The World Soundscape Project (WSP) was established as an educational and research group by R. Murray Schafer at ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV during the late 1960s and early 1970s. It grew out of Schafer's initial attempt to draw attention to the sonic environment through a course in noise pollution, as well as from his personal distaste for the more raucous aspects of Vancouver's rapidly changing soundscape. This work resulted in two small educational booklets, The New Soundscape and , plus a compendium of Canadian noise bylaws. However, the negative approach that noise pollution inevitably fosters suggested that a more positive approach had to be found, the first attempt being an extended essay by Schafer (in 1973) called 'The Music of the Environment,' in which he describes examples of acoustic design, good and bad, drawing largely on examples from literature.
The WSP group at ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV, 1973; left to right: R. M. Schafer, Bruce Davis, Peter Huse, Barry Truax, Howard Broomfield and Hildegard Westerkamp (see photo below)
(also see the "acoustic crew", 2010, recreating this iconic photo)Schafer's call for the establishment of the WSP was answered by a group of highly motivated young composers and students, and, supported by The Donner Canadian Foundation, the group embarked first on a detailed study of the immediate locale, published as , and in 1973, on a cross-Canada recording tour by Bruce Davis and Peter Huse, the recordings from which formed the basis of the CBC Ideas radio series Soundscapes of Canada. In 1975, Schafer led a larger group on a European tour that included lectures and workshops in several major cities, and a research project that made detailed investigations of the soundscape of five villages, one in each of Sweden, Germany, Italy, France and Scotland. The tour completed the WSP's analogue tape library which includes more than 300 tapes recorded in Canada and Europe with a stereo Nagra. The work also produced two publications, a narrative account of the trip called European Sound Diary and a detailed soundscape analysis called Five Village Soundscapes. Schafer's definitive soundscape text, The Tuning of the World published in 1977, and Barry Truax's reference work for acoustic and soundscape terminology, the Handbook for Acoustic Ecology published in 1978, completed the publication phase of the original project.
In 2009 the Five Village Soundscapes was reprinted (with 2 CDs) along with the results of the Finnish study (Acoustic Environments in Change) that re-visited those sites. The publication is available through Granum. In addition, the HTML Soundscape Composition Documentation DVD-ROM also published in 2009 contains sound excerpts and graphics from all of the WSP documents.
The WSP group in the churchyard, Dollar (Scotland), 1975. Left to right: R. M. Schafer, Jean Reed, Bruce Davis (standing), Peter Huse, Howard Broomfield.
Howard Broomfield at ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV, ca. 1972
Bruce Davis & Peter Huse recording at ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV, ca. 1972. The foundation laid by the WSP has been continued through the teaching and research program in acoustic communication at ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV, as well as through Truax's 1984 publication Acoustic Communication (second edition, 2001), which deals with all aspects of sound and the impact of technology, and the compositions of individual composers. One such composer, , edited the Soundscape Newsletter (1991-95) and Soundscape – The Journal of Acoustic Ecology (2000-2012), and was instrumental in helping found the in 1993 that connects groups and individuals around the world who are concerned with the soundscape.
In 1997, the World Soundscape Project and Cambridge Street Records re-issued the original Vancouver Soundscape recordings from 1973, along with the 1996 soundscape compositions and documentary Soundscape Vancouver 1996, on a double CD. The same year, Truax served on the City of Vancouver's Urban Noise Taskforce and contributed to the educational recommendations of its final report, Urban Noise. In 1999, Cambridge Street Publishing issued the original Handbook as a CD-ROM.
The catalogue of the WSP Tape Library (including photos from many of the recording sites) and the Sound References in Literature database is available on the , along with historical and recent photos of the studio. An extensive collection of the print, graphic and audio documents related to the World Soundscape Project including the entire collection of sound recordings from 1972 to the present, plus interviews and videos, is also available online as the WSP Database. Please contact Barry Truax (truax@sfu.ca) for guest access.
Hildegard Westerkamp with the WSP Tape Library, ca. 1982.
Related sites:
Soundscape Explorations Video Collection: