Monday, November 23, 2015

Intel HPC VR/Interactive video wall project




A short video showing a recent sound design project I worked on – an interactive/VR environment for Intel's new HPC audio supercomputer. Users prepared and manipulated audio clips, which were then inserted on a spiral timeline. Sounds were spatialized in 3D on both the video wall as well as via Oculus headsets.

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Monday, August 31, 2015

Interview with AmCor® Industries

'Night Swimmer': out soon on the Unfathomless label



‘Night Swimmer’ is created from field-recordings of nocturnal swims and paddles made during the summer of 2013 in Ontario’s Georgian Bay. As evening would fade into night, the athropophony and biophony tended to become muted; this resulted in a significantly increased signal to noise ratio, or what acoustic ecologist R Murray Schafer describes as a transformation into a ‘hi-fi environment’. This expanded sonic horizon – coupled with a reduced amount of visual information – encouraged a heightened focus on the act of listening: the manner in which landscape filters and reflects sound became significantly more perceptible and I often found myself in an acousmatic space in which most of what was heard could not actually be seen. In this intensified state of acoustic awareness, one can perhaps detect a more primal way of responding to our environment, an echo of a past that predates the primacy of the visual.

'Berlin Anamnetic': out soon on the 3Leaves label



‘Berlin Anamnetic’ is the outcome of a two-month residency at Berlin’s ZK/U (Centre for Art and Urbanistics). It seeks to integrate the ‘real’ acoustic soundscape with the embodied, imagined soundtrack evoked by a particular time and place.


The working process for this series involved long walks, generally from the outlying regions of Berlin to the city centre; these were documented via audio recordings, photos, and notes. Particular attention was placed on locations of emotional resonance, whether the source of this resonance was historical, personal or serendipitous. The associated sound files were then subjected to extensive spectral processing, melding the mnemonic soundtrack (usually overheard pop songs or earworms) with the real (diegetic) soundtrack. As such, sounds were structured in a quasi-painterly fashion rather than arranged in a more conventional linear time-line (i.e. in a DAW such as Ableton, etc.). Correspondingly, the pieces that comprise ‘Berlin Anamnetic’ also seek to adopt a narrative form that is textural and emotive, eschewing typical narrative structure for something that is more akin to the body’s ‘real’ movement through a landscape.

Thursday, May 21, 2015

Wednesday, March 18, 2015



Come Up to My Room 2015: 'Proximity', with Corinne Thiessen



Two figures stand on either side of the bed, facing each other. They rest their heads on plastic cups against the wall, eavesdropping. The room is dark; the occasional beam of light trails across the wall as a car passes, revealing their preoccupation before settling them into darkness again.