Note: If you see this text you use a browser which does not support usual Web-standards. Therefore the design of Media Art Net will not display correctly. Contents are nevertheless provided. For greatest possible comfort and full functionality you should use one of the recommended browsers.
 
Max Neuhaus «Public Supply I»
Max Neuhaus, «Public Supply I», 1966
Photography | © Max Neuhaus
Copyright: Max Neuhaus


 
Max Neuhaus «Public Supply I»Max Neuhaus «Public Supply I» | play audioMax Neuhaus «Public Supply I» | play audio

Keywords: Space | Surveillance

Relevant passages:

icon: authorGolo Föllmer «Audio Art» | 2

Works by Max Neuhaus:

Drive In Music| Maxfeed| Radio Net


United States | communication project in public space
 

 Max Neuhaus
«Public Supply I»

For «Public Supply I,» Max Neuhaus confined his role as musician to that of a «catalyst for sound-producing activities,» using the largest existing network, the telephone network, which had about 500 million subscribers at the time. Using technology he had constructed himself, he was able to mix calls coming in to ten telephones in the studios of the WBAI radio station in New York in different ways, and then broadcast this melange of listeners' sounds and noises. Once the listeners who called in had switched their radios on, he played with the feedback this produced and bundled sounds from introverted and extroverted callers together.

»I realized I could open a large door into the radio studio with the telephone; if I installed telephone lines in the studio, anybody could sonically walk in from any telephone. At that time there were no live call-in shows. […] Although I was not able to articulate it in 1966, now, after having worked with this idea for a long time and talked about it and thought about it, it seems that what these works are really about is proposing to reinstate a kind of music which we have forgotten about and which is perhaps the original impulse for music in man: not making a musical product to be listened to, but forming a dialogue, a dialogue without language, a sound dialogue.»
(Source: Max Neuhaus, «Rundfunkarbeiten und Audium,» in: Transit (publ.), Zeitgleich, Vienna 1994, pp. 21–23)

 

Golo Föllmer