I decided to take two field recordings from very different parts of the world, albeit unified by the presence of water in-situ and - in part - influencing the most distinct sonic aspects of the respective recordings.
The first is one of my favourite field recordings that I’ve made: the flow of the Rocky River on the remote western edge of Kangaroo Island, its ambience regularly punctuated by the beautiful sound of banjo frogs (also known as ‘pobblebonks’.)
The second record is another favourite of mine: a recording made on Rassada Pier on the Thailand island of Phuket. This recording consists of a tyre rubbing against the bow of a small boat, which is bobbing gently in the water. At the time, I was struck by how resonant and expressive this sound was.
In order to bring these two disparate recordings together, I selected several excerpts from the tyre rub recording and positioned these across a continuous excerpt of the Rocky River recording, with the tyre rub preceding the ‘bonk’ of the frogs.
The original field recordings used here can be found elsewhere on my Soundcloud page: