Abstract
This paper responds to a recent article by American sound artist Kim Cascone in which he asserts that the presentation of environmental recordings as ‘sonic art’ is often crucially lacking in some form of ‘soul’ or vitality. Cascone suggests that it is the responsibility of an artist working with real-world sounds to enter a more imaginative engagement than precedents within the field (and within the wider field of sonic arts in general) have historically presented. The paper briefly explores historical impulse to deprecate the importance of imagination, along with the imaginative implications of discourse around what Katharine Norman (1996) calls ‘real-world music’. From here, we explore the relationship between imagination and sound in two pieces of sonic art and argue that one response to Cascone’s call for an imaginative turn can be found within the idea of the ‘symbol’ as codified in Romantic poetic discourse (after Kathleen Raine’s reading of Coleridge). The paper explores the way in which a cultivation of an ‘imaginative perception’ can be used to elucidate such symbols in a compositional context and relates the creative and interpretive use of ‘sound-symbols’ to both Voss’ methodology of the imagination (2009) and Thomas’ multidimensional spectrum of imagination (2014).
More Information
Status: | Published |
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Refereed: | Yes |
Publisher: | Trinity College Dublin & The University of Ulster's Arts and Humanities Research Institute |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Imagination, Sound Symbols, Romanticism, Real-World Music, Listening, Creative Process, |
Depositing User (symplectic) | Deposited by Clark, Lucy on behalf of Legard, Phil |
Date Deposited: | 02 Nov 2017 16:56 |
Last Modified: | 12 Jul 2024 16:27 |
Item Type: | Article |
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License: Creative Commons Attribution
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