{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/80057992-f79a-4567-8ba0-45e1e97771ed/fb7ad5b9-b947-447f-8000-52c3ea4a2f71?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Re:sound #228 The Sonic Wanders Show","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/61009a3631fd81f125b34e75/61009ac9121e70001399e2e9.jpg?height=200","description":"This hour we're going on three soundwalks that meander at the pace of real life.\n\n4700 Liberty Heights Avenue [EXCERPT] \nby Aaron Henkin & Wendel Patrick (Out of the Blocks, WYPR, 2015) \nThe 4700 block of Liberty Heights Avenue is a portrait of survival and adaptability. It's a self-governed, informal economy where the currency is respect. Space is shared by merchants, churches, longtime residents, and drug dealers. Immigrants from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nepal, West Africa, and Korea have set up shops alongside a dwindling number of African American-owned businesses. Trust is earned here, not given lightly.\n\nMeet Me At the Cemetery Gates [EXCERPT] \nby Susanna Grant & Jo Morris (Shuffle Festival, 2015) \nNeglected for years, Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park is a registered charity mainly run by volunteers. Originally one of London’s Magnificent Seven cemeteries, it stretches for 31 acres and is the city's largest urban woodland. From cemetery to nature reserve, the park mirrors the East End’s long history of providing a refuge and haven for (im)migrants. We meet those who played there long ago, Serbian foragers, bird-watchers and to children who visit the park now, who all create a portrait of this bewitching space.\n\nShaktoolik Soundwalk [EXCERPT] \nby Josie Holtzman, Isaac Kestenbaum & Joaqlin Estus (Frontier of Change for KNBA and Localore: Finding America from AIR Media, 2016) \nThe village of Shaktoolik, Alaska, is 400 miles from Anchorage, on a spit of land between the Bering Sea and the Tagoomenik River. Climate change threatens to wash the village away within the next few decades. But what's it like to live there? This immersive audio tour will transport you to Shaktloolik. You'll walk the length of the village, go into homes, and meet a few of the people who live there.\n\nThis episode of Re:sound was produced by Dennis Funk\n\nTRACKLIST \nArtem Bemba, 'Red Shore', Basscoast (Southern City's Lab, 2015) \nAdriana Krikl, 'Every Way, Sonic Escapes (self-released, 2016) \nAdriana Krikl, 'Glitch, Sonic Escapes (self-released, 2016) \nSeba Lay, 'Directions', In search of (self-released, 2008) \nSo I'm an Islander, 'Æ Kirk'bak (The Church Hill)', Stelheij (self-released, 2016) \nSeba Lay, 'Colors', In search of (self-released, 2008)","author_name":"Third Coast International Audio Festival"}