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Sounding Out!

pushing sound studies into the red since 2009
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Acoustic EcologyAmerican StudiesDigital MediaHumanismInterviewMedia and Communications
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Author guestlistener

Lawrence English is composer, media artist and curator based in Australia. Working across an eclectic array of aesthetic investigations, English’s work prompts questions of field, perception and memory. He investigates the politics of perception, through live performance and installation, to create works that ponder subtle transformations of space and ask audiences to become aware of that which exists at the edge of perception.

ArticleCanadian StudiesDocumentaryField RecordingGenderMedia and Communications
Published
Author jgabrielaj

“Decolonization,” Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang propose in “Decolonization is Not a Metaphor,” “is not an ‘and.’ It is an elsewhere.” Elsewhere, not here, not now. Not here. Not now. Enough! In the context of decolonization, elsewhere is a refusal to accept the conditions of life as is in the here and now.

ArticleChildren's IssuesClassListeningMemoirMedia and Communications
Published
Author brownellcassie

Here at Sounding Out! we like to celebrate World Listening Day (July 18) with a blog series that focuses on the importance of listening. This year, we bring your attention to the role of listening when it comes to the sounds of the K-12 classroom, and by extension, the school.

Blog-O-VersaryEditorial CollectiveSound StudiesMedia and Communications
Published
Author j.l. stoever

** Click here if you are the kind of person who opens the gift first and the card later and you want us to just give you the mix already!! Otherwise, scroll down following this post** Never have we been prouder in the history of Sounding Out! that nothing much has changed over here in year 8.0. In what has been a period of unrelenting fear, volatility, violence, hate, and uncertainty, we have not only maintained our

Blog-O-VersaryMixtapesPodcastSound StudiesMedia and Communications
Published
Author Aaron Trammell

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD: ¡¡¡¡RESIST!!!! SUBSCRIBE TO THE SERIES VIA ITUNES ADD OUR PODCASTS TO YOUR STITCHER FAVORITES PLAYLIST ¡¡¡¡RESIST!!!! The Clash, “Guns of Brixton”—The Editorial Collective Alice Bag, “Programmed”—Jenny Stoever Speedy Ortiz, “Raising the Skate”—Liana Silva OutKast, “Humble Mumble”—Regina Bradley The Staple Singers, “Freedom Highway”—Shakira Holt El Jornaleros del Norte, “Serenata a un Indocumentado”—Dolores

ArticleBlack StudiesInstallationLive MusicMusicMedia and Communications
Published
Author guestlistener

Author’s note: In line with the ethics of listening considered below, I’ve chosen not to embed the videos of police violence that I discuss.  But I’ve linked to them when available for readers who’d like to see/hear their content.–Alex Werth “I’m scared to death of these police.”

ArticleListeningMemoirPencils Down K-12 SoundsPodcastingMedia and Communications
Published
Author pinkstoncb

Here at Sounding Out! we like to celebrate World Listening Day (July 18) with a blog series. This year, we bring your attention to the role of listening when it comes to the sounds of the K-12 classroom, and by extension, the school.

ArticleBlack StudiesFandom/Fan StudiesGenderHip HopMedia and Communications
Published
Author shakiraholt

Here at Sounding Out! we like to celebrate World Listening Day (July 18) with a blog series. This year, we bring your attention to the role of listening when it comes to the sounds of the K-12 classroom, and by extension, the school.

ArticleBlack StudiesFandom/Fan StudiesGenderLive MusicMedia and Communications
Published
Author justindburton

Less than two weeks after a suicide bombing killed 22 people at the Manchester Arena following an Ariana Grande concert, the singer was back on stage in the city. She capped her three-hour One Love Manchester benefit concert with the 2015 single, “One Last Time,” which had found its way back into the UK Singles chart in the days following the blast.

Book ReviewDigital MediaHistoryMusicNoiseMedia and Communications
Published
Author Andy Kelleher Stuhl

Analog revival has gained traction across many media in recent years, but perhaps nowhere so strikingly as in sound. The shifting formats and fortunes of a digitally reshaped music industry invite, for many, the counterposition of a bright nostalgic picture. Yet artists and engineers whose work has spanned the transition from analog to digital sound find that the romanticization of the former can have a weird overreach.