Categories
Creative Sound Projects Personal/ Relevant

Radio Art – Lance Dann, The Flickerman (INC) 2009

I noticed many clever auditory techniques used in Lance Dann’s, The Flickerman. Immediately, the overlapping of hushed vocals stood out to me, creating a seamless conversation that also, however, felt like a collage of words. A sense of hurriedness is apparent through this and starts the piece with an air of nervousness and secretiveness. All of this is cleverly coloured with well placed drone sounds and deep gong like drums. I also picked up on the muffledness of the backing soundscape and the stretched, pitched down background vocals once the narrator says ‘and then everything started to happen really slowly’ as the first climax starts to begin. It seems that throughout the story the actual sounds involved in the tale, whether that be birds taking off or the sound of vocals, as opposed to external unrelated sound effects or instruments, are manipulated to accompany the scripts current mood, integrating the story itself with our auditory experience.

At times it seems as if the surrounding voices feel distorted as they get louder. This brings into question the grain of the human voice and its importance in radio art. Having been given the role of interviewer in my groups sound piece this observation may be useful to implement. Taking special care in how I present/ project my voice in order to compliment its theme. Though it may be more important in the actual editing of the vocals, exploring ways in which the tone of the voices involved can be altered.

Silence too plays an important role in emphasis, but also as a marker for the direction or culmination of events. This can be heard at the end of The Flickerman’s sound effect sequence, just before what seems quite obviously to be an explosion of some sort. The silence makes it all the more potent but also gives the listener an even more accurate idea of what is being experienced, as if the world stands still for us and the characters just before the inevitable explosion.

After this weeks lecture I discovered that the ‘whooshing’ that follows the silence was achieved by reversing a sample. Further to this, at another point in the piece, the sound of birds flapping their wings seems to be drowned in reverb. These examples of manipulating the stories inherent sounds to aid in the visual imagery will make the process of curating samples for the group collaboration more specific, as I’ll be searching for sounds and effects that actually identify with the piece.

Categories
Creative Sound Projects

Radio Art – ‘Touching the Elephant’

Originally ‘based on an ancient Indian fable about a group of blind men who undergo a first time encounter with an elephant,’ an experiment was conducted in a modern day scenario and aired on BBC Radio 4 in order to recreate the tale. Listening to a transcript from this radio show I felt there were a couple of similarities between the blind participants acousmatic experience and my own sonic observation as a displaced listener.

  1. The instinctive visualisation due to a lack of image and the excitement of having to rely on hearing, giving a different sensory perception, as if experiencing something for the first time all over again.
  2. The use of imagination to create individualised interpretations of what is being heard.

Sound as a prompt for visualisation can make the resulting mental image personalised, as we draw on our own life experiences and certain stereotypes. I found this freedom to individually attach our own ideas and interpretations to sound as fairly inclusive, as one feels like less of an observer and more like an active participant in the nature of whatever is heard. The resulting experience is therefore more complex as it is cued by sound but coloured with imaginative faculty.

The term ‘all radio listeners are blind’ is a poignant way of putting the visual experience of radio art across, despite its aural form. It connects us in a way that makes us feel collectively powerless to what is being heard, but all the more powerful in the ways which we are now able to perceive it. In a psychological sense radio art and its sightless format lends an opportunity to explore our own subconscious manifestations of what we hear and why we see the things we do. A gateway into the psyche.

A BBC documentary that explores our abilities of visual perception without the use of sight

On the other end, the soundscape of ‘Touching the environment’ really sets the scene in ways that a visual medium may not. The whistling of the birds, the crackling and swooshing of the fabric, the sound of children playing in the background among much more really immerses you in a sonic environment that brings more nuanced detail than a moving image could. The combination of music, speech, sound fx, nature and even silence can all be combined in ways that can change the context of a piece entirely.

Understanding this concept of sightlessness in radio art will be key to conveying the theme in my groups collaborative radio piece correctly. Basing our piece on ‘The Society of The Spectacle’ by Guy Debord we have a clear theme surrounding social media and its implications and the curation and arrangement of samples will be paramount in aiding the induction of emotion, insight and ensuring that concept clearly enough to avoid misinterpretation.

References

“Touching the Elephant | Rockethouse Productions Ltd.” Rockethouse.co.uk, 2015, www.rockethouse.co.uk/oldsite/elephants/. Accessed 14 Feb. 2021.

Wikipedia Contributors. “Touching the Elephant (Radio Programme).” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 3 Nov. 2020, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Touching_the_Elephant_(radio_programme). Accessed 14 Feb. 2021.

“‘The Pictures Are Better on Radio’: A Visual Analysis of American Radio Drama from the 1920s to the 1950s.” Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, 2018, www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01439685.2017.1332189. Accessed 14 Feb. 2021.

Categories
Psychology

WinterGatan & Psycho-acoustics

The seemingly complex and brilliant structure/ instrument ‘the WinterGatan” has 2000 marbles at its disposal, trickling up and down its skeleton to trigger the instruments within. Whilst an intelligently put contraption, this idea of limitations comes into play as the melodies and rhythms one can procure from the machine are tonally bound to its capabilities of what the marbles can trigger. Whilst other more traditional instruments would allow for more control. Is any instrument really free of limitation or is it that limitation that breeds the creative spark in the first place?

In one of the other videos, Your Brain on Sound: Aural Illusions, MP3, and Psychoacoustics, Jack Moffitt describes differing ways in which we percieve sound. One technique used by many composers for visuals, called Shephard Tones stood out to me as particularly interesting. A sound loop that tricks the brain into thinking its continually going down in pitch by layering multiple sine waves that move in differing directions.