Remote Performances: Day 3 – Off the Grid Radio
- Date
- 07 Aug 2014
Remote Performances is a collaboration between artists London Fieldworks, Resonance104.4fm, (the world’s first art radio station), and LADA.
From the 4 to 9 August 2014, 20 specially commissioned artist performances and programmes created with local residents are being broadcast live from Outlandia, a unique artists' field-station in Glen Nevis, Lochaber, Scotland. With Resonance’s mobile studio ‘in residence’, Outlandia will become a portal between Lochaber and the rest of the world, a context in which participants can transmit experiences of place to diverse audiences through art, music and performance.
Remote Performances will be broadcast daily from 12-4pm (listen live) through Resonance, with listening posts set-up at the Edinburgh Art Festival and at LADA's Study Room in Hackney Wick, East London.
Below is the third in a series of blogposts written by Tracey Warr responding to Remote Perfomances, the blogposts will be published daily on LADA's blog throughout the project.
Remote Performances: Day 3 – Off the Grid Radio, Wed 6 Aug, Glen Nevis and Loch Ailort
Trying to make live radio broadcasts from an off-grid studio up a steep track is of course, perverse. Malfunction, as Johny Brown, observed at breakfast, is part of it – and that malfunction might be both technological and human. The Remote Performances project, with Resonance 104.4fm broadcasting from Outlandia, a hut up a tree in Glen Nevis, has been a challenge, but beyond that the artists and other contributors are on a rollercoaster of making, editing and broadcasting, with not much time to draw breath between. The complexity of the logistics is fierce: generators, satellites, transport, harsh walks uphill in rain and midge with heavy and fragile equipment, and above all juggling time, but this difficulty is proving to be wildly constructive.
Today’s broadcast ranged across Mozart, Morse Code, Johnny Rotten and Fleetwood Mac’s Albatross; and included Sarah Kenchington’s whale-wave-wind-like music, played on DIY instruments in the sea, producing melodic wheezings, groanings, snorings and huffings; Lisa O’Brien’s sound artworks inspired by weather and landscape in the Highlands; Tony White’s new story High-Lands, written here over the last few days from a desk looking out over islands, sunsets and cormorants.
Sheep farmer Ian McColl made the journey up the precipitous peat track to Outlandia for a discussion with Nevis Radio Presenter, Isobel Campbell, who also runs the Lochaber Rural Education Centre. Ian had with him a very finely carved wood and horn shepherd’s crook, the black and ivory handle worn glossy and marbled from the slide of a hand over the years. He and Isobel discussed changes and challenges in farming in Lochaber.
Tam Dean Burn interviewed historian Alex Du Toit from the Lochaber Archive Centre. They talked about the Clearings, the Jacobite Risings and the 19th century Kirk’s atttempt to curtail whisky consumption at funerals to a maximum of six glasses. Alex described how the Harry Potter Quidditch scenes were filmed at the viaduct in the Glen. Researchers at the Archives include the Local History Society and Scottish Diaspora visitors from Canada, Australia and New Zealand looking for information on their ancestors.
Continuing his series of absurd and effortful interactions with ‘nature’, Bram Thomas Arnold threw rocks at trees today, but nature appeared as impassive to this as to his oaths and particle physics lecture yesterday. Geoff Sample experimented with a lyrical performance drawing on experiences of working in the landscape, recording stags and eagles.
So at the end of four hours of broadcasting, when Johny Brown gently told the listeners: ‘we have to leave our nest in the trees here now and the mist is coming down over Ben Nevis opposite’, there was a sense of reluctant withdrawal from an eclectic, evocative sound scape … until tomorrow.
Other blogposts
Remote Performances: Day One – What Is Remoteness?
Remote Performances: Day Two – Soundings
Remote Performances: Day Three – Off the Grid Radio
Remote Performances: Day Four – And then…
Remote Performances: Day Five – Climbing a mountain in blue suede shoes*
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