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Contents contributed and discussions participated by john roach

john roach

Training to Be a Spy at the Brooklyn Museum - 0 views

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    "At this point, I should mention what I have neglected to say. Top Secret uses an algorithmic Bluetooth device that tracks your coordinates in the museum, sending you further information and instructions based on your location. This also means that when the voice in your headphone asks you a question, you can respond by moving in certain ways or relocating to specific areas in the galleries. For example, you may be asked to answer a question by walking to the other end of a gallery or waving your notebook (which Top Secret provides you with in the air above your head. "
john roach

Peter Vogel - The Sound of Shadows (2011) on Vimeo - 0 views

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    "Pre-published part of the documentary about Peter Vogel explaining his work in his atelier in Freiburg i.B., South-West Germany, by Jean Martin and Conall Gleeson."
john roach

Sonic Sea - The film - 1 views

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    "Oceans are a sonic symphony. Sound is essential to the survival and prosperity of marine life. But man-made ocean noise is threatening this fragile world. Sonic Sea is about protecting life in our waters from the destructive effects of oceanic noise pollution."
john roach

How a Musician Copes With Career-Ending Hearing Loss - The Atlantic - 1 views

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    "The ear has 20,000-30,000 hair cells, the nerve endings responsible for carrying the electrical impulses through the auditory nerve to the brain. These delicate receptors bend or flatten as sounds enter the ear, typically springing back to normal in a few hours, or overnight. But over time, loud sounds can cause more permanent damage as hair cells lose their resilience. Frequent and intense exposure to noise will cause these receptors to flatten down, stiffen, and eventually break. The damage can interfere with the ability to determine the location of a sound, cause extreme sensitivity and pain, and make it impossible to discern language with background noise. One in 20 Americans, or 48 million people, report some degree of hearing impairment. RELATED STORY What My Hearing Aid Taught Me About the Future of Wearables "
john roach

A History of Sound From the Big Bang to the Cellphone - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    "The first sound ever was the sound of the Big Bang. And, surprisingly, it doesn't really sound all that bang-like. John Cramer, a researcher at the University of Washington, has created two different renditions of what the big bang might have sounded like based on data from two different satellites."
john roach

FOLEY Rated R (for Vegetable Violence) - Cook's Science - 0 views

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    "Crack-k-squutch! A zombie's head explodes in a loud, disgusting gush of decaying brain matter, and the audience gleefully recoils. When it comes to Hollywood, in an era of digital special effects and computer-generated monsters, one of the last provinces of traditional analog elements is Foley art: the sounds that are added to movie scenes to give extra vividness to a head thwack, a creaking chair, or just the ever-present sounds of walking. These sounds are still created using physical props-and very often, those props come from the kitchen."
john roach

Musical Messaging System - TWMW - 0 views

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    A distributed hybrid digital/analog musical messaging system that activates an acoustic geography.
john roach

Aural Superimpositions: Olivia Block on Sonic Architecture and Sonambient Pavilion Inst... - 1 views

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    "Here's an excerpt from a recent talk by sound artist Olivia Block in which she exposes her approach to sound in relation to architecture, specifically in her recent Sonambient Pavilion, where she explored some interesting topics around sounds, materials, shapes, textures, layers, spaces, etc."
john roach

About | The Museum of Portable Sound - 0 views

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    "The Museum of Portable Sound is a portable museum dedicated to portable sound, currently based in London, UK. The Museum's galleries exist as digital files located on the Museum Director's mobile phone - due to copyright concerns, we are unable to distribute all of our objects online. Displays of our permanent collection are augmented with an ongoing series of rotating exhibits in our Exposition Space."
john roach

Sound Maps in the 21st Century: Where Do We Go From Here? | Phonomnesis - 0 views

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    "Sound maps are boring. Why? I would argue it's because they've become stuck in a rut that began when the idea of 'sound map' became synonymous with online, Google API-based or other forms of point-and-click, CD-ROM era interface design. If we want sound maps to become less boring, this needs to stop. But how do we as sound artists (or would-be 'sound cartographers') break free of the point-and-click model? "
john roach

Preserving the Little-Known Works of a Groundbreaking Guatemalan Sound Artist - 0 views

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    "For the past five decades, in a Guatemala City studio, 85-year-old sound artist Joaquín Orellana has been building unusual, sculptural útiles sonoros, or "sound utensils." Some look like marimbas curved into miniature roller coasters; others look like sets of wind chimes designed by Alexander Calder."
john roach

On The Sensations of Tone - TWMW - 0 views

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    "On the sensations of tone' brings together three artists where sound, listening, the ear of the listener and the composer are essential elements in their work. This approach evokes the theories of Hermann Ludwig von Helmholtz (1821-1894) in his seminal work 'The physiological theory of music based on the study of auditory sensations', published in 1865 in Germany."
john roach

The 'Lorem Ipsum' of sound - TWMW - 1 views

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    "A sound art installation exploring the infamous Latin 'Lorem Ipsum' text, used in publishing and editorial contexts, which allows focusing only on the visual and graphical aspects of the product. If the human ear can be compared to a radio receiver that is able to decode electromagnetic waves and recode them as sound, the human voice may be compared to the radio transmitter in being able to translate sound into electromagnetic waves.  The characteristic role of language with respect to thought is not to create a material phonic means for expressing ideas, but to serve as a link between thought and sound."
john roach

A climax of Mexican & German sound art - TWMW - 0 views

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    "IDEA: A large group exhibition in Berlin as a climax of a three-year residency and exchange project between Mexican and German sound art artists. WHAT:  'entre límites / zwischen grenzen - berlin' focuses on different aspects of the relationship between sounds and objects. The majority of the pieces at the exhibition were created over the course of several weeks during project residencies in Mexico and Berlin. The exhibition was already shown with great success earlier this year in Mexico City from late August to the end of October."
john roach

Artists' Fascination with the Soft, Tingling Sensations of ASMR - 1 views

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    "As ASMR videos have sped across the internet, artists have started making their own versions, inducing shivers with soft sounds like clacking, cracking, scratching, and whispering."
john roach

'How We Read': The Optophone - YouTube - 1 views

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    "Matthew Rubery discusses the Optophone as part of the 'How We Read: A Sensory History of Books for Blind People' exhibition. For more information see: http://www.howweread.co.uk."
john roach

VoxAura - The River Sings - 0 views

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    "VoxAura; the River Sings suggests that we pay attention to these complex issues that ultimately control our destiny by listening to the chemical composition of the Baltic."
john roach

Bill Fontana - Acoustical Visions of the Acqua Vergine - 0 views

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    "The digital movies shown on this page are part of the research and production of a new permanent sound sculpture for the entrance hall of MAXXI in Rome called Sonic Mappings that opened on October 23, initially as part of a new exhibition called Open Museum, Open City. These Acoustical Visions were made at some of the sites in Rome where I was making audio recordings for Sonic Mappings and now part of the permanent collection of MAXXI."
john roach

Audio Grove - Christian Moeller - 0 views

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    "Within a grid of touch sensitive steel posts surrounded by profile spot lights, visitors compose shadow structures and ambient sound."
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