ASU assistant professor earns praise for latest album


Image of professor Lauren Hayes performing sound art live
|

Lauren Sarah Hayes, musician, sound artist and assistant professor in Arizona State University's School of Arts, Media and Engineering, is receiving praise for her latest album of improvised sound art.  

“Embrace” has already been named one of the best albums of 2021 (so far) in Phoenix New Times and has been shared as part of the best experimental music on Bandcamp

Hayes builds, teaches and performs with hybrid analog/digital instruments from her own creation. Throughout her career, she has musically improvised and performed in several major electronic music festivals such as Moogfest (USA) and Norberg (Sweden) using handcrafted instruments that she has created through coding and engineering. She said she incorporates all her experience into the classroom. 

“I teach interdisciplinary improvisation in a class that is taken by students who are not only involved with sound and music, but also dance, visual arts, game design, engineering and more,” Hayes said. “I teach technical skills such as coding but from the perspective of really getting ‘under the hood’: being able to solve your own problems and think strategically. From my extensive experience performing with electronics on stage, having this kind of knowledge  is really crucial because it enables you to remain calm and be able to think quickly on the spot on the rare occasion that things break.”  

Outside the classroom, Hayes enjoys continuing to translate what she learns from performing and teaching into sound art. She released “Embrace” in early February 2021 and it’s on track to take off in the sound art world. The album includes four tracks of improvised sound art using Max/MSP, a visual programming language, and very little editing in a digital audio workstation. All instruments used on the songs are a combination of drum machines, analog synths, voice processor, controllers and the software that Hayes has been building since early 2007.

It is Hayes’ ability to sculpt and meld music in real-time that has set her apart and allows her to create brand new experiences for each listener. This ability has paved the way for her to continue performing her works live. Since the album release, she has been featured in Wire Magazine’s June edition, voted best artist of the month in April by Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival (hcmf//) and invited back by hcmf// to participate in their music festival.

 

More Science and technology

 

Outline of a head with arrows emerging from it on a pale green background.

New study uncovers another role for the cerebellum, offering clues about autism

There is a window of time, a critical period, during infancy and early childhood when the brain learns how to process information…

Person in a clean room wearing a clean rooms suit inspects a space instrument being built

A cereal-box-sized space telescope heads for the stars

A small space telescope roughly the size of a family cereal box — having cleared its pre-shipment review by NASA last spring — is…

A graphic depicting photos of a bobcat and two love birds

Hidden viruses thrive in desert wildlife

As the sun rises over the Sonoran Desert, bright green lovebirds gather noisily around backyard feeders. At dusk in the Arizona…