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Contents contributed and discussions participated by john roach

john roach

Locus Sonus - About - 0 views

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    "Locus Sonus is a research group whose main aim is to explore the ever evolving relationship between sound, place and usage. Our methodology places artistic experimentation at the center of our research. Multidisciplinary theoretical approaches dialogue with, nourish and nurture this experimentation and the research sometimes (but not systematically) leads to artistic productions in the form of installations, performances, concerts and web-based projects. Beyond this, Locus Sonus regularly publishes research in recognized journals and takes on an editorial role for special issues. "
john roach

UCSB Cylinder Audio Archive - 0 views

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    "The UCSB Library invites you to discover and listen to its online archive of cylinder recordings; donate to help the collection grow; and learn about how these sounds and songs create an audio history of American culture."
john roach

Sounds of the Earth - Sonifications of Earth's vibrations - 0 views

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    "Conversations of Great Whales in the oceans… Low throb of ship engines… Continuous rumble of the ground beneath our feet and of the seafloor below the water… Bursts of vibrations excited by earthquakes… We cannot normally hear these vibrations as sounds-the human ear is not designed to. But what if we could? What if we could make the sounds of the Earth audible?"
john roach

sonic cyberfeminisms - 0 views

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    " Sonic Cyberfeminisms is an ongoing project by a collective of artists, musicians and writers, which draws upon intersectional feminist praxis and the legacies of cyberfeminism. The project aims to foreground agendas of social justice in the domains of sound, gender and technology and, in doing so, develop critical cultural work. The project was initiated by Annie Goh and Marie Thompson. Current Sonic Cyberfeminisms participants include Robin Buckley, Marlo De Lara, Jane Frances Dunlop, Natalie Hyacinth, Miranda Iossifidis, Louise Lawlor, Frances Morgan and Shanti Suki Osman. "
john roach

What The Internet Sounds Like - 0 views

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    "Does the internet have a sound? Is it the whirring fan that keeps your computer from overheating? Is it a flurry of incessant notification pings? Is it the cackling laugh of Chewbacca Mom? Or is a monotonous drone, humming from an anonymous building where servers spin their disks and spit out information to millions of devices across a global network?"
john roach

With the Help of Scientists, Artist Tomás Saraceno Makes Music Out of Spider ... - 0 views

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    "Despondent folk music has been written about the sound of silence, but the sound of spiders turns out to be much, much heavier. Scientists at MIT have collaborated with Berlin-based sound artist Tomás Saraceno to create a virtual experience that literally instrumentalizes spider webs. This project aligns with more than two decades on the artist's part to deepen our understanding of environmental justice and interspecies cohabitation. Saraceno, Roland Muehlethaler, and Ally Bisshop at Studio Saraceno all participate in the research and development carried out through projects, including "Arachnophilia." "
john roach

▶︎ Magneto Mori: Kilfinane | Mark Vernon | Canti Magnetici - 0 views

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    "Magneto Mori is an exploration of tape recording as a form of memory storage. In this iteration the location is the Irish mountain town of Kilfinane."
john roach

Uneasy Listening | Towards a Hauntology of AI Generated Music (Resonance) - 0 views

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    In Resonance: The Journal of Sound and culture "This paper explores the cultural ramifications of music generated by artificial intelligence (AI). Deploying complex algorithms to create original music productions, AI's automation of human authorship may suggest a radically new sonic form. However, its creators have preferred to use its tools to mimic established musical genres from the past. "
john roach

The Forgotten 1979 MoMA Sound Art Exhibition | Resonance | University of Cali... - 0 views

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    "Over the past 40 years "sound art" has been hailed as a new artistic category in numerous writings, yet one of its first significant exhibitions is mentioned only in passing, if at all. The first instance of the hybrid term sound art used as the title of an exhibition at a major museum was Sound Art at the Museum of Modern Art in New York (MoMA), shown from 25 June to 5 August 1979. Although this was not marketed as a feminist exhibition, curator Barbara London selected three women to exemplify the new form. Maggi Payne created multi-speaker works that utilized space in a sculptural fashion; Connie Beckley combined language and sounding sculptural objects, showing sound in both a conceptual and physical manifestation; and Julia Heyward's work used aspects of feminist performance art including music, narrative, and the voice in order to buck abstract aesthetics of the time. This paper uses archival research, interviews, and analysis of work presented to reconstruct the exhibition and describe the obstacles both the artists and the curator encountered. The paper further provides context in the lives of the artists and the curator as well as the surrounding artistic scene, and ultimately exposes the discriminatory reasons this important exhibition has been marginalized in the current discourse."
john roach

Podcast #292 - The History of Sound Art - Radio Survivor - 0 views

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    "What is sound art? And what do we know about its origin story? We explore this question and more with our guest this week, artist and educator Judy Dunaway. An adjunct professor in the History of Art Department at Massachusetts College of Art and Design, Dunaway's recent article, "The Forgotten 1979 MoMA Sound Art Exhibition," is a fascinating look at the history of sound art and highlights important contributions by female artists. In our wide-ranging discussion, we also hear about Dunaway's own artistic practice, from her work with latex balloons to transmission art to a "phone improv" show over BlogTalkRadio a decade ago."
john roach

Blind Beekeeper Relies on Sound to Keep Her Hives Happy | KQED - 0 views

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    "I can hear how the bees are behaving - if they're agitated, if there are other bees trying to get in the hive, or if it's too crowded or too hot or too cold," said Aerial Gilbert, an avid beekeeper in Petaluma."
john roach

Between the Ears - Telling the Bees - BBC Sounds - 0 views

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    "Artist Jana Winderen transports us underwater, to listen to the sonic wonders of the sea."
john roach

Between the Ears - Listening to the Deep - BBC Sounds - 0 views

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    "Artist Jana Winderen transports us underwater, to listen to the sonic wonders of the sea."
john roach

Extremities: Maryanne Amacher | NewMusicBox - 0 views

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    "As someone whose entry point into the vast world of musical repertoire has mostly been through collecting records and since the most unusual and unique things are usually the hardest ones to hear live, Maryanne Amacher has always been something of an enigma to me. A composer of vast, space-specific sonic panoramas at crushingly loud volumes, Amacher defies containment and commodification. When Tzadik finally released a CD of her music, I finally thought I was able to experience it. But actually, I hadn't. Two speakers can't really convey what she is doing in space and as an apartment dweller the kinds of volumes she demands would inevitably lead to an eviction. Yet through listening and reading her essays on various subjects, especially her fascinating contribution to a panel on Cage's influence where she spoke about creating a music that is somehow liberated from time, I felt compelled to talk to her. We spent only about an hour in conversation-the unfortunate time constraints of a reality based on schedules-but it felt like it could have gone on forever. And, in some ways, it will…"
john roach

NEW SUNS - Listening with Artists - 0 views

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    Writing form sound artists
john roach

Buzz, Quack, Toot, Beep | HMC Bee Lab - 0 views

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    BEES and sound
john roach

How I edit and master my field recordings - Mindful Audio - 0 views

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    "I love talking about field recording, as you can gather from reading my blog or following me on social media. I'm deeply passionate about all aspects of the discipline and I also love to inspire others to pursue it. Something I haven't talked much about is the editing and mastering side, probably because it isn't as glamorous as teetering on the edge of a volcano or being chased by an orangutan in the rainforest. It may also be because I do my best to escape the studio whenever I can, and this would mean more time spent indoors. At any rate, with this blog post I'm trying to fix that."
john roach

In Sound of Metal, There Are No Small Sufferings - 0 views

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    "Darius Marder's Oscar-nominated film is less about the Deaf community than about the process of losing a sense inextricably tied to one's identity."
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