The cornerstone of CULT-AURAL was extensive fieldwork, combining advanced training in acoustic methods with independent data collection. Initial training took place with the ERC Artsoundscapes team at Es Culleram site (Ibiza, 2023), after which fieldwork was carried out in Catalonia, Norway, and Serbia.
• Catalonia: acoustic measurements were taken of bells in the Pallars Sobirà region (Santa Maria de Gerri, Santa Maria d’Àneu, Sant Pere de les Maleses, Sant Pere de Burgal, Sant Andreu de Pujol), and of two large wooden matracas at Santa Maria de Ripoll and Santa Maria de Cervera. The study of bell sound propagation at Santa Maria d’Àneu was published in Studia Universitatis Hereditati.
• Norway: fieldwork in the Valdres region documented 12 medieval bells (Slidredomen, Lomen, Reinli, Hegge, Hedalen), with a study on sonic heritage and comparative tonal analysis published in Heritage.
• Serbia: acoustic data were collected on bells and semantra at five sites on Mount Kosmaj (Monasteries Pavlovac, Tresije, Kasteljan, and the churches in Babe and Nemenikuće).
In 2024, the secondment at the Museum of Cultural History, University of Oslo, was completed. It was highly productive and fully aligned with the MSCA program’s goals of fostering interdisciplinary training and international cooperation, carried out with a clear focus, strong institutional support, and concrete outcomes in research, dissemination, and future collaboration. I participated in a thematic workshop and gave three invited talks, contributing to academic exchange and increasing the visibility of the CULT-AURAL project. A manuscript I prepared during the secondment was later published in the open-access scientific journal Studia Universitatis Hereditati, becoming the first scientific article from the CULT-AURAL project and meeting a key public dissemination objective. Additionally, I formed a new collaboration with the editorial team of Metode journal after my essay proposal was selected in a competitive contest for Volume 4, 'Exhibition as Method.' This collaboration is ongoing and involves four workshops scheduled from summer to fall 2025, connecting ten of fifty-five selected researchers worldwide and leading to the publication of Volume 4 of Metode journal. During the secondment, the fieldwork in the Valdres region was undertaken, performing acoustic measurements of medieval bells and studying the soundscapes of sacred sites—activities that directly support the core goals of the CULT-AURAL project by advancing methods for sonic heritage research. The resulting scientific article based on this fieldwork is published in September 2025 in the open-access Heritage scientific journal (Q1).
The CULT-AURAL project also had a strong impact through conferences and editorial initiatives. I co-organized sessions at the European Association of Archaeologists (Rome, 2024; Belgrade, 2025) and edited a Special Issue of Studia Universitatis Hereditati. In 2025, I co-organized the international conference Resonances of the Past: Archaeomusicological Research in Catalonia at the Museum of Music in Barcelona. Tirant lo Blanch will publish a co-edited volume arising from this conference.
CULT-AURAL further raised visibility through invited lectures and roundtables in Europe and beyond, including the roundtable Sound and Spac: A Multidisciplinary Roundtable organized by the International Musicology Society’s Auditory History Study Group (2025), ERC-funded projects Artsoundscapes and SenSArt seminars in Barcelona (2023) and Padua (2024), and Junior Research Seminars at the Institute of Archaeology in Barcelona (2025). International dissemination also included presentations at the IX Coloquio Internacional de Musicología (Bogotá, 2024), Collegium Medievale (Oslo, 2024), and a workshop at the Museum of Cultural History, University of Oslo (2024). Project results were presented at major international conferences such as MedRen (Granada, 2024), the XVII Symposium of the ICTMD Study Group on Music Archaeology (Valladolid, 2024), and the European Association of Archaeologists (Rome, 2024; Belgrade, 2025). Altogether, these activities consolidated CULT-AURAL’s role as a reference point for medieval sonic heritage and sacred soundscape research.