Author Archives: nickH

Voice On Record

Episode 1: Introduction

This introductory episode of Voice On Record is an appetiser for the series to come. It features poetry, examples of regional dialect, biography, comedy, natural history and children’s records.

Voice On Record is produced and presented by Sean Williams. Each episode features a selection of recordings of the human voice which have been preserved on vinyl. Historic events stand alongside esoteric guides to better bowling. Arid studio recordings are juxtaposed with location recordings rich with fascinating incidental sounds.

Presenter: Sean Williams

The Ugly Bug Crawl

Performing London’s ‘Ugly Bug Crawl’ takes the listener on an historic and anthropomorphic stroll around the immediate vicinity of South Bank Centre’s Pestival led by alternative historian John Nicholson.

Email: walksandtalks@aol.com

Originally broadcast during the week beginning August 31st 2009.

Tunnel Vision

Episode 3 of 10: Frank Key.

Frank Key
shuffles through a series of tunnels beneath West Dulwich to lament the forgotten histories of The Puckington Tunnels and Pointy Town sewers.

Tunnel Vision is a new series recorded entirely in London’s sewer system. Producer/presenter Bruno Rinvolucri duped a collection of writers, musicians, activists and academics into wading knee deep through swollen rivers of effluvia along the miles of tunnel beneath London. Tunnel Vision’s troglodytes explore this hidden and somewhat mysterious subterranean environment.

This episode was originally broadcast on 11th August 2009.

Email: brinvolucri@yahoo.co.uk

Violent London

Ian Bone discusses the history of violent protest in London. Joining Ian in the studio are the author Clive Bloom and Andy Meinke from Freedom Press.

This programme exists in parallel to London’s Burning, a series of talks and events concerned with London’s social history, literary London, the occult, deep topography, psychogeography, radicalism and much else besides. London’s Burning is hosted by Housmans book store…

Originally broadcast August 10th & 14th 2009.

Produced by Nick Hamilton.

Tunnel Vision

Episode 2 of 10: Jane Trowell.

Jane Trowell is a member of artist and environmentalist collective Platform. She discusses “green” sanitation systems.

Tunnel Vision is recorded entirely in London’s sewer system. Producer/presenter Bruno Rinvolucri duped a collection of writers, musicians, activists and academics into wading knee deep through swollen rivers of effluvia along the miles of tunnel beneath London. Tunnel Vision’s troglodytes explore this hidden and somewhat mysterious subterranean environment.

This episode was originally broadcast on 4th August 2009.

Email: brinvolucri@yahoo.co.uk

Tunnel Vision

Episode 1 of 10: Sammie Joplin

Sound artist Joplin embarks on a subterranean jaunt from Brixton Water Lane to Clapham High Street conducting various sound experiments en route.

Tunnel Vision is recorded entirely in London’s sewer system. Producer/presenter Bruno Rinvolucri duped a collection of writers, musicians, activists and academics into wading knee deep through swollen rivers of effluvia along the miles of tunnel beneath London. Tunnel Vision’s troglodytes explore this hidden and somewhat mysterious subterranean environment.

This episode was originally broadcast on 28th July 2009.

Email: brinvolucri@yahoo.co.uk

London’s Burning

Malcolm Vache from Housmans Bookshop in discussion with Ken Worpole, Laura Oldfield-Ford, John Rogers and Merlin Coverley discussing London’s social history, literary London, the occult, deep topography, psychogeography, radicalism and much else besides.

This programme exists in parallel to a series a walks, talks, discussions and screenings hosted by Housmans Bookshop throughout July and August.

Originally broadcast Monday July 13th 2009.

Produced by Nick Hamilton.

Cory Doctorow – Podcast 5

This is the fifth installment of a 5 part interview with Cory Doctorow conducted by Rachel Baker and George Beckett of Arts Council England. Doctorow discusses the bursting of the dot com bubble in the late 1990s, his forthcoming novel Makers and, rather generously, gives his advice to cultural funding bodies…

Cory Doctorow is a prize-winning science fiction novelist, blogger and technology activist. He is the co-editor of the popular weblog Boing Boing (boingboing.net), and a contributor to Wired, Popular Science, Make, the New York Times, and the Guardian.

Rachel Baker and Charles Beckett of Arts Council England interviewed Cory in his Clerkenwell office. This programme was recorded and edited by Nick Hamilton and produced by Richard Thomas for Resonance 104.4 FM.

Cory Doctorow – Podcast 4

This is the fourth installment of a 5 part interview with Cory Doctorow conducted by Rachel Baker and Charles Beckett of Arts Council England. Cory shares his thoughts on “mainstream cultural production”….

Cory Doctorow is a prize-winning science fiction novelist, blogger and technology activist. He is the co-editor of the popular weblog Boing Boing (boingboing.net), and a contributor to Wired, Popular Science, Make, the New York Times, and the Guardian.

Rachel Baker and Charles Beckett of Arts Council England interviewed Cory in his Clerkenwell office. This programme was recorded and edited by Nick Hamilton and produced by Richard Thomas for Resonance 104.4 FM.

Cory Doctorow – Podcast 3

This is the third installment of a 5 part interview with Cory Doctorow conducted by Rachel Baker and Charles Beckett of Arts Council England. Doctorow gives his views on the Digital Britain Report and his opinion of the “media distribution landscape”

Cory Doctorow is a prize-winning science fiction novelist, blogger and technology activist. He is the co-editor of the popular weblog Boing Boing (boingboing.net), and a contributor to Wired, Popular Science, Make, the New York Times, and the Guardian.

Rachel Baker and Charles Beckett of Arts Council England interviewed Cory in his Clerkenwell office. This programme was recorded and edited by Nick Hamilton and produced by Richard Thomas for Resonance 104.4 FM.