Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Business
Society & Culture
History
Sports
TV & Film
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts126/v4/c3/1f/97/c31f9750-5eea-471e-d419-d0735b1caa51/mza_14862460885046248687.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Binaural Radio Rural: A podcast around rural sounds and archives
Binaural Nodar
30 episodes
3 weeks ago
We continue to present a series of Binaural Radio Rural podcast that is part of the Creative Europe funded project, Tramontana Network, which consists in a cooperation between eleven mountain-based cultural organizations from Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Romania, Poland and Albania that all work in the intersection between ethnographic research and contemporary artistic practices. Throughout the episodes of this podcast series we are creatively addressing rural-based subjects like agropastoralism, transhumance, water manifestations and symbologies, social change and its impact on landscape and food production and consumption, the Ukrainian migration to rural areas in Europe and more. “Around the river Bend” is a sound piece by Binaural Nodar’s director Rui Costa that was composed from a variety of sound sources and compositions created for or recorded at Paivascapes - Paiva River Sound Festival. This festival took place between March 4th and 8th of 2011 in various locations along the Paiva River, in Center Portugal, and included a program of sound installations, performances, video screenings and conferences dedicated to the exploration of riverside locations and communities through sound and multimedia art. Following Patrick McGingleys's invitation to dedicate one of his Framework radio shows to the festival, Binaural Nodar asked everyone that was part of Paivascapes to send a sound excerpt related in some way to the festival. The resulting piece features a variety of locations, times of day, seasons, and contexts including recordings of the festival performances, source material collected by the artists for their sound and audiovisual installations, sound clips included in Binaural Nodar Digital Archive, spontaneous recordings of social gatherings during the festival, and improvisations made by children inspired by the river soundscapes or by the names of the places where the festival happened. The resulting work offered an aural window into a unique experience and, in a certain way, serves as a metaphoric tribute to this unique spatial-temporal context that imagined river with a thousand voices. Sound composition by Rui Costa Source material performed, composed or recorded by: Anna Hints, Charles Stankievech, Duncan Whitley, Ignaz Schick, Jez riley French, Lasse-Marc Riek, Luís Costa, Maile Colbert, Manuela Barile, Marc Behrens, Marja-Liisa Plats, Patrick McGinley, Phill Niblock, Rui Costa, Samuel Barile Costa, Students of Canelas Primary School and Tiago Carvalho.
Show more...
Society & Culture
RSS
All content for Binaural Radio Rural: A podcast around rural sounds and archives is the property of Binaural Nodar and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
We continue to present a series of Binaural Radio Rural podcast that is part of the Creative Europe funded project, Tramontana Network, which consists in a cooperation between eleven mountain-based cultural organizations from Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Romania, Poland and Albania that all work in the intersection between ethnographic research and contemporary artistic practices. Throughout the episodes of this podcast series we are creatively addressing rural-based subjects like agropastoralism, transhumance, water manifestations and symbologies, social change and its impact on landscape and food production and consumption, the Ukrainian migration to rural areas in Europe and more. “Around the river Bend” is a sound piece by Binaural Nodar’s director Rui Costa that was composed from a variety of sound sources and compositions created for or recorded at Paivascapes - Paiva River Sound Festival. This festival took place between March 4th and 8th of 2011 in various locations along the Paiva River, in Center Portugal, and included a program of sound installations, performances, video screenings and conferences dedicated to the exploration of riverside locations and communities through sound and multimedia art. Following Patrick McGingleys's invitation to dedicate one of his Framework radio shows to the festival, Binaural Nodar asked everyone that was part of Paivascapes to send a sound excerpt related in some way to the festival. The resulting piece features a variety of locations, times of day, seasons, and contexts including recordings of the festival performances, source material collected by the artists for their sound and audiovisual installations, sound clips included in Binaural Nodar Digital Archive, spontaneous recordings of social gatherings during the festival, and improvisations made by children inspired by the river soundscapes or by the names of the places where the festival happened. The resulting work offered an aural window into a unique experience and, in a certain way, serves as a metaphoric tribute to this unique spatial-temporal context that imagined river with a thousand voices. Sound composition by Rui Costa Source material performed, composed or recorded by: Anna Hints, Charles Stankievech, Duncan Whitley, Ignaz Schick, Jez riley French, Lasse-Marc Riek, Luís Costa, Maile Colbert, Manuela Barile, Marc Behrens, Marja-Liisa Plats, Patrick McGinley, Phill Niblock, Rui Costa, Samuel Barile Costa, Students of Canelas Primary School and Tiago Carvalho.
Show more...
Society & Culture
https://i1.sndcdn.com/artworks-N9vzZsFhvmqw5y7d-36pang-t3000x3000.png
Binaural Radio Rural #28 - Tramontana Series: Quiet Rain in the Mountain
Binaural Radio Rural: A podcast around rural sounds and archives
16 minutes 39 seconds
4 months ago
Binaural Radio Rural #28 - Tramontana Series: Quiet Rain in the Mountain
Tramontana Series - Episode nº 28: Quiet rain in the mountain We continue to present a series of Binaural Radio Rural podcast that is part of the Creative Europe funded project, Tramontana Network, which consists in a cooperation between 11 mountain-based cultural organizations from Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Romania, Poland and Albania that all work in the intersection between ethnographic research and contemporary artistic practices. Throughout the episodes of this podcast series we are creatively addressing rural-based subjects like agropastoralism, transhumance, water symbologies, social change and its impact on landscape and food production and consumption, the Ukrainian migration to rural areas in Europe and more. Rain has long been more than mere weather; in the earliest myths and cosmogonies, it represents a vital force shaping the world and the human experience. In ancient Greek mythology, rain was often seen as a gift from Zeus, the sky god whose thunderclouds brought life-giving water to the parched earth. This celestial rain was intertwined with divine will, a symbol of renewal and the sustaining power of nature that connected gods and mortals alike. Roman traditions, inheriting much from their Greek predecessors, also revered rain as a sacred element. The god Jupiter, akin to Zeus, controlled the skies and storms, wielding rain as both a blessing and a weapon. In Roman cosmogony, rain was crucial in nurturing crops and sustaining the bustling cities of the empire, a reminder of the delicate balance between civilization’s progress and the forces of nature. Christian cosmology introduced rain as a divine instrument of both mercy and judgment. Biblical narratives speak of rain in contexts like the Great Flood, where it served as a purifying force to cleanse the world of corruption. Rain became a symbol of God’s providence, washing over the land to bring growth and renewal, but also a reminder of humankind’s need for repentance and humility before the divine. The Celtic worldview embraced rain as an intimate part of the natural and spiritual landscape. In Irish and Scottish traditions, rain was woven into the rhythms of the land, often seen as a messenger or a blessing from the Otherworld. It sustained the lush green hills and ancient stone circles, linking the physical earth to ancestral spirits and the ever-turning cycles of life and death. Across these civilizations, rain emerges as a profound symbol—dancing between earth and sky, life and myth, the human and the divine. This podcast episode is a sort of homage to rain in rural contexts, intertwining recordings made in 2025 in several Portuguese locations, including poem readings, memories of rain in the village of Nodar, improvisations with rain in Vouzela and a sound walk to a stomp mill in the river Vouga near the the village of Paraduça, this being a water evidence that maybe is connected with rain that fell on distant European mountains
Binaural Radio Rural: A podcast around rural sounds and archives
We continue to present a series of Binaural Radio Rural podcast that is part of the Creative Europe funded project, Tramontana Network, which consists in a cooperation between eleven mountain-based cultural organizations from Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Romania, Poland and Albania that all work in the intersection between ethnographic research and contemporary artistic practices. Throughout the episodes of this podcast series we are creatively addressing rural-based subjects like agropastoralism, transhumance, water manifestations and symbologies, social change and its impact on landscape and food production and consumption, the Ukrainian migration to rural areas in Europe and more. “Around the river Bend” is a sound piece by Binaural Nodar’s director Rui Costa that was composed from a variety of sound sources and compositions created for or recorded at Paivascapes - Paiva River Sound Festival. This festival took place between March 4th and 8th of 2011 in various locations along the Paiva River, in Center Portugal, and included a program of sound installations, performances, video screenings and conferences dedicated to the exploration of riverside locations and communities through sound and multimedia art. Following Patrick McGingleys's invitation to dedicate one of his Framework radio shows to the festival, Binaural Nodar asked everyone that was part of Paivascapes to send a sound excerpt related in some way to the festival. The resulting piece features a variety of locations, times of day, seasons, and contexts including recordings of the festival performances, source material collected by the artists for their sound and audiovisual installations, sound clips included in Binaural Nodar Digital Archive, spontaneous recordings of social gatherings during the festival, and improvisations made by children inspired by the river soundscapes or by the names of the places where the festival happened. The resulting work offered an aural window into a unique experience and, in a certain way, serves as a metaphoric tribute to this unique spatial-temporal context that imagined river with a thousand voices. Sound composition by Rui Costa Source material performed, composed or recorded by: Anna Hints, Charles Stankievech, Duncan Whitley, Ignaz Schick, Jez riley French, Lasse-Marc Riek, Luís Costa, Maile Colbert, Manuela Barile, Marc Behrens, Marja-Liisa Plats, Patrick McGinley, Phill Niblock, Rui Costa, Samuel Barile Costa, Students of Canelas Primary School and Tiago Carvalho.