Episodes

  • Fluid Boundaries with Gina Lo
    Oct 23 2024

    Most of the time we think of humans and non-humans as separate things. We experience and live in different worlds. Humans may love nature but are separate from nature. What if that is a wrong – or at least limiting – way to think about it? What would it mean to break down that separation? How might that change our experiences of sound and life with non-humans and nature? I’m your host Steve Williams and today we explore these questions with Gina Lo. We have lots to talk about so be sure to check out the show notes for links to the sounds and get in touch to info@drusnoise.com with your questions and comments.

    Notes and Links

    Bio

    Gina Lo is a Taiwanese-born sound artist, field recordist, and performer based in Berlin. Their work revolves around the creation of immersive sonic environments that explore the fluid boundaries between human and non-human experiences, harmoniously merging the organic with the synthetic. Through live performances and sound installations, Gina employs a blend of electroacoustic instrumentation, field recordings, and custom-designed synthesizers. With a strong emphasis on attentive listening, their improvisational sets transform spaces into ever-evolving atmospheric landscapes.

    Gina’s connection to nature is rooted in their upbringing on a subtropical island and extensive time spent off the grid throughout East and Southeast Asia, where they immersed themselves in the rhythms of the natural world and the intricate behaviors of wildlife. These encounters form the core of their sonic research, fostering a deep engagement with the elemental forces of nature as a lens for exploring the human condition. Gina’s work invites listeners into a meditative state, where the boundaries between self and environment blur, creating space for deeper reflection and a reconnection with the primal, transformative aspects of the psyche.

    https://ginalosound.wixsite.com/work/about

    https://www.instagram.com/ginalololo/

    • EROOO0oo00​(​O​)​oO​.​0o0​.​oo​.​.​sion - Æther compilation (re:natura, digital)
    • Intuitive Dialogues @ginalolo and @frmvar
    • Harkening Critters https://f-o-m.bandcamp.com/album/harkening-critters
    • Cowie Bay https://f-o-m.bandcamp.com/track/cowie-bay
    • Bornean https://f-o-m.bandcamp.com/track/bornean-anura
    • Signals Festival Sound Installation https://catalyst-berlin.com/about/signals-festival-2021-installations
    • Berlin Modular Society 44 Live performance https://youtu.be/okHrEpze4wc
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    1 hr
  • Creating Future Soundscapes with drusnoise
    Sep 25 2024

    When people are asked what kind of neighbourhood they want to live in they often say they want a quiet neighbourhood. But by quiet, they do not mean silent! People want to hear the sounds of children playing, birds in the trees, and glasses clinking at cafés but may not want to hear sounds of traffic, construction, or planes overhead. They may want to preserve the sounds of the past or hear something completely different. The Future Soundscapes project connects with local residents to record (on their phones) sounds they want to hear more of and sounds they want to hear less of. The sounds are collected, categorized, and a soundscape of the future neighbourhood co-created with the collaborative inputs of local residents. The project has happened in Gothenburg Sweden and most recently in Utrecht Netherlands. Coming soon to Berlin and Oslo Norway. Today we dive into the why and how of Future Soundscapes and get to hear what happened in Gothenburg and Utrecht.

    I’m your host Steve Williams, also known as drusnoise, and today’s episode will be a bit different. Usually I am interviewing an artist about their approach to sound, music, and sustainability. Today I will be talking about my Future Soundscapes project and sharing some excerpts from Gothenburg and Utrecht. I think it is a fascinating approach to futures and I hope you find it interesting too. Definitely send me a DM and let me know in the comments too. My email is info@drusnoise.com

    Links and references

    Future Soundscapes https://sustain.fm/fss

    drusnoise https://drusnoise.com

    Academic paper on Future Soundscapes

    Listen – R. Murray Schafer documentary by National Film Board of Canada https://www.nfb.ca/film/listen/

    Jordan Lacey. Sonic Rupture https://www.bloomsbury.com/au/sonic-rupture-9781501338571/

    Centre for Sustainable Urban Futures https://urbanfutures.se/en

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    1 hr
  • Attunement – Environment, perception, weather and more with Juan Carlos Duarate Regino
    Aug 28 2024

    What does it mean to give voice to nature? To the weather? How can we connect with ecological systems through sound and performance? And what does it mean to attune to nature? Today I am excited to explore these questions – and more. Juan C. Duarte Regino is an artist-researcher, currently a Ph.D. candidate at Aalto University. Central to his investigation is the relation between the atmosphere, the act of listening, and the profound concept of attunement. His background is in New Media, Design & Production, and Audiovisual Communication. His mission looks beyond conventional, extractive, or deterministic approaches to understanding the relationship between nature and technology. Instead, it ventures into ancient and indigenous knowledge that harmonizes with ecological perspectives on our weather systems, giving voice to the natural agencies at play within the realm of weather. So as you can imagine, Juan is a perfect fit for this show.

    Bio

    Juan C. Duarte Regino is an artist-researcher, currently a Ph.D. candidate at Aalto University. Central to his investigation is the relation between the atmosphere, the act of listening, and the profound concept of attunement. His background is in New Media, Design & Production, and Audiovisual Communication. His artistic endeavors over the last decade have gained recognition and have been showcased at prestigious events and venues internationally. His mission looks beyond conventional, extractive, or deterministic approaches to understanding the relationship between nature and technology. Instead, it ventures into ancient and indigenous knowledge that harmonizes with ecological perspectives on our weather systems, giving voice to the natural agencies at play within the realm of weather. His research revolves around the exploration of the symbiotic relationship between nature and technology through environmental sound. His work presents artifacts to resonate with atmospheric energies. In his approach, he proposes diversified technologies for attuning to nature. By doing so, Duarte Regino pushes the boundaries of artistic expression and enables a deeper understanding of our environment and its intricate interplay with technology.

    Links

    www.juanduarteregino.com https://juanduarte.bandcamp.com/

    Hildegard Westerkamp - Kits Beach https://www.hildegardwesterkamp.ca/sound/comp/3/kitsbeach/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hg96nU6ltLk Sterne, J. (2019). Multimodal scholarship in world soundscape project composition: Toward a different media-theoretical legacy (or: The WSP as OG DH). Sound, Media, Ecology, 85-109. John Durham Peters - The Marvelous Clouds Toward a Philosophy of Elemental Media https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/M/bo20069392.html Augury: https://juanduarteregino.com/Augury

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    1 hr
  • Darkness and Sound with Melissa Ingaruca Moreno
    Jul 24 2024

    Sound is one of our most powerful senses. But it is just one of our senses. Sight, touch, smell, and taste are powerful too. And even more powerful when they are combined with sound. Today we talk with Melissa Ingaruca Moreno about her work with light, fungi, meditation, and sound. Melissa is an award-winning futurist and researcher in multispecies design based in Berlin. Her project ‘Endarken’ integrates fungal bioluminescence and sonification of nature with glimpses of darker futures. This is a future of designed light-darkness for multispecies cohabitation with a focus on healing and I am excited to chat with Melissa about how all of these ideas – and senses – fit together.

    Bio

    Melissa Ingaruca Moreno is an award-winning futurist and researcher in multispecies design. Endarken is a research-through-design project of Melissa Ingaruca Moreno´s PhD “Multispecies Cities and Emerging Technologies”, that re-imagines the future of nocturnal urban light for more-than-human wellbeing in Berlin via a series of participatory design workshops.

    Links and references

    Endarken Futures: Darkness as Healing https://melissa-ingaruca.medium.com/healing-in-darkness-endarken-futures-part-i-0d680189ea55

    Endarken project overview https://drive.google.com/file/d/1lU7Elq6W2ZzZJMHAKe_IJvEYliCPB0Y4/view

    Instagram @endarken_cities

    Floating University https://floating-berlin.org/

    Falchi, F. et al. The new world atlas of artificial night sky brightness. Sci Adv 2, (2016).

    Dunn, N. Dark Design: A New Framework for Advocacy and Creativity for the Nocturnal Commons. International Journal of Design in Society 10, 9–23 (2016).

    Falchi, F., Cinzano, P., Elvidge, C., Keith, D. & Haim, A. Limiting the impact of light pollution on human health, environment and stellar visibility. J Environ Manage 92, 2714–2722 (2011).

    Falcón, J. et al. Exposure to Artificial Light at Night and the Consequences for Flora, Fauna, and Ecosystems. Frontiers in Neuroscience vol. 14 Preprint at https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2020.602796 (2020).

    Yang, L., Xiao, L., Guo, Y. & Yan, Y. A review of the effects of artificial light at night in urban areas on the ecosystem level and the remedial measures. (2022).

    Gallan, B. & Gibson, C. New dawn or new dusk? Beyond the binary of day and night. Environment and Planning 43, 2509–2515 (2011).

    Zielinska-Dabkowska, K. M. & Xavia, K. Protect our right to light. Nature 568, 451–453 (2019).

    Pollastri, S. et al. More-Than-Human Future Cities. in ACM International Conference Proceeding Series 23–30 (Association for Computing Machinery, 2021). doi:10.1145/3469410.3469413.

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    1 hr
  • From ethereal to material with Priscilla Haring-Kuipers
    Jun 26 2024

    Sound and music are in many ways ethereal and, quite literally, float through the air with no environmental impact. But, especially in the electronic music world, the gear that makes sound, transmits sound, records sound, and drives the dance floor does have an environmental impact. What does that mean for a sustainable electronic music scene? Today we talk with Priscilla Haring-Kuipers of This is Not Rocket Science in Amsterdam about all this and more. Together with her husband Stijn, they design, make, sell and perform with modular synthesizers. Her background is in marketing, social sciences, media psychology and game-based-learning. I have had the chance to talk with Priscilla over the years about their company’s approach to sustainability and I’m excited to go deeper with that conversation today.

    Bio

    Priscilla Haring-Kuipers of This is Not Rocket Science in Amsterdam. Together with my husband Stijn we design, make, sell and perform with modular synthesizers. My background is in marketing, social sciences, media psychology and game-based-learning. Will sing.

    Links

    TINRS https://www.thisisnotrocketscience.nl/this-is-not-rocket-science/

    TINR Sustainability https://www.thisisnotrocketscience.nl/sustainability/

    Mastadon https://priscillaharing.info/

    Articles at Elektor Magazine https://www.elektormagazine.de/authors/167432/priscilla-haring-kuipers

    Vocal pack https://thisisnotrocketscience.bandcamp.com/album/vocal-pack-boom-link-to-zip

    Club Synth https://www.thisisnotrocketscience.nl/clubsynth

    sustain.fm https://sustain.fm

    Contact info@drusnoise.com

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    1 hr
  • Sound, memory, buildings, and bodies with Monica Sand
    May 22 2024

    Sound is an interesting thing. Sounds can evoke emotions like happiness, anxiety, hope, and calmness. But what I find most interesting is how sound can evoke memories. One of my first memories of sound is my Mum playing the organ at church, laying down on the wooden pew and feeling bass in my whole body. Strong memories of family, connection and childhood – all from sound. In the latest episode of sustain, we are talking with Monica Sand – an artist and researcher based in Stockholm and Gothenburg. Monica has a long history of working with sounds and space. And most recently a project in Gothenburg exploring art, buildings, and human bodies as carriers of cultural memory. Today we chat about sound, memory, art, science, buildings, and bodies.

    Bio

    Monica Sand, artist and researcher with a PhD in artistic research, from the School of Architecture, KTH, Stockholm. Sand holds a position as Research Adviser at the Artistic Faculty, and affiliated researcher at the Academy of Music and Drama, at Gothenburg University. From 2011 until 2019 she was coordinating research at ArkDes, Stockholm. At KTH and during a postdoc at Konstfack (University College of Arts Crafts andDesign, Stockholm) she produced courses, walk-shops and lectures based on art and artistic research projects with a focus on collective actions in public space. Earlier art work took place in collaborations with different physics laboratories in Sweden and at CERN, the largest particle laboratory in Europe, Geneva: In between art and science and Acting Physics

    Links

    Playing the Space https://playingthespace.wordpress.com/

    Matter Matters – Art, Buildings and Human Bodies as Carriers of Cultural Memory

    https://playingthespace.wordpress.com/2023/12/18/en-bage-genom-tiden/

    Matter Matters Sound Archive by Louisa Palmi https://palmi.org/The-Sound-Archive

    Important message to the public, VMA: https://soundcloud.com/lur_arkdes/sarafranceschi-elegi-short

    Forest Improvisations in the Uppsala Cathedral:

    https://vimeo.com/55853657

    City Experiments with students in an exhibition hall: Färgfabriken

    https://vimeo.com/149003424?from=outro-embed

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    1 hr
  • Hearing Hidden Noise with Felipe Vareschi
    Apr 24 2024

    It sounds simple, but what is noise? Is it unwanted sounds? Is it a set of frequencies? Or is it something that is always around us but something we don’t usually notice? Today we talk with Felipe Vareshi about their compositions and performances that give voice to the quietest and most hidden forms of noise pollution that affect us as individuals and as groups coexisting within urban spaces. We talk about sound, noise, listening, and the potentials of sound as a medium for “possible” futures and of the artist as the enabler for these kind of possibilities.

    Bio​

    Felipe Vareschi is an Experimental Electronic Musician, Performer and Mastering Engineer based in Berlin. Their work explores the way people interact with each other through objects, with a particular focus on the interactions between individuals, technology and nature.

    Felipe Vareschi is developing a new musical language where interactions between electronics, sound objects, performers, and installation sites mimic social interactions and human-object networks. Inspired by the physical and imaginary sounds of everyday life, Felipe aims to empower listeners to value and participate in the soundscape around them and embrace the noise of interconnected life.

    Links

    https://www.felipevareschi.com/

    https://www.vareschimastering.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/frmvar/

    Your host

    Steve Williams / drusnoise https://instagram.com/drusnoise

    https://sustain.fm

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    1 hr
  • From Trash to Music - Turning waste into sounds with Veerle Pennock and Etta Harbar
    Mar 27 2024

    So what is trash really? What is waste? How do we cut down how much we throw away? And what happens when we throw things away? Is that really the end of things? Many groups like Bye Bye Plastic and Clubtopia are thinking about questions like these; how to reduce waste in clubs and festivals, get rid of plastic water bottles and so on. But a different approach is to completely rethink the idea of waste and trash. Today I talk with Veerle Pennock and Etta Harbar from Utrecht in the Netherlands. They are live performers, teachers, makers, and hackers exploring the crossover between e-waste, art, music, and instruments and I am happy to talk more with them about their work and approach to sustainability. And we hear a recording of their heavy-hitting noisy trash music live at Voltage Control Amsterdam.

    Show notes and links

    Performance recordings featured:

    Modulation, 16.07.2023, de Nijverheid Utrecht, NL

    Voltage Control Amsterdam, 21.01.2024, Paradiso Amsterdam, NL

    Parallel Problems https://www.instagram.com/parallelproblems/

    Veerle Pennock https://veerlepennock.com/

    Elektrotek https://www.instagram.com/elektortek/

    Etta HarBar https://www.instagram.com/ettaharbar/

    Acid Solder Club https://www.instagram.com/acidsolderclub/

    Intergalactic Cyber Trash Collective https://www.dbstudio.nl/event/expo-opening-wreckage/ Voltage Control Amsterdam https://www.instagram.com/voltagecontrolamsterdam/

    Modulation Utrecht https://www.instagram.com/modulationutrecht/

    Bye Bye Plastic Foundation https://www.instagram.com/byebyeplasticlife/

    Clubtopia https://www.instagram.com/clubtopia

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    1 hr