----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
Thank you Tim and Renate for the invitation to be a part of the -empyre- 
soft-skinned space.

In early autumn 2017, I began meeting with bioacoustics researcher Katy Payne 
to listen to recordings of humpback whale song Katy and Roger Payne recorded 
from 1969-1988 in Bermuda and Hawaii. While many animals sing structured songs, 
the Paynes made the groundbreaking discovery that humpback whale songs evolve, 
progressively and continually, over time, with all singers in a population 
participating in the changes. There are changes in pitch, duration, and rhythm 
that occur as male whales mimic and develop each other’s song during the 
breeding season. Innovations enter the song at the micro level within each 
season, and at the macro level across spans of months, years, and decades. This 
is a striking example of composition in a non-human animal.

In the piece I composed for the 2018 Cornell Council for the Arts Biennial, 
“Cetus: Life After Life,” extracts of Hawaiian whale song sessions from 1977 
and 1981 are broadcast through four speakers facing out from the top of McGraw 
Tower in duet with percussionist Sarah Hennies performing on the Cornell 
Chimes. The piece begins with the 1977 recording. When the chimes enter, they 
follow the contour and development of one of the humpback whale song themes 
recorded throughout the 1977 season. At the completion of a 1977 selection, the 
chimes make a dramatic shift in texture, color, contour, and rhythm, reflecting 
the cumulative innovations that occurred in whale song during this four-year 
period. After a brief chimes solo, a recording of whale song from the same 
Hawaiian population, now in 1981, enters. The chimes and whale song duet for 
the remainder of the piece, modeling how humpback whales must be listening 
while singing, simultaneously but independently -- the chimes performer 
listening and integrating subtle changes inspired by the 1981 recording into 
her song.

The 1981 recording was specifically chosen for “Cetus” as it offers a special 
window into whale behavior – four minutes into the song, the sound attenuates 
as the whale swims to the surface of the water to breathe, reminding the 
listener that whales, like humans, are mammals.

You can listen to a recording of the live performance here: 

https://powerdove.bandcamp.com/track/cetus-life-after-life 

The slowly shifting clouds were extraordinary the night of the performance - 
I’ve included a picture on the Bandcamp page.



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