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Friday
Jun122009

Octachord: Hail to the sine wave

A long rope hangs from the ceiling in the main hall of the Utrecht University Museum. Connected to the rope are eight speakers, spreading sine waves over the stairs. Low frequencies come from the lower speakers while high frequencies come from those at the top of the sound installation. The natural reverb of the hall cause the frequencies to melt together.

Octachord is a sound installation created by Mark Thur and Simon Snel, students at the Utrecht School of Music and Technology. They used sine waves as building blocks for the ever-changing soundscape generated by the installation. Here’s a small example of the piece:

Octachord is a good example of how to create an installation for a specific architectural space and its properties. Being aware of the influence of a space on your creation and using this knowledge in the design of the work is very important and can lead to a great result.

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Reader Comments (2)

Hi

I like the Octochord recording. What is the audio player that you use on the blog

June 24, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJohn

I didn't record the sound myself this time. But I think it was recorded using a Zoom H4 or something similar.

The player I use on my site is the SoundCloud player. I like it a lot! You can read more about it in the article I wrote about SoundCloud.
Thanks for your comment!

June 26, 2009 | Registered Commenteradmin

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