Jana Winderen
"Sub-Pelagic Voices"
Soundscapes underwater are invisible but audible. Sound travels almost
five times faster in water than in air, the speed differing according
to pressure, salinity, current and temperature. Creatures living in
the ocean use sound to communicate, hunt and orientate themselves.
Different fish and crustaceans produce different sounds for different
purposes; you can identify the species by listening to them. In the
oceans there is a constant and lively sound environment; very little
research has been done by humans here, surprising perhaps considering
that the oceans cover more than 70% of our planet.
Sub-Pelagic Voices is a 17 minute sound piece made for the Sound Art
Weekend Gerlesborg as part of the ISCM World New Music Days, invited
by Jesper Eng at The Gerlesborg School of Fine Art. It is based on hydrophone
(underwater michrophones) recordings made in Bottnafjorden in August
2009, near Gerlesborg in Bohuslän, Sweden.
– Jana Winderen
www.janawinderen.com