Blog Archives

Corridor8

Issue #2 of Corridor8, an international contemporary visual art journal with a fresh and original mix of in-depth critical and literary writing, profiles and contemporary art. The second edition is the ‘Borderlands’ edition, Strange Weather, which investigates practice that takes as its starting point the remote, the endgame and life beyond the urban. This issue Corridor8 stretches its northern focus from the far-flung reaches of the UK and beyond and includes the North Midlands, North Scotland, Northern Europe and as far as the Arctic and back again via the Antarctica.

In this issue Elisa Oliver profiles Chris Watson’s creative history, including his work with Cabaret Voltaire, and interviews him from his base at the South Pole about his current work recording for the Attenborough BBC series, The Frozen Planet, to be screened in 2011.

A unique audio recording by Chris Watson, “The Sea Ice Border”, will be given away free with Issue #2 of Corridor8.

This CD will contain two tracks:
1. 89º 24′ N above
2. 89º 24′ N below

Also featured: Guest curator Axel Lapp brings us seven artists/groups to watch in the Conceptual North, Iain Sinclair’s transcribed audio journey Listening for the Corncrake, North Wales-based performance art duo, Heather and Ivan Morrison, Polar interventionist artist Neville Gabie and much more.

For more information on the launch of Corridor8 and our events programme sign up to our newsletter at www.corridor8.co.uk

Wildlife Sound Recording in Northern India | January 2011

We’re very pleased to announce the dates for our next sound recording expedition to India – 14-24 January 2011. Full details at www.wildeye.co.uk

A unique opportunity to record the rich sounds of the jungles of Northern India accompanied by experienced wildlife sound recordist Chris Watson.

Our base will be Camp Forktail Creek – a forest home surrounded by a dense Sal forest and moist jungles and the only ‘jungle’ camp of its kind within Corbett Tiger Reserve, offering exclusivity in game viewing, great walks and explorations on foot. Corbett National Park was the first National Park founded in Asia and being an excellent habitat for the Bengal Tiger, “Project Tiger” was launched here in 1973. Corbett is also rich in avifauna with counts of over 600 bird species.

From Camp you could get great sound recordings of Great Hornbill, Slaty Woodpecker, Oriental Scops Owl, Spot bellied Eagle Owl, Brown Hawk Owl, Large Tailed Nightjar, Indian Cuckoo, Common Hawk Cuckoo, Cheetal, Barking deer and monkey alarm calls and if lucky a leopard sawing.

We have a fantastic itinerary planned with walks and game drives into various parts of the park. Although the focus will be on recording wildlife and natural atmospheres there will also be opportunities to record the wonderful sounds of the people and villages of the area.

Cost £1,495 plus flight – bookings via info@wildeye.co.uk

Chris Watson in Conversation with Sir David Attenborough | 10th August 2010

On the 10th August 2010, as part of Chris Watson’s Whispering in the Leaves project, Watson and Sir David Attenborough will be appearing together, in conversation, at The Royal Institution, London at an event entitled “Calls of the Wild”.

Chris Watson’s wildlife sound recordings are perhaps best known through his work with Sir David Attenborough on BBC television series including The Life of Birds, The Life of Mammals, Life in the Undergrowth and Life in Cold Blood.

In this discussion, illustrated with tropical rainforest recordings used in Watson’s Whispering in the Leaves installation at Kew Gardens, Chris Watson and Sir David Attenborough talk about the animals heard in the piece, their experiences of filming and recording them, and the changing environment of the rainforest through the day.

For further information and ticket sales click here
www.davidattenborough.co.uk

Chris Watson also held a two-day workshop at Kew Gardens, which you can read about here.

You can read more about this here

A Guide to Coastal Birds | BBC Radio 4 August – September 2010

BBC Radio 4
Sun 8 Aug – Sun 5 Sept, 2010
14.45-15.00

Brett Westwood is joined by keen birdwatcher Stephen Moss on the north coast of Devon, and with the help of wildlife sound recordist Chris Watson they offer a practical and entertaining guide to identifying many of the birds which you’re likely to see and hear around Britain’s coastline.

Each week, the series focuses on a different habitat and the birds you’re likely to find here, starting with Estuaries, and birds such as Redshank, Dunlin, Curlew and Knot, then Sandy Shores (and birds including Common and Sandwich Tern), Rocky Shores (Rock Pipit, Turnstone), Sea Cliffs (Fulmar, Guillemot, Razorbill) and Off-shore islands (and Puffin, Manx Shearwater and Arctic Tern). Not only is there advice on how to recognise birds visually, but also how to identify them from their calls and songs .…. after all, often you’re more likely to hear a bird and than see it.

A Guide to Coastal Birds, complements three previous series A Guide to Garden Birds (2007), and A Guide to Woodland Birds (2008), and A Guide to Water Birds (2009).

Producer Sarah Blunt

Hunt for the Nightingale’s Song | BBC Radio 4 5th August 2010

Thursday 5th August
21.02-21.30

When he was 14 years old, wildlife sound recordist Chris Watson read about a bird that sings at night. The bird was a Nightingale; and since first reading about it, Chris has been fortunate enough to hear Nightingales both in Britain and Europe but always as part of a chorus of birds.

Now, in this programme, he tries to get a microphone really close to a lone Nightingale to record its remarkable song; a rich, mellow series of notes.

Of course, it’s not as easy as it sounds, and one bird in particular decides to play a game of Hide and Seek and switch song perches. But over the course of several nights, and using different microphone techniques, Chris is able to get closer and closer to a singing male bird. The result, after several sleepless nights, some unexpected recordings and a battle with brambles and nettles is the most astonishing clear, beautiful recording of the song of a Nightingale.

Producer Sarah Blunt

Jarvis Cocker’s “Sunday Service” | 25th July 2010

BBC 6 Music – Live from Port Eliot Festival, Cornwall
“Sunday Service”, presented by Jarvis Cocker from 1600 on Sunday 25th July 2010

You can listen here for 6 more days

Skibbereen Arts Festival At The Ends of The Earth – in Conversation

Wednesday 28th July 2010 – 8:30pm – 10€ – Abbeystrewry Church

Skibbereen Arts Festival is delighted to see the return of sound recordist and artist Chris Watson to present a selection of audio recordings in the atmospheric Abbeystrewry Church.

As David Attenborough’s sound man, Chris Watson is frequently to be found in inhospitable parts of the globe, capturing the sound of monsoon downpours in tropical rainforests, or recording the sounds of activity inside termite mounds in the stifl ing deserts of Namibia. This year Watson has been in the North Pole and the Antarctic to record sounds for the television series ‘The Frozen Planet’.

For this special live event Chris will be in conversation with Presenter Luke Clancy and Producer Kevin Brew from RTÉ Radio 1’s Sound Stories programme, to discuss the sounds, silences and unique atmosphere that is to be found at both ends of the world.
“I was out in the midnight sun, standing on just two metres of frozen sea ice, 12 kilometres from land, with 750m of ocean beneath my feet, recording pods of killer whales surfacing to breathe in a narrow crack in the sea ice, just three metres away”. (Chris Watson)

More info can be read here

Hazard – “Wind” now up on iTunes

In 2001 Chris Watson contributed wind recordings to an album by Hazard (BJNilsen)

Wind (Ash International # Ash 6.5) is now available on itunes

You can read more about this album here

Chris Watson in The Wire | August 2010

318cover

On the cover: Chris Watson – Ken Hollings meets the sound recordist and Cabaret Voltaire founder whose mic penetrates the wild places humans can’t reach…

Whispering in the Leaves | Kew Gardens May to September 2010

Chris Watson’s Whispering in the Leaves is an extraordinary sound installation, using recordings and natural history broadcast to transport us to the far-flung, dense rainforests of South and Central America. Throughout the summer festival, Kew Garden’s Palm House will be diffused with the dawn and dusk choruses of the myriad of creatures native to these lush tropical landscapes. A highly sensory experience, Whispering in the Leaves is a remarkable demonstration of the power of sound to evoke inaccessible and captivating locations.

Whispering in the Leaves is a powerful sound work derived from Watson’s extensive archive of wildlife and on location recordings in Central and South America – habitats that host over half of the planet’s wildlife. Diffused through the tropical foliage of Kew Gardens’ iconic building the Palm House, the surround soundtrack of wildlife dawn and dusk choruses will be transmitted at hourly intervals throughout the day for 15-20 minute durations – the approximate time taken in the rainforest for the transitions from darkness into light, and from daylight to dark. The sound pieces feature the calls and voices of thousands of species, including the howls and shrieks of black howler and spider monkeys, the musicality of diverse birdsong and the shimmering and hissing of tree frogs and cicadas.

A highly sensory and captivating experience, Whispering in the Leaves is a remarkable demonstration of the power of sound recordings and natural history broadcast to transport us to far flung, inaccessible and often extraordinary locations.

Chris Watson will perform a live sound mix in which audio recording of a three or four-hour period across late afternoon, sunset and into the night will be compressed into around twenty minutes. Featuring recordings of a tropical thunderstorm and ending with the deep, lush sounds of the nocturnal insect chorus, the performance will create an intense auditory narrative for the audience.

Whispering in the Leaves is co-produced by Sound and Music & Forma. Originally commissioned by AV Festival 08.

www.whisperingintheleaves.org
www.soundandmusic.org
www.forma.org.uk
www.kew.org

and you can read reviews in

Gramophone
The Daily Telegraph
Culture24

and The Guardian audio piece by Pascal Wyse here
and a review in Frieze by Daniela Cascella here
and in The New Scientist here

Chris Watson, Constable & The National Gallery | 14th May 2010

constable

[pic: Fabio Lugaro]

Friday 14th May 2010 7-7:30pm
Room 34
Admission free

“Musician and leading wildlife sound recordist Chris Watson will discuss the sounds of wildlife and weather in The Cornfield and the changes in sound pollution since Constable’s time. He will end with a performance of the piece he has written in response to this painting for the new Sounds of the Gallery Tour.”

Chris writes: “Gazing through the woodland and out into the cornfield creates for me a wonderful and seductive sense of perspective. The mature trees frame a pastoral scene which is in turn bridged by clouds.

I can hear birdsong billowing from the leaf cover and a great spotted woodpecker drumming on the trunk of a skeletal tree which temporarily distracts the Border collie from it’s herding duties. Unseen and almost unheard a freshwater spring bubbles into the drinking pool, a resource that is shared by animals and people alike on days such as this. From behind, a gushing breeze ripples through the tree canopy and out across open fields where ripe corn heads swish and sigh on dry stems, their slow rhythm accompanying a skylark singing from high above, a pin point of silver sound lost to all sight, in a pewter sky.

In the early 19th Century Constable could not only see into the distance but also hear it. From his memory no doubt the warm song of a yellowhammer and drifting tones and the church clock would carry far in the humid air. Noise pollution was yet to reach rural Suffolk revealing a quality of sound that has, like the landscape, passed into history.”

Interview in Line Up

Chris has been interviewed by Line Up (“the only online resource dedicated to audio for broadcast”) – click here to read.

The Ditch wins Best Drama at BBC Radio Awards | February 2010

The Afternoon Play, The Ditch, broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on 1st February, won ‘BEST DRAMA’ Award at the BBC Audio and Music Awards last week.

A sound recordist is enticed by the disturbing aural landscape of Slaughton Ditch with terrifying and fatal consequences.

Writer: Paul Evans
Wildlife sound recordist:Chris Watson
Sound engineer: Mike Burgess
Producer: Sarah Blunt

(Unfortunately its no longer available to listen to on iPlayer if folk are interested in hearing it.)

Doves remix

Caught by the River, in association with Heavenly Recordings, is pleased to make available for the first time a collaboration between Chris Watson and the aptly named Doves. This is a remix that Chris has done of the song “Birds Flew Backwards” from Doves’ last album “Kingdom of Rust”.

This remix can be heard over at www.caughtbytheriver.net

TouchRadio 49 | A Journey South

Chris Watson contributes his third piece for TouchRadio.
8.02.10 – A Journey South – 50:21 – 192 kbps

south2

Chris Watson journeys to the South Pole for the forthcoming David Attenborough series ‘The Frozen Planet’ (BBC, 2011). Here he reports back with his experiences…

Photos by Chris Watson & Jason Roberts.
McMurdo Sound, Cape Evans, Ross Island (approx 78º S).

You can hear his earlier pieces from the Galapagos islands here.

Subscribe to the TouchPod podcast of TouchRadio via the iTunes Music Store
Play “A Journey South”

Feature in Green Explorer

You can read an online feature on Chris by Peter Sterling at Green Explorer

NATURE: A Local Patch | BBC Radio 4 February 2010

NATURE: A Local Patch (part 1)
BBC Radio 4
Tuesday 2 February 11.02 (rpt Wednesday 3 February, 21.02)

In the first of two programmes exploring our relationship with the landscape and the value of getting to know ‘a local patch’ three wildlife enthusiasts share their experiences of their own ‘local patch’.

For wildlife sound recordist Chris Watson, the local patch is his suburban back garden in Newcastle upon Tyne, where the recordings he has made over the years chart not only the changes in the landscape and the wildlife, but also trigger memories of the past. For wildlife cameraman, John Aitchison, it’s the sea loch which lies just beyond his home on the west coast of Scotland which is his local patch; a place which he shares with sea otters, curlew and migrating geese. The local patch of wildlife artist and writer Jessica Holm, is the woodland on the Isle of Wight where she spent four years studying red squirrels.

Recordings from each location are weaved together highlighting the value of getting to know a patch of landscape so well that its ‘like having a second skin’, says Jessica Holm. It’s a revealing and fascinating insight into the power of experience and the relationships between people and place, between Man and Nature.

Wildlife sound recordist: Chris Watson
Producer: Sarah Blunt

(NATURE: A Local Patch (part 2) is on BBC Radio 4, Tuesday 9 February 11.02, rpt Wed 10 Feb 21.02)

The Ditch | BBC Radio 4 1st February 2010

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play – The Ditch on Monday 1st Feb

“A sound recordist is enticed by the disturbing aural landscape of Slaughton Ditch, with terrifying and fatal consequences. Written and narrated by Paul Evans.” (The Radio Times)

This play uses recordings taken from the CD “The Ghost Orchid: An Introduction to EVP” which is available from the TouchShop here. You can read more about EVP at parc.web.fm.

Wildlife Sound Recordist: Chris Watson
Produced & Directed by Sarah Blunt

ditch

Bridging the Gap | BBC Radio 4 27th January 2010

BBC Radio 4, Wed 27 January at 11.02

The sounds of the river, the wind and the wildlife are combined with local voices to tell the story of the Tyne Bridge, which spans the River Tyne between Newcastle and Gateshead; providing a link between north and south, past and present. The Bridge is both an engineering triumph and an icon of the North East.

Sound recordist: Chris Watson
Producer: Sarah Blunt

Shingle Street | BBC Radio 4 26th January 2010

NATURE: Shingle Street

BBC Radio 4, Tue 26 January at 11.02 (Rpt : Wed 27 January at 21.02)

An unusual and haunting sound portrait written and narrated by Paul Evans about the watchers and the watched on the shingle spit of Dungeness.

Dungeness is place to listen and to watch. It’s a place to watch new land being made by the sea’s shovelling of shingle; a place to watch the manufacture of power, a place to watch migrating birds and moths find a transitory refuge. But watching is about far more than just looking, as writer and naturalist Paul Evans reveals in this powerful and haunting sound portrait of one of Britain’s most unsettling landscapes; the shingle flats of Dungeness

Sound recordings by Chris Watson and Andrew Dawes
Producer Sarah Blunt