Yorkshire Post

Birds and bard: a sound idea to celebrate nature

Leafcutter John mixed people’s favourite outdoor noises in lockdown with interviews to create a soundtrack

- ALEXANDRA WOOD NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: alex.wood@jpress.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

FOR MANY, getting outside for a breath of fresh air during lockdown has never been more important and never more appreciate­d.

Which probably explains why, when musician Leafcutter John put out a call for the outdoor sounds that meant the most to people, 13 hours of field recordings poured in.

Including a woodpecker hammering, wind turbine blades swishing, and a torrential downpour, snippets of sound have been woven into a “patchwork” soundtrack by the Bradford-born sound artist.

Mingled with interviews featuring poet Ian McMillan, among others, Lockdown Patchwork, reflects the varied ways people have experience­d nature in a unique – and for some uniquely challengin­g – year.

Leafcutter John said it was hard to pick out a favourite sound: “People were very forthcomin­g in providing personal back stories for the sounds they sent me.

“This meant I could find beauty in all of the sounds, whether they were made on a high-end recorder or just a phone.

“It’s the context and personal reflection that makes each piece magical.”

Among the sounds he was

sent was a “really drippy and wet-sounding” recording made during a spectacula­r downpour at Hirst Wood, Shipley, while another was the dawn chorus at Wheldrake Ings, near York. Another contributo­r, from Harrogate, described getting up in the early hours in a turmoil over the pandemic, the impact on his business and turning 50 – but then going out into the garden and hearing the life-affirming crescendo of birdsong.

Meanwhile, for beatboxer and sound artist Jason Singh, a walk in the woods, even with the constant hum of the M60 in the distance, was calming and restorativ­e.

He said: “Hearing the wings of moths was incredible.”

Not everyone has been able to get out and about. Musician Ally Craig, who wrote a series of haikus for the piece, has been shielding at his home in Oxford since last March for health reasons. The tops of the trees from his back door is about all the green he can see.

Leafcutter John said: “I think people take different stuff from it. I think most people feel kind of reassured by hearing that their worries are not unusual.”

It also, he says, shows up the discrepanc­y between those who can access greenspace and those who can’t, and the lack of support for people with disabiliti­es.

The hour-long piece, released at 7pm on March 25 on the artist’s You Tube channel, includes a hand-drawn map showing where each recording was made, who recorded it and where it appears in the artwork.

The piece was commission­ed by Huddersfie­ld Contempora­ry Music Festival and Leeds Art Gallery, which will also host the project on its website at the same time. The gallery’s principal keeper, Sarah Brown, said: “Lockdown Patchwork is created entirely from crowd-sourced musical work and is a poignant time-capsule of a collection of sounds and music relating to our relationsh­ip with nature and green spaces during the pandemic.”

People provided back stories for the sounds they sent me. Leafcutter John asked for the outdoor sounds that meant the most to people.

 ?? PICTURE: KATHERINE MAGER ?? MAP: To accompany the soundtrack, this map shows where each recording was made, who recorded it, and where it appears in the artwork.
PICTURE: KATHERINE MAGER MAP: To accompany the soundtrack, this map shows where each recording was made, who recorded it, and where it appears in the artwork.
 ??  ?? LOCKDOWN PATCHWORK: Leafcutter John’s work reflects the ways people have experience­d nature in a unique year.
LOCKDOWN PATCHWORK: Leafcutter John’s work reflects the ways people have experience­d nature in a unique year.

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