Monday 14 April 2008

Meet the Neuroscientists

Today I met with an esteemed neuroscientist. It wore me out, so I'll update this blog as things take shape...

Thursday 10 April 2008

John Moran...and his neighbor, Saori

Yesterday I went to see a music/theatre performance called "John Moran... and his neighbor, Saori" performed by the duo of that name at Soho Theatre in London, and it blew me away!  How to describe it? Well, there was sound, music, movement, drama and comedy. One thing is for sure: if you like sound, you'll benefit from hearing John Moran! 

What I heard was lots of 'found sounds' used to make rather sophisticated music, musical structures that ran in and out of each other, and narrative that was making a social commentary behind a fog of complete DaDa. Your experience may vary! If I let my visual senses back in to the picture I can tell you that the piece was also made of beautifully intricate choreography from both performers, with stunningly evocative movement and expression from Soari. I really don't know how much of the show was improvised because they played with the choreography and things seeming random when in fact harmonious repetition indicated you should not trust your initial assumptions. The narrative seems disconnected, but the experience felt like it was a journey (destination Newfound Sound via 'throat singing and falsetto in the same sentence').

On to the sound! The experience was really very ear opening. Sound was used as music, but to a much greater depth than I've heard before: it wasn't just a case of sampling or setting music to 'found sound', there seemed to be a much greater democracy between the notions of sound and music. For example, there were compositions that had traditional instrumentation with human-noise based instruments woven in with consummate musical gesture (just to qualify my phrase 'human-noise', I mean machines, voices etc). This made a soundscape that had pleasant harmonic foundation which would musically sooth, but then you found yourself listening to the sound of the city as much as any traditional instruments. The connection between life, sound and music was highlighted for me.

Not only was sound used as music, but music was used as sound - other pieces emphasised traditional musical values less than the one I described above. If I think back to my untrustworthy memory of others moments in the show, I remember play back of the human voice (seemingly found voice rather than created especially) used as the 'lead instrument' with accompanying live voices... or though my perception of the live voices is questionable because of what happens earlier - you'll just have to see it to know what I'm on about. So much of the work presents a sound scape of sounds you might hear in everyday life, and traditional musical elements fuse into a single sound within that context (or at least they did for me). The spoken words too often fuse into a single sound, and the specific meaning of the language just becomes a mood or a counterpoint. The composer plays with our perceptions, and elements you initially latch onto become part of the environment, and sound from environment become the music you latch onto.

The use of repetition is astonishing. I cant really get my head round it but lines of music/sound/voice would begin and seem to loop, go in and out of phase. Lines that were separated were brought together to make conversations, some of the conversations were out of context but went together, some sounded like they should have been together from the beggining. This concept of bring untoward sounds together in harmony is extended into the musical realm with two well known tracks from different eras overlayed to make a beautiful duet. Some lines of music/sound/voice seemed to have varying start and end points - a fusion of granulation within the musical macro structure of life. I'm starting to make less sense now, I think the piece affected me quite badly.

Casting my mind back there are moments of humor, poignancy, social comment, and myriad meanings. My jabberings will not do it justice, so I urge you too see it if you can or do the next best thing and listen to some recordings.

Ta Ta for now,

Joe

http://www.myspace.com/johnmoranandsaori

Thursday 3 April 2008

Who Is Joe Bell?

Hello anyone who ends up reading this, I'm Joe Bell, someone who tends to be obsessed by sound. Many people tell me I've got a way with words and that I should start blogging, and today I'm at home poorly so what better thing to do than start a blog. To be honest just as many people tell me what I say is utter bollocks, but to preserve my inflated sense of self worth I'll ignore them for now and get blogging!

Sound is something that seems quite mystical to me, mystical in the way that physics and astronomy are. Religion and science sometimes seem to be against each other, but actually a lot of the time religion preempts science and shows that our instinct generally points us in the right direction. For example, Buddhism tell us that 'the world is sound' which although might seem very philosophical and scientifically wooly on one hand, on the other hand currently the majority of theoretical physicists are telling us that matter can be explained by 'string theory' which has definite parallels to sound.

So I find sound mystical. I also find it uplifting depending on the sound. I don't think anyone could disagree that music has the potential to stir emotion. Have you ever wondered why that is? Music is fairly quantifiable and certainly repeatable, so imagine the possibility that emotion can be triggered by a rational set of scientific theories based on waveform interaction! Exciting, huh? Of course, emotion is more complicated than a chart of numbers, but I still find it amazing how the sound of music can cause such fast emotional responses. Mood might effect our perception of music, but by the same token perceiving music can affect mood too. The Hindu notion of Om is a good historical example of sound being recognised as important to health and spirituality. I think its important to accept sound as something that is very important to our being, and not to take it for granted (or put a premium on it!).

Finally I find sound fascinating. I'm very interested in how to make and break sounds, and how our perceptions are related to the physical world. I suppose my work is about trying to understand the world I inhabit. I want to understand and manipulate perception. I believe that by altering and exploring perception people can understand themselves a bit better, and also empathise with other peoples thoughts and states of mind better, which is a good thing. Induvindualism is good, but if our impact on this planet is to be improved then we need to get to grips with the fact that we are in it together. Ghandi said "we must become the change we want to see" and a great friend of mine said "dont shit in the bath". Take from that what you will and discard the chaff.