Algerian artist and filmmaker Philippe Parreno has created a space in which a series of filmed events are projected in different galleries at London’s Serpentine Gallery. Sound from the outside plays a major part in the exhibition, courtesy of French sound designer and Foley artist Nicolas Becker.

Nicolas Becker recording the soundtrack for Parreno’s June 8, 1968
Nicolas Becker recording the soundtrack
for Parreno’s June 8, 1968
Becker has positioned three DPA SMK4060 stereo mic kits – each using a pair of 4060 omnidirectional miniature mics – around the space to pick up the outside ambience. As a film ends in one gallery, the blinds at the windows rise and the DPA mics transmit the sounds from outside into the gallery, while in the next space the blinds descend and the lights go off.

‘I chose the 4060s because they provide incredibly good sound for the size,’ says Becker. ‘The size of the 4060s allowed them to be concealed in the trees around the Serpentine Gallery.’

Becker has a large inventory of DPA mics, including five 4006-TLs with S5 mount, a 3532-S matched stereo pair of 4041 large diaphragm mics, three 4007 high-SPL reference mics, two 8011 Hydrophones, 4060 miniature omnis and a number of Windpac windshield systems. These were used to record the soundtracks for Parreno’s four short films that feature in the exhibition – Invisible Boy (2010) saw Becker used his setup of five DPA 4006-TLs and S5 surround mount to record the street sounds of Chinatown, New York, from a skyscraper. June 8, 1968 (2009) recalls the train journey that transported the corpse of assassinated senator Robert Kennedy from New York to Washington DC, and Becker recorded the journey from the roof of the train using a Decca Tree of three DPA 4007s and four 4006-TLs in quadraphonic configuration.

The Boy from Mars (2003) lingers on buffalo tied to an electricity-generating machine that provides the power required to make the film. Here, Becker drew on his extensive sound library which is recorded almost exclusively with DPA. The buffalo sounds were actually 96kHz recordings of horses, which Becker slowed down to 48kHz to suggest a larger animal. No More Reality (1991) features a group of schoolchildren filmed on Betacam and reshot on Parreno’s mobile phone to lend an unreal quality; here Becker recorded schoolchildren chanting in playgrounds, using three DPA 4006-TLs in Decca Tree configuration.

Becker has now used DPA microphones on more than 25 movies, including Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, 28 Weeks Later and Babylon AD.

More: www.dpamicrophones.com

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