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Radiophrenia Redux: Yara Asmar / Landforms / Jessica Syposz (Audio)

Jan 19, 2026

1) Yara Asmar - I am building a house so you can visit me 

Tape letters between two friends, one living in a blanket fort, the other in a house of paper, and both deeming each other’s homes unsound, can’t seem to agree on who should visit the other. So instead, one of them builds a house they can meet in, out of the safest material: Noise.

Commissioned for Radiophrenia 2025 with the support of Creative Scotland.


2) Landforms - Liquid Polyphonies

Liquid Polyphonies is a sound composition that is based on a field research in the European parts of the North Sea (2022). By weaving together anthrophone, biophone, and technophone sounds, and by searching for sonic analogies between the human and non-human through a combination of voice recordings, foley recordings, and field recordings, Lotte and Gillis create an electro-acoustic composition that emphasizes the interconnectedness between human and non-human entities at sea. Liquid Polyphonies is part of the residency program of Phonurgia Nova (FR) and was created during a residency at GMEM in Marseille.


3) Jessica Syposz - The Buzzer

Lena can't stop listening. Her favourite radio station only transmits a single, eerie buzzing noise. The sound gets under her skin. It makes her feel safe, especially on lonely nights in her room while her menacing landlord prowls around the house. The more this vulnerable young woman listens to this radio station, the easier it is to forget the world around her, or to feel like it's even real at all. A monologue which culminates in an unearthly radiophonic soundscape, 'The Buzzer' is a journey into obsession and our desire to be part of something bigger than ourselves. Written by Jessica Syposz, starring Radhika Aggarwal, with sound design by Paul Dodgson. The radio station Lena listens to is a fictionalised version of the real UBV-76 frequency or ‘Buzzer,’ a short-wave radio station which has been transmitting an unexplained buzzing since 1983.


This monthly program features highlights and commissions from the Glasgow art radio station Radiophrenia. 

Presented on an annual basis, Radiophrenia is a temporary art radio station – a two-week exploration into current trends in sound and transmission arts. Broadcasting live across Glasgow, the station promotes radio as an art form, encouraging challenging and radical new approaches to the medium. Each year, the broadcast schedule includes a series of newly commissioned radio works, live shows, pre-recorded features, and a number of Live-to-Air performances. The majority of the program is made up from selections submitted to an international open call for sound art and radio works. Radiophrenia is managed as a co-operative funded through Creative Scotland’s Multi-Year Funding Programme.