Do you know about the “Great Animal Orchestra“? Rachel Donadio at the NY Times has the story.
“The bioacoustician and musician Bernie Krause has been recording soundscapes of the natural world since 1968, from coral reefs to elephant stamping grounds to the Amazonian rain forest.
“Now, Mr. Krause’s recordings have become part of an immersive new exhibition at the Cartier Foundation here called ‘The Great Animal Orchestra.’ Named after Mr. Krause’s 2012 book of the same title, the show opens on Saturday and runs through Jan. 8, [2017].
“At its heart is a work by the London-based collective United Visual Artists, who have transformed Mr. Krause’s recordings of the natural world into 3-D renderings. Imagine stepping into a soundproofed black-box theater whose walls spring to life with what look like overlapping electrocardiograms, representing different species’ sounds. …
“The installation includes recordings Mr. Krause made in Algonquin Park in Ontario, where he found himself caught between two packs of wolves; in the Yukon Delta, a subarctic area in Alaska, where birds from different continents converge; and in the Central African Republic, where he heard monkeys. He also captured the cacophony of the Amazon, and whales off Alaska and Hawaii. …
“Mr. Krause is a polymathic musician who performed with the folk group the Weavers and helped introduce the Moog synthesizer to pop music — including songs by the Doors and Van Morrison — and film scores. He hears natural sounds with a studio producer’s ear.”
Read more here about Krause and his efforts to get the word out on the disappearing habitats of his featured animals.
This article inspires me to pay better attention to the music of the natural world on my morning walks. So much beauty goes right over my head.
Bernie Krause on St. Vincent Island, Fla., in 2001.


Funny–I was walking yesterday morning, and paying a lot of attention to sounds. This is a very neat idea, to elevate nature’s sounds by creating an “orchestra” concept.
I’m wondering if you heard any unusual sounds on that walk or what the sounds made you think about. I could never use an iPod on a walk: I like to soak up as much of what’s around me as possible.
Well, I actually did a blog post about this walk! https://lovethosehandsathome.wordpress.com/2016/07/31/an-early-summer-morning/
Oh, lovely!