Yesterday I had a unique hiking experience. A music student from a local university composed an hour-long piece of music with more than 8 instruments. The music was based on the noises of different creatures in the wild as recorded by local wildlife researchers. So a different instrument was assigned to each noise. Yesterday, several musicians were placed in the valley of this hiking trail where the noises had originally occurred but that were now replaced with the sounds of their instruments. While this occurred, a small group of us hiked the trail.

It really did feel like the musicians were wild animals occasionally making noise in the wild. It was also an interesting experiment in keeping time with other musicians at great distances and playing off of each other. (There was an element of improvisation as well.) It ended in a culmination of them playing together, like the forest coming alive.

I wouldn’t buy the album, but I loved the wackiness and uniqueness of the experience and I feel like we need more of this in the world.

#BeSilly
#WackinessNow

EDIT: Adding a video sample.

@LoganFive wow!!!

@Aphelion @LoganFive

yes, exactly: wow!

i was having troulble finding the words to express my amazment. lucky for us, we have such a great poet with us here.

p.s. forgive my snark, @Aphelion you really are great.

@LoganFive sounds like a contemporary performance! What an experience! 👏🏼 (your description took me there!)
@LoganFive That is briliantly gorgeous. You're so lucky. But I understand not buying the album.

@LoganFive

I absolutely love this

@LoganFive

Also just having a little laugh to myself imagining a cellist hiding in the tall grass

@LoganFive

Accosted by a flautist. Stalked by a timpanist.

@TheBreadmonkey 😂 It. Was. Unique.

@LoganFive

Percussionists hiding in the trees with their triangles

@TheBreadmonkey Stay alert! Trombonists are in the area!

@LoganFive

Hot cymbals in your local area

@TheBreadmonkey Is that a flautist? Very rare to see one this time of year. They’ve usually migrated to the Phil Harmonic by now.
@TheBreadmonkey Do not feed the oboists! They will become dependent on you for food and then will not be able to survive in the wild!

@LoganFive

They'll have to live in a (ka)zoo

@TheBreadmonkey @LoganFive it's rutting season for the timpanists

(it's always rutting season for the timpanists. Horny buggers)

@http_error_418 @TheBreadmonkey @LoganFive Supporting data point: a timpanist who got his wife and his mistress pregnant at the same time.
Supporting anecdote: numbers of timpanists who do a pretend drum roll to underscore their entering a bedroom.

@BashStKid @http_error_418 @TheBreadmonkey @LoganFive speaking as a former timpanist, yes I was horny, but I was at least monogamous

And I definitely didn't get anyone knocked up (including myself)

@LoganFive @TheBreadmonkey Flautists are so ditzy they often forget to migrate.
@LoganFive @TheBreadmonkey If you come upon a bassoonist, back away slowly, is my advice.
@mykl @TheBreadmonkey
Make sure you count the fingering on the brass section to make sure they’re not poisonous.
@mykl @LoganFive @TheBreadmonkey We bassoonists are actually very tame. You only have to worry if you call my instrument an oboe.
@Queenofpalms @mykl @LoganFive @TheBreadmonkey Side note: I think overuse of the word “bassoonists” may cause shortages of the letter “s”.
@whybird @Queenofpalms @mykl @LoganFive @TheBreadmonkey Especially bassoonists from Sassafras.
@level98 @Queenofpalms @mykl @LoganFive @TheBreadmonkey But will Ben rename himself “Ben’s bassoonists from Sassafras playing Sussudio” or not? Ssssssstay tuned…
@LoganFive @TheBreadmonkey Watch out for the tromboners, too.
@LoganFive @TheBreadmonkey This guide may help you identify the spit instruments should you come upon them in their native habitat.
@Queenofpalms @LoganFive @TheBreadmonkey
If your child takes up the clarinet, they will always wait until the music store closes to tell you they are out of reeds and they have a big concert tomorrow.

@TheBreadmonkey @LoganFive

There's that musician with the horn just behind that bush.

@LoganFive
i did a hike similar to this that was part of a music festival

but it wasn't based off animal sounds, that's dope

@LoganFive Peter and the Wolf?
@Burn_this_ More like the warm up before the performance.
@LoganFive What a unique experience to have been in person for.
@Crazypedia I’m grateful to have had it.

@LoganFive

Oooh a floor tom cat!

@LoganFive That's kind of neat.

One of my favourite albums in highschool was Graeme Revell's, "The Insect Musicians," which is entirely composed from field recordings of insects.

The equipment he was using was relatively primitive by today's standards, and I feel like the album could be done better now, but it was a cool project.