This article explores recent theories of listening, perception and embodiment, including those by Mark Grimshaw and Tom Garner, Salomé Voegelin, and Eric Clarke, as well as consequences and possibilities arising from them in relation to field recording and soundscape art practice. These theories of listening propose auditory perception as an embodied process of engaging with and understanding lived environment. Such phenomenological listening is understood as a relational engagement with the world in motion, as movement and change, which grants access to the listener’s emerging presence, agency and place in the world. Such ideas on listening have developed concurrently with new approaches to making and presenting field recordings, with a fo...
Listening After Nature examines the constructions and erasures that haunt field recording practice a...
This enquiry represents an exploration of environmental sound and artistic practice from the perspec...
This article considers the presence of ‘self-reflexive narrative’ in field recording. The authors in...
“An Omnivorous Ear - The Creative Practice of Field Recording” offers new insights into the history ...
An audio paper that examines the practice of field recording and composing with field recording arch...
Listening in a present-day urban environment requires the reconciling of multiple orders of auditory...
This paper considers ways in which audio recording can be used to offer new ways of experiencing nat...
This research project explores how listening functions as a significant device in my moving-image pr...
The article focuses on the political implications of field recording (FR) in relation to sound ecolo...
The development of recording is arguably the most significant change to have affected music in the t...
This article approaches listening practices and the role of technological mediation within ecologica...
The thesis explores soundwalking, memory and aural history through participatory exploration. My eth...
This article approaches listening practices and the role of technological mediation within ecologica...
Since the turn of the twentieth century field recording, a practice based upon recording the sounds ...
This essay examines how field recordings have been used in composition historically, and how three c...
Listening After Nature examines the constructions and erasures that haunt field recording practice a...
This enquiry represents an exploration of environmental sound and artistic practice from the perspec...
This article considers the presence of ‘self-reflexive narrative’ in field recording. The authors in...
“An Omnivorous Ear - The Creative Practice of Field Recording” offers new insights into the history ...
An audio paper that examines the practice of field recording and composing with field recording arch...
Listening in a present-day urban environment requires the reconciling of multiple orders of auditory...
This paper considers ways in which audio recording can be used to offer new ways of experiencing nat...
This research project explores how listening functions as a significant device in my moving-image pr...
The article focuses on the political implications of field recording (FR) in relation to sound ecolo...
The development of recording is arguably the most significant change to have affected music in the t...
This article approaches listening practices and the role of technological mediation within ecologica...
The thesis explores soundwalking, memory and aural history through participatory exploration. My eth...
This article approaches listening practices and the role of technological mediation within ecologica...
Since the turn of the twentieth century field recording, a practice based upon recording the sounds ...
This essay examines how field recordings have been used in composition historically, and how three c...
Listening After Nature examines the constructions and erasures that haunt field recording practice a...
This enquiry represents an exploration of environmental sound and artistic practice from the perspec...
This article considers the presence of ‘self-reflexive narrative’ in field recording. The authors in...