Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Bernie Krause. Bernard L. Krause (born December 8, 1938) is an American musician and soundscape ecologist. In 1968, he founded Wild Sanctuary, an organization dedicated to the recording and archiving of natural soundscapes. Krause is an author, a bio-acoustician, a speaker, and natural sound artist who coined the terms geophony, biophony, and ...

  2. Bernie Krause has been recording wild soundscapes -- the wind in the trees, the chirping of birds, the subtle sounds of insect larvae -- for 45 years. In that time, he has seen many environments radically altered by humans, sometimes even by practices thought to be environmentally safe. A surprising look at what we can learn through nature's symphonies, from the grunting of a sea anemone to the sad calls of a beaver in mourning.

  3. Jul 30, 2020 · There was a time when Bernie Krause listened to the world like anyone else. He cherished the song of a robin in the park, trembled at the roar of a lion at the zoo and was overwhelmed by the awe-inspiring volume of a tree frog’s mating call. After experiencing an epiphany on his first wildlife recording session with headphones, however ...

  4. Jul 15, 2013 · Bernie Krause has been recording wild soundscapes -- the wind in the trees, the chirping of birds, the subtle sounds of insect larvae -- for 45 years. In tha...

    • 15 min
    • 175.3K
    • TED
  5. www.youtube.com › user › BernieKrauseTVBernie Krause - YouTube

    A early pioneer of synthesizer and later forwarding the art of nature recordings, Bernie Krause first created Wild Sanctuary™ in 1968, preceding the release of his album 'In a Wild Sanctuary ...

  6. 'GIANTS' is a platform for legendary electronic musicians and innovators to express themselves through the art of storytelling. This documentary series, film...

    • 14 min
    • 15.3K
    • Moog Music
  7. People also ask

  8. Bernie Krause: The one place that most powerfully illustrates changes in biodiversity, due in large part to global heating, is a site where I’ve been recording each spring since 1993, a place called Sugarloaf Ridge State Park (about fifty miles north of San Francisco—located in a low-elevation mountain range that borders Napa and Sonoma Valleys). It is located in the Valley of the Moon, about a twenty-minute drive from where my wife, Kat, and I now live.