Posts Tagged ‘Eclectic’

Resonance FM

Thursday, March 11th, 2010


Although in the past we have featured only online radio broadcasting, this time we look at a station still doing it on the airwaves in London. Resonance104.4fm makes public those artworks that have no place in traditional broadcasting. A radio station like no other, that is an archive of the new, the undiscovered, the forgotten, the impossible. It is an invisible gallery, a virtual arts centre whose location is at once local, global and timeless. And that is itself a work of art. Imagine a radio station that responds rapidly to new initiatives, has time to draw breath and reflect. A laboratory for experimentation, that by virtue of its uniqueness brings into being a new audience of listeners and creators. All this and more, Resonance104.4fm aims to make London’s airwaves available to the widest possible range of practitioners of contemporary art.


The service includes “radio artworks” made especially for and exploring the medium of radio. The music based output places an emphasis on alternative and experimental music with a bias towards the avant-garde (how many broadcasters are willing to devote programming to found sounds and field recordings?). The speech based output includes discussion, alternative news, documentary and literary spoken word. Subjects covered include anything from cultural theory to pensioners’ rights and mental health to visual arts. The station provides a service for practising artists and engaged consumers whose interests fall outside the mainstream media or for those whose access to media is restricted or limited due to cultural bias or lack of formal training. The multicultural service transcends age barriers, it’s youngest regular broadcasters are 16, it’s oldest 77, from communities as diverse as Brazilian, Serbian and Congolese who are encouraged to initiate and realise their own programming.


You can hear nonsense sound poetry recorded halfway up a mountain on the Isle of Jura, a preacher in Glasgow or a Babylonian Jewish Choir, a huge variety of unique spoken word radio basically. That’s not to mention great specific music shows such as Is Black Music, featuring maverick black musicians who are involed in non-commerial, alternative outside of the industry mainstream. The program broadcasts Black folk, country, avant-garde, classical and rock music. It encourages the promotion of unusual black music such as Urb Alt and Afro Punk, and is a good way to challenge industry, artist and consumer stereotypes.

Resonance104.4fm started broadcasting on May 1st 2002, established by London Musicians’ Collective. Its brief? To provide a radical alternative to the universal formulae of mainstream broadcasting. Resonance 104.4 fm features programmes made by musicians, artists and critics who represent the diversity of London’s arts scenes, with regular weekly contributions from nearly two hundred musicians, artists, thinkers, critics, activists and instigators. You can also listen online or download one of their various podcasts for maximum aural pleasure.

Online Radio – Dublab

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Turn on, tune in...

Turn on, tune in...

Dublab is a non-profit internet radio station based in Los Angeles. As well as broadcasting music they have also been involved in art exhibitions, film projects, live events and record releases. The broadcast is eclectic ranging from electronic and noise to ambient, post-rock and folk. An example of their film work is Secondhand Sureshots where they gave producers five dollars to buy albums from second hand shops and sample the music to create new tracks. Their soundsystem an DJ collective has been featured at diverse venues such as The Getty Centre and Hollywood Bowl. Notable guests include Flying Lotus, Four Tet and Animal Collective.

Below is one of their more avant-garde film / art projects – mi casa es su casa, “an international home field-recording quilt.” It is a collage of sounds from personal spaces around the world. People have sent 30 second recordings of the most interesting sounds in their homes which were then stitched together to offer an audio insight into their intimate environments.

The finished piece was presented at the Sound in Space field recording festival in Los Angeles on Saturday, February 14th 2009 and is also available on dublab.com as a free audio download.

Thanks to Phat Phil for the heads-up.

Dublab

Online Radio – Soma FM

Friday, December 4th, 2009

La radio

La radio


A personal favourite of our antipodean cousins, Soma FM is one of the larger internet-only broadcasters boasting 5.8 million “listening hours” per month. However, they haven’t amassed this figure by playing mainstream music. They’ve got 18 unique unique channels with Groove Salad and Drone Zone being the first two we would recommend. Being listener supported and commercial free means no advertising or annoying interruptions. They describe their mission as searching out and exposing new music to people who may otherwise never encounter it. Since they work on a small listener supported budget they have to move slowly towards their goal of making Soma FM available in as many ways possible – but because they don’t have to answer to investors of venture capitalists, they can broadcast exactly what they want to.

Where does the name Soma come from? It’s a play on words. Soma is the name of many things, but in our case is based on the future’s perfect pleasure drug and the fact that we started broadcasting from San Francisco’s South of Market area, known also as SoMa.

Soma FM

DonnaSlut

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009
Discontinued

Discontinued

Like God’s own jukebox, not a lot of information on this blog, they simply let the music speak for itself. Just one page with lots of album covers (and labels of 45′s). You know the deal – click a cover to listen, right click and “save as” to download. Everyone’s a winner baby! Check it out, DonnaSlut.com.

Online Radio – WFMU

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009
Listen up

Listen up

Non of the hits, all of the time! WFMU is a really great radio station which has a well rounded music based blog and covers just about every genre of music out there, found sound, soundscapes, 60′s garage punk, turkish ragga etc… 100% funded by their listeners through an annual on-air fund-raising marathon as well as their annual record fair in Manhattan that occurs the first weekend of November, info for which can be found on the website here.

They are the longest running “Freeform” radio station in America. This is an approach to radio programming in which a station’s management gives the DJ complete control over program content. Freeform shows are as different as the personalities of DJ’s, but they share a feeling of spontaneity, a tendency to play music that is not usually heard. Their ideology tends to be liberal or radical, though their program content is not usually overtly political. WFMU has been the only one of the early freeform stations to survive into the present day (since 1968), with it’s philosophy and (lack of) format intact.

Rolling Stone Magazine, The Village Voice, CMJ and the New York Press have all at one time or another called WFMU “the best radio station in the country”. In recent years the station has gained a large international following due its online operations and counts Simpson’s creator Matt Groening, film director Jim Jarmusch and Velvet Underground founder Lou Reed, among others, as devoted fans of the station.

WFMU

Pictures of old radios