Categories
Sound

Reproduction of Sound Induced by Northern Lights

Does the aurora borealis produce sound? For some, it seems it does.

This piece is my personal reproduction of the auroral sound experience I had while working as a research assistant at the Sodankylä Geophysical Observatory in Finland. It reflects what I heard, an approximation unique to my perception; others might experience it differently.

In the winter of 2001, during peak auroral activity, five of us witnessed a vivid display of northern lights. Initially, three parallel belts of light appeared, which suddenly merged into one directly above us. At that moment, I perceived a sound unlike anything I had heard before.

The sound created its own space within my mind – devoid of reverberation or conventional spatial cues. The sound was dry. It resembled countless layered noises, each distinguishable, producing a sense of infinite depth yet feeling somehow confined, perhaps limited by my own perception.

Intermittently, very soft and deep pops punctuated the soundscape.

The sound’s presence fluctuated with the aurora’s movements. It ceased when the single belt split back into three. Moving my head did not alter the sound’s characteristics.

I was initially hesitant to share this experience with others. At the time, a project at SGO was collecting reports of auroral sounds, so I submitted mine. Later that night, I created a reproduction of what I heard – this piece is a refined, modern version of that.

I later came across the Frey effect (microwave auditory effect), which aligns with my experience but does not contradict my initial impression that the northern lights sound was directly induced.

The accompanying image is from Pixabay.

Categories
Sound

Music video for Mr. Fluffs Shadow Waltz

I handled the production of the music video for Laura Iso-Metsälä, including recording both the visuals and audio. I also mixed the final piece, ensuring the sound and imagery were seamlessly integrated.

Categories
Art

Sonification of a Graphical Piece – Sounds of Calligraphy

The three pieces in the Sounds of Calligraphy playlist continue from the SARANA performance at the Viiva & Viiru calligraphy group exhibition opening in Helsinki. They are generated in real time by analyzing the images across three color channels, with some oscillator waveforms derived directly from the image properties. Each channel uses 128 oscillators and filters, spatially positioned in the stereo field to precisely follow the visual forms. This results in a true sonic journey across the images.

The sonification was created using Max/MSP/Jitter. Special thanks to the Viiva & Viiru group for embracing this abstract approach.