Concrete, concert, CNCRT, concentrate, concentrated, congregated, congregation, media, mass
What do we rebel against? What is it that restricts our needs, happiness or freedom? Dominant or overbearing power structures come in many shapes and forms… Concrete fixes us in place, taking over the landscape - solid and monotonous…
As a kid who grew up in the bush, if I wanted to scream the house down, the nearest neighbours would never come to help. It was about 45 minutes on the bus to get to a town (population ~4000) where I went to school. Beyond the immediate few acres of bushland, we were surrounded by superphosphate-laden cow-paddocks, with relatively untouched wilderness areas between and beyond the farmer’s fence lines. Moving to the city, it was impossible not to notice the effects of the new surroundings. Built up areas are often depressing to look at and you cant help but get the feeling that all the hard surfaces surrounding us have a deep reaching effect on the people and the place.
As a high-density material , concrete “reduces” airborne noise transmission by separating spaces. It is a barrier, however the sound is reflected - simply bounced somewhere else. For those commuting between ‘places,’ traversing common urban spaces can be stressful and many people try to resist the overstimulation and unnatural setting by escaping somehow, often through sound and headphones. We try to drown out sound with more sound. My work is based around the idea of re-claiming concrete, and rejecting all the noises reflected in built up areas.
For my process of experimentation, I began by borrowing a zoom from the resource centre to make a series of sound recordings in urban spaces (see map). Site 1 was next to a six lane arterial road in the centre of a commercial strip, site 2 was on the 7th floor of an urban carpark, in the middle of a commercial area, but not on a main road, site 3 was outdoors, right by COFA. I loaded these in to Abelton and noticed that despite fairly consistent noise across the frequency spectrum, the lower frequencies had a lot of extra activity, at the edge of human hearing range.. I compressed each sample and bumped the low end EQ up and then pitched it up just enough to define it properly. The resultant sound recordings give an intensified feeling of the discomfort that is normally difficult to register, without being completely unlistenable.
Next, inspired by the idea of graphic scores, I started trying to figure out ways to get spectrograms from each recording, to have a look at them and to compare them. I also began browsing through the book “handmade electronic devices” and started playing around with piezo discs. I also started putting the pieces together for a very simple handmade amplifier kit with speaker. I was initially drawn to the idea of the final work including hand wired electrical components. Future projects would be interesting to expand on these initial experiments.
Hacking still does not feel entirely canonized - taking back circuits and consumer objects still seems to be fairly strongly associated with illegal activity. “The bending of a pre existing system into serving a different end than it was designed for, is the ideal example of a tactic, bottom up resistance. “ (Söderberg, 2007). Ive always been interested in simple electronics of instruments and effects pedals but haven’t yet taken the time to learn how they work. Although relatively primitive electronic devices seem more and more outdated, it feels like a useful skill to have, as we head towards an apocalyptic event horizon.
For my final work, I created ear muffs using concrete to construct a physical barrier – a tangible reaction to hyper real world, reclaiming the substance that has taken over our world and reclaiming the void - one small act of resistance.
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• Harvey, ‘Stealth Wear’ AHProjects.com, Dec 2013, accessed 14 Sept 2018, https://ahprojects.com/projects/stealth-wear/
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