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Listen To The Sounds Of A City With These Giant Listening Cones

Dominic Wilcox and James Rutherford Binaudios device creates a changing soundscape of the city.

Photo credit: Emilia Flockhart

What's that? Police sirens? The din of traffic? Random shouting? Must be the sounds of the city, the familiar yet alien noises that every city-dweller knows. A new art project from Dominic Wilcox and James Rutherford brings the sounds of a city, specifically Newcastle in the north of England, inside using a device called Binaudios.

Located at the Sage Gateshead, the Binaudios look like a giant pair of ear trumpets that listeners can point in different directions across the river Tyne to hear specific sounds. By doing so people can hear sounds related to various landmarks, a local market, street performers—over 50 different places in total.

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The inspiration for the look of the device came from those coin-operated tourist binoculars and it uses a hidden Raspberry Pi to connect the location to a sound, triggering the correct pre-recorded or historical sound to give the illusion that you're actually hearing the location. Wilcox explains more on his website:

"As the Binaudios are turned each sound merges with the sound next to it, like a DJ soundscape of previously unconnected things. The train station sound fades into the sound of a street performer followed by road works then local primary school children singing.

What’s nice about this project is that we can drop these Binaudios onto any tall building or place with a view and collect new sounds."

The piece, which you can check out below, was commissioned for Thinking Digital Arts 2014—and you can find out more plus listen to a sample of the sounds on Wilcox's site.

Image credit: Dominic Wilcox

Image credit: Dominic Wilcox

Image credit: Karolina Maciagowska

Image credit: Dominic Wilcox

h/t Design Boom

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