Part 1: Soundwalk Reflection
"A soundwalk is any excursion whose main purpose is listening to the environment. It is exposing our ears to every sound around us no matter where we are. We may be at home, we may be walking across a downtown street, through a park, along the beach; we may be sitting in a doctor's office, in a hotel lobby, in a bank; we may be shopping in a supermarket, a department store, or a Chinese grocery store; we may be standing at the airport, the train station, the bus-stop. Wherever we go we will give our ears priority."
--Hildegard Westerkamp
PROJECT DESCRIPTIONFollowing the Ai campus soundwalk, list all of the sounds you heard (retype them from your original notes so that we can read them).
Go to a place or space significantly different than the Ai complex (a beach, park or hiking trail if possible). Sit, close your eyes, and just listen for five minutes without doing anything else. LISTEN. For five minutes write down everything you hear. Indicate which sound you found most interesting and explain why this sound struck you as interesting.
Go to a sonically rich place in your home. Sit, close your eyes, and just listen for five minutes. Then write down everything you hear for five minutes. Indicate which sound you found most interesting and explain why this sound struck you as interesting.
Your Soundwalk reflection will also include answers to the following questions (please be as specific and thorough as possible:
1. Were you able to find places and spaces where you could really listen?
2. Was it possible to move without making a sound?
3. What happened when you plugged your ears, and then unplugged them?
4. Were you able to differentiate between sounds that had a recognizable source and those sounds you could not place?
5. Were you able to differentiate human, mechanical, and natural sounds?
6. Were you able to detect subtleties, changes, or variations in the everpresent drone?
7. Extremely close sounds? Sounds coming from very far away?
8. Were you able to intervene in the urban landscape and create your own sounds by knocking on a resonant piece of metal, activating wind chimes, etc.?
9. For each of the following three locations how would you describe the particular soundscape? If you recorded this environment and played it back to someone who hadn’t been on your walk, what would they tell you about this place?
a. Ai campus
b. external site
c. internal site
10. As a sound designer, if you played any of these soundscapes for your listeners, would they find it interesting? Can you use this in a story as is? Or would you have to modify or enhance it in the studio to heighten its effect?
11. Do you feel you have a new understanding or appreciation of the sounds of our contemporary landscape/cityscape?
12. How do you think your soundwalk experience will affect your practice as a designer, if at all?
BASIC REQUIREMENTSPost your answers as a comment to this post on the Course Blog. I would suggest that you work out your answers ahead of time in Notepad, TextEdit, or Word, then copy/paste into the comment field.
You may structure your answers in any way you wish: organized by location, contained in a narrative, or woven into an interview format. You may also provide a link to your own website, using the content of the Soundwalk Reflection for your own design purposes. Your comment must be posted by the start of class in Week 2.
After you have learned how to conduct a soundwalk you will probably find that you stop cataloguing the sounds that you hear. Instead you’ll find that at all times and places you will be conscious of the sounds that surround you, whether good or bad, and will be able to identify the sounds that make you feel peaceful or happy, and the sounds that cause you to feel apprehensive or disjointed.
Above all, be with yourself. Immerse yourself in your environment. When you can understand your responses to the place where you are, you’ll have a better chance of bringing your listeners along with you. You will also have a better sensitivity to sound when you make the transition from listening to recording, as chronicled in the second part of this assignment, Field Recording. �