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(Deutsche Übersetzung folgt) Saturday started with gentle winds and a changeable sky, filled as usual with the screeches of the watchful terns. Two guests were scheduled for today’s program, filmmaker and scholar Minou Norouzi and nature guide and photographer Erkki Makkonen.
As the theme of the day was ‘Island Ecologies’, Sarah Washington’s “Analogue Birds”, was the first thing to play while preparing a late breakfast with strong coffee.

The day’s playlist contained – not without a reason! – Dinah Bird’s “Different Rains”, Peter Cusack’s Berlin magpie recordings, and Sebastian Pafundo’s wave song piece “Dorothy”.  The Brazilian composer and radio artist Roberto D’Ugo had sent three compositions, all of them exploring analog sound/field recording (and making) and/or the imagery of the sea and liminal loop rituals. We played “M.A.R.” and “Stranger in the Nest”.

Minou Norouzi is a documentary filmmaker and critic with a focus on documentary art practice, knowledge production, and diasporic cinema language. 
For Harakka Radio she had prepared a text about islands which playfully approached the different connotations of the terms ‘island’, Isola, isolation… – and the sociopolitical parameters attached to them: the use of islands as prisons, or as conveniently isolated spaces for the mentally ill or the dead, for example. The audio file they brought was a piece by artist Moses Sumney, cut together with her most central statements about islands.

We also talked about her involuntarily lengthened stay on the Helsinki island Suomenlinna during her HIAP residency in 2021: The rules of the Covid pandemic required her to extend her stay from 2 months to a much longer term.

Erkki Makkonen, nature guide, and photographer, arrived around 3:30 pm. A photo was taken – on physical film material.

Maybe Erkki was the right person to ask why there no magpies could be seen on the ‘Magpie Island’, but hundreds of breeding barnacle geese and terns? Magpies reside here at a different time of the year he says, and explains, that it is only since 1990 that the barnacle goose made Harakka island its breeding place. Our talk meanders from the history of the island and the buildings on it (telegraph communications and chemical laboratory) to the educational work of the nature guides to the climatic changes evolving during the past decades. Having worked as a nature guide on the island for about 25 years already, Erkki drew on a deeper-than-usual sensing of the island’s nature. I wanted to learn more about possibly specific dealings with birds as more-than-human messengers between earth and sky. Owls, he says, would be the kind of bird that he has connected to in the past. Maybe, he says and laughs, he would even turn into one, in another life.

It is only in later research that I found out about the mystery tales about the barnacle goose which was believed to grow either from (equally black-and-white) barnacles clinging to floating timbers or, as this illustration below shows, from barnacle mussels hanging from a tree and then ripening into birds.

After the radio, we all walked over to the auditorium of the academy to witness a live painting video by Liisa Kallio, followed by a lecture about magic by the Karelian artist Joonas Jokiranta. Joonas had already started his performance, covering the blackboard with words and symbols. Luckily most of his words could be recorded as ‘impossible’ radio sorcery for Harakka Radio’s very last island broadcast, the Day of Magic!

Contributing radio artists (in loose order of appearance)

  • Sarah Washington: Analogue birds
  • Sebastian Pafundo: Dorothy
  • y2mate.com-Moses-Sumney-insula (Track by Minou)
  • Roberto d’Ugo: M.A.R.
  • Dinah Bird: Different Rains
  • Joan Schumann: Generative Engine
  • Peter Cusack: constant_magpies_distant_sirens_dogs&voices; very_close_magpie_sparrows
  • Roberto d’Ugo: Stranger in the Nest
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(Deutsche Übersetzung folgt) Six listening stations were set up around the gallery Lennätin: Six radios adorned with feathers transmitted the studio situation to the visiting or passing guests (tourists, children’s classes, nature lovers, artists, birds, and insects).

Rori Vallinharju

Harakka Island Radio received personal support from the immensely helpful assistance of Rori Vallinharju, who took care of helping with the set-up of the station and providing everything needed during the first two radio days.

Our broadcasting range was small, due to the rocky geography of the island and the rather low elevation of the transmitter being fixed to the wall of the house. Gallery Lennätin is a small house with a gallery space, a kitchen, an anti-chamber, and a small wooden terrace on which we installed the radio station. Our frequency was 92 MHz.

Harakka Island Radio started with Peter Cusack’s recordings of magpies (Harakka means ‘Magpie’ in Finnish), that now interweaved with the constant screeches and warning hisses of the seagulls and barnacle geese that were nesting all over the island. And while I Am This Radio was playing, Kari Yli-Annala, the organizer of the event of the “Week of the Impossible” made himself comfortable at the microphone.

As the founder of the island’s Nomad Academy of Experimental Arts, into which this former telegraph building still stemming from the Russian occupation has been converted, Kari jokes that who else than artists would be able to put up with the hundreds of angry birds populating the island. Kari works in Helsinki as a filmmaker, media artist, and art teacher, yet, the “Day of the Impossible” – according to Sun Ra, the 22nd of May – forms a central theme for his activities assembling ‘impossible’ artists to join him on the island for art exhibitions, lectures, performances, and… this time, even radio.

The main building hosts more than 20 studios rented out to different artists; for the “Week’s” events, the artworks are installed at the separate Gallery Lennätin, with an ancient farmhouse building of the “Kasematte IV” serving as a performance and multi-media space.

With this year’s focus on ‘the analogue’ it was clear that pre-digital recordings would be a favourite sound resource for the radio. Tiger Stangl’s short Rewind was a good example to play… a soft, as windy as melodic tape hiss. We examined some of the tapes Kari had been given for this event and played an excerpt from Lukatoyboy’s last-minute collage for Harakka. Anna Friz’ piece Radiotelegraph featured a sending of a radiotelegraph in spoken Morse code from the Skaftfell Center for Visual Art in the small town of Seyðisfjörður on the east coast of Iceland where she had undertaken a two-month residency. In only just introducing these works the bandwidth of the radio art spectrum became evident. 

The Taiwanese media artist and musician Wan Quian Lin aka Winona had arrived together with Kari already around noon. Originally based in Berlin, she too had undertaken the ‘impossible’ journey to Harakka Island. Her work, “The Whisperings of Mushrooms”, would be staged the following day at the Kasematte IV building, in cooperation with the Finnish dancer Sara Kovamäki.

We listened to an excerpt of her music, and we spoke about her fascination with the mycelium underworld. In her performances, she uses piezo and contact microphones which are intricately connected to objects in the room and to each other, creating a self-responsive web of communications.

Musically, the program of Day 1 continued with more tapes (and rewinds)  by potentiometer conductor Maximillian Glass, who spun through the frequency worlds of medium wave radio (AM) and uninterrupted waves (CW).

With Rori, who is active as a socio-cultural activist and artist we talked about the theme of psychogeography: What is it that makes the aura of a place special, even maybe eerie or tense, or relaxed? While we chatted on, alarming lightnings crisscrossed the sky and thunder could be heard from afar. Then, quite suddenly,  a gust of rain flooded the radio table and we decided to call it a day. The last piece played that day was Magz Hall and Peter Coyte’s collaborative piece Outside –  an auditory work that maps and makes audible sea and air pollution. A piece too, that brought us back to our location on an island that, just a stone’s throw from the city, is all the more vulnerable to all man-made environmental threats.

Kari Yli-Annala

Day 1 Radio Artists in loosely remembered order of appearance

  • Peter Cusack: Berlin Magpies
  • Gabi Schaffner: I Am This Radio
  • Tiger Stangl: Rewind
  • Lukatoyboy: Tape4Harakka
  • Anna Friz: Radio Telegraph
  • Maximillian Glass: The Conductor at the Potentiometer
  • Magz Hall and Peter Coyte: Don’t Listen Up

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(Übersetzung ins Deutsche entfällt) Dear contributing Open Call Artists,
dear Radio Enthusiasts, Analogue Islanders and Visitors!


As always, I am surprised, touched, and at times quite overwhelmed by the bandwidth, and beauty of your contributions. This time even more, because (probably) none of you living far away from Finland can really listen to them… they are broadcast exclusively via FM on the small island of Harakka, which is a short boat ride away from the pier in Helsinki.

At this point in time, the list of participating sound and radio artists reads like this:

  • Anna Friz
  • Cecilie Fang
  • Franco Falistoco
  • Ian Joyce
  • Joan Schuman
  • Jonathan Moss
  • Julia Drouhin – with Pip Stafford and Biddy_Connor
  • Kate Donovan – with Catherine Evans, Ally Bisshop)
  • Lukatoyboy
  • Magz Hall – with Peter Coyte
  • Maximillian Glass
  • Franco Falistoco
  • Petra Kapš aka OR poiesis
  • Roberto D’Ugo
  • Sarah Washington
  • Sebastian Pafundo
  • Sebastiane Hegarty
  • Tiger Stangl
  • Tom Miller

Due information about the pieces played and on which days will be given (latest) by Thursday morning. Harakka Radio is welcoming local artists and scientists to its program, as invited by the event’s organizer, artist and founder of the Nomad Academy of Experimental Art, Kari Yli-Annala:

Antti Salla, geologist. Day 2, 2 pm
Erkki Makkonen, plant specialist Day 3
Róza Turunen, poet. Day 4, 3 pm
Minou Norouzi, film maker. Day 3

The dates and times given are subject to changes! Additional guests are expected!

As the final schedule is not yet decided on, new info will also be shared a bit later on. Our frequency is 92.0 MHz. The program starts each day at 2 pm and ends at 5 pm… unless decided otherwise.  Broadcast assistant is Rori Vallinharju.

For all of you who want to visit the Island, this is the schedule for the ferry:

https://www.merenkavijat.fi/yhteysveneen-aikataulut.html

Please bring your radio! There are some specimens on the island to listen to/borrow but isn’t it much nicer to walk around and catch the radio waves by your own device?

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Nightloop #3: NoiseClicks&Classics

 

Übersetzung folgt

Whoever thinks of noise as a concept unfit for “the garden”, gardening or nature, is mistaken. Wind and waves are noise. The rustling of leaves is noise. Lawnmovers, saws and hedgecutters are noise. The neigbour’s radio sounds are “noise”. Noise could be defined as sound in absence of harmonic structures. Then again. Listen closely.

But what whim took over her to combine “noisy, electronic” tracks with contemporary classical music?
This was done to create a fitting pendant, or a counterpoint possibly. “Classical music” is usually connoted with “harmonic structures” and “harmonic structures” are deemed a lot more suitable for garden music… But just as with different gardening concepts there are different concepts of contemporary classical music. Be it the use of mathematical or aleatoric principles, of sung poetry, of experimental scores (for example the drawing of a leaf serving as a musical “instruction”), even the mix with “real” field recordings, not speaking of the actual situatedness of the concert/playback… almost every new school of music (from ages on) working in a different mode, seeking different harmonies has been attacked of creating “noise” .

Now, whether it is “noise”, drones, sinus waves, just “ugly” fieldrecordings, classical compositions bordering on atonality, orchestrated chaos or a meandering along a contrapuntal walk… with NoiseClicks&Classics you may continue to rely on your curiosity.

And for the whole beauty of it, I put some nightingale songs in it, too.

Featured composers are: Suspicion Breeds Confidence, Gerald Resch, Nikolaus Gerszewski, Miquel Parera, José Manuel Garcia, Udo Noll (radio aporée), Emanuele Constantini, William Engelen, Peter Cusack (Radio aporée), Wojciech Morawski, Daniel Blinkhorn, Carver Audain, Pit Schultz, Jaques Foschia, Toni Dimitrov, Attila Fias & John Kameel Farah, Stijn Demeulenaere, RawAudio.

Playlist: Playlist_Clicks

 

 

 

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