Monthly Archives: April 2013

Polish Deli 24 3 2013 feat. Andrzej Korzynski and Andy Votel

No music, just talking.
This week on Polish Deli we get to hear two interviews, one with a copmoser Andrzej Korzynski and one with Andy Votel, a dj and producer. Both gentleman were special guests at 11th Kinoteka Polish Film Festival and they took part in a closing event gala – Kleksploitation based on Polish sci-fi psychodelic trilogy Pan Kleks.

Language: Polish, English

Polish Deli 17 3 2013 feat. Wojciech Marczewski

Another episode of Polish Deli dedicated to 11th Kinoteka Polish Film Festival in UK. This time Kacper Ziemianin talks to Wojciech Marczewski, a great Polish film director of films like ‘Escape from the Liberty Cinema’ and ‘Shivers’ who was a special guest at the festival. We also get to listen to music by Andrzej Korzynski.

Language: Polish, English

Polish Deli 10 3 2013 feat. DJ Wika

Kacper Ziemiain visits Kinoteka Polish Film Festival and talks to 73 years old DJ Wika about her secret for feeling forever young. We also get to listen to music from ‘Ziemia Obiecana’, a film by Andrzej Wajda with music by Wojciech Kilar and other music relating to Kinoteka festival.

Language: Polish and English

Polish Deli 3 3 2013

In this episode of Polish Deli Kacper Ziemianin invites the listeners to the 11th Polish film festival in UK – Kinoteka and plays music by Jacek Smolicki, Kakofonikt and Andrzej Korzynski.

Looking Good, Feeling Great Episode 2 – His Knowledge Of London Was Extensive And Peculiar

This week, guided by the vintage voices of several competitively avuncular narrators and a grand piano, we’re taken on a whistle-stop audio tour of London, a fantastical city entirely populated by bad actors. We might go by underground. It’s quicker by tube, as you people say. The Police’ll be after you if you’re not a good boy. We’ll also have a cockney sing-song and enjoy a reggae tune about the joys of commuting. The great dome. A moon in the sky. Makes you think of horses, don’t it?

Join Robin The Fog as he digs up a plethora of inspirational, aspirational and instructional recordings of highly dubious vintage and embarks on a cut-and-paste odyssey that is by turns amusing, absurd and, on at least one occasion, almost unbearable.

The Opera Hour – series 2/episode 23

Opera singer Richard Scott explores opera through the prism of various themes – politics, power, greed, the abominable, magic, lust, comedy.

Today he examines opera’s portrayal of the night sky. We’ll hear Handel’s solar eclipse, how John Cage tried to musically trace the universe, prominent British astronomer William Herschel’s oboe concerto, Herschel discovered Uranus and her moons, and from Philip Glass’s opera, Kepler, who witnessed the great comet of 1577.
Originally broadcast on 11th April 2013.

http://richardrmscott.tumblr.com/

Hello GoodBye – 06.04.13 – Ft: Knalpot + Flame Proof Moth

Flame Proof Moth
Knalpot

World class talent graces Hello GoodBye once more!

Featuring live music from Knalpot and Flame Proof Moth.

With dub, rock, electronic noise, ambient and jazz as its main pillars, Knalpot’s sound always remains an utterly hybrid mix of many genres.

Flame Proof Moth (formerly Boycott Coca-Cola Experience) employs a droll, visionary, poetic stream of conciousness to a backdrop of ramshackle, abstract, folk / blues electric guitar.

PLAYLIST
Woman’s Hour – Our love has no rhythm
Robyn Hitchcock – The Lizard
Knalpot – La Luna (LIVE SESSION)
Knalpot – Prrrt (LIVE SESSION)
Knalpot – Tom 1 (LIVE SESSION)
Graduale Nobili – Óskasteinn
Knalpot – ‘interview’
Serafina Steer – Disco Compilation
Dog Chocolate – I want to give birth
Joe Gideon & the Shark – Poor Born
Lime Headed Dog – She stamped on her pet
Halo Halo – Manananggal
Art Trip & the Static Sound – Machine Gun
Skinny Girl Diet – Eyes that paralyze
Flame Proof Moth – Are you trying to tell me I haven’t got a good pen today? (LIVE SESSION)
Flame Proof Moth – Jools Holland (LIVE SESSION)
Flame Proof Moth – Taking it steady (LIVE SESSION)
Flame Proof Moth – I used to be a Kalahari Bushman (LIVE SESSION)
Flame Proof Moth – ‘interview’

Presented by: Ean Ravenscroft and Dan Frost
Live sound engineers: Kacper Ziemianin

Panel Borders: Small press publishers

Panel Borders: Small press publishers

Starting a month of shows looking at small press and self published comics, Panel Borders looks at the titles produced by two British independent publishing companies in interviews recorded at the London Super Comics Convention.

Alex Fitch talks to Nicolas Rossert, Loran and Charles Cutting about Sloth Comics, a new publisher devoted to both British and European graphic novels, including reissues of classic titles. Loran discusses his book Booyah!, about a playful green monster with anger management issues; Cutting talks about his steampunk adventure Steam Hammer, and Rossert describes his approach to choosing graphic novel formats and the process of getting the rights to republish Moebius and Alejandro Jodorowski’s classic Madwoman of the Sacred Heart.

Also, publisher Colin Mathieson discusses his company Accent UK which has built up a commendable body of work over the last dozen years concentrating on anthology books which have showcased the work of some of the country’s finest small press creators. Artist Conor Boyle joins the conversation to talk about Accent’s latest graphic novel Who on Earth was Thaddeus Mist? and the importance of design to the company’s range of books. (Originally broadcast 8th April 2013)

Titles published by Sloth Comics, Accent UK and Disconnected Press

Titles published by Sloth Comics, Accent UK and Disconnected Press

(Originally broadcast 08/04/13 on Resonance 104.4 FM)

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

Links: Sloth Comics website
Accent UK website
Disconnected Press blog Continue reading

Wavelength – Martin Kippenberger Musik 1979-1995

Music by German artist Martin Kippenberger from the CD issued by Edition Krothenhayn. There are 21 tracks in all, about half of which are straight jazz (Kippenberger’s passion was swing music, expansive, pompous, big band jazz) and a fairly bland version of Bang Bang which I find less interesting than the more experimental tracks played here today starting with “Ja, Ja, Ja, Nee, Nee, Nee” a tongue in cheek hommage to Joseph Beuys.