Tuesday 26 June 2012

St Barnabas Sound Map 01

Six months ago I won a small grant from the Student Community Grant to operate a project called ‘Secret Sound’. This project sought to archive sounds from all over Oxfordshire by getting the local population to submit audio clips from their ‘acoustic territory’, or daily routine. What struck me as I sought to promote this ideal, was how difficult it was to get people to think in terms of sound: as communication of identity, of personality, of history. One of the aspects of the project was to involve schools in documenting sounds from their areas.  I decided to start at this level, in the hope that some of these principles could be understood.

Using the money from the Student Community Fund, I bought four Zoom H1 wav recorders, and some basic windshields. I wrote out a lesson plan based around two concepts: listening and recording, with special reference towards doing the two of these in various locations. The main idea was to get children into the idea of listening as a skill and as a creative (and practical) tool and act, rather than as something of a 'passive' sense. Also, they would be involved in creating something: a recording, a sound document. These recordings would later form a sound map – a process which would involve them with issues of geography, citizenship, creativity, identity, and of environmental awareness.

The session ran in the following way: after a brief talk about listening, and a few brief concept of recording, the class was split up into four groups. Each group was given a WAV recorder, and was then to go to different locations in search of an acoustic space, or a specific sound, which they would record. Later on we would have to work out where they had been, or what sound they had found and ‘captured’.

What was noticeable from my group and the other groups, was that the children were highly motivated to create and find their own sounds. As well as capturing the passive ambience of a location, the children were actively interested in ‘playing’ a location; the objects, the space, the acoustic properties relevant to it. During this part the groups worked as a team in choosing a location, or in selecting a sound from the location to record. They also worked together in ‘performing’ aspects of the location (for example multiple fingers tapping on a hollow metal pole in the school kitchen area, or activating the space in the school hall by calling out “ECHO, ECHO!” as they danced around in a circle).

When we listened back, the children were extremely keen to play their own sounds, as well as hearing and deciphering everyone else’s. Lastly I re-capped on what we’d done, on how they had managed to deduce all information from the sound only, and how listening in this way creates a unique imagery of its own, potentially more interesting than video footage, or other forms of visual documentation. The whole session lasted an hour and a half. Later, I edited a selection of the sounds and put them into the  sound map above.

When testing the site, I was pleasantly surprised at how ‘alive’ the map sounds. That is down to the children themselves: their invention, their imagination, their ability to express so clearly. In times of intense textual communication and networking, and an overly–stimulated visual cortex, we really can express so much about ourselves, our lives, our preoccupations, simply with sound. 




The sound map is above (click on the location pointers for sounds) and the sounds are as a list below


St Barnabas' Sound Map 01 by Secret Sound

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