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MAKE WHOOPEE ON THE SOUTH BANK
Explore new ways of making music at Street Vibe Festival of Sound
6 June 2008: The world's largest whoopee cushion, carrot whistles,
watermelon drums and a technological makeover for pop star wannabes are
a few of the highlights of the FREE Street Vibe Festival of Sound, 11:30am
- 6:00pm, 14 June at The Scoop, More London - outside City Hall on the
South Bank.
World Record Attempt: 14:20 hrs
Street Vibe (www.streetvibe.org)
is a major free one-off event for all ages that explores the weird and
wonderful role of science and engineering in making music and sound. Extraordinary
live performances in The Scoop and creative workshops in surrounding marquees
invite us to tune our bodies; turn our silhouettes into sounds; slice,
dice and DJ sounds in the Strangeloop lab; and take part in a live orchestral
performance using our bodies as instruments. A big screen will broadcast
visual projections of the sounds and live events including:
- World Record Attempt - Street Vibe's attempt to break the
world record for the largest whoopee cushion ever made. A whopping three
metres in size, it will beat the current record by over a metre. Brave
volunteers will be invited to sit on the enormous 'musical' cushion
to demonstrate just how wind instruments really work.
- Trevor and Steve: Beautiful Music Horrible Sounds -
how performers get the X factor. Girl-boy duo Phluffy Nice and
the not so harmonious Grim Reaper get a much-needed makeover
to explore whether technology really does have the potential to make
or break their bid for fame and fortune.
- Get musical with the grow-your-own orchestra - Whether it's
a marrow-harp or coconut maracas, it's yours to make and play in the
Sound Factory, a workshop where just about anything can become
a musical instrument.
- Squid Soup - Freq2 - What you see is what you hear when Freq
takes the outline of our silhouette and turns it into a sound. Freq2
takes these sounds and throws them in the mix - looping and layering
to create a one off musical performance.
- Heart Beats, Rhythms and Street Vibes - Composer and musician,
Eugene Skeef and Physicist Steve Mesure will conduct a live orchestral
performance with our bodies as the instruments. It will explore the
different tones that can be made by our own bodies alongside the instruments
that the audiences will have made for the day.
Jane Reck from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
said: "Street Vibe aims to highlight the importance of engineering
and the many different ways in which it can be used our everyday lives.
It offers visitors the chance to participate in a fantastic range of innovative
events and performances and is a great way for people to realise how fun
and creative engineering can be."
Street Vibe is funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research
Council and managed by Kallaway. For more information including a full
programme of events, please visit www.streetvibe.org
Ends
For further press information please contact
Katie Jackson:
020 7221 7883 / 07846 339594
katie.jackson@kallaway.co.uk
Notes to Editors
The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) is
the UK's main agency for funding research in engineering and the physical
sciences. The EPSRC invests around £800 million a year in research
and postgraduate training, to help the nation handle the next generation
of technological change. The areas covered range from information technology
to structural engineering, and mathematics to materials science. This
research forms the basis for future economic development in the UK and
improvements for everyone's health, lifestyle and culture. EPSRC also
actively promotes public awareness of science and engineering. EPSRC works
alongside other Research Councils with responsibility for other areas
of research. The Research Councils work collectively on issues of common
concern via Research Councils UK. Website address for more information
on EPSRC: www.epsrc.ac.uk
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