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john roach

This Turkish Language Isn't Spoken, It's Whistled - YouTube - 0 views

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    "For three centuries, farmers living in the remote mountains of northern Turkey have communicated great distances by whistling. It's a language called kuş dili that is still used to this day, though fewer people are learning it in the age of the cell phone. It's also known as bird language, for obvious reasons. Muazzez Köçek lives in Kuşköy, and she is the best whistler in her village. Muazzez shows us how she uses varied pitch frequencies and melodies to translate Turkish vocabulary into whistles with meaning. "
john roach

The Remote Village Where People 'Talk' in Intricate, Ear-Splitting Bird Whistles - The ... - 2 views

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    For centuries, residents of Kuşköy have communicated over rural Turkey's vast distances with kuş dili, which literally means "bird language."
john roach

BLDGBLOG: On the Beach - 0 views

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    "I'm quite late hearing this for the first time, but I was thrilled to discover composer Pierre Sauvageot's Harmonic Fields project, a participatory landscape of wind-activated musical instruments temporarily installed on the beach near Birkrigg Common, Cumbria, England. The haphazard plinks, drum rolls, whistles and drones is often mesmerizingly beautiful, as the following video makes clear. It's a kind of weather plug-in, constructed as a sequence of very different movements in space."
john roach

Detecting the Strange Connection Between Where You Are and What You Are - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    "A new art expedition aims to record qualitative and quantitative data with a custom-built set of tools on a year of trips through some of the most fascinating places in America. " " Up first, we see their very low-frequency antenna, which they built from a kit developed by Stephen McGreevy with Christopher Woebken's design. The antenna captures the sounds of spaceweather, the nice name for the environmental conditions created by the sun casting particles at the Earth. As Geoff told me, "You can walk right up to the tripod, put on green headphones, and zone out to the otherworldly whistles and pops of the Earth's magnetosphere."
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