Category Archives: Shows

Regular broadcasts on Resonance FM

Marvin Suicide: 94 – Word up my booties.

Music. Download. Free. Internet.

In this weeks exciting installment…I…erm…play some music and talk complete rubbish. Here is the tracklisting for the show, I hope you enjoy it:

1. Hard Shoe by Vagina Jones, Karneval Der Vagina:
www.comfortstand.com

2. Dope Dragon by Flextronic:
www.myspace.com

3. Infinity Part 1 by Megatone, Pure Land:
www.myspace.com

4. Intro by Enjumi, Der Morgan Davor:
www.legoego.de

5. Nichts by Enjumi, Der Morgan Devor:
www.legoego.de

6. Tell Me Everything by Richard Prince and Bob Gober, Audio by Visual Artists – TELLUS 21:
www.ubu.com

7. In The Still Of The Night by Dondero High School A Capella Choir, Pop Concert 1995:
www.comfortstand.com

This episode was broadcast on 9th November 2006. Please visit www.marvinsuicide.org for previous shows and more information. Plus I would love it if you were to send me an e-mail.

I’m ready for my close-up: The London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival

In advance of their discussion of Stephen King movies this Thursday (16/11/06) on Resonance at 10.30pm; here’s a podcast of the interview Alex Fitch did with Emma Smart, a librarian at the British Film Institute about a lecture she gave at the LLGFF. They also discuss the lack of gay movies at the London Film Festival (thankfully this seemed to be remedied last month) and about the history of the LLGFF.
Links: http://www.llgff.org.uk
LLGFF reviews at backprojection.com
Originally broadcast 11th May 2006 (mp3 format, 25.9mb)

Hooting Yard: B For Bim

Brethren, we find ourselves, today, in a village in China. Perhaps some would feel inclined to ridicule rather than applaud the patience of a poor Chinese woman who tried to make a needle from a rod of iron by rubbing it against a stone. We may scoff and laugh and snicker like rude and common folk do. It is doubtful whether she succeeded or not, but, so the story runs, the sight of the worker plying her seemingly hopeless task, put new courage and determination into the heart of a young Chinese student, who, in deep despondency, stood watching her. He was a spindly little chap whose greatest joy was to be found in the study of industrious leaf-cutter ants, of which he kept teeming thousands in a glass case in the parlour of his pneumonia-racked mother. Because of repeated failures in his studies, ambition and hope had left him. He could think only of ants. Bitterly disappointed with himself, and despairing of ever accomplishing anything, the young man had thrown his books aside in disgust. He had even cast aside a five-volume encyclopaedia devoted entirely to the world of insects; ants alone filled the pages of books one and two. Put to shame, however, by the lesson taught by the old woman, he gathered his scattered forces together, went to work with renewed ardour, and, wedding Patience and Energy, became, in time, one of the greatest scholars in China. Actually, that’s not strictly true: he ended up sewing cummerbunds-for-export in a Batavian sweatshop. When you know you are on the right track, do not let any failures dim your vision or discourage you, for you cannot tell how close you may be to victory. And even if every damned thing goes wrong, there is no shame in being a deluded pauper. Have patience and stick, stick, stick. Then stick a bit more. It is eternally true that he “Who steers right on / Will gain, at length, however far, the port. / Though he be seasick all the way / And quite bereft of thought.”

A little moral fable taken from Stories From Life by Marden Vice Harden, with interpolations by Frank.

ant.jpg
  • Forty Visits to the Worm Farm – Parts 21 to 40
  • Hooting Yard Music Prize 2006
  • Fort Hoity
  • The Might of Patience

This episode of Hooting Yard was first broadcast on the 31st May 2006. A complete transcript of this episode can be found on Frank Key’s Hooting Yard website. Photo by JochenB.

I’m ready for my close-up: Remixing British Transport films

Richard Thomas remixes the soundtracks of the classic British Transport Films that were made from 1949 to 1982. Made by a protégé of the British Documentary Movement their purpose was to act as travelogue films, which promoted destinations in town, country and seaside resorts throughout the British Isles. By interweaving a variety of these films, which are being introduced to a new generation via BFI DVD releases, Richard investigates the cultural memory that the sounds and rhythms of the film soundtracks evoke.
Links: Buy the films from the BFI
BTF website
Originally broadcast 15th June 2006 (mp3 format, 25.1mb)

Marvin Suicide: 93 – And a half-penny too.

This episode can only be described as jowl-wobbling entertainment. 30 minutes of notes, growls, chords and yelps found freely and legally on the internet. Yes thats right. FREE and LEGAL. I just don’t think thats really sunk in to everyone yet…

1. Itchy Itchy Hay Hay by Georgia & August Greenberg, Sing Songs For You And Me!:
www.comfortstand.com

2. Pot Song by Red Dirt, Go Go USA:
www.reddirt.co.uk

3. Big Girls by Georgia & August Greenberg, Sing Songs For You And Me!:
www.comfortstand.com

4. Be Thankful You’re Healthy by DRGS, Laburnham Live Chipmunk Orchestra:
www.hippocamp.net

5. Fare Thee Well Blues by Joe Callicott, Ain’t A Gonna Lie To You:
www.fatpossum.com

6. psy. by 8m2 stereo, Per Undas Electricas:
www.pathmusick.hermetech.net

7. Married by Bern, Just Married:
thinner.cc

8. Buffalo by The Adjuster, The Past Compilation:
www.bevlarmusic.com

If you like what you hear then please support the many wonderful people that make their art available to us all. Love them, cherish them and above all, squeeze them tight.

Goodbye.

Hooting Yard: 40 Visits To The Worm Farm (part one)

A reading from the very rare and highly prized book by Frank Key ‘Twitching And Shattered’.

brokenbicycle.jpg
  • Forty Visits to the Worm Farm – Parts 1 to 20

This episode of Hooting Yard was first broadcast on the 24th May 2006. Frank Key’s Hooting Yard website. Photo by macop.

I’m ready for my close-up: Home movie day

Alex Fitch introduces and moderates a discussion with Guy Edmonds, film preserver and travel writer David Wenk about this year’s Home Movie Day which is being held at the Cinema Museum in Kennington. The annual Home Movie Day is designed to celebrate a populist art form which represents a cultural memory of the 20th century and documentations of everyday life. All visitors to the museum are welcome to bring their old cine reels to share, archive and project with others…

Links: Guy Edmonds
David Wenk
Home Movie Day in London
Lambeth Cinema Museum
The annual international Home Movie Day

Originally broadcast 10th August 2006 (mp3 format, 22.4mb)

Marvin Suicide: 92 – Black Gold 360 special.

This episode is showcasing the self-titled LP by the artist Black Gold 360.
It is one of many free releases available at www.belugarecordings.com so why not go and have a goosy ganders. And if you like what you hear then please give them a shout, I’m sure it would be much appreciated.

Tracks played from the LP in this show were:

1. Atlantic Conversation

2. F**k Your Best Friend

3. Wonderful Wonderful World

4. Puha

5. Venus Supine

6. Bill & Jimmy

Thankyou bye.

Hooting Yard: Detective Captain Unstrebnodtalb

Trellis was mere figment, vapour. He appeared to different people at different times as a sort of phantom. He was a tabula rasa, on to which those who met him inscribed their dreams, their yearnings, their hallucinations.

All, that is, except Blodgett, in whose presence Trellis took on a terrifying reality. He would snivel, and Blodgett would have to mop up the snivellings with his filthy shirt-cuff. He would mewl, and Blodgett would thump him on the head, bruising his fist in the process.

After Detective Captain Unstrebnodtalb chewed up part of his head, Blodgett’s relationship with Trellis became even more intimate. Trellis would tell Blodgett all about the weather in Finland, and the nature of ice, and give him planks, and show him albumen. He would invoke disastrous plutonian gods, and have them frolic, miniaturised, before Blodgett’s eyes, occasionally tweaking the hairs from his nostrils. In return, Blodgett gave Trellis extra helpings of soup, winced at his frailness, concocted diverting bedtime stories and nautical yarns, and plied him with raspberries.

raspberry.jpg

Together, they plotted dark and criminal deeds.

  • The Immense Duckpond Pamphlet: Part 2 (O to Z)

This episode of Hooting Yard was first broadcast on the 11th May 2006. A complete transcript of this episode can be found on Frank Key’s Hooting Yard website. Photo by Jeff Kubina.

Harmon e. Phraisyar: From Spools Beyond

It’s the time of year for spooks, spectres and things that go “ecky ecky ecky” in the night so in this supernatural episode, Dr. Buckhart Strangle invites you to ponder the existence of ghosts.

Reporting from glamourous Brixton, Ron Breful presents dictaphone recordings of empty rooms where aural manifestations are said to have taken place. If that wasn’t scary enough, somewhere in amongst all this is a cameo appearance by an actual improvising musician!