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Lost in Doi Saket - a Soundmap by Kate Carr app for iPhone and iPad


4.0 ( 320 ratings )
Entertainment Education
Developer: Sacha Schwab
Free
Current version: 1.0, last update: 7 years ago
First release : 21 Nov 2015
App size: 12.02 Mb

Lost in Doi Saket is a unique release that can only be experienced on Kate Carr‘s website and through this app: a sound map with approximately seventy pins representing seventy Soundcloud field recordings. Click on the pin, see a photo of the location, listen to the sound: it’s that easy. To travel around Thailand in this fashion mimics Carr’s own experience, in which she was able to rent a scooter with little training and set off to explore the countryside. Her 600k experience now becomes ours: familiar and disorienting all at once.
The difference, of course, is that while the home listener/viewer is provided an iPhone rather than a scooter, and is able to set off in a non-linear fashion. One can choose to follow Carr (or at least to guess her route) or to click randomly. As a travelogue, it’s far more appealing than a slide show. In a way, it’s like being left in a room with a photo book: one can choose to look, to linger or to ignore. But who can resist such a temptation?
The sonic journey takes a few hours to complete. But if one tires of clicking around, one can simply let the Soundcloud samples roll into each other like a field recording mix tape. The entire ride took place over the course of a month.
Head west to the lone pin, and one encounters “I Considered Buying Something From The Inflatable Store”, which sounds more like motors than one might expect from the title. But then one notices that more pins have popped up below. Traveling to this region, one finds a shopping area littered with horny pigeons, and a temple area being swept. (A horny cat bird makes an appearance later, while the residents of the bird hedge seem relatively well-behaved.) Turn north and one can investigate the sounds of the local dam. Water sounds abound in other regions as well: rivers, hot springs, a hose. Though Carr never visits the elephant camp, local creatures make appearances: ants, bees, bulls, cows, day dogs, night frogs, turtles and fish, angry geese, a distant rooster. Music abounds, from “Monday Is Dancing Night” to “Woman Talking Under a Banana Tree While Listening to Music”. The track titles alone provide a window into Carr’s playful personality: “I made the bamboo sway by pulling on it”, “The Spot Me And My Scooter Fell Into A Bush”.
Zoom way out and one finds Carr’s last scooter ride to the east (which sounds raw and scary). To the west, the Qantas announcer prepares passengers for lift-off. As we learned in “Rain Man”, “Qantas never crashed”. And so Carr bids farewell to a friendly nation, but carries their sounds to Australia, then to the world: a sonic evangelist whose love for her subject translates easily from nation to nation without words. (Richard Allen)