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Contents contributed and discussions participated by john roach

john roach

The Psychology Behind the World's Most Recognizable Sounds | WIRED - YouTube - 0 views

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    "Two sonic branding experts explain the thinking behind some of the world's most recognizable sounds. Featuring: Andrew Stafford - Co-Founder & Director at Big Sync Music Steve Milton - Founding Partner at Listen"
john roach

The Beeping, Gargling History of Gaming's Most Iconic Sounds | WIRED - 0 views

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    THE BOUNCY BEEPS of Pac-Man. The percussive build-up in Legend of Zelda. The effusive gibberish of The Sims. The sounds in videogames tell us to speed up, start over, and of course, to keep playing. But how does one set of beeps so effectively tell you you've gained power, while another indicates your character has died? And how, exactly, does someone create the sound of the Dark Knight punching the Joker in the face? The answer: Genius sound design.
john roach

Materiality of Sound: E. Domnitch & D. Gelfand, A. Smirnov, xname - 0 views

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    A presentation of artists exploring sound and materiality: "Materiality of Sound: In this chapter, we will present projects that get closer to the sonic phenomenon directly presented on stage in front of our eyes and hears as a form of scientific and artistic experiment. The materiality of sound, intended as a specific focus on using principles of the physical world to initiate a new listening into the matter, reveals the vibrational fundaments constituting our universe and unfolds the state of inter-connectivity in nature performing forces pervading multiple domains at the same time in the same space."
john roach

You Know What London Looks Like. But Have You Really Heard It? - The New York Times - 0 views

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    "The musician Dessa took a sensory tour in the city with the synesthete LJ Rich. Here is how it sounded"
john roach

Lawrence Abu Hamdan - 0 views

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    "Walled Unwalled  is a single channel 20 minute performance-video installation. The performance comprises of an interlinking series of narratives derived from legal cases that revolved around evidence that was heard or experienced through walls. It consists of a series of performances reenactments and a monologue staged inside a trio of sound effects studios in the Funkhaus, East Berlin."
john roach

Ragnar Kjartansson, on Repeat | The New Yorker - 0 views

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    "How Ragnar Kjartansson turns repetition into art. "
john roach

Go with the Slow: Ragnar Kjartansson's "The Visitors" - 0 views

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    "Behind a curtain in the darkened gallery space at Luhring Augustine nine screens, each equipped with its own speaker have been arranged into two somewhat discreet areas. Eight of the screens feature the image of a single musician - a guitarist, pianist, banjo player, cellist, and so forth - and one  screen offers a view of the porch of a large house where other instrumentalists, singers and assorted folks have gathered. Ragnar Kjartansson's video installation titled "The Visitors" documents in a single take the 64-minute-long performance of one song."
john roach

Project | conserve the sound - 1 views

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    "Conserve the sound« is an online museum for vanishing and endangered sounds. The sound of a dial telephone, a walkman, a analog typewriter, a pay phone, a 56k modem, a nuclear power plant or even a cell phone keypad are partially already gone or are about to disappear from our daily life. Accompanying the archive people are interviewed and give an insight in to the world of disappearing sounds."
john roach

An International Archive of Sound Art - 0 views

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    Here's an impressible batch of scanned articles about sound art available for download.
john roach

Recording Fluids: Foley Magic - 0 views

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    "Some of the most challenging, rewarding, and fun sounds to record are those within the vast spectrum of fluids. Wet, sticky, viscous, mushy; the tactful use of fluid sounds can reinforce the realism and impact of a scene, or just be the punchline of a joke. In order to effectively communicate an idea to an audience, there are a few challenges in recording fluids to consider before dipping your toes in. While most of these considerations are technical in application, they all serve to realize an idea and bolster the narrative. For live-action projects, capturing the complexity of fluid sounds on location can often range from impractical to impossible, which is where foley steps in."
john roach

Soaring Trips to a Temple in Nepal - The New York Times - 0 views

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    Sound by Ernst Karel - "The faces in "Manakamana," a transporting ethnographic film set in a green sliver of Nepal, stare into the camera, out into space and, perhaps, into the great beyond. The faces are sometimes creased and weathered, sometimes smooth as pebbles. A few look etched with worry, as if they were weighed down by a heavy burden, although they may also be seized with fear. That's because for 10 or so minutes at a time, these faces are floating hundreds of feet above a lush Nepali forest in a cable car that takes pilgrims to and from the temple that gives this film its rhythmic title. "
john roach

Sonic Ethnographer: An Interview with Ernst Karel | Institute of Contemporary Arts - 0 views

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    " Ernst Karel is Lecturer on Anthropology, Assistant Director of the Film Study Center, and Lab Manager for the renowned Sensory Ethnography Lab at Harvard University. In his audio projects, he works with analog electronics and location recordings, sometimes separately, sometimes in combination, to create pieces that move between the abstract and the documentary. Karel collaborates with filmmakers as a sound recordist, mixer, and sound designer. Notably, Karel has worked on key films produced at the Sensory Ethnography Lab including Sweetgrass (2009) and Leviathan (2012), both of which were released in UK cinemas via Dogwoof."
john roach

COSEE TEK: Resources - create a hydrophone - 0 views

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    Build a Hydrophone - Tutorial"
john roach

Beyond Imitation: Birdsong and Vocal Learning on Vimeo - 0 views

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    "Why do birds sing? Could we call what they sing and how they sing music? Of all nonhuman animals, birds teach us to check anthropocentrism in music, or, as David Rothenberg puts it in Why Birds Sing (2005), birds check "the conceit that humanity is needed to find beauty in the natural world." But how do they learn songs? Do they invent and compose them or "parrot" what they hear? Join us for a discussion between animal behavioral psychologist Professor Ofer Tchernichovski (Hunter College) and distinguished professor of philosophy and music, composer and clarinetist, Professor David Rothenberg (NJIT). Visit our site for more event information: "
john roach

Interview with Robert Dudzic - 0 views

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    "Interview with Robert Dudzic August 9, 2018 by Jim Stout Leave a Comment I recently had the privilege to speak with Robert Dudzic and, during the course of our casual discussion, we touched on topics such as his thoughts on the creative process, how to gain access to sites and the power of inspiration."
john roach

Science of Storytelling 6: How Sounds Optimise Audience Engagement in Movies | Keith Bo... - 0 views

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    " Science of storytelling 5 identified specific sounds that filmmakers use to scare us in horror-thriller films. In this article, I will be revealing the science of how different sounds in horror-thriller films optimise engagement. The research findings are based on a 5-year scientific study of suspense and engagement in horror-thriller films. I will first summarise the film experiment research methods and how our brain responds to a fear stimulus through a chain of neurological processes that can be recorded and analysed. Finally, the research outcomes (highlights) describe how viewers physiologically responded to specific sounds in horror-thriller films, in terms of anxiety durability (time) and intensity (level)."
john roach

The immense electronic art of Ryoji Ikeda - YouTube - 0 views

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    "Acclaimed Japanese artist Ryoji Ikeda creates new dimensions where art and quantum physics itersect. "
john roach

Casey O'Callaghan - How we understand perception - coordination and cooperation among o... - 1 views

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    "Casey O'Callaghan - Associate Professor. Department of Philosophy How we understand perception is being reshaped by attention to "other" sensory modalities and to the extensive coordination and cooperation among our senses."
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