假放射实验室:声音和意识形态

Akiva Zamcheck, A. Mirza
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Fake Radiolab是一个正在进行的双人表演项目,我们通过播客媒体形式的探索来询问中介的“事实”。我们采用无线电音乐人士和各种媒体类型的习惯和狂热(例如,播客,YouTube咆哮,ASMR会议,自助叙述,梦境序列,广播剧,自然纪录片),以开玩笑/严肃的方式打破当代音频制作赋予“内容”的清晰度和权威。作为现场播客的(不可靠的)主持人,我们呈现了一种音乐化的语音表演,将多种音频叙事模式与现场合成器、处理过的小提琴和采样的音频片段并置。在现场表演中,开场的旁白是预先录制的,观众看到我们站在舞台上的麦克风前,就会觉得这是一种听觉上的双关语;相反,我们的即兴表演插入了其他经过处理的材料,与预先录制的“背景音轨”相对应。我们的项目自觉地将放射性物质作为我们的主题和形式。其结果是一种技术和文化混合的话语,在这种话语中,作为表现性话语呈现的权力符号被纳入对体裁的攻击中。特别是,我们使用音频制作来强调和放大文本到表演的转换,以及表演到文本的转换,我们认为这种强大的操作在当代媒体文化中无处不在,而且非常有效。通过所有表面上的误导和错位,主打歌的叙述中仍然有一条贯穿的线索,它提供了对无线电声音的历史和现在的分析。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Fake Radiolab: Audio and Ideology
Fake Radiolab is the name of an ongoing duo performance project in which we interrogate mediated “facts” through explorations in the podcast media form. We adopt the mannerisms and mania of radiophonic personalities and a variety of media genres (e.g., podcasts, YouTube rants, ASMR sessions, self-help narrations, dream sequences, radio plays, nature documentaries) to playfully/seriously jar the clarity and authority imparted to “content” by contemporary audio production. Acting as (unreliable) hosts of a live podcast, we present a kind of musicalized speech performance that juxtaposes multiple modes of audio narration against live synths, processed violin, and sampled audio fragments. During live performance, the opening narration, which is pre-recorded, presents an acousmatic pun to the audience who sees us on stage in front of our microphones; instead, our improvised performance inserts other manipulated material in counterpoint to the pre-recorded “backing-track.” Our project self-consciously addresses radiophonic matter as both our subject and form. The result is a technologically and culturally hybridized discourse in which power-symbols presented as performative utterances are subsumed within an assault of genres. In particular, we use audio production to highlight and amplify the transformation of text into performance, and performance into text, powerful manipulations which we see as ubiquitous and scarily efficient throughout contemporary media culture(s). Through all the surface misdirection and dislocation, there remains a through-line in the narration of the title track which offers an analysis of the history and present presence of the radiophonic voice. 
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