I'm experimenting with 360 degree videos. Click on the screen and move the image to change the point of view.
Yes, we have ringtones
The Wyoming Toad is probably the most endangered amphibian in the U.S. Image Rights: CC BY 2.0 USFWS Mountain-Prairie, credit Sara Armstrong
These are a few that I've recorded for my own phone. My favorite is the Pacific Chorus Frog, but the endangered Wyoming Toad is pretty good too. They're all free.
Joe Frank, 1938-2018
I just heard the news on AIRDaily. Turn down the lights and listen to one of the all-time greats: https://www.joefrank.com/. There's also a nice tribute on Hearing Voices.
A visit to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
Late last year, the Republican-led Congress moved forward with plans to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil and gas drilling. They see the Refuge as a "frozen wasteland." President Donald Trump refers to it as "one of the great oil sites." But the Refuge is critical habitat for millions of migratory birds and other animals, and conservationists say the proposed drilling could do irreparable harm to wildlife. In this sound portrait (below), Martyn Stewart describe what it's like to visit the Refuge. He travels the world recording nature sounds for the BBC and I caught up with him in-between trips. I produced this story back in 2006 for the NPR program Day to Day.
And now for a brief intermission
I was going through some old tape and found this interview I conducted years ago with sound artist Christopher DeLaurenti. It's about his brilliant CD Favorite Intermissions. I mixed DeLaurenti's comments with recordings from the CD. The radio show I was going to sell it to folded and the piece never aired, but I am posting it online now. This is its grand world premier. For more information about DeLaurenti's work, you can visit his website at: https://delaurenti.net/favorite/. Thanks to Barrett Golding at Hearing Voices for tipping me off to the story way back when.
Rain clouds stretch from Seattle to China this week
"I knew every raindrop by its name." -- Denis Johnson
Photo from NASA via the Seattle Times.
Walking Out now on iTunes
It is great to see the movie Walking Out top this week's indie downloads on iTunes. Rolling Stone says "Watch it with someone you love." You can hear quite a few of my field recordings in the movie and I am glad more people are getting to see this beautiful film.
Walking Out stars Josh Wiggins and Matt Bomer
The soundscapes of Ivan Doig
It was an honor to present at the Ivan Doig symposium at Montana State University earlier this week. Our team at the Acoustic Atlas focused on the "Soundscapes of Ivan Doig," a collection of recordings inspired by Doig's writings and his early life in rural Montana. In 2016, I made a series of trips to document sounds at locations described by Doig in his books English Creek and This House of Sky. Those recordings will eventually become part of the MSU's Ivan Doig Archive, and you can listen to a few samples here.
Cottonwood grove
This is a recording of a cottonwood grove on the American Prairie Reserve in Montana.
Listen to more of my recordings on the Acoustic Atlas.
Recordings at the Montana State Fair
My audio recordings were featured in an exhibit at the Big Sky Country State Fair in Bozeman, Montana from July 19 – 23. The exhibit was sponsored by the Montana State University Library and focused on the literary work of the late author Ivan Doig. The recordings included soundscapes of rodeo events, livestock and wildlife from around Montana.
In 2016, I took several recording trips to trace locations featured in Doig’s writings as part of the library’s new Ivan Doig archive. Doig was raised in Montana and spent much of his life writing about his experiences. He wrote more than 16 books of fiction and non-fiction.
You can read more about the Doig exhibit in an article published last May in the Bozeman Daily Chronicle.