Show 1031: Field Transmissions by Tuukka Kaila for OOO Radio (guest slot)

Field Transmissions

In 2023, OOO (Out of Office) Radio visited Tuukka Kaila’s studio in Herttoniemi to hook into his set up for receiving live audio streams of terrestrial and cosmic weather events that appear as disturbances in the Earth’s electromagnetic field. The resulting natural radio waves on the VLF band (3—30 kHz) are picked up and broadcast as real-time audio streams over the internet by dedicated radio amateurs.

OOO (Out of Office) Radio is a mobile community radio station for experimental sound and curious ears, founded by James Prevett and Samantha Lippett. Based in Helsinki, it is a set of tools and internet broadcasting equipment that can be borrowed and used to broadcast remotely from any space (including outdoors using battery power).

Show 1030: duration unknown by Sarah Washington & Knut Aufermann (Mobile Radio)

duration unknown
by Mobile Radio (Sarah Washington & Knut Aufermann)

This piece concerns the uncertainties and contradictions of modern-day car use, and unfolds in the mind rather more as an unfinished philosophical journey than a physical one.
It was conceived as an antidote to the celebratory sentiment (although perhaps ironically intended) engendered in listeners by the Kraftwerk song ‘Autobahn’ – in relationship to the building of an out-of-time motorway bridge over the Mosel valley near Ürzig in Germany. The originally planned action was to detonate the record while it played on a portable turntable on the unfinished bridge, which was deemed somewhat tricky to realise.

The work was made for the show Cafe Sonore on the Dutch national radio channel VPRO in 2010, commissioned by Lukas Simonis. During a residency at WORM in Rotterdam to prepare source material, we recorded all the electronics on their wonderful array of analogue synths, which we interconnected with our own home-made instruments. We also set up radio and open-mic feedback processes in the studio. The voiceover was recorded in our home studio.

Each airing of the work is unique due to a production stunt; this version was specially produced for Radia in December 2024.

Mobile Radio

Sarah Washington and Knut Aufermann began Mobile Radio on the 18th September 2005. For the first two years the project was touring Europe without a home base.
It was established as a travelling project to build upon our work across Europe in the fields of radio and sound art which had arisen during the three years that we helped to establish the London art radio station Resonance FM. Our work takes us to media and art festivals, conferences, universities, and one-off events where we run short-lived radio stations, create special live broadcasts, give workshops and talks, design radio installations and play concerts. We also make radiophonic works for public and community radios worldwide, and produce books on the topic of radio art.
Nowadays based in Germany, we continue the work of Mobile Radio with those who want to develop concepts through the medium of radio. Our mission remains the same: to seek out new forms of radio by taking radio production out of the studio environment.
https://mobile-radio.net

SHOW 1029. FAST REWINDS. (TEAFM RADIO WORKSHOP)

 

Time travel has long been a tantalizing concept in both science fiction and theoretical physics. While we often imagine time travel as a physical journey through past and future landscapes, it can also be experienced in a more abstract yet profound way—through sounds.

Sounds of the Past
The past resonates with echoes that we can sometimes recreate or reimagine. Ancient musical instruments, historical recordings, and even the ambient noise of a bygone era—such as the clatter of horse-drawn carriages or the crackle of early radios—allow us to immerse ourselves in history. Time capsules of sound, like phonographs and vinyl records, are portals to another time. Through these, we don’t just hear the past; we feel its texture and rhythm.

Imagine walking into a cathedral where Gregorian chants are sung exactly as they were centuries ago. In that moment, the separation between now and then dissolves. Similarly, technologies like audio restoration bring forgotten voices and music back to life, giving us a sensory experience of eras we’ve never lived.

Sounds of the Future
The future, by contrast, is harder to predict. What will the world sound like in 50 or 100 years? Speculative sound design in films and media offers some possibilities—mechanical drones, synthetic symphonies, and alien languages. Advances in technology might also bring us auditory experiences we can’t yet conceive, like music tailored to our emotions in real-time or soundscapes of entirely virtual worlds.

The idea of time travel through sound becomes even more fascinating when paired with concepts like acoustic archaeology or audio synthesis. Could we someday accurately recreate the voice of a long-dead figure based on historical data? Could we design sounds that represent the potential noises of a future city or a space station?

Living Between Past and Future
We live at an intersection of temporal sounds. While digitized archives allow us to dive into historical audio, modern soundscapes are already capturing this era for future generations. Every recording, from a bustling city street to a personal podcast, becomes a thread in the fabric of history.

Time travel, then, doesn’t require a machine. It requires listening—tuning into the echoes of the past and the imagined vibrations of what’s to come. Sounds are a bridge, a timeline written not in years but in waves and frequencies. What does your time sound like? What echoes will you leave behind?

Show 1028: Vienna Crawling (Vienna Radia Collective feat. Fabi Lux)

radia show 1028: Vienna Crawling © Fabi Lux

With the programme VIENNA CRAWLING, the Vienna Radia Collective feat. Fabi Lux would like to welcome a new guest (Fabi) to Vienna and make ‘arriving in the city’ the topic of discussion.

Equipped with the sounds of the city on their way to the radio station, the group met for a radio programme in which the concept of the programme was discussed live in an on-air public editorial meeting. Fabi Lux used the material from all the participants, including the recording of this editorial meeting, as material for a remix.

Fabi mixed the sounds with DJ software, changed speeds, added effects and asked chance if it would like to contribute to the flow. VIENNA CRAWLING is a mixtape that tells of the journey, of arriving and then inviting you to take another trip.

Credits:

Sound-Recordings by

Fabi Lux
Barbara Kaiser
Stefan Nussbaumer
Karl Schönswetter

Mixdown by

Fabi Lux

Photo by

Fabi Lux

Show 1027: LGMN “Loo gëm,mu nekk” – Bocar Niang / *Duuu Radio

*Duuu Radio presents a compilation of tracks from the vinyl “Lo gëm, mu nekk”, by the artist Bocar Niang, edited and pressed by *Duuu in 2023.

The vinyl LGMN is a rap album consisting of 10 tracks. The album explores its musical influences through the variety of languages that resonate within it, including Wolof, English, and French. This musical project is the result of six years of research into writing, composition, and the dissemination of music. The phrase “Lo gëm, mu nekk” could be translated from Wolof into French as “Advient ce en quoi tu crois” (“Let what you believe in come to pass”). Bocar envisions Lo gëm, mu nekk as a slogan for young Senegalese people, offering hope and courage to Senegalese society, Africa, and its diaspora, who endure the oppressive weight of perpetuated African dictatorships.

LGMN calls for dialogue, open-mindedness, and a shift in mentalities. It advocates for friendship, solidarity, and mutual respect among the inhabitants of Earth. Sound art serves as a powerful means to connect and share “good vibes.”

Bocar Niang was born a griot in a family of griots in Tambacounda, Senegal. A performer, poet, visual artist, and musician, Bocar Niang is a graduate of Cheikh Anta Diop University (Dakar) and the École Nationale Supérieure d’Arts de Paris-Cergy. He is pursuing a research and artistic creation doctorate within the Radian doctoral program and was a resident at the French Academy in Rome – Villa Medici in 2022–2023. In 2013, he initiated the creation of the music label Free Label in Tambacounda. The Free Label collective works to promote and develop young creative talent from Tambacounda in all its forms.

Credits :

Texts and Voice: Bocar Niang aka Bocar Freeman
Beat: Khalil Diougue, Adama Diagne, Florian della Gortiglia
Production: Studio *Duuu / La Villette
Sound Recording and Mixing: Mathis Ouidir / *Duuu
Mastering: Paul Castillon / *Duuu
Producers: Loraine Baud and Simon Nicaise / *Duuu
Co-production: The Bureau of Invisible Hours
Drawing: Pierre Grandclaude
Graphic Design: Alice Bourdelon
Radia Show Compilation: Ariel Nisand & Arthur Bécart

Special thanks to my friends and loved ones, my parents and griot family, to the actors of urban cultures in Africa and worldwide, to Constance, nekkalante, and LGMN.

Links : https://duuuradio.fr / *Duuu éditions (duuuradio.fr)