RELEASE DATE: JULY 25, 2025
Six Microphones is a site-determined composition of audio feedback by designer and composer Robert Gerard Pietrusko, which explores the mutually constitutive relationships among sound, space, and audience.
Environmental Studies is an iteration of the piece created specifically for the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts (CCVA) in Cambridge, MA—the only building in North America designed by famed architect Le Corbusier. Installed at the CCVA during the spring of 2015, the piece unfolded over the course of a month. This recording is an excerpt from that longer performance, captured on the evening of 9 April 2015.
Installed, Six Microphones illustrates the simplest and most legible diagram of feedback—a microphone pointed at a loudspeaker. The piece transforms the gallery from a space in which sound simply propagates, to the medium required to bring sound into being.
Six Microphones is site-determined: no sound is generated, it is only amplified. All tones and modulations produced during a performance emerge from the continual interaction between the system and the space itself. This is dependent on three elements: (1) the composition as it unfolds in time, implemented as a changing combination of microphone amplitudes, (2) the geometry and materiality of the space in which the system is sited, and (3) the presence of listeners within the space. Though the structure of the composition remains the same from one performance to the next, the acoustic result is contingent on the complex interaction of these three elements and cannot be anticipated beforehand. As such, there is no “intrinsic” or “original” version of the piece that exists independent from its spatial context.
Pietrusko’s previous LINE edition, the self-titled work Six Microphones (LINE_105), was released in 2019, coinciding with a beautiful 2LP vinyl edition published on Counter Audition, US.
Read a recent article about Pietrusko’s work, Pietrusko Brings His Immersive, Intermedia Experiments to Venice by Jesse Dorris here.
