Talking to Each Other: A Collective Sounding Project


 


About

   

2019 – 2021

A multi-media, collaborative research-creation project directed by Simone Lucas, with Access in the Making Lab (AIM) and the Feminist Media Studio (FMS), in partnership with Accessibilize Montreal and Suoni Per Il Popolo.

In this project, the FMS, AIM, and our community partners, want to collectively work, tinker and experiment with the frictions and challenges between technologies, access and critical forms of media making. To explore these questions, we are launching Talking to Each Other: A Collective Sounding Project. Over the course of this initiative, FMS & AIM members and affiliates will be invited to create recorded narrative, interview, sound art, and multi-sensorial pieces on the theme of access, sound and technology. The project emerges out of the FMS’s recent installation of a sound recording booth in its production suite. In purchasing this equipment, the FMS was excited to make sound recording accessible to student members for whom access to sound studios on campus and off was frequently restricted. Researching this purchase, however, exposed the fact that accessibility was far from an open and shut deal. The size and design of the sound booth raise challenges—if not outright barriers—to many people with disabilities.



The title of the project is inspired by the words of disability justice activist, journalist, and project collaborator Aimee Louw, who once remarked about our booth’s size limitations: “we like to talk to each other”. The statement reflects the fact that most studios, artistic spaces and technologies for sound creation in Montreal exclude disabled people. In so doing, they exclude and limit possibilities for public, creative and artistic exchanges by and between disabled people themselves. The inaccessibility of the sound booth is multifaceted. In addition to its design limitations, it is located in a cloistered campus, subject to the sanitary regulations of the pandemic. Access to recording requires a Concordia University ID, and perhaps permanent residency status or a recognized student visa to secure entry to this piece of so-called Canada. Underlying these physical, legalistic and bureaucratic forms of exclusion are symbolic barriers that make the University a rarified space for so many. In this project, the invitation is:
  • To challenge ableism,
  • To reflect on the conditions of access that make research-creation (im)possible for FMS and AIM members and their broader communities,
  • To engage the sound booth as a technological assemblage, exploring its possibilities and limitations,
  • To think in multisensorial terms, and practice “sounding” across the senses,
  • To experiment, test and learn about voice, sound and cross-sensorial recording through collaborative creation.



For the first phase of the project, we are collaborating with the local Montreal Suoni Per Il Popolo Festival, as well as disability justice group Accessibilize Montreal. FMS and AIM members will be recording sound creations in the context of a one-week workshop lead by multi-media artists Piper Curtis and Razan AlSalah. Selected sound pieces will be launched through Suoni Per Il Popolo in June 2021, as well as on the FMS and AIM websites. 
    
Image Description: Inside of the sound booth. On the right-hand side, we see someone from the back with long curly hair. Inside the booth, is a wall-mounted screen, a black stool, a white microphone on an adjustable arm, and a headset on a small white counter. 1/3 of the walls from the bottom are white and the rest 2/3 is black with square texture.
Image Description: A hand drawn illustration of two adjacent rectangles (with some handwritten notes) on a squared paper.
Image Description: A lower angle photo of the sound booth, in the process of being installed in a gray and white space. Two yellow ladders standing on both sides of the booth.
Image Description: An illustration of the sound booth (walls in white, door in blue) against green background with the following measurement specifications: door frame width 0,75 m; the overall width of the wall with the door 1,38 m. Ventilator located on the left hand side of the booth.
Image Description: Three people are seated and talking in front of a vivid pink graffitied background. The person on the left is a Black person in a wheelchair wearing a baseball cap; in the center is a white person with long dark hair and glasses; and on the right is a white person with long blonde hair and a turquoise vest.





The Story of the Sound Booth

Questions of access instigated research into a sound studio in Spring 2019, when the FMS was awarded a Canada Research Chair renewal fund to purchase new media equipment. Graduate students and faculty working in the humanities and social sciences generally do not have access to sound studios. For the purposes of voice overs, interviews, foley recording, and more, this lack of access can have great impacts on creative process, ease of workflow, and quality of outputs. We thus set out to meet the FMS members’ need for sound recording facilities. Working within the confines of our budget and room allocations at the FMS, we chose to purchase a stand-alone recording booth by Studio Bricks. It soon became clear, however, that the booth we had selected was inaccessible. Could this sound booth be made accessible through invention and additional resources?

We partnered with Arseli Dokumaci, director of the forthcoming Access in the Making Lab. After ongoing research (considering an enlarged booth, the addition of an automatic door and a ramp), the booth continued to have significant barriers to access. The very design that improved the soundproof quality of the booth also made it inaccessible: a lip on the heavy door to create a seal, an elevation making distance from reverberations on the ground. We reviewed the booth with Aimee Louw and Paul Tshuma: expert access consultants, sound producers, and members of the local disability justice collective Accessibilize Montreal. They reminded us that, among other concerns, the size of the enlarged booth we had selected would allow for two able-bodied people to do an interview, but only one wheelchair user. As Aimee stated: “We like to talk to each other”. In addition, we learned that there are few, if any, accessible sound recording studios in Montreal. Given the high costs of accessibility additions and the limited improvements they seemed to provide, as well as other institutional constraints, we resigned ourselves to temporary failure on building accessibility into an inaccessible booth. 

We chose to move forward with our initial choice: the small, shower–sized booth with no ramp. Expanding on the booth and adding a ramp is still an avenue we hope to pursue in the future. In March, we ordered the sound booth just as the COVID-19 lockdown was announced. Since then, questions of access have shifted and expanded: many are confined to our homes, universities are closed, and resources are even more scarce than they once were. For those who already faced structural inequalities and barriers before the pandemic, including people with disabilities, undocumented peoples, and the working poor, current restrictions and lack of support has resulted in extreme scarcity and exacerbated the “crises” of many. The FMS has also become more aware of the ways our space and resources were already unavailable to most community members pre-lockdown, while it currently remains closed to most students as well.



Critical Sound Art


Our Collective Sounding Project invites FMS members, AIM members and affiliates to create critical sound art with the support of the FMS and AIM equipment, staff, and academic resources. Our objective is to collectively and creatively explore access, sound, the senses, and recording technologies themselves, through the frameworks of critical feminist and disability media studies.We are inviting collaborators to reflect and make with us, about access in an open ended, intersectional ways. We are also thinking of the sound booth as an assemblage of technologies and social relations, and of aesthetics as a politics of access.On themes of access, we are asking:
  • How has access to a multiplicity of sites and activities been constrained or expanded since the pandemic began?
  • What spaces, institutions and resources are accessible to me, and which ones are not?
  • How does access shape my ease of movement?
  • What does access grant me?
  • What does exclusion do to me?
On the sound booth and sound recording as technologies of access, we are asking:
  • How is the form (audio, tech, subjects) in a transpiring relationship with the content of the piece? How is your creative process both an aesthetic, an ethic and a politic?
  • How can the technology itself reveal a network of relations that reflects on intersectional notions of access?
  • Can our collective research-creation process think through and emerge with any solutions towards making this booth more accessible?
Spring 2021: with Piper Curtis and Razan AlSalah (FMS), Aimee Louw and Paul Tshuma (Accessibilize Montreal) and Suoni Per Il Popolo

For the first phase of the project, FMS and AIM members will record and produce short audio pieces on the theme of access in the context of a two-week workshop lead by Piper Curtis and Razan AlSalah. In addition, Aimee Loew, Paul Tshuma and Simone Lucas will hold a public conversation on the project questions and themes. Our work will be launched in June with the Suoni Per Il Popolo Festival, and on the FMS and AIM websites.



Videos






  

Events

   

June 15, 2021 / Deterritorializing the Realm of the New Music – Anoush Moazzeni

June 13, 2021 / Talking to Each Other – Aimee Louw & Paul Tshuma in Conversation with Simone Lucas

June 6, 2021 / Talking to Each Other – Sound Creation Panel






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Concordia University
Communications & Journalism (CJ) Building
CJ 2.130, 7141 Sherbrooke St. W.
Montreal, Quebec H4B 1R6
Canada

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