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VARIOUS ARTISTS- THE BELLY OF THE WHALE
imprec098 - CD - $10 
Channel Crossing Jayne Fenton Keane
Club Delphinapterus - LapCore
Cetacean Somnolence Yannick Dauby
Realtime Interspecies Music Jim Nollman
Ricochet Scanner
Anti-Japanese Whaling Song - Merzbow
Green Christina Della Giustina
Belly Up Stephen Vitiello & Drew Edwards
Pelagic Cycle Janus Kober
Moby Dick Dives In The Ocean's Dreams -Thanos Chrysakis
Inside The Whale David Rothenberg
Whale Belly Sound System John Hanes
Dolphinator Mike Hallenbeck
Detritus In The Wake Homer Smith
Navigator Petri Kuljuntausta
Unexplored Depths Nathan McNinch
Briny Claws - Kim Cascone
The Belly Of The Whale project is a was brilliantly conceived
together by two of the prime movers in the Natural Art world:
Interspecies and Greenmuseum. The goal was to create
digital music from underwater sound samples of creatures including
orcas, dolphins, beluga whales, sperm whales,
humpback whales, Weddell and Bearded seals,
lobsters, shrimp and water. Together, Interspecies
and Greenmuseum compiled a sample cd of 350 captured
sounds and sent it out to many of their favorite electronic artists.
Scanner, Merzbow, Yannick Dauby, LapCore,
Jayne Fenton Keane, Kim Cascone and many others answered
the call merging deep sea underwater sounds with their electronic
aesthetics. What's most compelling about this project is the throughtful
way that the artists have listened and responded, both indivdually
and as a community, to the sounds of our environment.
This project is a unique blend of modern electronic music as well
as an underwater educational experience. Included are some of the
foremost electronic composers in the world making music for two
of the foremost groups in the Natural Art world.
Jim Nollman started the nonprofit, Interspecies Communication
Inc., in 1978, to sponsor a long term experiment in using music
to communicate with wild animals. Over the years he has produced
field projects with species as varied as howler monkeys in Panama,
buffalo and elk in Yellowstone, and turkeys in his own backyard.
His best known work has been with dolphins and whales. This work
has been sponsored by many foundations including The Smithsonian,
Threshold, Slifka Foundation, the National Endowment
for the Arts, as well as foundations in Germany, Japan., Finland,
and France. It has been filmed many times by all US TV networks,
and includes two National Geographic films in the past 3
years alone. Nollman has also written several books about
this work including The Man Who Talks to Whales, The Charged
Border, and the Beluga Café.
In 2003 Nollman met Sam Bower of greenmuseum.org.
Their two organizations were engaged in the parallel work of promoting
and sponsoring new art that transforms the way human beings relate
to nature. To distinguish the two, Interspecies was more
focused on producing music with animals, while Greenmuseum was
more focused on developing and networking the incipient art-for-nature
community. Jim mentioned to Sam that Interspecies owned a sound
library of underwater animal calls, and wondered if there was some
way to use them to engage the greenmuseum community. From the resultant
conversations, The Belly of the Whale project was created.
Sam researched a list of 50 composers from around the world. Jim
produced a source CD that included 350 different sounds recorded
underwater (whales, lobsters, dolphins, seals, walrus, etc) plus
recordings of himself reading excerpts from his books about the
process of using live music to communicate with orcas and beluga
whales. From the initial 50, 19 composers responded with compositions.
The eclectic group included Scanner who had recently been
commissioned to compose the National Anthem for the European Union;
Petri Kuljuntausta who was recently honored as Finlands
artist of year; Christina della Guistina and Jayne Fenton
Keynes who have won many awards for their music worldwide; Merzbow,
who is known around the world; Kent Clelland who was a senior
programmer for Native Instruments in Berlin, and who made
some of the digital tools used by the others; and even drummer John
Hanes, whose recent credits include the theme music for the
film Grizzly Man.
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