THE EPIC SOUND BLOG

Our collection of bite-size, audio related stories from around the web.

Around the world in sound


June 21, 2010

Check out the brilliant Aporee sound map, featuring user-submitted recordings from across the globe. It’s easy to upload your own recordings – but if you just feel like listening, stop by as well for an aural journey across the planet.


aporee maps has started 2006, based on former artistic research on mapping, spatial conditions and the navigation between the real and the virtual. It develops from the insight that it is basically impossible to map the complexity of todays public spaces.


Against the background of an increasing awareness of spatial aspects in media and the popularity and presence of visual geographies like google maps, the idea was to connect sound and space, and to create a cartography which focusses solely on sound, and open it to the public as a collaborative project.


Meanwhile it contains 1000s of recordings from numerous urban, rural and natural environments, showing the sonic complexity of these environments, as well as the different perceptions and artistic perspectives related to sound, space and places.


 

Go explore the Aporee sound map right here!

 

(via @timprebble)






  Posted by Asbjoern Andersen, Epic Sound - Contact

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Mapping the US in sound


April 30, 2010

The Smalls Street Sound has launched a project to map the US in sound – hop on over to the site to hear the recordings.





  Posted by Asbjoern Andersen, Epic Sound - Contact

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The BBC’s ‘Save our Sounds’ project


April 23, 2010

The BBC has launched a great project called ‘Save Our Sounds’, dedicated to capturing and preserving sounds from all over the world in one big map of sound. Here’s the concept:


The eye is attracted by change, the new and the flashy. Our ears, by contrast, are seduced by the familiar. Yet, all the time, the sound of the world is changing. Precious sounds are dying while new ones enter our lives. So here at the BBC we want to build a sound map of the world – and save endangered sounds from extinction. And who better to help than avid audio consumers like you?


Hop on over to the BBC site to listen in and participate.





  Posted by Asbjoern Andersen, Epic Sound - Contact

Category recording Tags ,