Posts Tagged ‘ live electronics

Sub Terra (2008) – Natasha Barrett

Sub Terra photosNatasha Barrett is a sound designer/artist. She works in various media including installations, electroacoustic composition, multimedia works and composition for acoustic instruments with live electronics. Sub Terra is a concert performance and three sound installations that uses sounds collected from under ground. These sounds are then manipulated and altered to create unusual and exciting sound worlds. The work is described on Natasha’s website as follows:

Each installation zooms in on sounds unique to three locations under Norwegian ground, creating surreal semi-narrative journeys through the development of the sound in itself. The installation sites lead the visitor through underground or enclosed sound-worlds, where atmosphere and acoustics allow the sound to live, gradually closer to the concert space. The concert work crystallises into a musical form that which is most abstract from the installations and involves a dynamic performance through frequency, space and time over 14 loudspeakers.” (see below for more details)

Here is an excerpt from the work:

Find more Natasha Barrett songs at Myspace Music

The installations:

Under the Sea Floor (Coring and Strata) – 10 channel installation.
‘Under the sea floor (Coring and Strata)’ originated in a University of Oslo research project where a 10-meter long core-sample was taken from a ‘pockmark’ in the Oslo Fjord, 32 meters below sea level. For two days I hovered in the background on a research ship and on a drilling vessel, recording sounds from on deck, below water and on the sea-floor. From these recordings came one set of two sound-types used in the work. The second set of sounds originated from a seismic shot created by a large TNT blast in a quarry. This shot was recorded by an array of 2000 geophones spread over tens of kilometers. The sound on each geophone is about 15 seconds long, and records the response from the Earth’s crust and well into the mantle – representing the geological formation through sound and control data.

Sub Terra photos

Kongsberg Silver Mines – 4, 6 or 8 channel installation.
‘Kongsberg Silver Mines’ is a journey on the old miner’s train used to transport silver ore and miners in and out of the Kongsberg Silver Mines to a depth of over two kilometers. The deafening sound and immense vibrations of the old trucks transport us finally into the depths of the mines. Here a miner guide drifts in and out with snippets of description and history. Kongsberg Silver Mines displays a clearer narrative structure than ‘Under the Sea Floor (Coring and Strata)’. Spoken text from tourists and the ‘tunnel acoustic’ are used as landmarks in a Sub Terra surreal journey far removed from a leisure tourist trip.

Sub Terra photos

‘Sand Island’ – headphone listening to a 3-D space using head-related transfer functions (HRTFs).
A holiday sandy shore is transformed. Imagine telescoping down to the size of a sea snail. The lazy Norwegian tide and the soft golden sand take on a whole new perspective. Two hydrophones (underwater microphones) were buried under the sand in the tidal zone of a small bay on Sondre Sandoy in Hvaler, Norway. After some time the tide lifts the hydrophones out of the sand and carries them into a floating bed of seaweed. Be it rain, wind or sun, sit in the Tou garden and explore with your ears the shore-line in a way unimagined.

Sub Terra photos

‘Sub Terra’ was commissioned by NyMusikk Rogaland with support from the Norwegian Cultural Council and the Norwegian composer’s union.

If you would like to hear more of Natasha’s work, please visit her myspace page: www.myspace.com/twinofeyg

To find out more about Natasha and her work, you can visit her website: www.natashabarrett.org

Additionally, there is a Wikipedia entry for her and an article on www.otherminds.org

Sandglasses (2010) – Justė Janulytė – Part 3 of Huddersfield Festival 2010 Features

Sandglasses by Justė Janulytė was performed at Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival on the 28th November and it forms our third feature on the festival. We hope you enjoy the video below:

Programme note for Sandglasses (by the composer):

“Sandglasses” explores acoustic, visual and symbolic meanings of a sand timer, as a phenomenon. The inspiration of the piece is a simultaneous launch of several sandglasses of different capacity and duration. This idea is materialized in music by a polytemporal canon played by cellos which pass through their entire register at different rates, thus the initial unison splits off, the voices keep moving further from each other and reach the lowest note at different moments. The sounds produced live are being recorded and repeated in several variants that individually slow down and therefore descend, so that every cello’s sound generates its own polytemporal canon. They keep multiplying and layering before finally interlacing into a dense micropoliphonic texture which covers, floods and replaces the real sources of sound.

The musical idea is visualized by the purpose-built cylinder screens, made of tulle, where video images and light effects are projected. They extend and transform the performers’ existence on the stage while creating fictions and submerging spectators into various perceptive experiences.

Although the point of departure of the piece was of a purely acoustic-visual nature, the phenomenon of sandglass, being open for diverse interpretations, got wrapped with some implications and associations during the creative process. The metaphoric sand which seeps from the sandglasses, as a sediment of the passing time, accumulates and submerges the imprisoned individuals. Their identities transform, fade and vanish until the glasses fill up and the relentless operation of the chronometers stops. Everything freezes and the reverse process of purification starts.

For further details about the performance at the festival on 28th November, please click here.

For further information about Justė Janulytė on this site, please visit her page: Janulytė, Justė – Info

To see/hear more of Justė Janulytė’s work, please visit: http://www.janulyte.info