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A small room with a table with white paper on it and several green chairs

What is the Sound of Freedom?

What is the Sound of Freedom?

For day five of Ultra-red’s project, the investigation will review the previous work undertaken together, and perhaps draw up a summary of reflections and pose some future questions.

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Who

Founded in 1994 in Los Angeles, Ultra-red is a sound art and popular education collective committed to the practice of listening as a form of organizing.

What

Ultra-red have been working with many different communities in New York for many years. For their project with us, they have invited these groups to join them for 3 hours each day, and to enact, reflect upon and codify their experiences of 4 different protocols for listening, which will each address the question: what is the sound of freedom? Each protocol will has been devised and will be led by a different invited guest: George Lewis, members of the House|Ballroom scene, Nancy Nevárez and Fred Moten. The final session will review the previous four days and develop summary questions and propositions.

Each 3-hour session can be viewed as a performative action to be observed, or a collective learning process to be joined.

Why

While the image serves as the foundation for much of our understanding of activist art, Ultra-red turn the focus to the ear: the sound of communities organising themselves, the acoustics of spaces of dissent, the demands and desires in our voices and in our silences, and the echoes of historical memories of struggle.

Ultra-red propose a very simply but effective switch: instead of understanding music as a process of organising sound, they take seriously the political aspect of the term ‘organising’, and they work to find ways that combine political, popular educational methods of organising with the tools of experimental music (ways of listening). They have developed what you might call a pedagogy of the ear.

Kinds of listening involved

Freedom – to ask: what is the sound of freedom?

Organised – to replace the idea of music as organised sound, with a notion of political organising, and to use listening as a tool to aid this.

The workbook Protocols for the Sound of Freedom, created for this series of encounters, was published as part of the boxset Ultra-red: URXX Nos. 1-9. Nine Workbooks, 2010-2014, published by Buchhandlung Walther König.

Links
Ultra-red website Ultra-red Listening Session at Pitzer College Video interview with Ultra-red at Rufino Museo Tamayo, Mexico City

Documentation

14 images, 1 video, 1 audio
Audio Recording
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CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
A table covered in white paper in the middle of a rectangle of chairs

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A large table with a group of over twenty people sat around in discussion

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A woman with tied up hair speaks into a mic at a large table

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A group pf people sit in chairs organised in lines around a table with mics

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A woman stands at a table covered in paper and writes as others look on

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

Two people stand at a table covered in paper and write as others look on

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

Three people sit and discuss whilst sat on chairs and holding a flip chart

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A group of people stand around a table chatting

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A group of people sit and discuss whilst sat on chairs holding a flipchart

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A table covered in white paper in the middle of a rectangle of chairs

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A man writes on a table covered in white paper with a marker pen

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A table covered in white paper has been written on with marker pen

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

Pieces of flip chart paper with words and phrases written on them are on a wall

▴ Credit: Bryony

A large group of people sit around a large table in a gallery

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A table covered in white paper in the middle of a rectangle of chairs

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A large table with a group of over twenty people sat around in discussion

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A woman with tied up hair speaks into a mic at a large table

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A group pf people sit in chairs organised in lines around a table with mics

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A woman stands at a table covered in paper and writes as others look on

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

Two people stand at a table covered in paper and write as others look on

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

Three people sit and discuss whilst sat on chairs and holding a flip chart

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A group of people stand around a table chatting

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A group of people sit and discuss whilst sat on chairs holding a flipchart

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A table covered in white paper in the middle of a rectangle of chairs

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A man writes on a table covered in white paper with a marker pen

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

A table covered in white paper has been written on with marker pen

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

Pieces of flip chart paper with words and phrases written on them are on a wall

▴ Credit: Bryony

A large group of people sit around a large table in a gallery

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre