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Room for Noise in Soviet Sound Recording
Kendall, Matthew
Slavic review, 2023-01, Vol.82 (4), p.865-873
[Periódico revisado por pares]
New York, USA: Cambridge University Press
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Título:
Room for Noise in Soviet Sound Recording
Autor:
Kendall, Matthew
Assuntos:
20th century
;
Ambiguity
;
Archives & records
;
Critical Discussion Forum: Socialist Sound Worlds
;
Encoding
;
Interviews
;
Musical recordings
;
Noise
;
Oral history
;
Preservation
;
Sound
É parte de:
Slavic review, 2023-01, Vol.82 (4), p.865-873
Descrição:
When he was nearing the end of his life, Viktor Shklovskii recorded an oral interview that was recently digitized and published by the Moscow oral history project (http://www.oralhistory.ru). During the audio encoding process, Shklovskii's voice and the contents of the interview were badly distorted. This article frames noise as an important force that impacts not only how sound documents become authoritative archival evidence, but also indexically points to the context of their creation. To do so, I compare the role that sound plays in Shklovskii's own writing with the history of the Soviet state's archival preservation of sound, a variety of amateur sound recording projects, and mainstream discussions of audio quality and sound recording in the Soviet press. Ultimately, I argue that for audio researchers, making room for noise allows us to see the emancipatory gesture embedded within amateur tape recording itself: the ambiguous noise that seemingly marred unpolished recordings can instead be heard as a sonic alternative to official narratives.
Editor:
New York, USA: Cambridge University Press
Idioma:
Inglês
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