Sounds of the city: Toronto orchestra debuts interactive symphony - Action News
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Sounds of the city: Toronto orchestra debuts interactive symphony

Everyday sounds gathered in Toronto from noisy intersections to spinning skateboard wheels to a dip in the lake will be part of a brand new composition making its debut with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra this weekend.

City sounds submitted by public incorporated into custom classical composition

A symphony out of noise

12 years ago
Duration 2:42
The Toronto Symphony Orchestra's latest production was inspired by recordings of Torontonians' favourite and not-so-favourite city sounds

Everyday sounds gathered in Torontofrom noisy intersections to spinning skateboard wheels to a dip in the lake will be part of a brand new composition making its debut with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra this weekend.

After almost a year of planning, gathering, composing and mixing, composer Tod Machover and the TSO are premiering A Toronto Symphony: Concerto for Composer and City on Saturday, as part of the orchestra's New Creations Festival.

The commission blends music technology innovator Machover's unique abilities with public interaction: Torontonians submitted sounds of their city, while music students from various elementary and secondary schools contributed as well.

The multilayered final piece incorporates so many different elements that TSO music director Peter Oundjian, who will conduct thesymphony's performance,can't pinpoint them all.

"There's so many [sounds] going on that I don't even want to know until I finish conducting it, because I will get so confused if I try to hear too much," he said.

The goal of the projectwhich has already attracted interest from other major cities worldwide is to try out a new kind of collaboration between artists and regular people eager to create, Machover says.

"What's really important for the future is finding a different kind of communication and collaboration between artists," he said.

"People making things with a lot of experience and other people who are interested."

Zulekha Nathoo reports.