What Sound Looks Like

An ongoing series cross-posted from instagram.com/dsqt

A memento of a recent hotel stay. So many antiquities packed into one tiny space: the ballpoint pen, the stationery, the touch of personalization, the concept of “dialing.” Suffice to say there were no instructions inside, no matter what the note suggests. And what would these instructions have included? Proper finger positioning? Menu shortcuts? A technical manual? A schematic? In the end, the line, positioned at the page’s bottom, suggests itself as a creative prompt. Some visitors might not even know a telephone was ever involved.

An ongoing series cross-posted from instagram.com/dsqt.

The Year Ahead

As Disquiet.com approaches its 20th anniversary

Thinking ahead this year, some key priorities are

(1) getting this [This Week in Sound](http://tinyletter.com/disquiet) email published weekly,

(2) finally getting the podcast going,

(2) updating Disquiet.com several times a day rather than just daily,

(3) getting some playlists of (commercial) music going on Spotify, Apple Music, and Google Play Music (none of which have filled the sizable hole that Rdio’s disappearance has left),

(4) finishing a score to a science-fiction film I’m doing sound design and music supervision for (more on which later),

(5) getting my next semester of my class on the “role of sound in the media landscape”going (it starts the first week of February),

(6) finalizing “next book(s)”plans,

and … well, and more.

Current fixations: *the not-quite-silences of conference calls … sound effects in comics … sound design of TV shows and film … making peace with the death of Rdio and trying to get into the groove with either Google Play Music, Apple Music, or Spotify …*

*This first appeared in the January 12, 2016, edition of the free Disquiet “This Week in Sound”email newsletter: [tinyletter.com/disquiet](http://tinyletter.com/disquiet).*

This Week in Sound: Sonic Fiction + Sonic Weapons + Jack Politics +

Plus: canine audiences + tape heads

A lightly annotated clipping service, delivered weekly via email newsletter ([tinyletter.com/disquiet](http://tinyletter.com/disquiet)):

**Sonic Fiction:** So, one of the characters in the acclaimed Chinese science fiction novel [*The Three-Body Problem*](http://kenliu.name/translations/three-body/) by author Liu Cixin says he implemented the “pop music as sonic weapon” approach to dealing with Noriega. The irony being that the futuristic nano-material the characters then employ to deal with a larger problem comes to resemble a massively oversized zither — in other words, a whole other sonic weapon, of sorts. (I have some sound-related thoughts on two other science-fiction novels I finished reading late last year, Neal Stephenson’s *Seveneves* and Emily St. John Mandel’s *Station Eleven*, and I’ll try to work them into an upcoming This Week in Sound newsletter.)

**Robotic Dogs of War:** Sometimes being loud is a benefit in warfare. It is punishing and intimidating. Apparently for the development of “robot dogs,”sometimes being loud can mean being too loud. “”As Marines were using it, there was the challenge of seeing the potential possibility because of the limitations of the robot itself,” a spokesperson for the DARPA-funded Warfighting Lab told [military.com](http://www.military.com/daily-news/2015/12/22/marine-corps-shelves-futuristic-robo-mule-due-to-noise-concerns.html). “They took it as it was: a loud robot that’s going to give away their position.” (Via [cnet.com](http://www.cnet.com/news/googles-robot-dog-soldiers-rejected-by-marines-for-simple-reason/).)

**Canine Accompaniment:** Meanwhile, Laurie Anderson was composing for our canine companions, per [the New York Times](http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/04/arts/music/laurie-anderson-puts-on-a-concert-for-dogs-in-times-square.html?\_r=3): “She and friends put on a concert for hundreds of dogs outside the Sydney Opera House, with the music emitted from speakers at a low, dog-friendly frequency. (She didn’t want to risk shocking the dogs with a high frequency.)”

**The Hole Story:** There’s a lot of uproar over concern that Apple will ditch the headphone jack. As of this writing, 246,000 of a hoped-for 250,000 signatures have been added to [a petition for Apple to not do something it hasn’t said it’s going to do](https://action.sumofus.org/a/iphone-headphone-jack/) but that people are apparently concerned about. I’m a bit cautious about consumer activism these days. It often feels more consumerist than activist. In any case, while there’s concern about a whole new suite of cables required — should Apple go ahead with this plan — I think the real plan on Apple’s part may be to nudge us toward Bluetooth and other forms of wireless headphones. (Note a recent piece at [macrumors.com](http://www.macrumors.com/2016/01/12/apple-obsoletes-older-beats-models/).)

**Tape Heads:** It’s unclear if the novelist Rosecrans Baldwin (*You Lost Me There*) anticipated criticism of his attempted takedown of the cassette tape in a recent New York Times op-ed ([“Our Misplaced Nostalgia for Cassette Tapes”](http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/24/opinion/our-misplaced-nostalgia-for-cassette-tapes.html?\_r=0)), though he acknowledges in the piece that even his wife disagrees with him. In any case, [subsequent letters to the paper make a case for the medium](http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/31/opinion/appreciating-the-virtues-of-the-maligned-cassette.html). Dan Zajackowski of New York City wrote: “The cassette is for people with an attention span, people who are generous enough to let an artist curate a whole half-hour of listening, or in the case of a mixtape, between 60 and 120 minutes.”And Portland, Oregon-based Ted Laderas (a Disquiet Junto participant) wrote: “I read Rosecrans Baldwin’s article as a slap in the face of small-time musicians like me. The cost of manufacturing vinyl and CDs is prohibitive for musicians who sell small numbers of albums. While not ideal, tape is easy to manufacture and easy to personalize, and provides small-time musicians with a viable way of sharing our music that our fans are willing to buy.”

*This first appeared in the January 12, 2016, edition of the free Disquiet “This Week in Sound”email newsletter: [tinyletter.com/disquiet](http://tinyletter.com/disquiet).*

Music for Fracking

A work by Ohio-based composer Brian Harnetty

Among recent recipients of Creative Capital awards, announced [today](http://blog.creative-capital.org/2016/01/7517/), is composer and sound artist Brian Harnetty, whose *Shawnee, Ohio*, heard here in an excerpt, uses field recording and composed segments to explore the influence of fracking on communities and the environment. This piece is brief, under a minute, but the mix of elegant, slow-paced musical elements and snippets of spoken reminiscences is striking.

A brief note explains his project:

>Performed with sampled archives, field recordings and live musicians, Shawnee, Ohio critically engages ecology, energy, place and personal history to ask: What are the sounds of mining? Of fracking? Of a town fighting to survive after a century of economic decline and environmental degradation? These sounds are recorded as compositional material reflecting layers of history and memory in Appalachian Ohio. Shawnee’s history includes coal, gas and clay extraction, and the formation of early labor unions. The town’s downturn and partial restoration act as an ethos of the struggles and hopes of the larger region, now immersed in a controversial fracking boom. Shawnee, Ohio considers these histories, evokes place through sound, and listens to the present alongside traces of the past.

Video originally posted at [creative-capital.org](http://creative-capital.org/projects/view/872). More from Harnetty, who lives in Ohio, at [brianharnetty.com](http://www.brianharnetty.com/).

What Sound Looks Like

An ongoing series cross-posted from instagram.com/dsqt

I’m very happy with where I live, in San Francisco’s Richmond District. I’ve lived here for 20 years as of this coming summer, excepting four years spent in New Orleans (1999-2003). But once in a while an interesting home goes on the market, and it’s fun to take a look, perhaps (though not really) to move, more likely to dream, in any case to gain an unfamiliar vantage on this tremendous city. This view is from the top floor of an apartment building that faces Japantown. More immediately, however, it looks down directly on the Chinese consulate. If you look out you see the city to the north. If you look down you see an array of communication apparatuses. The urban high rise is a focal point of discussions about population density and privacy. But it’s another thing entirety to view, and be in view of, a site synonymous with surveillance. The view draws the narrative into the building. Who within the apartment complex might, themselves, be tasked with observational duties? And who observes them? Who, in other words, listens to the listeners?

An ongoing series cross-posted from instagram.com/dsqt.