For the current REF see the REF 2021 website REF 2021 logo

Output details

34 - Art and Design: History, Practice and Theory

University of the Arts, London

Return to search Previous output Next output
Output 324 of 433 in the submission
Title or brief description

Sounding Underground

Type
Q - Digital or visual media
Publisher
-
Year
2009
Number of additional authors
-
Additional information

Sounding Underground, funded by a Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowship 2007-2009, and supported by the Institute of Creative Technologies at De Montfort University, is an internet-based sonic environment that links passengers’ listening experiences of commuting through the metros of London, Mexico and Paris. Its graphic interface and sonic navigational structure were derived from the exploration of both the commonalities and the uniqueness of soundscapes in Mexico and Paris, as counterparts of London Underground. Supported by Centro Nacional de las Artes and Centro Mexicano para la Musica y las Artes Sonoras (Mexico), and the Maison des Sciences de l’Homme and Plate-forme Technologique Arts Sciences (Paris), the work was developed using an iterative method with 16 passengers in each city: remembering sounds, recording journeys, and selecting meaningful sounds from these recordings. A related output was ‘Listening and Remembering’, a networked performance involving passengers who expressed memories that were interweaved with sounds from their journeys.

Extracting common social, political and symbolic themes from Sounding Underground, the researcher created 31 radio documentary shorts commissioned by Fonoteca Nacional de Mexico.

This interdisciplinary work has been tested in international conferences in the fields of Human Geography, Anthropology, Sensory Ethnography, Soundscape Studies, History, and Computer Music, which highlight its innovative methods of capturing social experience. The work was awarded an Honorary Mention for New Genre by the IAWM New Music 2011 Competition, and a Special Mention for Soundscape work by the International Festival of Image 2011. It has been featured in Java Museum, Ear to Earth’s ‘100 x John’, and exhibited in Berlin, Boston, Burgos, Edinburgh, London, Mexico City, Morelia, and Nantes.

Related peer-reviewed publications include ‘Networked Improvisation for four commuters’, in CITAR Journal, ‘Sounding Underground: listening, performing and transforming the commuting experience’, in Sensate Journal, and ‘Creating Sounding Underground’ in Digital Creativity.

Interdisciplinary
-
Cross-referral requested
-
Research group
None
Proposed double-weighted
No
Double-weighted statement
-
Reserve for a double-weighted output
No
Non-English
No
English abstract
-