

The audio work across Deadhouse takes us from a futuristic lab to an imagined afterlife. Lucy Rose: the sound-track to my early 2010s her last album in 2019 was the perfect. Listening to Deadhouse, with yourself at the centre of whatever is happening, is challenging but thoroughly engaging. Lucy Rose performs Shiver in Binaural Audio. Creating a binaural (3-D) soundscape, sound designer David Rosenberg brilliantly captures a sense of time and place: The bubbling of a stove during Salem the stomach-churning, but highly visceral, reproduction of a body decomposing snatches of conversation just out of earshot a curious but unfriendly dog, snuffling around you. Deadhouse certainly makes an impact in terms of sensation, but better narrative cohesion would have made the experience work on both a technical and artistic level.ĭeadhouse as an audio immersive experience, however, completely convinces. Themes and motives are unresolved, and as a result, the trilogy as a whole feels unsatisfying. While Deadhouse asks interesting questions, the shorts never really give us time to break apart what is being asked. Voiced by Kenneth Cranham, Xanadu imagines an afterlife from ancient myth to an intensely graphic exploration of how the body dissolves and decays. He takes us through the dying process, we hear our own funeral service, the sound of earth being heaped on a coffin lid. The listener again is the focus of the story – Death whispers in our ear. Rosenberg and Neath ask whether consciousness outlives the human body. The last in the trilogy – Xanadu – is the most abstract piece, and comes with an intriguing premise. The voice (calm, soporific) tells us to take the knife into the bedroom, where the residents lie sleeping. Important note: Headphones are essential. There is a knife placed on the kitchen counter. 2021-10 Topics Binaural, BBC Audio Experience, Horror, Darkfield Language English Audio File Quality: 128kbps The BBC and Darkfield present an unnerving trilogy of immersive binaural experiences. The hypnotic voice guides us into a lift, and down a corridor. Through the silence, a disembodied voice urges us to listen to them “and nothing else”. The listener is one of them: The director of the facility (Lanna Joffrey) and technician, Frank (Amit Shah) are under pressure to produce results, but the experiment isn’t going to plan.įor the second short, Salem, we are in a location, unconnected to the first. Bethlehem is a medical facility that aims to revive dead bodies.

But as we overhear dialogue, it becomes clear we are in a lab. We are presented with sounds that suggest we are in a hospital. Connected by an interest in the mind and body, where they meet, where they diverge, the Deadhouse trilogy explores these expansive themes by digging down into scenarios of nightmarish unreality.īethlehem is the first: we are urged to listen to Deadhouse with headphones on, with no other distractions. The brainchild of artistic directors David Rosenberg and Glen Neath, Deadhouse is a bold, inventive experiment that places the listener at the heart of the stories. Told across three episodes ( Bethlehem, Salem and Xanadu), the Deadhouse trilogy is an immersive radio project with a difference. Directors: David Rosenberg and Glen Neath
