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Contents contributed and discussions participated by john roach

john roach

Repetition can make sounds into music -- ScienceDaily - 0 views

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    "Water dripping. A shovel scraping across rock. These sounds don't seem very musical. Yet new research at the University of Arkansas shows that repeating snippets of environmental sounds can make them sound like music."
john roach

How Do They Make It?! Music (Mammoth Beat Organ) - YouTube - 0 views

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    "The Dunning Underwood Mammoth Beat Organ is a modular, mechanical music contraption by Sam Underwood and Graham Dunning. Designed as a two-player, semi-autonomous musical instrument, it plays unusual, sometimes erratic compositions drawing on drone music, minimalist repetition and fairground organ techniques. h"
john roach

David Bobier - VibraFusionLab - 0 views

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    "David Bobier is a self-identified hard of hearing media artist with a mental health diagnosis and is the parent of 2 deaf children. His work has been exhibited internationally and has been the focus of prominent touring exhibitions in Ontario and the Atlantic provinces. Bobier has received grants from Canada Council for the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Grand NCE, Ontario Arts Council and New Brunswick Arts Council. "
john roach

Soundwalking on the Edges: Sound, Safety and Privilege in São Paulo, Brazil |... - 0 views

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    "Having spent most of my childhood and all of my high school years (between 1987 and 2005) in São Paulo, I find myself looking back at my sensory experience of the city as one mediated by fear, segregation, and vigilance. I have become interested in Vincent Adrisani's (2015) idea of sonic citizenship-ordinary, everyday auditory interactions and experiences through which presence in and claim over public spaces is asserted."
john roach

swissmiss | What Choral Singing Can Teach us About Leadership - 0 views

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    "As someone who recently started a choir, even though I am terrified of singing, and as someone who leads teams, this article really spoke to me."
john roach

Do Plants Have Something to Say? - The New York Times - 0 views

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    "One scientist is definitely listening."
john roach

Jen Kutler - 0 views

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    Jen Kutler is a multidisciplinary artist and performer. She modifies found objects that are cultural signifiers of power, gender, queerness and intimacy to create atypical instruments and sculptures. Her performances feature many of her instruments incorporated with immersive field recordings to explore common and discrepant experiences of familiar social tones in immersive sound and media environments.
john roach

SONYC - Sounds of New York City - 0 views

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    "The project - which involves large-scale noise monitoring - leverages the latest in machine learning technology, big data analysis, and citizen science reporting to more effectively monitor, analyze, and mitigate urban noise pollution. Known as Sounds of New York City (SONYC), this multi-year project has received a $4.6 million grant from the National Science Foundation and has the support of City health and environmental agencies."
john roach

What role does ambient music have in society and in musical culture? A new book explore... - 0 views

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    "What role does ambient music have in society and in musical culture? A new book explores how the genre has developed over the last 40 years"
john roach

Auditory Perception: Hearing the Texture of Sounds - ScienceDirect - 0 views

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    "A recent study provides intriguing insights into how we recognize the sound of everyday objects from the statistical properties of the textures they produce."
john roach

Hugh McCann - Listening Booth - V1 - 0 views

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    "The Listening Booth is a wooden structure that seats two and uses a directional speaker to play audio that only those within the booth can hear. It offers new and existing library goers, including visually impaired people, another way to engage with content in the library. "
john roach

The Ideal Conditions for Sound Art and Office Productivity Aren't So Far Apart | The Ne... - 1 views

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    "In case you haven't been tracking the progress of group exhibitions of sound art, a short history would be: they are generally a disaster, with many works either impossible to hear adequately in the situation or impossible not to hear while you are trying to listen to something else. "It is in sound's nature to be free and uncontrollable and to go through the cracks and to go places where it's not supposed to go," as the sound artist Christian Marclay said, in an interview, in 2005. Meanwhile, the institutions that are devoted to art exhibition-galleries, museums-are all about placing art works where they intend them to stay. "I think it's great that there is this interest in sound and music," Marclay said. "But the over-all art-world structures are not yet ready for that, because sound requires different technology and different architecture to be presented.""
john roach

"The Ground: From the Land to the Sea": Tarek Atoui's Rhythm and Improvisation at NTU C... - 0 views

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    The Ground: From the Land to the Sea" brings together some of the most important works by the sound artist, forming a musical and spatial composition in the gallery. For some video, go to this Instagram post: https://www.instagram.com/p/B05G-URnJJ3/?igshid=ftwbbfdvvh4j
john roach

Hearing Change in the Chocolate City:  Soundwalking as Black Feminist Method ... - 0 views

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    "While we often think of soundwalks as engines of knowledge production, we must also consider that they may simultaneously silence divergent worldviews and perspectives of space and place."
john roach

Hear what music would have sounded like at Stonehenge 4000 years ago | New Scientist - 0 views

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    "Stonehenge was the ultimate venue for ceremonies and rituals when it was built more than 4000 years ago. But what did they sound like? Now a 1:12 scale model of the site, with the stones in their original positions, reveals the surprising acoustic qualities of the monument."
john roach

tubechopper - 0 views

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    "With TubeChopper you can now play YouTube like a sampler! You can add cue points and play/sequence them from a hardware MIDI controller."
john roach

Imaginary Landscapes: The turntable as instrument - YouTube - 0 views

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    "A documentary on the artists and musicians pushing turntables to the limit in experimental music. Featuring Maria Chavez, Graham Dunning, Shiva Feshareki, Philip Jeck, Haroon Mirza, Marina Rosenfeld, Janek Schaefer, and Vinyl, Terror & Horror. Directed by Sam Campbell (www.samcampbell.net) Produced by The Vinyl Factory"
john roach

Deconstructing Brian Eno's Music for Airports | Reverb Machine - 0 views

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    "In 1978, Brian Eno released Ambient 1: Music for Airports, a landmark album in ambient and electronic music. Although it wasn't the first ambient album by any means, it was the first album explicitly released as an 'ambient music album'. The album was essentially a continuation of Eno's experimentation with the tape machine as a compositional tool, as well as his exploration of generative music, music created by systems. In this article I'll discuss how Music for Airports was created, I'll break down and recreate the tracks 2/1 and 1/2, and hopefully give you some ideas about how to adopt this approach yourself."
john roach

Experience the "Sonic Medicine" Treating a Santa Monica Community - 1 views

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    "Two Postcommodity members, along with composer Guillermo Galindo, are partnering with members of a fast-gentrifying Santa Monica neighborhood to produce a sound-based artwork of contested histories."
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