Plymouth University launches radical Sonic Artwork ‘Fathom'
UK - A sonic sea level which immerses audiences beneath the ocean waves - without getting wet - and then allows them to climb steps to emerge to a different sonic atmosphere has been unveiled at the launch of a major new cultural festival celebrating the River Tamar.

Fathom is a new 'sonic artwork' by Plymouth University media arts specialists Jane Grant and Dr. John Matthias. In an attempt to bring one of the country's most diverse waterways into sharp focus they used new generation technology to create an artificial surface 6ft above the floor of a 17th century Royal Navy victualing yard. Anyone that understands the challenge in creating two distinct sonic experiences in the same space will know this is no small feat - and it is Martin Audio's award-winning technology that has made this possible.

The company's Multi-cellular Loudspeaker Array (MLA), supplied by RG Jones, with lighting and staging by Pyramid AV, was used to transmit a combination of live and recorded sounds, enabling visitors to walk around and hear the sounds below the surface of the estuary. They were also able to lift their heads above the Fathom to hear the sounds above the water.

This commission was the centrepiece of a public event to launch It's All About the River, a year-long project to celebrate the historical, cultural and industrial importance of the River Tamar, which forms the border between Devon and Cornwall. This site-specific art work, utilising the confluence of the River Tamar and immersing the Old Factory Cooperage at Royal William Yard in sound, formed part of the two week long Ocean City Festival.

Producer of the event and masterminding the audio production was experienced sound engineer Simon Honywill, who has lectured for many years at the nearby Deep Blue Sound and has been a strong advocate of Martin Audio's breakthrough technology since it was launched. Underwater sound recording technology was provided by Thomas Gordon at VP Marine.

Speaking of his involvement in the project, Honywill said, "Of all the challenges I have had in my career - and there have been many - it is fitting that my home town of Plymouth should come up with the most intriguing, demanding and wholly satisfying piece of work I can remember."

He explains, "The city rests between two estuaries, the Plym and the Tamar, and despite the fact that the Plym gave up its name to the city, it is the seemingly bottomless Tamar that is the major waterway, dividing Devon from Cornwall. It is now, whilst still a busy waterway, a common thread for a wide group of artists of many kinds, and it is art that unexpectedly brought the Tamar and Martin Audio's MLA system together."

The challenge took him on an empirical journey into the unknown, as recordings were made out on the river by the two artists. "Some were familiar sonic events, some less so ... but how many get to hear them below the waves?" he asks rhetorically. The recordings were to be complemented with live input from a pair of hydrophones, electrical instruments for detecting or monitoring sound under water, which delivered a constant picture of the activity down in the deep throughout an entire weekend.

"The key element of Fathom that John and Jane wanted to convey was the divide between water and air, and Jane's concept was to create a boundary at 1 fathom (6ft 6in) from the floor where visitors to the piece could climb steps and emerge from the sonic water into the very different atmosphere above. It was up to me to find a way of achieving this convincingly."

He immediately knew that the answer lay in the ground-breaking Martin Audio MLA - designed to accurately place sound where it is required, and keep it away from where it is not. "It was the only way I could even start to generate the kind of sharp cut-off that this unique project demanded, and the only system I am aware of that can be programmed to make deep holes in its coverage."

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