Volume 19 • Issue 21 | October 6 - 12, 2006
Music
ear to the Earth Festival
October 6-14
3-Legged Dog, the Winter Garden,
The Elevated Acre and Judson Church
Visit www.eartotheearth.org for more details

Photo by David Monacchi, above
“I am Planet. Hear me warm.”
World music for a dying planet
By Jason Gross
Composer
Joel Chadabe had founded the Electronic Music Foundation (EMF) in 1994
to promote and support electronic works in the modern classical
field. While he worked tirelessly in this area, recording artists’
work and promoting concerts, he also came across another important
obsession.
“A few years ago,
it became apparent to me that we were collectively ruining our
environment and that we were facing a life-or-death emergency
situation. I can easily image the unimaginable connected to rising
ocean levels, the destruction of habitats for animals and all the
catastrophic effects of global warming. How can anyone not be
interested?”
While it’s good
and well to support environmental organizations, Chadabe decided to go
a step further and try to do something on his own.
“The
question was: what can we do as musicians? It was a natural connection
to make between recording real world sounds for artistic purposes and
recording real world sounds to engage people in environmental issues.”
So,
early last year, he began planning programs based around these ideas,
to get the public interested in the idea of ecology. The result is the
Ear to the Earth Festival, which will include panels, installations,
presentations, videos and concerts that revolve around issues like
logging (“Calls of the Wild”), endangered/extinct species (“Suspended
Sounds”) and global warming (“On Melting Ice”) at various venues in
Lower Manhattan. Chadabe didn’t have to look far for participants, as
he already knew several artists who had been thinking long and hard
about ecology and conservation. Downtown Express asked several of the
composers and artists involved in the festival how they saw a
connection between their work and the idea of ecology.
•
Andrea Polli (California digital media artist, participating in the
“Water and Ice” and “Melting Ice” installations): “Since 2001, I’ve
been collaborating with meteorologists and climatologists on
translating data describing these natural systems into sound, a process
called “sonification,” making a multi-channel aural representation of a
hurricane, for example. It’s a different way to try to understand
the forces of nature, through the ears.”
•
Bruce Odland (New York sound artist, participating in the “Elevated
Harmonies” installation): “Listening deeply to the culture (through
sound) provides a counterpoint to the visual culture which has wreaked
havoc on the environment. It’s possible that listening connects
you to this same environment. My work as a composer is all about
this connection, using the ears to reveal what the eyes obscure.”
•
Annea Lockwood (New Zealand composer/writer/teacher, participating in
“Water and Ice” installation): “I want to draw people into feeling
immersed in soundscapes that I create, into feeling permeated by the
Danube River, for example, because I know that then, all sense of
separation from that environment falls away. When that happens, a deep
comfort and sense of belonging in the natural world can emerge and with
it.”
• Jean Claude Risset
(French composer/researcher, participating in the “Ports of Call 1”
concert): “I believe in an ecological point of view for hearing: our
hearing has evolved to give us information on the environment that is
useful for survival. Too often, music only exploits these capacities in
a gratuitous way for our enjoyment.”
•
Maggi Payne (California composer, participating in the “Extended
Worlds” performance): “Underlying much of my work is the appreciation
of nature and our need to preserve nature and to subtly remind everyone
that we are an integral part of nature, not separate entities. I hope
that my works will remind people of the beauty, power, and need to
preserve the fragile ecosystems of the deserts and that we have a
responsibility to this earth.”
As
to the future of similar projects, Chadabe has ambitious plans. “We’re
in the process of forming a worldwide network called Musicians for the
Environment, aimed at encouraging people throughout the world to create
environmental music based on recorded sounds. We’re going to do
everything we can to encourage people to become sensitive to the world
around them.”