Mark IJzerman working with Sébastien Robert on Another Deep in Svalbard

What Do You Hear When The Sound Listens Back?

Sound can be listened to, but what do you hear when the sound listens back? This collage essay weaves together responses from sound artists and theorists, exploring the reciprocity of listening and the agency of sound itself.

«An object exists with relation to the sound that it permeates in the space that it was created or destroyed in. To no avail, the snail is still stuck imagining what it might have sounded like when his brother was stepped on.»
Zeynep Burça Oral

«When I first listened to beluga whales in Svalbard, I expected silence – having read so much eco-fiction, I somehow foolishly thought the oceans might already be empty. But their voices filled the water, and in that moment, I felt not just like a listener, but like I was being listened to, part of a world that wasn't gone but still speaking.»
Mark IJzerman

«Right now, it hears me thinking and murmuring names of people I need to respond to, or want to ask how they are. And now that the sun suddenly breaks through, it also hears a few things I look forward to, such as lying down in the grass in a park, listening to sounds of others moving around, blending with echoes of stories, sounds, and rhythms that entered my ears during the upcoming festival.»
Katía Truijen

«It hears my silly thoughts. They sound like fast trap hi-hats circling one's head like wasps around a glass of lemonade. It hears the noise of the sum of all my contradictory feelings, the embarrassing longing for making sense in a blissful ocean of undefined potential, and the fleeting breakbeats that emerge when everything collides into moments of joyful madness.»
Philipp Rhensius

«To hear what sounds back demands unlearning. Action or speaking without regular practice of active listening recedes radically into internal focus, becoming mere projection that, regardless of good intentions, risks ignoring what speaks softly in today's white noise of monological signals. Our social media information guerrilla draws hateful lines in the nuanced spectrum of reality and of being: between rightful and shameful, between citizens of repressive countries and repressed ones, sometimes forgetting our fundamental shared humanity. As Ripatti reminds us, «By practicing listening you teach an essential skill: you embody sensitivity, build sensibility towards your environment, and eventually instill the ability to care.» What we hear when sound listens back is the possibility of reciprocal care, a radical proposition in our disconnected world. When sound listens back, we hear not just its response but the transformation of space into place, of information into knowledge, of isolation into solidarity – the audible evidence that we are never alone in our witnessing of the world.»
Giada Dalla Bontà

This essay is part of the Norient Special Where Sound Becomes Witness, a publication in collaboration with Rewire Festival 2025. It assembles essays and audio pieces that explore how sound can cut through the noise to bear witness, inspire solidarity, and reimagine our shared reality. Curated and edited by Philipp Rhensius and Katía Truijen.

Biography

Zeynep Burça Oral, a.k.a. Burchhhha, is a performance artist and experimental musician, living and studying in the Hague. She participates in happenings, and performances, both inside and outside of the white cube space. Often with much internal resistance.

Biography

Mark IJzerman is an interdisciplinary artist who investigates ecological themes through the innovative use of digital technology. His work gives voice to the more-than-human world, exploring planetary processes such as eroding biodiversity and the impacts of warming waters. Through installations and audiovisual performances, IJzerman blends fieldwork, artistic research, and collaboration with experts from diverse fields, including biology, astronomy, and ecology. His projects often feature interactive or live elements, where living ecosystems and digital media converge.

Biography

Katía Truijen is a curator of the context programme for Rewire Festival, media researcher, writer, educator and musician based in Rotterdam. Her work is concerned with bringing people together around practices of listening, archiving, and rehearsing alternative urban, technological and ecological futures. She is part of Loom, practice for cultural transformation, co-founder of interdisciplinary platform //\ hoekhuis, and research tutor at the Studio for Immediate Spaces (Sandberg Instituut). Follow her on Instagram, LinkedIn, or on her Website.

Biography

Giada Dalla Bontà is an Italian researcher, curator, and writer exploring the intersections of sound, art, and politics. Based in Berlin and Copenhagen, she works as a PhD fellow at KU Sound Studies Lab, focusing on experimental and underground practices in the EECCA region from the late Soviet era to the present day.

Biography

Philipp Rhensius is an editor for Norient, writer, musician, sound artist, sociologist & musicologist, and curator from Berlin. His work investigates the connections between the micro- and macro-political and is driven by the idea that «feeling the chains» is the moment when emancipation begins. His music and sound art projects (Kl.ne, aphtc, Alienationst) merge sonic fiction with sardonic poetry and visceral sound. His texts are published in i.e. Taz, Spex, FAZ, Neue Zürcher Zeitung, WOZ and several book volumes. In late 2024, he started to write the autopoetic column Was Macht Mich in taz. He runs the music label Arcane Patterns and hosts a monthly podcast on Noods Radio. Follow him on Instagram, his Website, or LinkedIn.

Published on March 03, 2025

Last updated on March 10, 2025

Topics

Sound
Listening
Agency
Ecology
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