The glove, called the Remidi T8 wearable instrument, is equipped with pressure-sensitive sensors along its fingertips and palm.
Its wristband controls how the combination of sounds from each sensor are translated as a user moves his or her hand.
The glove aims to be a very intuitive device for music artists, enthusiasts and disc jockeys to use, the company said.
Users of the glove will be able to compose music, play and perform on the go, said Mark DeMay, co-founder and chief technology officer at Texas-based company Remidi.
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"We wanted to give people a fun way to express themselves and start pushing the boundaries of what we can do with musical instruments," DeMay told 'Live Science'.
With the T8, a user could start jamming on any surface - a desk, wall, subway seat, park bench, car window, or on their own body. The data from the glove can then be sent to the Remidi app or to other recording software, DeMay said.
The T8 creates different sound intensities and rhythms based on which of its eight sensors are pressed, what combinations are pressed and how long or how hard you press down on each point.
A tiny spinning gyroscope and accelerometer in the glove's wristband measures how fast your hand moves around and adjusts the tone and tempo of the music you create in real-time.