Sound and The City

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JOHN BINGHAM-HALL

Sound and the City Introduction Acoustic Ecology, Locality Why talk about noise? Noise Pollution? City and Periphary? The Relational Sound Field How can we work with sound? Light vs Sound in Public Spaces Acoustic Architecture Against Soundscape 2 2 4 6 10 12 13 20 21 23

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Introduction At the beginning of the twentieth century, Luigi Russolo predicted, on behalf of the Italian Futurists, that the motors and machines of our industrial cities will one day be consciously attuned, so that every factory will be transformed into an intoxicating orchestra of noises (Tisdall and Bozzolla 1977: 15). Perhaps this is true, but at present such an acoustically harmonious city seems far off. At this point, though, the beauty of city and industry was recognised and even idolised by the Modernist project and since then a minority strain of artistic practice has explored its sounds, sights, materials and movements. Now, more than 50% of us live in cities and, according to the United Nations, this number is set to rise by 2050 (Tate Modern 2007). The city, therefore, is no longer a fetish of Modernists and Industrialists but a necessary reality for the future of all humanity. This essay aims, as a part of a wider movement to understand cities and as a contribution to debates in the strand of contemporary music dealing with the sounds of the real world, to explore ways that sound behaves and can be dealt with in the city. London will provide a focus for this study as direct personal experience is an important method in studying ones own habitat. Obviously, different issues may arise when studying the newly burgeoning mega-cities of the Southern Hemisphere, but questions raised here about the relevancy of public arts policy may be taken as pertinent to their more haphazard development. The centre of this essay is urbanity, but the freedom to approach this wide issue though sound and related media is opened by practices such as phonography and sound art which are usually taken to come under the umbrella term of contemporary music. Acoustic Ecology, Locality. Initially, several concepts need to be introduced. Whilst I will not aim to provide an in-depth reading of locality I do require it here to make sense as a socio-

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geographic site which holds in varying levels memories, security, sustenance, culture and a sense of place for its inhabitants and users. Relating to London specifically, locality can perhaps be defined by the town or village centres that have become encompassed by the sprawl. Schools, colleges or universities may come to be at the centre of an imagined sphere of locality or the boundaries of music and fashion subcultures such as those of Camden, Notting Hill and Shoreditch may actually come to delineate a geographical area. Historically, for example in traditional Chinese culture as described by Lucie Rault, bells were chimed so that their sphere of acoustic influence could demarcate a socially coherent zone (Rault 2000: 140). Whilst in London the Bells of Bow have ceased to be used as the benchmark for a true Londoner the Mayor of Londons Noise Team still propose using the audibility of Big Bens chiming to assess noise pollution. However, with such high levels and variety of noise in London we must work harder to sonically define local cohesion. Another concept then, that of acoustic ecology or soundscape study, is invoked in order to study, highlight and work with a specificity of sound in which location and listening intersect (LaBelle 197). LaBelle has provided a comprehensive description of academic and artistic approaches in this wide field: Locality of sound is of paramount concern for the study of environmental sound, or what acoustic ecology has deemed the soundscape. It promotes active listening, environmental awareness and cultural practice sensitive to questions of place, and location-oriented musical education. While pinpointing local sound as a powerful presence affecting the human conditionacoustic ecology, in turn, expands locality to global proportions. Whereas sound installationworks with locational sound.acoustic ecology situates local sound in relation tothe entire field of sound (LaBelle 2006: 197).

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I will also speak about acoustic architecture; the planning, designing and building of these soundscapes in the public urban realm through specific threedimensional concrete-acoustic sound installations. The Mayor of London defines soundscape as the overall quality of the acoustic environment as a place for human experience (Mayor of London 2004: 262). Sounder City: the Mayors Ambient Noise Strategy is a document which outlines the proposed development of policies to improve and control the London soundscape, which is deemed a quality of life issue. I will refer often to this document and to the Mayors Noise Team who research and implement noise policy. So when talking about soundscape in a massive and densely populated city such as London it becomes a moral issue. Decisions, which are made not only by policy-makers but also by each citizen, impinge directly upon human life. Peter Gutkind suggests that discussing urbanism always draws us into a moral message (Gutkind 1993: 252) and so I will be talking not only about the current situation in soundscape design and sound installation but about future potentialities and their extrapolation into utopias.

Why talk about noise, about noise in the city or about noise in relation to music? Until writing was invented, man lived in acoustic space .The goose quill put an end to talk, it abolished mystery; it brought architecture and towns. (MacLuhan and Fiore 1967: 44) The age in which sight was the only sense trusted to give us our clear perception of the external world was perhaps an intermediate one between a latter age of primordial acoustic space as described by MacLuhan and Fiore and what may be seen as a contemporary reawakening of the ears. Such specialist visual symbols as architectural drawing, written language (incomprehensible to so many now in the less developed world and in previous less literate ages of our own society) and mathematical symbol systems excluded

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undesirables from knowledge reserved for the privileged. Printingconfirmed and extended the new visual stressThe private, fixed point of view became possible and literacy conferred the power of detachment, noninvolvement (Ibid: 50). Visuality permeates our every experience of the world and subsequent communication of it. MacLuhan offers the alphabet, sensible only in lines of code which must be read in order from one end to the other, as the basis for our perception of linear forms of space and time lines along which ephemeral events such as sounds can only have a duration and quality and are not perceived in their full spatiality. Primitive and pre-alphabet people integrate time and space as one and live in acoustic, horizonless, boundless, olfactory space. Alphabet means A to B a singular journey but sound radiates outwards to infinite points from one source. If we, as modern urbanites, are living, as is so often said, in an urban jungle then must we not relearn the kind of hearing which enabled our ancestors to survive in the primeval jungle? Sound now emanates loudly from millions of sources underground, in the sky and at all heights and distances from where we stand and listen. This provides a spherical experience of the city which breaks the doctrine of linear alphabetical space. William J Mitchell likens the networked city of the modern West to the human body; a semi-autonomous structure, internally hierarchical, consisting of architectures, flows and separate actions with multiple links to the world around it (Mitchell 2003). It seems clear to me that only a regaining of olfactory space can truly advance the general public understanding of the living city. Bill Fontanas sound work has gone even further in networking the city by setting up acoustic links between city and places outside of its boundaries (Fontana 2007). In Sound Sculptures through the Golden Gate Bridge (1987) sound was transported from various points outside of San Francisco and projected onto the faade of a city art gallery. No processing was applied and his compositional control consisted simply of the placing of microphones. The resultant live

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soundscape was allowed to blend with the existent soundscape whilst providing a link, in the mind of the listener, to that distant sound source. Peoples experiences and memories of local soundmarks outside of the city were evoked not only to activate listening to ones surroundings as a permanent condition but in a specific way to extend and deepen the sense of place; the listener is placed in the square outside the gallery by Fontanas composition, which is placed in the city centre by the noisy traffic and pedestrians, which is placed in context of the surrounding countryside by the link provided by Fontana.

Noise Pollution? Max Dixon calls noise the forgotten pollutant (Dixon 2007: 101) and it is clear from both government statistics presented in the Sounder City document (Ibid: 14) and simply from listening personally to Londons roads, rails and skies that we accept and often ignore levels of intrusive sound that we might rather live without. By encouraging, though, the perception that noise is a pollutant, alongside airborne particles and intrusive lighting, will we simply unleash a psychological disturbance that is currently subdued in people unaware of the idea of bad noise? With more and more writing emerging on sound as an artistic medium and a key perceptual feature of our lives it certainly seems that there is a risk of over-accentuating its importance in an unnecessarily keen reaction to the perceived ocular-centricity of our current culture. It concerns me that by forcing acoustics into the arena of urban debate we are creating a new vocabulary for dispute and complaint, and handing over to a government that already attempts to retain full control over the arts another element of a culture which is none of its business (Hensher 2008). A lifetime ago, surrealist poets refuted the centralised control of the French language held by L'Acadmie franaise and sought to destroy the logic of words,

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so that people might understand exactly how they sound and what they fail to convey. Painters and sculptors quickly followed suit in their abandonment of recognisable visual signs, yet it was not until forty years later that John Cage ripped open our notion of formalised music. The accidental and environmental noise that was revealed inside and beyond his musical structures is in relative infancy in its role as a form of art. It is young enough that many contemporary figures have witnessed its entire history and have consciously furthered its position. Perhaps this is the reason that many sound artists and legislators feel that environmental noise can be rationalised and forced into forms that can come across as self-important and overly proud of their community mindedness. Perhaps, like language and vision, sound should be relinquished to the population before it is fully taken up by administrators. So, whilst in this essay I would argue for an enriching of the urban experience through hearing and sounding, I would like to question the ability of the Sounder City project to identify and realise this potential new acoustic culture and environment. In the 1970s, R Murray Schafers World Soundscape project sought to map out territories, experiences and mythologies revealed by distinct soundscapes and soundmarks always placing the sentient at the focus of an acoustic sphere. Looking to a form of communication which massively predates written language or other visual symbols, Schafer invoked deeply mystic aspects to the sonic experience stemming from the beginnings of earthly presence, from the Dionysian to the Apollonian, to the alchemical and Gnostic, to siren songs and celestial harmonies (LaBelle 2006: 201). So, rather than being a new category of aesthetic experience, environmental sound, whether in country or city, has always played a profound role in defining our sense of were we are. Given the issues to do with lack of urban space raised by Gutkind and Rogers, and discussed later in this essay, it seems we can look to the spatial metaphor

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embedded in our experience of music to see why an acoustic understanding of space might be increasingly essential. Sound does not require us to draw a distinction between a place and its occupant and as an event in time it does not compete with other events for the time required (Scruton 1997: 74). In other words, so long as we do not expect complete silence then acoustic space can be shared almost infinitely. Schafer posited the complex overlapping and interpenetrating acoustic spaces as observed in birds and animals as a currency for space in the overcrowded modern community, with physical demarcation becoming increasingly inefficient. There is large scale physical/visible enclosure of space in all the urban financial centres; the massive size and harsh solidity of the corporate towers is hidden behind glass and metal skins which give, according to Jameson, the illusion of transparency. However, they in fact block the free movement of sound, light and pedestrian traffic in a way that Schafers acoustic spaces could not. Physical structures achieve the same semi-autonomy as cyberspace (Jameson 1997: 187) in that once their construction has been completed they relate to each other and to space in a way outside of our full control or understanding; a screen on which the images of surrounding life are projected (Tafuri and Dal Co 1968: 397). Buildings remain tyrannically present until violent action is taken against them. In response to this very tyranny Yves Klein suggested that all architecture be replaced with pneumatics, so that banks of pressurised air keep out dust, moisture and cold from inhabited spaces (Conor 2008: 88). This Utopian suggestion allows our need for shelter to be fulfilled whilst releasing geographical space from the bondage of permanent concrete structures, and human society from the segregation created by privacy. Whilst an unlikely achievement in the real terms of urban planning, it recalls the aims of the Kroly Sirats Dimensionist Manifesto - to extend art into all the available dimensions of space (quoted in Conor 2008: 87) by engaging the space around the object (which is, in essence, thin air) as a material for art. More recently the

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artist Ann Veronica Janssens has worked with mist in an attempt to achieve, similarly, absence of authoritarian materiality, that effort to get out from under the tyranny of objects (quoted in Conor 2008: 88). Iannis Xenakis added poetic and dynamic detail to one of his spaces with a system of windows and divides casting shadows which overlap and shift throughout the day (LaBelle 2006: 185). The perpetual arc of the sun across the sky allows light to become Xenakis art each day but to disappear nightly without a trace. It seems to follow to present sound as another utopian structural element in our urban spatial culture. It is an environment a continuous field though which the body moves and which both arises from and informs our activity in an ongoing and agenda-free way and also a culture that we may choose to listen to, learn about and partake in the alteration/creation of. However unlike concrete structure, sound achieves this whilst being ephemeral and passing, leaving only a psychological reminder of its occurrence. The soundscape is perhaps an all-encompassing public work of music formed of multiple nodes of reception and generation. In an instrumental group performance every musician can hear the entire work yet also contributes their own interplaying line. Classical sensibilities allow a composer to dictate the style, duration and form of each participants contribution. As I have said, though, modern music has long since embraced forms of group sounding which allow performers to react either purely on their own hearing and understanding, or not to react at all and listen simply to the sounds which are occurring anyway. The Scratch Orchestra stated in its constitution a desire to break down barriers between private and group activity by allowing people to produce spontaneously, or along loose guidelines, sound in large groups (Cardew 1972). So if there can in fact be analogy between public soundscape and musical work it would seem culturally anachronistic to allow planners to become composer-dictators with powers to shape such a large and democratically-produced piece of music. Lefebvre has already recognised the musicality of the city itself:

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Hard rhythms: silence and uproar alternate, time broken and accented, striking the one who from his window takes time to listen (Lefebvre 1996: 221) He sensed though that from his balcony vantage point he was removed from the city mle and at a distinct advantage in hearing this musical structure play out below him. I suggest though that he was still very much embroiled in the acoustic space of the city and that perhaps not only he and any other individual who looked down onto the street could hear this ensemble of flows of metallic or carnal bodies, but that each one of those carnal bodies, people, could too.

City and Periphery Speaking against a conception of the city as an organic whole Lefebvre promotes a multi-layered view of urban relations; social, legal, familial and commercial. The city is not simply a by-product of modern life and is not singular and saleable in the way of a commercial product. In the hands of a dominant power such as the state or the corporation (not to raise a debate here as to which holds the greater power, or where they become distinct) the identity of a city must become focussed on its centre; on its greatness and on its ability to be exported (via the tourist brochure). In reality though, according to Lefebvre, the city represents a collective historical force and is a production and reproduction of human beings by human beings (Lefebvre 1996: 101). Whilst the centre may always remain iconic, the lens must in my view become wider and allow the suburbs and the communities perceived as inferior to become arenas for cultural, not only material, life. Whether through grass roots activity stemming from within each respective lesser centre in the metropolitan area, or through outreaching legislation, it would seem beneficial for various reasons to imbue identity and detail into all corners without regard for their distance from the

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current heart. For Richard Rogers, London itself is potentially the ideal humanist city: London.developed around a multitude of centres, and it is still a collection of distinct towns and villages..each with its own character visual identity and history. Instead of allowing London to sprawl, and this polycentric pattern to erode, we should actively reinforce these neighbourhoods as compact, sustainable nuclei. (Rogers 1997: 113) I am fully in agreement with Rogers vision, though by bringing it into this study I want to show how his built concerns may be enriched by a realisation of each nucleus acoustic identity. For example, whilst he rightly talks about traffic in terms of its physical threat and production of air pollution (Ibid: 120) it has come to light in statistics reported in the Mayors Sounder City document that almost 40% of Londoners consider traffic noise some kind of problem (Mayor of London 2004: 14, fig. 1). The official planning attitude clearly prioritises flow of traffic towards the industrial and commercial centres of the City, West End and Docklands and therefore many localities are dominated physically and acoustically by junctions, flyovers and roundabouts. Inevitably their unique soundscapes are drowned out, and in a psychogeographical sense their identities and energy are drawn out along these concrete arteries towards the over-saturated centre. With London supporting such a diversity of sonic generators and resonators languages, topographies, architectural styles and geographically specific musical subcultures the sum of lost soundscapes must be huge. As an inevitable product of human activity and communication, sound comes to embody Lefebvres user-generated city. Also, heeding his warning that an organicist view of the city blocks deeper enquiry and understanding on the level of everyday life, we see how the city must develop in its periphery; filled in all its infinite distinct places with the sounds desired by those who live there everyday. Such imperatives seem spurious in the context of wider concerns facing

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society until the ecological and social benefits of localisation are also considered. Sound can be employed as one of a wider gamut of tools and products in the reclamation of the city by its inhabitants.

The Relational Sound Field The all-inclusive soundscape-as-work is a true embodiment of the relational aesthetic of modern art as put forward by Nicolas Bourriaud. If the role of artworks is no longer to form imaginary and utopian realities, but to actually be ways of living and models of action within the existing real (Bourriaud 1998: 13) then to listen to the soundscape as a massive Cagean composition is a truly relational artwork of grand scale. Listening to the soundscape almost always involves listening to other people. Whether it be their voices, their cars or the music they play we always learn something about the choices made by those around us from the sounds they produce. If art is made of the same material as social exchanges, and its most distinguishing quality is social transparency (Ibid: 41), then everyday sound is the ideal medium. If we are talking about letting sound freely arise from our actions and then appreciating its aesthetic quality as a part of the temporally and spatially wider soundscape, then here is an art form which presents no social blockages. Depending upon whether we are looking for aesthetic experience in addition to daily survival or simply as a part of it, then it is desirable to do away, as the Situationists would have had, with constructed art situations which preclude certain behaviours and social groups. Those that choose to perform, to extend their behaviour beyond the everyday in order to create extra sounds to their pleasing or to that of others, can do so within a framework where the all-encompassing sound field is viewed as an arena for art. All the worlds a stage; the artist need not replace his daily activity with art but can transgress the experiential by taking the increased appreciations of everyday

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life and then reinventing them through the body in performance (Mullis 2006: 109). Bourriaud also furthers an anti-technology aesthetic. Technology is the domain of economic power and our optimism with regard to the liberating power of technology has become considerably blurred (Bourriaud 1998: 65). In soundscape work, technology can either become the singular tool or a inhibitor in the social flow and independent experience that I have described. I will attempt now to look at forms of sound work engaging with either technology and the external world, or the radical subjectivity of the listener (Vaneigem 1967: 256).

How can we work with sound? To attempt to work in situ with sounds already occurring in the environment and to call it musical composition is inevitably to follow the branch of music initiated by Cage, as previously mentioned. He turned his back upon the dialectical and expressive compositional methods of the classical system and its contemporary continuation (Stockhausen) essentially a system of priorities which sets up ordered relationships between its components, and where one thing is defined in terms of another (LaBelle 2006: 4) So if in the Cagean tradition the writing of music is supplanted by the creation of situations as LaBelle suggests, it would seem that the acoustic urban situations I have described ought to follow and be seen as a part of Cages non-dialectics. Therefore, following his example, we can provide a platform for listening to the prevailing extravagance of nonintentionality, multiplicity, silence and noise (LaBelle 2006: 7) that characterises the urban soundscape, rather than trying to change or recompose it by introducing new elements that answer to, accentuate or negate pre-existing soundmarks. It seems that a dialectical approach to urban acoustics is exactly the kind of practise which Alan Bloomfield, in interview with myself, was warning against when he questioned the benefice of sonic artworks in

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the public domain which purport to improve the acoustic but in fact impose themselves upon inhabitants ears and dictate certain modes of listening which may not be universally relevant. Michael Benedikt sees a problem with the tendency in architecture to drench buildings with fabulation on top of fabulation and to lose patience with a reality unwilling to yield its secrets (Benedikt 1987: 12). Thus, an architect such as Vito Acconci who ergonomically moulds his constructions to become almost living extensions of the human body in their ability to respond to our every need and desire (Acconci 2007) succeeds actually in underestimating the ability of buildings inhabitants to use them imaginatively without the dictation of architects or planners. When forms become stylized our own gestural systems (Baudrillard 1996: 45) follow suit and become removed from our immediate experience of our own bodies. The style of such gestural systems always implies the suppression of muscular energy, or labour. Primary functions are overwritten by secondary ones, by relationship and calculation, and intellectual drives give way to cultural connotations. Baudrillard is not explicit in celebrating or condemning stylized forms such as Acconcis architecture. He does, however, suggest an idealistic belief that mans profound gestural relationship to objects, which epitomizes his integration into the world, into social structures, can be a highly fulfilling one (Baudrillard 1996: 50). Benedikts solution is a beautifully simplistic architecture which stands with emptiness and presence offering opportunity rather than giving direction (Benedikt 1987: 52). Those, then, seeking to work in the sonic realm can look to the lessons learnt from mistakes made in constructing our visual/physical environment and avoid the over-saturation brought about by a proliferation of competing referential forms as found in postmodern architecture. Sonic artists can avoid becoming the acoustic equivalent of the image engineers who, having partially replaced infrastructural architects, are geared towards constructing a reality, regardless of whether this is possible historically or scientifically and producing

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entertainment architecture (Shamiyeh 2001: 272). In physical architecture and sonic architecture alike the aim can now be to get away from reality as an effect of representation and move towards the real as trauma (Ibid: 276); the shock of the soundscape therefore is not softened but reframed. When considering in synthesis Cages formally open work, Benedikts functionally open building and Baudrillards assessment of the human body in relation to the physical world, two main directions in thought open themselves to me as distinct potentialities. Firstly, the focus for change in the acoustic experience could be on the human, the subjective listener, or even the body itself as a focus for aesthetic experience. If the onus is upon the listener to change what they hear through psychological attitudes or, more simply, physical positioning within the four-dimensional world (time, as a fourth dimension, being key as certain sounds can be discovered to occur at certain times, in certain places) then an improved acoustic experience could be in theory free, immediately available and under complete control of the individual. If it sounds better from above, climb a tree. Is the train outside the window always a disturbance or can it in fact serve to remind you that you are a member of a vibrant and mobile urban community? It is not only within an anarchist framework, whereby no overarching governant strategies are required to predict the average needs of multitudes of individual sentient bodies, that this autonomous approach to subjective experience is possible (see an in depth discussion of anarchist modes of aesthetics, for which there is not space here, in Taylor 1976). Baudrillards reading of human physical activity also points to the fulfillment that can be gained through physical exertion. The buttons and switches of modern technology allow us to exert control upon our environment using only the smallest movements in our bodies extremities. This is perhaps appropriate in the visual realm (lighting effects, pictures, crafted objects), acted upon as it is by mans skilled fingers to weave detailed works visible only as far as

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their surface. However, sounds emanate from within objects and our bodies and can be felt by them as vibrations too. So, just as when playing an instrument, subject-centred sonic interventions must originate with air propulsion in the lungs or from energetic bodily movements which bring sounding objects into contact with one another. Man has to be reassured about his power by some sense of participation (Baudrillard 1996: 51). Baudrillard acknowledges that whilst the body can be liberated of effort by technological niceties, it has also become ignored by modern praxis. (Ibid) Subsequently, physical recreation comes to replace direct forms of play within our environment - forms of play which could focus this power onto and enrich quotidian experience. We are left with the splitting of time into active and leisure time. (Ibid) Such somatic issues in the creation and reception of aesthetic experience are taken up and furthered in the study of performative somaesthetics (Mullis 2006). Its central principle states that to transgress the state of everyday experience an artist develops extra-daily techniques - activities beyond the minimum energetic input necessary for life in an automated environment and thereby enhances their ability to receive, and participate aesthetically in, the environment. In popular culture, freerunners and skateboarders extend their normal relations to the physical forms of the city in a kind of artistic athletics (see the Channel 4 film Jump London for a full description). In relation to the soundscape, though, we can look to individuals such as Francis Als, Hildegaard Westerkamp and Ian Sinclair who have all moved through urban spaces by undertaking pedestrian journeys dictated entirely or in part by preplanned acoustic topographies. Ian Sinclair tried to exorcise the emotional spectre in the left in the collective British psyche by the money-eating mismanagement of the Millenium Dome project. He walked a route that kept within earshot of the M25 London Orbital motorway; within its acoustic footsteps. In his non-fiction book (Sinclair 2002), fellow walkers such as photographer Marc Atkins suffer blisters and exhaustion from the long hikes but

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Sinclair is evidently fit enough from previous walking projects to trace the entire sweep of the motorways acoustic space in a series of long sections. Therefore such insights as he gained into the ontology of this creation stemmed in part from his physical conditioning as promoted by somaesthetics. Francis Als walks have also demanded physical endurance but have simultaneously fulfilled Baudrillards notion of participation by acting upon the structures they pass through and by. In one of his Seven Walks (2004-5) Als was filmed running a stick along railings he passed as he walked though Regency areas of West Central London. The kind of railings (cemented, free-standing, iron, steel etc) dictates the sonorities produced and thereby though his choice of location he can exert a limited compositional control. However, once initiated, the details of the architecture automatically generate a sound pattern (Als 2005: 20). So, as in the Cagean approach, the material world is allowed to speak freely to the listener; the only human intervention is to activate the potential sonority of the architecture. In his own words, the simple act of.feeling the architecture with the drumstick was a way of making contact, of connecting to the physicality of the place. Communicating in such a direct way with the city is perhaps a form of musical drive and succeeds in allowing any urban location to become a potential site for playful acoustic enjoyment. Inevitably, the Situationist International must be acknowledged in aims like this, but I will not at this point elaborate further upon their role. Marshall MacLuhan, though, has since explained similarly that environments are not passive wrappings but are, rather, active processes which are invisible (MacLuhan 1967: 68). Als has allowed these active processes to become audible and has brought them out into the cultural realm. Where Als and Sinclairs walks demanded a particular state of physicality, Hildegaard Westerkamp asks for a particular mentality in relation to the soundscape. She does not ask for physically demanding routes but does request uncompromised listening in order to rediscover and reactivate our sense of hearing

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(Westerkamp 2007: 49). Social behaviours in Westerkamps soundwalks are also, to use Mullis term, extra-daily - it is interesting to explore the interplay between group listening and individual listening (Ibid) and so walkers are asked to control modes of perception as well as instinctive behaviours just as somaestheticists would their bodies. There can be no control in soundwalking over the sounds that are received as the city continues its daily cacophony and instead a psychic space is created in which the many mixing voices of the environment can become a composition. However, as in Cages 433 there is a decision as to the location and duration of soundscape listening. Westerkamp uses the term Soundwalk Composition to denote a more active approach to the practice: Go out and listen. Choose an acoustic environment which in your opinion sets a good base for environmental compositions. In the same way in which architects acquaint themselves with the landscape into which they want to integrate the shape of a house, so we must get to know the main characteristics of the soundscape into which we want to immerse our own soundsCreate a dialogue and thereby lift the environmental sounds out of their context and into the context of your composition, and in turn make your sounds a natural part of the music around you. Is it possible? (Westerkamp 2007: 52) Assessing the role of the internal voice the unsounding speaker in each of our heads to whom we listen without using our ears Daniel Birnbaum invokes Derridas concept of phono-centrism. Derrida is in fact warning, in Of Grammatology, against the ability of this inner monologue to act as a definition of interiority and subjectivity (Birnbaum 2007: 16) which leads to a conservative understanding of the self. However, by exploring the consequences of hearing (understanding)-one-self-speak through the phonic substance which presents itself as the non-exterior (Derrida 1967: 7) Derrida in my view to provides a justification for the commentary and compositional listening with which

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Westerkamp aims to understand better her place within the exterior sonic environment. Referring to a state of mind in which multiple voices are spoken and heard Birnbaum uses the term polyphonic. So, if Derrida would have that the experience of hearing oneself think anchors subjectivity firmly within a chaotic phenomenological world and Birnbaum can use a semi-musical term to describe the experience of hearing this voice alongside the many other human and non-human voices (sounds), then perhaps an acute listening accompanied by an ongoing subjective commentary can indeed become a musical composition of immediacy and complete relevancy, existing only in the mind of the listener. Christina Kubisch has furthered the possibilities offered by these kinds of perceptual acrobatics in offering technological extensions to our hearing capabilities. She provides headphones which are altered in order that they transform into sound waves electromagnetic radiation from underground cables, wire boxes and any other of the numerous emitters to be found in urban and rural spaces. Suddenly a realm of sound is revealed that is not intended for public consumption as we hear signals from underneath the solid ground and from beyond the external veneer of private buildings. Thereby we are reminded of the political potency of sound as a medium that can transgress fences, barriers and closed-off spaces carrying information from within. The perception of everyday reality changes when one listens to the electrical fields Light systems, transformers, anti-theft security devices, surveillance cameras, cell phones, computers, elevators, streetcar cables, antennae, navigation systems, automated teller machines, neon advertising, electric devices, etc. create electrical fields that are as if hidden under cloaks of invisibility, but of incredible presence Possibly, these mechanical extensions of human capabilities are an inevitable future, or even present, as is suggested in cyborg theories like those of Donna Haraway (Haraway 1991). More tenably, though, the introduction of technology into our question of the

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improvement of the soundscape leads directly on to what I propose as my second potentiality the alteration of the buildings, machines and built spaces which give rise to the soundscape itself.

Light vs. Sound in Public spaces Such a practice as described above would require us to think of sounds in terms of the objects that produce them, as opposed to solely their aesthetic manifestation in our own experience. Just as we would make improvements to our visual experience by moving or in some way altering the objects which reflect light and thereby impress their image upon our retina, we might modify the built environment in order to generate or reflect sound waves in ways to our choosing. Of course, in the public realm, which is the arena in which I wish to debate, this constitutes a process of architecture and of planning. It is posited by both Max Dixon and Alan Bloomfield of the Mayors Noise Team (Interview 24/09/07) that it is desirable for acoustic concerns to take their place alongside cost, durability, profit and appearance in the designing of the city. At the moment however both the lack of awareness of bad acoustics and lack of professional acousticians makes it economically unprofitable on the behalf of developers it goes without saying, and here without judgement either, that profitability remains the primary concern for the market-driven planning executed in London. Must we therefore accept that any public sound design in the city be fully institutionalised funded, approved and controlled by the State?

Acoustic Architecture Few examples seem to exist in which buildings have been designed with sonic

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properties in mind. Peter and Alison Smithson proposed that public spaces be protected on either side by large commercial galleries (Smithson 2005: 95) that block out traffic noise; none have been realised. Bernard Leitner, on commission, installed the Cylindre Sonore (Sonorous Cylinder) into Paris Parc Villette. It consists of a walled circular space sunk into the ground, encircled again by a hollow created by a larger, outer wall. The voids..act as columns through which sound is composed and elaborated; this sound is then projected using wall-mounted speakers back into the space for the audience to hear (Leitner 1994). It remains a spectacle, outside of the realm of everyday sonority. As a structure whose only purpose is to be listened to it reinforces the separation between listening-as-living and listening as a specialised aesthetic experience. Max Neuhaus succeeded in penetrating more deeply into the acoustic everyday by sneaking sounds into uninhabited gaps in public space. In his legendary Times Square installation a large loudspeaker mounted below emanates a deep resonating drone which converses with the existing sound environment to bring it into relief (LaBelle 2006: 157). So the work is experienced simultaneously to and as an enrichment of the complex soundscape of the busy New York square. Neuhaus also infiltrated radiophonic space in the work Drive In Music, in 1967. A series of transmitters along Lincoln Parkway in Buffalo, New York, each broadcast its own pitch on an empty radio frequency. Drivers could tune into this frequency and hear each sound mixing and overlapping (Ibid: 155) as they passed; sound was broadcast from the infrastructure itself to form an ethereal composition that was also localised. These works, though, succeed in adding to the sonority of the built environment only through their support from public bodies. It would seem that, unlike graffiti as urban visual art, urban sound art must be public sound art. Gordon Matta-Clark alone has taken an anarchic approach to reshaping the urban acoustic. In disused buildings he appropriated illegally in New Yorks defunct docks, enormous cuts were made in the

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structures that allowed light from above and sound from the sea below to penetrate into the previously fixed and static space. A building thus becomes a state of mind (James Attlee quoted in LaBelle 2006: 161) into which sound, as a perceptual element that is usually kept forcibly out from indoor spaces, could enter. LaBelle recognises that this process was not carried out with sound explicitly in mind, but it does highlight how a radical architectural practice can, though violence, free up a space to aesthetic experience in a way not condoned by official planning. However, are not the millions of teenagers that can be heard on buses and trains, and in the street, playing music aloud on mobile phones taking active steps to alter their own soundscape to their liking? Music can be shared at any time and place amongst groups bound by their shared love for particular tracks. Unlike the personal headphone and Walkman which have dominated for so long, there is a shared acoustic space between young people in a way similar to the ghetto blaster of the 1970s street culture which gave us what we now call Urban Music. Max Dixon suggested to me that the most successful kind of public sound art would be that which can be carried and listened to privately on headphones, and heard in relation to whatever sound- and sightscape the piece has been designed for such as Janet Cardiffs audio walk for the Whitechapel Gallery, The Missing Voice (Case Study B) (1999). I would go further though, and in fact come full circle, by saying that we do carry sound art with us at all times, without the aid of composers or sound engineers and audio equipment with specialised skills beyond our own. Perhaps the art itself only really occurs at the point at which sound is received, reordered and re-imagined in our perception. Perhaps we must save the urban soundscape in advance by acting, not at all.

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Against soundscape? In 1996 the artist Martin Creed made, in the private medium of paper and ink, the statement that the whole world + the work = the whole world (Creeds Work No. 143). However, when he installed it in neon, as Work No. 232, on the faade of Tate Britain to celebrate its launch, the artists personal mission statement was embraced by the institution. For both it offers a fundamental assertion, that art should be seen and understood as part of the world, relevant to everyday life and to all people..The statement is self-effacing..by admitting that all works are subsumed into the overwhelming context of the whole world, in this equation their value is zero (Stout 2004: 65). Sound embodies this mantra entirely. The work of sound art is audible only so long as it is (re)sounded. Subsequently, it fades without a trace. The acoustically designed building is permanent, but its usefulness depends on the ability of architects to understand and provide for the needs of its users. All urban space has an inherent sonic property and in a city with such multitudes of potential listeners as London, differences in perception will surely cause any purposeful sound design to become subsumed, according to Creeds prediction, into the metropolis cacophony of sonority and resonance. Throughout this study I have used similar terms to describe and evaluate both acoustic and visual experiences and it is clear that the disciplines of art, architecture and music are increasingly becoming blurred. Even at its most progressive though, theory driving this merge still works on the assumption that there is or was once a distinction between aural and visual worlds. Surely, though, the environment that we experience, know and move around in is not sliced up along the lines of the sensory pathways by which we enter into it (Ingold 2007: 10). Ingold distinguishes between the powerful concept of landscape, a physical form lying complete and not tied to any specific sensory register, and the multitude of other scapes which we use to generalise or

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theorise about certain aspects of our own perceptual experience. He rightly points out that visual studies and visual art theory are currently concerned with objects themselves and their relation to one another. They have, then, lost touch with light itself. Light and sound enable us to discover what is actually there around us. Aurality does not stop at sound any more than visuality does at light, but neither is it concerned only with the reality beyond. Through an activated subjectivity like that prescribed by Vaneigem we can perhaps transcend our distinction between mundane objectivity and the extra-mundane aesthetic. Sound, like breath, is experienced as a movement of coming and going, inspiration and expiration. If that is so, then we should say of the body, as it sings, hums, whistles or speaks, that it is ensounded. It is like setting sail, launching the body into a sound like a boat on the waves or, perhaps more appropriately, like a kite in the sky (Ibid: 12). Sound becomes within ourselves as we move through a world whose secrets may be revealed by a holistic perceptual experience. It is undiscovered in that it cannot be fully controlled. Sound remains an anarchic and mysterious force within seemingly rational urban zones; just as the whistling wind spoke to the ancients of spirits and gods, we can now begin to listen deeply and discover what has become of gods now, in a web of technology so dense it is beyond any singular human understanding. Through art we might dig deeper, make new connections or present to the world our own imagined sonic utopias. Altering or harnessing the acoustic richness of the city through art, though, risks simulating a reality as deep only as our desire to change it, and losing the chance to rediscover sound as the carrier of a message from deep within contemporary human experience.

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LaBelle, Brandon (2006). Background Noise: perspectives on sound art (London & New York: Continuum). Lefebvre, Henri. Writings on Cities. Transl. Eleonore Kofman & Elizabeth Lebas, 1996 (Oxford: Blackwell). Leitner, Bernard (1994). Le Cylindre Sonore in Pamphlet Architecture 16: Architecture as a translation of music. Ed. Elizabeth Martin (Princeton Architectural Press) Mayor of London (2004). Sounder City: the Mayors ambient noise strategy (Greater London Authority). McCombe, Christine. Imagining Space through Sound in Proceedings: Sound Practice Sound Culture Environments: 16 20 February 2001, Dartington College of Arts. Ed John Levack Drever 2001 (UK and Ireland Soudscape Community) McLuhan, Marshall & Fiore, Quentin (1967). The Medium is the Massage: an inventory of effects (California: Gingko Press) Mitchell, William J (2003). Me++: the cyborg self and the networked city (Massachusetts Institute of Technology). Mercer, Charles (1975). Living in Cities: psychology and the urban environment (Penguin Books). Mullis, Eric C (2006): Performative Somaesthetics; principles and scope in The Journal of Aesthetic Education Vol. 40 no. 4 (University of Illinois Press) Plant, Sadie (1992). The Most Radical Gesture: the Situationist International in a postmodern age (London & New York: Routledge). Rault, Lucie (2000) Musical Instruments: a worldwide survey of traditional music making. Transl. Jane Breton (London: Thames and Hudson Ltd). Riddell, Alan M (1996): Music: the chords of eternity in Contemporary Music Review Vol. 15 part 1 (New York & London: Routledge) pp 151 171. Rogers, Richard (1997). Cities for a Small Planet (London: Faber and Faber) Scruton, Roger (1997). The Aesthetics of Music (Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press) Shamiyeh, Michael (2001). Pixel + Space Management: the Mise en Scne of experience in real and virtual space in Takeover: whos doing the art of tomorrow. Ars Electronica 2001 (Vienna & New York: Springer-Verlag) pp 270 278.

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Sinclair, Ian (2002). London Orbital (London: Granta). Smith, Bruce R (1999). The Acoustic World of Early Modern England (London & Chicago: University of Chicago Press). Tafuri, Manfredo & Dal Co, Francesco (1968). Modern Architecture. Transl. Robert Erick Wolf. (London: Academy Editions). Taylor, Michael Ph.D (1976). Anarchy and cooperation (London: Wiley). Tisdall, Carolina & Bozzolla, Angelo (1977). Futurism (London: Thames and Hudson Ltd). Vaneigem, Raoul (1967). The Revolution of Everyday Life Transl. Donald NicholsonSmith 2003 (Rebel Press). Westerkamp, Hildegard (2007). Soundwalking in Autumn Leaves: sound and the environment in artistic practice. Ed. Angus Carlyle (Paris: Double-Entendre / London: Centre for Research into Sound Arts Practice) pp 49 55.

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Stout, Katharine (2004). only what can be seen there is there in the whole world + the work = the whole world (Centre for Contemporary Art Ujazdowski Castle/British Council in Poland) pp 60 68. Tate Modern (2007). Global Cities (London: Tate Media). Toop, David (2005): Sounds Passing through Circumstances in Seven Walks, London 2004 5 (London: Artangel) pp 63 69. Worsdale, Godfrey (2000). Work #96 (1994) every and set in bold type in Martin Creed: Works. Ed Godfrey Worsdale and Iona Spens (Southampton City Art Gallery) Lecture Acconci, Vito. Goldsmiths College, University of London. 18:00 05/03/2007. Web Cardiff, Janet and George Bures Miller: Recent Works (Press release from the Whitechapel Gallery 2003), http://www.whitechapel.org/content40.html Accessed 23:50 17/03/2008 Fontana, Bill (2007). Interview with Peter Traub of Sonic Arts Network, http://transition.turbulence.org/networked_music_review/2007/11/01/interview-billfontana/ Accessed 14:40 03/12/2007 Hensher, Philip (2008). This phoney vision of cultural renaissance: Independent Newspaper Online, http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/philip-hensher/philip-hensher-thisphoney-vision-of-cultural-renaissance-781974.html Accessed 23:45 16/03/2008 Kubisch, Christina. Works with Electromagnetic Induction, http://www.christinakubisch.de/english/install_induktion.htm Accessed 17:50 21/12/2007 St Mary Le Bow Church, http://www.stmarylebow.co.uk/?Bow_Bells Accessed 00:50 27/01/2008

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