Skip to main content

Home/ Sound Research/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by john roach

Contents contributed and discussions participated by john roach

john roach

Lawrence Abu Hamdan Turns Sound Into Powerful Evidence | Frieze - 0 views

  •  
    "With forensic precision and poetic impact, the artist uses audio to challenge visual dominance, expose injustice and redefine how power is heard"
john roach

If the US-Mexico Border Could Talk - 0 views

  •  
    "Echoes from the Borderlands, which transcribes a sound installation tracing the border, insists on the land's inextricability from the history to which it bears witness. "
  •  
    "Echoes from the Borderlands, which transcribes a sound installation tracing the border, insists on the land's inextricability from the history to which it bears witness. "
john roach

Why is Japan's earthquake alert chime scary? Composer shares sound's science - The Main... - 0 views

  •  
    "TOKYO -- When an earthquake measuring a lower 5 or stronger on the 7-point Japanese seismic intensity scale is predicted, public broadcaster NHK airs an emergency earthquake alert chime on TV and radio, known for its distinctive melody. Even in noisy environments, this sound is clear and can evoke a sense of fear. But why is that?"
john roach

The Scores Project - 0 views

  •  
    In the decades following World War II, the musical score emerged as a unique and powerful medium for experimental art. A new movement of visual artists, composers, poets, and performers reimagined the score-traditionally defined as the written representation of a musical composition-as a tool for structuring experimentation in the nascent fields of performance art, conceptualism, and intermedia. They drew inspiration from unconventional musical notations devised in the early to mid-1950s by the composers Earle Brown, John Cage, and Morton Feldman. The new movement's use of experimental scores spread during the 1960s through publications, festivals, concerts, classrooms, networked correspondence, exhibitions, happenings, and a renewed awareness of score-like antecedents in the charts, diagrams, sketches, and written instructions of earlier avant-gardes, from Dada and Surrealism to the Bauhaus. By the later years of the 1960s, diverse communities of artists, musicians, poets, and dancers had transformed the possibilities of the score into an ever-expanding universe of textual, symbolic, and graphic marks. They used experimental scores to stage a multitude of practices that dismantled and recast the traditional boundaries of artistic media.
john roach

"Seeing" sound! - 0 views

  •  
    "We created a device that visualizes the speed at which sound travels through the air, 340 meters per second." "
john roach

Let's see the speed of sound - NHK for School - 0 views

  •  
    "86 people lined up in a 1.7 km straight line to conduct an experiment to test the speed at which soudns travel between cymbals and people."
john roach

Magz Hall - Sound and Radio Artist - 0 views

  •  
    radio and sound artist who works with a focus on expanded radio art in all its forms. "I've been exploring the artistic potential of radio and its use outside of conventional settings from ready mades to creating transmitters and site specific multi media installations which draw on aspects wireless technology and art for the environment. I am investigating radio art and expanded practice across the spectrum, working on projects across air, land, sea and space whilst drawing on experimental radio history as well as focusing on Art for the Environment."
john roach

Home | Anne Lepère - 0 views

  •  
    sound artist, composer and radio producer. "My artistic journey began with the world of sound and since then, it continues to be woven between sounds, breaths and words, for a poetic practice of everyday life, oscillating between the city and the rural."
john roach

Preemptive Listening The Sonic Politics of Emergency on Disclaimer - 0 views

  •  
    "Who raises the alarm, and in whose interest? What might a siren sound like for the entangled human, non-human, and more-than-human? This collection emerges from and expands upon a three-day program at Tate Modern, held alongside the premiere screening of Aura Satz's film Preemptive Listening. The programme brought together musicians, artists, historians, sociologists, and activists (several featured in the film), to think through the siren-not simply as an emergency signal, but as a tool for listening, remembering, sensing, and reimagining. Speaking to the sirens that are and those that could be, from sonic warfare to ecological disaster, the conversations circled back to recurring questions of how we might rewrite the scripts of urgency, survival, and resistance. "
john roach

THLEEP . EARTH - 0 views

  •  
    "THLEEP; Therapising For Sleep; a series of sound and light investigations; combined as a synaesthesia to reduce anxiety and promote healthier sleep cycles. We explore the combination of neuro-acoustics and vision physiology, and present installations & performances as a supplement to daily requirements for the positive frequencies of light and sound - helping regulate our lives."
john roach

Masimba Hwati | ARTIST - 0 views

  •  
    "An interdisciplinary artist, Masimba Hwati works at the intersections of sculpture, performance and sound. Known for unconventional mixed media and sound sculptures, he examines postcolonial themes by re-appropriating archives and objects and presenting them in new contexts. He collects historical, culturally imbued items ranging from cars to shoes, altering and repositioning them in a contemporary urban setting. "
john roach

About | Hannah Kemp-Welch | London - 0 views

  •  
    " Hannah Kemp-Welch is a sound artist with a social practice. She creates works collaboratively and in community settings, often responding to social issues. Recent projects include Nomadic Listening (2024) a series of workshops and radio installation for Manifesta15 with communities in the Barcelona Metropolitan region, and o-o-radio! (2022), a project at Wysing Arts Centre constructing homemade radios with d/Deaf young people, to better understand how hearing aids operate."
john roach

The Unbearable Loudness of Chewing-Asterisk - 0 views

john roach

About | Constellations - 0 views

  •  
    "Constellations is a community of listeners, investigating the world through sound. We curate and produce a podcast, live events and publish sound materials. Constellations features a wide-range of audio works which unravel the distinctions between experimental documentary, sound art, soundscapes, fiction, and music. The pieces we air demand a deep listening experience, encouraging listeners to expand their conception of narrative, sound and attention."
john roach

Wind's Animacies | Published in Media+Environment - 0 views

  •  
    This is an article about wind, dust, and their relations to life. It is a meditation on the liveliness of wind and airborne particles as they are experienced on the ground; in cultural texts including film, poetry, and oral history; and in the medium of satellite imagery. In dialogue with recent work in the social sciences and humanities that demonstrates how air and dust from the "South" are treated as foreign "intrusions" into Europe, this article proposes a focus on wind's animacies to further probe and nuance these claims. Situated primarily in Italy and the Balkans, two places where the author has familial relations and, in the case of the Balkans, deep ancestral history, the animacies of wind are examined specifically in relation to Scirocco and Jugo, two interrelated southerly winds commonly blowing in spring and autumn that sometimes bring "Saharan dust" to Europe. As a framework and scaffold, the article draws from Mel Chen's notion of "differential animacies": the ways animacy is bestowed on humans, animals, elements, and objects in hierarchies that are both revealing and "leaky." Exploring the animacies of Scirocco and Jugo shows how the wind acts as a force of de/humanization, as agency leaking across borders of life and nonlife, and as shape-shifting coauthor of collective memory.
john roach

Music Library - Goethe-Institut Max Mueller Bhavan | India - 1 views

  •  
    "M.A.P // A.M.P Music Library aims to create a repository of activist music, which will serve as an archive to amplify the reach of music as an expression and a tool of social and political activism. This library is an effort to bring together such voices from the region that may have gone unheard. In the process, we hope to create a rich and diverse range of activist music that will span all genres and generations of music and poetry."
john roach

Infrasonica - 0 views

  •  
    Infrasonica is a digital platform of non-Western cultures. We record, analyze and debate the eeriness of sound and its auras, linked to the world with the audible, the hidden and the sensitive. Infrasonic waves operate at a frequency that is undetectable by human ears even though they are often generated by massive ecological phenomena, such as the movement of tectonic plates or the deep currents of the ocean. Infrasonica aims to be a catalyst for those vibrations. The platform includes archives of experimental sound and visual artists, as well as theoretical musings on contemporary critical thought. By relying on a borderless network of collaborators, Infrasonica blends essays, conversations and speculative works that encourage critical curatorial and research projects.
john roach

Botanical Rhythms: A Field Guide to Plant Music | Sounding Out! - 0 views

  •  
    "Plants are the most abundant life form visible to us. Despite their ubiquitous presence, most of the times we still fail to notice them. The botanists James Wandersee and Elizabeth Schussler call it "plant blindness, an extremely prevalent condition characterized by the inability to see or notice the plants in one's immediate environment. Mathew Hall, author of Plants as Persons, argues that our neglect towards plant life is partly influenced by the drive in Western thought towards separation, exclusion, and hierarchy. Our bias towards animals, or zoochauvinism-in particular toward large mammals with forward facing eyes-has been shown to have negative implications on funding towards plant conservation. Plants are as threatened as mammals according to Kew's global assessment of the status of plant life known to science. Curriculum reforms to increase plant representation and engaging students in active learning and contact with local flora are some of the suggested measures to counter our plant blindness."
john roach

ABOUT/CONTACT | Bureau for Listening - 0 views

  •  
    "Bureau for Listening is an attempt to foster, engage with, and care for listening…We do not wish to set up limits or boundaries for the possibilities and potentials of listening, and likewise do we not wish to set them up for this bureau. We will as a bureau evolve as we entangle ourself with listening through practice, research, projects, failure, friendship etc… We hope to get lost. At our core, for the moment, is a chance to experiment and research - what can listening be (?) and what can we as a bureau for listening do for this phenomena?
1 - 20 of 1489 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page