Skip to main content

Home/ Sound Research/ Group items tagged blog

Rss Feed Group items tagged

john roach

Alexander Chen - Conductor: mta.me - 1 views

  •  
    "At www.mta.me, Conductor turns the New York subway system into an interactive string instrument. Using the MTA's actual subway schedule, the piece begins in realtime by spawning trains which departed in the last minute, then continues accelerating through a 24 hour loop. The visuals are based on Massimo Vignelli's 1972 diagram."
john roach

NZFF2014_02 Voices of the Land | Music of Sound - 1 views

  •  
    "Conceptually the film was a joy to work on as sound designer, as the premise was essentially a musical conversation between Richard, the instruments, his musical collaborators and the New Zealand landscape, beautifully filmed by Alan Bollinger and sympathetically edited to allow room for the music & sound to fully engage. And thanks to a beautiful mix by Mike Hedges & Tim Chaprione at Park Road Post, I think the film achieves the admirable goal of experiencing the world of its music, rather than just observing it."
john roach

Conduct A Garden Orchestra With Touch-Sensitive Plant Instruments | The Creators Project - 0 views

  •  
    "CalArts opens its Digital Arts and Technology Expo, and one project is continuing to pique our interest in bio-orchestras. "Cultivating Frequencies," a collaboration among music technologist Colin Honigman and designers Sean Chen, Marc Dubui, and Wen Han, is turning a garden into a generative music machine, including a interactive element that turns the individual plants into-touch sensitive instruments."
john roach

The Future Of Sound Art Is A Huggable Ball | The Creators Project - 0 views

  •  
    "Public artworks don't often include life-sized balloons- but that hasn't stopped UK artists Alison Ballard and Mike Blow from creating them. POD is an interactive sound installation that allows viewers to experience the physical life of sound waves through the skins of two, six-foot-tall inflatable spheres. The surfaces of POD pulsate in rhythm with a sound file that plays from deep within the sphere. Audience members are invited to drape their faces and bodies over these surface, free to enjoy POD's gentle massage. "
john roach

"SKIN" Transforms Your Emotions Into Sound And Color Through Sweat Data | The Creators ... - 0 views

  •  
    "Harvest Works gallery in New York exhibited an installation by audiovisual artist, Claudia Robles, that gets under your skin... literally. SKIN is a project that measures gallery visitors' skin moisture using a GSR (Galvanic Skin Response) interface and transforms that data into sound and images. Psychological states such as stress, nervousness, and even arousal become observable, external information. Be careful who you test it out around. "
john roach

This Man Can Hear Wi-Fi | The Creators Project - 2 views

  •  
    "Writer Frank Swain has been able to hear Wi-Fi signals for the past week, and no, it's not "the result of a sudden mutation or years of transcendental meditation," he says. Swain wears a special hearing device that gives him the ability to translate wireless frequencies into sounds. Alongside sound artist Daniel Jones, Swain created Phantom Terrains in order to give those invisible data fields that surround us a bit more presence. "
john roach

Hear the Wind Play This Experimental Sound Art | The Creators Project - 1 views

  •  
    "Sixteen bottles, each with its own air blower, stand arranged in a circle playing music. For his piece, and the wind was like the regret for what is no more, artist João Costa brings the wind indoors, translating its wild energy into simple sounds. "The work explores the interaction of two invisible factors, sound and wind," explains Costa in the video's description. "It deals with the dialectics of scattered and shapeless coefficients that cannot be seen, but have an intrinsic need of existence, of being, and nothing more. To articulate these elements is to deal with the unknown, the unpredictable.""
john roach

Acoustic Ecology and Ethical Listening - 1 views

  •  
    "Some say that acoustic ecology places a negative emphasis on noise in urban environments. In fact, it is concerned with improving the quality of the sonic environment, or soundscape, by re-sensitizing aural faculties both on the individual and the social level. This approach was pioneered in the late 1960s by the Canadian composer, educator, and founder of the World Soundscape Project, R. Murray Schafer. He realized that it was better to set aside moralizing about noise pollution in order to objectively study all aspects of the soundscape."
john roach

Doug Aitken's Acid Modernism - 0 views

  •  
    "The artist Doug Aitken's house, a block away from the Pacific Ocean, is in tune with its surroundings in more ways than one. In an exclusive video, Aitken, with the help of his girlfriend Gemma Ponsa and a few of their friends, activate its more hidden charms, revealing that it's a house that sounds as cool as it looks."
john roach

Maxing Out on Science & Art - Resolume VJ Software & Media Server - 1 views

  •  
    "Max Cooper is not your average electronic producer. With a PHD in Computational Biology, Max is what we like to call an Audio-Visual Scientist. Through his work he tries to bridge the gap, or reinforce the deep-seeded relationship between science, art and music. A look through his work and you realize how successful he has been. "
john roach

The Sound So Loud That It Circled the Earth Four Times - Facts So Romantic - Nautilus - 1 views

  •  
    "On 27 August 1883, the Earth let out a noise louder than any it has made since. It was 10:02 AM local time when the sound emerged from the island of Krakatoa, which sits between Java and Sumatra in Indonesia"
john roach

600 prepared dc-motors, 58 kg wood | Music of Sound - 0 views

  •  
    "600 prepared dc-motors, 58 kg wood Zimoun 2017"
john roach

Here's How You Turn Sounds Into 3D Sculptures | The Creators Project - 0 views

  •  
    "While exploring language and its political, social and cultural roots in many of her artworks, artist Inmi Lee became fascinated with the question, What does the pure form of sound look like? For her piece, Mother, she attempted to answer this question: a collaboration with code artist Kyle McDonald, Mother translates sounds into objects. Claims Lee, "It's one thing to hear a sound- it goes into your ear and dissipates." Representations of sound, however, "Reveal certain relationships between sound and shape.""
john roach

five video documents from the archives of rip hayman, and on recital's dreams of india ... - 0 views

  •  
    " Dreams of India & China, a survey of historical audio works by the artist, writer, performer, and editor, RIP Hayman, issued by Recital in late April. For decades, Hayman played a seminal role in the New York scene, but had, until the album's release, remained almost entirely unknown to the generations who have followed in his wake."
john roach

The Psychology of Sound and Image: Why Some Songs Just Work - 0 views

  •  
    ""Sound design is the main contributing factor to the mood and atmosphere of any film," Charlie Battin wrote in a 2015 piece for the BFI Film Academy. "The visuals are what the viewer tends to mostly focus on and the sound subconsciously alters how the visuals are perceived.""
john roach

Surface Noise: What We've Lost in the Transition to Digital - 0 views

  •  
    "In an excerpt from his book The New Analog, Damon Krukowski looks at the aesthetics of noise in analog music-and what we've lost in the transition to digital recordings."
john roach

Spatial Audio - An Introduction to The Continuing Evolution - 0 views

  •  
    ""But wait!" you might ask, "what do you mean by Spatial Audio? Are you talking about Immersive Audio, 3D Sound, Surround Sound, Binaural, Auro-3D, Dolby Atmos, 360-sound…?" Well, yes, sort of. In principle, we are talking about anything related to 'sound beyond stereo', which is not an entirely new thing on its own."
john roach

Sonic Lessons of the Covid-19 Soundscape | Sounding Out! - 1 views

  •  
    "It is of vital importance to attend to the Covid soundscape while we are still in it because the Covid soundscape is bound by time and place and is ever-changing. Once Covid is eradicated, our access to the sounds surrounding it disappear as well."
john roach

cornelius cardew's treatise (1963-67) - The Hum Blog - 0 views

  •  
    "Treatise, which was composed between 1963 and 1967, is considered to be Cardew's greatest achievement. It's also a total head-fuck for anyone who attempts to approach it. It's a 193 page graphic score with no instruction - completely in the hands of the conductor and musicians who interpret it."
john roach

Dreamland Creative Projects Create Spaces for Spontaneous Singing Exploring Vulnerabili... - 0 views

  •  
    "a temporary installation selected for the 2019 LA Design Festival, invokes the 'Purpose of Joy', as a reframed response to the festival theme, 'Design with Purpose'. It brings the activity of uninhibited singing from the privacy of one's shower to a public street parking lot, in a dedicated urban, mini 'singing shower park'. In play and joy, vulnerable boundaries between private and public behaviors dissolve. Using an 'authorized' play setting for all ages, it explores where and how we feel comfortable to express joy, where we hide, and where we test our private face in public."
« First ‹ Previous 41 - 60 of 73 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page