Product Description Dunn's 1990 composition of underwater pond insects, Chaos and the Emergent Mind of the Pond, became a classic in the field, excerpted widely on compilations and remaining in demand to this day as part of the CD Angels and Insects (OO Discs). Now, almost twenty years later, Dunn's research into the acoustic behaviors of bark beetles in our native Northern New Mexico has produced a stunning new CD-length work that opens ears to the wonderfully complex acoustic ecology of pinyon (piñon) pines. [See link to left to access David Dunn's extended liner notes for this album, especially if you are purchasing the MP3 version.] The Sound of Light in Trees had a dual genesis. The first was creative. For the past several years, David Dunn has been developing innovative, low-cost microphones for use in recording sounds that are normally out of reach of human hearing: probe mics for use in small spaces (like the holes made in trees by beetles), mics to record infrasonic (low frequency) sounds in prairie dog villages, and a revolutionary omni-directional ultrasonic mic that has led to many long nights listening to bats, as well as an increasing catalog of unidentified high-frequency sounds both in the wild and in urban settings. His writing and recording has taken a turn toward encouraging an appreciation of the vast spectrum of sounds in our world that are outside of our normal human experience; intimately related to this is Dunn's call to listen closely to the voices of our planet in these times of dire environmental stress. This led to the second genesis of the new CD, the use of acoustics in ecology research. In the forests of the west, diverse members of the bark beetle family are devastating pine species on local and regional scales. The fierce southern California fires of 2004 and Arizona fires of 2005 roared through beetle-killed stands of white and ponderosa pine, respectively; in northern New Mexico, a tiny bark beetle species, Ips confuses, has, in many areas, killed 50-100% of the core pine tree of the Rocky Mountain foothills, the piñon pine (referred to in the scientific literature in it's Americanized spelling, pinyon). In an effort to better predict where outbreaks would be the most intense, regional foresters turned to Dunn. As one of several monitoring methods being tested, Dunn went into the field and used his new recording techniques to try to find areas of increased beetle activity. As it turned out, his recordings were often able to identify population booms before pheromone traps, the previously accepted best method. But in addition to simply finding what trees had active bark beetle populations, Dunn found himself captivated by the variety of sounds being made by the little invaders. As he explains in the extensive liner notes (and as explicated in more detail on the associated online material), bark beetles have a complex acoustic repertoire, one that deserves further scrutiny by bark beetle biologists and forest ecologists. Thus The Sound of Light in Trees serves a dual purpose: it offers a first glimpse of an innovative approach to studying the biology of trees and insects, while also being a compelling listening experience, yet another landmark in Dunn's long career as a contemporary composer and innovative soundscape designer. It is a clear expression of Dunn's vision of art and science engaging in a mutually fruitful dialogue. In keeping with this project's contributions to the study of the role of acoustics in understanding larger patterns of interaction and co-evolution, the CD is being released in collaboration with The Acoustic Ecology Institute, which will receive 100% of the proceeds of all sales of the disc. AEI is a resource and information center focusing on sound-related environmental issues and academic research. It's website, AcousticEcology.org, offers science coverage, special reports, a news digest, and comprehensive resource directories of research institutions, non-profit organizations, and conferences addressing topics related to acoustic ecology. About the Artist Composer and sound artist David Dunn was born in 1953 in San Diego, California. From 1970 to 1974 he was assistant to the American composer Harry Partch and remained active as a performer in the Harry Partch Ensemble for over a decade. He studied composition with David Ernst, Kenneth Gaburo, Norman Lowrey, and Pauline Oliveros; violin and viola with Mary Gerard, James Glazebrook, and Howard Hill; and physical theater techniques with Jerzy Grotowski. He has worked in a wide variety of audio media inclusive of traditional and experimental music, installations for public exhibitions, video and film soundtracks, radio broadcasts, and bio-acoustic research. He is the composer of 56 major music compositions for various media, author/editor of 5 books and over 50 academic and theoretical publications in major journals with translations into seven foreign languages. Since 1973 he has given over 500 concert performances, lectures and radio broadcasts in North America, South America, Europe, Asia and Australia. He has over 100 additional international recording credits on LPs, CDs, internet, exhibition, film and video soundtracks. In recent years he has lectured and/or performed at such prestigious venues as SoundCulture (Japan), Beyond Music Festival (USA), Ars Electronica (Austria), the Styrian Autumn Festival (Austria), L'Immagine Elletronica Festival (Italy), the Institute for New Media (Germany), New Music Across America, Center for Contemporary Art (Santa Fe), Composer to Composer Festival (Telluride), Santa Fe Institute, Experimenta Festival (Argentina), Cranbrook Art Academy, Instituto Torcuato Ditella (Argentina), Graduate Center of CUNY, The Exploratorium (San Francisco), Institute for Advanced Study (Hungary), feature radio broadcasts throughout the world, various guest composer residencies at American universities, and wildlife field recording expeditions in North America, South America, Australia, and Southern Africa. He is the author of Music, Language, and Environment (a cdrom of selected scores, writings, sounds, and images), Skydrift (a book documenting a large environmental sound project), and Why Do Whales and Children Sing?:A Guide to Hearing in Nature. He is the editor of Harry Partch: An Anthology of Critical Perspectives and Eigenwelt der Apparate-welt: Pioneers of Electronic Art. His works are published and distributed by Ars Electronica, Innova Recordings, O.O. Discs, EarthEar, Pogus Recordings, Lingua Press, Frog Peak, Deep Listening Publications, Nonsequitur Foundation, W.W. Norton, Gordon and Breach, Schirmer Books, the Inial Group, and IML Records. Currently Dunn is President and Program Director of the Art and Science Laboratory and was recently artist-in-residence at the following institutions: Cranbrook Art Academy, Detroit Zoo, Center for Contemporary Art in Santa Fe, and the Art Technology Center at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. In addition to his artistic work his current projects include sonification research of deterministic chaotic systems and the design of bioacoustic techniques for: tracking jaguars in New Mexico and Arizona, studying the acoustic properties of Narwhal teeth, high-speed sampling for ultrasonic recording, and the development of acoustic techniques for the early monitoring of bark beetles in conifers.
S**!
Extraordinary, but not in a musical way...unless, perhaps, it is the music of nature
Okay, I finally read the bio. This is apparently not the David Dunn who puts out marvelous Christian song albums :-). Lesson learned! I will say that I was expecting some sort of "human" music to be arranged around this somehow, not just the music of nature :-). I'm not sure, having listened to it, that that is possible! However what is possible is an amazing orchestration of the sounds of nature that the composer has very carefully orchestrated and put together in this CD. It is fascinating, even if not quite what I expected :-).
J**Y
It's amazing. From barely audible rumbles of tree movements
The first thing that struck me about this album was the frequency range of sounds recorded. It's amazing. From barely audible rumbles of tree movements, to the shrill sounds of the insects communicating and assaulting the tree, it is quite a show. Some times it sounds like Darth Vader is scuba diving in a bowl of rice krispies, others it sounds like a team of oxen are chewing on the mic's themselves. It's surreal and peaceful to me. I'm currently using it to defrag the hard-drive between my ears. I'd highly recommend the album to those with an appreciation for the diminutive creatures of the world, or to those who meditate to alternative sound recordings. Very cool stuff.
D**L
hypnotic
Musically hypnotic, strangely soothing and vaguely disturbing at the same time. I was surprised and intrigued by the essay as well, which expressed an empathetic exploration of the entire cycle of trees/ beetles/ music/ sound /ecology/ human culture. He makes some brilliant right-brained leaps of intuition. An excellent example of the reason why artists should be included in scientific explorations and the communication of scientific understanding.
L**P
amazing and unusual!
If run your finger along the surface of a polished wooden table, it will feel smooth to you. Yet if you were one one-hundredth of your current size, your touch would reveal numerous blemishes and fissures normally undetectable. On the same kind of idea, David Dunn's _The Sound of Light in Trees_ reveals here the pinyon engraver beetles exploring and devouring the inner xylem of an American pine tree, captured with tiny specialized microphones. It is a fascinating, highly complex work that truly takes you to world of sound like no other, a place where human auditory senses could never venture without technological intervention. The beetle's world sounds violent and mysterious and organic of course, from the beetle itself munching away, to its entire environment shifting with the outside gale, the harmony of clicks and buzzes and murmuring of tiny creatures, and liquidy-sounds like tree-sauce moving around. Most of the sounds lend themselves to no identification, so you might as well be listening to something totally beyond tiny and strange to just out-there. Yet there is an omnipresent natural progression to it, and a deep-rooted intuition that makes it very lively and non-mechanistic, contrary what one might expect bugs' existence to be. It's kind of, erm, "dark" also. The beetles are destroying the tree, after all. A strange beauty exists also, as nature is equally full of charms as brutalities. You are missing wondrous music if you pass this up so put it on the list. I also highly recommend dunn's _Chaos and the Emergent Life of the Pond_, focusing on underwater insects -- also amazing!
R**G
This CD Made Me Itch
David Dunn is consumed with minutiae. He loves the sounds of insects and other tiny critters, in their squirming, wriggling, swarming burrows. TSoLiT is a 59-minute chronicle of the clicks, tappings and myriad scrunchy sounds made by bark beetles devouring a tree.On headphones this CD gives you the unpleasant sensation of having a head full of bugs, while on speakers it sounds like your house is about to come down around you. There is something profoundly disturbing about the tiny squeaks, scratching noises and millions of tiny limbs moving in frantic chaos.As a soundscape it is unique and powerful; but as a listening experience I think I won't be taking that journey again soon.
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