or fine-tune individual parts without all the gestural flair. It strikes a perfect balance between theatrical fun and practical functionality.


The Podium: Heart and Brain of Your Home Orchestra
At the base of this musical marvel sits the main speaker, fashioned to resemble an orchestra podium. This isn’t just a style choice; it’s the system’s command center. It anchors the bass, runs the AI that intelligently assigns parts to each speaker, and even sports a small display showing the current mode, battery life, and which instrument each satellite speaker is playing.


With everything displayed at a glance, you can keep your eyes on your music without fumbling through apps or menus—a perfect blend of tech sophistication and user-friendly design.
Interactive Music for the Performer in All of Us
Watching Sound Maestro in action is like seeing your music come alive, inviting you to interact, conduct, and shape the soundscape flowing through your home. It challenges the notion that speakers must be invisible, passive gadgets and instead makes them vibrant, interactive partners in your listening experience.


In a way, Sound Maestro turns your casual listening session into a playful performance, blending technology and artistry. Whether you’re waving that baton like a symphony conductor or simply adjusting the volume on your drums, this concept gives modular audio a theatrical heartbeat.
"Sound Maestro pokes at the idea that home audio can be more than invisible boxes and playlists... It makes listening into a small performance."
— Geonwoo Kang
FAQ
- How does Sound Maestro split the music into different speakers?
The system uses AI to separate a song into four stems—vocals, drums, bass, and melody—and sends each to a dedicated modular speaker. - Can I use the baton like a typical remote control?
Yes! Besides the gestural Maestro Mode, there’s a Remote Control Mode where you can press buttons to adjust volume or mute each speaker individually. - What does the conductor’s podium do?
It acts as the main speaker and system brain, handling bass, running the AI, and displaying mode and battery information. - Are the speakers wireless or need to be docked?
Each of the four speakers is modular and can be detached or docked, giving you flexibility in placement and sound experience. - Does the system require a smartphone app?
No, the system includes a display on the podium for monitoring status, so you don’t need to open an app to see what’s happening.
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