Tracklist
1 | Voting Line, Downtown Chicago | 1:00 | |
2 | Penny Whistle Seller, Guangzhou | 1:00 | |
3 | Sullivan's Island Beach, Charleston | 1:00 | |
4 | Basketball Court | 1:00 | |
5 | Walking Home, Los Angeles | 1:00 | |
6 | My Kitchen, Chicago | 1:00 | |
7 | Outside, Arrington | 1:00 | |
8 | Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie, Illinois | 1:00 | |
9 | Train, Antwerp to Amsterdam | 1:00 | |
10 | Belzec Extermination Camp | 1:00 | |
11 | Home, Los Angeles | 1:00 | |
12 | Amtrak, Hudson Valley | 1:00 | |
13 | Home, Portland | 1:00 | |
14 | Walking Home, Chicago | 1:00 | |
15 | Antwerp Central Train Station, Antwerp | 1:00 | |
16 | Barcelona (6:13 am, January 1st) | 1:00 |
Various Small Whistles and a Song, the new album by Chicago-based artist Lia Kohl, incorporates notions of space, social relations, and humor. As the title suggests, the album responds to Ed Ruscha’s 1964 photographic artist book Various Small Fires and Milk, which Kohl sees as a wondrous celebration of ordinariness, one that reveals Ruscha’s trademark deadpan humor and depth. In the spirit of that publication, Kohl created her own series of sonic vignettes, with guest appearances from her close community of collaborators including claire rousay, Macie Stewart, Patrick Shiroishi, and others, reflecting the same sense of humor and mundanity.
The structure of the album—16 one-minute tracks—directly mirrors Ruscha’s book, which comprises 15 photographs of fire and one of a glass of milk. Ruscha’s “small fires” are represented here by recordings of whistles—mostly human whistling, with occasional appearances by train whistles, emergency whistles, and a woman selling penny whistles on the street in Guangzhou, China. About this choice of material, Kohl writes: “I’ve always been captivated by whistling—it’s musical but often a bit unconscious; usually solo but often done in public places. There’s something tender and human about hearing someone whistle, a socially acceptable version of hearing their mind wander.” As with Ruscha’s photographs, the whistles are not random snapshots but windows into social situations, narratives, or spaces.
The “milk” of the title — the 16th photograph in Ruscha’s book — is interpreted here as a single recording: a group of people singing together in Barcelona around 6 a.m. on New Year’s morning, captured through the floor of an Airbnb. Kohl describes this as a social, collective sound that contrasts with the solitary nature of whistling. The song functions as a counterbalance—a quiet celebration of shared experience.
Lia Kohl is a composer and sound artist based in Chicago. Her wide-ranging practice includes composition and performance, installation, improvisation, and collaboration. She tours nationally and internationally, working in theater, jazz, rock, and experimental contexts. Her work centers curiosity and patience, an exploration of the mundane and profound possibilities of sound.