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BELIEVE IT OR NOT, the combination of ambient nature sounds and electronic music was actually an innovation in the 1970s. And you may be surprised that the idea had a history in European classical music, especially in England and France. In England, it was the so-called "pastoral" composers like ARNOLD BAX and RALPH VAUGHAN WILLIAMS, who created orchestral images of nature. In France, it was the Impressionists, from CLAUDE DEBUSSY to OLIVIER MESSIAEN. They didn't have recordings, so they created new instruments and playing techniques to imitate natural sounds like wind and birdsongs. By the mid-20th century, we could record the sounds of nature, edit them and play them back at will. In the 1950s, avant-garde composers like JOHN CAGE were promoting an awareness of ambient sound as equal to music. Music...was how you listened. Incorporating nature sounds into music was the next step; beside, film soundtracks had been doing it for years. The psychology is foundational: humans evolved listening to natural sounds, and they send a message we respond to instinctively. For example, birdsong on a gentle summer morning is delightful and calming. Blend in some subtle synthesizers, season with gourmet reverberation and you have what two young Canadians named MYCHAEL DANNA and TIM CLÉMENT called "environmental electronic music." It's an idea that was embraced by New Age musicians and in time became a bit of a cliché. But it led to an electronic genre of extended tone-color journeys in virtual space, which is still alive and well. On this transmission of Hearts of Space, the fluid, airy sound of summer spacemusic, on a program called SUMMERTONES 3. Music is by MEG BOWLES, DANNA & CLÉMENT, CHRONOTOPE PROJECT, ALTUS, and STELLIA. [ view program page ] [ view Flickr image gallery ] [ play 30 second MP3 promo ]
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Los primeros registros de la observación de Marte se remontan a la era de los antiguos astrónomos egipcios en el II milenio a. C. Más tarde, aparecieron los primeros registros chinos sobre los movimientos de Marte antes de la fundación de la dinastía Zhou (1045 a. C.). Los astrónomos babilónicos realizaron observaciones detalladas sobre la posición de Marte, que sirvieron para desarrollar técnicas aritméticas que predecían la posición futura del planeta. Los antiguos filósofos griegos y los astrónomos helenísticos desarrollaron un modelo geocéntrico para explicar los movimientos del planeta. Las mediciones del diámetro angular de Marte se pueden encontrar en antiguos textos griegos e indios. En el siglo XVI, Nicolás Copérnico propuso un modelo heliocéntrico para el sistema solar en el que los planetas siguen órbitas circulares alrededor del Sol. Esto fue revisado por Johannes Kepler, que pudo ajustar la órbita elíptica de Marte a los datos observacionales. La primera observación telescópica de Marte fue realizada por Galileo Galilei en 1610. Un siglo después, los astrónomos descubrieron distintas características del albedo del planeta. Fueron capaces de determinar su período de rotación y la inclinación axial. Estas observaciones se hicieron principalmente durante los intervalos de tiempo en el que el planeta estaba situado en oposición al Sol, en los cuales Marte se acercó más a la Tierra. A principios del siglo XIX las innovaciones en la fabricación de los telescopios permitieron empezar a mapear Marte. El primer mapa de Marte fue publicado en 1840, seguido por mapas más refinados a partir de 1877 en adelante. Cuando los astrónomos creyeron equivocadamente que habían detectado agua en la atmósfera marciana, la idea de la existencia de vida en Marte se popularizó entre el público. Percival Lowell creía que se podía ver una red de canales artificiales en la superficie de Marte. Estas características lineales demostraron posteriormente ser una ilusión óptica, y se demostró que la atmósfera era demasiado delgada para soportar un entorno parecido a la Tierra. Se han observado nubes amarillas en Marte desde la década de 1870. Eugène Antoniadi sugirió que se debían a arena o polvo que era soplado por el viento. Durante la década de 1920 se midió el rango de temperatura de la superficie marciana: de –85 a 7°C. Se encontró que la atmósfera planetaria era árida con indicios de oxígeno y agua. En 1947 Gerard Kuiper demostró que la fina atmósfera marciana contenía mucho dióxido de carbono; aproximadamente el doble de la existente en la atmósfera de la Tierra. Desde la década de 1960, múltiples ingenios espaciales robóticos han sido enviados para explorar Marte desde su órbita y su superficie. Antarctic Wastelands & Dear Gravity, God Body Disconnect, Helsinki Project, Spacecraft, Spectrum Vision, Ascendant, A.e.r.o. & Unusual Cosmic Process, Meg Bowles, Ben Frost, latome2, Reid Willis, Erez Yaary, Antarctic Wastelands & Ether Valley, Michael Neil, Nhung Nguyen, Neuromanter, Blue Is Nine. El playlist detallado: lostfrontier.org/space.html#1030.Escucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de lostfrontier.org. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://go.ivoox.com/sq/26825
The Moth is one of the oldest shows in podcasting. In fact, it pre-dates the medium by several years, having begun in the founder's living room in 1997. Today, The Moth is an internationally touring live storytelling production and a popular podcast and radio show. This week Leah sits down with The Moth's senior director Meg Bowles to talk about The Moth's new book, "A Point of Beauty: True Stories of Holding On and Letting Go," and about 27 years of helping everyday people bring their stories to life. Plus, we'll have more storytelling podcasts. Like Mortified, where we'll hear host David Nadelberg read an extremely cringey love letter he wrote as a teenager in front of a live audience. All that and more, this week on Podcast Playlist. Featuring: The Moth, Grown, Mortified, Normal Gossip Check out our episode with Kelsey McKinney from Normal Gossip For links and more info, head to cbc.ca/podcastplaylist
THERE'S NOTHING QUITE LIKE THE STILLNESS of a frigid winter night. Sensible humans retreat to their heated homes and warm beds, while the normal hyperactivity of the natural world is reduced to almost nothing by cold and dark. Even busy nocturnal creatures and insects take some time off, while flowing water turns to silent ice. It's an environment that finds expression in a rarified genre of electronic music, which runs the gamut from cool, to chilled, to frozen. On this transmission of Hearts of Space, Ambient electronic music for quiet winter nights, on a program called NORTHSCAPES. Music is by SOUNDS & SILENCE, SIMON LOMAX, CONNECT.OHM, MEG BOWLES, STEVE ROACH, MARK BANNING, JAJA, and BLISS. [ view playlist ] [ view Flickr image gallery ] [ play 30 second MP3 promo ]
Segunda parte del especial dedicado a las mujeres pioneras en la música electrónica, descubriendo compositoras más contemporáneas que han desarrollado instrumentos más sofisticados y versátiles que les permiten producir sonidos más elaborados y composiciones menos abstractas. Pauline Anna Strom, Janet Beat, Constance Demby, Meg Bowles, Lisa Bella Donna, Suzanne Ciani. El playlist detallado con enlaces a las audiciones íntegras de cada álbum: lostfrontier.org/episodios/2023/1014.
In this hour, four stories of determination, hope and battling for both survival and respect. From bootcamp in Fort Bragg to base camp in Kirkuk, Iraq; from the front lines to the home front. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Director, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Jill Morgenthaler battles to earn the respect of her fellow soldiers. Dylan Park finds hope in the chaos of war. Franny Civitano anxiously awaits her brother's return from deployment in Afghanistan. Jerry Neal describes a bird's eye view of the English Channel on D Day.
In this hour, stories of the digital space and its affect on the family connection IRL. From digital carts to hive minds and data collection - closing geographical and temporal distance between past and present. This hour is hosted by The Moth's Senior Director, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Meg Ferrill struggles with her fears of becoming a parent while shopping for sperm. Anaïs Bordier makes a surprising connection via social media. Trina Robinson, while researching online, discovers a shocking family history.
In this hour, stories of fear. From daily anxieties to earth-shattering moments of life-or-death terror. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Director, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Jessica Pan attempts to cure her social anxiety. Nick Revell takes a nerve wracking drive down a British motorway. Single mom, Katie Houghton-Ward, fears for her family's safety. Sudhesh Dahad deals with the aftermath of a near-death experience.
In this hour, an ancient instrument, a life-changing disaster, and survival in the face of genocide. People who experienced history, and its artifacts, firsthand. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Director, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Musician Frank Almond makes a historic discovery. Sivad Johnson takes us behind the scenes of the Detroit Fire Department. Henny Lewin, a young Jewish girl, is smuggled out of a Lithuanian ghetto during WWII.
In this hour, stories about seeing and witnessing. This episode is hosted by Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Meg Bowles Storytellers: Alice Schaffer, a preacher's daughter, grows up in fear of the lessons learned in Sunday school. Dawn Ross tries to adjust to life in rural Arkansas. D. Parvaz, a journalist covering the uprising in Syria, is arrested and imprisoned. Leland Melvin suffers a devastating injury that cuts short his dream of flying in space.
Además de la Magallanes, otras sondas han sobrevolado Venus en ruta hacia otros destinos para incrementar su velocidad mediante su impulso gravitacional. El 10 de febrero de 1990 la sonda Galileo sobrevoló Venus a una distancia de 16.000 Km en su camino hacia Júpiter. La sonda Cassini, en su viaje en dirección a Saturno, sobrevoló Venus en dos ocasiones: la primera en abril de 1998, a 234 Km, y la segunda en junio de 1999, a 600 Km. Durante el examen de la emisión de radiofrecuencias de Venus con sus instrumentos de ondas de radio y plasma en los dos sobrevuelos de la Cassini de 1998 y 1999, se observó que no existían ondas en el rango de frecuencias de 0'125 a 16 MHz, bandas que generalmente se asocian a los relámpagos. Esto entraba en contradicción directa con las observaciones de las sondas Venera de veinte años antes. Ante una hipotética ausencia de relámpagos en Venus, se ha conjeturado con algún tipo de actividad eléctrica de baja frecuencia, puesto que las señales de radio no pueden atravesar la ionosfera en frecuencias por debajo de 1 Megahercio. Donald Gurnett, físico de la Universidad de Iowa, observó que las emisiones de radio captadas por la sonda Galileo durante su maniobra de asistencia gravitacional en 1990 revelaron lo que en ese momento se interpretó como indicios de relámpagos. Sin embargo, la sonda Galileo pasó a una distancia 60 veces mayor de Venus que la sonda Cassini, por lo que sus observaciones son sustancialmente menos significativas. Hasta el año 2007 la actividad eléctrica en forma de relámpagos en la atmósfera de Venus siguió siendo un misterio. El 9 de noviembre de 2005 la Agencia Espacial Europea lanzó la sonda Venus Express con objeto de estudiar la atmósfera y las características de la superficie de Venus desde su órbita. Venus Express empezó a enviar imágenes del planeta el 11 de abril de 2006. Uno de los objetivos de esta misión es realizar una cartografía completa de las temperaturas en la superficie del planeta. Los primeros resultados fueron publicados en la revista Nature el 29 de noviembre de 2007. Incluían datos sobre el pasado de la atmósfera de Venus (más rica en agua), el descubrimiento de un vórtice dipolar en la región polar sur y la presencia de relámpagos eléctricos en las nubes de ácido sulfúrico del planeta al detectarse ondas de radio electromagnéticas de muy baja frecuencia en la banda de las generadas por los relámpagos. Inicialmente estaba previsto que la misión Venus Express durara unos 500 días terrestres, pero en febrero de 2007 se decidió prolongar hasta inicios del año 2009. El 4 de febrero de 2009 la Agencia Espacial Europea extendió el periodo de operaciones hasta el 31 de diciembre de 2009 y el 7 de octubre de 2009 decidió prolongar nuevamente la misión hasta el 31 de diciembre de 2012, fecha que nuevamente fue retrasada hasta diciembre de 2014, cuando finalmente se dio a la misión por oficialmente concluida. El 20 de mayo de 2010 la Agencia Japonesa de Exploración Espacial inició su propia misión a Venus, llamada inicialmente PLANET-C (o Venus Climate Orbiter), actualmente conocida como Akatsuki. Se había previsto que se situara en una órbita de entre 300 y 80.000 Km de altura para complementar los datos obtenidos por la Venus Express y realizar un mapeado de la superficie usando una cámara infrarroja, además de llevar diversos experimentos para determinar el posible vulcanismo actual en la superficie del planeta e intentar detectar la presencia y frecuencia de rayos y otros fenómenos eléctricos en la atmósfera de Venus. Por su parte, Rusia ha planteado la misión Venera-D, cuyo lanzamiento está programado para 2024. Jameson Nathan Jones, The Great Northern, Hendekagon, Dystopiker & Nyppy, Ethereal Planes, The Lovely Moon, AstroPilot & Spacecraft, Meg Bowles, Endless Melancholy, Altus, AES DANA, Suso Saiz, Howard Givens & Craig Padilla, SoLaRiS, Aleks Michalski. El playlist detallado con enlaces a las audiciones íntegras de cada álbum: lostfrontier.org/episodios/2023/1000.
In this episode, stories about finding, keeping, and losing love. Hosted by Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Meg Bowles Storytellers: Kristy Hawkins Kemp Powers Niall Ashdown Esther McManus
In this hour, stories of heroes, mentors, and our greatest supporters. A Coast Guard rescue swimmer considers his career, a lawyer learns the meaning of justice, and a songstress pens lyrics for her loved one. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Director, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Meg Bowles Storytellers: Rob Simpson takes us behind the scenes of life as a Coast Guard Rescue Swimmer. Sheila Calloway searches for fairness and empathy in the justice system. Beth Nielsen Chapman finds magic in the writing of a song.
5x15 and renowned nonprofit The Moth present a night of stories, inspired by the New York Times Bestselling book, How to Tell a Story: The Essential Guide to Memorable Storytelling from The Moth. Join us for an evening of true stories from two Moth speakers, storyteller interviews, and tips from some of the authors from the book, including Moth Directors Catherine Burns, Meg Bowles, and Kate Tellers. Hosted by poet, playwright, author, and Moth Storyteller Jon Goode. With thanks for your support for 5x15 Learn more about 5x15 events: 5x15stories.com Twitter: www.twitter.com/5x15stories Facebook: www.facebook.com/5x15stories Instagram: www.instagram.com/5x15stories
This week, we bear witness. From a Soviet labor camp, to a school desegregation, to a fight over books. This episode is hosted by Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Meg Bowles Storytellers: Toby Price Sybil Jordan Hampton Victor Levenstein
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! ¿No estáis un poco saturados? Saturados de correr de un lado para otro, de esa sensación de no llegar por mucho que corramos, de que los demás no nos hagan caso, de que todo el mundo exija que le hagamos caso... Saturados de nuestra forma de vida, de no encontrar un momento de descanso reparador. Pues ya está bien, deteneos, porque aquí tenemos el remedio: durante dos horas dejad lo que estéis haciendo para envolveros en música para perderse. Deepchild, Amethystium, Ugress, Haythem Mahbouli, X3, Remote Vision, Spectrum Vision, The Secession, Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross, Meg Bowles, Extraworld, LP. El playlist detallado con enlaces a las audiciones íntegras de cada album: lostfrontier.org/episodios/2022/991.Escucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de lostfrontier.org. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://go.ivoox.com/sq/26825
A special feature interview with the Connecticut-based composer-synthesist Meg Bowles. We talk about her personal music history and the upcoming album Voices from the Ethereal Forest.` In addition to our chat, a music mix is included.
On this week's episode, we take a look back at 2001. We'll hear a story from a firefighter who worked on 9/11, and we'll explore how stories helped people connect to each other in the weeks after the tragedy. This episode is hosted by George Green and Meg Bowles. Storyteller: Keith Young
This week on ‘The Write Question,' Lauren chats with the Senior Director and co-host of ‘The Moth Radio Hour,' Meg Bowles. Bowles was one of five co-authors of ‘How to Tell a Story: The Essential Guide to Memorable Storytelling from The Moth' (Crown Publishing Group).
This week on ‘The Write Question,' Lauren chats with the Senior Director and co-host of ‘The Moth Radio Hour,' Meg Bowles. Bowles was one of five co-authors of ‘How to Tell a Story: The Essential Guide to Memorable Storytelling from The Moth' (Crown Publishing Group).
Did you ever wish you could be that person who captivated a room, a gathering, an audience, a date with a story that cast a spell, moved them deeply, then left you both more connected and alive? Transformed even? Yeah, you're not alone. We all live lives filled with stories worth telling, but so often we don't realize it. And few of us know “how” to tell those stories in a way that brings others in close, then leaves them changed. Most just think it's a God-given ability. But, what if it wasn't? What if it was a skill anyone - including you - could learn? Would you want that? My guest today, Catherine Burns, believes it is. And, if there's anyone I'd believe, it's her. Catherine is the long-time Artistic Director at The Moth, the global phenomenon dedicated to the art and craft of storytelling. In our conversation today, you'll hear us dive into many of the ideas, tips, and strategies from her newest book, How to Tell a Story: The Essential Guide to Memorable Storytelling from The Moth, which she co-wrote with fellow The Moth directors, Meg Bowles and Jenifer Hixson. If you've ever wondered why we care so much about stories in the first place or what elements make for a good story, you're in for a treat in this episode because Catherine and I dive deeper into the art of storytelling and what it takes for anyone, and we mean anyone, to craft a story worth listening to. You can find Catherine at: Website | The Moth Instagram | TwitterIf you LOVED this episode you'll also love the conversations we had with Zoe Chance about language, stories, and influence.Check out our offerings & partners: My New Book SparkedMy New Podcast SPARKEDVisit Our Sponsor Page For a Complete List of Vanity URLs & Discount Codes.IKEA: Find affordable furniture and home goods at IKEA! Discover furnishings and inspiration to create a better life at home. And now sign up for IKEA Family for free and save 5% in-store on eligible purchases. Every visit. Every day! Explore even more new benefits at IKEA-USA.com/Family. Offer valid starting 9/1/2022. Limited to qualifying purchases, exclusions apply. Not valid on services. Discount applied in-store only, before tax, shipping, and handling. Cannot be combined with coupons. Visit IKEA-USA.com/Family for more details.Amazon: Earth's biggest selection of books, electronics, apparel & more at low prices. Get a head start on your holiday shopping this season, and shop legendary deals at Amazon. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
As the sun sinks below the equator and into the southern hemisphere, what used to be an orderly transition from summer heat to autumn cool is now disrupted by extreme weather events. Seasonal changes have become more unpredictable, and we must learn to navigate the new reality of our intensified climate — droughts, heat waves, mega-fires, monsoons, floods, hurricanes, cyclones, and a new class of superstorms are all on the menu, bringing new challenges to a changing world. On this transmission of Hearts of Space, a fond look back on those formerly gentle seasonal transitions, on a late summer/early autumn journey called RECESSION 3. Music is by DAVID HELPLING, ERIK WØLLO, MEG BOWLES, IAN BODDY, and STEVE ROACH. [ view playlist ] [ view Flickr image gallery ] [ play 30 second MP3 promo ]
In this hour, four stories on saying farewell to family, the past, or sometimes the very earth we stand on. Hosted by Meg Bowles, The Moth's Senior Director. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. Hosted by: Meg Bowles Storytellers: Ash Bhardwaj is tasked with bringing his father's remains back home to India. Courtney Antonioli questions her marriage, but not her love. Becca Stevens loses her son's childhood and childhood pet to time. Michael Such plans for his last moment.
In this hour, we lean into the moments of rejection, failure, embarrassment, and other stories of the human soul. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Director, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Meg Bowles Storytellers: Cynthia Shelby Lane sets her sights on a job that's out of this world. Lemn Sissay attempts to uncover a hidden past. Natasha Guynes desperately tries to hide her past from co-workers on The Hill. Matt Brown confronts his insecurities in an unconventional way Daniel Turpin deals with the aftermath of a split second decision.
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Me encanta descubrir nueva música, nuevos artistas, nuevos estilos —si ello es posible. Cuando me enfrento a una obra desconocida que consigue atrapar mi atención, me hayo frente a un enigma: suena bien pero ignoro si mantendrá esa expectación y si, finalmente, culminará como deseo. Espero que, de alguna manera, os pase lo mismo a vosotros cuando escucháis estos episodios: que permanezcáis atentos intentando adivinar cómo se desarrollará esa nueva y desconocida música enigmática. AVAWaves, Roger Subirana, Jade Ashtangini, Philip G Anderson, Mars Lasar, Enigma, José Manuel Guerra, Rob Papen & Ron Boots, TSODE, Meg Bowles. El playlist detallado con enlaces a las audiciones íntegras de cada album: lostfrontier.org/episodios/2022/981Escucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de lostfrontier.org. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://go.ivoox.com/sq/26825
El 1 de marzo de 1966, la sonda soviética Venera 3 se estrelló deliberadamente en Venus, convirtiéndose en la primera nave espacial en alcanzar la superficie de otro planeta. La cápsula de descenso de la Venera 4 entró en la atmósfera de Venus el 18 de octubre de 1967. La Venera 4 fue la primera sonda en transmitir datos medidos directamente en otro planeta. La cápsula midió temperaturas, presiones, densidades y realizó once experimentos químicos para analizar la atmósfera. Sus datos mostraban un 95% de dióxido de carbono y, en combinación con los datos de ocultación de la sonda Mariner 5, mostró que la presión en la superficie era mucho mayor de lo previsto (entre 75 y 100 atmósferas). Estos resultados fueron verificados y refinados por las misiones Venera 5 y Venera 6 los días 16 y 17 de mayo de 1969, aunque ninguna de estas misiones alcanzó la superficie mientras aún transmitían. La batería de la Venera 4 se agotó mientras la sonda aún flotaba lentamente en la masiva atmósfera de Venus, y las Venera 5 y 6 se colapsaron por la alta presión a 18 kilómetros sobre la superficie. En la década de 1960 EE.UU. y la Unión Soviética desarrollaron estudios técnicos sobre un posible sobrevuelo tripulado a Venus. A mediados de la década de 1960 la NASA realizó una serie de propuestas sobre un posible sobrevuelo tripulado de Venus en el contexto del Apollo Applications Program, usando material procedente del programa Apollo. El lanzamiento del Apollo-Venus tendría lugar el 11 de octubre de 1973, realizando un sobrevuelo del planeta Venus el 3 de marzo de 1974, regresando hacia la Tierra a continuación y llegando a esta en torno al 1 de diciembre de 1974. Estaba basada en un cohete Saturno V modificado de manera similar a lo que sería posteriormente la estación espacial Skylab. Coincidiendo en el tiempo, se desarrollaron varias propuestas similares en la Unión Soviética. La principal fue la nave TMK-MAVR. Tendría que haber sido operativa, según los primeros planes, a inicios de la década de 1970. El planteamiento inicial suponía una misión de 680 días integrada por 3 cosmonautas. Ambas iniciativas serían posteriormente desechadas por los dos países. Mientras los americanos orientaron sus recursos al programa del transbordador espacial, los soviéticos se centraron en el cohete Energía y en la estación espacial MIR. El primer aterrizaje con éxito en Venus lo realizó la sonda Venera 7 el 15 de diciembre de 1970. Esta sonda reveló unas temperaturas en la superficie de entre 457 y 474 grados centígrados. Tras el fracaso de la Cosmos 359, llegó el éxito de la Venera 8, que aterrizó el 22 de julio de 1972. Además de dar datos sobre presión y temperaturas, su fotómetro mostró que las nubes de Venus formaban una capa compacta que terminaba a 35 kilómetros sobre la superficie. Con un espectrómetro de rayos gamma analizó la composición química de la corteza. En febrero de 1974 la sonda Mariner 10 sobrevoló a Venus en su camino de encuentro con Mercurio, fotografiando la atmósfera venusiana en ultravioleta, además de realizar con éxito otros estudios atmosféricos. La sonda soviética Venera 9 entró en la órbita de Venus el 22 de octubre de 1975, convirtiéndose en el primer satélite artificial de Venus. Una batería de cámaras y espectrómetros devolvieron información sobre la capa de nubes, la ionosfera y la magnetosfera. El vehículo de descenso de la Venera 9 se separó de la nave principal y aterrizó, obteniendo las primeras imágenes de la superficie y analizando la corteza con un espectrómetro de rayos gamma y un densímetro. Durante el descenso realizó mediciones de presión, temperatura y fotométricas, así como de la densidad de las nubes. Se descubrió que las nubes de Venus formaban tres capas distintas. En 1978, la NASA envió la sonda espacial Pioneer Venus. La misión consistía en dos componentes lanzados por separado: un orbitador y una multisonda. La multisonda Pioneer Venus consistía en una sonda atmosférica mayor y otras tres más pequeñas. La sonda mayor fue desplegada el 16 de noviembre de 1978 y las tres pequeñas el 20 de noviembre. Las cuatro sondas entraron en la atmósfera de Venus el 9 de diciembre, seguidas por el vehículo que las portaba. Aunque no se esperaba que ninguna de las sondas sobreviviera al descenso, una de ellas continuó operando hasta 45 minutos después de alcanzar la superficie. Las Venera 13 y 14 llegaron a Venus el 1 y el 5 de marzo de 1982. Los datos sobre fluorescencia por rayos-X mostraron resultados similares a rocas basálticas ricas en potasio. El 10 de octubre de 1983, las Venera 15 y 16 entraron en órbita polar sobre Venus. La Venera 15 analizó y realizó un mapa de la atmósfera superior con un espectrómetro de infrarrojos. Del 11 de noviembre al 10 de julio, ambos satélites hicieron un mapa del tercio norte del planeta con radar de apertura sintética. Estos resultados proporcionaron el primer conocimiento detallado de la geología de la superficie de Venus, incluyendo el descubrimiento de los volcanes ocultos inusualmente masivos «coronae» y «arachnoids». Venus no tiene evidencias de placas tectónicas, a menos que todo el tercio norte del planeta forme parte de una sola placa. Las sondas soviéticas Vega 1 y Vega 2 llegaron a Venus el 11 y el 15 de junio de 1985. Descubrieron que las dos capas superiores de nubes estaban compuestas de gotas de ácido sulfúrico, aunque la capa inferior probablemente está compuesta por una solución de ácido fosfórico. Las misiones Vega también desplegaron globos aerostáticos que flotaron a unos 53 kilómetros de altitud durante 46 y 60 horas respectivamente, viajando alrededor de un tercio del perímetro del planeta. Estos globos midieron velocidades del viento, temperaturas, presiones y densidad de las nubes. Se descubrió un mayor nivel de turbulencias y convección de lo esperado. 404.zero, Solace Road, Ocoeur, Steve Roach & Michael Stearns, Black Tape for a Blue Girl, Brian Eno, Terminus Void, Marcus Denight, Endless Melancholy, Stellardrone, Suso Saiz, Meg Bowles, The Expanding Universe, Vangelis. El playlist detallado con enlaces a las audiciones íntegras de cada album: lostfrontier.org/episodios/2022/980
Here's the moment to sit down and relax …. no shouting, no news, no media. Where people meet music and music boosts the people. Interested? Tune in for ‘Essentials' for pure listening pleasure in the ambient, soundscape, instrumental, new world music genre. Featuring Ambient Worlds, Motionfield, Sikha Pros, Meg Bowles, Odysmod, Michael Stearns, Scann-Tec, Halcyon Hall, Spacecraft, Tauon, One of Them, Forest Robots. This show is available as a free podcast (96Kbps), also available in the support plans through my Patreon page and Ambient Zone site at high quality levels. Help to keep this station podcasting and enjoy the mixes that will last a lifetime. Cheers! START… 0:00:00 - Welcome to ‘Essentials' !0:06:01 - Pulsar - AMBIENT WORLDS0:07:39 - North Wind - MOTIONFIELD0:12:06 - Land-Of-No-Where - SIKHA PROS0:17:15 - Cloudburst over a Parched Land - MEG BOWLES0:23:06 - The Abandoned Ariadne - ODYSMOD0:27:47 - In The Beginning - MICHAEL STEARNS0:34:09 - White Sun (Live edit) - SCANN-TEC0:38:06 - Last Transport - HALCYON HALL0:41:47 - Tranquility - SPACECRAFT ( voice over )0:42:51 - Outside - TAUON0:46:19 - Maggie is Napping - ONE OF THEM0:51:21 - A Challenging Path Is Best Approached … - FOREST ROBOTS …END ———> NEW SHOW NOTES VERSION———> PLEASE SEND ANY FEEDBACK IF YOU WANT———> admin@ambient.zone———> visit our site www.ambient.zone———> SUPPORT THIS STATION https://paypal.me/ambientzone
Meg Bowles of The Moth knows the secrets to telling a good story. The Moth is an international organization that helps everyday people master storytelling through public speaking by focusing on authenticity, vulnerability, and confidence. They host public speaking events and workshops all over the world, and community events like The Moth Education Program. To purchase How to Tell a Story, follow the link below. From Amazon.com: THE MOTH is an acclaimed nonprofit organization dedicated to the art and craft of storytelling. Since launching in 1997, The Moth has presented over 40,000 stories, told live and without notes to standing-room-only crowds worldwide. The Moth's fourth book will be released in the Spring of 2022. J.K. Rowling was nearly homeless when she wrote the first Harry Potter book. Stephen King penned CARRIE on a small desk wedged between a washer and dryer. James Patterson worked in advertising and famously wrote the Toys “R” Us theme song long before becoming an author. Whether you're traditionally published or indie, writing a good book is only the first step in becoming a successful author. The days of just turning a manuscript into your editor and walking away are gone. If you want to succeed in today's publishing world, you need to understand every aspect of the business - editing, formatting, marketing, contracts. It all starts with a good book, then the real work begins. Join international bestselling author J.D. Barker and indie powerhouses, J. Thorn and Zach Bohannon, as they gain unique insight and valuable advice from the most prolific and accomplished authors in the business. In this episode, you'll discover: What makes a Moth story Why people fear public speaking How memorization ruins a story The power of a supportive audience Links: J. D. Barker - http://jdbarker.com/ J. Thorn - https://theauthorlife.com/ Zach Bohannon - https://zachbohannon.com/ The Author Life Summit 2022 - https://theauthorlife.com/summit2022/ The Moth - https://themoth.org/ How to Tell a Story - https://mybook.to/HowToStory Best of BookTook - https://bestofbooktok.com/ The Carbon Almanac - https://books2read.com/carbonalmanac Story Rubric - http://storyrubric.com Nonfic Rubric - http://nonficrubric.com Scene Rubric - http://scenerubric.com Proudly sponsored by Kobo Writing Life - https://kobowritinglife.com/ Music by Nicorus - https://cctrax.com/nicorus/dust-to-dust-ep Voice Over by Rick Ganley - http://www.nhpr.com and recorded at Mill Pond Studio - http://www.millpondstudio.com Contact - https://writersinkpodcast.com/contact/ *Full disclosure: Some of the links are affiliate links. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/writersink/support
This week, Liberty and Patricia discuss Nettle & Bone, Winnie Zeng Unleashes a Legend, Kaikeyi, and more great books. Follow All the Books! using RSS, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify and never miss a beat book. And sign up for the weekly New Books! newsletter for even more new book news. This content contains affiliate links. When you buy through these links, we may earn an affiliate commission. For a complete list of books discussed in this episode, visit our website. BOOKS DISCUSSED ON THE SHOW: This Wicked Fate (This Poison Heart, 2) by Kalynn Bayron Dreams Bigger Than Heartbreak (Unstoppable Book 2) by Charlie Jane Anders The Bone Shard Daughter (The Drowning Empire Book 1) by Andrea Stewart Realm Breaker by Victoria Aveyard Nettle & Bone by T. Kingfisher (The Twisted Ones, The Hollow Places, A Wizard's Guide To Defensive Baking, Dragonbreath, What Moves the Dead ) Winnie Zeng Unleashes a Legend by Katie Zhao Kaikeyi by Vaishnavi Patel (Sexism and misogyny, violence and death, loss of a loved one, partner abuse) Circe by Madeline Miller Ariadne by Jennifer Saint The Witch's Heart by Genevieve Gornichec Daughter of the Moon Goddess (Celestial Kingdom Book 1) by Sue Lynn Tan She Who Became the Sun (Radiant Emperor) by Shelley Parker-Chan How to Keep House While Drowning: A Gentle Approach to Cleaning and Organizing by KC Davis The Children on the Hill by Jennifer McMahon (The Winter People, The Night Sister, The Invited) I'm Waiting For You and Other Stories by Kim Bo-Young Meet Me in Another Life by Catriona Silvey (April 27 and December 14, 2021 shows) The Last Days of the Dinosaurs: An Asteroid, Extinction, and the Beginning of Our World by Riley Black How to Tell a Story: The Essential Guide to Memorable Storytelling from The Moth by Meg Bowles, Catherine Burns, Jenifer Hixon, Sarah Austin Jenness, and Kate Tellers Big Feelings: How to Be Okay When Things Are Not Okay by Liz Fosslien & Mollie West Duffy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
How to Tell a Story: The Essential Guide to Memorable Storytelling from The Moth by The Moth, Meg Bowles, Catherine Burns, Jenifer Hixson, Sarah Austin Jenness, Kate Tellers Over the past twenty-five years, the directors of The Moth have worked with people from all walks of life—including astronauts, hairdressers, rock stars, a retired pickpocket, high school students, and Nobel Prize winners—to develop true personal stories that have moved and delighted live audiences and listeners of The Moth's Peabody Award–winning radio hour and podcast. A leader in the modern storytelling movement, The Moth inspires thousands of people around the globe to share their stories each year. Now, with How to Tell a Story, The Moth will help you learn how to uncover and craft your own unique stories, like Moth storytellers Mike Birbiglia, Rosanne Cash, Neil Gaiman, Elizabeth Gilbert, Padma Lakshmi, Darryl “DMC” McDaniels, Hasan Minhaj, Tig Notaro, Boots Riley, Betty Reid Soskin, John Turturro, and more. Whether your goal is to make it to the Moth stage, deliver the perfect wedding toast, wow clients at a business dinner, give a moving eulogy, ace a job interview, be a hit at parties, change the world, or simply connect more deeply to those around you, stories are essential. Sharing secrets of The Moth's time-honed process and using examples from beloved storytellers, a team of Moth directors will show you how to • mine your memories for your best stories • explore structures that will boost the impact of your story • deliver your stories with confidence • tailor your stories for any occasion Filled with empowering, easy-to-follow tips for crafting stories that forge lasting bonds with friends, family, and colleagues alike, this book will help you connect authentically with the world around you and unleash the power of story in your life.
In this hour, stories about everyone's favorite subject - love. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Producer, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Host: Meg Bowles Storytellers: Suzie Afridi, Dan Larsen, Gabrielle Shea, Jim Obergefell
In this hour, stories of doing the seemingly impossible; taking a risk for a chance at love, trusting a gut instinct, believing in a message from beyond and shooting (literally) for the stars. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Producer, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Host: Meg Bowles Storytellers: Daniel Heuman, Navreet Chawla, Ashok Ramasubramanian, Cathy Olkin
My guest on this episode is composer Meg Bowles. For more information about her music visit: https://megbowlesmusic.com/ https://megbowlesmusic.bandcamp.com/ Tones & Drones is hosted and produced by Jason Miller in the studios of 91.3 FM KVLU. For more information visit: kvlu.org Music is this episode of the podcast was used with permission of the artist.
In this hour, Doctors, Judgements and Dictators! Stories of Patriot Games both on and off the field, huge decisions in the face of life and death; from meetings with Colonels to dances with Hephzibah. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Producer, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Ali Al Abdullatif, Aidan Greene, Chris Herbert, and Rachel Oglivy.
In this hour, a man fights street noise with poetry; a mother of three journeys to find true north; and a book lover faces danger in the Soviet Union. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Producer, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Meg Bowles Storytellers: Aaron Naparsteck, Ann Daniels, Victor Levenstein
A 5-year-old girl is caught stealing by her mother, a shy writer gives her first ever interview on national TV, a child gets caught in the shelter shuffle of the foster system, and a wilderness search and rescue teacher goes out on a ledge to help a young man. This episode is hosted by The Moth’s Senior Director, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Alana Kinarsky, Maile Meloy, Samuel James, and Cheryl Hamilton.
A lush journey in the key of space, both inner and outer. Tracks in this mix date from 1972-2011 and include Woob, Tangerine Dream, Global Communication, Bruno Sanfilippo, Boy Is Fiction, Meg Bowles, Humate, Rabbit In The Moon, Michael Stearns, Jonn Serrie, Jon Jenkins, Odessi, Alpha Wave Movement and Mystical Sun. Compiled & mixed by Mike G at Rubycon Sound, August-September 2011. If you like a track/s please support the artists and buy/stream the source albums. Full tracklist at AmbientMusicGuide.com
Show for Mid-April …. the sun is getting it's power back in Cyprus! Positive energy booster through your speakers with the World Première of the new NIMANTY album - Time Space Light - set for release date April 27. An early arrival in the Spacemusic podcast! We scratch the surface of this new work by Dutch Ambient musician Nimanty and we're absolutely sure you will like it. “ Seldom you hear an album that creates such spectacular space and deep listening experience! “ TC Absolute stunning tracks in one-go featuring David Helpling, Nimanty, Meg Bowles, Dreamstate Logic, Erik Seifert, Josef Steinbuechel, Nicholas Gunn, Stellardrone, Drøn, Laroth, Andrew Heath, Anne Chris Bakker, Forest Robots. Best measure for you to comply with : tune in and enjoy your License to Chill START … 0:00:00 - This is Spacemusic 13.7 “ License to Chill ”0:00:46 - As The World Falls Away - DAVID HELPLING0:06:08 - Time - NIMANTY0:12:28 - Space - NIMANTY0:19:43 - Chalice of Shadows - MEG BOWLES0:23:31 - Operation Terra - DREAMSTATE LOGIC0:28:35 - Timelapse - SEIFERT & STEINBUECHEL0:32:15 - The Unfolding - NICHOLAS GUNN0:35:34 - Electron - SEIFERT & STEINBUECHEL0:38:56 - Rendezvous With Rama - STELLARDRONE0:46:32 - Star Bathing - DRØN0:47:28 - Aetherium's Neural Machine - LAROTH0:52:49 - The Apostle's Benediction - ANDREW HEATH & ANNE CHRIS BAKKER0:59:15 - Sustenance Comes From The Roots, Not The Height - FOREST ROBOTS …END ———> NEW SHOW NOTES VERSION ———> PLEASE SEND ANY FEEDBACK IF YOU WANT ———> admin@ambient.zone ———> visit our site www.ambient.zone ———> SUPPORT THIS STATION https://paypal.me/ambientzone
A record-breaking adventurer sets his sites on the English Channel, a seamstress becomes an advocate for her child and a young woman is recruited into the world of Secret Agents during World War II. Hosted by Senior Producer, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Tim FitzHigham, Catherine Cross, and Noreen Riols.
It's a Cloud full of Sound today … More music for your ears than words can describe ✨Featuring Nicholas Gunn, Alina Renae, Banco de Gaia, Meg Bowles, Fallen, City of Dawn, Martin Stürtzer, Blue is Nine, Erik Wøllo, Michael Stearns, Andrew Heath. " It may be that the words I spokeTo cheer him on his way,To him were vain, but I myselfWas braver all that day. " ------ Winifred Webb ----- We hope the music brings you strength, hope and joy.Whatever you do and wherever you are! ~ START… 0:00:00 - Welcome to Spacemusic 13.3 “ CloudSound ”0:00:51 - The Promise - NICHOLAS GUNN ft ALINA RENAE0:04:21 - Language - NICHOLAS GUNN0:10:39 - Kintsugi - BANCO DE GAIA0:10:41 - Evensong - MEG BOWLES0:22:17 - La Mia Preghiera - FALLEN0:27:38 - Quiet Years and Broken Shells - CITY OF DAWN0:31:35 - Nightscape - MARTIN STÜRTZER0:37:19 - Rinascita - FALLEN0:31:50 - A Pool Appears - BLUE IS NINE0:44:49 - Electrical Pylons - BLUE IS NINE0:47:23 - Stable Wormhole - MARTIN STÜRTZER0:54:48 - Room with a View - FALLEN1:00:31 - The Way Ahead 1 - ERIK WØLLO & MICHAEL STEARNS1:05:33 - The Muse and her Dreams - ANDREW HEATH …END ———> NEW SHOW NOTES VERSION ———> PLEASE SEND ANY FEEDBACK IF YOU WANT ———> admin@ambient.zone ———> visit our site www.ambient.zone ———> SUPPORT THIS STATION https://paypal.me/ambientzone
A classic piece of electronic spacemusic from France by JEAN-MICHEL JARRE. With just a few notes, it creates a whole world of mystery and imagination. Slow, deep, romantic and sublime, it invites us into a place that's unknown and unpredictable, yet alluring. It's true that all good music takes you away, but since the 1970s artists have been using electronic tools to craft a sound that takes you to places far beyond the reach of ordinary music. Dark ambient electronics have become a vehicle...for transport to deep virtual worlds and exotic environments. On this transmission of Hearts of Space, a journey on the dark ambient spaceways, on a program called MYSTERIOSO. Music is by JEAN MICHEL JARRE, A PRODUCE & LOREN NERELL, PAUL ELLIS, MEG BOWLES, RICHARD BONE, ERIK WOLLO, KIT WATKINS, and ANDREW LAHIFF. [ view playlist ] [ view Flickr image gallery ] [ play 30 second MP3 promo ]
A special celebration from the world of science, from the 8th grade science fair to the Nobel Prize Award Ceremony in Stockholm, Sweden. This hour is hosted by one of The Moth’s Senior Directors, Meg Bowles.*The Moth Radio Hour *is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by Storytellers: Sarah Schlesinger, Robin Frankel, Deirdre Bowen, and Roald Hoffmann.
In this hour, four stories of lessons learned. Lessons of sharing, flirting, parenting and religious texts. Hosted by Meg Bowles, Senior Producer. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Meg Bowles Storytellers: Ashok Ramasubramanian, Jane Green, Shayk Umar, Cybele Abbett
PLAYLIST MÚSICAS IMAGINADAS 4 DE NOVIEMBRE DE 2019 - JEFF OSTER. Onward (Reach, 2018) - MARCIA WATSON BENDO. Planting Moon (Woodland Moons, 2018) - RYAN JUDD. Looking Back (An Open Sky, 2018) - LYNN TREDEAU. Fellowship of Solitude (Fellowship of Solitude, 2018) - HEIDI BREYER. Unfinished Conversation (Moonlight in Empty Rooms, 2018) - DAVID ARKENSTONE. Lonely Satellite (Colors of the Ambient Sky, 2018) - MEG BOWLES. Hymnus (Evensong: Canticles for the Earth, 2018) - KERANI. Celtic Mystery (Small Treasures, 2018) - DAVID WAHLER. Mosaic (Mosaic, 2018) - MAJESTICA. Alpha Orionis (Auriga to Orion, 2018) - VALERIE ROMANOFF. Pink Skies over Still Water (Healing Music vol. 2, 2018) - 2002. Dream of Life (A World Away, 2018)
In this hour, stories of the digital space and its affect on the family connection IRL. From digital carts to hive minds and data collection - closing geographical and temporal distance between past and present. This hour is hosted by The Moth's Senior Director, Meg Bowles. TheMoth Radio Houris produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Meg Bowles Storytellers: Meg Ferrill, Anaïs Bordier, Trina Robinson
In this hour, stories of fear. From daily anxieties to earth-shattering moments of life-or-death terror. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Director, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Meg Bowles Storytellers: Jessica Pan, Nick Revell, Katie Houghton-Ward, Sudhesh Dahad
In this hour, an ancient instrument, a life-changing disaster, and survival in the face of genocide .People who experienced history, and its artifacts, firsthand. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Director, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Meg Bowles Storytellers: Frank Almond, Sivad Johnson, Henny Lewin
Writer and bon vivant, Simon Doonan, sets out on a mission to fulfill a childhood desire; a secret finally catches up with a suburban housewife and mother; a college drop out finds himself in the unlikeliest of places and a young woman sets out to sabotage the wedding of the man she loves. Hosted by The Moth's Curatorial Producer, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Simon Doonan, Marie Walsh, Carlos Kotkin, Jill Donnelly Hosted by: Meg Bowles To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In this hour, four stories of determination, hope and battling for both survival and respect. From bootcamp in Fort Bragg to base camp in Kirkuk, Iraq; from the front lines to the home front. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Director, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Jill Morgenthaler, Dylan Park, Franny Civitano, and Jerry Neal. Sponsored by: www.rocketmortgage.com/Moth www.squarespace.com/Moth www.ziprecruiter.com/Moth To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
I have collaborated with Paul Asbury Seaman and several mixes and I look forward each and every one. Paul's mixes tend to be more ethereal, spiritual than mine and that's why I enjoy them so much. they take me on journeys I would go on otherwise. They way Paul and I work on these mixes is he sends me his well thought out tracklist in order. Then I just mix them together so they flow well. Essentially, Paul does all the heavy lifting. So here is our latest collab - Shimmering Land. Paul had this to say about it: "Meg Bowles is one of the few (prominent) female artists working in the ambient/electronic genre. She has only released five albums, including Evensong earlier this year, seven years after her last one, so there's cause for celebration. All her albums are top-notch ethereal/soothing journeys similar to the tracks by other artists featured here. This mix includes a beautiful piece by Deborah Martin from her recent compilation." I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. Cheers! T R A C K L I S T : 00:00 Meg Bowles - Into the Gloaming (The Shimmering Land 2013) 08:25 Sherry Finzer & Tom Moore - Infinite Space (Whispers From Silence 2016) 14:30 Alio Die - Radiance Revealed (Time Zone Portal 2017) 22:25 Ishq - Scielienta (Lyght 2018) 27:30 Jeff Greinke - High Flyers of the Night Sky (Before Sunrise 2018) 35:50 Meg Bowles - The Forgotten Valley (From the Dark Earth 1999) 42:55 Zero Ohms - Glimpsing the Eternal (Process of Being 2014) 55:00 Deborah Martin - Blue Lake (Selections 2018) 61:10 bvdub - Rainless [R]ivers (A Different Definition of Love 2018) 72:07 end
In this episode from the Moth archives a comic attends her sister's wedding at Disneyland, two guys try to break the Red Sox' curse, the child of two hoarders digs herself out, and a young man doesn't let his lack of eyesight restrict his mobility. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Director, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Jessi Klein, Joe Limone, Alison Minami, and Ryan Knighton. Originally podcasted: 10/1/2013 Sponsored by: www.rocketmortgage.com/Moth www.squarespace.com/Moth www.ziprecruiter.com/Moth To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Hymns to a golden god; new music from Al Gromer Khan, Paul Avgerinos and Meg Bowles.
Hymns to a golden god; new music from Al Gromer Khan, Paul Avgerinos and Meg Bowles.
A woman sets off in search of transformation and ends up in a harem in Bandar Seri Begawan, a teacher discovers her playground has turned into a 3rd grade war zone, singer-songwriter Suzanne Vega debates whether to take the stage at The Glastonbury Music Festival in the face of a death threat, and Damien Echols describes life after spending 18 years on death row for a crime he didn't commit. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Producer, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Originally podcasted: 4/23/2013 Storytellers: Jillian Lauren, Micaela Blei, Suzanne Vega, and Damien Echols Sponsored by: www.rocketmortgage.com/Moth www.squarespace.com/Moth www.ziprecruiter.com/Moth To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In this hour, four stories on saying farewell to family, the past, or sometimes the very earth we stand on. Hosted by Meg Bowles, The Moth's Senior Director. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. Storytellers: Ash Bhardwaj, Courtney Antonioli, Becca Stevens, and Michael Such. Sponsored by: www.rocketmortgage.com/Moth www.squarespace.com/Moth www.ziprecruiter.com/Moth To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Originally podcasted: 2/23/2016 A special hour all about FOOD. Stories from the farm and the table; complete with celebrated chefs and presidential diners. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Producer, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Chris Fischer, Evan Kleiman, Abhishek Shah, and Roy Choi. Sponsored by: www.rocketmortgage.com/Moth www.squarespace.com/Moth www.ziprecruiter.com/Moth To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In this hour, we lean into the moments of rejection, failure, embarrassment, and other stories of the human soul. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Director, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. To view photos and other extras from this episode, visit TheMoth.org. Storytellers: Cynthia Shelby Lane, Natasha Guynes, Matt Brown, and Daniel Turpin. Sponsored by: www.rocketmortgage.com/Moth www.squarespace.com/Moth www.ziprecruiter.com/Moth www.amazonmusic.com www.23andme.com/Moth To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In this hour, we celebrate things we do in the name of love. A woman is asked to choose between her family and the man she loves; a fisherman comes to appreciate his roots; a love song becomes a love story; and a man battles the law to protect his husband's legacy. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Director, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Suzie Afridi, Dan Larsen, Gabrielle Shea, and Jim Obergefell. For pictures from this episode, visit The Moth.org Sponsored by: www.rocketmortgage.com/Moth www.squarespace.com/Moth www.ziprecruiter.com/Moth To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In this hour, stories of doing the seemingly impossible; taking a risk for a chance at love, trusting a gut instinct, believing in a message from beyond and shooting (literally) for the stars. To see photos from this episode visit: TheMoth.org Hosted by The Moth's Senior Producer, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Daniel Heuman, Navreet Chawla, Cathy Olkin, and Ashok Ramasubramanian. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
A woman sets off in search of transformation and ends up in a harem in Bandar Seri Begawan, a teacher discovers her playground has turned into a 3rd grade war zone, singer-songwriter Suzanne Vega debates whether to take the stage at The Glastonbury Music Festival in the face of a death threat, and Damien Echols describes life after spending 18 years on death row for a crime he didn't commit. Hosted by The Moth's Senior Producer, Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Suzanne Vega, Jillian Lauren, Micaela Blei, and Damien Echols. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In this episode we feature four stories about our relationship to home. Yearning for a place to call home, leaving one home in search of another and coming to find beauty and a true sense of belonging. Hosted by Meg Bowles. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Storytellers: Suzi Ronson, Denis Repp, Jonah Lehrer, and Abeny Kucha. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We talk to Meg Bowles from The Moth, the incredibly popular radio show and podcast, about what makes the show tick and their forthcoming show at the London Podcast Festival.
A slow return to the shimmering land: new music by Meg Bowles and the John Puchiele Ensemble.
A slow return to the shimmering land: new music by Meg Bowles and the John Puchiele Ensemble.
July 25th 2013 - Listen.... hear and wow! Fantastic to post a new show in the middle of summer! No summer break this season; here’s a very cool episode filled with the best electronica for your hot summer nights... The track Dreams by Astronaut Ape is coming from the brand new Microcosmos Records release called ‘Ten Minutes Eternity’. File this one under Cinematic Ambient or Soundtrack Electronica if you will.... We are in the World of Sleepers now... Carbon Based Lifeforms still amazes every time I listen to the album; pretty unique release with sweet melodic ambient tracks that one will never forget. And then... iWorld 2.0 by Astronaut Ape. Wow....! Speaking of perfect combinations sound wise: this track says it all, the beats, the synths, the claps, the echoes, the bassline; sweet and melodic so we can drift away further and further into deeper space now... On the train from Berlin to Rotterdam I was listening to older Ultimae releases when this one was on my headphones; James Murray’s album ‘When Edges Meet’ is one of those albums making you feel funny in the head... after listening to couple of tracks back to back, you’ll feel pretty disoriented in a positive sense: this is pure ambient adventure! Satisfaction guaranteed. May God have Mercy on his Sounds and Soul... the Labyrinth series by the late Pete Namlook ft. Lorenzo Montanà. Probably the best Namlook series in our collection... These two souls have worked out an intense chemistry between their musical styles.... Where beauty meets percussion is exactly where Namlook met Montanà. This release should be in every person’s collection! Nice and easy we flow into the final part of this journey... Meg Bowles album ‘The Shimmering Land’ is a beautiful place, where we can sit, walk and think about what we’ve seen so far, what plans we have for the future, it’s like walking on ‘The Isle of Dream’ and that is exactly the title of this track in the mix... Divine Emanation is the logical conclusion for Spacemusic 8.13.... hear and wow! Anima delivers a divine album called ‘Light of Aluna’. Words are not necessary, just listen to this final track (excerpt) and you’ll be ready for a great night of sleep or a big day to be alive and enjoy! TRACKLIST: [00:00] Welcome to Spacemusic 8.13 Hear & Wow! [00:55] ASTRONAUT APE - Dreams Buy the album ‘Ten Minutes Eternity’ here [05:32] CARBON BASED LIFEFORMS - World of Sleepers Buy the album ‘Wold of Sleepers’ here [08:20] ASTRONAUT APE - iWorld 2.0 Buy the album ‘Ten Minutes Eternity’ here [18:43] JAMES MURRAY - Color Has It’s Own Language Buy the album ‘Where Edges Meet’ here [26:07] JAMES MURRAY - Awayward Buy the album ‘Where Edges Meet’ here [32:10] PETE NAMLOOK ft. LORENZO MONTANÀ - Labyrinth part I. Buy the album ‘Labyrinth’ on iTunes here [49:23] MEG BOWLES - Nightwalk Across The Isle of Dream Buy the album ‘The Shimmering Land’ on iTunes here [58:06] ANIMA - Divine Emanation Buy the album ‘Light of Aluna’ on iTunes here [01:02:08] THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT! END.
July 25th 2013 - Listen.... hear and wow! Fantastic to post a new show in the middle of summer! No summer break this season; here’s a very cool episode filled with the best electronica for your hot summer nights... The track Dreams by Astronaut Ape is coming from the brand new Microcosmos Records release called ‘Ten Minutes Eternity’. File this one under Cinematic Ambient or Soundtrack Electronica if you will.... We are in the World of Sleepers now... Carbon Based Lifeforms still amazes every time I listen to the album; pretty unique release with sweet melodic ambient tracks that one will never forget. And then... iWorld 2.0 by Astronaut Ape. Wow....! Speaking of perfect combinations sound wise: this track says it all, the beats, the synths, the claps, the echoes, the bassline; sweet and melodic so we can drift away further and further into deeper space now... On the train from Berlin to Rotterdam I was listening to older Ultimae releases when this one was on my headphones; James Murray’s album ‘When Edges Meet’ is one of those albums making you feel funny in the head... after listening to couple of tracks back to back, you’ll feel pretty disoriented in a positive sense: this is pure ambient adventure! Satisfaction guaranteed. May God have Mercy on his Sounds and Soul... the Labyrinth series by the late Pete Namlook ft. Lorenzo Montanà. Probably the best Namlook series in our collection... These two souls have worked out an intense chemistry between their musical styles.... Where beauty meets percussion is exactly where Namlook met Montanà. This release should be in every person’s collection! Nice and easy we flow into the final part of this journey... Meg Bowles album ‘The Shimmering Land’ is a beautiful place, where we can sit, walk and think about what we’ve seen so far, what plans we have for the future, it’s like walking on ‘The Isle of Dream’ and that is exactly the title of this track in the mix... Divine Emanation is the logical conclusion for Spacemusic 8.13.... hear and wow! Anima delivers a divine album called ‘Light of Aluna’. Words are not necessary, just listen to this final track (excerpt) and you’ll be ready for a great night of sleep or a big day to be alive and enjoy! TRACKLIST: [00:00] Welcome to Spacemusic 8.13 Hear & Wow! [00:55] ASTRONAUT APE - Dreams Buy the album ‘Ten Minutes Eternity’ here [05:32] CARBON BASED LIFEFORMS - World of Sleepers Buy the album ‘Wold of Sleepers’ here [08:20] ASTRONAUT APE - iWorld 2.0 Buy the album ‘Ten Minutes Eternity’ here [18:43] JAMES MURRAY - Color Has It’s Own Language Buy the album ‘Where Edges Meet’ here [26:07] JAMES MURRAY - Awayward Buy the album ‘Where Edges Meet’ here [32:10] PETE NAMLOOK ft. LORENZO MONTANÀ - Labyrinth part I. Buy the album ‘Labyrinth’ on iTunes here [49:23] MEG BOWLES - Nightwalk Across The Isle of Dream Buy the album ‘The Shimmering Land’ on iTunes here [58:06] ANIMA - Divine Emanation Buy the album ‘Light of Aluna’ on iTunes here [01:02:08] THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT! END.