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john roach

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

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    "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

You Can Talk to Plants. Maybe You Should Listen. - The New York Times - 0 views

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    "An installation at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden ponders the sounds made by plants. Visitors to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden can hear a version of the songs these corn plants have to sing. Credit Marcos Brindicci/Reuters Image"
john roach

In the Garden of Sonic Delights - Caramoor - 0 views

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    youtube video playlist for the exhibition "In the Garden of Sonic Delights" - at Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts
john roach

Really Good Elevator Music - Yowei Shaw - 0 views

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    "Really Good Elevator Music is an experiment that explores the potential of sound to stimulate social interaction and community building in the strikingly diverse Philadelphia neighborhood of Chinatown North/Callowhil, Philadelphia (8th to Broad, Vine to Spring Garden)"
john roach

'In the Garden of Sonic Delights' in Katonah - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "If, as the sound artist Stephan Moore likes to say, the laptop has become the 21st-century folk instrument, then the Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts in Katonah has propelled itself to the forefront of that development, commissioning and bringing to its 90-acre campus an exhibition of sound art featuring 10 works by 11 laptop-wielding artists."
john roach

Joe Jones - Music Machines, 1971 - Fluxus - YouTube - 0 views

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    "clip from "New Music: Sounds and Voices from the Avant Garden, New York, 1971" by Michael Blackwood"
john roach

Gary Simmons | Frieze - 0 views

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    "Sound Garden is a 16 inch high, 15 foot square platform of wood squares that recreates a section of a gymnasium floor, or a high-finish dance floor. The parquet is framed by a three foot wide planter of white pansies in full bloom. Suspended above the platform, in the manner of a public address system, are four out-sized black speakers. The speakers emit a three-phase, four-track audio component of verbal instructions for dance routines, the bouncing of a basketball on the floor of the gymnasium, tap dancing and the swiping of an eraser on a blackboard. The work thus takes the form of a rather peculiar hybrid structure with visual, auditory and olfactory dimensions."
john roach

Enter The Hive - Sound Matters - 0 views

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    "As he prepares for a performance, B&O PLAY visits London's Kew Gardens and meets the artist Wolfgang Buttress who tells us about his soon to be sonified sculptural installation, The Hive."
john roach

Light and Sound Healing: Krista Kim Launches the World's First Public Art Installation ... - 0 views

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    "A modern-day zen garden opened this past Friday, October 1st, at the Fort York Historic Site in Toronto, Canada. Contemporary artist Krista Kim brings her vision of wellness to the world via CONTINUUM: a meditative 20-minute generated animation aimed at improving mental health through active self-care participation. "
john roach

Expanding Radio. Ecological Thinking and Trans-scalar Encounters in Contemporary Radio ... - 0 views

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    "This thesis is an exploration of some of the discourses arising out of the current ecological crises (Haraway 2016; Horton 2017) and argues that radio art is a constructive method for opening out practices of listening, for helping move beyond anthropocentric dialogues, and simultaneously beyond the constraints of dominant modes of storytelling. Ecological Thinking (Code 2006) and concepts of Planetary Time (Dimock 2003) are a useful framework from which to view contemporary radio art practices because they accentuate long and complex networks of interconnectivity, not only within nature, but, more recently, between living beings, technology and the environment. By identifying the interconnectedness of radio and transmission, and the possibility for immersion not only in the content but the process of the medium itself, it is hoped that recognition will be given to the necessity to think ecologically (holistically) in order to create sustainable symbioses between humans, technology and the living and 'non-living' entities of the planet. I begin by providing an outline of anthropocene discourses intertwined with radio and radio art practice. Then I describe and contextualize the radio art work 'chorus duet for radio' (Donovan 2016), positioning it as an example of a collective, trans-scalar listening encounter. I move on to posit radio as a valuable medium from which to critique and disrupt masculinised and westernised (radio) histories, and as an outlet for feminist, queer, and speculative re-tellings of the past. History is viewed here in the same way as electromagnetic radiation: as matter to be untangled. Finally I use the garden radio art project Datscha Radio17 (Schaffner 2017) to give an overview of how radio can be implemented in an expanded way to examine many of the interconnected themes of this thesis: the anthropocene, radio art, ecology, human and more-than-human networks, listening, speculative storytelling, and disruption. This thesis is an explor
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