Heritage

Borneo Bengkel to create digital archive of sound, music and other audio with artists from Borneo, UK

16 creatives from 5 countries gathered to create a Soundbank digital archive, collecting endangered languages, musical beats and sounds from the world around them

Updated 2 years ago · Published on 05 Nov 2021 1:00PM

Borneo Bengkel to create digital archive of sound, music and other audio with artists from Borneo, UK
Bornean Soundbank collaborator Adrian Jo Milang seen here performing contemporary theatre piece Kelunan at Dpac, Kuala Lumpur in 2019. – Pic courtesy of Borneo Bengkel, November 5, 2021

ART Platform Borneo Bengkel have brought together a group of international musicians and artists to create a ‘Soundbank’ – a digital archive of sounds, images and videos from their respective countries.

The online interactive exhibition, launching today (November 5), explores the theme ‘Divided by Lockdowns and Borders, Can We Still Connect Digitally Across Oceans Through Sound?’ and presents words, songs and photographs from Malaysian, Indonesian and British collaborators.

A Zoom screenshot of the July gathering for the Borneo Bengkel Soundbank. – Pic courtesy of Borneo Bengkel
A Zoom screenshot of the July gathering for the Borneo Bengkel Soundbank. – Pic courtesy of Borneo Bengkel

The groundwork for the project was started in July 2021 by Kuching-based arts organisation Borneo Bengkel. They organised an online gathering for 16 creative industry practitioners from Borneo and the United Kingdom. Here the invited collaborators presented and shared virtually about their music and creative practice. Collaborators then spent the following months individually collecting and recording sounds, video and photography that represented their daily lives in their different countries.

Soundbank collaborators (clockwise from upper L) Sape musician Alena Murang, musician/artist Gindung Mc Feddy Simon, Scottish singer Kaitlin Ross and musician/composer Nursalim Yadi Anugerah. – Pics courtesy of Borneo Bengkel
Soundbank collaborators (clockwise from upper L) Sape musician Alena Murang, musician/artist Gindung Mc Feddy Simon, Scottish singer Kaitlin Ross and musician/composer Nursalim Yadi Anugerah. – Pics courtesy of Borneo Bengkel

Utilising newly developed app Living Archive, the musicians then uploaded, shared, and re-mixed audio and visuals. The outcome; Soundbank, a digital archive and playspace of music, visuals and found sound.

The soundbank archive features recordings in over five indigenous languages, a number of them highly endangered, such as Kayan, Dusun and Gaelic to name a few, demonstrating the diversity of the collaborators involved in this international project. There are also recordings taken of morning birdsong, and the throng of cicadas in the rainforest.

Soundbank collaborators (clockwise from upper L): Sound artist and musician Nick Williams, singer songwriter Maya Bayu, experimental musician Juan Arminandi, and experimental musician Cameron Clarke aka Calm C. – Pics courtesy of Borneo Bengkel
Soundbank collaborators (clockwise from upper L): Sound artist and musician Nick Williams, singer songwriter Maya Bayu, experimental musician Juan Arminandi, and experimental musician Cameron Clarke aka Calm C. – Pics courtesy of Borneo Bengkel

Produced in the age of the Covid-19 pandemic, many of the recordings uploaded were either made from home or local surroundings during the various lockdowns around the world. Others are videos or live recordings made prior to the pandemic, which document gatherings and performances, which the musicians have been unable to do for the past two years.

A screenshot of the Digital Archive on the Soundbank website. – Pic courtesy of Borneo Bengkel
A screenshot of the Digital Archive on the Soundbank website. – Pic courtesy of Borneo Bengkel

The online exhibition of the Soundbank will be launched in November, and broadcast digitally via Borneo Bengkel’s new website. Soundbank will highlight collaborators such as:

  • Sarawak Malaysia: Alena Murang, Adrian Jo Milang and Ezra Tekola
  • Sabah Malaysia: Maya Bayu and Gindung Mc Feddy Simon
  • Kalimantan Indonesia: Nursalim Yadi Anugerah, Reza Darwin and Juan Arminandi.
  • Britain: Curator Catriona Maddocks, Musicians – Rob Griffiths, Ceitidh Mac, Nick Williams, Callum Younger and Jayne Dent aka MeLostMe
  • Scotland: Kaitlin Ross
  • Northern Ireland: Cameron Clarke, aka Calm C
Soundbank collaborators Catriona Maddocks (UK) and Gindung Mc Feddy Simon (Malaysia) collaborate together to document indigenous instruments in Borneo. – Pic courtesy of Borneo Bengkel
Soundbank collaborators Catriona Maddocks (UK) and Gindung Mc Feddy Simon (Malaysia) collaborate together to document indigenous instruments in Borneo. – Pic courtesy of Borneo Bengkel

The curator of the project Catriona Maddocks, originally from the UK, had spent over 10 years living in Sarawak before being forced to return to England at the start of the pandemic. She explained, “This Soundbank project came from the realisation last year, that while we were all so separated from one another, the digital world gives us so many opportunities to connect with people from distant places. There is such rich folk music and cultural heritage in both Borneo and the UK, we wanted to bring these musicians together in an innovative way, and use technology to create conversation through music.”

One of the Soundbank collaborators is Adrian Jo Milang, a celebrated Sarawakian cultural practitioner working to ensure the preservation and continuation through practice and performance of the Parap and Takna, an oral tradition of the Kayan communities of Borneo.

He said, “For many, many months I haven't been able to visit the community elders who I usually sing with. Taking part in this project, and sharing our music and recordings on the Soundbank, gave me a chance to connect with others and see that the work I do is part of a much bigger story of indigenous representation and preserving endangered languages.” – The Vibes, November 5, 2021

– Pic courtesy of Soundbank
– Pic courtesy of Soundbank

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