Get High With the Band

If you’re lulled awake by electronic music at daybreak, look up. The tune may be coming from the seven hot-air balloons in artist Luke Jerram’s Sky Orchestra as it bumps ’80s-synth-style ambient tracks from the heavens. Jerram, who has already staged performances of his car-speaker-enhanced flotilla over Birmingham, England, and Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerland, has been invited […]

If you’re lulled awake by electronic music at daybreak, look up. The tune may be coming from the seven hot-air balloons in artist Luke Jerram’s Sky Orchestra as it bumps ’80s-synth-style ambient tracks from the heavens.

Jerram, who has already staged performances of his car-speaker-enhanced flotilla over Birmingham, England, and Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerland, has been invited by the Royal Shakespeare Company to rock the skies over Stratford on Midsummer morning in June. “Each balloon plays a different part of the score,” Jerram explains, “creating a vast surround sound in the sky.”

The project is also helping University of West England researchers study the effect of music on dreams. To collect info, questionnaires are distributed door-to-door as Jerram’s balloons drift by. “People who have been through traumatic experiences suffer nightmares,” says UWE psychologist Chris Alford. Apparently, subconscious doses of Brian Eno can help.

Sonia Zjawinski


credit:Thierry Grobet
Up, up, and away: Musical balloons trumpet the dawn.

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