Show 1048: Symphony for a city reclaimed (Usmaradio)



The minimalist musical composition, built from a few elements that repeat in cyclical and random patterns, serves as a dreamlike accompaniment to the transformation of the city, narrated through field recordings. It is a sonic narrative of the transition from a contemporary urban landscape to a city of the future, where nature plays a central role in our lives.

Music and Field Recordings by Giacomo Vanelli.


In April 2025, Giacomo Vanelli took part in the fourth edition of Radio Residenze, the series of artistic residencies dedicated to experimental radio and its connections with the performing arts. Hosted at Giardini Pensili in Rimini and organized by Usmaradio – Research Centre for Radiophonic Studies of University of San Marino, Vanelli developed a new work exploring the possibilities of modular synthesis and chance-driven composition. His residency culminated in a live performance broadcast on usmaradio.org, presented as part of the Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day on April 24.

More information about the Radio Residenze project is available at usmaradio.org/radio-residenze.


Giacomo Vanelli - Usmaradio - Radia.fm

Giacomo Vanelli is a musician known for his deep commitment to ambient and experimental electronic music. Vanelli is distinguished by his innovative approach to composition, where the modular synthesizer is not merely an instrument but a platform for exploring chance and self-imposed limitations. This method allows him to create complex and nuanced soundscapes that reflect a highly personal and introspective creative process.


Usmaradio – Centro di Ricerca Interdipartimentale per la Radiofonia (CRIR) / Interdepartmental Research Centre for Radio Studies, is a workplace of The School of Radio to develop an innovative radio pedagogy. Workshops, work sessions, meetings, presentations of live performance as sections of the project. Produced by UNIRSM | Università degli Studi della Repubblica di San Marino. usmaradio.org / theschoolofradio.org / unirsm.sm

Show 1046: Ghada Al Kurd for Radio With Palestine (radioart106)

Extracts of four consecutive live transmissions by Journalist Ghada Al Kurd from Dier Al Balah, Gaza,

part of  the ongoing series ‘Radio With Palestine’ produced and broadcasted by Soundcamp London.

The transmissions, co-produced with radioart106, took place on the dates 17.12.24, 31.12.24, 7.1.25, and 16.1.25. 

Ceasefire started on 19.1.25 and was broken by Israel on 18.3.25. 

Show made on day 553 of the war on Gaza.

https://acousticommons.net/listen/rwp

Show 1045 Breathing Rotations in the Imaginary Radio Station By Stephen Adams with The Music Box Project (Diffusion)


Four musicians of The Music Box Project deliver synchronised breath-length phrases to microphones, their presence doubled by the simultaneous lo-fi local broadcast diffusion of their music through the domestic radios they carry. The radios also diffusing field recordings played to air by a fifth performer, composer-producer Stephen Adams, operating the mixing desk of the Imaginary Radio Station. The installation looping in on itself when the musicians shift to using their radios to play the microphone feedback. All five artists interacting within a shared space of improvised sound-making and intense listening.

Breathing Rotations is a framework for improvising within the Imaginary Radio Station – a networked instrument-cum-sound-installation.

The installation enables a kind of live radio-making and hyper local broadcast to the performance venue and its immediate surroundings, with the performers both creating content for the station, and operating its lo-fi sound diffusion for the audience.

Breathing Rotations takes a mediative approach to the potentials of the Imaginary Radio Station. Four musicians are invited to improvise synchronised breath-length phrases to the four microphones at four corners of the room. With long pauses between phrases as the musicians move from one microphone to the next. Their sound-making and their movements are framed and potentially influenced by a fifth performer, the broadcast controller, who sits at a small mixing desk with FM transmitter, looking after the live mix as well as adding low-key field recordings and other audio files to the ‘program’ of live music-making broadcasting to the four radios which the musicians carry.

Over the course of the performance (which might last anywhere from 30 minutes to several hours), as well as rotating around the room in one direction or another (and occasionally choosing to remain at one mic for a while), the musicians gradually shift, one at a time, from playing their chosen musical instruments to playing microphone feedback with their radios, and finally to using their voices. The musicians cannot know what each other will play in each synchronised phrase. They know only what each played previously, and what they know of each other’s musical approaches and inclinations. Plus whatever may be suggested by their ways of moving between microphones, and the atmospheres created by the field recordings and that share the broadcast and acoustic space with them.

I created the Imaginary Radio Station (IRS) for Sydney-based collective The Music Box Project (TMBP), with the intention of composing a concert length work for TMBP, envisaged as built around an imaginary broadcast schedule, with opportunities to respond and incorporate material from the environments and audience members at each venue where it is installed/performed. While that concept is still in development, in March 2025 during a Bundanon artist residency with TMBP and dramaturg Nikki Heywood, an improvisation exercise I introduced proved to be particularly generative and exciting for all of us, emerging through further exploration and dialogue as a fully-formed model for a more abstract structured improvisational work, Breathing Rotations.

This program is a 28-minute radio edit and mix of a 50-minute workshop performance of that work by The Music Box Project and me, Stephen Adams, in the Dorothy Porter Studio at Bundanon to an audience of one – our collaborating dramaturg Nikki Heywood.

The opening field recording is of the sounds of dawn at Bundanon, as recorded on the verandah of the cottage next door to the studio at first waking on the morning of the performance. The final ‘field recording’ is the sounds from outside through the open studio door.

Performed by Elizabeth Jigalin (recorder, radio, voice), Naomi Johnson (flute, radio, voice), Jane Aubourg (violin, radio, voice), Joseph Lisk (trumpet, radio, voice), and Stephen Adams (live mix, field recordings and other pre-recorded material)

Concept developed by Stephen Adams for and in in dialogue with The Music Box Project and collaborating dramaturg Nikki Heywood.
Produced by Stephen Adams

https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephen-adams-1777025b/
https://www.themusicboxproject.com/