Thursday, November 24, 2011

19th meeting, Wednesday, November 30th

MoKS presents:
helikoosolek:tartu
with Rauno Kalda
Wednesday, November 30th
6-8pm
Eesti Rahva Muuseum, Tartu





Rauno Kalda, one of Estonia's very few experts in bats and echolocation, will be our guest at the
next helikoosolek. Rauno is a master's student in biology at the University of Tartu, and has been working extensively with bats for the past five years. Much of his work is comprised of recording and analyzing the sounds they produce.

Rauno will explain echolocation and how it is used by bats to sense their surroundings and orient themselves within it. Bat sonar can tell us a lot about a specific species' place of habitation and ecological niche. Together we will try to catch a glimpse of the deceptively soundless world of bats, in order to realise that their world is full of sounds that we can't hear. We will also examine the equipment and devices that are used to study this sonic world, as well as watch and listen to many recorded examples.

helikoosolek:tartu is a regular gathering for the exploration of sound in all forms.  The meetings comprise presentations, concerts, workshops, discussions, and field trips pertaining to sound and its consideration in art, music, architecture, ecology, philosophy, social and cultural interaction, and any other context that presents itself. Participants are encouraged to propose activities or discussions on topics of their interest, or to present projects of their own for feedback.  Sessions take place on the last Wednesday of each month, from 6-8pm at the Eesti Rahva Muuseum.

helikoosolek:tartu is organised my MoKS and supported by Eesti Rahva Muuseum and Tartu Kultuurkapital.

http://helikoosolek.blogspot.com
http://www.moks.ee
http://www.erm.ee

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

18th meeting, Wednesday, October 26th

MoKS presents:
helikoosolek:tartu
with Marja-Liisa Plats and Patrick McGinley
Wednesday, October 26th
6-8pm
Eesti Rahva Muuseum, Tartu



Marja-Liisa Plats and Patrick McGinley will present their project 'revenant:paiva', made in collaboration with the Portuguese artists Luis Costa and Tiago Carvalho in November 2010. The project took place in northeast Portugal along the Paiva River as part of the Paivascapes Festival at Binaural Media in the small village of Nodar. Under the umbrella of the wider 'revenant:sound' project, it deals with site-specific performative sound actions recorded in locations along the river and presented as 5 short films. The artists will screen the films, discuss both the Paiva and general revenant projects, and will also present some other 'revenant:sound' works featuring other artists.

'revenant:sound' is an ongoing project with open membership that focuses on site-specific acoustic actions; each is a document of a specific moment in time in a specific location. The name derives from a concept of spatial memory, or, more specifically, of the long-term gestural memory of space; the ability of a location to retain an imprint or trace of activity or energy that has been present therein.

Patrick McGinley is a member of MoKS, and is the host and main organiser of helikoosolek:tartu. He is a sound, radio and performance artist who has worked extensively in Estonia since 2005. He is the founder of Framework Radio, which has been on the air in several countries since 2002. He works with field recording and attempts to integrate and resonate found sounds, found objects, specific spaces, and moments in time, in order to create a direct and visceral link with an audience and location.

Marja-Liisa Plats graduated from Tartu Art College in photography and works as an illustrator. She has participated in group exhibitions in Estonia and in Portugal. Her first personal exhibition, with Anna Hints, showed in 2010. From 2008 to 2010 she sang in the vocal group Vaikuse Koosolek, and experimental voice remains one of her main interests. She has been reading children’s books already from an early age.

further info:
http://www.revenantsound.net
http://www.binauralmedia.org
http://www.murmerings.com
http://www.frameworkradio.net
http://liiso.planet.ee

helikoosolek:tartu is a regular gathering for the exploration of sound in all forms.  The meetings comprise presentations, concerts, workshops, discussions, and field trips pertaining to sound and its consideration in art, music, architecture, ecology, philosophy, social and cultural interaction, and any other context that presents itself. Participants are encouraged to propose activities or discussions on topics of their interest, or to present projects of their own for feedback.  Sessions take place on the last Wednesday of each month, from 6-8pm at the Eesti Rahva Muuseum.

helikoosolek:tartu is organised my MoKS and supported by Eesti Rahva
Muuseum and Tartu Kultuurkapital.

http://helikoosolek.blogspot.com
http://www.moks.ee
http://www.erm.ee

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

17th meeting, Wednesday, September 28th

MoKS presents:
helikoosolek:tartu
with William Bilwa Costa and Kristin Orav
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
6-8pm
Eesti Rahva Muuseum, Tartu

| resonance | sound, space + time
improvisation workshop for movement + sound
co-lead by William Bilwa Costa (sound) and Kristin Orav (movement)

| resonance | is based on practices that enable heightened states of sensory perception. The workshop shares methods for reverberating mindfully with other artists during duet and ensemble improvisation. We will focus on listening, sensing, and acting from sound, movement, and memory impulses. We will explore expansions and contractions of energy and sound in our bodies and in the space. We will trace the pathways that movement material takes between outside and inside: input - filtering - output - sending. Rather than reacting to other bodies, we will cultivate a stance that allows us to observe, consider, and respond with as much of our selves as possible.

The group will explore questions like: How do we transmit messages that perpetuate in different forms through the space instead of dying out? How do we translate or morph messages into different media like writing, drawing, or assessing? How can we use vibration, reflection, sounding, panning, resounding, writing, and remembering to create a resonating body?

Please bring a notebook and pen.
Please wear loose-fitting, comfortable clothes.
Please feel free to bring your own instruments/sound equipment. Set ups should be acoustic or self sufficient, so please bring small personal speakers or small practice amp.

William Bilwa Costa is a sound and visual artist/electronic musician/improviser. He has worked with movement artist Emily Sweeney as perpetual movement sound since 2006. He currently works internationally, generating research/ lab/ performance projects, actively cultivating opportunities for artists to work together on new interdisciplinary explorations. Bilwa works in both the performing and visual arts contexts. His electronic music and sound art often involve the abstraction of source material such as dancers’ breath and body sounds, acoustic musicians, and audio frequency feedback—sonic relics through which he pulls elements of specific spaces, times, and interactions into his work. He is interested in sensory perception and subjectivity, and his work documents those acts of decipherment. He often uses multiple speakers placed throughout a space, generating a sensory environment rich in ambient, rhythmic, and spatial sound.

Kristino Rav is a performance artist whose creation could be described as pushing her body to the extremes. Thus, the intersection of completed projects contains an element of tiredness together with physical, mental and temporal endurance. She draws inspiration from movements, silence, coincidences, as well as from the tension that lies between public and private spaces, being lately interested in the phenomenon of dance in this context. She has finished the Estonian Academy of Arts in sculpture and The university of Tartu in semiotics.

http://perpetualmvmtsnd.org/bilwa/
http://kristino-rav.blogspot.com/

helikoosolek:tartu is a regular gathering for the exploration of sound in all forms.  The meetings comprise presentations, concerts, workshops, discussions, and field trips pertaining to sound and its consideration in art, music, architecture, ecology, philosophy, social and cultural interaction, and any other context that presents itself. Participants are encouraged to propose activities or discussions on topics of their interest, or to present projects of their own for feedback.  Sessions take place on the last Wednesday of each month, from 6-8pm at the Eesti Rahva Muuseum.

helikoosolek:tartu is organised my MoKS and supported by Eesti Rahva
Muuseum.

http://helikoosolek.blogspot.com
http://www.moks.ee
http://www.erm.ee

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

august break

we're taking a summer break this month, but we'll be back in september with a visit from william bilwa costa:

http://perpetualmvmtsnd.org

more soon!

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

tomorrow's van location!

we have chosen a location for tmorrow's action: the Urban Audio van will be at the main pedestrian crossing on Riia at the corner of Aleksandri, from 1pm to 4pm, wednesday, july 27th. there will be chairs and headphones and pleasant company. come and join us!

Saturday, July 23, 2011

16th meeting, Wednesday, July 27th

MoKS presents:
helikoosolek:tartu
with Florian Tuercke
Wednesday, July 27th

* ALL DAY action at a location in the city to-be-announced *
* EVENING presentation from 6-8pm at Eesti Rahva Muuseum *






!!! The URBAN AUDIO van will be set up to receive visitors throughout the day on July 27th, at a location in central Tartu to-be-announced by the evening of July 26th on the helikoosolek blog, facebook page, and mailing list. !!!

Florian Tuercke will introduce URBAN AUDIO, a project that he has worked on for 6 years now. With URBAN AUDIO he transforms the noise of public space to musical abstractions. Special instruments are temporarily placed in urban situations and transform any ambient sounds to musical tones. The acoustical structure of each situation is the compositional basis for the music that is extracted from urban space. The result mirrors the urban environment as musical abstraction.

more information and recent projects on: www.urban-audio.org

In Tartu, Florian Tuercke will record musical abstractions during the day (places and time to be announced on the helikoosolek:tartu-blog) and present the instruments and the recordings in the evening.

Florian Tuercke (born 1977) lives and works in Nuernberg (Germany). He has performed this project in Budapest, Zurich, 27 Cities in the USA, 17 German cities and recently in Turku and Tallinn.

helikoosolek:tartu is a regular gathering for the exploration of sound in all forms.  The meetings comprise presentations, concerts, workshops, discussions, and field trips pertaining to sound and its consideration in art, music, architecture, ecology, philosophy, social and cultural interaction, and any other context that presents itself. Participants are encouraged to propose activities or discussions on topics of their interest, or to present projects of their own for feedback.  Sessions take place on the last Wednesday of each month, from 6-8pm at the Eesti Rahva Muuseum.

helikoosolek:tartu is organised my MoKS and supported by Eesti Rahva Muuseum.

http://helikoosolek.blogspot.com
http://www.moks.ee
http://www.erm.ee

Monday, June 20, 2011

15th meeting, Wednesday, June 29th

MoKS presents:
helikoosolek:tartu
with Kiwa
Wednesday, June 29th
6-8pm
Eesti Rahva Muuseum, Tartu
















Kiwa will introduce "metabor", a project, sound-art platform and series of events active in the period around 2001-04. "metabor" was the first Estonian sound-art and noise project/platform and series of events/temporary soundscapes in "peculiar" places (a former hospital, a steam icebreaker, the last analogue phone station, a soviet memorial etc). The aim was to bring together a few Estonian artists working with sound/silence at that time: Estonian modernism classic and kinetic art pioneer mr Kaarel Kurismaa, young noise-dj DJ Masin, avantgardist of Russian origin p0rt, low-tech experimentalist Martiini etc. "metabor" was organized by Ki wa & A nagu Alfa (A as in alfa aka Andres Lõo). In 2006 a book called *metabor. skidmark of the force before the shape* was published by Kurismaa & Ki wa as a project for the Ljubljana Print Trienniale.

Kiwa will show two movies about "metabor": Boreaalsolaarium, a documentary by Priit Pääsuke (DV, 21 min, 2005) that has never shown in public before and a VJ mix by British artist Lewis Bray.

KIWA (born 1975) – multidisciplinary artist, lives and works in Tartu and Tallinn. He actively explores and blends different media, from paintings and conceptual objects to total audiovisual environments. His artistic practices include painting, objects and sculpture, installation, video, performance, sound art, scenography, text, etc: all together functioning as a hypertextual research of meaning-making and cultural codes on different levels, collective and personal myths. KIWA is also active as a lecturer in the Estonian Academy of Arts (since 2006) and curator (since 1999), promoting interdisciplinary and research-based projects of the younger generation of Estonian artists. He initiated a series of multimedia events with a code name “Metabor” (2001–2004) and publication of an anthology of experimental literature “Kangelasema toitepiim – Tekstilääts” (Nutritive Milk of Mother Heroine – A Textual Lens, 2006). This year he also finished his first full-length documentary movie “Wariazone” (with anthropologist Terje Toomistu) about the Indonesian transgender phenomenon. He has participated in exhibitions since 1995, his last personal shows took place at Y-gallery (Tartu), Galerie Rivoli 59 (Paris) and Draakoni Gallery (Tallinn). Recent group shows and festivals include: NU Performance Festival and Kumu Art Museum (Estonia); Black Leather club and Manizales Theatre Festival (Colombia); Henie Onstad (Norway); The Kitchen, Yvon Lambert Gallery and Renaissance Society (USA); Tate Modern and Milch Gallery (UK); Stedelijk and DeAppel (Netherlands); Tseretely gallery and SKIF festival (Russia); Seccession and CAT/MAK (Austria), 1st Electronic Festival (Belorussia), Rivoli59 and Chateau de Tours (France) etc. Works in collections of Art Museum of Estonia, Tartu Art Museum, and private collections in Estonia, Europe and USA.

helikoosolek:tartu is a regular gathering for the exploration of sound in all forms.  The meetings comprise presentations, concerts, workshops, discussions, and field trips pertaining to sound and its consideration in art, music, architecture, ecology, philosophy, social and cultural interaction, and any other context that presents itself. Participants are encouraged to propose activities or discussions on topics of their interest, or to present projects of their own for feedback.  Sessions take place on the last Wednesday of each month, from 6-8pm at the Eesti Rahva Muuseum.

helikoosolek:tartu is organised my MoKS and supported by Eesti Rahva
Muuseum and Tartu Kultuurkapital.

http://helikoosolek.blogspot.com
http://www.moks.ee
http://www.erm.ee

Thursday, May 19, 2011

14th meeting, Wednesday, May 25th

MoKS presents:
helikoosolek:tartu
with John W. Fail
Wednesday, May 25th
6-8pm
Eesti Rahva Muuseum, Tartu

For May's helikoosolek,"Partial musician" John W. Fail will look at the aesthetics of contemporary outsider experimental music, with a concrete bend.  Specifically, the work of one obscure axis of musicians - Graham Lambkin, The Shadow Ring, Idea Fire Company, etc. - will be listened to and discussed.  Topics will include: sound art vs. music, imagery and expression, isolation and obfuscation, and maybe if things go that way, the culture and marketing of sound.

John W. Fail (b. 1980, Pittsburgh) is an artist and organiser working in Tallinn. He has released recordings under his own name and in several group projects, working in an intersection of improvisation, modern concrète and sound art. Since 2009 he has co-facilitated Ptarmigan, a non-commercial project space in operating in Helsinki and Tallinn. He has worked professionally in the area of digital preservation and written academically on film theory and avant-garde literature. He is one organiser of the Helsinki Public School, the current facilitator of the Svamp sound improvisation workshops, and has operated the record label Cenotaph for ten years.

helikoosolek:tartu is organised my MoKS and supported by Eesti Rahva
Muuseum and Tartu Kultuurkapital.

http://helikoosolek.blogspot.com
http://www.moks.ee
http://www.erm.ee

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

13th meeting, Wednesday, April 27th

MoKS presents:
helikoosolek:tartu
with Thomas Tilly
Wednesday, April 27th
6-8pm
Eesti Rahva Muuseum, Tartu

Apologies for the silence on these pages in the recent past - we will be catching up with reports on the past few meetings, including recordings from Dennis Tan's Breath workshop, very soon. In the meantime, we can announce that this next meeting, our 13th, is our 1st birthday! Happy birthday to us! Come along and help us celebrate...

      photo: John Grzinich

This month's guest will be French sound artist and phonographer Thomas Tilly (aka Tô), who will be visiting the country as an artist-in-residence at MoKS. Tilly will present a series of underwater recordings made in fresh waters over the past four years. Inaudible with the ear and very little known, most of these sounds are generated by animals and plants. Tilly will talk about these phenomena and their interaction with the environment. We will also discuss the understanding we have of these sounds and of the place of the composer/sound recordist in this interaction.

Artist-composer and self-taught musician, Thomas Tilly uses the microphone as his main instrument of work. In 2001 he created Tô, a solo project of concrete music focusing on environmental sounds and found-object manipulations. In this situation, the composition and publication on disc of such sound material has to be considered as a sonic synthesis of a place during a certain period of time. (N.B. this method requires one to stay, observe and study the architectural aspects of the place in order to formulate a personal view and interpretation of it). Tilly also uses his experience for sound-installations allowing the development and enlargement of the logic of specific data collected in a place – via various systems of triggering/diffusion in situ.

For more information visit Tilly's website at http://www.fissur.com.

helikoosolek:tartu is organised my MoKS and supported by Eesti Rahva Muuseum and Tartu Kultuurkapital.

http://helikoosolek.blogspot.com
http://www.moks.ee
http://www.erm.ee

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

11th meeting, Tuesday, February 22nd

MoKS presents:
helikoosolek:tartu
with Dennis Tan
Tuesday, February 22rd
6-8pm
Eesti Rahva Muuseum, Tartu

*****THIS MONTH ONLY!!!*****
This month's helikoosolek is happening one day early due to the upcoming holiday. Please make a note of it!


helikoosolek:tartu's 11th edition features a visit from Singapore-born and Germany-based artist Dennis Tan. Dennis will be presenting a new interactive version of his work Breathe:

"A good friend once asked me, would there be sound if there were no human beings in this world?

Of course there would be sound, only there wouldn't be anyone to appreciate it.  

Sitting in a quiet room, I hear sounds of machines nearby, my neighbour listening to music and maybe a car driving by. What else do I hear? What is the softest sound in this room? I hear the rustle of my clothes when I move but what else? Closing my eyes, I start to concentrate on listening, deep listening. What do I hear? I hear my breathing. My inconsistent breathing, at times deep, at times light. This is the sound we constantly make, without much effort and without any intention. It just happens because we are alive.

For this edition of helikoosolek:tartu, I would introduce 4 notation symbols for breathing. The public will observe their own rhythm of breathing and learn how to notate them. After that each will create a composition for their own breathing and we will come together as a choir to perform the composition." -Dennis Tan, 2011

Dennis is currently an artist-in-residence at MoKS Centre for Art and Social Practice in Mooste. He will also be giving a presentation about his work at Tartu's Y Galerii on Wednesday, February 23rd at 7pm.

Helikoosolek:Tartu is organised my MoKS and supported by Eesti Rahva Muuseum and Tartu Kultuurkapital.
http://helikoosolek.blogspot.com
http://www.moks.ee
http://www.erm.ee

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Questions for Steve Peters

I mentioned at the end of the 10th meeting report that i would forward along some of our group's questions about Steve Peters' work The Very Rich Hours to him for comment. He has graciously responded, and I've posted his answers below. He's has also expressed his willingness to continue the conversation, so if anyone has any further questions for him, feel free to send them along or put them in the comments section below. First, here again is the piece:



What is the intended role of the singing that is mixed into each piece? what is the music used?
The singers are singing the Latin names of endangered species in New Mexico - plants, animals, birds, insects, fish, etc. The music was improvised in the studio, with varying degrees of guidance from me. The five singers were each given a different list of species names and asked to improvise, so that each name was a short "piece" in itself. They had a continuous drone in their headphones to use as a reference pitch (a different pitch for each singer). They were each recorded separately in the studio, and were not allowed to hear what any of the other singers had done before them. In some cases I was more active in directing them, but with some singers I said almost nothing and just let them do what they did. Three of the singers specialize in both early music and contemporary classical. One of them specializes in contemporary classical, but is also trained in Persian and Javanese classical music. And one of them is mainly a jazz singer.

The original installation was made for a very beautiful old adobe (mud brick) church in New Mexico. I wanted to directly reference the historical use of the church, and also the idea of all creation as "holy", and I specifically used only the names of endangered species to highlight the urgency and tragedy of what is being lost. I liked the fact that Latin is both the spiritual language of the Church and of scientific classification. In the mix I treated the singers as if they were part of the environmental sound - moving around within the eight-channel audio field, sometimes "farther away", sometimes "closer".

Is it intentional that the spoken description is almost entirely visual description and not aural?
Absolutely. I felt there was enough audio content without the voices commenting on that, and I was more interested in the contrast between the sound and the visual. Specifically, each speaker was asked to choose a place to which they feel a deep personal connection or relationship, and they were directed to describe only what they were experiencing in that place at that very moment. I told them I was not interested in their stories about the place, or their opinions, or their past experiences, etc., but only in the their perception of the place in the moment. Of course, this is very difficult to do, and I edited out quite a bit of material that deviated from the instructions they were given. Emotional responses and feelings were allowed, but only within the context of the present. Overt references to past experiences were generally removed.

 Some people felt the spoken word was too overpowering and didn't allow enough time or space to experience the rest of the soundscape - any comment on that?
That is certainly a valid criticism, and something I struggled with a lot. In fact, I have thought about doing a mix with no speaking voices at all. But I am also very interested in the human experience of place and the more-than-human world, especially in the devotional sense. In a way, the piece is really focused on the human organism as one of perception and interpretation - the way we observe and place ourselves within the world and the meaning we make of it, and the affection/connection that comes from that. And I was also consciously addressing the anti-human bias within the sound art world - I don't mind that in this piece the environmental sounds play a background role to the voices. When working with sound it is so easy and tempting to remove the "human", to create a pristine sonic environment that is essentially an illusion. Sometimes that is the right thing to do, and I have certainly done it myself in other works. But in this case I wanted to acknowledge the role human perception plays in the creation of the world, and the feelings of love and loss that are intrinsically part of the human experience.

I was also very much dealing with the limitations of time - both the length of the piece itself and the amount of time I had in which to make it, as well as the amount of attention it could reasonably hope to sustain from listeners sitting in an otherwise empty church. Each of those recorded monologues was around 45 - 60 minutes (sometimes longer), and I mercilessly edited each one down to about 5 minutes. Within that, I tried to leave as much open space as I could for the other sounds and the singers to come through without it turning into a cluttered mess, and there is at least one minute of pure sound between each of the sections. If each section could have been twice as long, there would have been much more space for only sound. Given the time restrictions, I tried to use sounds that are continuous enough that the listener is able to get a good sense of them. The shorter sounds are woven into the holes in the spoken text and singing so they do not get buried.

I had originally thought that the speaking voices would be shuffled in a more random way, like the singers - that you would hear one person briefly, then a pause of random length, then another person, etc. That would definitely reflect my own typical artistic tendencies. But as I worked with the voices, even though they were heavily edited, I felt that there were narrative threads emerging that should be respected. Each person had a little story to tell about the place they loved, so I decided not to break those up, but to group them together sequentially within general kinds of places, beginning with "home" and moving further away to more remote locations. (I would also have liked to include a section on mountains, but there was simply not enough time.) I knew that not all listeners would stay to hear the entire piece, and I wanted to give them the opportunity to have a complete experience in a short time, to hear what each person had to say, rather than the sense that they were dipping into a completely random thing that was essentially "the same" throughout. You can tell that each section is a short story, and hopefully that encourages listeners to stay to hear the next one.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

10th meeting report

A great turnout for Carlo Cubero's talk about the use and role of sound within the field of anthropology. Carlo himself has this to say:

In my talk I wanted to address several issues that are highlighted when a social science - like anthropology - engages with the field of sound studies. On first impression, it would seem that the connections between sound studies and anthropology would be apparent and easy to explain. Anthropology claims to be the study of the lived experience, of the quality of social relations that make up our daily lives from a holistic and cross cultural perspective. Given that sound is an integral aspect of our experiences of being human and of living in the world, it would seem evident that anthropology be interested in how is it that people perceive and design sound in different parts of the world. However, during my initial research into this matter, I was surprised that there is not a wealth of research material on this subject. If anything, I found that the researchers that look into the relationship between sound and society, by and large, approach the matter from a multi-disciplinary perspective. But as for anthropology itself, the study of sound has mostly been addressed through the study of music and the social and political representations that can be articulated through music. But sound, as a social experience in itself, has not played a major role in the development of the discipline. And yet, sound producing technology has always been present throughout the history of the discipline. Tape recording interviews, musical groups, and the use of audiovisual material have been a central aspect of ethnographic research. However, the tendency has been to look at these materials as research materials, as data from where symbolic, structural, or political representations can be extracted from. Methodologically, treating sound recordings in this way, suggests that the material of the recording is consistent and objective, that it is reproducing interactions in the field with fidelity. It also suggests that the recordings do not produce knowledge in themselves, but that mainly lay inert until the expertise of an anthropologist decodes the material and makes it intelligible cross-culturally. And this is one of the first conceptual hurdles that one faces, as an anthropologist, when engaging with sound studies. If a sound ethnography is to seek to understand the different ways in which sound inter-relates with the social experience, how can we use sound on its own terms and expect it to communicate cross-culturally? In other words, what kind of technical and conceptual tools can we use, as anthropologists, to communicate a sense of the sonic across cultural contexts that are not related? How do we deal with the issue of cultural difference? How can we use sound in a way that does not exoticize cultures? 

Current generations of anthropologists have been reviewing the paradigm that looks at the materials collected during fieldwork as mere data and started to look at the experience of doing fieldwork itself as a suitable means of understanding social relations cross-culturally. This kind of approach places the ethnographic encounter at the centre of the research text. Methodologically, it is an approach that is practise centred rather than meaning centred. Better said, the quest for cultural meanings does not lie exclusively in understanding the discourses through intellectual exercise, but also includes corporeal and affective dimensions of knowledge. That in the practise of doing participant observation of engaging with culture through associations, of focusing on the process of knowledge production a more open ended and processual understanding of culture emerges. The questions posed by this kind of anthropology do not part from the cultural comparative approach, but centres its attention on the inter-subjective encounter in the field. It asks about the quality of relationships that are embedded in the text, its asks questions about the narrative and the ethical and methodological process of constructing the text, it seeks to produce a knowledge that is corporeal – which is felt in the body – rather than exclusively intellectual. It seeks to go provide the “reader” with a sense of being there by representing the fieldwork experience on its own terms rather than relying on intellectual schemes that lie outside of the context of encounter. A result of this approach is the creation of texts that place the reader in the centre of the action - they give a sense of the textures of the place, of the various subtleties that makes life meaningful. For some authors, it is an approach that approximates to giving the reader a sense of being there. The search for these kind of interactive texts has led to anthropologists to consider the limitations of academic text as a means of rendering the affective, improvisational, sensual, and chaotic dimensions of daily life. Some more salient examples of these approaches are ethnographies that addressed the format and politics of ethnographic writing and looked into formats such as novels, poetry, autobiography, and other means of experimenting with the ethnographic genre. It is my contention that sound studies has a great deal to contribute to this kind of scholarship for it engages the anthropologist through a more experiential and sensual dimension of producing knowledge.
This is an ideal and the question still remains on whether this paradigm is successful in being consistent and convincing. In my view, a very important issue to look into is to look into how other disciplines and paradigms have addressed similar issues. For example, in architecture there is a whole field and speciality that focuses on acoustic design for the construction of concert halls and churches. Musicians are constantly seeking new ways to produce music or to re-interpret and re-contextualise the classics. Sound artists are continuously interacting with engineers and designers as a means to seek different ways to articulate an experience sonically. This kind of interdisciplinarity is what I have attempted to follow in the designing of the course "Soundscape: Perception and Design" to be offered during the spring semester of 2011 in the Anthropology Department of Tallinn University.   
- Carlo Cubero, Tallinn, 2011 


We also introduced a new segment to the Helikoosolek, the Ear Cleaner, or opening listening session. In future we will begin each meeting by listening to a recording (composition, sound poem, field-recording, radio show, etc, etc...) proposed either by myself, or a member of our group. If you have any suggestions for recordings that could be suitable for a Helikoosolek Ear Cleaner, let me know!

Last night we listened to a piece by American artist Steve Peters entitled Canyons from his online release The Very Rick Hours. You can listen to and/or download it here:



You can also here these pieces as featured in the last several editions of framework, the weekly field-recording based radio show that I produce:

http://www.frameworkradio.net/2010/12/311-2010-12-26/
http://www.frameworkradio.net/2011/01/313-2011-01-09/
http://www.frameworkradio.net/2010/12/311-2010-12-26/

The Very Rich Hours presents an interesting mix of field-recording, spoken word, and choral singing. it raised many questions in our group: was it intentional that all of the spoken word description was specifically of visual aspects of the space? What role, conceptually, did the singing play in the work? Did the spoken word add to or detract from the experience of the composed soundscapes?

I plan to ask these questions of Steve himself. I'll post his responses here.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

10th meeting, Wednesday, January 26th

MoKS presents:
helikoosolek:tartu
with Carlo Cubero, PhD
Wednesday, January 26th
6-8pm
Eesti Rahva Muuseum, Tartu

The first meeting of the Helikoosolek in 2011 will feature a visit from Carlo Cubero, PhD, Associate Professor of anthropology at Tallinn University. In the coming year, Carlo will be teaching a course at the university entitled 'Soundscapes: Perception and Design', and is also heading the Soundscape Study Group, which is preparing works for the Maailmafilm Ethnographic Film Festival in Tartu, and for Tuned City Tallinn as part of Tallinn Capital of Culture 2011. In his visit to the Helikoosolek, Carlo, accompanied by members of his Soundscape Study Group, will address issues, questions, paradoxes, and possible solutions that come up when anthropology meets "the sonic". He will also discuss his plans and goals for the upcoming university course, which he describes as an exploration of:

"... the range of discourses and practices that relate to sound's relationship to social experience, from an anthropological perspective. It will focus on the different ways in which humans perceive sound – as a socially constructed phenomenon – and design sonic experiences. The course will discuss how technologies of sound emerge from cultural and historical worlds. Some themes that will be addressed in this course will be: (a) the political economy of noise, (b) cross-cultural discourses on sound perception, (c) intersections between technology and sound such as architecture, sound recordings, and experimental music, (d) copyright and sound ownership, amongst others. By examining sound from a cross-cultural perspective the course will also attempt to open up a dialogue with alternative sonic practices and thus ultimately challenge many taken-for-granted notions underlying contemporary theories of culture."

helikoosolek:tartu is organised my MoKS and supported by Eesti Rahva Muuseum, and Tartu Kultuurkapital.
http://helikoosolek.blogspot.com
http://www.moks.ee
http://www.erm.ee