Difference between revisions of "Soundwalk"

From Improvisers' Networks Online Mediawiki
Jump to: navigation, search
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
This term has been covered by the website Wikipedia as "[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soundwalk Soundwalk]"
 
This term has been covered by the website Wikipedia as "[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soundwalk Soundwalk]"
  
This mediawiki site, a `wiki dictionary` about the nature and practice of free improvisation declines to duplicate the content of that listing.
+
This mediawiki site, a `wiki dictionary` about the nature and practice of free improvisation and associated practices (?) declines to duplicate the content of that listing.
 
Below there is an introduction - a simple copy and paste. from Wikipedia then a link to the Wikipedia entry.
 
Below there is an introduction - a simple copy and paste. from Wikipedia then a link to the Wikipedia entry.
  

Latest revision as of 10:27, 22 January 2020

This term has been covered by the website Wikipedia as "Soundwalk"

This mediawiki site, a `wiki dictionary` about the nature and practice of free improvisation and associated practices (?) declines to duplicate the content of that listing. Below there is an introduction - a simple copy and paste. from Wikipedia then a link to the Wikipedia entry.

Introduction, copied from Wikipedia

A soundwalk is a walk with a focus on listening to the environment. The term was first used by members of the World Soundscape Project under the leadership of composer R. Murray Schafer in Vancouver in the 1970s. Hildegard Westerkamp, from the same group of artists, defines soundwalking as "... any excursion whose main purpose is listening to the environment. It is exposing our ears to every sound around us no matter where we are." [1]

Link to the Wikipedia page

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soundwalk