Measuring Device with Organs ranges from essay to soundscape, bildungsroman to musical composition. The work begins with a typical “expert listener”—a middle-aged, white audiophile with a passion for classic rock—undergoing a test meant to determine what sound should sound like. Measuring Device with Organs hinges on the recordings used in such tests, conducted by stereo manufacturers and agencies like the International Electrotechnical Commission, reliant on the ability of humans to act like listening machines. As the test proceeds, the expert struggles to train his ears on the frequency response of the audio files, to vanquish the memories evoked by Spanish guitar riffs and snippets of ABBA.
Through a narration of the listening test and portrayal of the expert listener (whose “auditory virtuosity” is rooted in his fascination as a teenager with the sonic qualities of Led Zeppelin’s “Black Dog”), Measuring Device with Organs reveals how we produce and experience culture in the form of digital files, how imperfect technological processes mold our conduct. Anonymous experts, claiming the mantle of science, stand in for the rest of us; each time we open an MP3 or MOV, play a record or CD, we are subjected to their edicts, we effectively universalize their tastes (and suppress the sensory experiences of millions of others).
Measuring Device with Organs consists of two tracks: "Every Frequency You Can't Hear" and "Every Frequency You Can't Recognize Yourself as Hearing." The third track, "His Master's Vox," is composed from materials recorded during a performance by Maria Chavez in April 2018, which utilized four turntables and many copies of Measuring Device with Organs, and does not appear on the LP.
Measuring Device with Organs originated as a performance and has been presented at the New Museum of Contemporary Art, as part of “Surround Audience: The Generational Triennial”; Istanbul Biennial 14: “Saltwater: A Theory of Thought Forms”; the Museum of Art at the Rhode Island School of Design; the Norwegian Festival for Non-fiction; and the Aspen Art Museum. Measuring Device with Organs is part of Standard Evaluation Materials, an issue of Triple Canopy devoted to harmonizing bodies, regulating speech, and fixing time.
Read more:
www.canopycanopycanopy.com/issues/22/contents/measuring-device-with-organs
released April 19, 2018
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