WGXC-90.7-FM Community Calendar
The Community Calendar gathers upcoming events in the Hudson Valley, Catskills, and Capital Region. Add your event to be posted here, and hear these activities read on the radio by WGXC programmers!ONGOING
Wednesday
Feb
09
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
ONGOING
Thursday
Feb
10
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
ONGOING
Friday
Feb
11
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
Saturday
Feb
12
Sheffield Winter Farmers' Market
91 Main St. | Sheffield, Massachusetts 01257
http://deweyhall.com/
The Sheffield Farmers’ Market is holding a winter market with local produce, meats, baked goods, crafts and gifts, and live music. We will continue to offer our SNAP Match program just as we do for t...
Saturday
Feb
12
The Grooveharmonik Trio
29 Church St. | Catskill, NY 12414 | 518-943-5333
https://www.theavalonlounge.com/
Keith Pray plays organ; Mike Wooten plays guitar; and Bobby Previte performs on drums live at The Avalon Lounge in Catskill with a broadcast on 90.7-FM and a webcast at wgxc.org.
ONGOING
Saturday
Feb
12
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
Sunday
Feb
13
Brian Dewan
29 Church St. | Catskill, NY 12414 | 518-943-5333
https://www.theavalonlounge.com/
Catskill's Brian Dewan performs songs of love and devotion from throughout the centuries on accordion, electric zither, and more live at The Avalon Lounge in Catskill with a webcast at wgxc.org.
ONGOING
Sunday
Feb
13
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
ONGOING
Monday
Feb
14
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
Tuesday
Feb
15
Hudson Schools Community Budget Workshop
215 Harry Howard Avenue | Hudson, NY 12534 | 518-828-4360
http://hudsoncityschooldistrict.com/
Residents of the Hudson City School District are invited to learn about the development of the 2022-23 school budget proposal during a 30-minute community budget workshop on Tuesday, February 15, 2022...
ONGOING
Tuesday
Feb
15
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
Wednesday
Feb
16
Catskill Library Board meeting
1 Franklin St. | Catskill, NY
http://www.catskillpubliclibrary.org/
3335 Route 23A | Palenville, NY 12463 | 518-678-3357
http://catskillpubliclibrary.org/
Regular monthly meeting of the Catskill Library Board of Trustees. The meetings are held at either the Catskill Library or the Palenville Branch Library. The meetings are subject to change, so please...
ONGOING
Wednesday
Feb
16
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
Thursday
Feb
17
What Happens When the Residency Ends
1405 County Route 22 | Ghent, NY 12075 | 518-392-4568
http://www.artomi.org/
Join this month's Art Omi Presents virtual conversation between artist Remy Jungerman and critic Charlotta Kotik entitled "What Happens When the Residency Ends." Exploring their shared experience in t...
Thursday
Feb
17
Martin Luther King March for Peace & Justice
The CHS Interact Club has scheduled its Martin Luther King March for Peace & Justice for Feb. 17. Meet at 2nd Baptist Church at 5 p.m. Candlelight March starts at 5:15 p.m. March from the Second Bapti...
ONGOING
Thursday
Feb
17
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
ONGOING
Friday
Feb
18
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
Saturday
Feb
19
Sarah Nolan
117 Harry Howard Ave. | Hudson, NY 12534 | 518-822-1875
http://www.fasnyfiremuseum.com/
Meet Firefighter Fran and her friend Firestar the Dalmatian, as they present an interactive show on fire safety. The show wraps up with a musical puppet show that will have the whole family “pumped up...
Saturday
Feb
19
Emergency Assistance Benefit
Virtual: Last year's event raised over $50,000 for direct emergency assistance to 200+ households. With fuel, electric and housing prices increasing dramatically, this year's goal is $75,000. Event is...
ONGOING
Saturday
Feb
19
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
ONGOING
Sunday
Feb
20
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
ONGOING
Monday
Feb
21
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
ONGOING
Tuesday
Feb
22
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
ONGOING
Wednesday
Feb
23
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
ONGOING
Thursday
Feb
24
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
ONGOING
Friday
Feb
25
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
ONGOING
Saturday
Feb
26
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
Sunday
Feb
27
People as Property in Delaware County, 1790 – 1830
The Mountain Top Historical Society presents their first program of 2022: “Enslaved: People as Property in Delaware County, 1790 – 1830.” This Zoom talk by Diane Galusha, historian, author and Preside...
ONGOING
Sunday
Feb
27
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
ONGOING
Monday
Feb
28
ONGOING EVENTS
Radio Deprogramming Workshop with Andy Stuhl
Deprogramming: micro-interventions for media-makers
These short text prompts, along with their audio and video interpretations, are the products of our collaborative imagining in the Radio Deprogramming workshop. Deprogramming, we decided, can mean many things: disrupting routines, inverting diagrams, restoring relations to space, rupturing the ordinary, transporting while disorienting, flipping what’s public and what’s private in listening, offering footholds in the unscalable walls of communication systems, or perhaps dismantling the very medium-ness of a medium. The prompts are event scores, creative strategies, poetic ruptures, productive ambiguities, speculative fictions, project plans, and counter-imaginaries.
Andrew Madey [Email
Wipe your contacts, then try to reach out to them under a completely unfamiliar address.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Phone first : when you call a specific phone number, you automatically go live on air, bypassing any show that was playing. (https://nimon.org/en/radio-symetrique)
Andrew Madey [Radio]
Conduct important interviews only during the graveyard shift.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Broadcast sounds rather than voices
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Translate a news story into a language you don’t speak and then attempt to read it aloud. (The chosen language could connect with a current refugee crisis.)
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Ubiquitous : Using several physical studios that are streaming live sounds, an online mixer allows to plays on each studio independently.
Russell Gendron [Audio]
Using the automation tool in your DAW, create 'peaks' of any effect (try echo if you can't think of one) every 30 seconds, starting from the beginning.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
When it comes time for the news on the hour, no newsreaders; no scripts. Only live crosses to man-on-the-street eyewitness accounts.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Drive to the nearest data center and stream your conversation with the security guards as you explain why you need to set up your transmitter there, where your sound files reside.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Move your station into the cloud. Place wires in a puddle to make the electrical connection between your mixing board and your transmitter. Conclude when the puddle evaporates.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Build a radio transmission tower that regularly, but randomly, narrowcasts the radio signal to smaller and smaller areas, like neighborhoods or even just blocks or specific homes.
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Starting from the printed page (or print out any news article,) cut up and reassemble the sentences into something new. Attempting to make the new version sensical is optional.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website through a game of telephone.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the first paragraph from a current newspaper article and record yourself reading it backward ending with the headline.
Melike Ceylan [Telephone]
Each time you receive a new voice message, replace your existing voicemail greeting with it.
Jin Zhu [Red tape]
Make the mass or weight of each bureaucratic form you submit directly proportional to the potential consequences it will have on your life or finances.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and replace all vowels with the letter “E”
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select a recent front-page newspaper article (above the fold). Using the context of the article as inspiration – create an abstract visual, sound, dance, or performance interpretation of it – and document it in any form.
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Assume the radio is the audience
Melissa Sarris [Print]
A visual exploration: (over)use fonts - change the font (and point size!) repeatedly in every printed story, including the title. The news never looked so good!
Michelle O'Connor [Radio]
Hand the microphone over to the audience
Ed Woodham [Print]
Select the last paragraph of a magazine article. Leave the first word capitalized but make all the other capital words lower case. Remove all of the spaces between the words and all of the punctuation except a period in the end. Create something with this final product.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Change the mix: music in the front, voices in the back
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Play a piece backwards (not the words, but just the story)
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that can only be accessed in one location.
Stacey Copeland [Print]
Time sensitive news. Attach a wick to the bottom of the newspaper with instructions to lite the wick before reading.
Sadie Couture [Audio]
Constantly set up the story/segment, never do it, and then end
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Variation: Create one news story that includes a sentence (or just a word?) from every article in one day’s newspaper.
Nicolas Montgermont [Radio]
Fallback : when there is no signals in the radio, use a fallback mode that is playing random files in a folder. These files are produced or selected in the context of a sound residency of one month, by an artist changing every month. (https://p-node.org)
Melissa Sarris [Print]
Read a news story while pronouncing every printed letter phonetically, even the the “silent” ones.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Cater the size of your broadcast to exactly match the size and shape of a family member or friend's current or past residence.
Stacey Copeland [Radio]
Broadcast live from the loudest place in your neighbourhood.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Speak without using your voice.
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and transcribe the partial article into a perspective of an octopus
Kirsten Chervinsky [Print]
Take the first paragraph of a news article and translate all nouns into French
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
purchase 5 helium-filled balloons large enough to levitate 1 of the solar-powered AM/FM receivers up into airspace. each ballon should have a 1-meter long string attached tied to the antennae of one of the receivers. tune the radio to the clearest station possible. attach a note to the radio with instructions to detune the station if found. release the ballon/receivers early in the morning of a sunny day. attempt to follow on foot the airborne receivers as far as you can.
Jin Zhu [Radio]
Alternately broadcast into outer space and inner space, in sync with your exhales and inhales.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Languages spoken on air are directly proportionate (i.e. airtime per day) to demographics of languages spoken in the broadcasting region.
Justin Maiman [Radio]
Broadcast all local high school and amateur sports games (football, tennis, volleyball, etc.) live without announcers and commentators, just the "nat" sounds from the game in real time.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
place 3-5 solar-powered FM or AM receivers, with the volume up, and place the receivers high up in several different trees located in a public greenspace - face the radios towards the sun. tune the receivers within a few degrees of one another such as 90.1, 90.2, 90.3, etc avoiding clear commercial broadcasts. sit under the trees and listen.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you can only see half of.
Stephen Bradley [Radio (public radio space)]
prepare a number of cheap solar-powered AM or FM radio receivers with magnets on the back of each receiver. turn the volume up as loud as possible, tune each receiver to the weakest station, attach the prepared radios with magnets to the outside surface of 2-3 public transportation busses. take one of the buses and ride it to the end of its route.
Ricardo Iamuuri Robinson [Radio]
Broadcast sound collaged commercials of concepts and ideas. (eg. Capitalism, Neoliberalism, Freedom, etc)
Jin Zhu [Archives]
Create an archive (or an item for an archive) of forgetting. Is it possible to create an audio recording of someone forgetting a thing?
Justin Maiman [Radio]
"YouTube-ify" community radio. Instead of pushing out station produced content to the community via radio transmission, pull it directly from the local community — allow them to upload audio programming, field recordings, meetings, conversations, etc, directly to a server and then broadcast it. Aim to become a user-generated audio streaming service that aggregates and collects community created audio for broadcast.
Russell Gendron [Music]
Compose something - melody, riff, song - using something other than your primary instrument. Or, take a composition/idea and remove the primary instrument that you made it with.
Celeste Oram [Radio (public radio)]
Entirely UNedited pre-records; keep all the ums and fumbles.
Andy Stuhl [Radio]
Extend your station identification by noting the problems that arise when you only name your transmitter's municipal location. Instead describe in detail each spot of land, sky, and water that your signal reaches. Start over at the top of each hour.
Andrew Madey [TV]
Broadcast a slow screen crawl of inane, unrelated technical information during prime-time hours.
Russell Gendron [Film photography]
Choose any colour, go for a walk and whenever you see that colour, take a photo of whatever you imagine that colour is 'looking' at.
Melike Ceylan [Radio]
Visit stations at neighbouring frequencies while on air: ask about their day, complain about a noise, or ask if they have any spare piece of equipment that you need.
Ed Woodham [Print]
Under a pseudonym write a short review (300 words max) of your real or imagined artwork for a major publication.
Matthew Flores [Internet]
Make a website that you have to print out to use.
Tuesday
Mar
01
Hudson Schools Community Budget Workshop
215 Harry Howard Avenue | Hudson, NY 12534 | 518-828-4360
http://hudsoncityschooldistrict.com/
Residents of the Hudson City School District are invited to learn about the development of the 2022-23 school budget proposal during a 30-minute community budget workshop on Tuesday, March 1, 2022, at...
ONGOING
Tuesday
Mar
01
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Wednesday
Mar
02
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Thursday
Mar
03
ONGOING EVENTS
Friday
Mar
04
Plumage and Portals
510 Warren St. | Hudson, NY 12534 | 518-822-0510
http://www.510warrenstgallery.com/
Morgan J. Burns: “Plumage and Portals” March 4-27, 2022 510 Warren Street Gallery 510 Warren St., Hudson, NY 12534 510warrenstreetgallery.com 510warrenstgallery@gmail.com Hours: Fri., Sat....
Friday
Mar
04
Sourdough Bread Baking Contest
91 Main St. | Sheffield, Massachusetts 01257
http://deweyhall.com/
A community event celebrating bakers, sourdough bread, cheese, wine, and beer. **Proof of vaccination and id required for entry. Masks required when attendees are not seated and eating. We are celeb...
ONGOING
Friday
Mar
04
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Saturday
Mar
05
ONGOING EVENTS
Sunday
Mar
06
WGXC 90.7-FM Winter 2022 Pledge Drive
WGXC's Winter 2022 Pledge Drive will take place from Sun., Mar. 6 through Fri., Mar. 18, 2022. Join us as we continue to build a base of monthly sustaining donors. Growing a community of sustaining su...
Sunday
Mar
06
Preseason Baseball Clinic
At Dutchess Stadium. This one day baseball clinic is the perfect preseason training every baseball player needs to improve their skills. Top coaches from the Hudson Valley area will be working with at...
ONGOING
Sunday
Mar
06
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Monday
Mar
07
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Tuesday
Mar
08
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Wednesday
Mar
09
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Thursday
Mar
10
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Friday
Mar
11
ONGOING EVENTS
Saturday
Mar
12
Sheffield Winter Farmers' Market
91 Main St. | Sheffield, Massachusetts 01257
http://deweyhall.com/
The Sheffield Farmers’ Market is holding a winter market with local produce, meats, baked goods, crafts and gifts, and live music. We will continue to offer our SNAP Match program just as we do for t...
Saturday
Mar
12
Mamie Minch, Tamar Korn
91 Main St. | Sheffield, Massachusetts 01257
http://deweyhall.com/
Mamie and Tamar’s show will feature a variety of genres including early country, blues, early and New Orleans jazz, some Appalachian folk, and originals. From Delmore Brothers and Carter Family to Si...
Saturday
Mar
12
Keeping Mary
44 W. Bridge St. | Catskill, NY 12414 | (518) 943-3818
https://bridgest.org/
Round the Bend Theatre presents a staged reading of “Keeping Mary” by Anthony Leiner, directed by Sydnie Grosberg Ronga. Mary and Tim’s plans for a secret romantic rendezvous are quickly disrupted by...
ONGOING
Saturday
Mar
12
ONGOING EVENTS
Sunday
Mar
13
Keeping Mary
44 W. Bridge St. | Catskill, NY 12414 | (518) 943-3818
https://bridgest.org/
Round the Bend Theatre presents a staged reading of “Keeping Mary” by Anthony Leiner, directed by Sydnie Grosberg Ronga. Mary and Tim’s plans for a secret romantic rendezvous are quickly disrupted by...
ONGOING
Sunday
Mar
13
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Monday
Mar
14
ONGOING EVENTS
Tuesday
Mar
15
Hudson Schools Community Budget Workshop
215 Harry Howard Avenue | Hudson, NY 12534 | 518-828-4360
http://hudsoncityschooldistrict.com/
Residents of the Hudson City School District are invited to learn about the development of the 2022-23 school budget proposal during a 30-minute community budget workshop on Tuesday, March 15, 2022, a...
ONGOING
Tuesday
Mar
15
ONGOING EVENTS
Wednesday
Mar
16
Catskill Library Board meeting
1 Franklin St. | Catskill, NY
http://www.catskillpubliclibrary.org/
3335 Route 23A | Palenville, NY 12463 | 518-678-3357
http://catskillpubliclibrary.org/
Regular monthly meeting of the Catskill Library Board of Trustees. The meetings are held at either the Catskill Library or the Palenville Branch Library. The meetings are subject to change, so please...
ONGOING
Wednesday
Mar
16
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Thursday
Mar
17
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Friday
Mar
18
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Saturday
Mar
19
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Sunday
Mar
20
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Monday
Mar
21
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Tuesday
Mar
22
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Wednesday
Mar
23
ONGOING EVENTS
Thursday
Mar
24
Hudson and Its River
51 N. 5th St. (at State St.) | Hudson, NY 12534 | (518) 828-1792
http://hudsonarealibrary.org/
The Hudson Area Library’s History Room hosts this Zoom discussion about Hudson’s relation to its eponymous river. Unnamed local history enthusiasts and experts will discuss a series of oral history re...
Thursday
Mar
24
Three Extraordinary Ordinary Women of the Mountain Top
Route 23A | Palenville, NY
http://www.mths.org/
In celebration of Women’s History Month, join the Mountain Top Historical Society for an evening on Zoom to celebrate three exceptional Mountain Top women: Justine Hommel, Hunter Historian for 3 decad...
ONGOING
Thursday
Mar
24
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Friday
Mar
25
ONGOING EVENTS
Saturday
Mar
26
Lara St. John
173 Main St. | Saugerties, New York | 845-246-2867
http://www.saugertiesreformed.org/
Violinist Lara St. John will play a program of women composers and works by Bach in concert to benefit the June workshop of "Penelope and the Geese," a new opera, which is a feminist retelling of the...
ONGOING
Saturday
Mar
26
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Sunday
Mar
27
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Monday
Mar
28
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Tuesday
Mar
29
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Wednesday
Mar
30
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Thursday
Mar
31
ONGOING EVENTS
Friday
Apr
01
Off the Wall Flowers
510 Warren St. | Hudson, NY 12534 | 518-822-0510
http://www.510warrenstgallery.com/
H. David Stein's show “Off the Wall Flowers” is open April 1 through May 1, 2022, Fridays, Saturdays, 12-6 p.m., and Sundays, 12-5 p.m.
Friday
Apr
01
Aida
215 Harry Howard Avenue | Hudson, NY 12534 | 518-828-4360
http://hudsoncityschooldistrict.com/
The Hudson Junior/Senior High School Drama Club presents “Aida: School Edition,” the musical with music and lyrics from Elton John and Tim Rice. Opening night is Friday, April 1, 2022, at 7:30 p.m., w...
Friday
Apr
01
Glass Pony
29 Church St. | Catskill, NY 12414 | 518-943-5333
https://www.theavalonlounge.com/
Encapsulating influences psychedelic and jam-focused rock, to funk, post-punk, and modern indie and post-rock, the Albany, New York collective Glass Pony offer a sound that truly translates through ge...
ONGOING
Friday
Apr
01
ONGOING EVENTS
Saturday
Apr
02
Michael Benedict Jazz Vibes Quartet
51 N. 5th St. (at State St.) | Hudson, NY 12534 | (518) 828-1792
http://hudsonarealibrary.org/
The Hudson Area Library hosts The Michael Benedict Jazz Vibes Quartet at the library. Michael Benedict (vibraphone), Jon LeRoy (keyboard), Mike Richmond (bass), and Andy Hearn (drums) perform straight...
ONGOING
Saturday
Apr
02
ONGOING EVENTS
Aida
215 Harry Howard Avenue | Hudson, NY 12534 | 518-828-4360
http://hudsoncityschooldistrict.com/
ONGOING
Sunday
Apr
03
ONGOING EVENTS
Aida
215 Harry Howard Avenue | Hudson, NY 12534 | 518-828-4360
http://hudsoncityschooldistrict.com/
ONGOING
Monday
Apr
04
ONGOING EVENTS
Tuesday
Apr
05
Hudson Schools Community Budget Workshop
215 Harry Howard Avenue | Hudson, NY 12534 | 518-828-4360
http://hudsoncityschooldistrict.com/
Residents of the Hudson City School District are invited to learn about the development of the 2022-23 school budget proposal during a 30-minute community budget workshop on Tuesday, April 5, 2022, at...
ONGOING
Tuesday
Apr
05
ONGOING EVENTS
Wednesday
Apr
06
Glenn Jones, Mark Trecka
29 Church St. | Catskill, NY 12414 | 518-943-5333
https://www.theavalonlounge.com/
Glenn Jones and Mark Trecka perform. There should be a live webcast of the entire show at http://wgxc.org beginning around 8 p.m. Click on "Listen Now" at top of the page, and scroll down to find the...
ONGOING
Wednesday
Apr
06
ONGOING EVENTS
ONGOING
Thursday
Apr
07
ONGOING EVENTS
Friday
Apr
08
Wayne Horvitz/Sara Schoenbeck Duo
29 Church St. | Catskill, NY 12414 | 518-943-5333
https://www.theavalonlounge.com/
Sara Schoenbeck and Wayne Horvitz perform together. There should be a live webcast of the entire show at http://wgxc.org beginning around 7 p.m. Click on "Listen Now" at top of the page, and scroll do...
ONGOING
Friday
Apr
08
ONGOING EVENTS
Saturday
Apr
09
Reading of Darrah Cloud’s "What’s Buggin' Greg?"
156 Main Street | Saugerties, NY 12477 | (845) 876-2515
https://www.upstatefilms.org/
A Theater of Wonder production, directed by Jessica Bauman. TOW presents plays for young audiences and openhearted adults. Cloud's plays include The Stick Wife, Our Suburb, the stage adaptation of Wil...
Saturday
Apr
09
Charity Concert for Ukraine
957 Route 82 | Ancram, NY 12502 | 518-851-5501
http://www.hvapa.com/
A day of dance and music to support Ukraine with uncredited local ballet dancers, singers and musicians. All proceeds will go to the Ukrainian American Cultural Center of New Jersey (UACCNJ) for human...
Saturday
Apr
09
Hope for Ukraine
Benefit for Ukraine produced by fashion designer Vilma Mare with her husband Paul Crayton a visual and sound artist known as Slink Moss. From Vilma Mare: “We learn and exercise peace within our famili...
ONGOING
Saturday
Apr



