A podcast about listening
Year 4 of The Wind will be a series called "Devil Music". Investigating the Satanic Panic, the crossroads and subliminal messaging. The devil is in the details. Coming soon.
The Wind is going on tour.These are the dates. (more info at thewind.org/events)Leg 1:June 15th - Garden City, Idaho @ Surel's PlaceJune 16th - Enterprise, Oregon @ BookloftJune 17th - Moscow, Idaho @ Wild at Art (KRFP presents)June 18th - Missoula, Montana @ Imagine Nation Brewing (Word Dog event)June 22nd - Hamilton, Montana @ Chapter 1 BooksJune 27th - Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada @ The Toast CollectiveJuly 1st - Portland, Oregon @ Speck's Records (4pm early show)••Leg 2:July 20th - San Francisco, California @ PRX Podcast Garage, KQEDAugust 11/12/13 - Los Angeles, California • More info TBAAugust 17th - Boston, Massachusetts (PRX Podcast Garage)August 18th/19th - New York City, New York • Working on venue, reach out if you can helpAugust 25th - Leeds, England @ Hyde Park Book ClubAugust 26th - Edinburgh, Scotland • Working on venue, reach out if you can helpAugust 31st - Glasgow, Scotland @ The Old Hairdressers
Year 3 comes to a close. Despite my best efforts, this was the first year that the desk was buried.
The Wind is produced by me, Fil Corbitt.This season was made with support from the Google Podcasts Creator Program through PRX. And by our patrons. If you'd like to support the show, head to Patreon.com/Thewind and set up a monthly donation. Thank you to Shawn Yazzi, Michael King, Dylan Jahr, Iron Mountain, Little Bear, Bad Soul, and Wocus Muffin for speaking with me for this episode. And thanks to Bethany Sam, Eleanor Tullock, and to Henry Rondeau who provided some of the audio of the drum groups. You can find him on youtube at “Yoyoyo itshendo”. He's got a bunch of powwow videos if you wanna check them out, and I'll post some, along with photos, links and more at TheWind.org. Thanks for being here for Year 3 of The Wind. We'll have a guest episode and epilogue soon. And to all of the patrons, THANK YOU. You've seriously made this thing much easier to sustain, and I am deeply grateful.
The Wind on Snap Judgement!If you're new to The Wind, start with the Prologue.//// Hey, Fil HereJust dropping in the feed real quick with an announcement. Wind episode Whip Law just aired on the podcast and national radio show Snap Judgement. We've got a wave of new listeners here so if you came over from Snap, WELCOME. The Wind can be a hard show to describe, but I recommend starting with the Prologue. It's the very first episode and it'll explain the premise of the show. Then, feel free to click around. If you dug Whip Law you might like Rodeo Clown or a Hobo a Tramp a Bum. And if you're already a Wind listenerr thank you. Whip Law will be airing on Snap Judgement this week all over North America. Catch you soon with the season finale of Year 3.
This episode is part of a two part series called The Merry Monarchs. Both are from Wind contributor Eleanor Tullock.In this episode of the Merry Monarchs, Eleanor makes an audio tour for the Monarch Butterflies, and to aid them on their migration, she constructs a series of objects and offerings. And it's not just audio magic: she really created these offerings: butterfly-sized leather-bound books, kites, pendants and baskets…all types of really cool stuff. You can see photos of all of it at TheWind.org.A huge thank you to Theo Rassmusen who provided all of the music in this episode. Theo is a good friend and excellent synth musician and you can his work at patterns.bandcamp.comThanks to Laurie Leonard of the River Fork Ranch, Dr. Chip Taylor: Founder and Director of Monarch Watch, and Storai Stanizai for speaking to us for this episode.For a full source list and a million links, head to thewind.org!
The Wind is made possible by our patrons. If you'd like the support the show, head to patreon.com/thewind and set up a monthly donation. This is a completely independent production and any support helps.This episode is one part of a two part series called The Merry Monarchs. Both are from Wind contributor Eleanor Tullock. In this episode, Eleanor interrogates the internet in search of answers about the Monarch Butterflies. A huge thank you to Theo Rassmusen who provided most of the music for this episode. Theo is a good friend and excellent synth musician and you can his work at patterns.bandcamp.com - And thank you to Tsippora Sidibé from the podcast Tant Que Je Serai Noire for lending her voice.
PATREONWEBSITEHOWLS ROAD EP The Wind is produced by me, Fil Corbitt.This episode was written, read and scored by Emily Pratt. If you'd like to find her music head to Howlsroad.bandcamp.com.This season was made with support from the Google Podcast Creator Program through PRX. and by listeners like you. If you'd like to help keep this thing going, head to patreon.com/thewind and set up a monthly donation. At $7/month, you can get access to the exclusive official Wind Listener Patch.For photos, links, merchandise and more, we're at Thewind.ORG
This season was produced with support from the Google Podcasts Creator Program through PRX and our patrons. If you want to support the show, Head to www.patreon.com/thewind or click the link on the website. Set up a monthly donation to keep this thing going.Thanks to Cory Mcabee for speaking with me for this episode, and to Lori Leanord of the River Fork Ranch Preserve, Katrina Spade, and John Christian Phifer of the Conservation Burial Alliance.For more information on I_Butterfly and the Red Planet Planning Commission, along with other Links, photos, Live show calendar, Merch and more, visit Thewind.org.The music in this episode was almost entirely by Cory Mcabee, Most of it was from his album Small Star Seminar, plus that one was from his film, a space western called Stringray Sam. The piece I played under Carl Sagan was an altered version of The Magic Flute by Mozart, The original was included by Sagan on the Golden Record, a collection of music that was present on Voyager 1 when it took that picture of our pale blue home. Finally, Wedding of the Winds is from the public domain.
Links and more: www.TheWind.org Support: www.patreon.com/thewind
Thanks to Jay Valentine and Kim Green for speaking to me for this story. You can find Kim's webstore at BlackB4U.com. Also thank you Alex Painter for connecting me with Jay and thanks to the Negro Leagues Hall of Fame Museum in Kansas City, Missouri.Music from the public domain and by: Yclept Insan, Hannah Lee, Anthony Ouradnik.
The Wind is produced by me, Fil Corbitt.This season was made with support from the Google Podcasts Creator Program through PRX.Links, photos, Live show calendar, and more at Thewind.org. And, if you want to support, first subscribe on your podcast app and then become a patron. Head to the brand new patreon.com/thewind or click the link on our website. You can set up a monthly donation to help me keep this thing going. Thank you to Michael Branch who wrote a short story on the rodeo that partially inspired my curiosity in the rodeo clown. Thanks to Geoff from In Other News Radio who interviewed Michael Bala. And Thanks to Willie and Connor for talking with me.The music in this episode was In the Gloaming and Rovin' Cowboy from the public domain, plus a track from friend of the show Yclept Insan.
I found a handsaw sticking out of the snow, and I carried it deep into the woods. This is a story I've told a few times. ••• Broadcasting from a handmade desk the the Sierra Nevada, The Wind returns for a third year. •••
A welcome to new listeners, and an announcement.Hear my episode on 99% Invisible's feed or at 99pi.org
My office is a field of poison flowerspurple swaying in the breeze.It is also a pathway. For a bear, whose tracks have on occasion encountered my own. Surprised by each other's quiet presence, we make eye contact before retreat.•On the way to my desk, I traverse a shelf more mixed than lush: Throat Forest — a half failing aspen grove, green shoots among the fallen white trunks. • That which is pliant is a disciple of life: that which is rigid, a disciple of death. • Throat Forest voices this point. The living trees bend and sway, while the dead hold steady and unwavering: solemn monuments, they are their own gravestones.•This has been a year of adjustment, a season of bending and adapting. But in so, a year of life. I appreciate your presence, and this show will return soon, with more findings and searchings.
How a small sonic boom came to represent homelessness in Reno, and how the city responded to unhoused people taking up sonic real-estate. // Utility, aesthetic language, 911 tape and the search for Reno's master whip maker.
Kiko Dinucci: “It's been about 10 years since I've realized that in my music, in all my works and projects, such as Metá Metá, I have been working with something beautiful and something ugly; something violent and something lyrical. And I think Brazil is like that. It is a tropical country with wonderful nature, but it has its past and history marked by death, exploitation, and so on and so on… So we live with many amazing things, especially when we think about our culture and nature; but there's a lot of bad stuff too. Thus, we still have a lot of marks from our colonial period, from slavery, from military dictatorship… so I got used to writing songs in this way: bringing together beautiful and ugly things; lyrical and violent things. I like that mix and I like artists who play with it.”
Let's take a long walk. We'll park at the Walmart. Cross the asphalt, past the Arby's and the TJ Maxx. Get on the sidewalk, right between the street and the parking lot. Now, keep walking. Pass the KFC and the Payless Shoes. In just a few long minutes you'll reach the Circle K. Hit the crosswalk button -- it's only you on foot. Watch the traffic back up as you slowly cross the 6 lanes and step into the Burger King parking lot. Behind it, you'll find a Costco. Now the trick is to keep walking, as far as you can, until you can't anymore. And then turn around and walk back.
In a quest to understand the Aeolian Harp, an interview with composer John Luther Adams.
Traveling the west with an Aeolian Harp: listening in dry lake beds, great sand dunes, and the world's largest living organism, Pando Aspen Grove // official reports from the road.
All we talk about is the smoke. Where I live it has replaced the weather; both conversationally and to some degree physically. Fire has become its own season.I have not had a conversation in over a month that didn't at least touch on the smoke.But really, that's only if we're lucky. Because if we aren't talking about the smoke, it's because a fire has come close enough to talk about that instead. Close enough to our houses or friends houses or favorite places in the mountains that we watch slowly be eaten by a red line as the Facebook group updates the fire perimeter.
A note on Throat Forest, a half-failing aspen grove that I pass through on my way to my handmade desk in the woods.
A conversation with Nomadland author Jessica Bruder from February 2020.
I sit at my desk and the wind scrapes endlessly through the canyon. Glad that I could capture a little bit of it and fold it up into words and yips and yodels for you this year. Catch you soon.
The unlikely history of voice breaking in American music, and what it says about us.
Before this patch of Lodgepole Pines became my office, I was walking through the meadow. I heard a small waterfall coming from inside a bush. Since waterfalls don't come from inside bushes, I elbowed my way in to find a Fountain of Youth -- a rusty pipe spouting the coolest, clearest water I had ever tasted.
Dan Flores and his book Coyote America, dueling press releases, and The Wind Inaugural Coyote Calling Contest.
In 2017, Jeff Davis Peak (California) and Jefferson Davis Peak (Nevada) began the process of shedding their names. In this episode, we journey through the bureaucratic network that names places in the US, and try to get a handle on what it means to name a place.
Time can wear a word down. If said to much, or not enough, it can begin to mean something else entirely or in some cases start to blend into the words around it. Three such words are hobo, tramp and bum.
How gender neutral language is working for non-binary people, and how it's developing in English, Tagalog, Vietnamese, Portuguese and Hebrew. Featuring Avery Hellman (Ismay), Cara Nguyen, Dana Dela Cruz, Tyler Broderick (Diners), nwaobiala, Tuck Woodstock (gender reveal), Dan Everton, Jaq Victor, Em Jiang, Lior Gross, Eyal Rivlin (Non-binary Hebrew project).
Western Films as America's origin story, and why they sound the way they do. Featuring Gary Farmer, Rion Amilcar Scott, Jeff Grace and Kathryn Kalinak. ------------------Playlist of Western Film Scores:SPOTIFY | YOUTUBE------------------In this episode we investigate western film scores from early westerns and singing cowboys (Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, Herb Jeffries) to the John Ford Era (Tiomkin, Hageman, Steiner and Bernstein) to Ennio Morricone to Neil Young's score for Dead Man and beyond.
I found a handsaw in the mountains, sticking out of the snow. I carried it deep into the woods and used it to build a desk from a felled tree. This desk is where I produce and record the podcast.