The new plastic polymer £5 notes can’t be crumpled, are extremely hard (though not impossible) to burn and some wonky stuff happens if you shine a laser through the Queen’s face. But by far the strangest feature of these notes? The £5 can be used as a rudimentary record player needle.
This phenomenon appears to have been first discovered by a multimedia artist from Norfolk named Michael Ridge who has previously played records using cacti, a bird skull, fish bones and tortilla chips.
“I found the edges of the new plastic £5 notes to be quite sharp and hence potentially good at playing vinyl,” he told Gizmodo over email. “Set-up is very simple, a contact microphone is held on the back of the note which picks up and amplifies the music being played through the note itself, the contact microphone is connected to a small guitar amplifier off screen. The whole video is recorded live with no editing.”
With some folding, he was able to perform this same feat with the old £5 bill, though that hasn’t stopped others on YouTube, Instagram and Twitter from imitating it with Great Britain’s new space money.
For anyone considering a bit of bandwagon-hopping, keep in mind that using plastic money as a needle will almost certainly damage whatever record it’s playing, so use a record you don’t care about.
@FuntCaseUK pic.twitter.com/t3x2GvjddF
— Suspect (@SUSPECTdubstep) October 10, 2016