Heard on NPR鈥檚 All Things Considered - CRESCENDO: Turning environmental impact data into music
A musical piece created from environmental data was presented at a 新澳门六合彩内幕信息Symphonic Band & Wind Ensemble concert on Feb. 6. The music is written in two parts: Sanctuary, which represents the coral reef under seige and Cardinal Flow that takes you through the ups and downs of red tide.
By , University Communications and Marketing
When Heather O鈥橪eary started attending concerts held by USF鈥檚 School of Music in 2021, she loved how the performances made her feel.
As an anthropologist, she was moved and inspired by the ebb and flow of the music. She often wondered: could her own data touching on environmental impacts be turned into music that people could enjoy and understand?
鈥淚 was listening to all this beautiful music and thinking about my research and what I do every day,鈥 said O鈥橪eary, assistant professor of Anthropology at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息St. Petersburg. 鈥淚 was thinking how sound could make my spreadsheets come alive. The challenge was making sense out of 50 columns of data that span over three years.鈥
Earlier this month, that challenge was met. O鈥橪eary鈥檚 research data on the depletion of coral reefs due to Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease and the impact of Harmful Algae Blooms on coastal economies was converted and performed as a piece of music by the university鈥檚 Symphonic Band & Wind Ensemble.
The collaboration began with the publication of a paper. O鈥橪eary was part of a that found the red tide bloom in Florida from 2017-2019 cost tourism-related businesses an estimated $2.7 billion. The findings were significant, but the data was difficult to understand by non-experts.
Thinking back to the music, O鈥橪eary loaded her spreadsheets into a sonification machine, which converted the data into sound. She thought it was exciting but not exactly what she was hoping for. So, she reached out to her colleague Matt McCutchen in USF鈥檚 College of the Arts.
Continue reading on
- Hear CRESCENDO on NPR's