Jasmine Guffond: Microphone PermissionJasmine Guffond: Microphone PermissionJasmine Guffond: Microphone PermissionJasmine Guffond: Microphone Permission

Jasmine Guffond: Microphone Permission

Explorative Neo-Classical / Drone / Electronica works (w/ download code)

"Editions Mego is proud to release the new album by Australian producer Jasmine Guffond. Developed over a two year period, Microphone Permission is an unsettling musical journey utilising contemporary tools of communication to display Guffond’s ongoing research into online surveillance and sound as a method of investigation.
Source material on Microphone Permission are from various projects Guffond has been working on; a commission to sonify the data of the city of Melbourne, a dance performance about the future sounds of an extinct forest, an installation that sonifies Twitter meta data in real time, a job as a composer for a theatre work about music and feminism by five young female identifying performers in Western Sydney and a site specific installation at the Linachtalsperre dam that employed the harmonic frequen- cies of electric currents.
The results are a stark, brooding, disorientating journey into a paranoid musical field that sits somewhere between ambient club music and a dystopian soundtrack. Ele- ments of techno, classical music and sound art form a dark intriguing masterwork that questions the nature of invasive, algorithmic and computational listening practices.
For example Microphone Permission refers to the consent we routinely give when in- stalling various apps. onto our smart devices. Inspired by a 2018 scandal in which fans of Spain’s most popular soccer team were effectively turned into unwitting spies by granting the La Liga application microphone permission. No matter which make or model, all smart devices are built with a microphone that is by default, forever listen- ing. Listening in these situations often takes on an algorithmic form that enables tech developers to bypass public response to what is intuitively considered invasive prac- tice, that is, traditional modes of eavesdropping such as using the microphone to lis- ten and record audio."

Jasmine Guffond: Microphone Permission

Jasmine Guffond: Microphone Permission

Explorative Neo-Classical / Drone / Electronica works

Forever Listening9:10AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25
Dotcompound10:10AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25
Default Cultures3:33AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25
An Utterly Dark Spot12:16AIFF € 1.75MP3 € 1.25

"Editions Mego is proud to release the new album by Australian producer Jasmine Guffond. Developed over a two year period, Microphone Permission is an unsettling musical journey utilising contemporary tools of communication to display Guffond’s ongoing research into online surveillance and sound as a method of investigation.
Source material on Microphone Permission are from various projects Guffond has been working on; a commission to sonify the data of the city of Melbourne, a dance performance about the future sounds of an extinct forest, an installation that sonifies Twitter meta data in real time, a job as a composer for a theatre work about music and feminism by five young female identifying performers in Western Sydney and a site specific installation at the Linachtalsperre dam that employed the harmonic frequen- cies of electric currents.
The results are a stark, brooding, disorientating journey into a paranoid musical field that sits somewhere between ambient club music and a dystopian soundtrack. Ele- ments of techno, classical music and sound art form a dark intriguing masterwork that questions the nature of invasive, algorithmic and computational listening practices.
For example Microphone Permission refers to the consent we routinely give when in- stalling various apps. onto our smart devices. Inspired by a 2018 scandal in which fans of Spain’s most popular soccer team were effectively turned into unwitting spies by granting the La Liga application microphone permission. No matter which make or model, all smart devices are built with a microphone that is by default, forever listen- ing. Listening in these situations often takes on an algorithmic form that enables tech developers to bypass public response to what is intuitively considered invasive prac- tice, that is, traditional modes of eavesdropping such as using the microphone to lis- ten and record audio."