Vibrations and how they get to your ears.
Noise for airports is a blog about culture, sound, music, and technology.
You can filter the posts to see just things I wrote or made.
Updated (sometimes) by Nick Seaver.

Jinsheng Wang’s turntable sculptures:
The products in this line use three salvaged turntables two that have been converted to gardens and the third that plays vinyl. I accidentally became a collector of old radios and turntables because in the 1990s it was expensive and difficult to buy parts, so I decided to buy old turntables for parts. Moreover, I have always liked the physical appearance of them. Now, I understand that I was attracted to their basic geometry: the circle, the line or arm and the cube.
(via PSFK)

Score for a Hole in the Ground is an installation in a forest, “near the village of Challock in Kent.” It consists of this large phonograph-like cone connected to a pipe that descends into a well. The dripping sounds from the wet environment (and nearby pond) are broadcast by the cone, producing aleatory music from the environment.
It’s a beautiful installation, and you can see more lovely pictures and hear how it sounds at the project’s web site.
(via oddstrument)
Wet Sounds is an underwater sound art gallery.(via Everyday Listening)
A DEEP LISTENING EXPERIENCE
Touring swimming pools in the UK and abroad it presents sound art nd music collages to the public outside the niche gallery setting. The audience floats and dives, ears submerged, immersed in sound.