SOCIAL ACOUSTICS

Pirate Sound Lab

The workshop focuses on questions of sound and listening, and how these relate to practices of collaboration. Sound will be understood as a “shared medium” that enables forms of sociability and what Maria Puig de la Bellacasa terms “common-ability”: the capacity to foster conditions of radical sharing. For Bellacasa, this must move us beyond the human as a defining figure of the world. Common-ability instead locates us within a space of togetherness, and leads to practices of “forming kinship” with the matters of the world, from things and materialities to bodies and other creatures.

As a way of developing these ideas, we will utilize the form of a Party as a creative device: celebration, festivity, social gathering, having fun, letting go, decorating and DJing – the Party will allow us to experiment with constructing a condition of common-ability, creating a critical space for reworking conditions of singularity, loneliness and precarity. Instead, we will work through questions of hospitality and hosting, identity performance and community, felt experiences and the potentialities of new intimacy, all of which are active in the gesture of giving a party. The Party forms a highly creative and energetic field of imagination that is equally a socio-material work: a work that is actively shaped and fueled by musicality and the joy of listening. What would a Party be without Music?

The workshop will focus on working with sound as a way to capture and speculate upon states of common-ability. We will work as a group, identifying aspects of our surroundings that we might collaborate with: the building itself will become a partner in experimenting with audio recording, DJ software, performative gestures, listening activities, and finally, the construction, crafting and presentation of a Party: we will think through and join together in “throwing a Party”, where expressions of DJing will be explored as a general aesthetic and performative method: the DJ as a remixer of culture and a figure that produces kinship with a range of sonic matters. Through this, we will pose the practice of “Compositioning” – moving from ideas of musical composition towards that of socio-material compositioning. This will allow us to deepen understandings of sound as a common matter migrating across bodies and things, creatures and networks, and how it may perform as an artistic framework for expanded practices as well as identities – what Dimitris Papadopoulos calls: “more than social movements”.

The workshop took place from March 4 – 8, 2019, as part of the Sound Network: London-Jerusalem-Bergen, and included students from London College of Communications, the Musrara School Jerusalem, and the Bergen Academy.

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