Re-sounding Yardley

room 15 ECHOES

Location: Birmingham

Duration: 20-30 minutes

Walk round the St Edburgha's churchyard and let the sounds transport you through the four wards of Yardley: Stetchford; Sheldon; Acocks Green and South Yardley.

Developed as part of the for-Wards project.


SOUNDwalker
SOUNDwalker
GPS triggered locative audio walks created by SOUNDkitchen

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The Echoes


Stetchford: Blacksmiths

A recording made inside the Old Yardley blacksmiths just over the road. Recorded with Ruby Gale from…

Old Yardley Park, Stetchford

A recording made in March 2018 capturing the birds in the hedgerows of Old Yardley Park

Playground, Old Yardley Park, Stetchford

A montage of recordings made by the Stetchford Beavers in the playground of Old Yardley Park

St Edburgha's Bells, Stetchford

The bells of St Edburgha's Church.

Sheldon Park Farm, Sheldon

A recording made in 2018 in Sheldon Park Farm outside the Tai Chi hut.

Swan Island, South Yardley

The mesmerising waves of the iconic Swan Island

Airport Runway, Sheldon

A recording made at the end of the runway as a plane takes off.

Cow barn, Sheldon Park Farm

Inside the cow barn in Sheldon, The cows were quiet but the birds were very chatty!

Station Office, Acocks Green

Inside the Acocks Green Train Station office capturing the very creaky doors. Recorded by students…

School playground, Acocks Green

A recording made outside Kimichi school capturing the soundscape of the adjacent school playground a…

Trains, Acocks Green

A train recorded at Acocks Green Train Station. Recorded by students from Kimichi School

Westley Vale Millenium Green, Acocks Green

Recordings made at Westley Vale Millenium Green. Recorded by students from Kimichi School
and 3 more echoes…
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Other walks nearby

Where the Paths End - Birmingham Soundwalk

Where the Paths End - Birmingham Soundwalk

'Where the Paths End' is a collection of 3 different soundwalks around Edinburgh, Birmingham, and London commissioned by Plus Minus Ensemble and Zubin Kanga's Cyborg Soloists UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship at Royal Holloway University of London. Each soundwalk should take about 40 - 50 minutes to experience, and they are located in areas of cultural importance within reasonable walking distance of the venues of the Reid Concert Hall (Edinburgh), Royal Birmingham Conservatoire (Birmingham), and Cafe Oto (London), where live performances of this piece first occurred. Through the presentation of environmental sound the work attempts to offer a record of the sound of three different cities in the early part of 2023. We often have visual records of cities through photographs, paintings etc, but we seldom have sonic representation. What became apparent making these recordings is how loud our cities are, and how much of our audio space is given over to the combustion engine and other anthropophonic sounds. Environmental sounds become the springboard for other musical materials. Each movement takes the resonant frequency of the environmental recording and ornaments it with synthesizers, demonstrating that music, pitch, and even melody can be born from the sound of the environment all around us. These are lessons we learn from Annea Lockwood, Alvin Lucier, and Pauline Oliveros amongst others. In addition, between each movement, a simple drum beat with synth acts as 'headphone music' and carries us from one recorded location to the next. Finally, Where the Paths End is an attempt to incorporate walking, and my lived experience as an artistic practice in a manner similar to visual artists such as Hamish Fulton or Richard Long. There is a real beauty to walking and experiencing our habitat with heightened awareness. In this state we can offer strange interventions. How uncanny and beautiful to experience Edinburgh’s George Square in the dead of winter and hear it teeming with student life on a sunny spring day, or to stand in London’s Dalston Curve Garden and hear the bells of the Greyfriars Kirk in Edinburgh. It’s as if we can time travel or hover above the earth and eavesdrop on very specific locations simultaneously. All journeys start from home, and this piece begins with sounds created in my house. The poetic title of each moment also comes from home, more specifically poems found in the collection 'Where the Sidewalk Ends' by Shel Silverstein, which my wife was reading to my 4 year-old son during the compositional process. They are not related, but associations are born from happy accidents and experiencing disparate things simultaneously, and I like to think that each movement has something of the character of their title. The poem Where the Sidewalk Ends invites us to walk to a beautiful mythical place ‘with a walk that is measured and slow’. By the same token, I hope that this piece can bring you to a beautiful place measured and slow, whether literal or figurative.
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