Article: "Acoustic Space" R. Murray Schafer

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Article

"Acoustic Space"
R. Murray Schafer
Circuit: musiques contemporaines, vol. 17, n 3, 2007, p. 83-86.

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Acoustic Space 1
R. Murray Schafer

Until writing was invented, we lived in acoustic space, where the Eskimo now lives:
boundless, directionless, horizonless, the dark of the mind, the world of emotion,
primordial intuition, terror. Speech is a social chart of this dark bog.
Speech structures the abyss of mental and acoustic space, shrouding the voice; it is a
cosmic, invisible architecture of the human dark. Speak that I may see you.
Writing turned the spotlight on the high, dim Sierras of speech; writing was the
visualization of acoustic space. It lit up the dark.2

This statement permeates all McLuhans writings from The Gutenberg


Galaxy onwards. For McLuhan, the electric world was aural; it moved us
back into the acoustic space of preliterate culture. Carpenter developed the
theme in Eskimo Realities, where auditory space is employed as an interchangeable term:
Auditory space has no favoured focus. Its a sphere without xed boundaries, space
made by the thing itself, not space containing the thing. It is not pictorial space,
boxed-in, but dynamic, always in ux, creating its own dimensions moment by
moment. It has no xed boundaries; it is indifferent to background. The eye focuses,
pinpoints, abstracts, locating each object in physical space, against a background;
the ear, however, favours sound from any direction... I know of no example of an
Eskimo describing space primarily in visual terms.3

Despite McLuhan and Carpenters infatuation with the concept, acoustic


space did not attract critical attention until the World Soundscape Project
was established at Simon Fraser University in 1970. The projects intention

1. [Ed. note] The full text of this article


is available on the Circuit website :
<http ://www.revuecircuit.ca/web>.
This article was originally published
in : Schafer, R. M. (1993), Voices of
Tyranny, Temples of Silence, Indian River
(Ontario), Arcana Editions, pp. 29-44.
This book is available at : <http ://www.
patria.org/arcana/arcbooks.html>

2. Carpenter, Edmund (1973), Eskimo


Realities, New York, Holt, Rinehart and
Winston pp. 35-37.

3. McLuhan, Marshall (1960), Five


Sovereign Fingers Taxed the Breath,
Carpenter, Edmund and McLuhan,
Marshall (eds.) (1960), Explorations in
Communication : An Anthology, Boston,
Beacon Press, p. 207.

r . m u r r ay s c h a f e r

As far as I know, the first scholars to use the term acoustic space were
Marshall McLuhan and Edmund Carpenter in their magazine Explorations,
which appeared between 1953 and 1959. There, McLuhan wrote:

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c i r c u i t v o lu m e 17 n u m r o 3

84

was to study all aspects of the changing soundscape to determine how these
changes might affect peoples thinking and social activities. The projects
ultimate aim was to create a new art and science of soundscape design complementary to those in other disciplines dealing with aspects of the visual
environment.
Anyone who has tried to hone a new concept for delivery to the public
knows how essential it is to nd the right tag words to describe it. Acoustic
space is too awkward a term to have conferred fame on its inventor. Perhaps
one reason is its hybridity, marking it as transitional, caught between two cultures. The xity of the noun space needs something more than the application of such a restless and vaguely understood modier as acoustic to
suggest the transition from visual into aural culture as McLuhan perceived
it. Nor is it easy to subject aural culture to the same systematic analysis that
has characterized visual thinking. The world of sound is primarily one of
sensation rather than reection. It is a world of activities rather than artifacts,
and whenever one writes about sound or tries to graph it, one departs from
its essential reality, often in absurd ways. I recall once attending a conference
of acoustical engineers where for several days I saw slides and heard papers
on various aspects of aircraft noise without ever once hearing the sonic boom
that was the object of the conference. This lack of contact is characteristic of
much of the research on sound still, and one aim of this essay is to show the
extent to which considerations with space, the static element in the title of
this essay, have affected the active element, sound.
When one rst tries to conceptualize acoustic space, the geometrical gure that most easily comes to mind is the sphere, as Carpenter evoked it
above. One would then argue that a sound propagated with equal intensity in all directions simultaneously would more or less ll a volume of this
description, weakening towards the perimeter until it disappeared altogether
at a point that might be called the acoustic horizon. It is clear at once how
many spatial metaphors we must use to fulll this notion. In every sense it
is a hypothetical model. In reality, what happens is that sound, being more
mysterious than scientists would like to believe, inhabits space rather erratically and enigmatically. First of all, most sounds are not sent travelling omnidirectionally but unidirectionally, the spill away from the projected direction
being more accidental than intentional. Then, since there is normally less
concern with the transmission of sounds in solids than with their transmission through air, the model should be corrected to be something more like
the hemisphere above ground level. Experience shows that this hemisphere
is distorted in numerous ways as a result of refraction, diffraction, drift and

4. Proust wrote of the sound of the bell


as oval. A few years ago, when I had a
group of students draw spontaneously
to sounds played on tape, the bell was
one of the sounds evoking the greatest
circularity. The other sound was that
of the air conditioner. See Schafer, R.
M. (1973), The Music of the Environment
Vienna, Universal Edition, p. 21.

5. See European Sound Diary, p. 16.

r . m u r r ay s c h a f e r

other environmental conditions. Obstructions such as buildings, mountains


and trees cause reverberations, echoes and shadows. In fact, the prole of
any sound under consideration will be quite unique, and acknowledgement
of the laws of acoustics is probably less effective in explaining its behaviour
than in confounding it. Finally, and most importantly, the sphere described
is assumed to bc lled by one sound only. That is to say, a sound-sphere lled
is a dominated space.
The sphere concept may have originated in religion. It is in religions, particularly those stressing a harmonious universe ruled by a benevolent deity,
that the circle and the sphere were venerated above all gures. This is evident in Boethius Harmony of the Spheres, in Dantes circles of paradise, and
in the mandalas that serve as visual yantras in numerous Eastern religions.
I will not dwell on this symbolism which, as Jung explained, seems to suggest completion, unity or perfection. The sounding devices used in religious
ceremonies such as the Keisu or Keeyzee of Japan and Burma, the temple
gongs of India and Tibet, and the church bells of the Western world all retain
something of the circle in their physical forms, and by extension their sound
may seem to evoke a similar shape.4
This circling is quite literally true of the church bell, which denes the parish by its acoustic prole. The advantage of the bell over visual signs such as
clockfaces and towers is that it is not restricted by geographical hindrances and
can announce itself during both day and darkness. In one of the studies of the
Soundscape Project, it was determined that a village church bell in Sweden
could be heard across a diameter of fteen kilometers and there can be little
doubt that in past times, given a much quieter ambient environment in the
countryside, this kind of outreach was general throughout Christendom.5 In
the late Middle Ages, the intersecting and circumjacent arcs of parish bells
quite literally gripped the entire community by the ears, so that when Martin
Luther wrote that every European was born into Christendom, he was merely
endorsing a circumstance that was in his time unavoidable. Those who could
hear the bells were in the parish; those who could not were in the wilderness.
The same thing happened in Islam, which centered on the minaret, from
which the voice of the muezzin, often blind, could be heard giving the call
to prayer. To increase the sounding area, or to maintain it against increasing
disturbance, Islam eventually adopted the loudspeaker, which can be seen
throughout the Middle East today, hanging incongruously from mosaic-studded towers, booming out over perpetual trafc jams. Like Islam, Christianity
was a militant religion, and as it grew in strength, its bells became larger
and more dominating (the largest of those in Salzburg Cathedral weighs

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c i r c u i t v o lu m e 17 n u m r o 3

14,000 kilograms), responding to its imperialistic aspirations for social power.


There can be no doubt that bells were the loudest sounds to be heard in
European and North American cities until the factory whistles of the
Industrial Revolution rose to challenge them. Then a new prole was incised
over the community, ringing the workers cottages with a grimier sound.
[]

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