naturerecordists
[Top] [All Lists]

Hydrophonia Sound Art Contest

Subject: Hydrophonia Sound Art Contest
From: "Kim Cascone" anechoicmedia
Date: Wed Sep 8, 2010 11:50 am ((PDT))
Hydrophonia Sound Art Contest
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
      recycle - reuse - reduce
turn ocean noise into sound art
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
     Hydrophonia Festival - Barcelona 2010
              http://hydrophonia.com/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
     Deadline: October 10th 2010
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Ocean Noise affects the marine life in all our oceans.

Anthropogenic noise is human-generated sound from various sources
including commercial ship traffic, oil exploration and production,
construction, acoustic research, sonar use and navy experiments.
Noise causes health problems for all life yet when it comes to the life
under the surface of our oceans we tune a deaf ear to it.

It is our goal to raise public consciousness about anthropogenic noise
and the devastating effect it has on the delicate balance of our planet.

One way sound artists can help is to create new sound works using the
very noise that is negatively affecting the marine life in our oceans.

Hydrophonia is therefore inviting sound artists to create a new work
using a library donated generously by the renowned bio-acoustician and
field recordist Gianni Pavan of CIBRA in Pavia Italy.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

You can download the zipped noise library here:

http://www.hydrophonia.com/contest/ocean_noise_samples_vol1.zip

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
                           RULES
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- all submissions should be no longer than *6 minutes* in length

- all submissions should be sent as 192 kbps mp3 files!

- please do not send .wavs or .aiffs!
  - they will not be accepted unless specifically requested!

- note: we prefer atmospheric electro-acoustic music pieces to beats :)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Deadline: October 10th 2010
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

All submissions should be sent to:



***using a web based ftp service such as sendthisfile.com -or-
rapidshare.com***

***DO NOT SEND ME EMAIL ATTACHMENTS***

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
WHAT YOU'LL WIN:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

the most interesting sound piece will be selected and will receive:

1 - Cetacean Research Technology - Model SS03-10 hydrophone with a 10m cabl=
e

http://www.cetaceanresearch.com/hydrophones/ss03-10-hydrophone/ss03-10.html=
#pic

- your piece will be diffused by Kim Cascone during the first evening of
the festival

- your name and the title of your piece will be posted to the
Hydrophonia web site

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
REMINDER: Deadline: October 10th 2010
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
for those interested in the frequency bands in which anthropogenic noise
occurs
I've included a short excerpt from the following reference

'Ocean Noise and Marine Mammals' (2003)
by Ocean Studies Board
(pgs 28 & 29)

Unintentional contributions to marine noise arise from transiting ships,
coastal and marine construction activity, mineral extraction, and
aircraft overflights. These anthropogenic sound sources contribute to
ocean noise over the complete 1-Hz to 200-kHz band of interest in this
report.

In the lowest bands, 1-10 Hz, the contributors are ship propellers,
explosives, seismic sources, and aircraft sonic booms.

In the 10-100 Hz band, shipping, explosives, seismic surveying sources,
aircraft sonic booms, construction and industrial activities, and naval
surveillance sonars are the major contributors.

For the 100-1,000 Hz band, all the sources noted for the 10-100 Hz band
still contribute. Also, the noise from nearby ships and seismic air-guns
can extend up into the 1,000-10,000 Hz band. This band also includes
underwater communication, naval tactical sonars, seafloor profilers, and
depth sounders.

The 10,000-100,000 Hz band includes the systems listed, in addition to
mine-hunting sonars, fish finders, and some oceanographic systems (e.g.,
acoustic Doppler current profilers).







<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
Admin

The University of NSW School of Computer and Engineering takes no responsibility for the contents of this archive. It is purely a compilation of material sent by many people to the naturerecordists mailing list. It has not been checked for accuracy nor its content verified in any way. If you wish to get material removed from the archive or have other queries about the archive e-mail Andrew Taylor at this address: andrewt@cse.unsw.EDU.AU