Sounds of Some Summer is a sprawling soundscape by Fremantle-based artist Bruno Booth, turning the city itself into an instrument. Across Walyalup (Fremantle), five microphones are discreetly installed — tuned to the sounds of the everyday — the wind, port, voices, traffic, and silence. These live audio streams feed into a central mixing station at the installation’s “epicenter,” where the city’s sounds, as summer awakens, are remixed in real time.

Sometimes quiet, sometimes dissonant, the soundscape is in constant flux — modulated by a rotating cast of invited “conductors and performers”, curated by Lyndon Blue. Using distortion, delay, and instruments to sculpt spontaneous compositions from everyday noise, each performer will create a layered audio experience that’s never the same twice.

Inspired by the brain’s Default Mode Network — a state of mind-wandering triggered by ambient stimuli — Booth’s installation offers a space for gentle drift, introspection and imaginative thought. It’s a work that invites you to listen differently: to find new meaning in the familiar, to be still inside a moving world. Bruno Booth’s innovative practice spans sculpture, technology and participation. With Some Sounds of Some Summer, he offers a quiet proposition: that a city might be found in its background noise.

Date and Time

13-30 Nov (Thur-Sun)
11am-8pm, Performances To be announced

Locations

Fremantle Pool

South Beach Dog Beach

Fremantle Fishing Boat Harbour

Cappucino Strip

more to be announced

Entry

Free

Bruno Booth has used a wheelchair for most of his life, interrupted by a short and unsuccessful career as an amateur stilt walker when he used prosthetic legs as a child. In his memory these leather and metal devices would not have been out of place on the set of some dystopian, apocalyptic epic – not in a cool and attractive Fury Road sort of way, more like the zombies in the original Walking Dead. The experience of wearing restrictive equipment left him with a dislike of tight fitting clothing, a love of speed and a need to reach over his head in supermarkets – as a child he made the decision to use a wheelchair as his primary mode of transport – and he’s never looked back (probably because he’s too busy looking out for sand pits on dark footpaths). 

Having a disability has been a constant background hum throughout Bruno’s life. Kind of like a social tinnitus – you know it’s there but you try not to talk about it. It was only when he started to call himself an artist, without cringing too much, that he began to engage critically with what it meant to be categorised as disabled.

Fremantle Pool

10 Shuffrey St,
Fremantle

South Beach Dog Beach

Marine Terrace,
South Fremantle

Fremantle Fishing Boat Harbour

Mews Rd,
Fremantle

Cappucino Strip

SOUTH TERRACE,
Fremantle

More information coming soon…

More information coming soon…

More information coming soon…