Baikal Ice: Recording and Interpreting the Sounds of the Environment

The “Baikal Ice” CD represents a sustained exploration, in sound, of a specific place. The techniques and practices involved in both the recording and in the composition of the recorded material relate to a long-standing themes for the researcher. These themes include an exploration of the relations...

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Main Author: Cusack, Peter
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/1274/
id ftunivartslondon:oai:ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk:1274
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spelling ftunivartslondon:oai:ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk:1274 2024-10-20T14:09:29+00:00 Baikal Ice: Recording and Interpreting the Sounds of the Environment Cusack, Peter 2004-07-01 https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/1274/ unknown Cusack, Peter <https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/view/creators/Cusack=3APeter=3A=3A.html> (2004) Baikal Ice: Recording and Interpreting the Sounds of the Environment. [Art/Design Item] Sound Arts & Design Film & Sound Recording Art/Design Item PeerReviewed 2004 ftunivartslondon 2024-09-24T23:53:58Z The “Baikal Ice” CD represents a sustained exploration, in sound, of a specific place. The techniques and practices involved in both the recording and in the composition of the recorded material relate to a long-standing themes for the researcher. These themes include an exploration of the relationship between landscape and soundscape, the extent to which our sense of place is affected by sound, and the issue of whether the creative practice of sound may provide an innovative perspective on our environment. Lake Baikal, in Siberia, is a unique place that has been designated a UN World Heritage site. It is the world’s oldest and deepest lake and holds one fifth of the planet’s fresh water within its 600 kilometre length. Its ecology is equally impressive, with many indigenous plants and animals. The climate is extreme and in winter the lake is covered by over a metre thick ice sheet. The researcher travelled to the lake’s more accessible southern tip in April/May 2003, to record the spring ice break-up. Although melting takes weeks there are a few days when the ice finally disappears and the lake becomes open water again. It is a spectacular and moving transformation. Many recordings were made including the sounds of local people, this latter designed to evoke a sense of their way of life. Of particular importance to this project was experimentation with different microphones, including self-made underwater hydrophones, which proved especially effective at recording the ice, revealing sonic effects not audible above water. Text Ice Sheet Siberia University of the Arts London: UAL Research Online
institution Open Polar
collection University of the Arts London: UAL Research Online
op_collection_id ftunivartslondon
language unknown
topic Sound Arts & Design
Film & Sound Recording
spellingShingle Sound Arts & Design
Film & Sound Recording
Cusack, Peter
Baikal Ice: Recording and Interpreting the Sounds of the Environment
topic_facet Sound Arts & Design
Film & Sound Recording
description The “Baikal Ice” CD represents a sustained exploration, in sound, of a specific place. The techniques and practices involved in both the recording and in the composition of the recorded material relate to a long-standing themes for the researcher. These themes include an exploration of the relationship between landscape and soundscape, the extent to which our sense of place is affected by sound, and the issue of whether the creative practice of sound may provide an innovative perspective on our environment. Lake Baikal, in Siberia, is a unique place that has been designated a UN World Heritage site. It is the world’s oldest and deepest lake and holds one fifth of the planet’s fresh water within its 600 kilometre length. Its ecology is equally impressive, with many indigenous plants and animals. The climate is extreme and in winter the lake is covered by over a metre thick ice sheet. The researcher travelled to the lake’s more accessible southern tip in April/May 2003, to record the spring ice break-up. Although melting takes weeks there are a few days when the ice finally disappears and the lake becomes open water again. It is a spectacular and moving transformation. Many recordings were made including the sounds of local people, this latter designed to evoke a sense of their way of life. Of particular importance to this project was experimentation with different microphones, including self-made underwater hydrophones, which proved especially effective at recording the ice, revealing sonic effects not audible above water.
format Text
author Cusack, Peter
author_facet Cusack, Peter
author_sort Cusack, Peter
title Baikal Ice: Recording and Interpreting the Sounds of the Environment
title_short Baikal Ice: Recording and Interpreting the Sounds of the Environment
title_full Baikal Ice: Recording and Interpreting the Sounds of the Environment
title_fullStr Baikal Ice: Recording and Interpreting the Sounds of the Environment
title_full_unstemmed Baikal Ice: Recording and Interpreting the Sounds of the Environment
title_sort baikal ice: recording and interpreting the sounds of the environment
publishDate 2004
url https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/1274/
genre Ice Sheet
Siberia
genre_facet Ice Sheet
Siberia
op_relation Cusack, Peter <https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/view/creators/Cusack=3APeter=3A=3A.html> (2004) Baikal Ice: Recording and Interpreting the Sounds of the Environment. [Art/Design Item]
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