Listening to the Deep
Artist Jana Winderen transports us underwater to listen to the sonic wonders of the sea: melting ice booms, cacophonous coral, singing whales and fish that howl at the moon.
Although they cover more than 70% of the globeβs surface, most people have little idea about what our oceans sound like. In some traditions of science and storytelling, the sea was a place of deathly quiet - βThe Silent Worldβ - but of course thereβs anything but silence down there. Sound actually travels further and faster in water than air.
Norwegian artist and composer Jana Winderen has been recording and sharing sounds of the deep for nearly two decades, dangling microphones from boats to uncover sonic wonders such as the tectonic boom of melting ice, singing whales, and fish that howl at the moon.
With a background in natural sciences and fine arts, Jana Winderenβs vast sound archive brings the oceans to life in a unique way: transporting us to Greenland, where the waters moan under the pressure of the climate emergency; plunging us into cacophonous Caribbean coral reefs; taking us to a Thai fishing community, who for generations have passed down traditional techniques for underwater hearing.
By listening closely one can perhaps look at the planet we live on with a new perspective.
Recordist and host: Jana Winderen
Dog: Charlie
Contributors: Madeline Appiah, Carlos Duarte, Hans Slabbekoorn, Rungrueng Ramanyah / ΰΈ£ΰΈΈΰΉΰΈΰΉΰΈ£ΰΈ·ΰΈΰΈ ΰΈ£ΰΈ°ΰΈ«ΰΈ‘ΰΈ±ΰΈΰΈ’ΰΈ° (Bang Nee)
Translation and photography: Palin Ansusinha
Mixing: Mike Woolley
With thanks to: TBA21-Academy and Ruben Torres
Producer: Jack Howson
A Reduced Listening Production for ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 3
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Broadcasts
- Sun 14 Mar 2021 18:45ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 3
- Fri 26 Aug 2022 22:00ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 3
Binaural sound
What is it and why does it matter?
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Between the Ears
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