RADIO ART ARCHIVE
The Burdened Land
Originally commissioned by Constellations for an episode entitled Feel the Sky, in which Al-Rahim was prompted to create new work from a 1992 amateur field recording of trumpeter swans on an icy lake, The Burdened Land spins archival sound into a boundless meditation on ecological degradation, temporal disjunction, and how capitalism shapes our concept of the natural world. The forlorn bird calls and footsteps crunching on frozen terrain from the original recording are stretched, smeared, and juxtaposed with industrial noise, invoking a spectral aviary that shimmers with elusive thresholds, binaries, and migratory patterns. Eventually, the echoed whisper of the question “Am I falling?” implies breaking through the barrier of the icy lake. Upon revisiting the piece four years after its initial release, this repeated question speaks to the ambience of dysphoria, transition, and reembodiment that lingers at the outer limits of The Burdened Land. - Described by Wave Farm Radio Archive Contributor 2024, Kamikaze Jones.
Curatorial statement
Radio has a rich legacy of deliberate misuse. From the mobilization of the Black Panther Party via CB Radio, to the subversive dissemination of pirate broadcasts, the insurrectionist potential of the airwaves and their propensity for revolutionary action is well documented. How does a queer affect, one marked by loss, resistance, subterfuge, transformation, and rebellion, map onto these radiophonic spaces? What paradigms of audiological intervention are implicitly queer? What can we learn from exploring the immaterial queer archive: an amorphous collection unsanctioned by the state, transmitted through utterance, gesture, noise, and paralinguistic activity?
This addition is part of an ongoing curatorial series entitled Pink Noise, which investigates contemporary strategies of queer sonic resistance and counter-archival methodology across transmission arts.-Kamikaze Jones