Category Archives: Shows

Regular broadcasts on Resonance FM

OST 12.08.2008 – Sesame Street Special

Film, library and television music with Jonny Trunk. In this archive edition from 2008, Robin The Fog, OST’s long-suffering engineer and comedy foil takes the controls to bring you the musical fruits of his Sesame Street obsession, aided and abetted by ResFM stalwart Joceline Colvert. Together they bring you a Ladybug’s Picnic, P-Funk jams concerning the days of the week and a pigeon that plays checkers, pus some surprisingly avant-garde obscurities from Philip Glass. What more could you ask for?

Technical Difficulties 2:14

Joe Collins of JC Promotion talks about the first full gig for the Finnish bilingual (American Sign Language and English spoken) rap crew Signmark’s in the UK.

Join the discussion on Google + Facebook and Twitter . Wear your scars with pride, and remember. We all have Technical Difficulties.

Panel Borders: Mom’s Cancer

Panel Borders: Mom’s Cancer

Starting a month of shows about medical comics, Panel Borders is proud to present a talk given by cartoonist Brian Fies about his web comic / graphic novel Mom’s Cancer, recorded at last year’s Graphic Medicine conference in London. Brian talks about the history of the comic, his experiences of working on a strip with such emotive content and his thoughts regarding the comics medium as a whole as a method for helping people deal with medical and life threatening situations.

Excerpt from Moms Cancer by and (c) Brian Fies

Excerpt from Moms Cancer by and (c) Brian Fies

For more info about this podcast and a variety of formats you can stream or download, please visit the home of this episode at www.archive.org

Links: Official Mom’s Cancer website
Graphic Medicine website including info on the 2010 conference
Read Brian Fies’ blog posts about his trip to London and Graphic Medicine 2011

Listen to Philippa Perry talk about her therapy graphic novel Couch Fiction
Listen to Alex Fitch interview Darryl Cunningham about Psychiatric Tales and his other work

Info about the 2011 Graphic Medicine conference, 9-11 June 2011, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago

Continue reading

Hello GoodBye Show 28 May 2011: Skinjobs, Ten and Gerry Mitchell

We have debut performances on Hello GoodBye this afternoon from Skinjobs and Ten.

SKINJOBS
Skinjobs is the current art-music project for the long standing collaborative partnership between the artist Adam Latham and former Xerox Teens (aka XX Teens) singer Richard Cash. Well-turned out and industrious (check out their merchandising!) troubadours Skinjobs play bespoke one-song gigs, often mimed and at far-flung venues, car parks, forests and art galleries across Europe. Who knows what they will play for us in session today? Probably not even they do…

TEN
From Leeds and London, Ten comprise guitarists Dominic Deane and Jonny Fryer. They create minimalist sonic soundscapes in equal parts folk and ambient.

Track List:
A Clean Kitchen Is A Happy Kitchen – Farmers With Televisions
Skinjobs – Howdy Do (LIVE SESSION / PRE-REC)
Skinjobs – Who Wants Canaries (LIVE SESSION / PRE-REC)
Skinjobs – Beautiful Sea (LIVE SESSION / PRE-REC)
Skinjobs – Money In The Bank Vs. Money In The Pocket (LIVE SESSION / PRE-REC)
Xerox Teens – Cousin Called Jonathan (Live @ 12 Bar Club 11.09.04 – HG archive)
Milk Kan – Junk Yard
Ten – The Absent (LIVE SESSION)
Ten – Winter Light (LIVE SESSION)
Ten – 17 (LIVE SESSION)
Serafina Steer – Half Robot
Lime Headed Dog – Excited
Las Kellies – Totsunootoshigo
Maria & The Mirrors – Magadan ’92
Gertrude – Pigs In Mud
Gerry Mitchell w. Ten – Die To Love (LIVE SESSION)
Gerry Mitchell w. Ten – Faker Quaker (LIVE SESSION)
Hot Head Show – ‘Title Unknown’

Wavelengh – 2009 August 14th Armer Tschitchik!

Armer Tschitchik! by Martin Klapper and Roger Turner from Recent Croaks 1997, then pour percussions and saturation by Israel Quellet from Oppressum 2005 and finally the third section from A Crimson Grail for 400 Electric Guitars by Rhys Chatham recorded live in Paris 2006.

Technical Difficulties 2:13

This week’s show is a news roundup from around the world. This is the last time I will do such a feature, there is too much news to give it proper airtime. For more regular news, visit www.disabilitynewsservice.com

Join the discussion on Google + Facebook and Twitter . Wear your scars with pride, and remember. We all have Technical Difficulties.

Art Monthly May 2011

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In this programme, Matt Hale  discusses the latest May 2011 issue features with Maria Walsh, who has interviewed Mary Kelly at the time of her exhibition Projects 1973-2010 at the Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester and JJ Charlesworth who discusses 21st century art criticism  in his feature Criticism V Critique.

Art Monthly magazine’s talk programme on Resonance FM started in February 2009 and is broadcast on the second Friday of each month at 5pm. In each show Art Monthly critics discuss their writing in the latest issue.

The programme is hosted by Matt Hale who has worked at Art Monthly since 1991 and produced by Frederika Whitehead.

Previous episodes are available on Art Monthly’s website www.artmonthly.co.uk/events.htm

Art Monthly magazine offers an informed and comprehensive guide to the latest developments in contemporary art.

Fiercely independent, Art Monthly’s news and opinion sections provide regular information and polemics on the

international art scene. It also offers In-depth interviews and features; reviews of exhibitions, performances, films and books; art law; auction reports and exhibition listings

Art Monthly magazine is indispensable reading!

Special magazine subscription offer for Resonance 104.4 listeners.Subscribe now and save 40% on the cover price at

www.artmonthly.co.uk

 

Sine Of The Times 29/05/2011 – Opit Records Special

The cutting edge of London’s underground dance music scene with Thomas Lee and Rita Maia. This week your hosts were joined in the studio by Opit Records boss Subeena to chat about what she and the label have planned for the next few months. As if this wasn’t enough she’s brought label signing Circle Traps with her, who crammed the studio full of their equipment and then played us a spell-binding live session. Two members of the group are involved with the mercury-nominated Portico Quartet, so that should give you a good idea of the kind of quality on offer. Don’t miss this chance to poke your nose into the affairs of one of the most exciting labels on the scene today.

Tracklist

Gil Scott Heron – Lady Day and John Coltrain

Boxcutter – All Too Heavy (ft Brian Greene)

Africa Hitech – Cyclic Sun

Myele Manzanza – Me I Know Him ft. Sam Manzanza and Amenta

Lando Kal – Further

Graphics – Blue Top

Cosmin TRG – Bijoux

Emptyset – Altogether Lost (Peveralist Edit)

Subeena – Wrong For Me

Milyoo – Colours (Forthcoming Opit)

Vezelay – Demure (Forthcoming Planet Mu)

-Circle Traps Live Session-

Mr Beatnick – Casio Romance (BNJMN remix)

Subeena – space of flow

Cornelia – Aquarius Dreams (Circle Traps Remix)

Gil Scott Heron & Jamie xx – I’ll Take Care Of U

Why not get in touch and send us your tracks?

Twitter: @sineradio

Blog: http://sineofthetimes.tumblr.com/

SoundCloud: http://soundcloud.com/sineofthetimesradio

Voice on Record: Episode 57 (Ludwig Koch)

Ludwig Koch was the first person to record the voice of an animal, recording an Indian Shama bird in 1889 on an Edison Cylinder. His interest in sound recording led him to make some of the most amazing field recordings over many decades, and we present excerpts of two records in which he is interviewed and some of his recordings are played and remarked upon.
Originally broadcast on 23rd November 2010

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.

http://voiceonrecord.blogspot.com

Hooting Yard: P. to V.

If it was shortly after dawn that you sank into your quagmire, bleary-eyed on a morning hike, you at least know that you have many hours of light ahead, and this knowledge should help you to keep your pecker up. After all, statistically, the longer the daylight, the more chance there is of a peasant passing by. I have not studied statistics, and of course there are all sorts of variables to take into account, but I think I can safely say that you have more reason for optimism if you have sunk into a quagmire early in the morning rather than at dusk, as the sun sinks in the west and the sky turns black. You can adjust the intensity of your hope or hopelessness based on what o’ clock it is when you sink, for of course it may be neither dawn nor dusk but two-thirty in the afternoon or one minute past midnight. If the latter, should you survive your ordeal, you would be well-advised to review your decision to go marching about the bleak countryside in the middle of the night, and resolve not to do so in future, if it can at all be avoided

This episode was recorded on the 7th October 2010. A complete transcript of this episode can be found on Frank Key’s Hooting Yard website. Accompanying Hooting Yard On The Air, the five publications We Were Puny, They Were VapidGravitas, Punctilio, Rectitude & Pippy BagsUnspeakable Desolation Pouring Down From The StarsBefuddled By Cormorants and Inpugned By A Peasant And Other Stories are available for purchase