What would be your soundtrack for space?
Here
is an answer, from three female artists who made a field trip to Houston, Texas
and took two years to construct this response.
We
are three people who make work from our surroundings. We chose space because
it's the ultimate surrounding and because we love the glamour of human attempts to navigate it. Our work
is made from samples and improvisations, visually and sonically. We interviewed astronauts, hung out
with a mission controller, a rocket scientist, and spent a long time on line
gathering raw stuff.
When
interviewed, all the astronauts at different moments apologised for a lack of
poetry in their accounts of what the experience of space travel meant to them
existentially. They distinctly
described themselves as not being artists or poets.
Do
they need to be? Do we require
anyone to articulate space for us? Or is it simply enough to see and hear it
remotely? Our work is
impressionistic sonic cartoons driven by the enthusiasm many human beings feel
for space ventures. Made in
episodes, because that was how we managed to collaborate over time and
distance, each piece grew like a
crystal. We made them and then had to put them together in a click
response environment. The site works like a form of archival space related
television, but some of it is an instrument you can play.
Like
astronauts we constantly had to endure weight allowances, so file sizes are optimized and lean
but they still might take some minutes of your time to appear.
In
contrast to the digital aesthetics of the net we also made this vinyl picture disk as a work mate to the site. It
rocks. It's also annette works first collaboration and first vinyl release.
Oh,
you might also like to know some of the questions we asked the astronauts
......
What
does it sound like, going there, being there, coming home?
What
music did you take with you to listen to when you were not working?
Each
astronaut is selected from eight thousand candidates within the fields of
science and the military. We were curious about who these people might be and
thought that discovering the music they liked, would reveal something about
them. Their responses actually revealed more about their chosen occupation.
Astronauts have very little time up there to listen to anything recreationally,
they snatch glimpses of earth from the window while they eat some lunch between
heavy science schedules, maintenance and engineering. Their life support
systems create a constant ambience of around 70 decibels, which NASA have
recognised as officially unhealthy and damaging to astronauts hearing in the
long term.
The
most specific responses to the question of what music did you take to space
included Joan Baez and Johnny Cash, the American Airlines Easy Listening Classical
compilation, Ravel’s Piano Concerto for the Left Hand in D and none. One small token of musical respite
actually comes from Mission Control to wake astronauts up in the morning. Each
crew member’s family are permitted to select a piece of music which is
transmitted from ground to space. We were listening to Columbia’s wake up
interactions before the accident and made a piece from it. We also sampled the
jukebox in the official NASA local, made an astronaut dream at 70 decibels,
improvised around ideas on internal/external spaces, on nothing(there is no
sound that we human animals can hear in space of course) and with live
electronic activity from space transmitted via huge radios, and were so
inspired by the hairdos zero gravity creates that we made hair instruments. And more.
Basically
we played with the areas that most intrigued us. You'll hear some of them on
this album and get even more from http://www.weightlessanimals.com
Welcome
..