Feature Article: Who Pays for the Art? by Alan Chen

Who Pays for the Art?             Mannequins and animal taxidermy dangles above the ground at various heights around you. Once the sun dips below the horizon, you see multiple points on the levitated bodies light up. You notice that you … Continue reading

Horror Video Theatrical StoryTelling By DNA

Produced and brought to you by DNA: Donald Fung Nick Djamalidinov Alan Chen Here is the video: Play it on 1080 HD for the highest quality. Citations concerning music: WildFunAwesome. “Horror Movie – Jump Scare Sound Effects (2) LQ.” Online … Continue reading

Audio

Asian Happiness (Age and Happiness) Sound Sculpture by D.N.A.

This sound sculpture describes the relationship between our age and happiness. As we grow older, our ability to achieve happiness becomes increasingly complex. Our sculpture spans from infancy to elderly. Happiness comes to infants and children easily. At the beginning of our sculpture, we decided to include clapping sounds to indicate a simpler form of happiness. Children require the approval of their parents to achieve happiness and clapping is usually seen as a sign of approval. Children don’t have to work for this type of approval either. They can sit there and do nothing, but still receive positive reinforcement. After the clapping, we added more complex sounds. The addition of sounds are gradual, at one point there are three sounds playing at once. This period represents the development from the infant period to the teenage years.

Most people experience a time of confusion during their teenage years. Teenagers want to experience happiness, but at this point in life they require more to be happy. The simple approval of their parents is simply not enough anymore. They might want more material items or have a desire to fulfill their goals. Everyone’s happiness is different, but without a doubt, it will not remain the same as when they were children.

Around the 36 second mark, when the song becomes more upbeat and loud, it indicates adulthood. When people becomes adults, they gain more freedom than ever before. This freedom is directly related to the choices they can make to be happy. Adults enter this entirely new world, where they face decision more complex than ever to determine their happiness. We intentionally made the music seem like a mess of sounds to portray the complexities of happiness during adulthood. At 45 seconds we have a female voice that talks about love, which resembles the need for humans to have social contact or companions.

After the reference to love we enter the old age. Happiness is still confusing at an elderly age, but more understood than before. The slowing of sounds portray a closure to ones life. The childish laughter towards the end of the piece is an allusion to a new form of happiness taking the form of children or grandchildren. Most of the sound sculpture sounds upbeat and happy because as we age, we have more chances to be happy. Towards the end, it becomes more calm and the volume lowers. This is suppose to be a bittersweet moment, when old age limits happiness, but the elderly have the new generation to look forward to and bring them happiness. We made our interpretation of happiness and age as general as possible with the exception of love and children. Most people experience this change in complexity between happiness as they grow older.

 

Created by D.N.A.
Donald Fung, Nick Djamalidinov, Alan Chen

Work Citied:

Beethoven, Ludwig van. Moonlight Sonata. Crownstar, 2006. MP3.

Coldplay. Viva La Vida. Parlophone and Capital Records, 13 June. 2008. MP3.

Girl’s Generation. I Got a Boy. S.M. Entertainment, 1 Jan. 2013. MP3.

Imagine Dragon. It’s Time. Interscope Records, 18 Aug. 2012. MP3.

Jun, Maeda and Yanagi Nagi. Last Smile. Geneon Universal Entertainment, Feb. 2012. MP3.

Macklemore and Ryan Lewis Feat. Mary Lambert. Same Love. Macklemore LLC, 18       Jul. 2012. MP3.

Shinhwa. Venus. Shinhwa Company, 23 Mar. 2012. MP3.

System S.F. Feat. Anna. Look At the Sky. Konami, 29 Oct. 2002. MP3.