<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><!-- generator="podbean/5.5" -->
<rss version="2.0"
     xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
     xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
     xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
     xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
     xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd"
     xmlns:googleplay="http://www.google.com/schemas/play-podcasts/1.0"
     xmlns:spotify="http://www.spotify.com/ns/rss"
     xmlns:podcast="https://podcastindex.org/namespace/1.0"
    xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/">

<channel>
    <title>Constellations</title>
    <atom:link href="https://feed.podbean.com/constellations/feed.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/>
    <link>https://constellationssounds.org/</link>
    <description>A community of listeners, investigating the world through sound.</description>
    <pubDate>Wed, 04 Jan 2023 09:24:00 +1100</pubDate>
    <generator>https://podbean.com/?v=5.5</generator>
    <language>en-us</language>
        <copyright>Constellations</copyright>
    <category>Arts</category>
    <ttl>1440</ttl>
    <itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type>
          <itunes:summary>We exist in the cosmos of sound art &amp; experimental narrative.</itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
<itunes:category text="Arts" />
    <itunes:owner>
        <itunes:name>Constellations</itunes:name>
            </itunes:owner>
    	<itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
	<itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
	<itunes:new-feed-url>https://feed.podbean.com/constellations/feed.xml</itunes:new-feed-url>
    <itunes:image href="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/image-logo/12532936/logo-small_web_-_under_0_75_mb_zrqajv.jpeg" />
    <image>
        <url>https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/image-logo/12532936/logo-small_web_-_under_0_75_mb_zrqajv.jpeg</url>
        <title>Constellations</title>
        <link>https://constellationssounds.org/</link>
        <width>144</width>
        <height>144</height>
    </image>
    <item>
        <title>The Mystery Box</title>
        <itunes:title>The Mystery Box</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/the-mystery-box/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/the-mystery-box/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Wed, 04 Jan 2023 09:24:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">constellations.podbean.com/b57122e5-4336-32c7-91c0-bf7e348ee9ad</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[<p>This Mystery Box has been mixed by Ariana Martinez.</p>
<p>It’s composed from sounds recorded by: Jess Shane, Miyuki Jokiranta, Anouk Hannan, Mike Williams, Ayesha Barmania, Adair Sheppard and Isaac Arnquist.</p>
<p>To hear these sounds in their entirety, click <a href='https://constellationssounds.org/mystery-box#uraw-submissionsu'>here</a>.
***</p>
<p>Constellations is a community of listeners, investigating the world through sound.</p>
<p>The mix engineer is MM.</p>
<p>The graphics are designed by JS.</p>
<p>For more sounds from Constellations, visit out website: https://constellationssounds.org/</p>
]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This Mystery Box has been mixed by Ariana Martinez.</p>
<p>It’s composed from sounds recorded by: Jess Shane, Miyuki Jokiranta, Anouk Hannan, Mike Williams, Ayesha Barmania, Adair Sheppard and Isaac Arnquist.</p>
<p>To hear these sounds in their entirety, click <a href='https://constellationssounds.org/mystery-box#uraw-submissionsu'>here</a>.<br>
***</p>
<p>Constellations is a community of listeners, investigating the world through sound.</p>
<p>The mix engineer is MM.</p>
<p>The graphics are designed by JS.</p>
<p>For more sounds from Constellations, visit out website: https://constellationssounds.org/</p>
]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/pvjwma/Mystery_Box_5.mp3" length="25067973" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[This Mystery Box has been mixed by Ariana Martinez.
It’s composed from sounds recorded by: Jess Shane, Miyuki Jokiranta, Anouk Hannan, Mike Williams, Ayesha Barmania, Adair Sheppard and Isaac Arnquist.
To hear these sounds in their entirety, click here.***
Constellations is a community of listeners, investigating the world through sound.
The mix engineer is MM.
The graphics are designed by JS.
For more sounds from Constellations, visit out website: https://constellationssounds.org/]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>624</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>78</itunes:episode>
        <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
        <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/Mystery_Box_5_box2-fence_stinsf.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">The Mystery Box</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>On ”Aural Alterities”: An interview with jamilah malika abu-bakare</title>
        <itunes:title>On ”Aural Alterities”: An interview with jamilah malika abu-bakare</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/on-aural-alterities-an-interview-with-jamilah-malika-abu-bakare/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/on-aural-alterities-an-interview-with-jamilah-malika-abu-bakare/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Wed, 05 Oct 2022 22:48:47 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">constellations.podbean.com/2b9876ac-22d9-327d-9bde-399d7b844878</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[<p>This episode of Constellations we speak with artist and writer <a href='https://www.jamilahmalikaabubakare.ca/'>jamilah malika abu-bakare</a> about <a href='https://www.auralalterities.com/'>Aural Alterities</a>, an online exhibition curated by abu-bakare. Aural Alterities is a collection of works by 8 sound artists, which suggest dimensions and possibilities for working in sound outside of formal or canonical of the medium. All of these artists are Black, Indigenous or POC Chilean.</p>
<p>This episode is primarily an interview with abu-bakare, alongside excerpts from the exhibition. We strongly recommend you listen and take in these works in their online format here: <a href='https://www.auralalterities.com/'>auralalterities.com</a></p>
<p>Aural Alterities works:</p>
<p>- “sending a message to you” by Adee Roberson
- “Speaking into Existence” by Aj McClennon
- “Audible Rising” by Allah George
- “L2BW2” by jamilah malika abu-bakare
- “ALL OF ME” by Jessica Karuhanga
- “FIGHT ME” by Kim Ninkuru
- “only workers” by RUTMEAT
- “Detenidxs Desparecidxs” by Soledad Fatima Muñoz</p>
<p>
Referenced reading:
<a href='https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/combahee-river-collective-statement-1977/'>The Combahee River Collective Statement</a>
<a href='https://www.artpapers.org/interview-david-hammons/'>Art Papers, Interview: David Hammons</a>
<a href='https://www.akpress.org/undrowned.html'>Undrowned: Black Feminist Lessons from Marine Animals by Alexis Pauline Gumbs</a></p>
<p>Further reading:
Aural Alterities “On Listening” page: <a href='https://www.auralalterities.com/on-listening'>auralalterities.com/on-listening</a></p>
]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This episode of Constellations we speak with artist and writer <a href='https://www.jamilahmalikaabubakare.ca/'>jamilah malika abu-bakare</a> about <a href='https://www.auralalterities.com/'>Aural Alterities</a>, an online exhibition curated by abu-bakare. Aural Alterities is a collection of works by 8 sound artists, which suggest dimensions and possibilities for working in sound outside of formal or canonical of the medium. All of these artists are Black, Indigenous or POC Chilean.</p>
<p>This episode is primarily an interview with abu-bakare, alongside excerpts from the exhibition. We strongly recommend you listen and take in these works in their online format here: <a href='https://www.auralalterities.com/'>auralalterities.com</a></p>
<p>Aural Alterities works:</p>
<p>- “sending a message to you” by Adee Roberson<br>
- “Speaking into Existence” by Aj McClennon<br>
- “Audible Rising” by Allah George<br>
- “L2BW2” by jamilah malika abu-bakare<br>
- “ALL OF ME” by Jessica Karuhanga<br>
- “FIGHT ME” by Kim Ninkuru<br>
- “only workers” by RUTMEAT<br>
- “Detenidxs Desparecidxs” by Soledad Fatima Muñoz</p>
<p><br>
Referenced reading:<br>
<a href='https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/combahee-river-collective-statement-1977/'>The Combahee River Collective Statement</a><br>
<a href='https://www.artpapers.org/interview-david-hammons/'>Art Papers, Interview: David Hammons</a><br>
<a href='https://www.akpress.org/undrowned.html'>Undrowned: Black Feminist Lessons from Marine Animals by Alexis Pauline Gumbs</a></p>
<p>Further reading:<br>
Aural Alterities “On Listening” page: <a href='https://www.auralalterities.com/on-listening'>auralalterities.com/on-listening</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/y2vzps/Constellations_77_AuralAlterities_interview_with_jamilah_malika_abu-bakare.mp3" length="61136640" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[This episode of Constellations we speak with artist and writer jamilah malika abu-bakare about Aural Alterities, an online exhibition curated by abu-bakare. Aural Alterities is a collection of works by 8 sound artists, which suggest dimensions and possibilities for working in sound outside of formal or canonical of the medium. All of these artists are Black, Indigenous or POC Chilean.
This episode is primarily an interview with abu-bakare, alongside excerpts from the exhibition. We strongly recommend you listen and take in these works in their online format here: auralalterities.com
Aural Alterities works:
- “sending a message to you” by Adee Roberson- “Speaking into Existence” by Aj McClennon- “Audible Rising” by Allah George- “L2BW2” by jamilah malika abu-bakare- “ALL OF ME” by Jessica Karuhanga- “FIGHT ME” by Kim Ninkuru- “only workers” by RUTMEAT- “Detenidxs Desparecidxs” by Soledad Fatima Muñoz
Referenced reading:The Combahee River Collective StatementArt Papers, Interview: David HammonsUndrowned: Black Feminist Lessons from Marine Animals by Alexis Pauline Gumbs
Further reading:Aural Alterities “On Listening” page: auralalterities.com/on-listening]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1528</itunes:duration>
        <itunes:season>7</itunes:season>
        <itunes:episode>77</itunes:episode>
        <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
        <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/Screen_Shot_2021-10-02_at_9_21_03_AM_ebfb84.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">On ”Aural Alterities”: An interview with jamilah malika abu-bakare</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>A surprise is coming...</title>
        <itunes:title>A surprise is coming...</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/a-surprise-is-coming/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/a-surprise-is-coming/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Mon, 18 Oct 2021 10:31:26 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">constellations.podbean.com/de8451be-882d-3084-84be-e34a324f8f9d</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[<p>Trick & treat. You know where we've been 😉</p>
<p>Constellations returns with some 🪄😈✨🧨 very soon.</p>
<p> </p>
]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Trick & treat. You know where we've been 😉</p>
<p>Constellations returns with some 🪄😈✨🧨 very soon.</p>
<p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/q7ztrj/A_surprise_is_coming.mp3" length="2432190" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Trick & treat. You know where we've been 😉
Constellations returns with some 🪄😈✨🧨 very soon.
 ]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>60</itunes:duration>
        <itunes:season>6</itunes:season>
                <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
        <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/q3_ct9id3.jpg" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">A surprise is coming...</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>WARATAH ~lonely artefacts~</title>
        <itunes:title>WARATAH ~lonely artefacts~</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/waratah-lonely-artefacts-1628734025/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/waratah-lonely-artefacts-1628734025/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 20 Nov 2020 14:33:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5fb14c4c9071527666360929</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Lonely Artefacts is a podcast series about regional Australian museums by Sisters Akousmatica for Constellations. Lonely Artefact #2 takes you to the Waratah Museum in Waratah north west lutruwita-Tasmania. 

From Sisters Akousmatica: 
“I visited in 2010 and the museum experience stayed with me, as it was so obviously a labour of love and community service. In fact it was probably the original inspiration for this series.”

Sisters Akousmatica pay respect to the Palawa people as the traditional and ongoing custodians of Lutruwita and to elders past, present and future, and acknowledge that sovereignty has never been ceded.


https://www.constellationsaudio.com/sounds]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Lonely Artefacts is a podcast series about regional Australian museums by Sisters Akousmatica for Constellations. Lonely Artefact #2 takes you to the Waratah Museum in Waratah north west lutruwita-Tasmania. 

From Sisters Akousmatica: 
“I visited in 2010 and the museum experience stayed with me, as it was so obviously a labour of love and community service. In fact it was probably the original inspiration for this series.”

Sisters Akousmatica pay respect to the Palawa people as the traditional and ongoing custodians of Lutruwita and to elders past, present and future, and acknowledge that sovereignty has never been ceded.


https://www.constellationsaudio.com/sounds]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/41fxs6/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5fb73722cff50c33d8ca0a66_1605842974009_201120_Ep12_5_Waratah_museum.mp3" length="22778774" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Lonely Artefacts is a podcast series about regional Australian museums by Sisters Akousmatica for Constellations. Lonely Artefact #2 takes you to the Waratah Museum in Waratah north west lutruwita-Tasmania. 

From Sisters Akousmatica: 
“I visited in 2010 and the museum experience stayed with me, as it was so obviously a labour of love and community service. In fact it was probably the original inspiration for this series.”

Sisters Akousmatica pay respect to the Palawa people as the traditional and ongoing custodians of Lutruwita and to elders past, present and future, and acknowledge that sovereignty has never been ceded.


https://www.constellationsaudio.com/sounds]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>569</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>12.5</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/d0973a5aef23fae08044978142aef41c.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">WARATAH ~lonely artefacts~</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Extraction</title>
        <itunes:title>Extraction</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/extraction-1628734026/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/extraction-1628734026/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Sat, 14 Nov 2020 03:24:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5fae182f54d01722c186ef30</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Energy usage and sound are two omnipresent components of our daily life. We're constantly trying to weigh our own wants and complications against individual sacrifices and the perceived "difference" our actions can make. And of course, as with much of existence, many things can be true at once. 

Featuring:
"i don't think its my place"  by Sophia Steinert-Evoy
"Forest to Desert" by Sarah Boothroyd

https://www.constellationsaudio.com/sounds]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Energy usage and sound are two omnipresent components of our daily life. We're constantly trying to weigh our own wants and complications against individual sacrifices and the perceived "difference" our actions can make. And of course, as with much of existence, many things can be true at once. 

Featuring:
"i don't think its my place"  by Sophia Steinert-Evoy
"Forest to Desert" by Sarah Boothroyd

https://www.constellationsaudio.com/sounds]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/izbpiq/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5fae184be741ef42c9d4c874_1605245421161_201113_Ep12_Extraction.mp3" length="38391640" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Energy usage and sound are two omnipresent components of our daily life. We're constantly trying to weigh our own wants and complications against individual sacrifices and the perceived "difference" our actions can make. And of course, as with much of existence, many things can be true at once. 

Featuring:
"i don't think its my place"  by Sophia Steinert-Evoy
"Forest to Desert" by Sarah Boothroyd

https://www.constellationsaudio.com/sounds]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>960</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>12</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/9e84de7caad5a5b4c2e6d2e6aefd4613.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Extraction</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Semiotic Shift</title>
        <itunes:title>Semiotic Shift</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/semiotic-shift-1628734027/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/semiotic-shift-1628734027/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Tue, 03 Nov 2020 19:34:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5f9ec4e476564e30d95c83a8</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Language is inextricably linked to land. In this episode, we explore how the shifts in the landscape have impacted language across generations and cultures.

Featuring:
“Translation (a prayer)” by John Isaiah Edward Hill
“During the drought the road is dry” by Bartosz Panek

John Isaiah Edward Hill is writing a poem to the generations passed and the generations to come in the Oneida language that’s been threatened by settler colonial violence. In their piece “Translation (a prayer)”, we hear two voices: the English voice which is static and unmoving, and the Oneida voice, which moves in a counter-clockwise motion, representative of traditional Haudenosaunee dance practices. 
~
In Poland, drought has wrecked havoc on the landscape. 2019 was the hottest year on record in Poland, and it’s affecting their entire way of life from water, the soil, food and energy prices. These shifts have meant a shift in the language used to describe water, heat and dryness. In Bartosz Panek’s piece “During the drought the road is dry” he explores how old words are being given a new context alongside the changing climate. 

Transcript for “During the drought the road is dry” is below.

[8:49 - 9:00]
During the drought the road is dry.
 
[9:10 - 9:15]
During the drought the road is dry.
 
[9:20 - 9:25]
During the drought the road is dry.
 
[9:34 - 9:34]
Can you see the drought?
 
[9:34 - 9:54]
So you know... in a place like this it will be seen there... Take a look there, where's upper: dryness has just been appeared. So it’s visible.
If the whole area, the grass here, is burned by the sky, it’s obvious there’s the drought.  
 
[10:03 - 10:33]
Nope! It's not so bad now.
In my backyard I have a garden with some vegetables and it was visible You just need to dig your finger into the soil and you know if it’s dry or humid.
So when the vegetation started in May and June, there was a kind of crisis. But not now.
 
[11:50 - 11:59]
Damn deckchair. The drought exhorted great havoc. Raspberry season is almost over…

[14:20 - 14:39]
Sasha is treading down a dry road, He can hardly walk, that’s a forebode. The heat is pouring out of the sky, During the drought the road is dry.

[24:09 - 24:17]
Dry across, dry out, dry over, dry totally…]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Language is inextricably linked to land. In this episode, we explore how the shifts in the landscape have impacted language across generations and cultures.

Featuring:
“Translation (a prayer)” by John Isaiah Edward Hill
“During the drought the road is dry” by Bartosz Panek

John Isaiah Edward Hill is writing a poem to the generations passed and the generations to come in the Oneida language that’s been threatened by settler colonial violence. In their piece “Translation (a prayer)”, we hear two voices: the English voice which is static and unmoving, and the Oneida voice, which moves in a counter-clockwise motion, representative of traditional Haudenosaunee dance practices. 
~
In Poland, drought has wrecked havoc on the landscape. 2019 was the hottest year on record in Poland, and it’s affecting their entire way of life from water, the soil, food and energy prices. These shifts have meant a shift in the language used to describe water, heat and dryness. In Bartosz Panek’s piece “During the drought the road is dry” he explores how old words are being given a new context alongside the changing climate. 

Transcript for “During the drought the road is dry” is below.

[8:49 - 9:00]
During the drought the road is dry.
 
[9:10 - 9:15]
During the drought the road is dry.
 
[9:20 - 9:25]
During the drought the road is dry.
 
[9:34 - 9:34]
Can you see the drought?
 
[9:34 - 9:54]
So you know... in a place like this it will be seen there... Take a look there, where's upper: dryness has just been appeared. So it’s visible.
If the whole area, the grass here, is burned by the sky, it’s obvious there’s the drought.  
 
[10:03 - 10:33]
Nope! It's not so bad now.
In my backyard I have a garden with some vegetables and it was visible You just need to dig your finger into the soil and you know if it’s dry or humid.
So when the vegetation started in May and June, there was a kind of crisis. But not now.
 
[11:50 - 11:59]
Damn deckchair. The drought exhorted great havoc. Raspberry season is almost over…

[14:20 - 14:39]
Sasha is treading down a dry road, He can hardly walk, that’s a forebode. The heat is pouring out of the sky, During the drought the road is dry.

[24:09 - 24:17]
Dry across, dry out, dry over, dry totally…]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/gmlwy7/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5fa106463dba451832434bc7_1605244975390_201103_Semiotic_Shift.mp3" length="63824456" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Language is inextricably linked to land. In this episode, we explore how the shifts in the landscape have impacted language across generations and cultures.

Featuring:
“Translation (a prayer)” by John Isaiah Edward Hill
“During the drought the road is dry” by Bartosz Panek

John Isaiah Edward Hill is writing a poem to the generations passed and the generations to come in the Oneida language that’s been threatened by settler colonial violence. In their piece “Translation (a prayer)”, we hear two voices: the English voice which is static and unmoving, and the Oneida voice, which moves in a counter-clockwise motion, representative of traditional Haudenosaunee dance practices. 
~
In Poland, drought has wrecked havoc on the landscape. 2019 was the hottest year on record in Poland, and it’s affecting their entire way of life from water, the soil, food and energy prices. These shifts have meant a shift in the language used to describe water, heat and dryness. In Bartosz Panek’s piece “During the drought the road is dry” he explores how old words are being given a new context alongside the changing climate. 

Transcript for “During the drought the road is dry” is below.

[8:49 - 9:00]
During the drought the road is dry.
 
[9:10 - 9:15]
During the drought the road is dry.
 
[9:20 - 9:25]
During the drought the road is dry.
 
[9:34 - 9:34]
Can you see the drought?
 
[9:34 - 9:54]
So you know... in a place like this it will be seen there... Take a look there, where's upper: dryness has just been appeared. So it’s visible.
If the whole area, the grass here, is burned by the sky, it’s obvious there’s the drought.  
 
[10:03 - 10:33]
Nope! It's not so bad now.
In my backyard I have a garden with some vegetables and it was visible You just need to dig your finger into the soil and you know if it’s dry or humid.
So when the vegetation started in May and June, there was a kind of crisis. But not now.
 
[11:50 - 11:59]
Damn deckchair. The drought exhorted great havoc. Raspberry season is almost over…

[14:20 - 14:39]
Sasha is treading down a dry road, He can hardly walk, that’s a forebode. The heat is pouring out of the sky, During the drought the road is dry.

[24:09 - 24:17]
Dry across, dry out, dry over, dry totally…]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1595</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>11</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/0edace43d15c42fdf58c2a4af44176b6.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Semiotic Shift</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Archive</title>
        <itunes:title>Archive</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/archive-1628734028/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/archive-1628734028/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 09 Oct 2020 20:55:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5f7767e5112454436edcebfa</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Ft. “American Ghosts” by Erica Huang and “Bob Hope No Hope” by Jenn Stanley.

The act of recording has impacted how we perceive and understand time. Recording’s byproduct, whether by sound, video, photo etc, is an artifact of the past, a moment of space and time captured and archived.

For this episode of Constellations, we asked two artists, Erica Huang and Jenn Stanley to reflect on how they consider time, its relationship with recorded artifacts and the significance of the archive. We asked them: How might our conception of what an ‘artifact’ is be sonically unraveled?  ]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Ft. “American Ghosts” by Erica Huang and “Bob Hope No Hope” by Jenn Stanley.

The act of recording has impacted how we perceive and understand time. Recording’s byproduct, whether by sound, video, photo etc, is an artifact of the past, a moment of space and time captured and archived.

For this episode of Constellations, we asked two artists, Erica Huang and Jenn Stanley to reflect on how they consider time, its relationship with recorded artifacts and the significance of the archive. We asked them: How might our conception of what an ‘artifact’ is be sonically unraveled?  ]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/jqepz3/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5f8028d85e38f224fe1b322e_1602235651615_201009_Ep10_Archive.mp3" length="59900864" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Ft. “American Ghosts” by Erica Huang and “Bob Hope No Hope” by Jenn Stanley.

The act of recording has impacted how we perceive and understand time. Recording’s byproduct, whether by sound, video, photo etc, is an artifact of the past, a moment of space and time captured and archived.

For this episode of Constellations, we asked two artists, Erica Huang and Jenn Stanley to reflect on how they consider time, its relationship with recorded artifacts and the significance of the archive. We asked them: How might our conception of what an ‘artifact’ is be sonically unraveled?  ]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1497</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>10</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/8e527a101e1f4d230f46949ced1fda8d.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Archive</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Voicing</title>
        <itunes:title>Voicing</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/voicing-1628734030/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/voicing-1628734030/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 18 Sep 2020 19:56:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5f622619ed91293a5b47d7f9</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Voicing was produced and composed by Mara Schwerdtfeger

The piece is an interweaving abstract conversation exploring the concept of voice through a series of four sound elements. The deconstructable nature of the piece allows for multiple forms of expression to be heard both as individual voices and together as an active cohesion of sound. 

We encourage you to visit our website to play with these different voices – voice, viola, environments and sound objects – in your own time. We’ve got each of the separate voices listed there, so you can hear they interact, relate, and reflect back on each other within your own sonic environment.  Play with them how you like.

constellationsaudio.com/sounds]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Voicing was produced and composed by Mara Schwerdtfeger

The piece is an interweaving abstract conversation exploring the concept of voice through a series of four sound elements. The deconstructable nature of the piece allows for multiple forms of expression to be heard both as individual voices and together as an active cohesion of sound. 

We encourage you to visit our website to play with these different voices – voice, viola, environments and sound objects – in your own time. We’ve got each of the separate voices listed there, so you can hear they interact, relate, and reflect back on each other within your own sonic environment.  Play with them how you like.

constellationsaudio.com/sounds]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/z9c4qr/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5f64822734269e4b85acddce_1600422763807_200918_Ep9_Voicing.mp3" length="27627101" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Voicing was produced and composed by Mara Schwerdtfeger

The piece is an interweaving abstract conversation exploring the concept of voice through a series of four sound elements. The deconstructable nature of the piece allows for multiple forms of expression to be heard both as individual voices and together as an active cohesion of sound. 

We encourage you to visit our website to play with these different voices – voice, viola, environments and sound objects – in your own time. We’ve got each of the separate voices listed there, so you can hear they interact, relate, and reflect back on each other within your own sonic environment.  Play with them how you like.

constellationsaudio.com/sounds]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>691</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>9</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/8f854fa38fc3ca2db983aac6b988f378.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Voicing</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Inner Geographies</title>
        <itunes:title>Inner Geographies</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/inner-geographies-1628734031/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/inner-geographies-1628734031/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Sat, 12 Sep 2020 11:46:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5f53f6a875dd3715b11e1918</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[This episode of constellations we’re mapping ourselves, from the outside in. Relax your need to understand everything and listen to yourself, your body, loosen the need to analyze.

Featuring:
“Necropolis 2: Cruise Control” by Kamikaze Jones
“A Sound Poem” by Axel Kacoutié
and
“Necropolis 3: Planet of the Gapes” by Kamikaze Jones.

Axel writes: “We are wrong to look for uniformity and objectivity. We have all mapped associations to what our subjective experience is like. 

My experience of the colour red is different from yours. Our brains light up the same way when hearing water but our relationship to its sounds will never be the same. 
Because of this, I wanted to illustrate how I've mapped mine using abstract terms like solitude, sunbathing, patricide etc. All as an attempt to say, "you don't have to understand, I just want to connect and have you see (listen) how I relate to the world."

—

“Necropolis 2: Cruise Control” —> This piece is composed from Grindr chats, sex toy Yelp reviews, and hold music from gay phone-sex hotlines. It imagines a queer hauntological underworld mediated by the technologies of yesteryear.
“Necropolis 3: Planet of the Gapes” —> This piece is a more meditative, cosmic manifestation of the Queer Necropolis, and is comprised entirely of acoustic instruments played with a vibrating butt plug.

Kamikaze writes: “My original intention was to create an immersive sonic environment that was representative of the darker, more infernal channels of the collective queer subconscious. My work as a performance artist and extended technique vocalist over the past year has been focused on explorations of queer madness, and supernatural manifestations of queer erotic identity. My objective was to create a mythological sonic territory that addressed the sublimated ghosts and demons of our shared history. I quickly realized the boundaries of my own subjectivity in the compositional process and, embracing the queer art of failure, realized that the project would undergo a kind of conceptual mitosis, splitting into two separate but distinct companion pieces, each radical interpretations of what a “Queer Necropolis” could sound like. (for more, head to our website)

constellationsaudio.com/sounds]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[This episode of constellations we’re mapping ourselves, from the outside in. Relax your need to understand everything and listen to yourself, your body, loosen the need to analyze.

Featuring:
“Necropolis 2: Cruise Control” by Kamikaze Jones
“A Sound Poem” by Axel Kacoutié
and
“Necropolis 3: Planet of the Gapes” by Kamikaze Jones.

Axel writes: “We are wrong to look for uniformity and objectivity. We have all mapped associations to what our subjective experience is like. 

My experience of the colour red is different from yours. Our brains light up the same way when hearing water but our relationship to its sounds will never be the same. 
Because of this, I wanted to illustrate how I've mapped mine using abstract terms like solitude, sunbathing, patricide etc. All as an attempt to say, "you don't have to understand, I just want to connect and have you see (listen) how I relate to the world."

—

“Necropolis 2: Cruise Control” —> This piece is composed from Grindr chats, sex toy Yelp reviews, and hold music from gay phone-sex hotlines. It imagines a queer hauntological underworld mediated by the technologies of yesteryear.
“Necropolis 3: Planet of the Gapes” —> This piece is a more meditative, cosmic manifestation of the Queer Necropolis, and is comprised entirely of acoustic instruments played with a vibrating butt plug.

Kamikaze writes: “My original intention was to create an immersive sonic environment that was representative of the darker, more infernal channels of the collective queer subconscious. My work as a performance artist and extended technique vocalist over the past year has been focused on explorations of queer madness, and supernatural manifestations of queer erotic identity. My objective was to create a mythological sonic territory that addressed the sublimated ghosts and demons of our shared history. I quickly realized the boundaries of my own subjectivity in the compositional process and, embracing the queer art of failure, realized that the project would undergo a kind of conceptual mitosis, splitting into two separate but distinct companion pieces, each radical interpretations of what a “Queer Necropolis” could sound like. (for more, head to our website)

constellationsaudio.com/sounds]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/mw1o7v/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5f5c250802b4ba0be6d04fce_1599874960576_200911_Ep8_inner_geographies_FINAL.mp3" length="65828570" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[This episode of constellations we’re mapping ourselves, from the outside in. Relax your need to understand everything and listen to yourself, your body, loosen the need to analyze.

Featuring:
“Necropolis 2: Cruise Control” by Kamikaze Jones
“A Sound Poem” by Axel Kacoutié
and
“Necropolis 3: Planet of the Gapes” by Kamikaze Jones.

Axel writes: “We are wrong to look for uniformity and objectivity. We have all mapped associations to what our subjective experience is like. 

My experience of the colour red is different from yours. Our brains light up the same way when hearing water but our relationship to its sounds will never be the same. 
Because of this, I wanted to illustrate how I've mapped mine using abstract terms like solitude, sunbathing, patricide etc. All as an attempt to say, "you don't have to understand, I just want to connect and have you see (listen) how I relate to the world."

—

“Necropolis 2: Cruise Control” —> This piece is composed from Grindr chats, sex toy Yelp reviews, and hold music from gay phone-sex hotlines. It imagines a queer hauntological underworld mediated by the technologies of yesteryear.
“Necropolis 3: Planet of the Gapes” —> This piece is a more meditative, cosmic manifestation of the Queer Necropolis, and is comprised entirely of acoustic instruments played with a vibrating butt plug.

Kamikaze writes: “My original intention was to create an immersive sonic environment that was representative of the darker, more infernal channels of the collective queer subconscious. My work as a performance artist and extended technique vocalist over the past year has been focused on explorations of queer madness, and supernatural manifestations of queer erotic identity. My objective was to create a mythological sonic territory that addressed the sublimated ghosts and demons of our shared history. I quickly realized the boundaries of my own subjectivity in the compositional process and, embracing the queer art of failure, realized that the project would undergo a kind of conceptual mitosis, splitting into two separate but distinct companion pieces, each radical interpretations of what a “Queer Necropolis” could sound like. (for more, head to our website)

constellationsaudio.com/sounds]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1646</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>8</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/993d7644872ab8321cd499177f38445f.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Inner Geographies</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Basic Ingredients</title>
        <itunes:title>Basic Ingredients</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/basic-ingredients-1628734032/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/basic-ingredients-1628734032/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 28 Aug 2020 23:26:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5f3c13063d78c26c8f6417e2</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[What do eyes sound like?

Does a spider’s abdomen sound furry or crunchy? How much sameness do I share with a cardinal? A mouse? Or the mold in the corners of my bathroom?... I should clean my bathroom?

In BASIC INGREDIENTS we’re into objects - both seemingly inanimate and living - to reconsider our relationship to the spaces that surround us.

Featuring:
"Dust Meditation” by Clare Dolan
"Fork, Knife, Lid" by Kim Hiorthøy
“The Land Owns Us” by Nishant Singh]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[What do eyes sound like?

Does a spider’s abdomen sound furry or crunchy? How much sameness do I share with a cardinal? A mouse? Or the mold in the corners of my bathroom?... I should clean my bathroom?

In BASIC INGREDIENTS we’re into objects - both seemingly inanimate and living - to reconsider our relationship to the spaces that surround us.

Featuring:
"Dust Meditation” by Clare Dolan
"Fork, Knife, Lid" by Kim Hiorthøy
“The Land Owns Us” by Nishant Singh]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/9abtex/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5f49037f895ef626d92dd054_1598621099940_200828_Ep7_basic_ingredients.mp3" length="54753697" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[What do eyes sound like?

Does a spider’s abdomen sound furry or crunchy? How much sameness do I share with a cardinal? A mouse? Or the mold in the corners of my bathroom?... I should clean my bathroom?

In BASIC INGREDIENTS we’re into objects - both seemingly inanimate and living - to reconsider our relationship to the spaces that surround us.

Featuring:
"Dust Meditation” by Clare Dolan
"Fork, Knife, Lid" by Kim Hiorthøy
“The Land Owns Us” by Nishant Singh]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1369</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/d87a52bee41affa1b208cc4e2013af95.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Basic Ingredients</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Missed Connections</title>
        <itunes:title>Missed Connections</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/missed-connections-1628734033/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/missed-connections-1628734033/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 14 Aug 2020 11:43:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5f2c5be76ceeb671b78606c0</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Do you ever feel like you’re not quite getting it? We live in a time of missed connections expressed through misunderstandings, dropped calls and glitches. In this episode of Constellations, sit with us in an attempt to express the inexpressible. Oh, and a duck sound or two.

"Echoing Quack" by Natalie Kestecher and Mike Williams
"poor connection" by Yardain Amron]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Do you ever feel like you’re not quite getting it? We live in a time of missed connections expressed through misunderstandings, dropped calls and glitches. In this episode of Constellations, sit with us in an attempt to express the inexpressible. Oh, and a duck sound or two.

"Echoing Quack" by Natalie Kestecher and Mike Williams
"poor connection" by Yardain Amron]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/ybiwck/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5f35e3f8ea5190140c383013_1597368729422_200814_Ep6_missed_connections_V2.mp3" length="85343084" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Do you ever feel like you’re not quite getting it? We live in a time of missed connections expressed through misunderstandings, dropped calls and glitches. In this episode of Constellations, sit with us in an attempt to express the inexpressible. Oh, and a duck sound or two.

"Echoing Quack" by Natalie Kestecher and Mike Williams
"poor connection" by Yardain Amron]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>2134</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/e191e525382799c083426de0a81a1726.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Missed Connections</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Accumulation Over Time (Parts X,Y,Z)</title>
        <itunes:title>Accumulation Over Time (Parts X,Y,Z)</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/accumulation-over-time-parts-xyz-1628734034/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/accumulation-over-time-parts-xyz-1628734034/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Sat, 08 Aug 2020 00:04:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5f10ddeea6402971296a305b</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[I want to talk about how the accumulation of things — books or bottles or 
whatever - is overwhelming on different scales. Overwhelming to the 
environment, overwhelming to the individual home, or overwhelming to the 
body. I wanted to make something that was claustrophobic but also could be 
exhumed and heard in parts like picking through the ruins of an old factory 
building.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[I want to talk about how the accumulation of things — books or bottles or 
whatever - is overwhelming on different scales. Overwhelming to the 
environment, overwhelming to the individual home, or overwhelming to the 
body. I wanted to make something that was claustrophobic but also could be 
exhumed and heard in parts like picking through the ruins of an old factory 
building.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/w1li1y/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5f2d5237e03c0f4bec975c8d_1596806051778_X_The_rationale_of_a_body_in_pain.mp3" length="19662824" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[I want to talk about how the accumulation of things — books or bottles or 
whatever - is overwhelming on different scales. Overwhelming to the 
environment, overwhelming to the individual home, or overwhelming to the 
body. I wanted to make something that was claustrophobic but also could be 
exhumed and heard in parts like picking through the ruins of an old factory 
building.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>491</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/9847c04731e7a8bdfbbe4cb8e3d01a47.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Accumulation Over Time (Parts X,Y,Z)</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>X Axis: The rationale of a body in pain</title>
        <itunes:title>X Axis: The rationale of a body in pain</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/x-axis-the-rationale-of-a-body-in-pain-1628734035/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/x-axis-the-rationale-of-a-body-in-pain-1628734035/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 07 Aug 2020 23:56:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5f1637eb352d6f601eae9f63</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[X Axis: The rationale of a body in pain
--
Think about each layer existing at the same time and bleeding together. 
Each layer is like a different perspective to a single thing that is too massive to perceive all at once.
--
Accumulation Over Time was written, produced, and edited by Adriene Lilly and features the voice of Tiana Tucker with additional help from Tiana Tucker, Olivia Bradley-Skill and Michelle Macklem. Readings from The Body in Pain by Elaine Scarry and Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology After the End of the World by Timothy Morton.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[X Axis: The rationale of a body in pain
--
Think about each layer existing at the same time and bleeding together. 
Each layer is like a different perspective to a single thing that is too massive to perceive all at once.
--
Accumulation Over Time was written, produced, and edited by Adriene Lilly and features the voice of Tiana Tucker with additional help from Tiana Tucker, Olivia Bradley-Skill and Michelle Macklem. Readings from The Body in Pain by Elaine Scarry and Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology After the End of the World by Timothy Morton.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/nku8pi/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5f1fe3b10d404b5c3a5a42a4_1595925650796_X_The_rationale_of_a_body_in_pain.mp3" length="19662824" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[X Axis: The rationale of a body in pain
--
Think about each layer existing at the same time and bleeding together. 
Each layer is like a different perspective to a single thing that is too massive to perceive all at once.
--
Accumulation Over Time was written, produced, and edited by Adriene Lilly and features the voice of Tiana Tucker with additional help from Tiana Tucker, Olivia Bradley-Skill and Michelle Macklem. Readings from The Body in Pain by Elaine Scarry and Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology After the End of the World by Timothy Morton.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>492</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/e18fc7efc70f4add71102de109a36414.jpg" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">X Axis: The rationale of a body in pain</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Y Axis: The hoarding habits of two manhattan heirs</title>
        <itunes:title>Y Axis: The hoarding habits of two manhattan heirs</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/y-axis-the-hoarding-habits-of-two-manhattan-heirs-1628734036/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/y-axis-the-hoarding-habits-of-two-manhattan-heirs-1628734036/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 07 Aug 2020 23:54:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5f1637d86a769b073efaae76</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Y Axis: The hoarding habits of two manhattan heirs
--
imagine these pieces as parts of a whole.
--

Accumulation Over Time was written, produced, and edited by Adriene Lilly and features the voice of Tiana Tucker with additional help from Tiana Tucker, Olivia Bradley-Skill and Michelle Macklem. Readings from The Body in Pain by Elaine Scarry and Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology After the End of the World by Timothy Morton.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Y Axis: The hoarding habits of two manhattan heirs
--
imagine these pieces as parts of a whole.
--

Accumulation Over Time was written, produced, and edited by Adriene Lilly and features the voice of Tiana Tucker with additional help from Tiana Tucker, Olivia Bradley-Skill and Michelle Macklem. Readings from The Body in Pain by Elaine Scarry and Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology After the End of the World by Timothy Morton.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/xlqj97/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5f1ffa77ee5fff35596c410c_1595931712412_Y_The_hoarding_habits_of_two_manhattan_heirs.mp3" length="19662824" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Y Axis: The hoarding habits of two manhattan heirs
--
imagine these pieces as parts of a whole.
--

Accumulation Over Time was written, produced, and edited by Adriene Lilly and features the voice of Tiana Tucker with additional help from Tiana Tucker, Olivia Bradley-Skill and Michelle Macklem. Readings from The Body in Pain by Elaine Scarry and Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology After the End of the World by Timothy Morton.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>492</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/e88661bd705fe41be094eba808f94b42.jpg" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Y Axis: The hoarding habits of two manhattan heirs</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Z Axis: The distribution of massive objects in time and space</title>
        <itunes:title>Z Axis: The distribution of massive objects in time and space</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/z-axis-the-distribution-of-massive-objects-in-time-and-space-1628734037/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/z-axis-the-distribution-of-massive-objects-in-time-and-space-1628734037/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 07 Aug 2020 23:52:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5f1637b4b9ec1e5fe96c58e4</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[<p>5</p>
]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>5</p>
]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/q8ck6k/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5f1ffcd398fe6764e8471680_1595932081772_Z_The_distribution_of_massive_objects_in_time_and_space.mp3" length="19662824" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[5]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>492</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/b03e4cca4706611c704a5cc21659006a.jpg" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Z Axis: The distribution of massive objects in time and space</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Accumulation over time [credits]</title>
        <itunes:title>Accumulation over time [credits]</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/accumulation-over-time-credits-1628734039/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/accumulation-over-time-credits-1628734039/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 07 Aug 2020 23:49:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5f2d579d6ba07c7942fe6fd7</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“There's something to me something about hoarding or accumulating or the need to own things and purchase things and have things in your life. I understand it on a lot of levels and obviously I have stuff and I have more plants than a person should have. But there's something about that impulse. It's the opposite of the impulse I have, which is to shed everything and have nothing. So I say that because, that's like where the tension is for me, right? Because I want to understand … what is this accumulation? Like, why is why is this? How is this? What is this?” [Adriene Lilly]

--

Accumulation Over Time was written, produced, and edited by Adriene Lilly and features the voice of Tiana Tucker with additional help from Tiana Tucker, Olivia Bradley-Skill and Michelle Macklem. Readings from The Body in Pain by Elaine Scarry and Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology After the End of the World by Timothy Morton. ]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“There's something to me something about hoarding or accumulating or the need to own things and purchase things and have things in your life. I understand it on a lot of levels and obviously I have stuff and I have more plants than a person should have. But there's something about that impulse. It's the opposite of the impulse I have, which is to shed everything and have nothing. So I say that because, that's like where the tension is for me, right? Because I want to understand … what is this accumulation? Like, why is why is this? How is this? What is this?” [Adriene Lilly]

--

Accumulation Over Time was written, produced, and edited by Adriene Lilly and features the voice of Tiana Tucker with additional help from Tiana Tucker, Olivia Bradley-Skill and Michelle Macklem. Readings from The Body in Pain by Elaine Scarry and Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology After the End of the World by Timothy Morton. ]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/cqk5x5/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5f2d599859e70c08d9b59d1c_1596807802141_200807_Accumulation_over_time_credits.mp3" length="22697272" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“There's something to me something about hoarding or accumulating or the need to own things and purchase things and have things in your life. I understand it on a lot of levels and obviously I have stuff and I have more plants than a person should have. But there's something about that impulse. It's the opposite of the impulse I have, which is to shed everything and have nothing. So I say that because, that's like where the tension is for me, right? Because I want to understand … what is this accumulation? Like, why is why is this? How is this? What is this?” [Adriene Lilly]

--

Accumulation Over Time was written, produced, and edited by Adriene Lilly and features the voice of Tiana Tucker with additional help from Tiana Tucker, Olivia Bradley-Skill and Michelle Macklem. Readings from The Body in Pain by Elaine Scarry and Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology After the End of the World by Timothy Morton. ]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>567</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/c892980f68a3c497c6aa298cc7cdb45c.jpg" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Accumulation over time [credits]</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>BROOD</title>
        <itunes:title>BROOD</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/brood-1628734042/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/brood-1628734042/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Sat, 27 Jun 2020 22:12:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5ef5337db02e1134f4a6de9e</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[BROOD was composed by RUTMEAT. 

RUTMEAT writes:

This work was created by singing with feedback, using effects pedals, playing cymbals with beadwork and some field recordings. April 30th is when I pulled "the sun, it sets on the empire" through my body by using my voice in this way. The words are from a work by Dzawada'enuxw artist, Marianne Nicholson, who has consented to me referencing her 2017 work, The Sun is Setting on the British Empire. I want to talk about the blockades that were in Vancouver this winter in support of Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs (law and governance system that is older than what is now known as Canada). I want to talk about ongoing colonial violence, genocide and hope. About Black and Indigenous communities showing up for each other and demanding more than performative allyship from yt and POC settlers. Talk about how resource extraction always brings ripples of violence. I want to talk about how a generation of Indigenous youth called to shut Canada down and then covid struck. I want to talk about labour that is expected of Indigenous femme presenting people to educate those around them. And I will, with my communities. 

In the words of Ta'kaiya Blaney, "We are the land protecting itself."

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This work was supported by constellations' 2019 Indigenous Sound Art Fundraiser.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[BROOD was composed by RUTMEAT. 

RUTMEAT writes:

This work was created by singing with feedback, using effects pedals, playing cymbals with beadwork and some field recordings. April 30th is when I pulled "the sun, it sets on the empire" through my body by using my voice in this way. The words are from a work by Dzawada'enuxw artist, Marianne Nicholson, who has consented to me referencing her 2017 work, The Sun is Setting on the British Empire. I want to talk about the blockades that were in Vancouver this winter in support of Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs (law and governance system that is older than what is now known as Canada). I want to talk about ongoing colonial violence, genocide and hope. About Black and Indigenous communities showing up for each other and demanding more than performative allyship from yt and POC settlers. Talk about how resource extraction always brings ripples of violence. I want to talk about how a generation of Indigenous youth called to shut Canada down and then covid struck. I want to talk about labour that is expected of Indigenous femme presenting people to educate those around them. And I will, with my communities. 

In the words of Ta'kaiya Blaney, "We are the land protecting itself."

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This work was supported by constellations' 2019 Indigenous Sound Art Fundraiser.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/qnxa45/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5ef73420068552405e3f566a_1593259753976_RutmeatEpisode_FINAL.mp3" length="41645452" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[BROOD was composed by RUTMEAT. 

RUTMEAT writes:

This work was created by singing with feedback, using effects pedals, playing cymbals with beadwork and some field recordings. April 30th is when I pulled "the sun, it sets on the empire" through my body by using my voice in this way. The words are from a work by Dzawada'enuxw artist, Marianne Nicholson, who has consented to me referencing her 2017 work, The Sun is Setting on the British Empire. I want to talk about the blockades that were in Vancouver this winter in support of Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs (law and governance system that is older than what is now known as Canada). I want to talk about ongoing colonial violence, genocide and hope. About Black and Indigenous communities showing up for each other and demanding more than performative allyship from yt and POC settlers. Talk about how resource extraction always brings ripples of violence. I want to talk about how a generation of Indigenous youth called to shut Canada down and then covid struck. I want to talk about labour that is expected of Indigenous femme presenting people to educate those around them. And I will, with my communities. 

In the words of Ta'kaiya Blaney, "We are the land protecting itself."

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This work was supported by constellations' 2019 Indigenous Sound Art Fundraiser.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1041</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/c1b9df555f3d8722346085c63bb8ce38.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">BROOD</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>The Tortoise Carries its House on its Back</title>
        <itunes:title>The Tortoise Carries its House on its Back</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/the-tortoise-carries-its-house-on-its-back-1628734043/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/the-tortoise-carries-its-house-on-its-back-1628734043/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 12 Jun 2020 21:35:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5edeb777c8279a79a2dd6419</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[<p></p>
]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p>
]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/o1sbcm/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5ee363a0785fd005fb8b81d6_1591961314950_200613_The_tortoise_carries_its_home_on_its_back_v2_FINAL.mp3" length="51266872" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1044</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>03</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/91d33f5c8f4d817106501397097b5aee.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">The Tortoise Carries its House on its Back</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>FEEL THE SKY Side B ~ The Burdened Land</title>
        <itunes:title>FEEL THE SKY Side B ~ The Burdened Land</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/feel-the-sky-side-b-the-burdened-land-1628734045/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/feel-the-sky-side-b-the-burdened-land-1628734045/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Sat, 30 May 2020 02:23:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5ed1247402ae514757387d64</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[For the first episode of Constellations’ 2020 season, we present FEEL THE SKY, a duo of sound works in conversation composed by JAYE KRANZ (Australia) and MYRA AL-RAHIM (USA). Both extend from the same starting point – a recording from 1992 made by a news reporter unfamiliar with field recording, but entranced by a chance encounter with trumpeter swans on an icy lake. Originally recorded on cassette, Constellations digitized the material and commissioned Kranz and Al-Rahim to compose their own landscapes – both real and imagined – in response. Take an interior road trip in “Are We There Yet” (Kranz), a journey across interior ecologies and mountain peaks. Then venture into “The Burdened Land” (Al-Rahim), a sprawling whorl that considers borders from the perspective of migratory bodies that cannot be contained within them.

Both works take inspiration from field recordings by HEATHER EVANS on the ancestral and traditional territories of the HAISLA NATION.

From the mind of Myra Al-Rahim:
When I began developing “The Burdened Land”, I knew I wanted to create an environmentally-conscious piece, though not in the traditional sense of the term. I wanted the work to have a distinct feeling of space and scale. I sought to explore the thematic interconnectedness between the migratory paths of birds and the sprawling supply chains of capital. Heather's original tape appears close to the beginning of my piece and continues throughout Act 1. I imagined she was taking a new journey through the sonic landscape I created for her to explore.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[For the first episode of Constellations’ 2020 season, we present FEEL THE SKY, a duo of sound works in conversation composed by JAYE KRANZ (Australia) and MYRA AL-RAHIM (USA). Both extend from the same starting point – a recording from 1992 made by a news reporter unfamiliar with field recording, but entranced by a chance encounter with trumpeter swans on an icy lake. Originally recorded on cassette, Constellations digitized the material and commissioned Kranz and Al-Rahim to compose their own landscapes – both real and imagined – in response. Take an interior road trip in “Are We There Yet” (Kranz), a journey across interior ecologies and mountain peaks. Then venture into “The Burdened Land” (Al-Rahim), a sprawling whorl that considers borders from the perspective of migratory bodies that cannot be contained within them.

Both works take inspiration from field recordings by HEATHER EVANS on the ancestral and traditional territories of the HAISLA NATION.

From the mind of Myra Al-Rahim:
When I began developing “The Burdened Land”, I knew I wanted to create an environmentally-conscious piece, though not in the traditional sense of the term. I wanted the work to have a distinct feeling of space and scale. I sought to explore the thematic interconnectedness between the migratory paths of birds and the sprawling supply chains of capital. Heather's original tape appears close to the beginning of my piece and continues throughout Act 1. I imagined she was taking a new journey through the sonic landscape I created for her to explore.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/ud97lp/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5ed1289cfa7bcf673af2ee1d_1590766190405_2020_E02_Feel-the-Sky_The_Burdened_Land.mp3" length="41507525" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[For the first episode of Constellations’ 2020 season, we present FEEL THE SKY, a duo of sound works in conversation composed by JAYE KRANZ (Australia) and MYRA AL-RAHIM (USA). Both extend from the same starting point – a recording from 1992 made by a news reporter unfamiliar with field recording, but entranced by a chance encounter with trumpeter swans on an icy lake. Originally recorded on cassette, Constellations digitized the material and commissioned Kranz and Al-Rahim to compose their own landscapes – both real and imagined – in response. Take an interior road trip in “Are We There Yet” (Kranz), a journey across interior ecologies and mountain peaks. Then venture into “The Burdened Land” (Al-Rahim), a sprawling whorl that considers borders from the perspective of migratory bodies that cannot be contained within them.

Both works take inspiration from field recordings by HEATHER EVANS on the ancestral and traditional territories of the HAISLA NATION.

From the mind of Myra Al-Rahim:
When I began developing “The Burdened Land”, I knew I wanted to create an environmentally-conscious piece, though not in the traditional sense of the term. I wanted the work to have a distinct feeling of space and scale. I sought to explore the thematic interconnectedness between the migratory paths of birds and the sprawling supply chains of capital. Heather's original tape appears close to the beginning of my piece and continues throughout Act 1. I imagined she was taking a new journey through the sonic landscape I created for her to explore.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1038</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/6d6b4edc59140408b48f51bbf4f536a6.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">FEEL THE SKY Side B ~ The Burdened Land</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>FEEL THE SKY Side A ~ Are We There Yet?</title>
        <itunes:title>FEEL THE SKY Side A ~ Are We There Yet?</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/feel-the-sky-side-a-are-we-there-yet-1628734044/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/feel-the-sky-side-a-are-we-there-yet-1628734044/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Sat, 30 May 2020 02:23:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5ecfba693ae2372e774da028</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[For the first episode of Constellations’ 2020 season, we present FEEL THE SKY, a duo of sound works in conversation composed by JAYE KRANZ (Australia) and MYRA AL-RAHIM (USA). Both extend from the same starting point – a recording from 1992 made by a news reporter unfamiliar with field recording, but entranced by a chance encounter with trumpeter swans on an icy lake. Originally recorded on cassette, Constellations digitized the material and commissioned Kranz and Al-Rahim to compose their own landscapes – both real and imagined – in response. Take an interior road trip in “Are We There Yet” (Kranz), a journey across interior ecologies and mountain peaks. Then venture into “The Burdened Land” (Al-Rahim), a sprawling whorl that considers borders from the perspective of migratory bodies that cannot be contained within them.

Both works take inspiration from field recordings by HEATHER EVANS on the ancestral and traditional territories of the HAISLA NATION.

From the mind of Jaye Kranz:
“Are We There Yet?”  is a strange, recurring road-trip towards home. A home we can never really find or retrieve; while at the same time, being a home we have already found: the one that is already ours. Like a circular roadmap for finding our way there. We hear the same driving tape over and over, but we move through different landscapes, across vast spans of time and place, in a dreamscape where the laws of separation and structure, boundary and contour, do not apply.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[For the first episode of Constellations’ 2020 season, we present FEEL THE SKY, a duo of sound works in conversation composed by JAYE KRANZ (Australia) and MYRA AL-RAHIM (USA). Both extend from the same starting point – a recording from 1992 made by a news reporter unfamiliar with field recording, but entranced by a chance encounter with trumpeter swans on an icy lake. Originally recorded on cassette, Constellations digitized the material and commissioned Kranz and Al-Rahim to compose their own landscapes – both real and imagined – in response. Take an interior road trip in “Are We There Yet” (Kranz), a journey across interior ecologies and mountain peaks. Then venture into “The Burdened Land” (Al-Rahim), a sprawling whorl that considers borders from the perspective of migratory bodies that cannot be contained within them.

Both works take inspiration from field recordings by HEATHER EVANS on the ancestral and traditional territories of the HAISLA NATION.

From the mind of Jaye Kranz:
“Are We There Yet?”  is a strange, recurring road-trip towards home. A home we can never really find or retrieve; while at the same time, being a home we have already found: the one that is already ours. Like a circular roadmap for finding our way there. We hear the same driving tape over and over, but we move through different landscapes, across vast spans of time and place, in a dreamscape where the laws of separation and structure, boundary and contour, do not apply.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/pc2sc4/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5ed11da88302042c26b7dd0a_1590764660712_2020_E01_Feel-the-Sky_Jaye-Kranz_Podcast.mp3" length="41779199" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[For the first episode of Constellations’ 2020 season, we present FEEL THE SKY, a duo of sound works in conversation composed by JAYE KRANZ (Australia) and MYRA AL-RAHIM (USA). Both extend from the same starting point – a recording from 1992 made by a news reporter unfamiliar with field recording, but entranced by a chance encounter with trumpeter swans on an icy lake. Originally recorded on cassette, Constellations digitized the material and commissioned Kranz and Al-Rahim to compose their own landscapes – both real and imagined – in response. Take an interior road trip in “Are We There Yet” (Kranz), a journey across interior ecologies and mountain peaks. Then venture into “The Burdened Land” (Al-Rahim), a sprawling whorl that considers borders from the perspective of migratory bodies that cannot be contained within them.

Both works take inspiration from field recordings by HEATHER EVANS on the ancestral and traditional territories of the HAISLA NATION.

From the mind of Jaye Kranz:
“Are We There Yet?”  is a strange, recurring road-trip towards home. A home we can never really find or retrieve; while at the same time, being a home we have already found: the one that is already ours. Like a circular roadmap for finding our way there. We hear the same driving tape over and over, but we move through different landscapes, across vast spans of time and place, in a dreamscape where the laws of separation and structure, boundary and contour, do not apply.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1044</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>01</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/688fc92dbe4280d909643e6c4c7ef615.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">FEEL THE SKY Side A ~ Are We There Yet?</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Constellations 2020 is HERE</title>
        <itunes:title>Constellations 2020 is HERE</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/constellations-2020-is-here-1628734046/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/constellations-2020-is-here-1628734046/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Thu, 21 May 2020 16:35:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5ec61bcc8e5b9f5b9fb07ca0</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Hello, Constellations is returning to your feeds with a delicious new season of audio oddities, soul-filled sounds and feed fucking. We can’t wait for you to hear what we’ve been up to.

We’re throwing a (n online) party to celebrate our launch, THIS Friday, May 22 at 8:00pm EST / Saturday, May 23 at 10:00am AEST. It’s an intimate listening party and in-conversation with the artists behind our first physical release FEEL THE SKY. Tickets and more info here: https://www.facebook.com/events/836823783469230

And we’re back on your feeds NEXT WEEK, Friday May 29th, so keep an ear out for us then. 

Constellations~

FEED YOUR EARS]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Hello, Constellations is returning to your feeds with a delicious new season of audio oddities, soul-filled sounds and feed fucking. We can’t wait for you to hear what we’ve been up to.

We’re throwing a (n online) party to celebrate our launch, THIS Friday, May 22 at 8:00pm EST / Saturday, May 23 at 10:00am AEST. It’s an intimate listening party and in-conversation with the artists behind our first physical release FEEL THE SKY. Tickets and more info here: https://www.facebook.com/events/836823783469230

And we’re back on your feeds NEXT WEEK, Friday May 29th, so keep an ear out for us then. 

Constellations~

FEED YOUR EARS]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/mp83lr/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5ec61c68db9d7308cea09d4a_1590041783116_Constellations_2020_Trailer.mp3" length="5586650" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Hello, Constellations is returning to your feeds with a delicious new season of audio oddities, soul-filled sounds and feed fucking. We can’t wait for you to hear what we’ve been up to.

We’re throwing a (n online) party to celebrate our launch, THIS Friday, May 22 at 8:00pm EST / Saturday, May 23 at 10:00am AEST. It’s an intimate listening party and in-conversation with the artists behind our first physical release FEEL THE SKY. Tickets and more info here: https://www.facebook.com/events/836823783469230

And we’re back on your feeds NEXT WEEK, Friday May 29th, so keep an ear out for us then. 

Constellations~

FEED YOUR EARS]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>108</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/0831e22e7b6aea8c5ea4d425a4b4a238.jpg" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Constellations 2020 is HERE</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>RESONANT BODIES [the exhibition]</title>
        <itunes:title>RESONANT BODIES [the exhibition]</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/resonant-bodies-the-exhibition-1628734048/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/resonant-bodies-the-exhibition-1628734048/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Sat, 07 Dec 2019 01:21:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5de9f92e772746761f32e135</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Step inside the world of Resonant Bodies with this special hour-long episode that takes you piece-by-piece through the exhibition. Follow your ears through the ambient sounds of the gallery and stop off at each piece. Read alongside with the piece descriptions below.


[00:24-09:02] Aliya Pabani, Singing on the Line
Aliya Pabani goes to a vocal coach to look into the extent of her vocal cord damage, and the contours of the voice she has left. Originally constructed as a four-channel audio installation, this piece played back on four speakers fabricated from four balloons.

[09:02-19:56] Jon Tjhia, Thing-Like
How is a business phone call like a folk song or jazz standard? How much are non-words, and part-words, involved in how we communicate? Is it possible to speak into the void; to use our voices to communicate nothing at all?

In Thing-Like, Jon Tjhia has created a suite of 'exercises' – basically analogous to piano études, or studies, for edited sound works. Taking Walter Ong's preoccupations with the 'immersive' and vital nature of oral culture as a point of departure, these pieces tease and critique the heavy burden of speech and its value: as social currency, blunt instrument, monetary resource and point of connection.
This collection of short works is composed for speakers – inviting, intrusive, implicating the passer-by; and headphones – individual, interior. Traditional interviews, aimless conversations, paid celebrity dedications, forgotten sing-alongs, free improvisations, custom voice synthesis and chance murmurs become material for a process that is both informal and entirely formal. Speakers’ words are manipulated (‘say that again, but opposite’); license agreements are breached. While Ong argues that thought and expression have been fundamentally reconfigured by the technology of writing; Thing-Like suggests ways in which voice and speech have been reconfigured by the technology of money and how it structures time. 

[19:56-30:40] Kaija Siirala, Hamina, Finland
“Where is the Cloud located on Earth?” Reflecting on the disembodied lexicon of virtual space, Kaija Siirala’s Hamina, Finland situates listeners at an unexpected nexus between digital and physical gathering places: the Hamina sauna. A relic of a retrofitted paper mill, this sauna is an employee perk at the Hamina Google data center in Southern Finland. Uniquely, seawater is channeled here to cool Google’s vast, active server bodies. Simultaneously, human bodies in the neighbouring sauna heat up after a day of work. The piece considers the often-obscured physical consequences of virtual activity by mapping it onto a visceral sauna experience.

A watery world emerges through a whispered choir of google search histories, including Siirala’s own Hamina sauna research. Sauna is a central component of Finnish culture and is a lifelong practice Siirala inherited from her family. Her field recordings from these times together — sounds of breath, camaraderie, eruptions of laughter — underscore the piece.

When water is tossed onto the rocks atop the stove, the löyly — steam in Finnish — mounts the heat to an intolerable crescendo forcing participants out of the sauna and into the same cold sea cooling the Google servers. Löyly shares the same etymological root as the Finnish word for “spirit”.

[30:40-41:17] Cheldon Paterson, Transport Station
Forests, rain, traffic — all seem to sound louder in the dark of night. For sighted people, hearing is the center point of attention only when visual input is absent or unclear. Cheldon Paterson’s Transport Station, composed as an audiovisual diptych plays with this tendency through spatial isolation of the audio and visual components of the work, so that they can be experienced both together and apart.

In video form, Paterson’s audio comes first, setting up hearing as the primary mode of perceiving one’s environment. Listeners hear field recordings from urban and natural environments that have been twisted and turned on themselves through turntablism and sampling. The second half of the piece is accompanied by video, which employs the kaleidoscope as a visual metaphor for how the transformation of familiar sounds affects the imagination.

While the interaction of sight and sound is usually clarifying to the senses, Paterson’s approach refracts memory and imagination, forcing the viewer-listener to succumb to the current of sensual input or become an active participant in meaning-making.

[41:17-49:51] Chandra Melting Tallow, Protect Me From My Protector
In her critique of romantic love, bell hooks writes, “This illusion, perpetuated by so much romantic lore, stands in the way of our learning how to love. To sustain our fantasy, we substitute romance for love.” In Protect Me From My Protector, Chandra Melting Tallow pierces the fantasy of romance to reveal the sharp, tense and dark edges of harm within intimate partner relationships. Dropping us into the emotional inner world of the artist, this work explores the intensity, confusion, and disorientation of living within the confines of abuse, including the cycles of trauma and cognitive dissonance that occur when one’s protector is simultaneously inflicting harm.

The piece extends past personal relationships to confront power relations, particularly between the state as a protectorate and marginalized communities. When these communities are depicted as irrational and hysterical, the state reasserts power to remove their agency. As a result of such abuses of power, the world is heard and experienced differently by marginalized communities, so that music that once signaled romance can be recast as a tool of manipulation.

[49:51-57:48] Phoebe Wang, Isn’t it lovely?
Stepping inside Isn’t it lovely?, Phoebe Wang asks the audience to leave the known territory and comfort of the white-walled gallery space to become immersed in an isolated environment. Here, sights and sounds of walls, carpets, speech and din create a faux-warmth that is at once invasive and curious. The listener then must subject themselves to the sounds that enter their ears.

The fragments of recorded memories that make up Isn’t it lovely? hover over meaning, never landing solidly. As the audio progresses, Wang prompts and engages in a series of conversations that attempt to ask, “why choose to keep going in a world that is not built for you?”

In Isn’t it lovely?, Wang constructs a refuge of sorts – yet the systems and histories she seeks to evade or emancipate herself from continue to be felt here, too.
*******************************************************
Resonant Bodies began as an exhibition in Toronto Canada. In Toronto, we’re situated within the ‘Dish with One Spoon Territory’ on the ancestral and traditional territories of the Anishnaabe, the Haudenosaunee, the Huron-Wendat First Nations, and the Mississaguas of the Credit First Nations. We acknowledge Canada’s First Peoples as the original inhabitants and storytellers of this land, and we pay respects to their ongoing storytelling traditions.

Resonant Bodies was curated and produced by Aliya Pabani, Michelle Macklem and Jess Shane. Audio mixed by Michelle Macklem. Graphics designed by Jess Shane.

The artists are: Aliya Pabani, Jon Tjhia, Kaija Siirala, Cheldon Paterson, Chandra Melting Tallow and Phoebe Wang. 

Resonant Bodies received exhibition support from many generous people and organizations. Thank you to Henry Faber, Jennie Robinson, Mitchell Akiyama, Amita Kirpalani, Braden Labonte, Liam Coo, Matthew Kariatsumari, Frank Green, Evan Cartwright, Robin Luckwaldt, Mitch Trachter, and Yuula Benivolski. 

Special thanks to the terrific folks at the Toronto Media Arts Centre for partnering with us and making this event possible. Thanks also to community partner Charles Street Video.

Resonant Bodies was supported by the Toronto Arts Council and the Ontario Arts Council.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Step inside the world of Resonant Bodies with this special hour-long episode that takes you piece-by-piece through the exhibition. Follow your ears through the ambient sounds of the gallery and stop off at each piece. Read alongside with the piece descriptions below.


[00:24-09:02] Aliya Pabani, Singing on the Line
Aliya Pabani goes to a vocal coach to look into the extent of her vocal cord damage, and the contours of the voice she has left. Originally constructed as a four-channel audio installation, this piece played back on four speakers fabricated from four balloons.

[09:02-19:56] Jon Tjhia, Thing-Like
How is a business phone call like a folk song or jazz standard? How much are non-words, and part-words, involved in how we communicate? Is it possible to speak into the void; to use our voices to communicate nothing at all?

In Thing-Like, Jon Tjhia has created a suite of 'exercises' – basically analogous to piano études, or studies, for edited sound works. Taking Walter Ong's preoccupations with the 'immersive' and vital nature of oral culture as a point of departure, these pieces tease and critique the heavy burden of speech and its value: as social currency, blunt instrument, monetary resource and point of connection.
This collection of short works is composed for speakers – inviting, intrusive, implicating the passer-by; and headphones – individual, interior. Traditional interviews, aimless conversations, paid celebrity dedications, forgotten sing-alongs, free improvisations, custom voice synthesis and chance murmurs become material for a process that is both informal and entirely formal. Speakers’ words are manipulated (‘say that again, but opposite’); license agreements are breached. While Ong argues that thought and expression have been fundamentally reconfigured by the technology of writing; Thing-Like suggests ways in which voice and speech have been reconfigured by the technology of money and how it structures time. 

[19:56-30:40] Kaija Siirala, Hamina, Finland
“Where is the Cloud located on Earth?” Reflecting on the disembodied lexicon of virtual space, Kaija Siirala’s Hamina, Finland situates listeners at an unexpected nexus between digital and physical gathering places: the Hamina sauna. A relic of a retrofitted paper mill, this sauna is an employee perk at the Hamina Google data center in Southern Finland. Uniquely, seawater is channeled here to cool Google’s vast, active server bodies. Simultaneously, human bodies in the neighbouring sauna heat up after a day of work. The piece considers the often-obscured physical consequences of virtual activity by mapping it onto a visceral sauna experience.

A watery world emerges through a whispered choir of google search histories, including Siirala’s own Hamina sauna research. Sauna is a central component of Finnish culture and is a lifelong practice Siirala inherited from her family. Her field recordings from these times together — sounds of breath, camaraderie, eruptions of laughter — underscore the piece.

When water is tossed onto the rocks atop the stove, the löyly — steam in Finnish — mounts the heat to an intolerable crescendo forcing participants out of the sauna and into the same cold sea cooling the Google servers. Löyly shares the same etymological root as the Finnish word for “spirit”.

[30:40-41:17] Cheldon Paterson, Transport Station
Forests, rain, traffic — all seem to sound louder in the dark of night. For sighted people, hearing is the center point of attention only when visual input is absent or unclear. Cheldon Paterson’s Transport Station, composed as an audiovisual diptych plays with this tendency through spatial isolation of the audio and visual components of the work, so that they can be experienced both together and apart.

In video form, Paterson’s audio comes first, setting up hearing as the primary mode of perceiving one’s environment. Listeners hear field recordings from urban and natural environments that have been twisted and turned on themselves through turntablism and sampling. The second half of the piece is accompanied by video, which employs the kaleidoscope as a visual metaphor for how the transformation of familiar sounds affects the imagination.

While the interaction of sight and sound is usually clarifying to the senses, Paterson’s approach refracts memory and imagination, forcing the viewer-listener to succumb to the current of sensual input or become an active participant in meaning-making.

[41:17-49:51] Chandra Melting Tallow, Protect Me From My Protector
In her critique of romantic love, bell hooks writes, “This illusion, perpetuated by so much romantic lore, stands in the way of our learning how to love. To sustain our fantasy, we substitute romance for love.” In Protect Me From My Protector, Chandra Melting Tallow pierces the fantasy of romance to reveal the sharp, tense and dark edges of harm within intimate partner relationships. Dropping us into the emotional inner world of the artist, this work explores the intensity, confusion, and disorientation of living within the confines of abuse, including the cycles of trauma and cognitive dissonance that occur when one’s protector is simultaneously inflicting harm.

The piece extends past personal relationships to confront power relations, particularly between the state as a protectorate and marginalized communities. When these communities are depicted as irrational and hysterical, the state reasserts power to remove their agency. As a result of such abuses of power, the world is heard and experienced differently by marginalized communities, so that music that once signaled romance can be recast as a tool of manipulation.

[49:51-57:48] Phoebe Wang, Isn’t it lovely?
Stepping inside Isn’t it lovely?, Phoebe Wang asks the audience to leave the known territory and comfort of the white-walled gallery space to become immersed in an isolated environment. Here, sights and sounds of walls, carpets, speech and din create a faux-warmth that is at once invasive and curious. The listener then must subject themselves to the sounds that enter their ears.

The fragments of recorded memories that make up Isn’t it lovely? hover over meaning, never landing solidly. As the audio progresses, Wang prompts and engages in a series of conversations that attempt to ask, “why choose to keep going in a world that is not built for you?”

In Isn’t it lovely?, Wang constructs a refuge of sorts – yet the systems and histories she seeks to evade or emancipate herself from continue to be felt here, too.
*******************************************************
Resonant Bodies began as an exhibition in Toronto Canada. In Toronto, we’re situated within the ‘Dish with One Spoon Territory’ on the ancestral and traditional territories of the Anishnaabe, the Haudenosaunee, the Huron-Wendat First Nations, and the Mississaguas of the Credit First Nations. We acknowledge Canada’s First Peoples as the original inhabitants and storytellers of this land, and we pay respects to their ongoing storytelling traditions.

Resonant Bodies was curated and produced by Aliya Pabani, Michelle Macklem and Jess Shane. Audio mixed by Michelle Macklem. Graphics designed by Jess Shane.

The artists are: Aliya Pabani, Jon Tjhia, Kaija Siirala, Cheldon Paterson, Chandra Melting Tallow and Phoebe Wang. 

Resonant Bodies received exhibition support from many generous people and organizations. Thank you to Henry Faber, Jennie Robinson, Mitchell Akiyama, Amita Kirpalani, Braden Labonte, Liam Coo, Matthew Kariatsumari, Frank Green, Evan Cartwright, Robin Luckwaldt, Mitch Trachter, and Yuula Benivolski. 

Special thanks to the terrific folks at the Toronto Media Arts Centre for partnering with us and making this event possible. Thanks also to community partner Charles Street Video.

Resonant Bodies was supported by the Toronto Arts Council and the Ontario Arts Council.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/kfdu3i/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5dea02438c354b64fb0c3716_1575619345179_Resonant_Bodies_The_Exhibition.mp3" length="144549093" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Step inside the world of Resonant Bodies with this special hour-long episode that takes you piece-by-piece through the exhibition. Follow your ears through the ambient sounds of the gallery and stop off at each piece. Read alongside with the piece descriptions below.


[00:24-09:02] Aliya Pabani, Singing on the Line
Aliya Pabani goes to a vocal coach to look into the extent of her vocal cord damage, and the contours of the voice she has left. Originally constructed as a four-channel audio installation, this piece played back on four speakers fabricated from four balloons.

[09:02-19:56] Jon Tjhia, Thing-Like
How is a business phone call like a folk song or jazz standard? How much are non-words, and part-words, involved in how we communicate? Is it possible to speak into the void; to use our voices to communicate nothing at all?

In Thing-Like, Jon Tjhia has created a suite of 'exercises' – basically analogous to piano études, or studies, for edited sound works. Taking Walter Ong's preoccupations with the 'immersive' and vital nature of oral culture as a point of departure, these pieces tease and critique the heavy burden of speech and its value: as social currency, blunt instrument, monetary resource and point of connection.
This collection of short works is composed for speakers – inviting, intrusive, implicating the passer-by; and headphones – individual, interior. Traditional interviews, aimless conversations, paid celebrity dedications, forgotten sing-alongs, free improvisations, custom voice synthesis and chance murmurs become material for a process that is both informal and entirely formal. Speakers’ words are manipulated (‘say that again, but opposite’); license agreements are breached. While Ong argues that thought and expression have been fundamentally reconfigured by the technology of writing; Thing-Like suggests ways in which voice and speech have been reconfigured by the technology of money and how it structures time. 

[19:56-30:40] Kaija Siirala, Hamina, Finland
“Where is the Cloud located on Earth?” Reflecting on the disembodied lexicon of virtual space, Kaija Siirala’s Hamina, Finland situates listeners at an unexpected nexus between digital and physical gathering places: the Hamina sauna. A relic of a retrofitted paper mill, this sauna is an employee perk at the Hamina Google data center in Southern Finland. Uniquely, seawater is channeled here to cool Google’s vast, active server bodies. Simultaneously, human bodies in the neighbouring sauna heat up after a day of work. The piece considers the often-obscured physical consequences of virtual activity by mapping it onto a visceral sauna experience.

A watery world emerges through a whispered choir of google search histories, including Siirala’s own Hamina sauna research. Sauna is a central component of Finnish culture and is a lifelong practice Siirala inherited from her family. Her field recordings from these times together — sounds of breath, camaraderie, eruptions of laughter — underscore the piece.

When water is tossed onto the rocks atop the stove, the löyly — steam in Finnish — mounts the heat to an intolerable crescendo forcing participants out of the sauna and into the same cold sea cooling the Google servers. Löyly shares the same etymological root as the Finnish word for “spirit”.

[30:40-41:17] Cheldon Paterson, Transport Station
Forests, rain, traffic — all seem to sound louder in the dark of night. For sighted people, hearing is the center point of attention only when visual input is absent or unclear. Cheldon Paterson’s Transport Station, composed as an audiovisual diptych plays with this tendency through spatial isolation of the audio and visual components of the work, so that they can be experienced both together and apart.

In video form, Paterson’s audio comes first, setting up hearing as the primary mode of perceiving one’s environment. Listeners hear field recordings from urban and natural environments that have been twisted and]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>3614</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/939a53f35289cdfda8706974de6c8a4f.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">RESONANT BODIES [the exhibition]</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Phoebe Wang ~ Isn't it lovely?</title>
        <itunes:title>Phoebe Wang ~ Isn't it lovely?</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/phoebe-wang-isnt-it-lovely-1628734049/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/phoebe-wang-isnt-it-lovely-1628734049/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 29 Nov 2019 20:13:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5dde9c1302bf4d324fe2672e</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Stepping inside Isn’t it lovely?, Phoebe Wang asks the audience to leave the known territory and comfort of the white-walled gallery space to become immersed in an isolated environment. Here, sights and sounds of walls, carpets, speech and din create a faux-warmth that is at once invasive and curious. The listener then must subject themselves to the sounds that enter their ears.

The fragments of recorded memories that make up Isn’t it lovely? hover over meaning, never landing solidly. As the audio progresses, Wang prompts and engages in a series of conversations that attempt to ask, “why choose to keep going in a world that is not built for you?”

In Isn’t it lovely?, Wang constructs a refuge of sorts – yet the systems and histories she seeks to evade or emancipate herself from continue to be felt here, too.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Stepping inside Isn’t it lovely?, Phoebe Wang asks the audience to leave the known territory and comfort of the white-walled gallery space to become immersed in an isolated environment. Here, sights and sounds of walls, carpets, speech and din create a faux-warmth that is at once invasive and curious. The listener then must subject themselves to the sounds that enter their ears.

The fragments of recorded memories that make up Isn’t it lovely? hover over meaning, never landing solidly. As the audio progresses, Wang prompts and engages in a series of conversations that attempt to ask, “why choose to keep going in a world that is not built for you?”

In Isn’t it lovely?, Wang constructs a refuge of sorts – yet the systems and histories she seeks to evade or emancipate herself from continue to be felt here, too.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/9ct03s/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5de0df42d36d6241f15ad41d_1575614766919_Isn_t_It_Lovely.mp3" length="32506174" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Stepping inside Isn’t it lovely?, Phoebe Wang asks the audience to leave the known territory and comfort of the white-walled gallery space to become immersed in an isolated environment. Here, sights and sounds of walls, carpets, speech and din create a faux-warmth that is at once invasive and curious. The listener then must subject themselves to the sounds that enter their ears.

The fragments of recorded memories that make up Isn’t it lovely? hover over meaning, never landing solidly. As the audio progresses, Wang prompts and engages in a series of conversations that attempt to ask, “why choose to keep going in a world that is not built for you?”

In Isn’t it lovely?, Wang constructs a refuge of sorts – yet the systems and histories she seeks to evade or emancipate herself from continue to be felt here, too.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>767</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/f40a469b7509b851a49578b29893a30d.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Phoebe Wang ~ Isn&#039;t it lovely?</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Chandra Melting Tallow ~ Protect Me From My Protector</title>
        <itunes:title>Chandra Melting Tallow ~ Protect Me From My Protector</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/chandra-melting-tallow-protect-me-from-my-protector-1628734050/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/chandra-melting-tallow-protect-me-from-my-protector-1628734050/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 22 Nov 2019 19:49:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5dd1eb264149017c676bbfe1</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[<p>In her critique of romantic love, bell hooks writes, “This illusion, perpetuated by so much romantic lore, stands in the way of our learning how to love. To sustain our fantasy, we substitute romance for love.” In Protect Me From My Protector, Chandra Melting Tallow pierces the fantasy of romance to reveal the sharp, tense and dark edges of harm within intimate partner relationships. Dropping us into the emotional inner world of the artist, this work explores the intensity, confusion, and disorientation of living within the confines of abuse, including the cycles of trauma and cognitive dissonance that occur when one’s protector is simultaneously inflicting harm.</p>
<p>The piece extends past personal relationships to confront power relations, particularly between the state as a protectorate and marginalized communities. When these communities are depicted as irrational and hysterical, the state reasserts power to remove their agency. As a result of such abuses of power, the world is heard and experienced differently by marginalized communities, so that music that once signaled romance can be recast as a tool of manipulation.</p>
]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In her critique of romantic love, bell hooks writes, “This illusion, perpetuated by so much romantic lore, stands in the way of our learning how to love. To sustain our fantasy, we substitute romance for love.” In Protect Me From My Protector, Chandra Melting Tallow pierces the fantasy of romance to reveal the sharp, tense and dark edges of harm within intimate partner relationships. Dropping us into the emotional inner world of the artist, this work explores the intensity, confusion, and disorientation of living within the confines of abuse, including the cycles of trauma and cognitive dissonance that occur when one’s protector is simultaneously inflicting harm.</p>
<p>The piece extends past personal relationships to confront power relations, particularly between the state as a protectorate and marginalized communities. When these communities are depicted as irrational and hysterical, the state reasserts power to remove their agency. As a result of such abuses of power, the world is heard and experienced differently by marginalized communities, so that music that once signaled romance can be recast as a tool of manipulation.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/1h0f76/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5dd79e3584879234de938899_1574870036976_Protect_Me_From_My_Protector.mp3" length="49196735" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[In her critique of romantic love, bell hooks writes, “This illusion, perpetuated by so much romantic lore, stands in the way of our learning how to love. To sustain our fantasy, we substitute romance for love.” In Protect Me From My Protector, Chandra Melting Tallow pierces the fantasy of romance to reveal the sharp, tense and dark edges of harm within intimate partner relationships. Dropping us into the emotional inner world of the artist, this work explores the intensity, confusion, and disorientation of living within the confines of abuse, including the cycles of trauma and cognitive dissonance that occur when one’s protector is simultaneously inflicting harm.The piece extends past personal relationships to confront power relations, particularly between the state as a protectorate and marginalized communities. When these communities are depicted as irrational and hysterical, the state reasserts power to remove their agency. As a result of such abuses of power, the world is heard and experienced differently by marginalized communities, so that music that once signaled romance can be recast as a tool of manipulation.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1185</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/d2034f09d1bca42bf13ac5ccf51631aa.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Chandra Melting Tallow ~ Protect Me From My Protector</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Cheldon Paterson ~ Transport Station</title>
        <itunes:title>Cheldon Paterson ~ Transport Station</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/cheldon-paterson-transport-station-1628734051/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/cheldon-paterson-transport-station-1628734051/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 15 Nov 2019 23:16:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5dbf7f4bda741b03e187f5ed</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Forests, rain, traffic — all seem to sound louder in the dark of night. For sighted people, hearing is the center point of attention only when visual input is absent or unclear. Cheldon Paterson’s Transport Station, composed as an audiovisual diptych (though is also released via podcast as audio-only) plays with this tendency through spatial isolation of the audio and visual components of the work, so that they can be experienced both together and apart.

In video form, Paterson’s audio comes first, setting up hearing as the primary mode of perceiving one’s environment. Listeners hear field recordings from urban and natural environments that have been twisted and turned on themselves through turntablism and sampling. The second half of the piece is accompanied by video, which employs the kaleidoscope as a visual metaphor for how the transformation of familiar sounds affects the imagination.

While the interaction of sight and sound is usually clarifying to the senses, Paterson’s approach refracts memory and imagination, forcing the viewer-listener to succumb to the current of sensual input or become an active participant in meaning-making.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Forests, rain, traffic — all seem to sound louder in the dark of night. For sighted people, hearing is the center point of attention only when visual input is absent or unclear. Cheldon Paterson’s Transport Station, composed as an audiovisual diptych (though is also released via podcast as audio-only) plays with this tendency through spatial isolation of the audio and visual components of the work, so that they can be experienced both together and apart.

In video form, Paterson’s audio comes first, setting up hearing as the primary mode of perceiving one’s environment. Listeners hear field recordings from urban and natural environments that have been twisted and turned on themselves through turntablism and sampling. The second half of the piece is accompanied by video, which employs the kaleidoscope as a visual metaphor for how the transformation of familiar sounds affects the imagination.

While the interaction of sight and sound is usually clarifying to the senses, Paterson’s approach refracts memory and imagination, forcing the viewer-listener to succumb to the current of sensual input or become an active participant in meaning-making.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/1lx9x4/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5dce94577c70ce6ae5a99143_1574038310429_Transport_Station.mp3" length="35487377" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Forests, rain, traffic — all seem to sound louder in the dark of night. For sighted people, hearing is the center point of attention only when visual input is absent or unclear. Cheldon Paterson’s Transport Station, composed as an audiovisual diptych (though is also released via podcast as audio-only) plays with this tendency through spatial isolation of the audio and visual components of the work, so that they can be experienced both together and apart.

In video form, Paterson’s audio comes first, setting up hearing as the primary mode of perceiving one’s environment. Listeners hear field recordings from urban and natural environments that have been twisted and turned on themselves through turntablism and sampling. The second half of the piece is accompanied by video, which employs the kaleidoscope as a visual metaphor for how the transformation of familiar sounds affects the imagination.

While the interaction of sight and sound is usually clarifying to the senses, Paterson’s approach refracts memory and imagination, forcing the viewer-listener to succumb to the current of sensual input or become an active participant in meaning-making.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>843</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/b2dc1cf83e3d65a5b45338a9c8267f23.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Cheldon Paterson ~ Transport Station</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Kaija Siirala ~ Hamina, Finland</title>
        <itunes:title>Kaija Siirala ~ Hamina, Finland</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/kaija-siirala-hamina-finland-1628734052/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/kaija-siirala-hamina-finland-1628734052/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 08 Nov 2019 21:36:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5db674ae4f74010ee4e9045d</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“Where is the Cloud located on Earth?” Reflecting on the disembodied lexicon of virtual space, Kaija Siirala’s Hamina, Finland situates listeners at an unexpected nexus between digital and physical gathering places: the Hamina sauna. A relic of a retrofitted paper mill, this sauna is an employee perk at the Hamina Google data center in Southern Finland. Uniquely, seawater is channeled here to cool Google’s vast, active server bodies. Simultaneously, human bodies in the neighbouring sauna heat up after a day of work. The piece considers the often-obscured physical consequences of virtual activity by mapping it onto a visceral sauna experience.

A watery world emerges through a whispered choir of google search histories, including Siirala’s own Hamina sauna research. Sauna is a central component of Finnish culture and is a lifelong practice Siirala inherited from her family. Her field recordings from these times together — sounds of breath, camaraderie, eruptions of laughter — underscore the piece.

When water is tossed onto the rocks atop the stove, the löyly — steam in Finnish — mounts the heat to an intolerable crescendo forcing participants out of the sauna and into the same cold sea cooling the Google servers. Löyly shares the same etymological root as the Finnish word for “spirit”.

A watery world emerges through a whispered choir of google search histories, including Siirala’s own Hamina sauna research. Sauna is a central component of Finnish culture and is a lifelong practice Siirala inherited from her family. Her field recordings from these times together — sounds of breath, camaraderie, eruptions of laughter — underscore the piece.

When water is tossed onto the rocks atop the stove, the löyly — steam in Finnish — mounts the heat to an intolerable crescendo forcing participants out of the sauna and into the same cold sea cooling the Google servers. Löyly shares the same etymological root as the Finnish word for “spirit”.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“Where is the Cloud located on Earth?” Reflecting on the disembodied lexicon of virtual space, Kaija Siirala’s Hamina, Finland situates listeners at an unexpected nexus between digital and physical gathering places: the Hamina sauna. A relic of a retrofitted paper mill, this sauna is an employee perk at the Hamina Google data center in Southern Finland. Uniquely, seawater is channeled here to cool Google’s vast, active server bodies. Simultaneously, human bodies in the neighbouring sauna heat up after a day of work. The piece considers the often-obscured physical consequences of virtual activity by mapping it onto a visceral sauna experience.

A watery world emerges through a whispered choir of google search histories, including Siirala’s own Hamina sauna research. Sauna is a central component of Finnish culture and is a lifelong practice Siirala inherited from her family. Her field recordings from these times together — sounds of breath, camaraderie, eruptions of laughter — underscore the piece.

When water is tossed onto the rocks atop the stove, the löyly — steam in Finnish — mounts the heat to an intolerable crescendo forcing participants out of the sauna and into the same cold sea cooling the Google servers. Löyly shares the same etymological root as the Finnish word for “spirit”.

A watery world emerges through a whispered choir of google search histories, including Siirala’s own Hamina sauna research. Sauna is a central component of Finnish culture and is a lifelong practice Siirala inherited from her family. Her field recordings from these times together — sounds of breath, camaraderie, eruptions of laughter — underscore the piece.

When water is tossed onto the rocks atop the stove, the löyly — steam in Finnish — mounts the heat to an intolerable crescendo forcing participants out of the sauna and into the same cold sea cooling the Google servers. Löyly shares the same etymological root as the Finnish word for “spirit”.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/tjagfw/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5dd4f1c638ae5452a055670d_1574237212933_Hamina_2C_Finland.mp3" length="52112079" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“Where is the Cloud located on Earth?” Reflecting on the disembodied lexicon of virtual space, Kaija Siirala’s Hamina, Finland situates listeners at an unexpected nexus between digital and physical gathering places: the Hamina sauna. A relic of a retrofitted paper mill, this sauna is an employee perk at the Hamina Google data center in Southern Finland. Uniquely, seawater is channeled here to cool Google’s vast, active server bodies. Simultaneously, human bodies in the neighbouring sauna heat up after a day of work. The piece considers the often-obscured physical consequences of virtual activity by mapping it onto a visceral sauna experience.

A watery world emerges through a whispered choir of google search histories, including Siirala’s own Hamina sauna research. Sauna is a central component of Finnish culture and is a lifelong practice Siirala inherited from her family. Her field recordings from these times together — sounds of breath, camaraderie, eruptions of laughter — underscore the piece.

When water is tossed onto the rocks atop the stove, the löyly — steam in Finnish — mounts the heat to an intolerable crescendo forcing participants out of the sauna and into the same cold sea cooling the Google servers. Löyly shares the same etymological root as the Finnish word for “spirit”.

A watery world emerges through a whispered choir of google search histories, including Siirala’s own Hamina sauna research. Sauna is a central component of Finnish culture and is a lifelong practice Siirala inherited from her family. Her field recordings from these times together — sounds of breath, camaraderie, eruptions of laughter — underscore the piece.

When water is tossed onto the rocks atop the stove, the löyly — steam in Finnish — mounts the heat to an intolerable crescendo forcing participants out of the sauna and into the same cold sea cooling the Google servers. Löyly shares the same etymological root as the Finnish word for “spirit”.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1246</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/6b2ed3f514da677dd4c09d536394f3bc.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Kaija Siirala ~ Hamina, Finland</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Jon Tjhia ~ Thing-Like</title>
        <itunes:title>Jon Tjhia ~ Thing-Like</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/jon-tjhia-thing-like-1628734053/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/jon-tjhia-thing-like-1628734053/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 01 Nov 2019 19:12:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5db67286c853f67fa18c2417</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[In Thing-Like, Jon Tjhia has created a suite of 'exercises' – basically analogous to piano études, or studies, for edited sound works. Taking Walter Ong's preoccupations with the 'immersive' and vital nature of oral culture as a point of departure, these pieces tease and critique the heavy burden of speech and its value: as social currency, blunt instrument, monetary resource and point of connection.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[In Thing-Like, Jon Tjhia has created a suite of 'exercises' – basically analogous to piano études, or studies, for edited sound works. Taking Walter Ong's preoccupations with the 'immersive' and vital nature of oral culture as a point of departure, these pieces tease and critique the heavy burden of speech and its value: as social currency, blunt instrument, monetary resource and point of connection.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/zp3wly/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5dbbe5ba35d7d9095ee41370_1572595620127_Thing-Like.mp3" length="39282092" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[In Thing-Like, Jon Tjhia has created a suite of 'exercises' – basically analogous to piano études, or studies, for edited sound works. Taking Walter Ong's preoccupations with the 'immersive' and vital nature of oral culture as a point of departure, these pieces tease and critique the heavy burden of speech and its value: as social currency, blunt instrument, monetary resource and point of connection.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>938</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/7f61622eae9f27c8fbd4e4cb800b2ed1.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Jon Tjhia ~ Thing-Like</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Aliya Pabani ~ Singing on the Line</title>
        <itunes:title>Aliya Pabani ~ Singing on the Line</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/aliya-pabani-singing-on-the-line-1628734054/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/aliya-pabani-singing-on-the-line-1628734054/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 25 Oct 2019 19:37:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5c4150d80ebbe8aa256916f1</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“This piece comes out of a desire that I've had for a long time to map out 
the damage to my vocal cords. As a kid, I used to scream a lot and throw a 
lot of tantrums and I think that might have caused stress to my vocal cords 
and that's why I have the voice that I have right now. And although I 
really like my voice, I can't actually sing very well. I have a really 
limited range. And so I wanted to speak to a vocal coach and do a vocal 
lesson to see what my voice could do.”

~Aliya Pabani]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“This piece comes out of a desire that I've had for a long time to map out 
the damage to my vocal cords. As a kid, I used to scream a lot and throw a 
lot of tantrums and I think that might have caused stress to my vocal cords 
and that's why I have the voice that I have right now. And although I 
really like my voice, I can't actually sing very well. I have a really 
limited range. And so I wanted to speak to a vocal coach and do a vocal 
lesson to see what my voice could do.”

~Aliya Pabani]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/shig1f/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5db2b1e57dabf01728f01e90_1572237958149_01_ResBods_Aliya_Pabani__Nice_Voice.mp3" length="38070856" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“This piece comes out of a desire that I've had for a long time to map out 
the damage to my vocal cords. As a kid, I used to scream a lot and throw a 
lot of tantrums and I think that might have caused stress to my vocal cords 
and that's why I have the voice that I have right now. And although I 
really like my voice, I can't actually sing very well. I have a really 
limited range. And so I wanted to speak to a vocal coach and do a vocal 
lesson to see what my voice could do.”

~Aliya Pabani]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>952</itunes:duration>
                <itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode>
                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/50b13bb90631c1032edba161843642cb.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Aliya Pabani ~ Singing on the Line</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>Resonant Bodies {Oct 25 – Dec 2}</title>
        <itunes:title>Resonant Bodies {Oct 25 – Dec 2}</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/resonant-bodies-oct-25-%e2%80%93-dec-2-1628734056/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/resonant-bodies-oct-25-%e2%80%93-dec-2-1628734056/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 18 Oct 2019 16:04:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5da9424560d9ba4636d6486f</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Constellations returns on October 25 to Dec 2 with Resonant Bodies – an 
online exhibition and short season about the interactions between bodies 
and their environments. It features original works by:

Aliya Pabani

Chandra Melting Tallow

Cheldon Paterson

Kaija Siirala

Jon Tjhia

Phoebe Wang

We asked these artists to create works in response to this provocation by 
Walter Ong:

"Sight isolates, sound incorporates. Whereas sight situates the observer 
outside what [they view], at a distance, sound pours into the hearer."]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Constellations returns on October 25 to Dec 2 with Resonant Bodies – an 
online exhibition and short season about the interactions between bodies 
and their environments. It features original works by:

Aliya Pabani

Chandra Melting Tallow

Cheldon Paterson

Kaija Siirala

Jon Tjhia

Phoebe Wang

We asked these artists to create works in response to this provocation by 
Walter Ong:

"Sight isolates, sound incorporates. Whereas sight situates the observer 
outside what [they view], at a distance, sound pours into the hearer."]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/dje3tj/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5da94681aaa5bf6d2a1aa7a5_1571374899722_Resonant_Bodies.mp3" length="4238703" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Constellations returns on October 25 to Dec 2 with Resonant Bodies – an 
online exhibition and short season about the interactions between bodies 
and their environments. It features original works by:

Aliya Pabani

Chandra Melting Tallow

Cheldon Paterson

Kaija Siirala

Jon Tjhia

Phoebe Wang

We asked these artists to create works in response to this provocation by 
Walter Ong:

"Sight isolates, sound incorporates. Whereas sight situates the observer 
outside what [they view], at a distance, sound pours into the hearer."]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>62</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/7aaef59850c07cc113ea38992cf388ce.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">Resonant Bodies {Oct 25 – Dec 2}</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>hildegard westerkamp - whisper study</title>
        <itunes:title>hildegard westerkamp - whisper study</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/hildegard-westerkamp-whisper-study-1628734057/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/hildegard-westerkamp-whisper-study-1628734057/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 12 Jul 2019 19:37:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5d239c5a2f2b9b00018edc4b</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“Whisper Study started out as an exercise in exploring basic tape 
techniques in the studio, using the whispered voice as sound material. It’s 
based on the sentence "When there is no sound, hearing is most alert", a 
quote from the Indian mystic Kirphal Singh in Naam or Word. The content of 
that sentence appealed to me. I thought a lot about it and then decided I 
was going to whisper that sentence. I ended up with this very quiet 
recording of my whispered voice. In doing this, I was challenging myself, 
because whispered sounds in an analog studio create the issue of hiss and 
added noise.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“Whisper Study started out as an exercise in exploring basic tape 
techniques in the studio, using the whispered voice as sound material. It’s 
based on the sentence "When there is no sound, hearing is most alert", a 
quote from the Indian mystic Kirphal Singh in Naam or Word. The content of 
that sentence appealed to me. I thought a lot about it and then decided I 
was going to whisper that sentence. I ended up with this very quiet 
recording of my whispered voice. In doing this, I was challenging myself, 
because whispered sounds in an analog studio create the issue of hiss and 
added noise.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/yddsxk/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5d285300b57bc3000186e1e3_1562924144017_whisper_study.mp3" length="45710314" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“Whisper Study started out as an exercise in exploring basic tape 
techniques in the studio, using the whispered voice as sound material. It’s 
based on the sentence "When there is no sound, hearing is most alert", a 
quote from the Indian mystic Kirphal Singh in Naam or Word. The content of 
that sentence appealed to me. I thought a lot about it and then decided I 
was going to whisper that sentence. I ended up with this very quiet 
recording of my whispered voice. In doing this, I was challenging myself, 
because whispered sounds in an analog studio create the issue of hiss and 
added noise.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1104</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/2659f0845e27eb04d6b39084ff8dcef4.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">hildegard westerkamp - whisper study</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>ayaz kamani - point pelee</title>
        <itunes:title>ayaz kamani - point pelee</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/ayaz-kamani-point-pelee-1628734058/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/ayaz-kamani-point-pelee-1628734058/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 21 Jun 2019 20:30:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5d0c5c56d92471000109e15e</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“What I create through sound design is a false representation of nature, 
but a constant reminder that it exists, because you're like ‘oh shit this 
room, no one's going to believe this room if there is no air and room 
tone.’ So you have to put all this stuff in to sell the room. You're always 
walking a fine line. While making this piece, I thought a lot about where 
my urge to recreate this moment at Point Pelee really came from. What 
evolutionary need does it serve?”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“What I create through sound design is a false representation of nature, 
but a constant reminder that it exists, because you're like ‘oh shit this 
room, no one's going to believe this room if there is no air and room 
tone.’ So you have to put all this stuff in to sell the room. You're always 
walking a fine line. While making this piece, I thought a lot about where 
my urge to recreate this moment at Point Pelee really came from. What 
evolutionary need does it serve?”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/5ezp8w/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5d0ca37191fd0f000180da08_1561109614275_point_pelee.mp3" length="30370167" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“What I create through sound design is a false representation of nature, 
but a constant reminder that it exists, because you're like ‘oh shit this 
room, no one's going to believe this room if there is no air and room 
tone.’ So you have to put all this stuff in to sell the room. You're always 
walking a fine line. While making this piece, I thought a lot about where 
my urge to recreate this moment at Point Pelee really came from. What 
evolutionary need does it serve?”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>721</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/07eb6fd638e99c5142e29698362006e5.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">ayaz kamani - point pelee</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>amy hanley - H:O:M:E</title>
        <itunes:title>amy hanley - H:O:M:E</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/amy-hanley-home-1628734059/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/amy-hanley-home-1628734059/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 07 Jun 2019 22:18:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5cf8797b5e02000001809726</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“I explored holding and responding. I explored the possibilities of sound 
as a facilitator and communicator of memories, embodied and expressed. I 
explored themes of death, displacement, collective memory, and personal 
stories. These themes were informed by memories that were shared to an 
online portal – those stories of place and belonging were gathered by 
L&NDLESS and were used to create an immersive performance-based 
installation.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“I explored holding and responding. I explored the possibilities of sound 
as a facilitator and communicator of memories, embodied and expressed. I 
explored themes of death, displacement, collective memory, and personal 
stories. These themes were informed by memories that were shared to an 
online portal – those stories of place and belonging were gathered by 
L&NDLESS and were used to create an immersive performance-based 
installation.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/qvlr6s/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5cfa658ec9ca9800012b1761_1559914295662_H_O_M_E.mp3" length="47170036" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“I explored holding and responding. I explored the possibilities of sound 
as a facilitator and communicator of memories, embodied and expressed. I 
explored themes of death, displacement, collective memory, and personal 
stories. These themes were informed by memories that were shared to an 
online portal – those stories of place and belonging were gathered by 
L&NDLESS and were used to create an immersive performance-based 
installation.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1140</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/47cb473ee470533863d9502cde2eda3d.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">amy hanley - H:O:M:E</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>sam leeds - that spiraling place</title>
        <itunes:title>sam leeds - that spiraling place</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/sam-leeds-that-spiraling-place-1628734060/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/sam-leeds-that-spiraling-place-1628734060/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 24 May 2019 23:48:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5ce79c61e2c48362868ae5f0</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“I’ve been thinking a lot about the intersection of escape and bearing 
witness. And I keep coming back to that saying, “wherever you go, there you 
are.” This piece began because I wanted to document my trip to Iceland with 
one of my close friends. We booked it on whim after a breakup. We spent 10 
days driving the country during a wintery March in 2018. It was an escape 
and a chance to exist outside the routines of home..“]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“I’ve been thinking a lot about the intersection of escape and bearing 
witness. And I keep coming back to that saying, “wherever you go, there you 
are.” This piece began because I wanted to document my trip to Iceland with 
one of my close friends. We booked it on whim after a breakup. We spent 10 
days driving the country during a wintery March in 2018. It was an escape 
and a chance to exist outside the routines of home..“]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/jhwviq/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5ce79e4b419202839389508c_1558683518546_that_spiraling_place.mp3" length="32635506" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“I’ve been thinking a lot about the intersection of escape and bearing 
witness. And I keep coming back to that saying, “wherever you go, there you 
are.” This piece began because I wanted to document my trip to Iceland with 
one of my close friends. We booked it on whim after a breakup. We spent 10 
days driving the country during a wintery March in 2018. It was an escape 
and a chance to exist outside the routines of home..“]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>777</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/56d49e67c49e2a3a3014bbd9ff6a51ce.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">sam leeds - that spiraling place</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>aidan mcmahon - i/a recording</title>
        <itunes:title>aidan mcmahon - i/a recording</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/aidan-mcmahon-ia-recording-1628734061/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/aidan-mcmahon-ia-recording-1628734061/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 10 May 2019 15:41:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5cd4ee5e15fcc0eb78d54787</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“This piece is about the tension between experience and the impulse to 
record it. The two, I believe, are incompatible. What happens when the 
experience you want to record is another person? How does this interrupt 
the relationship, or improve it?”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“This piece is about the tension between experience and the impulse to 
record it. The two, I believe, are incompatible. What happens when the 
experience you want to record is another person? How does this interrupt 
the relationship, or improve it?”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/8d2htr/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5cd50cea9b747a46ad78c866_1557466535958_i_a_recording.mp3" length="23751783" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“This piece is about the tension between experience and the impulse to 
record it. The two, I believe, are incompatible. What happens when the 
experience you want to record is another person? How does this interrupt 
the relationship, or improve it?”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>555</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/c32d5586b0111bef3ef75ea13b72cc64.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">aidan mcmahon - i/a recording</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>james t green - emdr</title>
        <itunes:title>james t green - emdr</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/james-t-green-emdr-1628734062/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/james-t-green-emdr-1628734062/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Thu, 25 Apr 2019 01:38:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5cc083129b747a3b8bf05cea</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[In a medium where the unfurling of an idea is often synthesised and made 
neatly linear, James T. Green’s piece offers a welcome unending. In perfect 
tense, “I’ve always felt this need for control”, is a musical refrain with 
a psychoanalytic spike. The ‘cut ins’ of conversation between James and 
another person who, from his explainer we learn is his partner, are 
positioned above a muffled or partially muted version of the motif.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[In a medium where the unfurling of an idea is often synthesised and made 
neatly linear, James T. Green’s piece offers a welcome unending. In perfect 
tense, “I’ve always felt this need for control”, is a musical refrain with 
a psychoanalytic spike. The ‘cut ins’ of conversation between James and 
another person who, from his explainer we learn is his partner, are 
positioned above a muffled or partially muted version of the motif.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/qyitul/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5cc2ceca6e9a7f1fcaca80bd_1556270988452_emdr.mp3" length="22200110" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[In a medium where the unfurling of an idea is often synthesised and made 
neatly linear, James T. Green’s piece offers a welcome unending. In perfect 
tense, “I’ve always felt this need for control”, is a musical refrain with 
a psychoanalytic spike. The ‘cut ins’ of conversation between James and 
another person who, from his explainer we learn is his partner, are 
positioned above a muffled or partially muted version of the motif.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>516</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/b242646accc5568a168d25e8b13f8336.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">james t green - emdr</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>myra al-rahim - and the sea gave up the dead which were in it</title>
        <itunes:title>myra al-rahim - and the sea gave up the dead which were in it</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/myra-al-rahim-and-the-sea-gave-up-the-dead-which-were-in-it-1628734065/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/myra-al-rahim-and-the-sea-gave-up-the-dead-which-were-in-it-1628734065/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 29 Mar 2019 21:17:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5c9aee80652deafccab19400</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“I started making this piece in the summer of 2017. That year marked 15 
years since the US invasion of Iraq. From the piece’s conception, my plan 
was to create a sonic eulogy commemorating this anniversary; to construct 
an audioverse where I could reflect on the hubris of the United States and 
its acolytes. Propelled by ruthless arrogance, bolstered by intelligence 
that was categorically false, their decision to act preemptively against 
the non-threat that was Saddam’s Regime, thrust the region into years of 
destabilization and bloodshed the shock waves of which continue to 
reverberate to this day.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“I started making this piece in the summer of 2017. That year marked 15 
years since the US invasion of Iraq. From the piece’s conception, my plan 
was to create a sonic eulogy commemorating this anniversary; to construct 
an audioverse where I could reflect on the hubris of the United States and 
its acolytes. Propelled by ruthless arrogance, bolstered by intelligence 
that was categorically false, their decision to act preemptively against 
the non-threat that was Saddam’s Regime, thrust the region into years of 
destabilization and bloodshed the shock waves of which continue to 
reverberate to this day.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/niapto/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5c9deed0ee6eb0725607af7d_1553854479117_and_the_sea_gave_back_the_dead_which_were_in_it.mp3" length="34970853" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“I started making this piece in the summer of 2017. That year marked 15 
years since the US invasion of Iraq. From the piece’s conception, my plan 
was to create a sonic eulogy commemorating this anniversary; to construct 
an audioverse where I could reflect on the hubris of the United States and 
its acolytes. Propelled by ruthless arrogance, bolstered by intelligence 
that was categorically false, their decision to act preemptively against 
the non-threat that was Saddam’s Regime, thrust the region into years of 
destabilization and bloodshed the shock waves of which continue to 
reverberate to this day.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>835</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/955d27b373c7aa02ef16ecc382eec39f.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">myra al-rahim - and the sea gave up the dead which were in it</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>ayesha barmania - quiet contemplations</title>
        <itunes:title>ayesha barmania - quiet contemplations</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/ayesha-barmania-quiet-contemplations-1628734066/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/ayesha-barmania-quiet-contemplations-1628734066/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 15 Mar 2019 21:30:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5c8a6b5bfa0d602b39b5afdf</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“I have been really inspired by Ad Reinhardt's 'Abstract Painting' from 
1963 which depicts nine very subtle shades of black. At first glance, the 
viewer sees a flat black canvas. Over time, the viewer notices the subtle 
tone differences - one is more red, another blue, one slightly green. The 
viewer wonders: which is the true black? That concept has resonated with me 
when I contemplate the subtleties in silence.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“I have been really inspired by Ad Reinhardt's 'Abstract Painting' from 
1963 which depicts nine very subtle shades of black. At first glance, the 
viewer sees a flat black canvas. Over time, the viewer notices the subtle 
tone differences - one is more red, another blue, one slightly green. The 
viewer wonders: which is the true black? That concept has resonated with me 
when I contemplate the subtleties in silence.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/330uzl/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5c8b7b62104c7b933c6b1e88_1552645399675_quiet_contemplations.mp3" length="36382782" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“I have been really inspired by Ad Reinhardt's 'Abstract Painting' from 
1963 which depicts nine very subtle shades of black. At first glance, the 
viewer sees a flat black canvas. Over time, the viewer notices the subtle 
tone differences - one is more red, another blue, one slightly green. The 
viewer wonders: which is the true black? That concept has resonated with me 
when I contemplate the subtleties in silence.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>870</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/376ae27d774b0b8b024cc449313bdddd.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">ayesha barmania - quiet contemplations</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>phil smith - the space between stories</title>
        <itunes:title>phil smith - the space between stories</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/phil-smith-the-space-between-stories-1628734067/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/phil-smith-the-space-between-stories-1628734067/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Thu, 21 Feb 2019 10:10:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5c6dde6cc8302548a9db5347</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“This piece expresses the ongoing search for home and meaning in a time of 
ecological collapse and the disintegration of old ideas about our place in 
the world. It’s an expression of conversations I’m having with friends, and 
of things I’m reading. It's an attempt to make something spiritual and 
honest in sound! There are no facts or environmental insights in the piece. 
It's more about the internal flow of feelings and emotions that come from 
the desire to believe that we might be on the verge of something truly 
beautiful, despite (and perhaps also owing to) the health of the planet.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“This piece expresses the ongoing search for home and meaning in a time of 
ecological collapse and the disintegration of old ideas about our place in 
the world. It’s an expression of conversations I’m having with friends, and 
of things I’m reading. It's an attempt to make something spiritual and 
honest in sound! There are no facts or environmental insights in the piece. 
It's more about the internal flow of feelings and emotions that come from 
the desire to believe that we might be on the verge of something truly 
beautiful, despite (and perhaps also owing to) the health of the planet.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/q60m02/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5c790635ec212d6eff2d223a_1551435671889_the_space_between_stories.mp3" length="38430782" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“This piece expresses the ongoing search for home and meaning in a time of 
ecological collapse and the disintegration of old ideas about our place in 
the world. It’s an expression of conversations I’m having with friends, and 
of things I’m reading. It's an attempt to make something spiritual and 
honest in sound! There are no facts or environmental insights in the piece. 
It's more about the internal flow of feelings and emotions that come from 
the desire to believe that we might be on the verge of something truly 
beautiful, despite (and perhaps also owing to) the health of the planet.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>922</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/097f6ced7498405df250962ab7fb870d.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">phil smith - the space between stories</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>franco falistoco araya - despojo</title>
        <itunes:title>franco falistoco araya - despojo</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/franco-falistoco-araya-despojo-1628734068/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/franco-falistoco-araya-despojo-1628734068/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 15 Feb 2019 19:00:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5c622dd6ee6eb0235cf8d3a8</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“DESPOJO is a sound work which only uses sounds from an old vinyl record — 
clips and claps. I cut the big sound loop into fragments, creating small 
samples. Then I limited myself to using few processes — 1 equalizer, 1 
reverb, and 1 delay. Anything else I wanted, I had to manually build inside 
the digital audio workstation.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“DESPOJO is a sound work which only uses sounds from an old vinyl record — 
clips and claps. I cut the big sound loop into fragments, creating small 
samples. Then I limited myself to using few processes — 1 equalizer, 1 
reverb, and 1 delay. Anything else I wanted, I had to manually build inside 
the digital audio workstation.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/3krgx3/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5c6619344785d30857d410d1_1550195177397_despojo.mp3" length="21316399" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“DESPOJO is a sound work which only uses sounds from an old vinyl record — 
clips and claps. I cut the big sound loop into fragments, creating small 
samples. Then I limited myself to using few processes — 1 equalizer, 1 
reverb, and 1 delay. Anything else I wanted, I had to manually build inside 
the digital audio workstation.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>494</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/8c55c7620aff42167610491457e15ae5.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">franco falistoco araya - despojo</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>janna graham - to slow down time</title>
        <itunes:title>janna graham - to slow down time</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/janna-graham-to-slow-down-time-1628734069/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/janna-graham-to-slow-down-time-1628734069/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 01 Feb 2019 20:00:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5c53ad5b419202f09d505ae2</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“In October, 2014, Atsumi Yoshikubo, a Japanese tourist, was seen walking 
down the highway outside of Yellowknife with a camera and a shoulder bag. 
It was the last time she was seen alive. The following summer, a friend of 
mine, Ryan Silke, discovered her belongings in the bush, not far from town. 
Rather than delving into how Atsumi died — her death was assumed to be 
intentional — I began thinking about how we engage in certain processes to 
slow down time."]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“In October, 2014, Atsumi Yoshikubo, a Japanese tourist, was seen walking 
down the highway outside of Yellowknife with a camera and a shoulder bag. 
It was the last time she was seen alive. The following summer, a friend of 
mine, Ryan Silke, discovered her belongings in the bush, not far from town. 
Rather than delving into how Atsumi died — her death was assumed to be 
intentional — I began thinking about how we engage in certain processes to 
slow down time."]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/59p06k/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5c53ee1424a6946784bece55_1549004587465_to_slow_down_time.mp3" length="35742339" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“In October, 2014, Atsumi Yoshikubo, a Japanese tourist, was seen walking 
down the highway outside of Yellowknife with a camera and a shoulder bag. 
It was the last time she was seen alive. The following summer, a friend of 
mine, Ryan Silke, discovered her belongings in the bush, not far from town. 
Rather than delving into how Atsumi died — her death was assumed to be 
intentional — I began thinking about how we engage in certain processes to 
slow down time."]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>854</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/b82f9286766719e3c545ddbd8b465b8a.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">janna graham - to slow down time</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>abinadi meza - vein of sky (winter #4)</title>
        <itunes:title>abinadi meza - vein of sky (winter #4)</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/abinadi-meza-vein-of-sky-winter-4-1628734070/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/abinadi-meza-vein-of-sky-winter-4-1628734070/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 21 Dec 2018 21:14:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5c087f170ebbe85d99ec68cf</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“Vein of Sky is a collection of pieces made from environmental elements 
such as air temperature, humidity, light, and the movements of wind. These 
phenomena were recorded using micro-sensors and translated into sound. The 
project explores a sonic space or ecology not entirely representational yet 
not entirely fictional. I think the sonic space of the piece is kind of 
like a sculptural cast; it is imprinted and formed by real space but it has 
become something other. Space, air...is so full of material. I wanted to 
collect some of it.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“Vein of Sky is a collection of pieces made from environmental elements 
such as air temperature, humidity, light, and the movements of wind. These 
phenomena were recorded using micro-sensors and translated into sound. The 
project explores a sonic space or ecology not entirely representational yet 
not entirely fictional. I think the sonic space of the piece is kind of 
like a sculptural cast; it is imprinted and formed by real space but it has 
become something other. Space, air...is so full of material. I wanted to 
collect some of it.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/dfwidu/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5c1cb9d40e2e720762207152_1545386991889_vein_of_sky_28winter_234_29.mp3" length="35208317" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“Vein of Sky is a collection of pieces made from environmental elements 
such as air temperature, humidity, light, and the movements of wind. These 
phenomena were recorded using micro-sensors and translated into sound. The 
project explores a sonic space or ecology not entirely representational yet 
not entirely fictional. I think the sonic space of the piece is kind of 
like a sculptural cast; it is imprinted and formed by real space but it has 
become something other. Space, air...is so full of material. I wanted to 
collect some of it.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>841</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/83d6bf88de9cb90808100baf438cba73.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">abinadi meza - vein of sky (winter #4)</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>rachel ní chuinn - heavy summer</title>
        <itunes:title>rachel ní chuinn - heavy summer</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/rachel-ni-chuinn-heavy-summer-1628734071/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/rachel-ni-chuinn-heavy-summer-1628734071/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 07 Dec 2018 20:05:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5c0873ba40ec9a67bf3753aa</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“Being a mother is a huge change for me. Fán is 9 months old at the moment 
and sometimes we put her in her high chair and put her up to the piano, and 
she really enjoys playing and sometimes singing along. I had a recording of 
Fán playing the piano and singing. I also rediscovered a field recording of 
a lawn mower in the Botanical Gardens in Dublin that I took a couple years 
ago which had this compelling drone-like sound.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“Being a mother is a huge change for me. Fán is 9 months old at the moment 
and sometimes we put her in her high chair and put her up to the piano, and 
she really enjoys playing and sometimes singing along. I had a recording of 
Fán playing the piano and singing. I also rediscovered a field recording of 
a lawn mower in the Botanical Gardens in Dublin that I took a couple years 
ago which had this compelling drone-like sound.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/13taf6/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5c0a34258a922d13084b7c50_1544173187751_heavy_summer.mp3" length="34452856" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“Being a mother is a huge change for me. Fán is 9 months old at the moment 
and sometimes we put her in her high chair and put her up to the piano, and 
she really enjoys playing and sometimes singing along. I had a recording of 
Fán playing the piano and singing. I also rediscovered a field recording of 
a lawn mower in the Botanical Gardens in Dublin that I took a couple years 
ago which had this compelling drone-like sound.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>822</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/70aab5e814ea3c4a6676289c3f767080.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">rachel ní chuinn - heavy summer</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>sol rezza - el primer espacio</title>
        <itunes:title>sol rezza - el primer espacio</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/sol-rezza-el-primer-espacio-1628734073/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/sol-rezza-el-primer-espacio-1628734073/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 2018 21:06:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5bf4e2e3aa4a99319f433a48</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“The uterus is a spatial experience that all human beings share but do not 
remember. Within it, we experience the rhythm of our mother’s heart and 
that of her breathing alongside the rhythm of our own heart. This first 
rhythm, so close in those 9 months of gestation, will shape how we will 
perceive the outside world and how our own sense of rhythm in life will 
develop.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“The uterus is a spatial experience that all human beings share but do not 
remember. Within it, we experience the rhythm of our mother’s heart and 
that of her breathing alongside the rhythm of our own heart. This first 
rhythm, so close in those 9 months of gestation, will shape how we will 
perceive the outside world and how our own sense of rhythm in life will 
develop.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/5hmg95/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5bf7cfb2032be49110f298ec_1542967454710_el_primer_espacio.mp3" length="24393623" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“The uterus is a spatial experience that all human beings share but do not 
remember. Within it, we experience the rhythm of our mother’s heart and 
that of her breathing alongside the rhythm of our own heart. This first 
rhythm, so close in those 9 months of gestation, will shape how we will 
perceive the outside world and how our own sense of rhythm in life will 
develop.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>571</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/f60ed57408f83658bd21547fe04b6221.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">sol rezza - el primer espacio</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>israel martínez - mi vida</title>
        <itunes:title>israel martínez - mi vida</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/israel-martinez-mi-vida-1628734074/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/israel-martinez-mi-vida-1628734074/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Sat, 10 Nov 2018 11:02:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5be50e0740ec9a7bcd9bd756</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“I wanted to make a non-linear narrative of a ride ending in a crash. I 
mean, this is the story, but the "events" are presented differently, going 
back and forth and connected through acoustic and gestural similarities - 
composition. I was influenced by literature and films based on this kind of 
structure. I decided to create a work using car sounds to protest the abuse 
of the automobile in Mexican cities, and as a criticism of its status as a 
cult object. “]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“I wanted to make a non-linear narrative of a ride ending in a crash. I 
mean, this is the story, but the "events" are presented differently, going 
back and forth and connected through acoustic and gestural similarities - 
composition. I was influenced by literature and films based on this kind of 
structure. I decided to create a work using car sounds to protest the abuse 
of the automobile in Mexican cities, and as a criticism of its status as a 
cult object. “]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/uocne1/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5be50e1621c67cf1e729ad65_1541738289261_my_life.mp3" length="26064143" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“I wanted to make a non-linear narrative of a ride ending in a crash. I 
mean, this is the story, but the "events" are presented differently, going 
back and forth and connected through acoustic and gestural similarities - 
composition. I was influenced by literature and films based on this kind of 
structure. I decided to create a work using car sounds to protest the abuse 
of the automobile in Mexican cities, and as a criticism of its status as a 
cult object. “]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>612</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/276618bbfc5be2d8bda13f5687951460.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">israel martínez - mi vida</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>paolo pietropaolo - ode to the salish sea</title>
        <itunes:title>paolo pietropaolo - ode to the salish sea</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/paolo-pietropaolo-ode-to-the-salish-sea-1628734075/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/paolo-pietropaolo-ode-to-the-salish-sea-1628734075/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 26 Oct 2018 17:00:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5bcfa8c015fcc0bbd4b09762</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“As the title suggests, my aim was to compose a lyrical tribute to the 
unique beauty of this coastal region by capturing and recomposing the 
sounds and languages of the Salish Sea. I also wanted to explore the 
complexity of the relationship between the indigenous and non-indigenous 
cultures that call the Salish Sea home.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“As the title suggests, my aim was to compose a lyrical tribute to the 
unique beauty of this coastal region by capturing and recomposing the 
sounds and languages of the Salish Sea. I also wanted to explore the 
complexity of the relationship between the indigenous and non-indigenous 
cultures that call the Salish Sea home.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/ungdyj/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5bd28280419202918bd82924_1540522734993_ode_to_the_salish_sea.mp3" length="34831881" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“As the title suggests, my aim was to compose a lyrical tribute to the 
unique beauty of this coastal region by capturing and recomposing the 
sounds and languages of the Salish Sea. I also wanted to explore the 
complexity of the relationship between the indigenous and non-indigenous 
cultures that call the Salish Sea home.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>832</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/5be7feb3398a40c575f0915eae6d8580.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">paolo pietropaolo - ode to the salish sea</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>aurélie lierman - iota mikro</title>
        <itunes:title>aurélie lierman - iota mikro</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/aurelie-lierman-iota-mikro-1628734076/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/aurelie-lierman-iota-mikro-1628734076/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 12 Oct 2018 17:00:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5bbf63304192021def629b79</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“It was my wish to fuse both my passions and professions, radio and 
composition into one composition. ‘iota mikro’ is Greek for small iota. 
Iota is the smallest letter in the Greek alphabet, and ‘mikro’ just means 
small but could also refer to a microphone. And since my real paper birth 
certificate in Rwanda is actually missing, I created, with iota mikro, my 
own sonic birth certificate.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“It was my wish to fuse both my passions and professions, radio and 
composition into one composition. ‘iota mikro’ is Greek for small iota. 
Iota is the smallest letter in the Greek alphabet, and ‘mikro’ just means 
small but could also refer to a microphone. And since my real paper birth 
certificate in Rwanda is actually missing, I created, with iota mikro, my 
own sonic birth certificate.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/o4movm/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5bbffcc07817f723509f48cb_1539308826786_iota_mikro.mp3" length="36697024" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“It was my wish to fuse both my passions and professions, radio and 
composition into one composition. ‘iota mikro’ is Greek for small iota. 
Iota is the smallest letter in the Greek alphabet, and ‘mikro’ just means 
small but could also refer to a microphone. And since my real paper birth 
certificate in Rwanda is actually missing, I created, with iota mikro, my 
own sonic birth certificate.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>878</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/d809029740439252d57aa4d69fc2af88.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">aurélie lierman - iota mikro</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>camilla hannan - it was right there in front of you</title>
        <itunes:title>camilla hannan - it was right there in front of you</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/camilla-hannan-it-was-right-there-in-front-of-you-1628734077/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/camilla-hannan-it-was-right-there-in-front-of-you-1628734077/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 28 Sep 2018 13:19:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5bad9c8fe5e5f09ef7dec498</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“In this piece, I was thinking about how things right in front of you can 
tell you stuff that for whatever reason you may be oblivious to.  You may 
be distracted by other things or… you can’t or you don’t pay attention. 
That’s what it’s all about, paying attention.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“In this piece, I was thinking about how things right in front of you can 
tell you stuff that for whatever reason you may be oblivious to.  You may 
be distracted by other things or… you can’t or you don’t pay attention. 
That’s what it’s all about, paying attention.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/5gexes/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5bad9e9624a694acce150d13_1538105056642_it_was_right_there_in_front_of_you.mp3" length="33456796" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“In this piece, I was thinking about how things right in front of you can 
tell you stuff that for whatever reason you may be oblivious to.  You may 
be distracted by other things or… you can’t or you don’t pay attention. 
That’s what it’s all about, paying attention.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>797</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/d44e8712cf90285600f7bc19371dd80d.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">camilla hannan - it was right there in front of you</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>olivia bradley-skill - music to wash dishes By</title>
        <itunes:title>olivia bradley-skill - music to wash dishes By</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/olivia-bradley-skill-music-to-wash-dishes-by-1628734078/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/olivia-bradley-skill-music-to-wash-dishes-by-1628734078/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 10 Aug 2018 16:00:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5b6b3d272b6a28b0f78c9fbb</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“I made part of this piece two years ago, kind of as an experiment or a 
sketch. I recorded myself making sounds in the kitchen, so I made eggs - I 
turned on the stove, I cracked open the eggs, I fried em up. At the time I 
was also reading this piece by Zadie Smith, which had an audio component of 
her reading the piece, and I just needed sound materials and liked her 
voice and cadences, so I thought it would be interesting to cut her voice 
up and manipulate it and decontextualize it and see if I could relate it to 
the kitchen and the idea of cooking as a metaphor for something else, 
something beyond the piece.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“I made part of this piece two years ago, kind of as an experiment or a 
sketch. I recorded myself making sounds in the kitchen, so I made eggs - I 
turned on the stove, I cracked open the eggs, I fried em up. At the time I 
was also reading this piece by Zadie Smith, which had an audio component of 
her reading the piece, and I just needed sound materials and liked her 
voice and cadences, so I thought it would be interesting to cut her voice 
up and manipulate it and decontextualize it and see if I could relate it to 
the kitchen and the idea of cooking as a metaphor for something else, 
something beyond the piece.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/lwztk9/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5b6cd2bb03ce64fb9cc58f14_1533858520545_music_to_wash_dishes_by_28this_is_of_course_a_metaphor_29.mp3" length="20030902" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“I made part of this piece two years ago, kind of as an experiment or a 
sketch. I recorded myself making sounds in the kitchen, so I made eggs - I 
turned on the stove, I cracked open the eggs, I fried em up. At the time I 
was also reading this piece by Zadie Smith, which had an audio component of 
her reading the piece, and I just needed sound materials and liked her 
voice and cadences, so I thought it would be interesting to cut her voice 
up and manipulate it and decontextualize it and see if I could relate it to 
the kitchen and the idea of cooking as a metaphor for something else, 
something beyond the piece.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>462</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/6c44359ccecb246cfcff769b2a68fa44.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">olivia bradley-skill - music to wash dishes By</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>dylan gauche - dr faustus begs to come</title>
        <itunes:title>dylan gauche - dr faustus begs to come</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/dylan-gauche-dr-faustus-begs-to-come-1628734079/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/dylan-gauche-dr-faustus-begs-to-come-1628734079/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Sat, 28 Jul 2018 04:16:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5b5a6c4088251b685a536ab0</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“I really just want to know what love is, and why it treats me so poorly 
sometimes. Even though this is far less detailed in its autobiographical 
elements than some other work I've done and put out into the world, it is 
by far my most vulnerable piece. I translated this short soliloquy from 
Faust in November of 2017, with the primary goal of perverting academia. 
But, while putting a lot of conscious effort into the play of translation, 
I ended up putting a lot of myself into it. A lot has changed since then, 
but I do struggle with the same old problems, and I wanted this piece to 
reflect accurately on many different stages of love.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“I really just want to know what love is, and why it treats me so poorly 
sometimes. Even though this is far less detailed in its autobiographical 
elements than some other work I've done and put out into the world, it is 
by far my most vulnerable piece. I translated this short soliloquy from 
Faust in November of 2017, with the primary goal of perverting academia. 
But, while putting a lot of conscious effort into the play of translation, 
I ended up putting a lot of myself into it. A lot has changed since then, 
but I do struggle with the same old problems, and I wanted this piece to 
reflect accurately on many different stages of love.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/ebf3cb/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5b5b60c2575d1f298db513cd_1532715340090_dr_faustus_begs_to_come.mp3" length="22376698" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“I really just want to know what love is, and why it treats me so poorly 
sometimes. Even though this is far less detailed in its autobiographical 
elements than some other work I've done and put out into the world, it is 
by far my most vulnerable piece. I translated this short soliloquy from 
Faust in November of 2017, with the primary goal of perverting academia. 
But, while putting a lot of conscious effort into the play of translation, 
I ended up putting a lot of myself into it. A lot has changed since then, 
but I do struggle with the same old problems, and I wanted this piece to 
reflect accurately on many different stages of love.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>520</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/50017dc73e50c06dec523a8cae617962.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">dylan gauche - dr faustus begs to come</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>chris connolly - black beach</title>
        <itunes:title>chris connolly - black beach</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/chris-connolly-black-beach-1628734080/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/chris-connolly-black-beach-1628734080/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Sat, 14 Jul 2018 05:43:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5b43e3500e2e7292fc7c4da9</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[When we first heard this piece, it was at an earlier stage in its 
development, at a gathering with a group of Toronto audio aficionados. We 
both were moved by rawness of the tape. This sort of vulnerable 
conversation about masculinity was something we'd rarely, if ever, heard 
before. We love the piece's intimacy, not only in the words spoken but also 
in its style - the stereo recording, the feeling of being able to drift 
alongside its narrators as they walk the shoreline. Black Beach is Chris' 
first foray into audio, and we're so glad to be able to share it here on 
Constellations.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[When we first heard this piece, it was at an earlier stage in its 
development, at a gathering with a group of Toronto audio aficionados. We 
both were moved by rawness of the tape. This sort of vulnerable 
conversation about masculinity was something we'd rarely, if ever, heard 
before. We love the piece's intimacy, not only in the words spoken but also 
in its style - the stereo recording, the feeling of being able to drift 
alongside its narrators as they walk the shoreline. Black Beach is Chris' 
first foray into audio, and we're so glad to be able to share it here on 
Constellations.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/8a7r53/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5b48ffaf0e2e721516f47a98_1531510757031_black_beach.mp3" length="36095163" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[When we first heard this piece, it was at an earlier stage in its 
development, at a gathering with a group of Toronto audio aficionados. We 
both were moved by rawness of the tape. This sort of vulnerable 
conversation about masculinity was something we'd rarely, if ever, heard 
before. We love the piece's intimacy, not only in the words spoken but also 
in its style - the stereo recording, the feeling of being able to drift 
alongside its narrators as they walk the shoreline. Black Beach is Chris' 
first foray into audio, and we're so glad to be able to share it here on 
Constellations.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>863</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/75e89a32def6c128ae4e6e4cc64dcd98.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">chris connolly - black beach</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>kaija siirala - a conversation</title>
        <itunes:title>kaija siirala - a conversation</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/kaija-siirala-a-conversation-1628734082/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/kaija-siirala-a-conversation-1628734082/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 29 Jun 2018 16:00:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5b326683aa4a99ad8656a289</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Kaija's immersive piece is chock-full of sensual field recordings, 
including to our delight "some recordings of me playing piano downstairs in 
my old house through a hydrophone in the bathtub". Listening to this piece 
feels like we're following the fisherman's current into a suspension 
between light and shadow, propelled by bold transitions and a sensitivity 
to the musicality of voice. ]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Kaija's immersive piece is chock-full of sensual field recordings, 
including to our delight "some recordings of me playing piano downstairs in 
my old house through a hydrophone in the bathtub". Listening to this piece 
feels like we're following the fisherman's current into a suspension 
between light and shadow, propelled by bold transitions and a sensitivity 
to the musicality of voice. ]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/ks90nh/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5b35b22d6d2a73fcad1a2564_1530246283254_a_conversation.mp3" length="37739832" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Kaija's immersive piece is chock-full of sensual field recordings, 
including to our delight "some recordings of me playing piano downstairs in 
my old house through a hydrophone in the bathtub". Listening to this piece 
feels like we're following the fisherman's current into a suspension 
between light and shadow, propelled by bold transitions and a sensitivity 
to the musicality of voice. ]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>904</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/a980c76fc8e947ad6fb2776850c7d56c.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">kaija siirala - a conversation</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>joaquin cofreces - maquinas humanas</title>
        <itunes:title>joaquin cofreces - maquinas humanas</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/joaquin-cofreces-maquinas-humanas-1628734083/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/joaquin-cofreces-maquinas-humanas-1628734083/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 15 Jun 2018 23:00:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5b22dffb2b6a28cf823eb3b0</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Even if you don't understand Spanish, this piece is an evocative, 
multi-lingual sci-fi adventure. Masterfully produced, its assemblage of 
voices, samples, sound design, complex musical beds and sound effects wind 
it up into a delicious ear candy collage that leaves listeners reeling and 
dreaming.  We haven't heard any sound-art fiction like this before. ]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Even if you don't understand Spanish, this piece is an evocative, 
multi-lingual sci-fi adventure. Masterfully produced, its assemblage of 
voices, samples, sound design, complex musical beds and sound effects wind 
it up into a delicious ear candy collage that leaves listeners reeling and 
dreaming.  We haven't heard any sound-art fiction like this before. ]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/2c5875/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5b23b6d9562fa7bac7e39ce5_1529067641031_maquinas_humanas.mp3" length="25989955" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Even if you don't understand Spanish, this piece is an evocative, 
multi-lingual sci-fi adventure. Masterfully produced, its assemblage of 
voices, samples, sound design, complex musical beds and sound effects wind 
it up into a delicious ear candy collage that leaves listeners reeling and 
dreaming.  We haven't heard any sound-art fiction like this before. ]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>611</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/c29d550ffeda7d34a2bbb4a570fc3cf2.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">joaquin cofreces - maquinas humanas</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>meira asher - refuse: military.01</title>
        <itunes:title>meira asher - refuse: military.01</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/meira-asher-refuse-military01-1628734084/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/meira-asher-refuse-military01-1628734084/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 01 Jun 2018 15:30:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5b0acf2370a6addca9bd3beb</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[This complex manifesto of a piece is powerful both in its content and 
delivery. Noam's written testimony is powerful, but set against the 
rhythmic collage of percussion, sampling, and field recordings, its 
descriptions are rendered more raw and graphic. Meira's work is politically 
relevant as ever, and we're inspired by the bold and heartfelt stand she 
makes in all her work.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[This complex manifesto of a piece is powerful both in its content and 
delivery. Noam's written testimony is powerful, but set against the 
rhythmic collage of percussion, sampling, and field recordings, its 
descriptions are rendered more raw and graphic. Meira's work is politically 
relevant as ever, and we're inspired by the bold and heartfelt stand she 
makes in all her work.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/givekf/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5b0f64f41ae6cfb8a04350c6_1527735590773_refuse__military_01.mp3" length="28745206" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[This complex manifesto of a piece is powerful both in its content and 
delivery. Noam's written testimony is powerful, but set against the 
rhythmic collage of percussion, sampling, and field recordings, its 
descriptions are rendered more raw and graphic. Meira's work is politically 
relevant as ever, and we're inspired by the bold and heartfelt stand she 
makes in all her work.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>866</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/aad23348fb5f5c73e5f16c6109db9670.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">meira asher - refuse: military.01</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>rui costa + maile colbert - birds of maio</title>
        <itunes:title>rui costa + maile colbert - birds of maio</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/rui-costa-maile-colbert-birds-of-maio-1628734085/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/rui-costa-maile-colbert-birds-of-maio-1628734085/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 18 May 2018 15:00:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5af79a788a922da689dbec9e</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[That this piece was born from a beautiful love story is evident in the 
intricate and intimate texture of the sounds. The pulsating soundscape 
traverses mood and plays with space in its reverberations. Who knew that 
symphonic wildness of bird sounds set against a gentle music box would be 
such a striking juxtaposition. ]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[That this piece was born from a beautiful love story is evident in the 
intricate and intimate texture of the sounds. The pulsating soundscape 
traverses mood and plays with space in its reverberations. Who knew that 
symphonic wildness of bird sounds set against a gentle music box would be 
such a striking juxtaposition. ]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/87rrwa/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5afc2cd82b6a28e91700eff9_1526476362216_birds_of_maio.mp3" length="24516649" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[That this piece was born from a beautiful love story is evident in the 
intricate and intimate texture of the sounds. The pulsating soundscape 
traverses mood and plays with space in its reverberations. Who knew that 
symphonic wildness of bird sounds set against a gentle music box would be 
such a striking juxtaposition. ]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>574</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/633c47fd3c0262d77c470fc599c538ac.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">rui costa + maile colbert - birds of maio</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>tk matunda - snooze</title>
        <itunes:title>tk matunda - snooze</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/tk-matunda-snooze-1628734086/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/tk-matunda-snooze-1628734086/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 04 May 2018 15:00:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5aeb863d03ce64a369370614</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[We love the closeness, vulnerability, and musicality of this piece. TK has 
taken morning drowsiness, that floating time between conscious and 
unconscious, and massaged it into a tender swirl of thoughts, hums, and 
dreams. ]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[We love the closeness, vulnerability, and musicality of this piece. TK has 
taken morning drowsiness, that floating time between conscious and 
unconscious, and massaged it into a tender swirl of thoughts, hums, and 
dreams. ]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/tfleqb/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5aebd8fc758d4629e6df8dd6_1525406127832_Snooze.mp3" length="11157183" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[We love the closeness, vulnerability, and musicality of this piece. TK has 
taken morning drowsiness, that floating time between conscious and 
unconscious, and massaged it into a tender swirl of thoughts, hums, and 
dreams. ]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>419</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/aefcda8a3301182fe297fe71f21c8156.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">tk matunda - snooze</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>phoebe wang - in search of the miraculous (bas jan ader)</title>
        <itunes:title>phoebe wang - in search of the miraculous (bas jan ader)</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/phoebe-wang-in-search-of-the-miraculous-bas-jan-ader-1628734087/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/phoebe-wang-in-search-of-the-miraculous-bas-jan-ader-1628734087/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 20 Apr 2018 15:06:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5ad6b62c2b6a284cf9f99d6a</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[This piece feels like rifling through a scrapbook inside someone's head. 
Its structure is as flowing and choppy as the ocean that Phoebe so often 
alludes to. We love Phoebe's play with music, and the raw meticulousness of 
the tape she's collected. This is a piece that resists traditional personal 
narrative storytelling arcs; it reveals itself slowly through additional 
listens. ]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[This piece feels like rifling through a scrapbook inside someone's head. 
Its structure is as flowing and choppy as the ocean that Phoebe so often 
alludes to. We love Phoebe's play with music, and the raw meticulousness of 
the tape she's collected. This is a piece that resists traditional personal 
narrative storytelling arcs; it reveals itself slowly through additional 
listens. ]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/yuomzj/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5ad957e1352f53638f5a0a48_1524193637767_in_search_of_the_miraculous_28bas_jan_ader_29.mp3" length="23470288" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[This piece feels like rifling through a scrapbook inside someone's head. 
Its structure is as flowing and choppy as the ocean that Phoebe so often 
alludes to. We love Phoebe's play with music, and the raw meticulousness of 
the tape she's collected. This is a piece that resists traditional personal 
narrative storytelling arcs; it reveals itself slowly through additional 
listens. ]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>913</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/fdccb4626c6dfcd113d60c9d80d53700.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">phoebe wang - in search of the miraculous (bas jan ader)</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>bonnie jones - and if i live a thousand lives i hope to remember one</title>
        <itunes:title>bonnie jones - and if i live a thousand lives i hope to remember one</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/bonnie-jones-and-if-i-live-a-thousand-lives-i-hope-to-remember-one-1628734088/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/bonnie-jones-and-if-i-live-a-thousand-lives-i-hope-to-remember-one-1628734088/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 06 Apr 2018 15:00:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5aaea88988251b56306785d7</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[This piece does a magic thing of infusing a recording with the nowness of 
live music; it is as much a happening as the musical performances that were 
its building blocks, with the failure of the recording technology as 
performer and conductor.

In a percussive wave of otherworldly sighs and stutters, the richly 
textured sound leaves us guessing, with memorable sonic moments passing 
before can fully process them, so that when they stay longer than expected 
we are moved and curious - but the tape rolls on.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[This piece does a magic thing of infusing a recording with the nowness of 
live music; it is as much a happening as the musical performances that were 
its building blocks, with the failure of the recording technology as 
performer and conductor.

In a percussive wave of otherworldly sighs and stutters, the richly 
textured sound leaves us guessing, with memorable sonic moments passing 
before can fully process them, so that when they stay longer than expected 
we are moved and curious - but the tape rolls on.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/qzzaak/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5ac6f40f758d461c8c412767_1522988658722_and_if_i_live_a_thousand_lives_i_hope_to_remember_one.mp3" length="26511359" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[This piece does a magic thing of infusing a recording with the nowness of 
live music; it is as much a happening as the musical performances that were 
its building blocks, with the failure of the recording technology as 
performer and conductor.

In a percussive wave of otherworldly sighs and stutters, the richly 
textured sound leaves us guessing, with memorable sonic moments passing 
before can fully process them, so that when they stay longer than expected 
we are moved and curious - but the tape rolls on.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>624</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/7aa683b0a5ea0d1c8034cf3ce4a64f1d.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">bonnie jones - and if i live a thousand lives i hope to remember one</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>anna friz - air can break your heart</title>
        <itunes:title>anna friz - air can break your heart</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/anna-friz-air-can-break-your-heart-1628734089/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/anna-friz-air-can-break-your-heart-1628734089/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 23 Mar 2018 16:00:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5aaeab3203ce64db74efc461</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[This piece sits somewhere between music and installation. As a 'narrator', 
Anna's 'air' is endowed with aliveness, and palpably shifts in mood and 
voice throughout the piece, at times sounding almost human. 

Clinging to its gliding tail, listeners catch glimpses of urban spaces. 
Sometimes evoking chamber music, and other times, wind, static, and other 
manipulated field recordings, in this piece Anna tenderly blurs the line 
between music and noise. ]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[This piece sits somewhere between music and installation. As a 'narrator', 
Anna's 'air' is endowed with aliveness, and palpably shifts in mood and 
voice throughout the piece, at times sounding almost human. 

Clinging to its gliding tail, listeners catch glimpses of urban spaces. 
Sometimes evoking chamber music, and other times, wind, static, and other 
manipulated field recordings, in this piece Anna tenderly blurs the line 
between music and noise. ]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/5i47nx/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5ab4715d03ce648650e624d6_1521775502809_air_can_break_your_heart.mp3" length="34751424" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[This piece sits somewhere between music and installation. As a 'narrator', 
Anna's 'air' is endowed with aliveness, and palpably shifts in mood and 
voice throughout the piece, at times sounding almost human. 

Clinging to its gliding tail, listeners catch glimpses of urban spaces. 
Sometimes evoking chamber music, and other times, wind, static, and other 
manipulated field recordings, in this piece Anna tenderly blurs the line 
between music and noise. ]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>830</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/5c073aa8d84726481517fb8fd0276284.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">anna friz - air can break your heart</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>jeff emtman - dream tapes</title>
        <itunes:title>jeff emtman - dream tapes</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/jeff-emtman-dream-tapes-1628734091/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/jeff-emtman-dream-tapes-1628734091/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 23 Feb 2018 18:30:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5a8ec374c83025b12f242668</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[We're excited by the tactile nature of this project -imagining the 
recorders Jeff sent out waiting on 50 strangers' bedside tables, and their 
sleep-drunk fumbles with the record button.

As an ensemble, the dream tapes are a peek into an alternate subconscious 
reality. The speakers are recording as they cross the boundary between 
sleep and waking. Their words slip past the mind's sense censor and thus 
possess a kind of intimacy that is interesting beyond the psychedelic 
content of the dreams.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[We're excited by the tactile nature of this project -imagining the 
recorders Jeff sent out waiting on 50 strangers' bedside tables, and their 
sleep-drunk fumbles with the record button.

As an ensemble, the dream tapes are a peek into an alternate subconscious 
reality. The speakers are recording as they cross the boundary between 
sleep and waking. Their words slip past the mind's sense censor and thus 
possess a kind of intimacy that is interesting beyond the psychedelic 
content of the dreams.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/c89lhm/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5a8faeba08522995fefce04c_1519366225576_dream_tapes.mp3" length="27351457" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[We're excited by the tactile nature of this project -imagining the 
recorders Jeff sent out waiting on 50 strangers' bedside tables, and their 
sleep-drunk fumbles with the record button.

As an ensemble, the dream tapes are a peek into an alternate subconscious 
reality. The speakers are recording as they cross the boundary between 
sleep and waking. Their words slip past the mind's sense censor and thus 
possess a kind of intimacy that is interesting beyond the psychedelic 
content of the dreams.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>645</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/39c795a33445fe23213e0b030d9da5a9.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">jeff emtman - dream tapes</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>karen werner - swimming through butterflies</title>
        <itunes:title>karen werner - swimming through butterflies</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/karen-werner-swimming-through-butterflies-1628734092/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/karen-werner-swimming-through-butterflies-1628734092/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 09 Feb 2018 17:03:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5a6f29a053450a1718ea9536</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[We love the interdisciplinary and collaborative approach that Karen took in 
this piece. The scoring of this piece feels raw and vivid - clearly the 
cello is a second narrator in this piece, seamlessly harmonizing with the 
speaking voice and pointing to both speech's and the narrative's 
musicality. This piece makes time slow right down, with musical interludes 
complex and abstract enough to bring the listener fully into this conjured 
fluttering space. On every listen, we're left with a potent sense of 
wonder.]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[We love the interdisciplinary and collaborative approach that Karen took in 
this piece. The scoring of this piece feels raw and vivid - clearly the 
cello is a second narrator in this piece, seamlessly harmonizing with the 
speaking voice and pointing to both speech's and the narrative's 
musicality. This piece makes time slow right down, with musical interludes 
complex and abstract enough to bring the listener fully into this conjured 
fluttering space. On every listen, we're left with a potent sense of 
wonder.]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/eywufo/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5a7d1f3c08522928810cb727_1518150167199_swimming_through_butterflies.mp3" length="43999816" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[We love the interdisciplinary and collaborative approach that Karen took in 
this piece. The scoring of this piece feels raw and vivid - clearly the 
cello is a second narrator in this piece, seamlessly harmonizing with the 
speaking voice and pointing to both speech's and the narrative's 
musicality. This piece makes time slow right down, with musical interludes 
complex and abstract enough to bring the listener fully into this conjured 
fluttering space. On every listen, we're left with a potent sense of 
wonder.]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>1061</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/4bed9f9e03146977616797db84f57837.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">karen werner - swimming through butterflies</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>rignam wangkhang - prairie wind</title>
        <itunes:title>rignam wangkhang - prairie wind</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/rignam-wangkhang-prairie-wind-1628734093/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/rignam-wangkhang-prairie-wind-1628734093/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 26 Jan 2018 17:23:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5a69db7cc83025d0fb0b8921</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[Rignam reached out to us about this piece after recently having moved to 
Winnipeg. He said it would be inspired by "the prairie wind - outside my 
apartment windows, you can hear it howl". His piece takes us to the 
prairies and beyond, sweeps us across a vast and melancholic landscape 
while kicking up the dust of the world under its heels. In this piece, the 
wind is an omniscient character whose powers seem matched only by the 
anxious pulls of technology. ]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[Rignam reached out to us about this piece after recently having moved to 
Winnipeg. He said it would be inspired by "the prairie wind - outside my 
apartment windows, you can hear it howl". His piece takes us to the 
prairies and beyond, sweeps us across a vast and melancholic landscape 
while kicking up the dust of the world under its heels. In this piece, the 
wind is an omniscient character whose powers seem matched only by the 
anxious pulls of technology. ]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/za57eg/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5a6abae0e2c48371b9964baa_1516944353177_prairie_wind.mp3" length="15886873" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Rignam reached out to us about this piece after recently having moved to 
Winnipeg. He said it would be inspired by "the prairie wind - outside my 
apartment windows, you can hear it howl". His piece takes us to the 
prairies and beyond, sweeps us across a vast and melancholic landscape 
while kicking up the dust of the world under its heels. In this piece, the 
wind is an omniscient character whose powers seem matched only by the 
anxious pulls of technology. ]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>358</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/26b8b8b153bd508cd43bf4b12a58c088.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">rignam wangkhang - prairie wind</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>joan schuman - walking in bad circles</title>
        <itunes:title>joan schuman - walking in bad circles</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/joan-schuman-walking-in-bad-circles-1628734094/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/joan-schuman-walking-in-bad-circles-1628734094/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 12 Jan 2018 16:34:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5a542f9c419202695f3da25e</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“When I read a story in the back of the newspaper about a young man who had 
wandered across the U.S./Mexico border, I became curious about what his 
experience must have been like. I imagined how he might wander through his 
mind, talking to no one in particular, remembering his town, his mother, 
and the things he heard and saw along the way—how he kept repeating that he 
was ‘walking in bad circles,’ as if any of us walk a linear, knowable 
journey.“]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“When I read a story in the back of the newspaper about a young man who had 
wandered across the U.S./Mexico border, I became curious about what his 
experience must have been like. I imagined how he might wander through his 
mind, talking to no one in particular, remembering his town, his mother, 
and the things he heard and saw along the way—how he kept repeating that he 
was ‘walking in bad circles,’ as if any of us walk a linear, knowable 
journey.“]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/4opbdb/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5a5803f5652deaf84ee7d4b7_1515717965629_walking_in_bad_circles.mp3" length="18342401" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“When I read a story in the back of the newspaper about a young man who had 
wandered across the U.S./Mexico border, I became curious about what his 
experience must have been like. I imagined how he might wander through his 
mind, talking to no one in particular, remembering his town, his mother, 
and the things he heard and saw along the way—how he kept repeating that he 
was ‘walking in bad circles,’ as if any of us walk a linear, knowable 
journey.“]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>419</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/67dd2b8c9b058d1eea1a45a66f7e5e8e.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">joan schuman - walking in bad circles</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>aleksandra bragoszewska - coarse &amp; janky</title>
        <itunes:title>aleksandra bragoszewska - coarse &amp; janky</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/aleksandra-bragoszewska-coarse-janky-1628734095/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/aleksandra-bragoszewska-coarse-janky-1628734095/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 29 Dec 2017 16:34:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5a37ee06c830258ccbd72c4c</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[As this roller coaster of a year comes to a close, we thought this sonic 
manifesto and portrait was the perfect toast for ushering in the new year: 
To taking artistic risks! To having the courage to struggle on stage!  This 
piece, and the collaborative, political and tactile world of Bread and 
Puppet that it conjures, embody the ethos of experimentalism, 
interdisciplinarity, and community that Constellations aspires to. And we 
can't think of a voice more suited to sewing this cardboard cacophony 
together than Aleks'. ]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[As this roller coaster of a year comes to a close, we thought this sonic 
manifesto and portrait was the perfect toast for ushering in the new year: 
To taking artistic risks! To having the courage to struggle on stage!  This 
piece, and the collaborative, political and tactile world of Bread and 
Puppet that it conjures, embody the ethos of experimentalism, 
interdisciplinarity, and community that Constellations aspires to. And we 
can't think of a voice more suited to sewing this cardboard cacophony 
together than Aleks'. ]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/ivxbvw/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5a457e909140b7fa15e0a498_1514503984035_coarse_26_janky.mp3" length="26993247" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[As this roller coaster of a year comes to a close, we thought this sonic 
manifesto and portrait was the perfect toast for ushering in the new year: 
To taking artistic risks! To having the courage to struggle on stage!  This 
piece, and the collaborative, political and tactile world of Bread and 
Puppet that it conjures, embody the ethos of experimentalism, 
interdisciplinarity, and community that Constellations aspires to. And we 
can't think of a voice more suited to sewing this cardboard cacophony 
together than Aleks'. ]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>636</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/0949e2460ec936211481dc1c249d870e.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">aleksandra bragoszewska - coarse &amp; janky</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>craig desson - 06-30-24</title>
        <itunes:title>craig desson - 06-30-24</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/craig-desson-06-30-24-1628734096/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/craig-desson-06-30-24-1628734096/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 15 Dec 2017 16:34:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5a2eac180d9297714fb9e125</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“I love the work of the 60s era NFB experimental filmmaker Arthur Lipsett 
and so I wanted to try and do what he does. The piece is also an 
exploration of the digital subconscious that exists on my MacBook.  It's 
made up of sounds on my hard drive that I recorded over the last year that 
just felt right together."]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“I love the work of the 60s era NFB experimental filmmaker Arthur Lipsett 
and so I wanted to try and do what he does. The piece is also an 
exploration of the digital subconscious that exists on my MacBook.  It's 
made up of sounds on my hard drive that I recorded over the last year that 
just felt right together."]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/om5dma/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5a3346530d92972a192ea260_1513310070140_06-30-24.mp3" length="19190317" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“I love the work of the 60s era NFB experimental filmmaker Arthur Lipsett 
and so I wanted to try and do what he does. The piece is also an 
exploration of the digital subconscious that exists on my MacBook.  It's 
made up of sounds on my hard drive that I recorded over the last year that 
just felt right together."]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>441</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/638f0aee8ecf0ed2c6474b0253b60130.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">craig desson - 06-30-24</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>veronica simmonds + andrew bateman - we are the transcribers</title>
        <itunes:title>veronica simmonds + andrew bateman - we are the transcribers</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/veronica-simmonds-andrew-bateman-we-are-the-transcribers-1628734097/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/veronica-simmonds-andrew-bateman-we-are-the-transcribers-1628734097/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 01 Dec 2017 16:34:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5a1dddc953450a9c54d08fcc</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“What's a transcriber, you ask? Well, it's a human who listens to words and 
then writes them down for other people. It's a dying art that we were 
trying to capture. In the making of this piece we were trying to cultivate 
the monotony, drudgery, brutality of transcription work which we were both 
doing a lot of at the time."]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“What's a transcriber, you ask? Well, it's a human who listens to words and 
then writes them down for other people. It's a dying art that we were 
trying to capture. In the making of this piece we were trying to cultivate 
the monotony, drudgery, brutality of transcription work which we were both 
doing a lot of at the time."]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/ffgg76/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5a20dda08165f51b7dbead62_1512103913763_we_are_the_transcribers.mp3" length="15894518" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“What's a transcriber, you ask? Well, it's a human who listens to words and 
then writes them down for other people. It's a dying art that we were 
trying to capture. In the making of this piece we were trying to cultivate 
the monotony, drudgery, brutality of transcription work which we were both 
doing a lot of at the time."]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>358</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/7d0a3a8a85a5e371da9bc2f7c27a4dac.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">veronica simmonds + andrew bateman - we are the transcribers</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>janet rogers - broken english</title>
        <itunes:title>janet rogers - broken english</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/janet-rogers-broken-english-1628734098/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/janet-rogers-broken-english-1628734098/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 17 Nov 2017 16:34:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:5a0458748165f5ed3e827b99</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[This piece distorts language in a way that feels simultaneously playful in 
its musicality, while also awkward and violent. It's so true to the way 
language and language barriers fail and frustrate us. We loved listening a 
couple times in a row, sinking into the jarring cadence of the reader's 
cropped syllables. ]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[This piece distorts language in a way that feels simultaneously playful in 
its musicality, while also awkward and violent. It's so true to the way 
language and language barriers fail and frustrate us. We loved listening a 
couple times in a row, sinking into the jarring cadence of the reader's 
cropped syllables. ]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/sc8anv/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5a0e6eb29140b774642e1d97_1510895642988_broken_english.mp3" length="22132383" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[This piece distorts language in a way that feels simultaneously playful in 
its musicality, while also awkward and violent. It's so true to the way 
language and language barriers fail and frustrate us. We loved listening a 
couple times in a row, sinking into the jarring cadence of the reader's 
cropped syllables. ]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>514</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/fddb43f955bbbb15901fae9e6fbf351d.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">janet rogers - broken english</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>ellie gordon-moershel - anatomy of the road</title>
        <itunes:title>ellie gordon-moershel - anatomy of the road</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/ellie-gordon-moershel-anatomy-of-the-road-1628734100/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/ellie-gordon-moershel-anatomy-of-the-road-1628734100/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 03 Nov 2017 15:34:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:59fa3c88c83025395d9bef18</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“I was driving down the 401 which I normally find to be very uninspiring, 
but then I was thinking about all the breakthrough moments I've had in 
cars, whether its been me alone thinking of something and coming to a 
conclusion, or being on a road trip with someone else and us having our 
first real bonding moment or big fight. And I was thinking about how that's 
kind of like therapy.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“I was driving down the 401 which I normally find to be very uninspiring, 
but then I was thinking about all the breakthrough moments I've had in 
cars, whether its been me alone thinking of something and coming to a 
conclusion, or being on a road trip with someone else and us having our 
first real bonding moment or big fight. And I was thinking about how that's 
kind of like therapy.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/ylh80k/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_59fbca29e4966baa783e57ae_1509674150726_anatomy_of_the_road.mp3" length="19710229" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“I was driving down the 401 which I normally find to be very uninspiring, 
but then I was thinking about all the breakthrough moments I've had in 
cars, whether its been me alone thinking of something and coming to a 
conclusion, or being on a road trip with someone else and us having our 
first real bonding moment or big fight. And I was thinking about how that's 
kind of like therapy.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>454</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/732b7cd521ae686c3aff4fc7c9263d99.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">ellie gordon-moershel - anatomy of the road</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>julie shapiro - is this an exercise?</title>
        <itunes:title>julie shapiro - is this an exercise?</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/julie-shapiro-is-this-an-exercise-1628734101/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/julie-shapiro-is-this-an-exercise-1628734101/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 20 Oct 2017 22:00:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:59e913abbff200eef5c82f98</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“Back in the 80's I sneak-watched a TV movie with highly disturbing content 
(about nuclear war) and it's been passively haunting me ever since. I 
discovered a lot of my friends had the same experience with this movie, and 
are also still lightly traumatized, so asked them all about it.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“Back in the 80's I sneak-watched a TV movie with highly disturbing content 
(about nuclear war) and it's been passively haunting me ever since. I 
discovered a lot of my friends had the same experience with this movie, and 
are also still lightly traumatized, so asked them all about it.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/0ve2fc/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_5a09d56d9140b7f3b7d169a5_1510594294727_is_this_an_exercise.mp3" length="24677612" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“Back in the 80's I sneak-watched a TV movie with highly disturbing content 
(about nuclear war) and it's been passively haunting me ever since. I 
discovered a lot of my friends had the same experience with this movie, and 
are also still lightly traumatized, so asked them all about it.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>578</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/0af27cab828680d9b34c5aaf2248d6b9.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">julie shapiro - is this an exercise?</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>miyuki jokiranta - no event</title>
        <itunes:title>miyuki jokiranta - no event</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/miyuki-jokiranta-no-event-1628734102/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/miyuki-jokiranta-no-event-1628734102/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 06 Oct 2017 15:34:00 +1100</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:59d681dec027d81789ef915a</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“Time functions asymmetrically in a doctor's waiting room. Our bodies keep 
their own time, which is rarely calibrated to half hour appointments, and 
we feel we're often left waiting. The smallest procedure can stretch to 
fill a day, and a year on waiting list, a lifetime. No Event is a plastic 
moment in a waiting room.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“Time functions asymmetrically in a doctor's waiting room. Our bodies keep 
their own time, which is rarely calibrated to half hour appointments, and 
we feel we're often left waiting. The smallest procedure can stretch to 
fill a day, and a year on waiting list, a lifetime. No Event is a plastic 
moment in a waiting room.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/2yy0l6/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_59d6cfb59f745607c78b1490_1507250482824_01_No_Event.mp3" length="20454601" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“Time functions asymmetrically in a doctor's waiting room. Our bodies keep 
their own time, which is rarely calibrated to half hour appointments, and 
we feel we're often left waiting. The smallest procedure can stretch to 
fill a day, and a year on waiting list, a lifetime. No Event is a plastic 
moment in a waiting room.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>472</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/fbaf36ccd92ebdeafbd686f552dcb6ce.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">miyuki jokiranta - no event</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>michelle macklem - ode to my last 10 years of dating</title>
        <itunes:title>michelle macklem - ode to my last 10 years of dating</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/michelle-macklem-ode-to-my-last-10-years-of-dating-1628734103/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/michelle-macklem-ode-to-my-last-10-years-of-dating-1628734103/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 22 Sep 2017 14:34:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:59bd724acd39c3f9f5cfa032</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“OTML10YOD is an audio short story that charts the familiar sequences of 
romantic relationships. It stems from a personal experience, but embraces 
common feelings of closeness, connection, difficulty, love and loss. Let 
your mind wonder and project how you will.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“OTML10YOD is an audio short story that charts the familiar sequences of 
romantic relationships. It stems from a personal experience, but embraces 
common feelings of closeness, connection, difficulty, love and loss. Let 
your mind wonder and project how you will.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/n4wje1/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_59c2feb0edaed8018317d963_1505951477572_ode_to_my_last_10_years_of_dating.mp3" length="30400789" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“OTML10YOD is an audio short story that charts the familiar sequences of 
romantic relationships. It stems from a personal experience, but embraces 
common feelings of closeness, connection, difficulty, love and loss. Let 
your mind wonder and project how you will.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>721</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/15d29589d8d9a089b2789c33c25ccbcf.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">michelle macklem - ode to my last 10 years of dating</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>adriene lilly - migraines &amp; tsunamis</title>
        <itunes:title>adriene lilly - migraines &amp; tsunamis</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/adriene-lilly-migraines-tsunamis-1628734104/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/adriene-lilly-migraines-tsunamis-1628734104/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 08 Sep 2017 15:00:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:59b2078f37c581fbf8618a36</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“The comparison between migraine and tsunamis comes from how I think about 
my own experiences. Migraines are different for everyone, but in my case 
there are a couple of warning signs that I tend to get in the hours or days 
before an attack. They are things like horrible dry mouth, I can’t stop 
yawning and become very depressive. I think about them as the ocean 
drawback that can happen before a tsunami.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“The comparison between migraine and tsunamis comes from how I think about 
my own experiences. Migraines are different for everyone, but in my case 
there are a couple of warning signs that I tend to get in the hours or days 
before an attack. They are things like horrible dry mouth, I can’t stop 
yawning and become very depressive. I think about them as the ocean 
drawback that can happen before a tsunami.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/8btw1i/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_59b20dbb8dd04187fcd09df1_1504841617084_Migranes_and_Tsunamis.mp3" length="27383629" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“The comparison between migraine and tsunamis comes from how I think about 
my own experiences. Migraines are different for everyone, but in my case 
there are a couple of warning signs that I tend to get in the hours or days 
before an attack. They are things like horrible dry mouth, I can’t stop 
yawning and become very depressive. I think about them as the ocean 
drawback that can happen before a tsunami.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>645</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/ad7e8829a83f7adb74db9a6bd69c1f4e.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">adriene lilly - migraines &amp; tsunamis</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>la cosa preziosa - blinking</title>
        <itunes:title>la cosa preziosa - blinking</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/la-cosa-preziosa-blinking-1628734105/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/la-cosa-preziosa-blinking-1628734105/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 25 Aug 2017 14:15:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:599c3c29cf81e0b3580a66e5</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“Blinking is about a feeling anyone who's ever lived the experience of 
emigration will recognize. That of returning to your native country to find 
that what you see is different, sometimes clearer and sharper than it ever 
was while you were there. It's also about a sense of loss, rootlessness, 
and searching.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“Blinking is about a feeling anyone who's ever lived the experience of 
emigration will recognize. That of returning to your native country to find 
that what you see is different, sometimes clearer and sharper than it ever 
was while you were there. It's also about a sense of loss, rootlessness, 
and searching.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/i8yebr/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_599f9d2fcd0f68882d4bd23e_1503632845440_ep2-la-cosa_blinking.mp3" length="9902468" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“Blinking is about a feeling anyone who's ever lived the experience of 
emigration will recognize. That of returning to your native country to find 
that what you see is different, sometimes clearer and sharper than it ever 
was while you were there. It's also about a sense of loss, rootlessness, 
and searching.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>247</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/d55f924bd1f3a9600c43c63812ee0136.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">la cosa preziosa - blinking</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>angela shackel - lazaro's dream</title>
        <itunes:title>angela shackel - lazaro's dream</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/angela-shackel-lazaros-dream-1628734106/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/angela-shackel-lazaros-dream-1628734106/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Fri, 11 Aug 2017 14:34:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:598b833dcd0f686e45177921</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[“Lazaro's Dream is an audio walk that mixes history and fiction into a 
surreal dreamscape and guides listeners through the Danforth area in 
Toronto, Ontario. Press play and enter a character's dream. We use Michael 
Ondaatje's In the Skin of a Lion as inspiration and include lines from the 
text which are voiced by the author.”]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[“Lazaro's Dream is an audio walk that mixes history and fiction into a 
surreal dreamscape and guides listeners through the Danforth area in 
Toronto, Ontario. Press play and enter a character's dream. We use Michael 
Ondaatje's In the Skin of a Lion as inspiration and include lines from the 
text which are voiced by the author.”]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/lqr8aw/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_598c7807893fc0a8dff5c0d8_1502378018303_01_Lazaro_27s_Dream.mp3" length="17899009" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[“Lazaro's Dream is an audio walk that mixes history and fiction into a 
surreal dreamscape and guides listeners through the Danforth area in 
Toronto, Ontario. Press play and enter a character's dream. We use Michael 
Ondaatje's In the Skin of a Lion as inspiration and include lines from the 
text which are voiced by the author.”]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>420</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/44580538e8a1154aecf9f54756dbbf10.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">angela shackel - lazaro&#039;s dream</media:title></media:content>    </item>
    <item>
        <title>constellations - an introduction</title>
        <itunes:title>constellations - an introduction</itunes:title>
        <link>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/constellations-an-introduction-1628734107/</link>
                    <comments>https://constellations.podbean.com/e/constellations-an-introduction-1628734107/#comments</comments>        <pubDate>Tue, 25 Jul 2017 20:04:00 +1000</pubDate>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9:592acab5414fb5ddd3938e8b:59770d74d7bdcef00d1ff9cf</guid>
                                    <description><![CDATA[constellations illuminates audio work from a community of international artists craving + making experimental work that floats beyond the borders of radio and podcasting]]></description>
                                                            <content:encoded><![CDATA[constellations illuminates audio work from a community of international artists craving + making experimental work that floats beyond the borders of radio and podcasting]]></content:encoded>
                                    
        <enclosure url="https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/d5ii4d/static_592ac7151b631b84a1587ea9_t_597c151ff14aa1fbe786f500_1501304115606_0_an_introduction.mp3" length="12160453" type="audio/mpeg"/>
        <itunes:summary><![CDATA[constellations illuminates audio work from a community of international artists craving + making experimental work that floats beyond the borders of radio and podcasting]]></itunes:summary>
        <itunes:author>Constellations</itunes:author>
        <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
        <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
        <itunes:duration>70</itunes:duration>
                                <media:content url="https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog12532936/49e9cabc9a0644129b065f55f04ff013.png" medium="image">
                            <media:title type="html">constellations - an introduction</media:title></media:content>    </item>
</channel>
</rss>
