Sunday, 11. January 2015, 23:03 - 23:59, Ö1

[ DEUTSCH ]

KUNSTRADIO - RADIOKUNST



Radiocustica. Listening Proposals from the Czech Republic


1) “Kurzwellen mit Fragezeichen” by Slávo Krekovič
2) „Ice Factory“ by James Wyness
3) „Between the Words“ by Jakub Rataj


rAdioCUSTICA is an intermedia project by the Czech Radio Vltava produced in collaboration with Czech Radio's Production Center. The portal focuses on contemporary radioart - wide range of media art forms, which try to explore potential of radio as a dynamic medium of the 21st century. The portal is connected with Czech Radio Vltava’s program Radioateliér, which has been on-air since 2003 presenting newest commissions of Czech and international acoustic art scene as well as introducing wide range of international sonic events from musique concrete through diverse forms of "Hörspiel" toward live radio performances.

Kunstradio presents three recent works which have been produced by rAdioCUSTICA as Listening Proposals, as proposed to the members of the EBU’s Ars Acustica radio art group.

1) “Kurzwellen mit Fragezeichen” by Slávo Krekovič



sound PLAY


The composition has been freely inspired by 'processual' work of Karlheinz Stockhausen “Kurzwellen”. It exists in various versions and is based upon a concert improvisation using material that has been taken from shortwave radio broadcast.
Messages broadcast on various wavelengths into the whole world – from the clearly recognizable signal of the distant radio stations to the mysterious world of coded satellite communication and other technological devices – are used to go off forever while their parallel coexistence will never be repeated. But then again it is possible to capture them and use them in various ways.
The basis of the composition has been the research of radio spectrum by means of modern tools (so-called software defined radio). The “radio signal” which is broadcast on various frequency bands is subject to a series of transformation, and consequently returns back on air, enriched now by synthetically generated structures.
The complexity of modular analogue synthesis and the unpredictability of radio waves complement one another in the sound stream, where composition and improvisation fuse within one world, and so do the analogue as well as the digital, the decision of man and the machine – the moment of 'right here, right now' in which there is place for both elements of order as well as for surprising coincidences.

2) „Ice Factory“ by James Wyness



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In the early spring of 2013 I contributed to a regional arts project in the Scottish Borders called Casting the Net: Coast to Inland. The project set out to explore aspects of our relationship with the sea and fishing: how the sea shapes life on the coast and impacts on the inland communities; the connections and the flow of ideas in both directions. The outcomes were intended to effectively engage with the materiality of place and the trades, crafts and lives of people living in the fishing town of Eyemouth and Selkirk in the inland Borders.
I proposed a series of sound works which would investigate, by means of field recordings, aspects of a specific working environment and the influence of this environment on the lives of men and women in the fishing industry. Initially I wanted to explore the use of sound in gauging the health of a seafaring vessel. I knew from research that sailors used to, and probably still do, use their ears as much if not more than their eyes to judge whether a vessel is ‘sound’, in other words whether it is sailing or working well. This important form of occupational auscultation, or aural diagnosis, is used across many domains of working life, from industry to agriculture to science to domestic and everyday life.
I sought also to strengthen and develop an existing investigation into the ethnography of technology in the Borders, in which I was exploring industrial auscultation in the textile industry. In this respect I set out to develop my archive of recordings from working textile mills and to establish the extent to which the ear of the machine operator is used in gauging the ‘health’ of his or her machine.
In terms of outcome, I proposed a series of sound works which would be played in various empty shops and industrial spaces in Eyemouth, a coastal town with a fishing heritage and Selkirk, an inland town with a textile heritage. My intention was to remap and recreate an original sonic environment and to recontextualise this in the new spaces by means of immersive sound installation and performance.
Ice factory, commissioned by Czech Radio, is a new composition made from the sounds of the ice factory at Eyemouth, the fishing vessel White Heather VI, and from the sounds of objects and materials recorded in the studio. It continues my research into the genesis and evolution of sound shapes and musical forms. Following a lengthy research phase, compositions are typically created with environmental field recordings and material generated in the studio using hand-made instruments and found objects. By juxtaposing layers of dense textures, separated out into contrasting blocks of sound, then establishing a range of relationships between various foreground and background layers, my aim is to make these sonic environments function less as stereo sound-fields and more as living evolving multidimensional organisms. This compositional work is informed by a range of extra-musical interests, in particular aspects of the biological sciences, semiotics and anthropology. An overall intention in all my compositional work is that the listener will ‘listen through’ the composition to a range of themes and topics, activated largely by means of socially engaged working procedures. In the ice factory the abstraction of the working soundscape is underpinned by a very real physical and material working environment.
(James Wyness)


3) „Between the Words“ by Jakub Rataj



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The composition 'Between the Words' came into existence within the ten months I spent in Paris. It is a reflection of sounds, spaces, pictures and ideas which stayed in my memory in order to create a condensed view of a single time interval spent in one city.
The crackling of bamboo, ripping of stems, and crushing of leaves is what the first part of 'Between the Lines' is composed of. I was being cruel to such a fragile, yet solid plant (the bamboo I have been destroying like this had already dried…), and this is how I handled the sound recording as well. The organic sound object gradually became transformed into a mechanical, artificially constructed sound entity – just like bamboo groves turn into artificial lay-bys of a metropolis. By means of tearing and cutting heartlessly, I changed the original, 'natural' sound into a broke-down machine which sometimes gets jammed – into a small robot who knows that he has already been replaced by new, better models, and yet he is trying hard to keep up with the rhythm of time.
I have used the poem called 'One Artist' by Vladimír Kokolia as construction material for the composition 'One' which is for seven instruments and electronics, and it came into existence at about the same period of time. I was seeking that which is hidden between the lines of the poem, and I found smacking and breathing. Breathing in as well as breathing out carries in itself natural tension that is created before the word comes out, and the release that follows the utterance. This empty space between the two parts of discourse is in reality filled up with expectation of receiving information that would not come, and instead of that, it becomes an autonomous sound independent on the meaning of words, thus creating the second part of 'Between the Words.'
Recordings of the city soundscape represent the third part of the composition. These are sonic images of individual places which are being sketched in more and more detail, just like when you paint a moustache and a top hat on the picture of a fish seller, or when the petanque ball makes the nearby church bell ring out.
(Jakub Rataj)
 
Link: http://www.rozhlas.cz/radiocustica/portal/


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