Tag Archives: sound

The University Green: a Reflection of UVM

green206colorflat600 IMG_1817 IMG_1815

Sitting in the middle of the University Green on a cold, windy day, it becomes clear that the beautiful expanse is in fact an amalgamation of the sounds which are most exemplary of the University of Vermont. Bike spokes whirring, students talking and laughing, food truck motors rumbling, and of course the noises from the construction site all make their way into the soundscape of the green. The strip of grass in the middle of the small city seems like an oasis, a place to get away from the sounds of traffic and the constant bustle of people. However, sounds from outside find their way in, and congregate at the Green, creating a place where all aspects of the University come together to create a singular soundscape that exemplifies the University and the City of Burlington.

As Feld states, sounds contribute to our meaning of humanity by contributing understanding, compassion, and identity to our lives. Schafer describes a keynote sound as “the anchor or fundamental tone” (Schafer: 100) of a soundscape, something that is always there but not always actively recognized. After listening to the University Green for some time, it becomes apparent that there are a few sounds which are constantly rumbling in the background, easily forgotten. From early each morning until around 4:00, food trucks line up along University Place and provide a soft undertone above which the rest of the sounds of the Green are heard. Although the trucks are not there at night, during the daylight hours they contribute to the soft drone created by the whoosh of ventilation from the surrounding buildings and the wind blowing across the open space.

Wherever you happen to be on the Green, it is always possible to hear the high-pitched, mechanical chirping of the crosswalk signals near Waterman Hall. These warning signs are clear signals in the soundscape, both managing interactions between humans and cars as well as the sounds they produce. Other than these signals, there is nothing to stop sounds from carrying all the way across the Green. The bells of the Ira Allen Chapel ring out across the space, managing our concept of time and making sure students make their way to class on time. These bells and chirps each provide context to the Green which would otherwise be an island to itself. We give these sounds meaning, using them as a way to tell time hour to hour, but also to know when it is safe to perform certain actions such as crossing the street. Since the rumble of traffic is fairly constant throughout the day (though it goes through waves of density), it is sometimes hard to hear the sounds given off by the Green itself. However, if you listen closely, it is possible to discern the quiet chirps of animals, and leaves skittering across the ground. For those who look (or listen) for it, the natural world of the Green presents itself in a soft-spoken fashion.

Sense of place is greatly shaped by the sounds of a location. Just as “part of the culture shock of India is its cacophony of sounds” (Coward: 1), the sounds of the University Green enculturate students into feeling more at home at the University of Vermont. Burlington is a city known for its healthy and happy people, a description which applies to the University of Vermont as well. Food trucks from local businesses can often be found across the small city, bringing joy to hungry students all around. The city is also known as biker-friendly, and the number of people who flock to the mountains each weekend is extremely high. As a result, bikes are a common sound to hear walking across campus or downtown. Additionally, the University Campus has recently been dominated by the construction of new first-year housing and a STEM building at its center. Sitting in the University Green, it is possible to hear all of these sounds come together in one place, which makes it a unique place through which we can listen to the heart of the University of Vermont. It makes sense that Commencement is held on the very same green where the sounds that define the city and University weave themselves together.

For our soundscape of the University Green, we decided to create a composition which conveys the nature of the Green as a collection of all things UVM. This involved overlaying sounds that did not originally occur in the same moment, just as Monacchi manipulated the sounds of the rainforest for his music. We did not change the tones of the sounds themselves, but instead rearranged and reimagined the true soundscape of the University Green into something that conveys the essence of the small oasis in the middle of the campus. We began with the simpler sounds of nature which are present on the Green: wind blowing through the trees, leaves skittering on the sidewalk, the occasional ramble of conversation. Next, more sounds begin to seep into consciousness, the droning rumble of motors rise in the background. Voices start to speak in the distance, as students pass between classes. Then BANG! Metal clangs together from the construction site nearby. This moment is the turning point of our soundscape, as it opens up the location to the world surrounding it. After the construction noises join the soundscape, the sounds of traffic and the machinery-centered world outside the green come in with a higher frequency, crescendoing into a cacophony of sounds from the University, all colliding at one moment. Finally, the sounds leave one by one, until only the restful whistle of wind through the trees is left. As John Cage states, “We want to capture and control these sounds, to use them… as musical instruments” (Cage: 3), and that is exactly what we have done in creating this soundscape. The final instrument of the wind in the trees shows the true heart of the University, since machinery sounds will always eventually end, always come second to the sounds of nature that pull students out towards the mountains to explore.

By Abra Clawson and Eryka Collins

THE BEAT THAT CHANGED HIP-HOP

The Beat that Changed Hip-Hop

By Abra Clawson and Lindsay Chaplin

The Roland TR-808’s interface is easy to use, as it has color-coded dials and buttons.

Roland_TR-808_large

The genres of Hip-Hop, House, Techno, and R&B were changed forever because of the machine.

night-club-clubbing-jobs-abroad

Arthur Baker, Producer of Planet Rock

A-4158-1228812134.jpeg

Matt Black, from the British duo Coldcut

mattb

Additionally, the full videos we pulled interviews from can be found at

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VCJReSDmqkg

and

http://www.synthtopia.com/content/2012/04/27/the-history-of-the-roland-tr-808/

Continue reading

Theremin: The Anonymous Instrument

Theremin Presentaton

Bibliography:

Seabrook, John. “Vibrations.” The New Yorker 9 May 2011: 23. Literature Resource Center. Web. 10 Nov. 2015.

Orton, Richard, and Hugh Davies. “Theremin [Termenvoks].” Oxford Music Online. 2007. Accessed November 9, 2015. http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com:80/subscriber/article/grove/music/27813.

Townsend, Peter. “The Role of Physics in Shaping Music.” Academic Search Premier. 1975. Accessed November 4, 2015.

 

My Day

When we were first assigned this project, I started to hear the sounds of my everyday life differently. I began to notice the sounds that reoccured throughout my day. The ten sounds that I chose to include in this project are the ones that I found occurred the most, and have become the soundtrack of my daily life here at UVM. I chose to not have all my sounds be one minute long because I wanted them to be as authentic and representative of my real life as possible.

The second sound in my podcast is the sound of me getting out of bed. As you have heard, my bed creaks like an old basement door. When getting into or out of bed, or even when sitting on it, every spring can be felt, and definitely heard. The vibrations of each spring’s creak ripples through the cotton-polyester blend and into the body of whoever has sat down. I felt that this was a good demonstration of the vibrations that make up sounds, as we read about in Hearing Vibrations. Instead of just hearing the vibrations like we do with the majority of sounds we hear, when it comes to my bed, you can feel the vibrations that make up the sounds as well, proving, and reminding who ever sits on it, that sound is in fact vibration, which was the main point that Shelley Trower was trying to get across.

The seventh sound in my podcast is the sound of the fan that sits next to my desk. When I recorded that sound, I was doing homework with the window open, and although you cannot hear it in the recording, I could hear the sounds of people walking through the pebbles outside of Harris-Millis. I hit record in the hopes that my phone would be able to pick up those sounds, as well as those of people walking up and down the stairs outside of my dorm, and people talking outside my window. To my ears, those sounds were just as loud, if not louder, than the sound of the fan that is so prominent in the recording. I chose to keep this recording and include it in this project because it shows the difference between what human ears can pick up and what technology can, as was discussed in The Sounds Around Us: An Introduction to Field Recording. This example also connects to Hudspeth’s The Energetic Ear, because my ear was able to pick up and focus on the sound of people’s footsteps outside, even though they were seventy-five feet away, and the sound of people walking up and down the stairs even though there was a thick door between us. Even though the sound of the fan is what is predominant in the recording, that was more of a background noise to my ear, allowing my brain to unconsciously focus on the new sounds that were being produced around me.

This project made me slow down in my busy every day life and listen more closely to the sounds happening all around me. I noticed small things such as people talking behind me in class, or the sound of longboards going over the cracks in the sidewalk as I’m walking to class that I would’ve disregarded previous to this class and this project. I also contemplated sounds’ deeper meaning, with Hillel Schwartz’s quote, “Noise may be unwanted or incomprehensible sound; it is never insignificant sound,” in the back of my mind. In the past month, these ten sounds have become most familiar to me, and in hindsight, have been essential to me adjusting to my new life away from home, here at UVM.

Citations:

Trower, S. (2012). Introduction: Hearing Vibrations. In Senses of Vibration: A History of the Pleasure and Pain of Sound (pp. 1-12). New York, NY: The Continuum International Publishing Group.

Schwartz, H. (2011). BANG (a beginning). In Making Noise: From Babel to the Big Bang & Beyond (pp. 17-35). Brooklyn, NY: Zone Books.

Hudspeth, A. (2015). The Energetic Ear. 42-51.

English, L. (2015, February 8). The sounds around us: An introduction to field recording. Retrieved September 24, 2015.

Table Music

Any sound can be music if you listen to it the right (or wrong) way. Living in the Farm to Table living/learning community at the University of Vermont, I am constantly surrounded by musical people (who knew so many wonderful people could love both food AND music!?). In this podcast, I have collected 10 sounds from my daily life which I consider to be music. We begin with the noises I wake up to, such as the box fan in my window, and progress through my daily life until the last things I hear before going to bed. Additionally, you may notice that the music in my life starts out as an individual experience each morning, and slowly builds to include our whole community by the end of the night. Each and every sound can be found within the Farm to Table house. Some of these noises are indeed actual songs that can be played, but others are fragments of noise which inspire me to create and connect to other people.

  1. Box fan – Each morning, before my alarm even goes off, my brain registers the sound of the fan in the window of my room. The sound is constant, and always in the background of my daily life.
  2. Book Pages – Books are a huge part of my life, whether I am reading them for class or just for fun, I have always loved the sound of crisp pages turning.
  3. Pencils drumming – A tick similar to tapping a foot, I often tap my pencil in my room while thinking of an idea (or sometimes out of boredom).
  4. Feet on the Stairs – Every person has a unique, distinct walk. The acoustics of the stairwell outside our suites carry the pounding of feet up three floors, so we always know when people are home.
  5. The Laugh – One of the members of my suite has an amazing, deep, bubbling laugh. Whenever I hear it, I can’t help but smile.
  6. Food Song – While hiking with five other people from my house this past weekend, I was introduced to a song by one of the other members. He taught us this song which he sang while in high school, and we sang it before our lunch at the top of the mountain. Later that evening, we taught it to the parents of one of the other members.
  7. Eating – Oftentimes I come back to my room to find my beautiful roommate spread out on the floor, eating pretzels or other snacks.
  8. Percussion Jam –Spontaneous jam sessions often happen on the third floor of A Mid, such as this percussion circle from a week or so ago. One person started with a beat, and slowly everyone else (about 20 people) added in their own rhythm until we were all clapping, stomping, and shaking trashcans as one.
  9. Night Music –Nightly music adventures make our community ever stronger. Sitting around in a circle, singing and playing music together allows us to bond as a community. We are no longer each our individual selves trying to do the best we can, but parts of the whole machine that work to achieve a common goal.
  10. Deep breathing/absence of sound – After everyone goes to sleep, this quietness seeps through the suite like a blanket, quieting our minds until we wake up to the sounds of a new day.

The way we perceive sound, and thus music, is highly individual. However, the act of hearing is also a cultural phenomenon. As explained in “BANG (a beginning),” our culture and language greatly influence how we hear. In the article, Schwartz states that “just as noise is what we make of certain sounds, the meanings we assign to noise are no less consequential than the meanings we assign to other sounds” (Schwartz, 28). In that case, I consider all of the noises in my podcast to be music, so therefore they are. Additionally, my observation of Farm to Table as a whole has helped me find each individual’s own voice. As Barthes states in his article “The Grain of the Voice,” “the voice is not personal… it is not original… and at the same time it is individual” (Barthes, 182). This is the essence of Farm to Table. Though we all come into the house with our own voice and personality, there is a constant give and take between us and the music we create together. To me, it seems that at the end of the night our voices all together make up one singular new grain.

Picking 10 sounds that exemplify my life with Farm to Table caused me to thing about many things, but most importantly it made me realize that sound is a communal experience. In choosing which noises to include on the list, I was required to ruminate on what I personally consider music, and why. I have decided that, for me at least, music does not need to have an established rhythm or melody, but just something that strikes a chord in my heart, and brings me back to a specific place or time. These 10 sounds will forever remind me of Farm to Table, a place that I have come to call home.

 

Bibliography:

Bathes, Roland. “The Grain of the Voice.” In Image, Music, Text, translated by Stephen Heath, 179–89. Noonday Press, 1977.

Schwartz, Hillel. “BANG (a Beginning).” In Making Noise: From Babel to the Big Bang & beyond, 18–36. Brooklyn, NY: Zone Books, 2011.