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The man transforming data from two dramatic storms into music

Craig Kirkpatrick-Whitby's cancer diagnosis added urgency to his project, as part of musical collective Mining, to turn weather and sea data into music
MINING - West Pole Beacon.
The West Pole Beacon off the聽UK鈥檚 south coast records weather and sea data
PJ Davy


Mining
The Leaf Label

Every time Craig Kirkpatrick-Whitby speaks, he has to hold down a button on a device in his neck, which stops air coming out of a hole in his throat. He explains the opening-closing mechanism before he reinserts the white plastic disc. It is a heat and moisture exchanger, implanted to allow him to retain moisture in his lungs.

鈥淚鈥檝e had cancer three times in the last four-and-a-half years,鈥 he says, his voice now generated by a tracheoesophageal voice prosthesis embedded in the back wall of his neck. 鈥淚 have no voice box, no lymph glands, no thyroid glands. They rebuilt my face using skin and tissue from my left leg. I couldn鈥檛 speak at all for more than two years,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut I don鈥檛 want to be defined by my cancer. I want to do interesting stuff.鈥

That 鈥渋nteresting stuff鈥 includes innovative music, drawing on science. An investor, data scientist, sailor, ex-boxer, photographer and musician, Kirkpatrick-Whitby is the creative, curious mind driving Chimet, the first album by the musical collective Mining.

The instrumental pieces were built around more than 2000 sampled data streams from West Pole Beacon, known as Chimet, a navigation marker off the coast of Chichester in West Sussex, UK, that records meteorological and nautical information.

The data was captured over seven days in October 2017, as Hurricane Ophelia and Storm Brian lashed the country. Each 2-second period of music represents a 5-minute snapshot of data, including wind speed and direction, atmospheric temperature, water temperature and wave height.

In 2016, Kirkpatrick-Whitby and sound designer PJ Davy, another member of the Mining collective, developed a 鈥渟ound engine鈥 using Max software, where algorithms organise the mined data samples into streams, which then create outgoing signals that trigger the desired intensity, notation and rhythms of a sound palette to generate music.

鈥淚鈥檓 an investment banker,鈥 says Kirkpatrick-Whitby. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 where my knowledge of data comes from. I live in West Sussex, about 5 nautical miles away from Chimet. I鈥檇 been coming down to this area of the south coast for sailing and windsurfing every weekend since the 1970s, which is where I saw Chimet. I鈥檝e been interested in electronic music all my life and I鈥檇 been tracking storms and capturing data. When I looked at the charts from Chimet, it was very obvious to me that it looked like music.鈥

Musician Matthew Bourne, the third member of Mining, later improvised piano over the atmospheric soundscape, with a cello and a Memorymoog synthesiser added for texture. Chimet doesn鈥檛 contain direct audio recordings, but is more an evocation of a storm, a meditative, eerie music of drones, pulses and clicks reminiscent of the Blade Runner soundtracks or Brian Eno鈥檚 ambient work.

鈥淭here is the 鈥楳other Nature鈥-orchestrated music and the 鈥榟uman nature鈥 [orchestrated music], which reinforces the feelings of the storms,鈥 explains Kirkpatrick-Whitby. 鈥淲e wanted to create an experience that evoked the feelings of being on the water or the beach, and being in the weather.鈥

As well as terrifyingly strong winds, Hurricane Ophelia and Storm Brian also brought dust storms and widespread damage. But Kirkpatrick-Whitby enjoys a good storm. As someone who says he is very sensitive to music and weather, he suggests that he may experience it through his body more than other people do. 鈥淢y senses are enlivened by it. Weather is incredible,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 like a storm. I love snow. I love ice. These are all things that make you feel alive and sharpen the brain.鈥

Craig Kirkpatrick-Whitby
Craig Kirkpatrick-Whitby plans to return to work and make more albums
Craig Kirkpatrick-Whitby

Originally from London, Kirkpatrick-Whitby鈥檚 work in global banking has taken him around the world. There has been a restless curiosity about the variety of his other pursuits, too: a one-time boxer, he now enjoys yacht racing and photography. His 6000-strong CD collection ranges from Ravi Shankar to Tangerine Dream, but it mostly consists of electronic music, including dance and what he calls 鈥渜uite unusual, rare, neoclassical ambience鈥.

Before his cancer diagnosis, he also sang in bands. 鈥淚 had a very powerful voice, like Michael Stipe or Eddie Vedder,鈥 he tells me. 鈥淟osing your voice is quite astonishing.鈥

Originally planned for release in 2019, Chimet was delayed by Kirkpatrick-Whitby鈥檚 cancer treatment. 鈥淚 wanted to get the album out before I died,鈥 he says.

The use of data to create music isn鈥檛 new, but Kirkpatrick-Whitby believes it hasn鈥檛 been done on the scale of Chimet before, with musicians usually working with single strands of data, such as wind speed. 鈥淲e鈥檝e used 14 separate variables,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd captured 30,000 data points.鈥

The process can be applied to all kinds of data, from medical records to that relating to climate change. 鈥淎s long as I understand the data and can format the data, I can sonify anything,鈥 reckons Kirkpatrick-Whitby. 鈥淚鈥檝e got info on satellite data that I鈥檓 looking at. I鈥檓 also looking at sonifying mathematical conjectures.鈥

He is also thinking about cancer data. 鈥淏efore I lost my voice, I was on conference calls with people who run data for the National Health Service [in the UK],鈥 he says. 鈥淚 recently applied to work with my surgeon on a cancer project. I鈥檒l have access to data and could create music that derives from the statistics from cancer patients across the UK or data that has been professionally anonymised and is allowed to be used.鈥

At the age of 59 and after a medical all-clear, he hopes to 鈥渆xist in the normal world鈥 again. 鈥淢y attitude to life hasn鈥檛 really changed. But cancer has changed other people鈥檚 perceptions of me,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 was a noisy, good-fun, centre-of-attention type of bloke. I was quite good-looking, reasonably wealthy. I鈥檝e become more insular, more introverted.

鈥淧eople pay less attention to what I have to say now because they view me as disabled. My brain is fine, but it does take effort talking,鈥 he says. 鈥淧eople butt in all the time. I end up feeling disappointed by social engagements because I鈥檝e not been able to freely express myself in the ways I used to. I鈥檝e lost a lot of acquaintances because they can鈥檛 be bothered.鈥

He plans to return to work. There will be more music, too, with plans under way to record two new albums with Mining. He is also working on his own keyboard compositions.

鈥淚 feel blessed to be alive. I was at the Royal Marsden hospital in Chelsea the other day and there was a 12-year-old girl who鈥檇 had throat cancer since she was 10 鈥 unbelievable,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淚 can still walk鈥 I鈥檓 vocally disabled but my brain is fine. I can drive a car. I can鈥檛 go near water because if I go in, I would fill up with water very quickly,鈥 he chuckles.

鈥淭his,鈥 he says, pointing at his augmented throat, 鈥渋s not ideal. But I鈥檓 still alive.鈥

Graeme Green is a writer based聽in聽Derbyshire, UK

Topics: Culture / Music / Review