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Scholars re-create the sounds of worship at an ancient Greek church

The sound reverberates through the space, immersing hundreds of spellbound listeners. Eyes fall closed, heads bow in prayer, and fidgety limbs come to rest. The crowd is lost in a Byzantine soundscape as five singers chant the Akathistos hymn, an Orthodox liturgical chant composed in the sixth century.

But the audience gathered in Central Los Angeles is not only hearing the singers. They are also hearing the sounds of Hagia Sophia, one of the oldest churches in the Greek city of Thessa­loniki. This unique auditory moment is made possible by a collaboration between two professors who are re-creating the acoustic experiences of ancient spaces.

“We create what I like to call an ‘acoustic photocopy,’” said Chris Kyria­kakis, professor of electrical engineering and director of the Immersive Audio Laboratory at the University of South­ern California.

The recital in LA, which took place on the campus of Saint Sophia Cathedral, was the first time the team used acoustic photocopies to re-create the experience of an ancient building for a live audience. The free event drew 700 people just days after it was announced.

Liturgical music is an important aid to prayer in the Greek Orthodox Church, and preserving the acoustic ecology of these spaces is essential to preserving the religious integrity of the services.

“Those buildings have been there for thousands of years and hopefully will be around for thousands more,” Kyriakakis said. “But one day, they may not be.”

This project embraces a mode of preservation many historians overlook: the auditory experience.

Kyriakakis works with Sharon Ger­stel, an art history professor at UCLA studying Byzantine architecture. They hope their research will enhance the public’s understanding of these historical spaces by adding the element of sound.

Having been baptized in Thessa­loniki’s Hagia Sophia, Kyriakakis felt a personal connection to the project from the start. He and Gerstel recorded the sounds in nine different Greek Orthodox churches, using seven advanced recording devices to capture the voices of liturgical chanters. The acoustical information is stored digitally and then used to re-create the sound of the original spaces.

According to Gerstel, connecting sight with sound changes the neurological response, and this was a key part of the experience in the early Greek Orthodox church. At Hagia Sophia, life-sized images of saints line the walls, many holding scrolls that correspond to various verses from the chants.

“When you hear and see simultaneously, your body has a very powerful experience,” Gerstel said. “It’s critical to the emotional response to worship, and I think the Byzantines were very keyed into that.”

The connection between sound and image was particularly powerful in the premodern period. For members of the congregation, the experience was designed to assist with their prayers and elevate them to a higher level of thought.

“The primary purpose of the music is not to create enthusiasm or to bring attention to itself but to be of service to the prayer and spirits of the congregation,” said Dimos Papatzalakis, who was one of the chanters at the LA event, where the music took center stage in the absence of religious imagery. “The priest, the congregation, and the chanter are forming one body in raising their voices and prayers to God.”

The audio experts fed the singers’ voices through acoustical data that allowed the projected sound to mimic how one would hear them in Hagia Sophia.

John Bakas, Saint Sophia’s priest, underscored the key role of the hymns during prayer: “The music allows us to transcend this world, to tone down passions, to have introspections, to meditate, and to pray.”

So far, the research has focused on Greek Orthodox churches, but Gerstel said it has implications for the broader religious experience. Domed synagogues create similarly immersive acoustics for worshipers when cantors pray. The team has already been invited to collect data from historic buildings in Turkey and Gothic cathedrals in France. The goal is to create an “acoustic museum” where visitors can experience the sounds of these spaces virtually.

The ongoing project aims to record diverse religious spaces, showing, in Gerstel’s words, “how important—and deliberately calculated—sound is for the perception of the sacred, and for spiritual transformation.” —Religion News Service

Zara Abrams

Zara Abrams writes for Religion News Service.

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