Vicki Bennett/People Like Us

Plunderphonics is a genre of music which consists of heavily sampling most commonly from well known recognisable material. The term plunderphonics was created by John Oswald in 1985 in his essay by the same name. The essay really piqued my interest as I have been actively interested in the legal and moral standpoint of sampling in general. After reading the essay I feel excited to start experimenting with more samples in my personal and university work.

http://www.plunderphonics.com/xhtml/xplunder.html

I have just checked the plunderphonics genre on Rate Your Music and I have listened to a lot of the albums on the list and was unaware that the music was in the plunderphonic genre.

Further listening list-

革命京劇 (Revolutionary Pekinese Opera) Ver.1.28

Lektion III – Den Sorte Skole 2013

Dispepsi – Negativland

Unborn Faces Withering – DJ Yo-Yo Dieting

Sound arts now

Sound arts now is a book written by Cathy Lane and Angus Carlyle, it fouses on sound art in the present tense (2010/20’s) and leans away from focusing on the “white men from the north” and gives a much more global insight into sound art in the present day. The book consists of 20 interviews taken with a range of international artists each bringing their own unique perspectives and ideas on sound art. Although I could not rent the book from the library as they did not have a copy, I was able to do research on the book online and using CRISAP I managed to find a excerpt of the book on the LCC UAL website. The excerpt is from the end of the book after all of the 20 interviews have concluded and the authors and talking within themselves, they discuss how the interviews have went and what they would do if they could do it again such as the guests not talking about their theoretical concerns as much as they might have wanted to.

https://www.arts.ac.uk/colleges/london-college-of-communication/stories/london-college-of-communication-researchers-professor-cathy-lane-and-professor-angus-carlyle-publish-sound-arts-now

“listening is presented as a medium or modality, a genre or a discipline in itself; on the other hand, maybe it is the exact opposite, with listening becoming subsumed, becoming a reflexive part and parcel of what a critical practitioner does?”

Curatorial Practices in West Germany

The sense of touch is a sense that is usually disregarded by sound artists, seeing and hearing are closely related. Fiir Augen und Ohren was an exhibition that took place in Berlin in 1980 it highlighted the synthesis and central role of sight and hearing. The visitors of the exhibition were allowed to touch and play with the exhibited works. The exhibition included the works of Luigi Russolo, Man Ray, Christina Kubisch and Bernhard Leitner.

“There was, however, at least one other sense inquisitively employed by the visitors and that is the sense of touch. The visitors to the exhibition were allowed to touch play with the exhibited works”

Kunstgewerbemuseum in Cologne hosted Sehen und Hören: Design und Kommunikation in 1974 which “alluded directly to the importance of technology to the senses of sight and hearing”. Peter Frank was who curated the exhibition and divided the exhibition into three broad categories which were “How we expand communication”, “How we orientate in time and space” and “How we process information”. In each room there would be products and items that relate to these three categories which were exhibited in “sterile looking rooms”.
“Despite this sterile, perhaps cold site, visitors to this design and communication exhibition were allowed to touch and test all the items on display.”

In Dusseldorf John Cage used the white cube setting to show his work 33 1/3 from 1969 which was composed of twelve records playing simultaneously different music and the audience played the roll of a DJ and picked what music they were going to listen to.

John Cage, 33 1/3, 1969. Installation view at daadgalerie Berlin, 1988–89. Courtesy of the John Cage Trust. Photo: Werner Zellien, © Archiv Broken Music

Sound Arts in China

Sound art did not exist in China before the 1990’s but the culture did produce the most advanced sound theories and auditory aesthetics among world cultures.

The Bianzhong of Marquis Yi of Zeng is a instrument made in 433 BC, they were an accidental discovery in May of 1978

Bianzhong of Marquis Yi of Zeng - Wikipedia

FM3 are are Chinese electronic duo consisting of Christiaan Virant and Zhang Jian who have created a range of different Buddha Machines with artists such as Cornelius, Throbbing Gristle and Phillip Glass. I thought that the collaboration with Cornelius on Ghost In The Machine was very interesting and sparked my interest as Ghost in The Shell is one of my favourite manga/animes. The Ghost In The Machine Buddha Box comes preloaded with 3 tracks from the Ghost In The Shell:Arise which can be played together. The idea of the Buddha Machine comes from ancient practices and is influenced by mantras and repetition.

“The music scene was all DIY, we basically had to do everything ourselves.” – FM3 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlSM3GMuYVU

The Echo Wall at the Temple of Heaven in Bejing is a wall where you can put your ear to the wall and hear echoes from the other side of the wall, the sound waves reflect off the wall and because of its circular shape it can be passed around to the other side. A wall similar to this is found up St Pauls Cathedral which has the same

7 Interesting Facts About the Temple of Heaven

Glossary –

dynastic rulers – a leader who inherits their power from their ancestors.

sovereignty – supreme power or authority

Background Noise

“All I am doing is directing attention to the sounds of the environment” – John Cage

“Cage was concerned to organise the temporal unfolding of the work in a context where chance already rules, for reasons that are more social than musical…” – Jean Jacques Nattiez

background noise

listening breaks apart the shell of the subject, eases the borders of identity and initiates an interdependence whereby one is constituted by the whole environmental horizon.

listening is very social it brings people together
connects people around the world

communication technologies make us more involved in others lives

art and now music serve to open peoples eyes and ears to the enjoyment of their daily environment

the way that we send and receive information is more important than the information itself – mcluhan

our memory spans have been reduced due to technology

talks on the future and how we are shifting into cyberspace, memory and screen space become valuable.

META
NFT
EARTH 2

Earth 2® is a futuristic concept for a second earth; a metaverse, between virtual and physical reality in which real-world geolocations on a sectioned map correspond to user generated digital virtual environments. These environments can be owned, bought, sold, and in the near future deeply customized.

transurbanism – shift away from the material city to the immaterial flow of information
further definition- a design strategy that allows cities to organise themselves as complex systems, where small local structures incorporate global flows
Wollscheid’s work is “production of the local “ in which the work of the imagination coalesces into collective sensibility, enhancing the intensification of prensence in digital society.

sensor band global string
the work consists of a metal cable stretched from the floor to caking fitted ehhh vibration sensors, the sensors translate physical vibrations into digital data that are fed to the network.
it’s a mono chord where the two end points are physical and the middle is the betwoej
creating extended musical instrument that collects and collates multiple inputs along the way, argumentimg physical and virtual spaces
is mono hoff where

sensorband are a trio of musicians using interactive technology active between 1993-2003

listening is about
Research on – Alchim Wollscheid
Joshua Meyrowitz
Tia DeNora

Marshall McLuhan

roland. bathes
david rothenburg
Achim Wollscheid

Sound Art In Japan

This article is text by Ryo lkeshiro ond Atou Tonoko about how sound art is viewed and percieved in the Japanese context. We are told about how sound is a very important part of Japanese culture, we are also shown historical sound art pieces by various sound artists from the years 1949 to 2013. Sound art is still relatively a new term in Japan.

Jikken Kōbō was an artist collective founded in Japan in 1951 and was disbanded in 1957, the group consisted of 14 members, they were artists, musicians, choreographers and poets who were self taught. Their leader Shuzo Takiguchi played a pivotal role in introducing Dada and Surrealism to Japan through connections to Andre Breton and Marcel Duchamp. They were described and being like Bauhaus but without the buidlings.

Jikken Kobo | Frieze

Gutai Art Association were another Japanese Avant-Garde artist group founded in the Hanshin region In 1954. In their early work they created a series of striking works anticipating later happenings, performance and conceptual art. “In which the artist rolled half naked in a pile of mud, remains the most celebrated event associated with the group.”

https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/g/gutai

Shozo Shimamoto, ‘Holes’ 1954

Fluxus was a movement in art put forward by George Maciunas in 1963. The leaders of Fluxus consisted of George Maciunas, Yoko Ono, Nam June Paik, La Monte Young, etc. Fluxus’s work was profoundly influenced the nature of art production since the 1960s. The work had no single unifying style but adopted the DIY mindset.

“Purge the world of bourgeois sickness, ‘intellectual,’ professional & commercialized culture, PURGE the world of dead art, imitation, artificial art, abstract art, illusionistic art, mathematical art, — PURGE THE WORLD OF ‘EUROPANISM’!” – Maciunas

Image via Wikimedia Commons.
What Is Fluxus? - Artsy

Glossary-

Wabi-Sabi – “beauty of irregularity.” Muneyoshi Yanagi “The notion of wabi-sabi may be seen as the aesthetic grounding of the Japanese reinterpretation of Buddhism, reflecting plainfless and simplicity, aged and solitary states.”

Pro Tools Lesson 2

1.Name some of the folders and files that ProTools creates as part of the session hierarchy. Where is the session file (. ptx) stored? 

Sample files, session files, clip groups and also videos if you render them. The session file is stored in pro tools session and can be saved to wherever you decide.

2.What is the WaveCache.wtm file used for? What happens if the WaveCache file gets deleted or goes missing? 

It’s used to show the waveform which can help Pro Tools to open faster. If the file goes missing pro tools can recalculate where it is or you can update its location.

3. Where are audio files stored in the session hierarchy? 

They are saved into the audio files folder.

4.Where are Pro Tool’s is MIDI files normally stored? 

in the session

5. Which components should you turn on first when powering up a Pro Tools system? Which component should you turn on last? 

External hard drives. Audio monitoring system. Check inputs and outputs on system preferences and Pro Tools sound engine settings.

6. What type of processing does the hardware buffer size affect? What type of processing does it not affect?

Native plug-in processing. DSP Processing. It affects purely audio.

7. What kinds of commands can be found under the ProTools View menu? How does the view menu differ from the window menu?

You can hide or show the windows, tracks, and track data . You can arrange the way the way the windows on display look.

8.What kind of commands can be found under the ProTools Options menu? How does the options menu differ from the setup menu?

It lets you select several editing, recording, monitoring, playback, and display options and the setup menu allows you to configure functions or operations that involve multiple settings.

9. Which main Pro Tools window displays audio waveforms and can be used to work directly with audio, MIDI, and video files on tracks?

The edit window

10. Which ProTools window provides access to Pan controls and Volume faders for each track?

The mix window

Pro Tools 101 lesson 1

Questions-

1. Name and describe five types of production tasks that ProTools can be used for.

Audio Processing,

2. What’s the frequency range of human hearing? 

20hz to 20kz

3. What does the frequency of a sound wave affect in terms of how we perceive the sound? How is frequency measured? 

The frequency of the sound pressure variations that reaches our ears creates our perception of the pitch of the sound. We measure this frequency in cycles per second (CPS), also commonly denoted as Hertz (Hz). These two terms are synonymous—15,000 CPS is the same as 15,000 Hz. Multiples of 1,000 Hz are often denoted as kilohertz (kHz). Therefore, 15,000 Hz is also written as 15 kHz.

Frequency is measured by in hertz and is the rate of which current changes direction per second, it

4. What does the amplitude of the sound wave affect? How is amplitude measured? 

5. How does the sample rate of a system relate to the frequency of audio it can capture? What is the name of the law that specifies the relationship between sample rate and audio frequency? 

6. How does the bit depth relate to the dynamic range of audio it can capture. How can you estimate the dynamic range of a system? 

7. What are some common digital connections available on Pro Tools audio interfaces? What type of connector jack does each use? 

8. Name some audio interfaces that are compatible with standard Pro Tools software. 

Any interface compatible with core audio for Mac or ASIO for Windows

9. Name some Avid audio interfaces that are compatible with Pro Tools | Ultimate software. 

Supports multichannel outputs.

Making a contact mic

To make the contact mic we used 35mm Piezo discs and attached them with a soldering iron to a 6.35mm jack, using the 6.35mm jack was very helpful as it could be connected to a field recorder or to an interface easily without using an adapter. The process was relatively easy and I was scared at first to use a soldering iron as I haven’t before and thought I would solder too much by accident but this wasn’t an issue. I really enjoyed making the microphone and it has lead me to start getting into building guitar pedals and eurorack modules as I now know how to solder and have been reluctant to in the past.

This is a drawn out sketch of the process I used to create the contact mic.

Week 4: Sound Arts in The British Context

This text is an interview between Adam Parkinson and David Toop recorded in 2015 at the London Metropolitan University.

“What I’m trying out at this stage of my life life is new formats, or new settings maybe’ or formats and settings that have been tried before but then been forgotten or pushed aside because established formats have such a powerful hold on our thinking’ I’m frustrated by [” ‘]all the familiar routines that frame practice and discourse [“‘] what I want to do is modest, small scale, quiet, and uncertain – just a slight shift of conditions [“‘] a big thing but small, a conversation that can be quiet but loud’.”

“But sound art to me is problematic for a number of reasons. One, because it is so closely associated with a particular world and a particular economy – the art world – and there are all sorts of reasons why that’s difficult.”

Toop finds the term “sound art” problematic as he finds it too closely related to the art world and how it revolves around money. I find this

https://www.arts.ac.uk/about-ual/press-office/stories/david-toop-offering-rites-at-central-saint-martins

“They are more concerned with the unfinished or in-between, that which is difficult to articulate or impossible to exhibit; each one will involve offerings of different kinds, opportunities to listen, to watch, to speak, to be silent.”

Glossary

Aesthetics – a persons idea on what is beautiful

Sound Walk 8th of October

We started the sound walk off at Forest Hill station (my local station) and while we waited for the whole class to arrive we started the walk by going into the stations under passage. We were given eye masks so that we were only focusing on sound. Personally the sounds in the under passage were my favourite of the whole trip. The sounds started off pretty ambient and were mostly just footsteps and the jangling of people keys/money in their pockets. Occasionally you could hear the train announcer saying “This is the London Overground service to Highbury and Islington” and you could hear the cars passing by both sides. Then instantly the whole tunnel was filled with reverb and a steady pounding four to the floor at around 90bpm kick like sound which was the train passing overhead. I then heard a few women speaking amongst themselves and asking what we were doing under the tunnel, that was followed by the sound of an ambulance’s siren to the east of me. Occasionally I could hear coughing from the public and the light breeze of wind against my ears, I could also hear the crackiling of plastic as a member of public opened something while passing.

We then went around the corner to stand on the side of the train tracks, we stood against the wall nd put our eyes masks on. The first sounds I heard were the chirping of birds and the sound of a hose/carwash coming from infront of me. This was then followed by he sound of a train passing fast by me which sounded more like a whirring and like an aeroplane taking off. There were also trains that went by slower which occasionally had a clicking electrical hiss which is the sound that sometimes comes out of a trains wheels. On the side of the tracks you could also hear the announcements a lot louder and clearer. Opposite the sidewalk were a few workers that were doing sawing and shouting which was pretty loud.

After we headed to Horniman Museam where we would begin to experiment with walking with the blindfolds with a partner.

I found this one hard as I was being lead downhill and kept feeling like I was tripping over stuff.