All posts by Bohang Zhang

Environmental protection in the piece

For the final piece, I was inspired by a phenomenon I notice every day when I walk along the road, where discarded cans are trampled by pedestrians on the road, but there is actually a rubbish bin not far ahead. So I had the idea to put the story of the cans into piece.

In the first part, I recorded a lot of field recordings, with city noises, shop openings and some footsteps to achieve the scene of a thirsty man entering a shop to buy a drink, and in the second part, I added a drum and changed the tempo of my recorded breaths to make what amounts to an improvisation. The music in the second part is rhythmic, which reflects his happiness after drinking the drink. In the third part when he throws the can anywhere, I added strings and synth chords to make the part sad and I also recorded a lot of footsteps of different shoes trying to create that everyone was just walking and stepping over the can and no one was picking it up. The third part also had some skateboarding sliding by and kicking the cans. In the fourth part, which is the end of my story, I recorded some sounds of the can rolling in the wind and then being picked up. Eventually, the can was thrown in the trash.

Visiting Practitioner Fari Bradley

Fari Bradley An Iranian-born sound artist, Bradley’s practice involves sound sculpture, installation, performance and broadcast. With a background in classical and North Indian music, Bradley uses off-the-shelf materials, handmade electronic devices for improvisation and recording.

Fari showed two sketches in her presentation and played them with very Indian style instruments. Her two sketches were similar to a score, which is similar to the graphic score in the creative sound project. Her work is also done through acute creation.

The pan in the left and right channels of the intro to Fari’s piece Stereo Mountains is very comforting to me, and the vocals sampled in the piece are Persian, a reminder of the Zagros Mountains that Fari says in his introduction that this was inspired. Elements of Persian singing are similar to Yoder, and Zagros has many influences at the intersection of Iran, Iraq and Turkey. The Zagros spans the entire length of Iran’s western and south-western plateau, bordering Iraq and Turkey, ending at the Strait of Hormuz, and starting in north-western Iran and extending along Iran’s western border.

DIY Cultures

In this lesson, we compare and contrast the difference between Underground and avant-garde artists. Underground music generally exists outside or on the margins of mainstream institutions and cultures in various forms of music production, such as noise and improvised music. And he does not earn a lot of money. Whereas avant-garde is progressive, boundary-pushing and challenges convention in a progressive sense and draws the mainstream towards it.

I don’t think I know what kind of sound art I’m in right now, but if I had to think about it, I’d probably progress towards avant-garde because I’m currently trying to become a game sound designer, and although I don’t know what the future holds, I think game sound should be avant-garde. Because it’s more accessible to the masses and is in the mainstream.

We also looked at a lot of the underground and avant-garde pages in class, and when we compared them, it was clear that the underground pages were more free-form than the avant-garde pages, which were like having a dedicated web designer working on them. I like the Sofia records website very much, their design is very free and I like the spontaneity.

In the end we discussed Manifestos and set out our rules.

ONE SAMPLE THAT EVERYONE USES IN THEIR PIECE

DON’T NOT HAVE FUN

ALWAYS SUPPORTIVE, INCLUSIVE, A COMMUNIT WITH SOLIDARITY

BLEND OF INDIVIDUALS, ARTISTIC FREEDOM AND FREEFORM

WORK IN COLLABORATION NOT IN COMPETITION, WILLING TO SHARE WITH EACH OTHER AND NOT KEEPTHINGS FOR OURSELVES, COMMUNAL VULNERABILITY

WHO CARES? WE ARE ANTI-MANIFESTO, RULES ARE MEANT TO BE BROKEN

MUSIC RELEASE SHOULD BE OPEN TO INTERPRETATION NOT GUIDED BY THE MANIFESTO

INDIVIDUAL LIITATIONS SHOULD BE EMBRACED BUT OVERALL LIMITATIONS AVOIDED, OTHERWISE YOU WILL MISS OUT

Theme: Change

verb (used with object),changed,chang·ing.to make the form, nature, content, future course, etc., of (something) different from what it is or from what it would be if left alone:to transform or convert (usually followed by into).

verb (used without object),changed,chang·ing.to become different:to become altered or modified.

noun the act or fact of changing; fact of being changed: a transformation or modification; alteration.

Interview

In my interview with my friend, I asked a few questions.

How do you feel about the sounds you hear in your everyday life?

Sound is present in our lives all the time, but the senses of touch, smell and sight are visible and made up of very small molecules. Sound, however, is made up of waveforms, which are very abstract. Sound is a way of putting on and getting information and, like music, expressing important information. For me, sound is a language other than words, a form of expression that is very malleable. At the same time, as an artist, the sound is as important as the visual, and it can also stimulate my imagination.

Play the game with sound off or on?

With sound The game has a more ambient feel to it, adding to the experience. Travelling through the different spaces in the game makes for an interesting experience. Background music and location-specific music Invisible but create a specific space.

What about the connection between sound and our bodies?

Sounds have important connections to all our other perceptions, for example, physically, the head hurts when you can’t accept high frequency sounds, the sound of nails scraping a chalkboard, sour teeth, and psychologically, the soundtrack to a horror movie, a feeling of being infected.

GRAPHIC SCORES

In this lesson, we looked at many examples of graphic scores, both drawn and photographic. My scores were made up of irregular curves, dots and numbers in traditional Chinese characters. My score required four to five instruments to improvise.

I find these graphic scores interesting because it is not like a traditional score where each note has its own prescribed notation. It is very abstract and may have an inner meaning of a story or a poem. I might use graphic scores in my work.

I chose graphic scores for the work I produced later on, and my scores tell the story of the can. The story is about a thirsty man who goes into a shop to buy a drink, and after drinking it on the road, he just throws the can away. The can goes through many things on the road, being stepped on by pedestrians, run over by skateboards and kicked like a ball, but no one picks it up. In the process, the cans are in motion and form a trajectory. Coincidentally the person who discarded the can came across it in another block and this time picked it up and threw it in the trash bin.

Psychoacoustics

Psychoacoustics is a fringe discipline that studies the relationship between sound and the auditory sensations it evokes. I felt that the term psychoacoustics was very confusing to me when I first heard it, but it’s really quite simple – it’s the way that the human brain uses to interpret sound. For example, if a person shouts at the top of their lungs and gently steps on their foot at the same time, I will hear them shouting, but I may not hear them stepping on their foot. I am then mentally attracted to his shout because it is richer in high frequencies. I was thinking that when we listen to some music, if there is an instrument that is very special, it might make the listener attracted to that instrument. I was listening to a piece of Chinese-influenced music that had a part played by the suona, a traditional Chinese instrument, and when I got to that part, my attention was completely drawn to the melody of the suona. This is probably the same as shouting and stamping in which the shout is more appealing.

In my piece I can also use the concept of psychoacoustics to accomplish this. Because I want to create an atmosphere with a combination of field recordings and synthesisers. My field recordings may be more appealing to the audience than my synthesizer sounds, and I hope that this will turn the piece into a better sense of rich space.

Yan Jun

Yan Jun is an experimental musician. He is mainly engaged in improvised music, experimental electronic music, field recording and sound art. When I listened to one of his albums called Plays John Cage, the music in the album artwork was borrowed from John Cage’s 4 ’33” played with no intentional sound.

I think the most interesting piece in this album is the piece 0’0″, in which I can hear the sound of keyboard typing in this 26-minute piece. Although I don’t know what he wrote, I can imagine that the artist may have used this method to express his own point of view or to express who he is. In fact, he was also inspired by John cage’s 0’0″ for this piece.

In 1962, Cage wrote 0′00″, which is also referred to as 4′33″ No. 2. The directions originally consisted of one sentence: ‘In a situation provided with maximum amplification, perform a disciplined action.’ At the first performance Cage had to write that sentence. The second performance added four new qualifications to the directions: ‘the performer should allow any interruptions of the action, the action should fulfill an obligation to others, the same action should not be used in more than one performance, and should not be the performance of a musical composition.’

I think Yan jun is one of the representatives of contemporary sound art in China at the moment, and his other works are very experimental and incorporate a lot of noise elements. He also said in an interview that in the future, 90 percent of Chinese sound art creators may disappear, and people will start with noise and eventually go back to pop music, or simply give up creating, which may also have to be linked to reality. People should have to extend their instincts into a self-consciousness.http://www.yishushijie.com.cn/sesquiton/article/?type=detail&id=152

THICK Description

When I was in Primary School Year 3 I went to the first concert of my life where the lights, sound, songs and instruments mixed together on stage and reached my ears. When the drummer struck the first beat of the concert, my whole heart and eardrums were captivated by the low frequencies and started swaying to the rhythm. When the singer got to the hit song, the whole arena sang along with it, which was very powerful.

I then fell in love with live music, the difference between listening to music live and on my phone or vinyl is that it’s more powerful for me. Many music apps now have the ability to add effects to the original audio file, such as live effects, weighted bass, and custom effects. Although these effects can slightly change the feel of the original audio for me, they still don’t have the same atmosphere as live music.

When I wasn’t there to watch football I watched it live on my electronics and I very clearly remember being in front of the screen during the 2014 World Cup final but I could feel the tension. During the final minutes of the Germany game, when the German players had the ball, the Argentine fans booed and when the Argentine players had the ball, the German fans booed. I watched my first live game before the 2020 pandemic, at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium I watched the Champions League group stage and really experienced the sound of the action. There was a middle-aged fan behind me who kept shouting the names of the players and trying to call their tactics, his voice was particularly obvious when there was no other cheering, but when the team song reached us, everyone’s voice drowned him out. On top of that I felt the high frequency of the boos from the fans when a player took a penalty was so harsh.

broadcast vs narrowcast

The difference between broadcast and narrowcast lies in two keywords: broad and specific. But they are both aimed at groups of people. Broadcast is good at delivering information to a wider audience so that its message is known for some promotional or commercial purposes, so broadcast is aimed at a wider and more diverse group of people. In contrast to radio, narrowcasting is about sharing information to individual groups and is more targeted as they try to attract a more passionate and interested target group. Some narrowcasting is even tailored on a one-to-one basis, serving only one person.

I think broadcast can be better communicated than narrowcasting because there is no specific audience to serve, so it is more accessible. However, compared to narrowcasting, the broadcast has less targeted publicity so it is not easy to achieve the desired goal in the short term. However, I believe that narrowcasting is based on broadcasting because it requires broadcasting or some form of access to information about a specific group of people for the purpose of classification or research. After discussing the concept of these two terms with my friend, we had some questions such as, is narrowcasting limited in terms of the group of audience? And is broadcast completely unrestricted? Ultimately I think that the starting point of radio is not limited but the audience group itself may be limited. For example, some Chinese broadcasts have no specific audience, yet some people are unable to listen to them because of language issues. Narrowcasting, on the other hand, is not completely restrictive or limited, and sometimes even receives a very good response to its targeted messages. According to some surveys, ninety-eight per cent of people will open narrowcast emails, while broadcast emails are often ignored.

When I was thinking about these two concepts, I noticed that some of today’s social media genres have examples of these. For example, at Tiktok, at the beginning they push different types of videos to users to determine their preferences, this is broadcasting, and then they push the appropriate type of videos to users based on these judgments, thus arousing their interest and spending time on these videos. This is narrowcasting. This combination of broadcast and narrowcasting is a perfect example of filtering and research to increase customer satisfaction and achieve the desired outcome.