For Yui Nishikawa, that silence is home.
Her breakout work, 042816 , was a 44-minute composition made entirely from the hum of air conditioners in Port of Spain’s embassy district. Critics called it “oppressively political.” Nishikawa called it “air conditioning.”
Nishikawa, a 34-year-old Japanese-Caribbean sound artist, has spent the last decade archiving what she calls “the planet’s accidental music.” But where other artists seek clarity, Nishikawa chases degradation. i--- Caribbean -042816-146- -042816-551- Yui Nishikawa
There is a specific kind of silence that exists only in the Caribbean at 3:00 AM. It’s not empty—it’s heavy. It carries the weight of trade winds, centuries of colonial static, and the low hum of satellite relays bouncing between islands.
By [Your Name]
“Some questions are better as static,” she says.
But the -146 and -551 fragments represent a shift. The former is guttural, subsonic—you feel it in your sternum before you hear it. The latter is almost beautiful: a lonely, morse-like code that was never meant to be decoded. She refuses to reveal what, or who, was on the other end of the cable. For Yui Nishikawa, that silence is home
“The dash is the most important part,” she tells me, her voice soft over a patchy VoIP connection from a catamaran off the coast of Dominica. “The numbers are coordinates. The dashes are the silence between them. Without the silence, you just have data. With it, you have a story.”
And then the line goes silent. Not a drop. A dash. There is a specific kind of silence that