- Date(s)
- April 8, 2022
- Location
- MMR SARC
- Time
- 14:30 - 16:30
John D鈥橝rcy 鈥 First Steps into Someone Else鈥檚 Ears: The initial activities of Do You Hear What I Hear? 鈥 Do You Hear What I Hear (DYHWIH) is an interdisciplinary project that aims to explore how diversity in auditory sensory experiences might be shared through technologically-assisted arts performances. The project incorporates participatory performance and augmented-reality audio in an investigation of aural empathy. The presentation will cover the project鈥檚 origins; share influential work by other artists and organisations; document the initial activities of DYHWIH; consider the ethics of 鈥榯rying on someone else鈥檚 ears鈥; and forecast some potential future outcomes of the project.
Georgios Varoutsos 鈥 Peace Wall 抖阴短视频 鈥&苍产蝉辫;In West 抖阴短视频 lays the Peace Wall 抖阴短视频, a manifestation of multifaced messages on political, religious, and communal ideals represented by physical properties of cement, gates, and artwork. There have been discussions on initiatives to take down the walls, however, this remains a fragile state. When thinking about the connectivity of the surrounding spaces and communities, the placing of the Peace Wall(s) blocks any opportunity of cross-communication and produces disorienting effects. However, through alternative artistic approaches focusing on sound, there can be innovative capabilities of sharing these stories and spaces with spatial audio techniques.
Julian Weaver 鈥 Future Audition: listening to promises of 鈥榰nlimited power for the indefinite future鈥 鈥 Future Audition presents a sonic investigation of Nuclear Fusion, its ongoing quest to become the power source of the future, and its wider implications in terms of environment and energy landscapes. 鈥楢lways 30 years away鈥, as the joke goes, Fusion energy is 鈥渁 dream that haunts the future鈥 [Pinkus, 2016]. Future Audition puts fusion energy 鈥榠n place鈥, re-entangling its mission to 鈥榗reate a sun on earth鈥 with environmental discourses around landscape and power, global resourcing and strong sustainability. Drawing on the project鈥檚 field-recordings, audifications of reactor data, and captured robotic and material science processes, Future Audition will transmit some aspects of these current and future entanglements.
Marcel Sagesser aka Marcel Zaes 鈥 Composing Time: The Sonic Materiality of Grids, Deviations and Envelopes 鈥 Digital audio workstations teach us to detach abstract temporal tools from the audio clips that we are composing with: we align clips on a temporal grid, apply time-based effects, algorithmically seek for transients, apply audio quantization, envelopes, etc. But what if we consider these tools themselves as material to work with? In this lecture-demonstration, Marcel presents a series of current studies where he uses the temporal algorithms and the audible artifacts thereof as sound material to compose with. Listening to these studies will encourage us to think about a potential 鈥渟onic materiality鈥 of time.
Sylvia Hinz 鈥 Recorder: in-between times 鈥 We are living in-between times, and as classical musicians also in-between genres. contemporary music is experimental, interdisciplinary, and open for elements from both traditional notation and graphical notation. with this programme , I aim to show similarities and differences, massive sounds and fragile trembling of the air.
1. Graphic score I & II (2020) WP for tenor recorder + tape 鈥 Elsa M鈥橞ala (*1988, CM), tape: Sylvia Hinz 7鈥
2. Lost in a dystopian story (2021)* WP for alto recorder + tape 鈥 Guadalupe Perales (*1992, MX) 8鈥
* written for Sylvia Hinz