I’m listening to all these sound walks as research, but I’m not out walking, I’m at my desk. How can I be a good listener without this condition? What does the sound need from me for it to be fulfilled?
Just as podcast audio tends to map itself onto radio’s demands for immediate hooks (don’t turn the dial) and standard periods of time (the half hour, the hour-long, the commute-length, when we we commuted), the audio for audio walks has its own environment that supports its duration, its mood, its density, how it gets deployed in time—it assumes the underlying meter of a walk, a steady space of both practical navigation and mental drift. (Maybe also fair to say most of these audio walks assume the underlying meter of an uninterrupted stretch of time, a stretch of time not permeable to work and messaging.)
Anyway, I found myself needing to do two things at once because of schedule crunch. One of those things was listen to an audio walk. The other was trace some images and ink them in for a book I’m making. It turns out to be an excellent way to listen. There is some analogue in the attentive but automatic physical activity of tracing and inking.
What kind of physical presence does your audio walk assume? What are all the ways we drift in low gear, in the manner of walking?
This is a question about how to do research without losing our minds to the internet’s distraction, assuming we’re constantly faced with a device that can divert us. But it’s also about thinking about how a certain array of physical activities, walking among them, act as a container and support, in the same way that a theater does—using its lights, its architectures of attention.