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Sonic Experience

A Guide to Everyday Sounds

Jean Francois Augoyard

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Paper (077352942X) 9780773529427
Release date: 2006-04-05
CA $34.95  |  US $32.95
Order by mail / fax : Order form


Cloth (0773525483) 9780773525481
Release date: 2006-04-05
CA $95.00  |  US $95.00
Order by mail / fax : Order form


6 x 9
230pp
8 b&w photographs

Subjects:
Architecture   Musicology  

Table of Contents

Reading this book is like a stimulating listening experience: I found myself measuring the effects of sounds heard, overheard, or imagined.
R. Murray Schafer, composer and author of The Tuning of the World

Never before has the everyday soundtrack of urban space been so cacophonous. Since the 1970s, sound researchers have attempted to classify noise, music, and everyday sounds using concepts such as Pierre Shafer's sound object and R. Murray Schafer's soundscape. Recently, the most significant team of soundscape researchers in the world has been concerned with the effects of sounds on listeners.

In a multidisciplinary work spanning musicology, electro-acoustic composition, architecture, urban studies, communication, phenomenology, social theory, physics, and psychology, Jean-François Augoyard, Henry Torgue, and their associates at the Centre for Research on Sonic Space and the Urban Environment (CRESSON) in Grenoble, France, provide an alphabetical sourcebook of eighty sonic/auditory effects. Their accounts of sonic effects such as echo, anticipation, vibrato, and wha-wha integrate information about the objective physical spaces in which sounds occur with cultural contexts and individual auditory experience. Sonic Experience attempts to rehabilitate general acoustic awareness, combining accessible definitions and literary examples with more in-depth technical information for specialists.

From the book
Cocktail or Cocktail Party:
Our ability to focus attention on the speech of a specific speaker by disregarding irrelevant information coming from the surroundings … From the physical point of viev, one of the predominant elements is the spatial separation of noise and speech ... on the psycho-physiological level, selective listening is governed by our capacity to discriminate sounds from different sources - that is, by our capacity to localize in the noise.

Jean-François Augoyard, a philosopher, urban planner, and musicologist, is the founder of CRESSON-CNRS (National Scientific Research Centre) at the School of Architecture in Grenoble.

Henry Torgue, a sociologist and urban planner, is a researcher at CRESSON and an author, pianist, and composer.

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The AAUP has compiled a bibliography of books from university presses that shed light on some of the issues surrounding recent events.