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WSNS
United Kingdom
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Field Recording
Field recording is the practice and genre of capturing sounds in situ—outside the studio—using portable recording equipment. It centers on documenting environments, human activities, wildlife, weather, machinery, rituals, and music as they actually occur, often with minimal intervention. As a listening genre, field recording foregrounds place and presence. Releases may present unprocessed, extended takes (e.g., a shoreline at dawn), or carefully edited sequences that map a soundwalk, a village festival, or a factory floor. The results range from documentary-style fidelity to abstract, immersive soundscapes that emphasize texture, spatiality, and the ecology of sound.
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Non-Music
Non-music is an umbrella category for recorded audio whose primary purpose is not musical performance. It encompasses spoken word, speeches, interviews, poetry readings, comedy, audio documentaries, instructional recordings, field recordings, sound effects, and other forms of organized sound meant to inform, narrate, document, or entertain without relying on melody or conventional song structure. Rather than emphasizing harmony, rhythm, and instrumentation, non-music foregrounds voice, text, ambient sound, narrative flow, informational content, and sonic texture. Its aesthetics range from raw, unedited actuality to highly produced studio works, and its scope spans archival preservation, education, performance art, and mass entertainment.
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Sermon
Sermon is a spoken, often improvised, religious oratory recorded as audio, frequently captured live in church services. It centers on scripture exposition, moral exhortation, and personal testimony, delivered with rhetorical devices such as call-and-response, repetition, and dynamic vocal "whooping" that escalates toward a climactic close. While sermons can be purely unaccompanied speech, many historic recordings include musical underscoring—Hammond organ pads, piano punctuations, tambourine, and congregational or choir interjections—to mirror and intensify the preacher’s cadence. The genre’s most documented sound world comes from African American church traditions, where preaching overlaps with gospel aesthetics and communal participation.
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Sound Art
Sound art is an interdisciplinary practice that treats sound itself as the primary artistic material, often prioritizing listening, space, and context over conventional musical form. It commonly appears as installations, sculptures, site‑specific works, and conceptual pieces presented in galleries, museums, and public spaces rather than on a traditional stage. Rather than focusing on melody, harmony, or beat, sound art emphasizes timbre, texture, perception, and spatialization. Works may use field recordings, environmental sound, feedback, room acoustics, silence, psychoacoustic phenomena, or generative and interactive systems. The listener’s movement, the architecture, and the social environment frequently become integral to the piece, encouraging attentive, situation‑based listening.
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Speech
Speech is a non-music recording category focused on intelligible spoken language rather than melody, harmony, or meter. It encompasses political addresses, public announcements, news bulletins, commemorations, and other forms of formal oratory captured as audio. Unlike spoken word poetry or stand-up comedy, the emphasis in speech recordings is on clear rhetoric, message delivery, and documentary value. The production prioritizes intelligibility, natural prosody, and sonic transparency, often avoiding musical accompaniment so that content remains archival, reference-grade, and contextually faithful. From wax cylinders and shellac discs to radio tape, cassettes, digital broadcast, and streaming archives, speech has been a core use-case of audio media, preserving moments of civic life, cultural change, and history in their original voices.
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Melodding was created as a tribute to
Every Noise at Once
, which inspired us to help curious minds keep digging into music's ever-evolving genres.