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March 2017

The Circle: The Lowland Hundred

Brought to you by Arctic Circle Radio, the Circle takes you on a one-hour journey based on the most simple and significant of shapes. Every Circle is unique; formed from a guest curator’s musical landscape and they all share the same revolutionary quality: each one ends at the point where it began.

Edition 57 – The Lowland Hundred – “The thought I kept coming back to is summed up by that photo. If a track is a stone and your mind is the still pool, when you hear a track, it makes a splash and its influence ripples out through you. Those ripples grow to encircle you but then you hear another track which creates its own ripples which intersect with the ripples made by the first track and before you know it, you’re dealing with something so complex that even John Venn himself is running for the hills!”

http://www.lowlandhundred.com
http://www.jointhecircle.net

The Hut 25

Welcome to the Hut; a weekly velvety soft sonic celebration brought to you by Arctic Circle Radio. The Hut is a refuge, a cocoon of the finest in new music, spinning a warm glow from the outer-reaches of the snowy wastelands. Presented and produced by Ben Eshmade (with additional sounds and magic from Sone Institute), the Hut is a one-hour transmission from an intensely beautiful musical world.

Edition 25 – featuring music from The Gilded Palace of Sin, The Sleeping Years, Richard Skelton, Nancy Elizabeth and The Big Eyes Family Players.

Presented & Produced by Ben Eshmade for Arctic Circle Radio
www.jointhecircle.net/ben.php

with additional music & sonic trickery by Sone Institute
www.myspace.com/soneinstitute

If you enjoy this show please consider supporting us www.jointhecircle.net/support

Eclectronica 15

Bruce Bickerton [aka 1=”alucidnation” ] treats you to some tasty aural morsels from his library of Vinyl, CD & Digital, tonight featuring tracks by Helen Reddy, My Morning Jacket, Nick Lowe, Prefab Sprout and more.

Chiller Cabinet – Chants, Hymns and Dances

The philosopher Georges Ivanovitch Gurdjieff developed his music originally to accompany the dances and movements that he taught to pupils. The sources for his melodies came from music heard in childhood or on his prodigious and now famous travels, documented in the book (www.gurdjieff.org) he wrote. A lot of explanation for something so beautifully simple, tonight we play tracks from the album Gurdjieff/Tsabropoulos “Chants, Hymns and Dances”, a beautiful album we love on the show.

Eclectronica 11

Bruce Bickerton [aka 1=”alucidnation” ] treats you to some tasty aural morsels from his library of Vinyl, CD & Digital, tonight featuring a special Pink Floyd mix, tracks by Gerry Rafferty, Jackson Browne and more.