Transmissions

Documentary, Audio Portrait, Community Lucia Scazzocchio Documentary, Audio Portrait, Community Lucia Scazzocchio

Nobody Dies Here: Everyone is welcome, not everyone is welcome

Michelle Ransom-Hughes (AU 2023)

Michelle Ransom-Hughes (AU 2023)

29 min Episode 1 of 8

A beautifully produced audio portrait of the Medically Supervised Injecting Room (MSIR) trial in North Richmond, Australia with health workers and people who inject drugs. In the entry zone, staff walk the fine line between extending a warm, non-judgemental welcome to all and adhering to licensing regulations. People from every walk of life present here to access the room.

Producer/ Writer/ Editor/ Sound Design/ Mix - Michelle Ransom-Hughes

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Sound Art, Abstract, Documentary Lucia Scazzocchio Sound Art, Abstract, Documentary Lucia Scazzocchio

Radio Armed Response

Claudia Wegener (ZA 2007)

Produced by Claudia Wegener (ZA 2007)

60 min

South Africa based artist Claudia Wegener from Radio Continental Drift walks the streets of two suburban communities in Johannesburg S.A. In door to door interviews, at times through intercom systems and across gates, she asks questions related to public safety and a privatised security system. The result is a radio artwork mixed from what the artist likes to call dramatic field recordings. In surprisingly intimate, often humorous conversations, narratives of a complex urban patchwork of communities unfold before your ‘very eyes’. Yet what unravels, far beyond ‘issues of security’, social and urban divisions are shared concerns, questions, stories and visions about living together.

Producer: Claudia Wegener

The original half hour audio piece from 2005 is reframed in recent footage for London’s art radio station Resonance104.4fm

Recommended by Paris based sound artist Dinahbird


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Documentary, Sound Art, Radio Lucia Scazzocchio Documentary, Sound Art, Radio Lucia Scazzocchio

Running the Goat

Chris Brookes (CA 2005)

Chris Brookes (CA 2005)

25 min

On July 2, 1992 the once-gigantic Newfoundland cod fishery was shut down. Twelve years later, 70,000 people had left, and coastal communities were struggling to survive. The blow to the culture was as dramatic as the economic effect, but how do you measure cultural change? Perhaps with a centuries-old Nfld “set dance”.

Celebrating the life and works of the late Chis Brookes.

Produced by Chris Brookes - Battery Radio

First broadcast by Radio Netherlands April 24, 2005
AWARDS: Third Coast Festival 2005. Grand Prix Marulic 2006


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Documentary, Health, Montage Lucia Scazzocchio Documentary, Health, Montage Lucia Scazzocchio

Bodies - Touch

Allison Behringer US 2023)

Allison Behringer (US 2023)

27min Episode 31 of 31

A vending machine ritual, a life-changing massage, a spiffy velvet outfit and a belly full of caterpillars. Bodies returns with four stories of touch.

Each episode of this documentary series begins with a medical mystery. Sometimes the sickness is in the body, and sometimes the sickness is in the system.

Hosted by Allison Behringer
Produced by Allison Behringer, Lila Hassan, Hannah Harris Green
Composer and Sound Designer Hannis Brown

Produced for KCRW

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Documentary, History, Music Lucia Scazzocchio Documentary, History, Music Lucia Scazzocchio

Every Voice: The Magic Flute: From Morehouse … to the opera house with Monostatos

David Norville + Terrance McKnight (US 2023)

David Norville + Terrance McKnight (US 2023)

22min Episode 1 of 5

Every Voice spotlights the vibrant stories and perspectives that reflect the whole of the American musical experience. There are many different kinds of classical music, depending on where you are in the world. While this music typically preserves the traditions of a given society, classical music in America remains wedded to its Western European roots. This show explores why — and what America’s classical music really sounds like. Through interviews, historical investigation, and personal storytelling, Terrance McKnight unearths the hidden voices that have been shaping our musical traditions all along. This debut season examines the representation of Blackness in opera. While character flaws are universal, stereotypes often fall along racial lines. We look at the loneliness, jealousy, self-loathing, and cultural appropriation associated with African characters in 18th and 19th century operas by Mozart and Verdi, introducing the African-American personalities found in the operas of Atlanta-based composer Dr. Sharon Willis.

Hosted by Terrance McKnight
Produced by David Norville
Contributing Strategic Advisor Tony Phillips

Produced for WQXR

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Documentary, Reporting, Investigation Lucia Scazzocchio Documentary, Reporting, Investigation Lucia Scazzocchio

Dwelling: Squats, protest and Olive Morris

Marnie Woodmeade (UK 2023)

Marnie Woodmeade (UK 2023)

30min Episode 1 of 5

As the housing crisis deepens, home is becoming increasingly difficult to find. Join host Marnie Woodmeade as we speak to the people seeking alternatives. From abandoned buildings to lost rivers, they redefine what a home can be. But as restrictions on alternative lifestyles tighten, how can they protect their sanctuaries, sites of resistance and dwelling?

Squats have been demonised by the media, but how have empty buildings supported the feminist, environmental and black power movement?

Hosted and produced by: Marnie Woodmeade
Powered by Transmission Roundhouse

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Documentary, Reporting, Investigation Lucia Scazzocchio Documentary, Reporting, Investigation Lucia Scazzocchio

Discarded: Addicted to Convenience

Gloria Riviera, Alie Kilts, (US 2023)

Gloria Riviera and Alie Kilts (US 2023)

42 min Episode 1 of 4

The invention of plastic changed the way we live — and now we’re hooked. The journey starts in Louisiana, where plastic is born, to New Jersey, where plastic goes to die… or live again. This episode explores greenwashing, wish-cycling, and our collective culpability as we try to understand how we became so reliant on plastic — despite knowing its harm to the earth and the communities closely impacted.

This is the story of a modern-day Erin Brockovich, set on the Mississippi River in an area known as “Cancer Alley.” Her name is Sharon Lavigne, her community is St. James Parish in Louisiana, and her fight is to keep out one of the largest plastic manufacturing companies in the world. In this investigative four-part series, hosted by Emmy award-winning journalist Gloria Riviera, we discover how our plastic world came to be. Because plastic is everywhere – it has advanced our world, but it has damaged our environment and our health. So what do we do? We look at what’s next for all of us, and how we can learn from communities like St. James to make a difference in our own backyards.

This series is presented in partnership with Only One, the action platform for the planet.

A Lemonada Media original

Hosted by Gloria Riviera
Produced by Alie Kilts

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Documentary, Reporting, Investigation Lucia Scazzocchio Documentary, Reporting, Investigation Lucia Scazzocchio

The Syria Trials: The Doctors Who Resisted

Sasha Edye-Lindner (UK 2022)

Sasha Edye-Lindner - 75 Podcasts (UK 2022)

29 min Episode 3 of 11

While many doctors and medical staff sided with the Syrian regime after the protests began in Syria in 2011, there were, of course, many doctors, nurses and medical students who sided with the protestors calling for freedom and democracy. Field medical teams to help injured protestors, and later field medical hospitals and checkpoints to care for those wounded in the escalating war, were set up - only to become targets of the regime’s increasingly more violent tactics.

Please take care when listening - this episode talks about violence and war.

The Syria Trials takes the listener on a trip through the stories around the scattered landscape of justice and accountability efforts for the atrocious crimes committed by the regime in Syria, since it violently suppressed the peaceful revolution in 2011. Less than a year after the Koblenz trial, the world’s first criminal trial to convict a Syrian official, they explore the other trials now underway, as well as the cases being built, that all set out to bring about justice for Syria. Where are we now on the long and complicated road to justice? What does the road ahead look like? What can the law and international justice do - and what can’t it do - for Syria?

Hosted by: Fritz Streiff
Produced by Sasha Edye-Lindner
Created by 75 Podcasts

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Documentary, Music, Oral History Lucia Scazzocchio Documentary, Music, Oral History Lucia Scazzocchio

Radio Ballad: The Travelling People (1964)

Ewan McColl, Peggy Seeger, Charles Parker (1963)

Ewan McColl, Peggy Seeger, Charles Parker (UK 1963)

59 min

This new revolutionary format - radio ballad (BBC) conceived by folk musicians Ewan MacColl, Peggy Seeger, and the brilliant radio documentary maker Charles Parker in 1958, combining sound: songs, instrumental music, sound effects, and, most importantly, the recorded voices of those who are the subjects of the documentary. This had never been done before, and still sounds incredibly fresh today.

This ballad gives voice to travellers in the UK as well as the people who have a distrust or fear of this group. Note this was recorded in 1963 and some people featured are quite outspoken about their racist beliefs.

Producer: Charles Parker
Music: Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger

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Documentary, Essay, Musicology Lucia Scazzocchio Documentary, Essay, Musicology Lucia Scazzocchio

Phantom Power: The Sound World of Harriet Tubman

Maya Cunningham + Ravi Krishnaswami (US 2023)

Maya Cunningham + Ravi Krishnaswami (US 2023)

41 min Episode 7 of 7

Ethnomusicologist Maya Cunningham reads “The Sound World of Harriet Tubman.” Maya Cunningham is an activist and jazz singer currently completing a Ph.D. at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, in Afro-American studies with a concentration in ethnomusicology

She uses field recordings, historical research, and ethnomusicological research to explore the roles of sound and music, and voice in Tubman’s life and leadership. You’re going to hear about the American Christian revival known as the Second Great Awakening, which stirred both Black and white people from the late 1700s to the mid-1800s. You’ll also hear about the Invisible Church, where enslaved African Americans were able to worship secretly and autonomously and through the singing of folk spirituals, which differed greatly from white religious music at the time, but would go on to influence not only gospel music but pretty much every form of popular music we know today. The sounds and music from today’s show can be heard on Maya’s Spotify playlist

Produced for Phantom Power


Written and narrated by Maya Cunningham
Produced by Ravi Krishnaswami

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