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Brookfield Meadow - Launch Event

I want to make work that connects people to the world around them ... encourages people to experience places like this more deeply
— Ellie Wilson

Listen to the River Ching was launched at Brookfield Meadow on Wednesday 6 May and we were delighted by how many people popped by during the afternoon and the lovely response to the music. People of all ages took the opportunity to slow down, pause for a moment to listen and wander by the river. This project is hyper local for me and there really is a lot of love for this district in NE London.

Some visitor feedback

‘Lovely to see this previously neglected corner come to life. The music and words are beautiful and moving. Thank you for a wonderful project’

‘Beautiful moving music … the most incredible way to connect with nature’

‘What a lovely thing to have on our doorstep. Thank you – the music is lovely’

‘Music was magical and so lovely to sit on a toadstool and listen under the trees by the river’

‘Made me experience the place in a different way’

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New Release

New single - out 6 May

Ellie Wilson’s Listen to the River Ching gives voice to this magickal watercourse, featuring field recordings, composition and readings the Ching speaks to us through Ellie’s enchanting creation. Such a beautiful tribute to this essential capillary of London
— John Rogers writer/film-maker (thelostbyway.com)

Listen to the River Ching is a project taking place at Brookfield Path in Highams Park E4, funded by a ‘Make It Happen’ grant from London Borough of Waltham Forest.

This new music composition grew from a series of workshops led by composer Ellie Wilson for pupils with vision impairment at Joseph Clarke School. They visited the River Ching to explore the landscape through sound and collaborative listening. Together, they captured a sonic portrait of the environment using hydrophones and microphones.

The resulting composition combines percussion and whispered voices (water spirits) captured in the classroom with field recordings of the riverbank and its underwater world. This is combined with violin, synthesiser, piano, percussion and sound design for an immersive experience, evoking the flow of the river as it meanders through Epping Forest and slips quietly past back gardens, playing fields and allotments.

A reading from Henry Hawkins’ 1895 book Epping Forest – London’s Great Legacy (from a copy that belonged to Ellie’s great-grandfather) is incorporated into the piece, connecting past and present through place, memory and listening.

Release date: 6 May

Ellie Wilson composer, violin, hardanger fiddle, voice, sound design
Pupils from Joseph Clarke School whispered voices, shakers
Thom Ashworth mix, master, sound design
Ryan Pearce cover image and video

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A lesson in listening

Pupils with vision impairment worked with Ellie to pick some of the sounds used in the piece.

This new music composition grew from a series of workshops with pupils with vision impairment at Joseph Clarke School. We visited the River Ching to explore the landscape through sound and collaborative listening. Together, we captured a sonic portrait of the environment using hydrophones and microphones.

The resulting composition combines percussion and whispered voices (water spirits) captured in the classroom with field recordings of the riverbank and its underwater world. This is combined with violin, synthesiser, piano,percussion and sound design for an immersive experience, evoking the flow of the river as it meanders through Epping Forest and slips quietly past back gardens, playing fields and allotments.

Working with the students was a lesson in listening for me too as many of them rely on their ears (and touch and smell) to navigate their surroundings. They were so enthusiastic and I enjoyed working with them.

Here’s a word cloud with some of their answers to the listening survey I gave them.

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The River Ching

Find out more about this small urban stream and Ching Action Group

Epping Forest by F. H. Headley

The River Ching (often marked on maps simply as The Ching / Ching Brook) is a small, meandering river that starts at Connaught Water in Epping Forest and travels 10km to join the River Lea near the North Circular, north of Banbury Reservoir, Walthamstow.

As is the case with most North East London rivers, the River Ching is heavily modified with multiple weirs, structures, culverts, and stretches of concrete channel, which can block fish passage. The river has been artificially straightened, widened, and deepened in places. Although the River Ching is home to an array of wildlife such as perch, stone loach, European eel, and stickleback, fish biodiversity has declined in recent years due to physical barriers, pollution and poor water quality. The Ching Action Group is working in partnership with Thames 21 and others on this to improve biodiversity and water quality, restoring the river’s natural flow and supporting its rich aquatic life.

The River Ching Action Group is a group of volunteers that aims to improve the River Ching for people and nature along the river and enhance local people’s relationship with green spaces. They have been clearing the overgrown space to improve access to the river at Brookfield Path and continue to enhance habitats for biodiversity, run craft workshops and promote health benefits of being outdoors and in nature. They have also commissioned some beautiful animal sculptures and benches by chainsaw carver Marshall Lambert which have recently been installed on the site along with willow arches designed by willow weaver Deb Hart.

Listen to the River Ching is a Ching Action Group project, sponsored by Waltham Forest's ‘Make it Happen’ and supported by Highams Park Planning Group.

To find out more about the Ching Action Group’s activities sign up for a monthly email update from chingactiongroup@gmail.com or find on Facebook

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