Tarun Nayar — the ecologist-musician who posts as Modern Biology — became an unlikely internet star a few years back when short videos of him patching mushrooms and houseplants into modular synths went viral. Those clips made obvious what synth nerds had quietly known for decades: living things produce tiny, measurable electrical signals, and turned into sound, they feel uncanny — half-music, half-ecology. The Pocket Scion is the most accessible, pocket-sized expression of that idea yet: a $149 handheld instrument that listens to plants, fungi, and skin and turns their bioelectric whispers into music and MIDI data.
If you’ve never seen a biosonification rig in action, the basics are simple. Touch two sensors to a leaf or a mushroom and you complete a tiny electrical circuit; the instrument measures fluctuations in conductance and maps that stream of data onto musical parameters — pitch, rhythm, filter cutoff, whatever you choose. In modular synth terms, Scion (Instruo’s original Eurorack module) translated those bio-signals into control voltage (CV) you could patch into oscillators and LFOs. Pocket Scion squeezes that same trick into a standalone box with sensors and a capacitive touchpad, so you don’t need a rack full of modules to hear a fern play a melody.
What the Pocket Scion actually does is two things at once. Onboard, it has four purpose-built “instruments” — names like Secret Garden, Fungal Waves, Treebeard’s Koto and Soil Circuits give you a hint of the aesthetic — that generate evolving soundscapes and up to five-note polyphony from whatever biofeedback you feed it. At the same time, the unit translates those signals into MIDI (TRS Type-A and USB) and OSC messages, so the device is as much a controller and data source as it is a tiny synth. Plug it into a DAW, Max/MSP patch, Unreal Engine visual, or a hardware groove box and you’ve turned the plant next to your desk into a live, reactive performer.

There’s a practical side to the design, too: the Pocket Scion is battery-powered (3× AAA) or USB powered, weighs only a few dozen grams and ships with sensor cables. A companion desktop app for macOS, Windows and Linux exposes deeper editing — scales, ratcheting, voice allocation, MIDI channel and CC assignments — and broadcasts OSC stats like min/max/mean and variance so you can visualise or modulate other systems. In short, you get a public-facing “play a plant” toy and a studio-ready data source in the same tidy package.
Why does this matter beyond novelty? Biosonification has always sat at the fringes — from experimental electronic composers in the 1970s to DIY projects like the MidiSprout — but the Pocket Scion feels like an inflection point. By lowering the price and friction (no Eurorack, no soldering, no gear-head expertise), it lets artists, educators and installation creators fold living systems directly into performance and multimedia work. The OSC output in particular is a neat bridge: plants controlling visuals in real time, or fungal colonies mapped to generative choreography, are now easy to prototype.
There are limits worth noting. Pocket Scion is not a keyboard — there’s no traditional interface for playing like on a synth with keys — and its expressive palette is tied to what the sensors can reliably detect. Plants and fungi don’t play predictable scales; they produce slow, stochastic data that’s beautiful precisely because it’s unruly. If you want precise, note-for-note sequencing, you’ll still route its MIDI into other gear and quantise or gate it externally. Also, small-battery, handheld form factors mean you’ll trade some studio conveniences for portability.
Market reaction speaks for itself: the initial production run sold out almost immediately after announcement, and retailers opened a preorder for the next batch. At the advertised price — about $149 USD — it undercuts the entry cost of a basic Eurorack biofeedback setup by an order of magnitude, which helps explain the rush.
What will artists do with it? Expect a lot of small experiments: backyard concerts where a patch of moss improvises alongside a guitar; gallery pieces where a fern subtly shifts ambient sound as viewers move closer; classroom demos that let students “hear” plant physiology. And because the device exports data, the really interesting projects might be hybrid — where botanical sensors dance with visuals, machine learning and environmental sensors to make artworks that are as much about systems and attention as they are about tone.
For those who care about provenance, the Pocket Scion is an explicit collaboration between Instruo — the Glasgow synth house that made the original Scion module — and Tarun Nayar / Modern Biology, who’s been experimenting with biosonification for years. That lineage matters: this is not a viral gimmick repackaged as a gadget. It’s a distillation of a set of practices from a scene that has always been curious about the borderlands between organism and machine.
If you want one, the sensible expectation is to treat it like any small run—preorder or watch dealer stock alerts, and be ready to patch a leaf in public. If nothing else, Pocket Scion is a reminder that the next interesting instruments might not be built from metal and silicon alone; sometimes they’re rooted in the slow, electrical conversations happening on our windowsills.
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