Saturday 21st December 2024

Midnight GMT Monthly on the first Tuesday at 7PM New!

Late Works: By Ear #38

In this episode, Tracks selected in response to postcards sent in by Nicola Organ and Ellen Poppy Hill. Featuring Harry Partch, Charlotte Moorman & Midori Takada. Get your tickets to Late Works at Cafe Koko on 12th September on Dice now!


The radio counterpart to live intermedia event series Late Works, hosted by founder Joseph Bradley Hill. Each month a selection of artists respond to the show on postcards and send them in as inspiration for the next. Running through the shows are a modular stem experiment in which musicians improvise live to original 15 minute compositions.

1am GMT Twice-Monthly, First and Third Thursday at 6pm BST

female:pressure #129 - Hypnotist

For a while now, DJ BONEY S and zikade have been playing with the idea of merging their respective sounds. It wouldn’t be the first time these two share the decks, though: under the name of DJ Frottée, they recently started a vinyl only project dedicated to classic 90s underground from techno to trance.

Finding the spaces where their individual sets collide, their new vinyl only back2back project Hypnotist will be a journey from techno, EBM and industrial to dark italo and disco-heavy electro. Sharing a deep understanding of the other one‘s musical taste and a similar vision for the dance floor, Hypnotist are excited to create something fresh.


Twice-monthly broadcast showcasing electronic music produced by members of the female:pressure international network of female, transgender and non-binary artists practising in the fields of electronic music and digital arts.

2am GMT Monthly

Gravity Waves and The Spirit World # Beatrice Dillon / Keith Harrison OUTLANDS


Commissioned new work from contemporary sound practitioners and other audio choices from experimental electronic collective The Spirit of Gravity.

4am GMT New!

SubPhonics #5 - (A)nything (I)nteresting

We Like computers, you like computers, we all need computers. But how can they augment and initiate creative practice, not as a tool but as an active participant?

In this month’s episode SubPhonics collaborate with our digital comrades to explore productive relationships with technology.

Featuring: David Williams, Lewis Baxter, Nia Fekri, Timo Koch, Erin Robinson, Toby Edwards, Giulio Dal Lago, Jamie Turner, Vincent Ott, Jan Willem de With and the Bots.

If you would like to play and/or collaborate with us, please contact hello@subphonics.com.


Quarterly noise from SubPhonics exploring themes of collaborative sound and performance.

5am GMT

Radio Cascabel # Gustavo Obligado Mix

This episode features an exclusive mix by Argentinian experimental musician Gustavo Obligado.


A selection of the most vibrant and exciting new sounds of Latin America's emerging talents.

6am GMT Monthly

Dronica #52 - Dronica meets Dan Allison, Sam Hailey-Watts and Holst

In this episode, Dronica meets Dan Allison, Sam Hailey-Watts and Holst, curators at Whitechapel Gallery Presents, in London.

Sam Hailey-Watts ///
Sam Hailey-watts is the founder of Calling Cards Publishing, a non for profit organisation that channels a specific focus of the intersection between visual and sonic arts, as well as the co-founder of new experimental and electronic label The Florist’s Mum.

Holst ///
Holst is the alias of DJ and producer Sam Williams. As well as co-curating Whitechapel Gallery Presents, he is one of the founders of London based record label B REC and plays in and produces a number of projects including Black Pixels, Kareni and GOMM as well as his own solo material. Interested in warping electronic music outside of genre confines, he regularly explores analogue tape degradation and sub frequencies.

Dan Allison ///
Performer, recording artist and curator, Dan Allison is half of BAG, a sound and spoken word project with partner Jody DeSchutter. He has recorded and released a self-titled album as GOMM recently. Dan has co-curated exhibitions as part of the Deptford X festival and also co-curates Whitechapel Gallery Presents as well as other performance and sound based events.

They present a selection of experimental electronic music.


Nicola Serra, founder of East London's experimental music festival Dronica, presents new and archival material.

8am GMT Monthly / First Tuesday / 8pm

Discrepancies #79

This episode features Discrepancies from 2022, a run down of all the albums we released on the Discrepant and sisters labels, Sucata Tapes, Souk records and Pacific City Discs.


Discrepancies is a global showcase of disparate music with a focus on earthly field recordings and international sounds, curated by the Discrepant record label, presented by Gonçalo F Cardoso.

9am GMT New!

Injazero #17


Injazero Records founder Siné Buyuka plays a selection of electronic, experimental, ambient and contemporary classical tracks.

10am GMT New!

A Mixtape Radio #2 - Kinship for a Subjective Body

Joe and Chanelle’s audio recordings encompass ambient sounds, conversation, experimental composition and improvised instrumental response. Cassette drones, loop pedals, voice and guitar are used to echo, mimic or bend over bird calls, thunderstorms, night sounds, indistinguishable chatter, museum reverberations and urban movement. These moments captured to tape are presented in two halves as an A-side/B-side format.

Enriched by visual counterpoints for each episode, Bruna’s critical eye forms an ambiguous tonal narrative from Jake's method of stumbling into excellence. Mountain, valley, glacier, and urban horizon are presented in stereo format, to parallel the A-side/B-side format.

This program has been made on the stolen lands of the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, we pay respect to the Elders both past and present.

Project lead and sound by Joe Wilson and Chanelle Collier. Creative direction by Bruna Volpi. Photography by Jake Terrey.

Supported by Higher Ground Studios, Artspace, Create NSW and Resonance Extra.

Field Notes - “Let Me Stop You Right There”

Side A - Kinship

Mixtape 9: Electronic high notes to museum recording and fading in chords on guitar; max delay and screaming children distorted from the vinyl record; G major riff with applause on vocal pedal loop and storytelling of washing past; shaking drones with ringtone from missed call message bank; indistinguishable talking in the studio and use of power tools; recording of bus engine over museum crowds; handling of cassette tapes and players; music sample; A minor and F major riff on guitar with offset vocal loop.

Side B - Body

Mixtape 9: Screams in an institution and guitar noises; Lp needle taps with heavy distortion and delay; creaking guitar handling through high compression; feedback and chords and scales; offset vocal loop over distorted museum; guitar in G major and indistinguishable voices; birds and language lessons; phone calls and studio visits; artist borscht picnic chats; feedback on amp; Bundanon morning birds and crickets with museum sounds and guitar.


A monthly programme which blends textured audio from cassette recordings by Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier with tonal imagery by Bruna Volpi and Jake Terrey. Sound engineering by Ollie Brown.

10:30am GMT

The Wire: Adventures In Music and Sound # 23rd May 2024

In this episode, Shane Woolman presents a special guest mix from Avalanche Kaito and also plays new and recent music by People Like Us, Liliane Chlela, Marewrew, Ahmed Malek, Sound Breaking Sky, Kiwanoid and more.


New music with The Wire Magazine.

Midday GMT

Railroad Flat Radio presents Pasolini’s Anger

*

Why is our life dominated by discontent, by anguish, by the fear of war, by war? In order to answer this question I have written La rabbia, not following a chronological or perhaps even a logical thread, but only my political reasons and my poetic sense.Pier Paolo Pasolini

Written in response to producer Gastone Ferranti’s request for his comments on a set of newsreel items, the poet would respond with a montage of his own. Via the unfolding of a chrysalis of images, in La rabbia / Anger (1963), Pasolini’s lens pans over Soviet repression in Hungary; the Cuban revolution; (the utopian object of) space exploration; political imprisonment in Algeria; the liberation of the former European colonies; the election of Pope John XXIII; the prospect of revolution in Africa and the Middle East; in Europe and in Latin America... Here, we’ve a panoply of photorealist intimations of Pasolini’s ‘poetic sense.’ The death of Marilyn Monroe crests as an idea in this tidal pooling of reflections, as the poet’s line lights out for conceptual rhymes and counterpoints.  

In Viti’s translation, the weave of prose and poetry that forms La rabbia portrays the vitality of Pasolini’s work in its capacity to speak to both the specifics of his contexts, the character of our own present tense, and the ironic fact of a life lived against the gulf of discontent in its myriad forms. Here, we’ve a startling confrontation of a revolutionary struggle in stasis set in lines that crystallise a rallying call against blindness. ‘I’ll not have peace, not ever,’ he writes. A lucid acceptance of the poet’s restlessness, and a marker for Pasolini’s commitment to a solidarity with the oppressed that we find reaffirmed on every page, in La rabbia the poet charts how ‘the powerful world of capital takes an abstract painting as its brash banner’ in this unravelling of ‘crisis in the world.’

*

Pasolini’s poems thrive with passion and outrage. A 20th century Dante, he grieves at inequity, feels disgusted by corruption, and wails against the evil that people do. Pasolini doesn’t render a coming paradise, but contests hate with love, meanness with generosity, and through the reality of his beautiful poems, suggests the possibility of creating a better world.Lynne Tillman

Pasolini saw what was coming and saw the poet’s mission as an excoriation of this world to come, that has now arrived. His tremendous energy was not negative. It came from an abounding love of the world. Picturing himself like a hero from ancient days, he struggled mightily, in and against the powers arrayed against life. What he called neocapitalism already came with its own brands of neofascism. Good comrade that he was, he knew the mark of our enemies, and where to direct his rage. Here we find him in a moment when he thought the good fight might still be won. A book to give us courage.McKenzie Wark

La rabbia remains one of Pasolini’s most singular achievements, an all-consuming expression of the restless and relentless fury that defined his work and his thinking. In an age of increasingly one-dimensional political art, this most welcome volume is an urgent reminder of its dizzying possibilities.Dennis Lim

‘Today,’ we read in La rabbia, Pasolini’s remarkable set of poems composed in 1962 to accompany his film by that title, ‘only four thousand subscribers have televised moving images in their homes; in a year they will be in the tens of thousands.’ And then the poet corrects the line: ‘No—in their millions. Millions of candidates for the death of the soul.’ Sixty years later, in the age of TikTok and Instagram, those ‘candidates’ may well be in the billions. Indeed, what gives La rabbia its uncanny accuracy is that its vision, however exaggerated and extreme, might well characterise our own moment in history. Not only ‘in my country, my country that’s called Italy’ (Pasolini’s refrain), but all over the world, the ‘noble’ solutions of the late 1940s and ‘50s, with their UN charter, their Marshall Plan, and their call for No More Wars, now seem to have been little more than Band-Aids that left things pretty much as they were. Whether he is dealing with the failed Hungarian Revolution or the Algerian War, or with the ‘new problem [that] breaks out in the world. It is called colour,’ Pasolini sees the real enemy as normality—the normality or qualunquismo that accepts things as they are. In Cristina Viti’s excellent translation, Pasolini’s anger would be devastating, were it not for the proviso that poetry can change consciousness. It is poetry, La rabbia insists, that provides the counterweight to the darkness that surrounds us.Marjorie Perloff

*

Pier Paolo Pasolini (1922–1975) was an Italian poet, novelist, journalist, filmmaker, theorist, and dramaturg. First and foremost a poet, he is a major figure in European literature and cinematic arts. Life in Rome during the 1950s furnished the material for his first two novels, Ragazzi di vita / The Ragazzi, 1955) and Una vita violenta / A Violent Life, 1959); works whose brutal reflections of urban poverty in the city were similar in character to the depictions of Rome in his debut film, Accattone (1961). All three works dealt with the lives of thieves, prostitutes, and other denizens of a Roman underworld. Other notable novels and narrative works in translation include the unfinished novel Petrolio (published in English in Ann Goldstein’s translation by Pantheon), a work-in-progress at the time of Pasolini’s death, and La lunga strada di sabbia / The Long Road of Sand, a facsimile of writings towards a travelogue initially published in the magazine Successo.

Pasolini published numerous volumes of poetry in his lifetime, including La meglio gioventù (1954); Le ceneri di Gramsci (1957); L'usignolo della chiesa cattolica (1958); La religione del mio tempo (1961); Poesia in forma di rosa (1964); Trasumanar e organizzar (1971); and La nuova gioventù (1975). Works of poetry in English language translation include Norman MacAfee’s Poems, an anthology covering the entirety of Pasolini’s ‘official publications’ (Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 1982); Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Francesca Valente's Roman Poems (City Lights, 1986); Jack Hirschman's anthology, In Danger (City Lights, 2010); and Thomas E. Perterson’s translation of The Divine Mimesis (Contra Mundum, 2014), amongst others.

A noted journalist and publisher, Pasolini was also a rare voice in the popular press. In 1955—in collaboration with Francesco Leonetti, Roberto Roversi and others—he edited and oversaw the publication of Officina, a periodical dedicated to new poetry in Italian (which ran for fourteen issues), and contributed a regular column to Vie Nuove from May 1960 to September 1965 (titled Dialoghi con Pasolini, or Pasolini in Dialogue, subsequently published as a collated edition in 1977 as Le belle bandiere or The Beautiful Flags). His literary works informed his cinema, and Pasolini would follow the release of Accattone in ‘61 with such noted features as Il Vangelo secondo Matteo / The Gospel According to Saint Matthew (1964); Uccellacci e Uccellini / Hawks and the Sparrows (1966); Oedipus Rex (1967); Medea (1969); Teorema / Theorem (1968); Porcile / Pigsty (1969); Il Decamerone / The Decameron (1971); and The Canterbury Tales (1972). Pasolini referred to himself as a ‘Catholic Marxist’ and often used shocking juxtapositions of idea and imagery to expose the vapidity of values in modern society. His friend, the writer Alberto Moravia, considered him “the major Italian poet” of the second half of the 20th century. Pasolini was murdered in 1975.

Cristina Viti is a translator and poet working with Italian, English and French. Her most recent publication includes Pier Paolo Pasolini’s La rabbia / Anger (Tenement Press, 2022), a co-translation of poems by Anna Gréki, The Streets of Algiers and Other Poems (Smokestack Books, 2020), and her translation of Elsa Morante’s The World Saved by Kids and Other Epics (Seagull Books, 2016), which was shortlisted for the John Florio Prize. Viti held collaborative translation workshops within the Radical Translations project run by the French and Comparative Literature departments of King’s College; Tenement’s imprint, No University Press, published an anthology of texts resulting of these workshops in 2024, An Anarchist Playbook.

Martin Esposito is a freelance language professional operating in London and Rome. His entry into voiceovers took place organically twenty years ago through the side-doors of conference interpreting and song. Martin is strictly agnostic with regard to content as his main objective is to balance two identities, languages and influences into a composite whole—an act of exposure and digestion enough to last a lifetime.

catholic Churgh is a is a two-person organisation.


A signal post for the Winter solstice, an unabridged reading of the 2022 Tenement Press publication of Pier Paolo Pasolini’s 1963 work La rabbia / Anger—translated from the Italian by Cristina Viti—as read by Viti, with contributions from Martin Esposito and music by catholic Churgh (Jon Auman and Thomas Bush). Pasolini’s Anger was recorded and produced for radio by Tenement’s Dominic J. Jaeckle and Resonance’s Milo Thesiger-Meacham.

1:32pm GMT

Five Folk Tales for Radio (featuring Steffan Cennydd) # The Deserter

The Deserter was commissioned by Radio Art Zone as part of Esch2022 European Capital of Culture.


Five Folk Tales for Radio (featuring Steffan Cennydd). Voice: Steffan Cennydd. Concept, text, sound design, montage by Ed Baxter. Recording engineer: Michael Umney.

2pm GMT New!

Merrie Melodias #2 - Free the Jazz

We continue to listen to rare records released on the Soviet major label Melodia. This time – and not for the last time – the episode is dedicated to jazz in all its manifestations.

We'll start with the first jazz composition in the history of the USSR (the Uzbek band under Pavel Chaplevsky made this recording in 1935), listen to balearic improvisations from Ukraine, electro-boogie from Kazakhstan, jazz-mughams from Azerbaijan and then dive headfirst into free jazz from the Baltic States and faraway places in Russia. Let jazz be free!


Uzbekistan-based DJ and boss of the experimental TOPOT label Eugenie Galochkin presents rare vinyl rips from the Soviet Melodia label. Melodia has released music from all around the world: from obscure Baltic electronica and free jazz from Siberia; to synth-pop from Tajikistan and academic avant-garde from Ukraine. The series will explore how national and cultural characteristics are embedded in musical language.

3pm GMT Monthly

Radio Picnic #65 - Renaissance Resonances: Nap Concert Events with D.C.P - Diorama Inactif

In this episode, a sleep project live from Le Commun, Geneva.


Radio Picnic is a mobile radio art project by zonoff which invites multi-disciplinary artists to create works inspired by the radio medium.

4pm GMT

Radia #1021 - Nitz-Live by Tine Vrabič

Tine Vrabič (Nitz) is one of the most active protagonists of the Slovenian electronic, club and experimental music scene. For more than a decade, he has been DJing and performing live in the most prominent clubs and festivals at home and abroad.

He is also known as the former programme manager of the Ljubljana Klub K4, the head of the AmbientSoup label and series, a member of the CLSTRFNK collective (Evano, Nulla) and the author of the Senzorama show on Radio Študent, which covers electro-acoustic, experimental and ambient releases of all eras. Together with harpist Urška Preis (rouge-ah) he also forms the experimental duo II/III (two out of three).

This 27 minute piece was played live in 2023 for Kamizdat label night, representing a blend of cuts from old releases and newer live jam recordings which were never released.


Members of Radia, the international group of independent cultural radio stations, explore new and forgotten ways of making radio.

4:30pm GMT New!

Atmospheric Densities #1

The first episode of Atmospheric Densities showcases new and not so new releases moving from saxophone soundscapes, electronics markets in China, unreleased ice rink tunes and hippos in South Africa.

Hosted by Kate Carr.


This is the Flaming Pines radio show featuring new releases, mixes and experiments in field recording, sound art and experimental music, hosted by Kate Carr and guests.

6pm GMT New!

Shuffle #11 - Where Is My Mind?

In this edition, get ready to listen to the weirdest and most mind-blowing covers and drifts of Where Is My Mind? by The Pixies. There's no order, no lists, only stilted and exclusive material.

Rumba bands, super special Youtube stars, eminences of bardcore, piano lovers, dutch speakers, Fight Club fans, Misters and misses robots, rocker babies, zoologists, … all are welcome in Shuffle formula radio mode.

This episode features a special guest: Youtuber shonkywonkydonkey. Since 2016, he's been regularly uploading memes, mashups and other quirky content he feels like uploading. Formerly known as "the firefly guy" and "the Onision vocoder guy". Now better known as 'the "but it's all my voice" guy'.


Shuffle by Agnès Pe is a formula radio programme taken to the extreme: repetitive, obscure and humorous. Each episode presents obscure covers of a single song. “Anything that spreads by imitation or spreads by bodily reproduction, like genes, or by viral infection is a meme” - (Richard Dawkins, 2013).

7pm GMT Monthly

Klanglabor #3

Now: 'Silence' - the third experiment.

Missed the show? Catch up on Mixcloud.


Experiments in exploring humanity with Keno Westhoff of http://klanglabor.ayayay.eu.

8pm GMT Monthly on the fourth Thursday at 8pm

Stray Landings #4 - The Sample

This month: Stray Landings are joined by Natasha Lall and Dane Law to discuss The Sample.


Online music publication Stray Landings invites guests from across the electronic music spectrum to discuss themes and innovations.

9pm GMT

Night Trippin' #10 - Iceland


Night Trippin' unearths alternative sounds from around the world, one country at a time.

10pm GMT Monthly on the first Tuesday at 10pm New!

Superfluid #8


Btech and Eman Resu of Superfluid present sound, music, noise along with all their sources via talk, fiction and truth.

11pm GMT

Listening Experience #38 - Rigid: Ideal for the Grill


A monthly collection of audio experiments and listening objects with sound artist Matt Burnett from Berlin.

Midnight GMT

Underground Institute Festival # Night 2

On this second night, live performances from Silent Green by Limpe Fuchs and Alexandra Cárdenas; and by Das Kinn and Ya Tosiba at Panke Culture.

Full lineup:

Percussionist, sound-sculpture builder and pioneer sonic explorer from rural Bavaria, Limpe Fuchs' ongoing legacy expands over 6 decades. She uses her large scale self-built instruments made of metal, wood, and stone, as well as the viola and the voice creating a tapestry of sound.

Colombian composer Alexandra Cárdenas is best known for her performances with live coding, though she has composed contemporary pieces for a variety of musical formations (orchestra, ensembles, soloists). Her work researches the algorithmic behavior of music, and musicality within code.

Toben Piel (half of the Frankfurt-based avant-garde / techno-pop duo Les Trucs) stops for a visit with a new blend of Post Punk and crisp analog electronics.

Azerbaijani-born Zuzu Zakaria borrows from traditional music from the region, woven into cutting edge Scandinavian electronica and hip hop, using rhymes in her native Azeri tongue, in the tradition of Meykhana (‘winehouse’) word artists, which was prohibited during the soviet regime.


Resonance Extra presents two nights of the Underground Institute Festival, which was broadcast live from Silent Green, Berlin and Panke Culture on the 8th and 9th December 2022. Sonic exploration, custom built instruments, sound art and avant-garde pop music, featuring some of the most adventurous sonic artists active today.

00:00
00:00
Open in new window