Schizophonia vs. l’objet sonore: soundscapes and artistic freedom – by Francisco López

As sound artists we have inevitably an object of interest which is being extracted and/or executed in a way which expresses an artistic idea. The sound is that object. Lopez’s article discusses two schools and negotiates two different points of view at the same phenomena of real sound environments – soundscape. 

On one hand there is a school of “Schaferians” named after Canadian composer Murray Schafer. He starts with a critique of “tuning” which he considers “silencing” and “noisy” which is a diversion of post-industrial human from the natural sounds of the environment surrounding us. Therefore he considers any kind of systematic attempt to isolate the sound from its natural environment as a form of divergence which he calls Schizophonia. 

Pierre Schaeffer talks about sound object (object sonore) which is exactly the opposite of what Schaferians wish to achieve. Sound object is a sound isolated from its environment in order to create artistic expression. Schafer says that keeping sounds within its natural environments is artistic expression itself. Schaeffer criticises him for restricting the creative freedom in favour of acoustic ecology.

I can agree with both points of view but only in their specific parts. Schafer is seeing an art in something naturally occurring and trying to raise a critique of common sonic art expression which we call music (in order to create an art piece music isolates tones, then further music concrete isolates sounds etc.). This may bring a lot of new inspiration but in the same time it stops here. That is where I agree with Pierre Schaeffer claiming that Schaferians are reducing opportunities for artistic freedom and expression.

Field Recording Trip

Thames South Bank 24th October 2022

In front of Sea Containers Hotel a security guard arrived to check activities of animalistic sounds and application of suspicious looking devices. Came worried and paranoid, left genuinely intrigued. Music producer from Southbank University liked it too.

See It, Record It, Sorted.
This piece was recorded on my way home from the field recording trip. I was playing around with Soma Ether at London Bridge station. There was a homeless guy busking, playing on guitar few chords. He was facing directly glowing advert screen in a tunnel where people were passing by during the rush hour. When I scanned the screen with Soma Ether I realised that sounds of its electromagnetic fields creates two major tones which exactly matched chords of the guitar riff which he played without stopping over and over again…

Chris Watson: The Art of Location Recording

The article provides very interesting and valuable insight into technical backround, ways of recording and use of various equipment in Chris Watson’s field recordings in various outdoor environments with sometimes even extreme conditions.

An extensive list of tips how and when to use specific types of gear to achieve specific sonic results of the recorded audio can be almost extracted here.

I found interesting Watson’s comparison of pros and cons of digital and analog recorders. Digital domain provides more portability and reliability. Gear is getting lighter, smaller and amount of audio recorded larger. Analog gear which often doesn’t possess qualities mentioned below on the other hand stands out by its physical aspect and distinctive sound.

For sound design he prefers original sound of hardware synthesisers due to better harmonic frequencies than those contained in software synths.

Watson’s way of post-processing of recordings depends on the goal or the task but personally he insists on doing as little as possible. Here Watson emphasise the importance of quality of the recorded audio sample at its source. He thinks ahead very carefully about the nature of the sound before pressing the record button so he avoids overwhelming himself with extensive library of low-quality samples later. Then he carefully choses specific microphones and pieces of gear based on experience gathered over the time and around places in order to capture those thoroughly premeditated coherent sounds.

Week 3: Electrical Walks of Christine Kubish – An extension or diversion from the Soundwalking by Hildegard Westerkamp?

In this blog post I would like to compare and explore possible relation between two sound art practices, soundwalking of Hildegard Westerkamp and Electrical Walks of Christine Kubish. The practice of sound walking emerged in 1970s inspired by practice of conscious listening of the environment and acoustic ecology (Staśko-Mazur, 2015: 440-441). Westerkamp’s soundwalking is inherently ecological activity. She is questioning the backround noise and sonic pollution of human cities creating ‘authoritarian environment’ which causes inability to hear and listen to tiny sounds of barnacles during Kits Beach Soundwalk and it concerns her. Westercamp isolated those tiny noises with a use of bandpass filters and equalisation and so gave the chance to unheard voices to be heard there she doesn’t promote complete abandonment of technology (Kobler, 2002: 41-42).

Christine Kubish started her Electrical Walks in 2004 inspired by her previous sound installations from 1980s based on listening to amplified electromagnetic fields of wires. She has created headphones with built-in microphones and amplifiers which allows listeners to walk freely in the city and listen to multitude of various electromagnetic fields which surround us constantly in urban environment. Kamila Staśko-Mazur considers Electrical Walks as a new strategy of soundwalking (Staśko-Mazur, 2015: 441).

Both types of soundwalking practices differ from each others as well as carry a lot of in common. Westercamp is trying to escape human cities so she can listen to silenced sounds of the nature and maybe to find her own inner voice too (Kobler, 2002: 42). On the other hand Kubish is diving right into the noise polluted human city centres. She also uses the technology for the similar reason – to listen to the unheard. Electromagnetic fields and barnacles are both silent by its nature. Both can be brought up to be louder and be heard by the use of the technology. However human induced electromagnetic fields are by product of the noise pollution which are silencing the tiny nosies of the nature. In contrary Westerkamp once said that ‘we should listen to our cities as the native did to the forest’ (Westerkamp, 1974: 18-24) and that’s what Kubish did in more depth and precision. Certain sense of ambivalence is arising whilst comparing these two practices.

I really enjoyed the idea of Electrical Walks by Christine Kubish. It reveals sonic realms constantly present in the city environment but hidden to our hearing and brings completely different perspective and inspiration. I am particularly interested in drone sounds and electromagnetic fields are inducing these a lot in many forms, textures and pitches. Regular percussive sounds can be found as well. On contrary randomness and irregularity of sounds of barnacles is what I liked a lot in Kits beach Soundwalk of Hildegard Westerkamp. 

Week 2: Keywords to my practice and aspirations

Immersion

I have been always intrigued by immersive performances and audio-visual installations. The main reason is the possibility of escaping from the reality which surrounds us into realms of dreams, timelessness and abstraction. Certain type of sounds (f.e. drones), its characteristics (f.e. reverberation), shapes and lights induce in me very particular states of mind close to meditation.

Installation

Music production and music performance have been part of my artistic expression for the most of my life. Over the time mainly due to electronic music club environments I started to develop interest in different avenues how to express the need around playing with and manipulating the sound. There are different scales of time and space when it comes to sound installations and sound sculptures in comparison to music performances and productions which take the form of the release for example. I would like to work with similar vibes and emotions which I always liked in performances, reframe and execute them within different time-scales and spaces.

Psychoacoustics

Certain frequencies and their combinations can make us feel and react certain ways. I am keen to explore how sound installations and sound/music performances impact human emotions and psyche when executed in specific ways. Playing with specific frequencies to induce particular states of mind.

TROJΛNOVSKX – my journey through electronic and experimental music, sound design and performance art

At very first I touched the DAW in 2014 but more consciously my music production, experiments and collaborations started to evolve in 2016 after I moved into a squatted bookshop in district Holloway situated in North London. I started instantly collaborate with my ‘squatmate’ performance artist Piotr Bockowski a.k.a Neo Fung and joined an underground art event under his curation called The Chronic Illness of Mysterious Origin which is focused on mainly on underground performance art and experimental electronic music. The event is situated in the basement of the squatted building – The Dungeons of Polymorphous Pan – by Neo Fung often described and conceptualised as an independent fungal post-internet entity or life-form.

Over the period of last six years I have been scoring various live performance acts and Neo Fung’s short movies whist living in the building, often bringing the equipment down to the Dungeon and rehearsing at its constantly changing environment. The basement has been several times flooded by underground rivers pressing on local sewage system. Couple of Chronic Illness events happened even in spite of of circumstances of nature and electronic music has been replaced by acoustic experiments with metal structures of the dark and moist environment.

Under the moniker Aurelia Trojanovska later transformed into TROJΛNOVSKX I played several experimental ambient live sets which created foundations for many of my tracks. Some of them has been released in form of digital EPs on London’s underground experimental electronics/techno/avantgarde labels Edited Arts in 2018 (‘Hemlock’), then Metempsychosis Records (‘Blaec Waella’) and The Judgement Hall Records (‘Theatre of Plague’) in 2022. One upcoming track will soon join few other industrial and techno artists as a part of VA compilation released on Korean label GWI MYEON Records coming out in few weeks.

Focusing mainly on performing live set and scoring performance art acts I have been mainly using the DAW and MIDI controllers. However in last two years I have started including in my production live recordings and the raw sounds of guitar effects, analog and modular synthesisers.

If I decide for mixing and layering music of my favourite artists I choose to perform DJ and hybrid sets. In those I often blend dark ambient, industrial, broken beat techno, ritualistic electronic, witch house and other sub-genres of dark wave and over the fast paced repetition I promote storytelling and narration.

Hildegard Westerkamp’s Kits Beach Soundwalk – shifting perspectives in real world music & Soundwalk as a multifaceted practice

Soundwalk

Westercamp’s approach to soundwalk is inherently ecological and reaches into ides almost spiritual. Regularly practiced experience of present moment during soundwalks may become an experience meditative. She juxtaposes ‘authoritarian environment’ of human cities inducing huge amount of noise and ‘tiny unheared vices’ of barnacles and points out the imbalance which concerns her. By practicing a conscious and focused listening to natural environments and their marginalised aspects one can regain the lost balance with an almost meditative effect and hear not only ‘barnacles in their whole tinyness’ but also ‘reach their own inner voice’.

It is important to point out that Westercamp doesn’t refuse the use of technology. For example the use of equalisers and bandpass filters allows us to bring up to live all those marginalised and silenced voices. Westercamp says that ‘we should listen to our cities as the native did to the forest’ (1974)[1 The quote is from a text by Westercamp entitled Soundwalking, which sets out the fundamental goals of the practice (Westercamp, 1974:18-27)].

It is, again, about finding the right balance between use of technology and nature by ‘…actively paying attention to current needs, and adopting an approach of awareness’[2 Kamila Stasko-Mazur, Soundwalk as a multifaceted practice, p. 448 (2016)].

Tim Ingold’s concept Being-in-sound follows up Westercamp’s conscious environmental listening by becoming present in the moment which may again results in meditative states of mind.

Reflecting my own experience of Soundwalk whilst blindfolded together with Westercamp’s ideas I found this practice as a good sonic and attention span hygiene. It is not only the auditory noise of the human cities which suppresses marginalised voices of barnacles but nowadays also ‘visual and attention noise’ of social media which drags us out from the experience of present moment and then often devalue various sensory experiences like conscious listening.