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SWS24 2024

IMMA Timescapes Soundwalk

Performing at Bully's Acre, IMMA Timescapes Soundwalk
Irish Museum of Modern Art, Military Road, Kilmainham, Dublin 8, Ireland
45 minutes
Live event only involving the performance of three main creators: composer and sound artist Robert Coleman, ornithologist Seán Ronayne, and performer and improviser Seán Mac Erlaine.

history

Collection · 185 items

Nature

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music

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environment

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Sound walk
No longer available

Created for IMMA’s EarthRising Eco Festival 2023, the IMMA Timescapes Soundwalk is a hybrid soundwalk / performance resulting from a collaboration between composer and sound artist Robert Coleman, ornithologist Seán Ronayne, and performer and improviser Seán Mac Erlaine.

The soundwalk explores the soundscape of IMMA and its relationship stretching from the past, through to the present day and into the future. The focus across these different moments in time allow us to perceive the human impact on the environment which can often go unnoticed due to the slow rates of change. Through eco-acoustic monitoring of bird migrations over IMMA we also explore the geographical connections which become apparent across the globe highlighting the interconnectedness of the Earth’s biodiversity.

Credits

Created in collaboration between composer and sound artist Robert Coleman, ornithologist Seán Ronayne, and performer and improviser Seán Mac Erlaine.

Supported by the Irish Museum of Modern Art and the Contemporary Music Centre, Ireland.

APA style reference

Coleman, R. (2024). IMMA Timescapes Soundwalk. walk · listen · create. https://walklistencreate.org/walkingpiece/imma-timescapes-soundwalk/

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plodge

The Scottish and English word plodging has been wading through the lexical muck and mire since the late 1700s, and it refers to icky, slow, molasses-type walking. Plodge is probably a variation of plod. This word isn’t totally out of use, as a 1995 use from British magazine The Countryman illustrates: “Northbound Pennine Wayfarers, plodging through the interminable peat-bogs of the North Pennines.” Even if you have a spring in your step, it’s tough to skip merrily through the peat-bogs. Credits to Mark Peters.

Added by Geert Vermeire

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