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For much of this year I’ve been composing music that is traditionally
notated – I write the notes on paper and
the musicians bring the notes to life in the performance. Working this way means there is a certain
distance between me and the music – I can have a reasonable idea what the music
will sound like (thanks to my music notation software) but the music doesn’t
really live until it is played or sung by real living people in a real acoustic
space. So it has been great to shift into the world
of digital sounds (and images) for the pieces I have been working on over the
last couple of months, where I can create sound worlds that are immediately
realizable in a virtual acoustic space.
I dabbled with electronic music many years ago as an
undergraduate student but it wasn’t until I was doing my Masters degree in
Glasgow that I had access to a digital sound studio where I could really start
to explore and manipulate recorded sound.
One of my first electroacoustic (to be heard through speakers) pieces
was largely built of recordings of me walking up and down stairs and unlocking,
opening and closing my front door. This
wouldn’t seem to be particularly inspiring source material but once in the
studio I became completely absorbed in the process of dissecting and
reassembling the sounds to create my own imaginary sonic space. Something quite magical happens when you
record a space – when you listen to it later, your imagination recreates that
space purely through sonic information.
I can listen to a recording of a reverberant stairwell in Glasgow while
I am sitting in my study in Melbourne and feel transported back to that very
particular space. (I've written about this in more detail in a paper, 'Imagining Space Through Sound'.) There is a whole sonic
subculture that deals with ‘Acoustic Ecology’ – capturing and preserving
acoustic environments and creating sound scapes from these recordings. I’ve certainly created a collection of sound
works that fit into this category – I made a series of soundscapes during an
Artist Residency at Bundanon (NSW) where I recorded the soundscape of Cicadas
at different times of the day and a the unfolding sounds of a heavy downpour of rain. Environmental sounds often have
their own shape and structure over time, requiring little ‘composing’ of the
sounds after the event. This approach to
creating a recorded soundscape is more about capturing a particular time and
place.
In other works I have enjoyed using various recorded sounds
to create my own imaginary sonic space, editing and digitally manipulating
sounds and combining different sonic elements to ‘compose’ a new sonic
environment. In my music theatre work
‘An Opera of Clouds’ I created a series of soundscapes that weave around the
live performance elements and spoken texts of the work, taking the audience to
quite a different imaginary space and creating a rich web of suggested meanings. Most recently I have been
working on a soundscape ‘accompaniment’ to a three part vocal work. The text for the work is a Scottish Haiku
that delicately captures the particular qualities of sound and light of a
Scottish spring. Having lived in
Scotland for a few years, I just happened to have some lovely recordings that
worked well as a sound bed for the vocal piece, evoking something of the
qualities of the text and hopefully creating new layers of meaning in the work.
Sound is such a powerful way to evoke memory and create
associations between what is seen and what is heard. Combining sound and image can result in an
amazing alchemy whereby the sound and the image are both transformed and
enhanced. I’ve just started working on a
series of video miniatures (for want of a better description) that combine
images and sounds with the intention of creating moments in time in which we
can just contemplate simple elements or ideas.
There is no narrative, no ‘take home message’, just something open to
the viewer/listener’s interpretation.
The first of these, ‘Remembering Water’ combines simple layered loops of
video (water in a Scottish burn, with water the colour of tea) and a layered
3-part canon of a recorded viola solo from an earlier work. The elements are simple but I am really
pleased with how they work together.
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