The forest has been hiding a song we were never meant to hear. Not in the leaves, not in the wind—but buried deep inside the trunk itself.
An artist pointed a camera at the rings of a felled tree, fed the data into a computer, and pressed play.
What emerged wasn’t noise. It was a mourn… Continues…
Inside every tree, a silent archive has been forming year after year: rings recording droughts, storms, and seasons of abundance.
Bartholomaus Traubeck found a way to turn that archive into music, translating the shifting colors and widths of each ring into notes on a piano.
Instead of a needle tracing grooves on vinyl,
light and a camera trace the scars and triumphs of a life spent reaching for the sun.
The result is a fragile, eerie composition that feels less like a song and more like a memory being played back.
Each cross-section becomes a unique score; a maple whispers differently than an ash, an old trunk “speaks” with a slower, heavier tone than a young sapling.
Listening, you sense storms, sudden growth, years of quiet struggle. It changes the way you walk through a forest. You no longer see just trees, but countless unwritten records,
standing in patient, resonant silence—until someone finally listens.