
WIRE #468 Feb 2023 MAG
Inside this issue:
Meredith Monk: In the wake of a career-spanning box set the multidisciplinary artist discusses a lifetime of connection and communication. By Emily Bick.
Barbara Dane: The US folk/blues/jazz musician and activist details eight decades of anticapitalist agitation in a new memoir. By Emily Pothast.
Ocen James: The Ugandan Acholi fiddler talks electronic collaborations and riotous wedding jams. By Daniel Spicer.
Invisible Jukebox: aya: Will The Wireâs mystery record selection be poetry to the ears of the UK DJ, producer and vocal artist? Tested by Meg Woof.
Unlimited Editions: Fox & His Friends. By Antonio Poscic.
Unofficial Channels: The Bristol Germ. By Noel Gardner.
Mark Jenkin: The Enys Men director explores Cornwallâs hidden reverse. By Spenser Tomson.
Zaliva-D: Explosive electronics from the Beijing duo. By James Gui.
Territorial Gobbing: Leeds noisenik Theo Gowans cobbles it together. By Abi Bliss.
Jacqueline Nova: Opening the Colombian composerâs archive. By Louise Gray.
Global Ear: Kansai: Fantasy and future unite in southern central Japan. By Miranda Remington
The Inner Sleeve: Audrey Chen on Nakatani-Chen Duoâs LIMN
Epiphanies: The Raincoatsâ Gina Birch on a pivotal encounter with The Slits
...
Inside this issue:
Meredith Monk: In the wake of a career-spanning box set the multidisciplinary artist discusses a lifetime of connection and communication. By Emily Bick.
Barbara Dane: The US folk/blues/jazz musician and activist details eight decades of anticapitalist agitation in a new memoir. By Emily Pothast.
Ocen James: The Ugandan Acholi fiddler talks electronic collaborations and riotous wedding jams. By Daniel Spicer.
Invisible Jukebox: aya: Will The Wireâs mystery record selection be poetry to the ears of the UK DJ, producer and vocal artist? Tested by Meg Woof.
Unlimited Editions: Fox & His Friends. By Antonio Poscic.
Unofficial Channels: The Bristol Germ. By Noel Gardner.
Mark Jenkin: The Enys Men director explores Cornwallâs hidden reverse. By Spenser Tomson.
Zaliva-D: Explosive electronics from the Beijing duo. By James Gui.
Territorial Gobbing: Leeds noisenik Theo Gowans cobbles it together. By Abi Bliss.
Jacqueline Nova: Opening the Colombian composerâs archive. By Louise Gray.
Global Ear: Kansai: Fantasy and future unite in southern central Japan. By Miranda Remington
The Inner Sleeve: Audrey Chen on Nakatani-Chen Duoâs LIMN
Epiphanies: The Raincoatsâ Gina Birch on a pivotal encounter with The Slits
...
Description
Inside this issue:
Meredith Monk: In the wake of a career-spanning box set the multidisciplinary artist discusses a lifetime of connection and communication. By Emily Bick.
Barbara Dane: The US folk/blues/jazz musician and activist details eight decades of anticapitalist agitation in a new memoir. By Emily Pothast.
Ocen James: The Ugandan Acholi fiddler talks electronic collaborations and riotous wedding jams. By Daniel Spicer.
Invisible Jukebox: aya: Will The Wireâs mystery record selection be poetry to the ears of the UK DJ, producer and vocal artist? Tested by Meg Woof.
Unlimited Editions: Fox & His Friends. By Antonio Poscic.
Unofficial Channels: The Bristol Germ. By Noel Gardner.
Mark Jenkin: The Enys Men director explores Cornwallâs hidden reverse. By Spenser Tomson.
Zaliva-D: Explosive electronics from the Beijing duo. By James Gui.
Territorial Gobbing: Leeds noisenik Theo Gowans cobbles it together. By Abi Bliss.
Jacqueline Nova: Opening the Colombian composerâs archive. By Louise Gray.
Global Ear: Kansai: Fantasy and future unite in southern central Japan. By Miranda Remington
The Inner Sleeve: Audrey Chen on Nakatani-Chen Duoâs LIMN
Epiphanies: The Raincoatsâ Gina Birch on a pivotal encounter with The Slits
...











