Open your ears.
Sonic Innovations continues to expand Caramoor’s programming with an annual exhibition of sound art, curated by Stephan Moore, from artists working with sonic materials outside the traditions of concert music. Each artist has drawn inspiration from their chosen location, creating work that is mindful of the natural and human-made sounds and systems already present in the environment, while engaging each site’s unique characteristics — be they acoustic, historic, architectural, or natural.
2024 Sonic Innovations
Our Commitment to Multi-Sensory Needs
This year’s exhibition includes a piece by artist Liz Phillips at the dovecote in Caramoor’s Sense Circle. The Marjorie Carr Adams Sense Circle Garden was planted in 1989 and features a variety of scents, textures, and colors to engage all visitors, including those who are blind or visually impaired. Today, the Sonic Innovations exhibition throughout the grounds affirms Caramoor’s commitment to this multi-sensory approach. While all pieces involve aural expression, many also include elements of vibration, texture, movement, and visual elements, allowing for multiple interactions and experiences.
Seismic Grief (2024)
Senem Pirler
Seismic Grief is a sound installation that incorporates sonic inflatable sculptures that are designed and shaped using seismic data that was captured during the earthquake in Turkey and Syria on February 6th, 2023 from two different sites, Turkey and the United States.
Borrowing the term “material witness” from Susan Schuppli, and accompanied by a sound composition that is influenced by Sara Ahmed’s text “The Cultural Politics of Emotion,” this installation positions itself as a study of sound as a material witness to grief.
Credits:
Data Compilation & Design & Sound & Concept & Composition: Senem Pirler
Inflatable Fabrication & Inflatable Design Consultation: Pneuhaus
Technical Assistance & Interaction Guideline Drawing: Monica Duncan
All seismic data were downloaded through the EarthScope Consortium Wilber 3 system or EarthScope Consortium Web Services, including the following seismic networks: (1) Turkey (ANTO; Ankara, Turkey); (2) United States (COR; Corvallis, Oregon); (3) United States (HRV; Oak Ridge, Massachusetts).
Senem Pirler
Senem Pirler (she/her) is an artist, sonic improviser, and educator based in Brooklyn/Troy, NY. Pirler’s interdisciplinary work crosses over into sound engineering, sound art, performance, video art, movement, and installation.
Born in Turkey, Pirler studied classical piano at Hacettepe State Conservatory and sound engineering and design at Istanbul Technical University/MIAM. Pirler earned her M.M. in Music Technology the Stephen F. Temmer Tonmeister Honors Track from NYU Steinhardt, and her Ph.D. in Electronic Arts from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Her dissertation’s title was Disruption, Dis/orientation, and Intra-action: Recipes for Creating a Queer Utopia in Audiovisual Space.
Pirler has exhibited and performed work at institutions, venues, and festivals internationally, such as the Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center/EMPAC (NY), Roulette Intermedium (NY), The Kitchen (NYC), Carnegie Hall (NYC), Southbank Centre (London), Akademie der Künste (Berlin), Los Angeles Philharmonic (LA), Baryshnikov Arts Center (NY), Montalvo Arts Center (CA), Mount Tremper Arts (NY), and Collar Works (NY). Her work has been recognized by various institutions through residencies, such as the Institute for Electronic Arts, PACT Zollverein, and Signal Culture residency.
Pirler has been awarded a NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship in the category of Music/Sound in 2022 and the Malcolm Morse Award to honor the work of Pauline Oliveros and Deep Listening in 2018.
Dr. Pirler joined the Bennington College faculty in Fall 2018
Promenade (2024)
Stephan Moore
Along the covered walkway, three stations are perched. As visitors walk by, their presence stirs up sounds evoking Caramoor’s past, present, and future — ghostly voices and instruments, the natural sounds, and concerts both remembered and imagined, all remixed and orchestrated anew at each interaction. If a visitor approaches and lingers at a station, possibly raising their hand to touch it, they find themselves able to further activate these sonic memories, drawing forth a stream of sounds as if playing an instrument.
Stephan Moore
Chicago-based sound artist Stephan Moore is currently the curator of sound art at the Caramoor Center for Music and Arts in New York. As a performer, organizer, and maker, he has been working at the forefront of the experimental audio world for the past 20 years. His work as a sound installation artist, composer, and theatrical sound designer has been recognized with numerous awards, grants, and artist residencies. His recent solo exhibitions have exhibited at diverse venues, including Experimental Sound Studios in Chicago, the Church of the Ascension in New York City, and Raygun Projects in Queensland, Australia. He has designed over 20 dance and theater productions in New York City, including the “Bessie” award-winning Dark Horse/Black Forest, and the “Bessie” nominated The People To Come, both with the performance collective A Canary Torsi. Evidence, the band he formed with Scott Smallwood in 2001, has performed extensively across 5 continents and has released a dozen recordings.
Stephan Moore received his MFA in 2003 from the Integrated Electronic Arts program at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, where he studied with Pauline Oliveros and Curtis Bahn. From 2004 to 2010 he was the touring sound engineer and music supervisor for the Merce Cunningham Dance Company. Moore formed the company Isobel Audio LLC in 2012 to promote and distribute Hemisphere Speakers, an omnidirectional loudspeaker used in sound installations and electronic music performances. After completing his Ph.D. in Computer Music and Multimedia Composition at Brown University in 2015, Moore joined the faculty of Northwestern University, where he currently teaches courses in sound art and sound design.
Dyning in the Dovecote (2023)
Liz Phillips
The sounds of water, insects, dove calls, and bird wings flicker and fly around the dovecote, continually moving along ephemeral, shapeshifting sound trails. The hanging bamboo and the vases become resonant speakers that radiate sound and change wave patterns to form on the water’s surface. Sound events are live processed and located by sensing light and motion-with etherwaves like a theremin. This recalls Lucie Rosen’s place in the history of music technology. The people, cloud and bird proximity and stillness near objects shifts the soundscape, as does sunlight and the wind. Presence stirs the voices into subtle transformations, differing throughout the day. This work is meant to join with the trees, birds and bees in the natural environment, making for deep near and far listening experience in the garden.
Dedicated to the memory of the composer, Ruth Anderson.
Liz Phillips
New York-based artist Liz Phillips has been making interactive multi-media installations for the past 50+ years. She is a pioneering figure in the development of interactive and sound installation art. She creates responsive environments sensing wind, plants, fish, audience, dance, water, and food. Audio and visual art forms combine with new technologies to create elastic time-space constructs. Sound is often the primary descriptive material.
Phillips exhibits in museums, alternative spaces, festivals, and public spaces. These include: The Whitney Museum of American Art, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Milwaukee Art Museum, Lincoln Center Festival, the Spoleto Festival USA, the Walker Art Center, Ars Electronica, Jacob’s Pillow, The Kitchen, Stedelijk Museum, Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, Ilya Fridman Gallery, Rene Block Gallery and Frederieke Taylor Gallery. Windspun (1980) was a wind- powered and activated sound in a wind-turbine in the South Bronx, cosponsored by Creative Time. Phillips received a Guggenheim Fellowship (1987) to create Graphite Ground, a dry rock garden with natural copper formations. Wave Crossings was installed on Governors Island in 2017 commissioned by NYSCA through Harvestworks. In 2019 the Queens Museum commissioned Heidi Howard and Liz Phillips to create Relative Fields in a Garden her longest installation for their atrium center space and later they created a virtual interactive version of that work.
Created with Annea Lockwood, The River Feeds Back was commissioned and installed at Drexel’s Academy of Natural Sciences and Inside the Watershed, a public, site-specific installation, uses underwater sounds and plays back through its own wooden listening arbor on the Schuylkill River (Philadelphia 2022-23.)
Phillips also collaborated with the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, Simone Forti,
Earl Howard, Robert Kovich, Alison Knowles, Nam June Paik, and Yoshimasa Wada. Public installations were commissioned/presented by The Cleveland Orchestra, IBM Japan, and the World Financial Center.
Phillips received a B.A. from Bennington College in 1973. In 1981 she co-founded Parabola Arts Foundation, a not-for-profit organization created with five media artists from varied disciplines (music, sculpture, film, video.) Phillips lectures, organizes exhibitions, and engages communities in workshops on Sound and Interactive Media; Graduate Music Department at Wesleyan University, the Sound MFA Program at Columbia University, and Purchase College in the Visual Arts Department (1998-present.)
She has organized exhibitions of emerging artists and women making installations with sound; Issue Project Room (2009)(works by Liz Phillips, Maryanne Amacher, and Miya Masaoka), Neuberger Museum (2019), Pelham Art Center (2005), Richard and Dolly Maas Gallery (2004), Boston Museum of Fine Arts (2002, 2003).
in“C” (2021)
in“C” (2021)
Trimpin
When Caramoor first asked Trimpin to create a permanent sound art sculpture in celebration of its 75th Anniversary, the world-renowned sound artist thought about Caramoor’s acoustical environment: the birds singing, the wind in the trees, and the blissful absence of street noise. He then conceived of in“C”, the interactive kinetic sculpture shaped as a 16-foot high double letter C now located in the entry plaza, welcoming guests as they arrive. From the top of the C’s curve, 24 tuned metal bell chimes ranging over two octaves are suspended. Made out of steel and utilizing electromechanical components, in“C” interacts with visitors through a motion sensor (as you approach, its melodious chimes draw you closer) and through the physical activation of a push-button panel (don’t be shy!). The push-buttons activate the structure’s chimes to play pre-composed short pieces, each 1–2 minutes long. In addition to Trimpin’s music, Caramoor commissioned pieces from four composers: Christopher Cerrone, Anna Clyne, Missy Mazzoli, and Nico Muhly. As Caramoor continues to work with composers, the chime-piece library will grow. When in“C” is in its education mode, a MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface) keyboard enables visitors of any musical ability (or even none!) to make their own chime music, as the chimes respond to the strikes on the keyboard.
Trimpin
Trimpin is an internationally acclaimed composer, musician, visual artist, and inventor, engaged in commissions and exhibitions at venues around the world. Born in 1951 and based in Seattle for the past 25 years, he grew up near the German Black Forest, an area that has a history rich in mechanical music machines (think cuckoo clocks and pianolas, or player pianos). Fascinated with sound exploration in his early childhood, Trimpin often experimented with sound and distance in the German woods. Using the tools from a well-stocked cabinetry shop in his home (his father was a cabinet maker by trade), he took apart and reassembled old radios and musical instruments. By age 10, he was inventing his own eccentric instruments. The son of amateur musicians, the young Trimpin learned to play brass instruments but developed a mysterious allergy to metal that forced him to give up playing. He turned to electromechanical engineering. Self-taught, he mastered how the memory works on a pianola and devised a machine that could transcribe and preserve the piano paper rolls digitally. He became a leading specialist in combining musical compositions with computer technology. Throughout his career, he has created installations that incorporate complex technological sculptural elements. On permanent display in his hometown area are: If VI was IX, a sound sculpture composed of 600 electric guitars at MoPOP (Museum of Pop Culture); Hydraulis, an elegant interactive water sculpture at the Seattle Center Key Arena; and On: Matter, Monkeys, and the King, a multimedia kinetic wind-up-toy structure next to the rolling walkway in Sea-Tac International Airport. In his 2014 In the Garden of Sonic Delights installation, The Pianohouse, Trimpin wanted to create a piece that every visitor could feel free to explore. What he created was a house-like structure from the frameworks of six upright pianos. “I try to use other ways to make the sculpture look not so much like a musical instrument, so people will actually play,” Trimpin explains. “My work is an ongoing exploration of the concepts of sound, vision, and movement,” he says, “experimenting with combinations that will introduce our senses of perception to a totally new experience.” A MacArthur Foundation “Genius” Award recipient and a Guggenheim Fellow, Trimpin has been commissioned by Lincoln Center, San Francisco’s Exploratorium, Merce Cunningham Dance Company, and Seattle Symphony, among others.
Wild Energy (2014)
Annea Lockwood and Bob Bielecki
Wild Energy gives access to the inaudible, vibrations in the ultra and infra ranges emanating from sources which affect us fundamentally, but which are beyond our audio perception, many of which are creating our planet’s environment: the sun, the troposphere and ionosphere, the earth’s crust and core, the oxygen-generating trees — everything deeply integrated, forming an inaudible web in which we move, through which we live and on which, therefore, we depend. It is our sense that through these sounds one can feel the energies generated, not as concepts but as energy-fields moving through one’s body. A generating image for the piece is of Caramoor’s trees funneling these energies into the oxygen we breathe as we walk near them, or lie under them.
Wild Energy is a fifty minute loop which begins with solar oscillations recorded by the SOHO spacecraft, sped up 42,000 times, and ends with ultrasound recorded from the interior of a scots pine tree, slowed down 10 times, to make them audible to us. We are deeply grateful to the scientists who so generously gave us access to their sound files and permission to use them. The many sounds and their sources are described below, in order of initial appearance.
Sounds & Sources
Solar oscillations
Solar oscillations are pressure waves which travel through the body of the sun, causing ripples on the surface which the SOHO spacecraft is recording (NASA and the European Space Agency). Alexander Kosovichev and colleagues at Stanford University’s Solar Oscillation Investigation program, sped up 40 days of solar data by a factor of 42,000, bringing them into the audio range.
Kilauea volcano – gas vents, tremors
Pressurized gas is released as magma rises to the surface, creating pressure fluctuations, infrasound. Gas bubbles contribute to the sounds produced, which can resonate cavities beneath the surface. Infrasound signals recorded from tremors, explosions, fissure eruptions and bench collapses have been recorded by Milton Garces and his team (the Infrasound Laboratory, the University of Hawai’i) in recent years, particularly at the Pu’u O’o and Halema’uma’u vents. Of the recordings we have used here most have been sped up 200 times, a few 100 times.
Chorus waves and whistlers
Very Low Frequency Chorus Waves are electromagnetic waves caused by intense plasma waves generated in the radioactive Van Allen Belts in the magnetosphere surrounding the Earth. Whistlers (also VLF electromagnetic waves) are generated by lightning and move along Earth’s magnetic field lines, between the two hemispheres. Their high frequency components travel more rapidly than their lower frequencies, creating a falling tone. “This is what the radiation belts would sound like if we had antennas for ears” commented Craig Kletzing of the University of Iowa’s Radio & Plasma Wave Group who gave us these recordings and also a recording of AKR emissions. NASA’s two Radiation Belt Storm Probe satellites, together with the University’s EMFISIS receivers recently sent back recordings transmitted in stereo, a new development enriching both the sound and the data picture. Both whistlers and choruses occur at frequencies within our hearing range, and are audible once converted by the receivers.
Watch ScienceCasts: The Sound of Earthsong
Sei whale
Sei whales are “the third largest baleen whale, found in subtropical, temperate and subpolar waters worldwide.” (DOSITS) Having been extensively hunted they are now an endangered species, with an estimated current population of 80,000 whales. This whale was recorded by Arthur Newhall (the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), near the continental shelf break east of New Jersey, just south of the Hudson Canyon.
Dr. Newhall has posted this recording on the University of Rhode Island’s DOSITS (Discovery of Sound in the Sea) website where many interesting oceanographic sound samples may be heard.
Earthquakes
The ground shaking of earthquakes is very low frequency, recorded as seismograms which may be sped up to bring them into the hearing range. Arrays of seismometers are used at different distances from the epicenter, which affects the pitch ranges, in addition to the quake’s perceived strength: Because high frequencies lose energy and are dissipated faster with distance than low frequencies, higher pitches and sharp, explosive events indicate a shorter distance from the seismometers, and the deep rumbling ones a greater distance.
The first quake in the installation was the Parkfield quake of 2004 (on the San Andreas Fault), recorded by the USGS. The subsequent quake recordings were given to us by Ben Holtzman, at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University and Jason Candler (www.seismicsoundlab.org): Sumatra 2002, and the Sumatra-Andaman Island great quake of 2004, Japan 2007, and also from Japan 2011 – the ‘tsunami’ quake.
Sounds of SeismologyBroadcasts of continuous seismic sound from real-time global quake data
Trees: ultrasound emissions 1
Trees continuously pump water out of the ground through water columns in the xylem layer up to the leaves, enabling photosynthesis to take place. When trees become water-stressed, in drought or other dry conditions, unusually high levels of tension in the water columns lead to their rupture. Air bubbles are formed, blocking water flow and bursting; one indication of this is the ultrasonic acoustic cavitation clicks the trees emit. Biophysicist and tree physiologist, Melvin Tyree, has carried out pioneering research on this and other aspects of water transport in trees and compiled this sequence of cavitation clicks, each distinct and individual, which he sent to Annea over a decade ago. Here is an illustration of the process.
Hydrothermal Vents
These oceanic vents form when seawater (35.6 degrees F) penetrates cracks in the seabed, moving down toward magma bodies where it absorbs intense heat and minerals. The now superheated water (up to 860 degrees F), which is rich in hydrogen sulfide and minerals, then bursts back up through the seafloor and into the ocean to complete the hydrothermal cycle. The hottest of these vents are called black smokers (named for the black plumes they produce).
Long thought to be silent, hydrophone arrays deployed near the vents have recently revealed that they generate intense broadband acoustic signals at frequencies from 5 to 500Hz, and also “narrowband tones from 10 – 250Hz… Each vent has a unique acoustic signature” (dosits.org). Timothy Crone and colleagues at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory have been recording at the Sully and Puffer black smoker vents in the Main Endeavor Field of the Juan de Fuca Ridge, two hundred miles off the coast of Washington State and gave us filtered examples of the tones generated as the vents’ physical structures resonate.
Listen to the Sound of Black Smoker Vents
Bats
The echolocation calls bats emit are in the ultrasound range, so these have been slowed down. The following bats (found on Shockwave-Sound.com) are included in Wild Energy:
Pipistrelle bat – we do not have identification for the precise type.
California Myotis bat – prefers desert habitat, known for the great agility of its flight patterns.
Silver-haired bat – the largest of New York’s bats with a wingspan which can reach 16 inches, found largely in the Adirondacks.
Big brown bat – the largest cave bat in New York State with a wingspan of almost 13 inches, and is the most commonly seen summer bat.
Big brown bat hunting tiger moth: This remarkable recording by Aaron Corcoran of Wake Forest University is of a big brown trying to catch a Grote’s tiger moth (Bertholdia trigona) using echolocation. The moth, in turn, is using ultrasound bursts to jam the bat’s echolocation capability – i.e. interference. The recording has been slowed down ten times to bring it into our hearing range.
AKR waves
Auroral kilometric radiation emissions occur along magnetic field lines, and are generated by high-energy particles shooting through Earth’s magnetic field. They are associated with aurora displays, and seem to occur “about 3,000 miles above bright regions” in the auroras which arise in polar regions, University of Iowa researchers Robert Mutel and Donald Gurnett noted in 2001.
Tree ultrasound emissions 2: Scots Pine
Cavitation clicks are not the only ultrasonic acoustic emissions (UAE) from trees. Roman Zweifel, Fabienne Zeugin (Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL) and Marcus Maeder (Institute for Computer Music and Sound Technology, Zurich) have been recording a variety of other emissions from within scots pines, discovering a relationship between the intensity of the emissions and changes in stem radius, for example. This recording, made by Marcus Maeder in 2012, together with an earthquake in Sumatra (recorded in 2004 by Ben Holtzman), can be heard at the end of Wild Energy.
Annea Lockwood & Bob Bielecki
Photo by Nicole Tavenner
Annea Lockwood
Born in New Zealand in 1939 and living in the US since 1973, Annea Lockwood is known for her explorations of the rich world of natural acoustic sounds and environments, in works ranging from sound art and installations, through text-sound and performance art to concert music. Her music has been performed in many venues and festivals including: the Possibility of Action exhibition at MACBA Barcelona, De Ijsbreker, the Other Minds Festival-San Francisco, the Walker Art Center, the American Century: 1950 – 2000 exhibition at the Whitney Museum, the Los Angeles County Museum, Queen Elizabeth Hall, the Westdeutscher Rundfunk, CNMAT Berkeley, the Asia-Pacific Festival, Donaufest 2006 Ulm, the Donau Festival Krems, the 7th Totally Huge New Music Festival Perth, Ear To The Earth Festival — New York and Sonic Acts XIII.
Her sound installation, A Sound Map of the Danube, has been presented in Germany, Austria, and the USA. This is a surround ‘sound map’ of the entire Danube River, incorporating a wide variety of water, animal and underwater insect sounds, rocks from the riverbed, and the voices of those whose lives are intimately connected to the river. Other recent projects include Ceci n’est pas un piano, for piano, video, and electronics commissioned by Jennifer Hymer; Jitterbug, commissioned by the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, a six-channel soundscape with two improvising musicians; and In Our Name, a collaboration with Thomas Buckner based on poems by prisoners in Guantánamo. She was a recipient of the 2007 Henry Cowell Award. Her music has been issued on CD and online on the Lovely Music, Ambitus, EM, XI, Rattle, Lorelt, and Pogus labels.
Photo by Marcella Robinson
Bob Bielecki
Bob Bielecki has worked in the media arts field for more than forty years, creating unique instruments and sound designs for installation and performance. He is known for his innovative use of technology to develop distinctive electronic effects and environments and is engaged in ongoing research in psychoacoustics, sound localization, and 3-D audio.
Bob Bielecki has worked with many artists including John Cage, Alvin Lucier, La Monte Young and Pauline Oliveros. His association with Laurie Anderson dates from the mid-1970s and he has worked with Stephen Vitiello and Annea Lockwood since the 1980s.
He produced and engineered the groundbreaking media-arts residency program, ZBS/AIR, and helped to pioneer the field of binaural radio. A recipient of grants from the Andy Warhol Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts, he is an Associate Professor of Music at Bard College and serves on the faculty of the Bard MFA Program.
Videos
Stone Song (2014)
Ranjit Bhatnagar
Created for 2014’s In the Garden of Sonic Delights, Stone Song by Ranjit Bhatnagar was originally hosted by the Neuberger Museum of Art of Purchase College, SUNY and was brought to Caramoor in 2015.
“When I look at an old stone wall, I think about how the seemingly solid form has shifted and settled over time, through weathering and the erosion and compression of the soil. In order to explore this process through sound, Stone Song is laced with pressure sensors and strain gauges, and sensors for humidity, temperature, and barometric pressure. All this information feeds into a drone synthesizer, whose fundamental tones shift slowly over the months as the stones settle. Daily weather and seasonal changes will produce smaller, shorter-term changes in the stones’ song, as will the weight of visitors who stop to sit on it and listen.
“I’ve designed Stone Song in collaboration with Hilary Martin, Akira Inman, and Evan Oxland.”
— Ranjit Bhatnagar
Ranjit Bhatnagar
Photo by Keira Heu-Jwyn Chang
Ranjit Bhatnagar
Ranjit Bhatnagar discovered sound art around age 14, listening to weird late night programs on KPFA. He now works with interactive and sound installations, with scanner photography, and with internet-based collaborative art. Recent works have been exhibited at the Lawrence Hall of Science in Berkeley, the Parc d’aventures scientifiques in Belgium, Flux Factory in Queens, in the Artbots series at Eyebeam Atelier and the Pratt Institute in New York, and the Mermaid Show at the Williamsburg Art and Historical Center in Brooklyn. He recently taught “Mister Resistor” at Parsons School of Design, a studio course and rock band with homemade instruments.
Originally from the San Francisco Bay Area, Ranjit received a BA from U.C. Berkeley and an MS from the University of Pennsylvania, and was certified carnie trash by the Coney Island Sideshow School in 2002. He lives in Brooklyn next to a nice big park.
Videos
t(ch)ime (2017)
Taylor Deupree
t(ch)ime is a site-specific sound installation that utilizes a quiet hideaway on the grounds of Caramoor to create an environment that is both familiar and otherworldly. The sole sound source of the piece is a collection of bell chimes that have been manipulated through increasing layers of digital processing as the path is traversed. The human element of the chime — with its familiar interplay of sound, weather, and nature — is preserved, while the acoustic imperfections are highlighted, drawing attention to the physicality of the materials. As the listener approaches the center, the sound of the installation begins to stand still, while the sounds of nature and the outside world continue. The effect is a small temporal oasis of fragile and reflective sound, in which hearing becomes the listener’s most heightened sense.
Taylor Deupree
The life and work of Taylor Deupree are less a study in contradictions than a portrait of the multidisciplinary artist in a still-young century.
Deupree is an accomplished sound artist whose recordings, rich with abstract atmospherics, have appeared on numerous record labels, as well as in site-specific installations at such institutions as the ICC (Tokyo, Japan) and the Yamaguchi Center for Arts and Media (Yamaguchi, Japan). He started out, in the 1990s, making new noises that edged outward toward the fringes of techno, and in time he found his own path to follow. His music today emphasizes a hybrid of natural sounds and technological mediation. It’s marked by a deep attention to stillness, to an almost desperate near-silence.
And though there is an aura of insularity to Depuree’s work, he is a prolific collaborator, having collaborated with the likes of Ryuichi Sakamoto, David Sylvian, Stephan Mathieu, Stephen Vitiello, Christopher Willits, Kenneth Kirschner, Frank Bretschneider, Richard Chartier, Savvas Ysatis, Tetsu Inoue, and others.
Deupree dedicates as much time to other people’s music as he does to his own. In 1997 he founded the record label 12k, which since then has released over 100 recordings by some of the most accomplished musicians and modern sound artists of our time.
Deupree continues to evolve his sound with an ambition and drive that is masked by his music’s inherent quietude. He approaches each project with an expectation of new directions, new processes, and new junctures.
Nafasi Yako Ni Ya Kijani (Your Place is Green) (2018)
Walter Kitundu
Nafasi Yako Ni Ya Kijani (Your Place Is Green) centers around a handmade white oak rocking chair that activates sound vessels (speakers) suspended in nearby trees. The sounds are a combination of composed works, field recordings, birdsong, and conversation. The piece is a meditation on absence, specifically that of the artist’s late parents. Kitundu’s mother was an artist and deeply supported his creative endeavors. All bird recordings come from the region in Tanzania where the artist’s late father grew up. Many of them sound remarkably like Caramoor’s resident birds, and the blending of the two worlds is intentional. The piece is a celebration of those relationships, what we leave behind and what we carry forward when our loved ones are no longer here. Nafasi Yako ni ya Kijani (Your Place is Green) was originally commissioned by Montalvo Arts Center.
Walter Kitundu
Walter Kitundu
Kitundu creates kinetic sculptures and sonic installations, develops public works, builds (and performs on) extraordinary musical instruments, while studying and documenting the natural world. He is the inventor of a family of Phonoharps, multi-stringed instruments made from record players that rely on the turntable’s sensitivity to vibration. Kitundu has created hand-built record players driven by the wind and rain, fire and earthquakes, birds, light, and the force of ocean waves. In 2008 he received a prestigious MacArthur Fellowship in recognition of his work and creative potential.
Piano Garden (1969 – 1970 / 2021)
Annea Lockwood
Piano Garden is one of four installations in a series
entitled Piano Transplants. In each piece in the series,
Annea Lockwood positions a piano beyond repair in the natural world and invites the elements to consume it. Audiences are welcome and encouraged to play the piano until environmental forces make it dangerous or
impossible to do so. The score for Piano Garden reads:
Dig a sloping trench and slip an upright piano in sideways so that it is half interred. A small grand piano may be set down amongst bushes etc. Plant fast growing trees and creepers around the pianos. Do not protect against weather and leave the pianos there forever. This installation of Piano Garden is presented in collaboration with ISSUE Project Room, which honored the artist in 2021 with a global staging of Piano Transplants.
Annea Lockwood
Annea Lockwood
Annea Lockwood is known for her explorations of the rich world of natural acoustic sounds and environments. Her sound installation, A Sound Map of the Danube, has been presented in Germany, Austria, and the U.S. Other recent projects include Ceci n’est pas un piano, for piano, video, and electronics, commissioned by Jennifer Hymer;
Jitterbug, commissioned by the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, a six-channel soundscape with two improvising musicians; and In Our Name, a collaboration with Thomas Buckner based on poems by prisoners in Guantánamo. Her music has been issued on CD and online on the Lovely Music, Ambitus, EM, XI, Rattle, Lorelt, and Pogus labels.