A Brief Tale: Bach in Seville (TEA FM)

In the spring of 1745, Johann Sebastian Bach, weary from years of composing and performing across Germany, embarked on an unexpected journey south. Rumors of the vibrant music and golden light of Andalusia had reached Leipzig, whispered by travelers and fellow musicians. Intrigued and seeking inspiration, Bach set his sights on Seville.

Upon arriving, the composer was struck by the city’s intoxicating mix of Moorish architecture, orange blossom-scented air, and the ever-present rhythm of flamenco echoing through cobbled streets. He was welcomed by local musicians, curious about the German master whose music, though foreign to them, stirred something familiar in their souls.

One evening, in a small courtyard lit by lanterns, Bach joined a gathering of Spanish guitarists and singers. They played bulerías and soleás, their hands moving like fire across strings and palms. Bach, fascinated, responded with improvisations on his clavichord, echoing the passionate melodies with Baroque flourishes. The music transcended language. In those moments, the sacred and the earthly met.

Before leaving Seville, Bach climbed the Giralda tower. From its heights, he gazed across the red rooftops and the Guadalquivir River, listening to the distant strum of guitars. He did not write down what he heard—but in his final compositions, there would linger a warmth, a rhythm, and a hint of Spain that no one could quite explain.

And so, though unrecorded in history, Seville left its mark on the master of counterpoint—just as his music left echoes in the alleys of Andalusia.

Based on the show “Improbach. The Intangible Infinite”
Dance–Choreography–Texts: Alba Lucera
Piano: Pierre Mancinelli

Sound Design: Chuse Fernandez

 

Show 1051: Radiopille by Vienna Radia Collective feat. Liese Schmidt

Image: Montage Liese Schmidt

The exhibition ‘Die Pfeile des Wilden Apollo’ (an exhibition of the art collections in cooperation with the Exhibit Gallery at the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna) explores the transition from the Enlightenment to early Romanticism through the central role of music as a vehicle for spiritual experience and national mysticism: sounds of an early folk movement, Nordic drone scapes as an expression of a new national mysticism, bardic singing and the sounds of cosmic forces.

The video work magnetic fan fiction (The Case of Miss – –) by Liese Schmidt responds to four portraits of so-called ‘clairvoyants’ shown in the exhibition, who are under the influence of a mesmeristic treatment. The work weaves together medical, spiritualist and media-technological narratives into a speculative story of mental transmission, in which primarily female, childlike and colonised bodies appear as transmitters and receivers of thoughts, diagnoses and cosmic visions. In a fictional extension of this narrative, the so-called ‘radio pill’ is hacked to send a patient’s thoughts back into the past. The result is a ‘magnetic fan fiction’ that makes a paranoid inner world audible via invisible frequencies.

The ‘radio pill’ had an inspiring effect on the Vienna Radia Collective and prompted Fabi Lux and Karl H. Schönswetter to develop the idea of a radio station travelling through the body.

Radiopille

with contributions by Liese Schmidt, Fabi Lux and Karl H. Schönswetter

Show 1050: I don’t believe in computing (*Duuu Radio)

From April 24 to 26, 2025, *Duuu invited artists and musicians Corentin Canesson, Charlie Jeffery, and Julien Tiberi for a residency at *Duuu’s studio. Each day, from 4:00 to 5:00 PM, *Duuu broadcast live to share the working sessions taking place in the recording studio. For Radia Show 1050, *Duuu presents a musical piece from the final live session recorded on April 26.
This residency will result in the release of a vinyl record produced by *Duuu, scheduled to launch on June 21, 2025, at the *Duuu studio / Folie N4 Parc de la Villette, as part of the Fête de la Musique celebrations.

I don’t believe in computing, by Corentin Canesson, Charlie Jeffery and Julien Tiberi

Recorded and produced by Morgane Charles, Arthur Bécart and Sampson Staples at *Duuu studio in Paris

Links : https://duuuradio.fr

Radia Show number 1049 : shower: a call for shouts by Ada LaNerd for ∏Node

first it was a call,
then it was a fail,
thus it was a fiction,
although it was a show,
yet it was a need,
but it was a spoof,
albeit it was an effort,
so it was a part,
also it was a thing,
in the end, it is a call.

a call for shouts,
a call for action.

musical background are excerpts of [The Flood by Rrrrrose Azety / Soft and Furious](https://chezmonplaisir.bandcamp.com/album/the-flood).

Half-lady/half-lazy, Ada LaNerd is a radio hacker and a performer. She joined ∏Node in 2025 and mostly produces radio shows about politics and news of the independent social medias.

https://hackstub.eu/home/en/membres/ada-lanerd