An Exploration Of Elevator Music At The Blanton – KUT

SoundSpace, the ongoing hybrid art series produced by Steve Parker at UTs Blanton Museum of Art, returns this weekend withNot Bad Muzak,a new installment inspired by elevator music and its close cousin, telephone on-hold music.

It aligns with a current exhibition by Ed Ruscha at the museum, Parker says. [Ruscha] uses text a lot in his work, and he often paints landscapes in the back. The text is the subject but the landscape in the back he refers to as elevator music."

Ruschas work inspired Parker to delve into the world of Muzak.

Elevator music was originally developed to manipulate behavior, Parker says. To soothe nerves in the elevator, to increase worker productivity in the factory, and also to get people to buy more things at the shopping malls. And were just looking at the different ways in which sound and music is used to manipulate human behavior.

To that end, Parker has partnered with radio producer Yowei Shaw to create what they callReally Good Elevator Music.

Weve commissioned a few different artists to create new elevator music for the Blantons elevator, Parker says. As you are travelling up and down on the Blantons elevator, youll experience new elevator music [that] at time has verbal prompts. Im most looking forward to audience reactions and what this new elevator music gets people to do, and what sort of interactions are facilitated as a result.

Among the other artists taking part inSoundSpace: Not Bad Muzakis choreographer Jennifer Sherburn, who is devising a new piece inspired by her complicated reaction to on-hold music.

When we started talking about elevator music or call center hold music, I realized that theres two versions of myself when Im on hold. One is, I quickly get mad and want to rebel and break things," she says. "And the other is, I just allow myself to get tugged away to a dream state, much like [when] you plunge into a pool of water and everything just kind of changes. So Im going to play with both of those things with movement.

Sherburns piece will be set to a new piece of music created by her brother Justin Sherburn, with whom she frequently collaborates.

Hes stoked about elevator music, Jennifer says. [And] whats cool is that if he goes into the direction Im thinking, its something he doesnt normally make, period. So itll be pretty refreshing for the both of us.

"SoundSpace: Not Bad Muzak" is Sunday, January 26 at 2:00 pm at the B;lanton Museum of Art.

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An Exploration Of Elevator Music At The Blanton - KUT

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