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Artist
The London Sound Survey
ReleaseProduct
From Dusk Till Dawn
Label
Persistence of Sound
Catalogue Number
PS008
Release Date
September 16, 2022

Press Release

“Ian M. Rawes is a supreme field recordist, and his website the London Sound Survey is an exemplary piece of work. Perhaps The London Sound Survey ought to be understood as a painter of sorts, and these audio images of the river might prove to be as aesthetically and historically resonant as the mid 19th- century paintings of the Thames by James McNeill Whistler..” - Ed Pinsent, The Sound Projector

Persistence of Sound presents a posthumous album of field recordings from The London Sound Survey. ‘From Dusk Till Dawn' is a sound-journey through the dark in East Anglia. It roams across the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk to places whose sounds have a precarious existence outside the crowded realities of modern everyday life.

Before his death in 2021, Ian Rawes had been making recordings across East Anglia, notably at Lakenheath Fen, an RSPB reserve on the Norfolk/Suffolk border. Like many of Ian’s projects, there was a tight logic to this collection. They chart the journey of natural sounds from dusk until dawn. The extraordinary sound of massed birdsong, the wind thrumming against an abandoned pumping station, the sound of common seals.

Ian describing the recording process: "A bittern called from time to time, sounding like someone blowing over the wide top of an old milk bottle. A distant machine tone came from somewhere to the south-east: perhaps from an agribusiness factory. It continued into the small hours. At around half past four in the morning I struggled out of my sleeping bag and began to walk east, carrying my bulky wooden mic baffle on its tripod. A small wood drew close and there was a brief pinpoint of light among the tree trunks. I stopped then moved on: the light was obscured. Birds hadn't stopped calling all night but now the intensity and variety of cries and songs was growing. I set the tripod down on a path running between the wood to the north and the reed-beds of New Fen to the south. The pre-amp and recorder were switched on. I listened briefly through headphones and swivelled the baffle this way and that before noticing how the flights of ducks and geese seemed to go from east to west. I set the baffle and its pair of mics to face south, then went to sit on a tree stump about forty yards away. For a short while everything felt unfamiliar while the dawn chorus took over my thoughts, as though suddenly immersed in a remote past."

Ian Rawes was a sound recordist and archivist best known for founding the London Sound Survey (LSS) in 2009 as an online platform for his field recordings of London street life. He had started making recordings the previous year (the first was at Petticoat Lane Market in London’s East End). “I wanted to do something to understand this city,” he said in The Wire 341, “to produce my own version of it that other people could read or respond to.” Over the next ten years he maintained the site single handedly, building it into a unique multilayered sound map of the capital, embedded with his own recordings made at multiple locations across the city, as well as historical recordings and texts drawn from a variety of sources, including the BBC archives. - Tony Herrington (The Wire)

Digital Tracklist

Persistence of Sound

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