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I’m thrilled to be a Fellow in Garden & Landscape Studies at Dumbarton Oaks this academic year! I highly recommend…
Check out this new article from the Smithsonian Magazine on the history of environmental recordings (with an unexpected appearance by…
A late-night spotlight on Japanese composer Ryuichi Sakamoto and his transformation of a tsunami-damaged piano into a permanent sonic and…
Each week, I’ll highlight a composer or sound artist who works closely with ecological sounds. Today, I’d like to highlight…
Check out the call for papers for an upcoming, eco-adjacent symposium happening at Berkeley later this year! https://careers.amsmusicology.org/opportunity/berkeley-ca-call-for-papers-cfp-clouds-streams-and-ground-truths-developing-methods-for-studying-algorithmic-music-ecosystems/
“What does a melting glacier sound like?” Check out this op-doc from the New York Times on Ludwig Berger’s efforts…
The EDC’s Multi-Elemental Radio Station (MERS) is an interactive environmental sound installation, accessible via the EDC website. Inspired by ETH…
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The Acoustic Ecologies group brings together EDC members interested in sounding environmental spaces. Together, we explore questions such as: what does it mean to think environmentally about music and sound? What does it mean to think musically and sonically about the environment? This group’s purview maintains no historical, disciplinary, or geographical limitations. All are welcome.
The primary aim of this group – and, in a sense, its principal site of engagement – is the Multi-Elemental Radio Station, which is currently in development.
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