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Re: Discrete/Ambient/SoundScape/Whatever
I've called this, when walking around and finding a good mix of
disparate sound sources, an "Ives point" or "Ives moment".
One of the best of these was when I lived in Brookdale on a hill on
one side of a valley in the Santa Cruz mountains. I walked out my
front door and heard one of the most fantastic singing drones. After
regaining the ability to walk I walked down the hill towards what we
euphemistically called "town". I was about a half of a mile down the
road before I saw the source of the angelic drone: several men on the
roof of the Brookdale Lodge using circular power saws. It was
revelatory.
More on the Brookdale Lodge, which is rumored to be haunted:
<http://www.santacruzpl.org/history/tourism/brookdal.shtml>
Chris
At 2:00 PM -0800 11/19/01, Allan Hoeltje wrote:
>All this Eno/Fripp talk has got my loopie juices flowing.
>
>Every once and a while I will be in a noisy public place and I will
>experience a phenomenon for which there must be a name. All the sounds in
>the place are competing for my attention/interpretation and the result is
>a
>perceived piece of music which is greater than the sum of its parts.
>
>The best place I've found for this is the Metro where there will be two or
>three distant boomboxes, rhythmic train sounds, unintelligible
>announcements
>on the PA, and lots of other background noise fading in and out of the
>mix.
>Its as if my brain is desperate to hear a coherent melody and harmony and
>so
>creates it.
>
>Has anyone here experienced this? Is there a name for it? W. A. Mathieu
>("The Listening Book") talks about listening to background sounds as if
>they
>were music but I don't remember him giving it a name or describing that
>which is heard as a synthesis created from the background.
>
>-Allan
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