Skip to content

TAG ARCHIVES: Eric Dalbin

SETTING UP FOR THE SHOW AT LA VILLA NOAILLES


BrowserPreview tmp 42 SETTING UP FOR THE SHOW AT LA VILLA NOAILLES

Eric Dalbin organizing the show at Villa Noailles.

BrowserPreview tmp 17 SETTING UP FOR THE SHOW AT LA VILLA NOAILLES

Stephan taking a photo in the bathroom with Charles and Marie-Laure de Noailles.

BrowserPreview tmp 11 SETTING UP FOR THE SHOW AT LA VILLA NOAILLES

Old photo of the pool where we performed.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Excerpt from Points Radiants I,II,III sound installation by Sabisha Friedberg at Villa Noailles.

BrowserPreview tmp 51 SETTING UP FOR THE SHOW AT LA VILLA NOAILLES

Director and photographer Stephane Sednaoui shooting a film on Ulysses’ Syndrome.

DSCN08951 SETTING UP FOR THE SHOW AT LA VILLA NOAILLES

Crashing at the Blue House after the show.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Extract from “La Brûlure” by Soundwalk

All photos by Stephan Crasneanscki


ON THE WAY TO LA VILLA NOAILLES, HYERES SOUTH OF FRANCE

Saturday, November 13th 2010

Marseille ON THE WAY TO LA VILLA NOAILLES, HYERES SOUTH OF FRANCE

Waking up in Marseilles, on the way to La Villa Noailles.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Extract from “La Brûlure” by Soundwalk

Hadtmp1 ON THE WAY TO LA VILLA NOAILLES, HYERES SOUTH OF FRANCE

Hadley Hudson, our favorite photographer who has been traveling with us all over Europe.

setup ON THE WAY TO LA VILLA NOAILLES, HYERES SOUTH OF FRANCE

Set up for the show.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.


“LE SON DU NOUS” REHEARSAL PHOTOS

Photo credit: Yves Malenfer for Label Dalbin


FRANCE INTER’S LIVE BROADCAST FROM MAC CRETEIL

ym starck dalbin 6 600x352 FRANCE INTERS LIVE BROADCAST FROM MAC CRETEIL

Alternatives, a French radio program focused on independent, modern art, presented by Laurence Pierre and broadcast by France Inter, caught up with Philippe Starck at MAC Créteil Thursday, March 18 the night before his debut on stage for LE SON DE NOUS. The interview was broadcast Saturday, March 20th at 8 pm during Alternatives’ live show from MAC Créteil, when Soundwalk‘s Stephan Crasneanscki and Label Dalbin‘s Eric Dalbin were also interviewed.

Click the audio player to listen to the interview with France Inter’s Alternatives (French only).

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

English recap here!

“It is not a spectacle, nor a performance – it’s an adventure… I am not a singer or a composer; I don’t work with sound, so I am completely outside my professional field and, frankly, outside my comfort zone… [one will see] that I’ve put myself out in the open, to a certain extent…with my friends from Soundwalk, who are obviously the best in the world, we tried to organize everything, but it’s a fact that we never know where it will take us. We know why we’re doing it, what the goal is, but what it will really look like, how it is going to feel…will the end result achieve a meaning for the members of the audience…that we do not know.”

So begins the interview, in which Philippe Starck discusses LE SON DU NOUS and his desire to put himself out of his comfort zone to explore the world of sound. He goes on to say that he has always thought of himself as intuitive, but not intelligent, and that in order to compensate for this lack, he tries always to follow the example of the great literary masters and teachers in seeking to understand the world around him and the laws that control it. He describes his interest in the worlds of water and air, and in exploring their benefits – “So,” he says, “we will cause the air to vibrate” in order to produce a sound, “creating a physical sensation of shock, of sound, of compressed air in your chest. I remember several occasions when this has actually taken my breath away.”

“To create, I listen to sound, paying very close attention. The quality of my projects is directly related to the quality of sound and music that I listen to. If I listen to bad music, or bad sounds, I’ll produce a bad project. I use it as a tool, for me it is a vital element.”

Starck also believes it is vital, “to find the love of your life: a man, a woman, a dog, whatever you want. You have to find your place: a zone of comfort, a place you can express yourself. We put in a lot of effort as well, into finding our color, people dress in purple or orange; it’s evident that we always look for these places. Where sound is concerned, there is an extraordinary paradox. All day, we are on the internet, watching television, and listening to the radio, hearing sound, but we don’t try to understand our relationship with it. Why we are always listening to sound? I think I have an answer: we listen to it all day because we are looking for a place. A place where we feel more assured; we are trying to find the sounds closest to us, the sound that is us, the sound of me.”

“I have spent my life doing this. In my search for these sounds I have found three. The first was 30 years ago in Panaji, India: A vagabond was wandering from shop to shop playing a little flute with a guttural sound: I was paralyzed by it and I new right away that the sound was a part of me. It’s inexplicable. After, I encountered my second sound in a very sophisticated product: the infrasound of Laurie Anderson‘s electronic violin. It is a vibration that you feel in your heart. The third sound I heard on a Sunday afternoon in Brooklyn, in a Williamsburg café. There was a young girl there, she was extraordinarily ugly, and she was terrifying. And then she let out a scream. It was a scream of such beauty, an astonishing scream. I realized that all her ugliness was the means by which she could create such an incredible sound. I was dumbstruck, there were tears in my eyes, I couldn’t help it, I had found my ultimate sound.”

Starck then discusses the concept of LE SON DU NOUS, and the interactive perspective of the primal scream, which the audience was asked to make in culmination of the show. “There are three levels to the performance: I am the presenter, then there is the fabrication of virtual sound made by the artists that have come together from many parts of the world who record and transform sound. Last, we have material sound made by true sound engineers who can capture the falling of snow and the rustling of paper. We will embark on a journey linked to the history of humanity, through sound.”

“The end of the show is what I find fascinating. We will ask the spectators to become actors, and to call upon their sound. We will do the one thing we can all do together: we will scream. We will scream to find a precise sound, at 10:44 pm at MAC Créteil, creating a sound and a moving, physical experience. I hope it will bring people to the same state I was in when I found my ultimate sound in the café in Williamsburg. Some people will leave happier, some will leave less so, but what I hope is for them to leave in a different state. The sound, we will listen to again and then send, encapsulated, into space as something akin to a recording of the primal scream, the sound made when the world was created.”

When asked about his desire to work with sound Starck replies, “Sound has an advantage over other mediums: it’s immaterial. I live in Paris, high up, across from an enormous flag. I’m fascinated by it and its convolutions. What’s too bad is that we look only at the flag itself and forget that the convolutions are ripples, like fluid, like sound. I have a passion for that which is immaterial, though I’ve fallen into working primarily with material goods, and I that is something I am trying to change in my life.”

Alternatives also spoke with Soundwalk founder Stephan Crasneanscki who recounted the steps leading to this collaboration with Starck. 2004′s Nuit Blanche event marked Soundwalk’s first cooperation with the designer, where Crasneanscki says he experienced Starck’s “enthusiasm and incredible generosity, as well as his intense passion for sound and love for music.” Next, came the creation of 24 Hours: the Starck Mix, a gift for the designer consisting of a mix of music and ambient sound, “constructed as a 24 hour sound-story about Philippe Starck; his whole life in one day.”

The soundtrack for the current project draws from Soundwalk’s audio archives over ten years in the making, for which Crasneanscki and the Soundwalk collective have traveled all over the world. “The idea is to recollect all these sounds and to create an adventure, a story, with sound as the principal actor. It is a journey also, through powerful moments in sound.”

Eric Dalbin, head of the contemporary-creation label, Dalbin, producer of LE SON DU NOUS also spoke of the projects leading up to the collaboration, as well as the novelty of the idea. “Neither Philippe Starck nor Soundwalk had ever ventured into the territory of live performance. It was a real challenge, requiring a lot of reflection. It was a huge pleasure to work with Philippe; he is always brimming with enthusiasm, joy, and has a great sense of humor. His relationship with sound is very real and profound.” Dalbin goes on to say that, “this was a very particular type of performance, because the sound is the star.”

Stephan Crasneanscki and Eric Dalbin also spoke about their future projects, including “Ulysses Voyage“, hertz frequency recordings taken while on the Mediterranean Sea following the voyage of Ulysses in Homer’s Odyssey to be presented at the 2010 Universal Exposition in Shanghai, and Collectorserie, an application enabling the purchase and download of video artwork through one’s iphone, which Dalbin refers to as the “democratization of art.”

Photo credit: Yves Malenfer


INTERVIEW: ERIC DALBIN ON CONTEMPORARY CREATION

Dalbin interview  INTERVIEW: ERIC DALBIN ON CONTEMPORARY CREATION

8 LISTEN TO ERIC DALBIN’S INTERVIEW WITH RADIO ALIGRE on dalbin.com (in French only)

Eric Dalbin was invited by Véronique Godé, aka Orevo, for an interview on the radio show “Vive le cinéma” on Aligre FM to discuss Label Dalbin‘s current projects, among them his work with Soundwalk and Philippe Starck for LE SON DU NOUS.

Dalbin initiated, directed and produced LE SON DU NOUS. An independent contemporary creation label founded in 2003 in Paris, Dalbin produces and publishes works of art, events and audiovisual content. They co-produced “Kill the Ego” from Soundwalk to Rostarr, which will be featured in the art collection iPhone app and website Collector Serie on March 21.

In this interview, Eric Dalbin speaks of  the idea of contemporary creation at the heart of his label, which seeks to support and be involved in artworks that cross the boundary between sound and image.

He talks about the artwork and artists that Label Dalbin has been working with in this vein: how he introduced Rostarr to Soundwalk’s Stephan Crasneanscki and Dug Winningham to make “Kill the Ego”, on the appearances of Xavier Veilhan and Sebastien Tellier on the film “Furtivo”…

Eric says of Collector Serie that its theory lies in an aspiration to build a collection of video artworks where sound and image can melt together and form a new media or ‘matière’. He is enthusiastic about the dematerialization of art distribution facilitated by new technologies. Collector Serie artworks will be available online (through the website Collectorserie.com) and on the iPhone/iPad.

Eric Dalbin gives a few sneak peaks into LE SON DU NOUS. Label Dalbin initiated the idea for this performance, an encounter between the designer Philippe Starck and the art collective Soundwalk centered around the quest for the essence of the human sound. LE SON DU NOUS will build a sound narration between Starck and Soundwalk, in which Starck will talk about his passion for sound, while Soundwalk will explore the history of sound, from pre-human sounds to sounds produced by human systems and constructions. This sound dialogue will be enhanced by intrumentalists, sound technicians (‘bruiteurs’), and the audience.

© DR, Photo credits to www.dalbin.com


KILL THE EGO IN JUXTAPOZ MAGAZINE

product large 344353 348x450 KILL THE EGO IN JUXTAPOZ MAGAZINE

Juxtapoz #108 | January 2010

Soundwalk’s Kill the Ego has been listed as one of Juxtapoz Magazine’s Top 100 Moments of 2009.

“Kill the Ego started as a song [of New York] by the sound design team Soundwalk. Insert an epic song [built over ten years of fragmented memories, voices of pimps and engineers, poets and domanitrixes, visionaries and children, hope and sorrow] into Rostarr’s psyche. After some internalizing, mixing with their own hopes, dreams and aesthetic vision, the result is ‘Kill the Ego’.

“The film is a remarkable mix of motion-painting, capturing street sounds, and it plays as this incredible narrative  . . .amazing.” – Eric Pricco

Kill the Ego will be shown at Centre Pompidou, Paris, in February 2010.

View the video here.