A report from Brandenburg! Nassenheide is a small village located 40 km north of central Berlin. A sometimes busy traffic junction determines the local soundscape: The main railway line from Berlin to the ports on the Baltic Sea cuts across a local road which is a byway for trucks driving from east to west, maybe headed towards Hamburg or Rotterdam.
Countless times, every day and every night, a signal bell starts ringing at the crossing gate. The gate closes - cars and trucks approach and stop. The traffic noise is interrupted and the soundscape suddenly changes: Birds, muffled music from cars, idling engines, occasional voices, cicadas. Finally the train passes, creating an acoustic climax.
Over the years, we have been exposed to these sounds which have changed with the modernisation of the railway tracks: Rhythmic sound clusters of train wheels on steel, monotonous sounds of tires rumbling over the tarmac road and the rail tracks, pop music from car radios (Peter Fox forever), the signal bell changing from analogue to digital (2thousandfucking12).
Time to give some sounds back. And add Hong Kong sounds to the local soundscape, create a mix of Nassenheide and Hong Kong sounds.
SissiFM sends recordings from the railway crossing and an interview with Yeung Yang from sound pocket.
SissiFM - wir sagen nie die Wahrheit!
Your queer feminist radio show: We are passionately live, performative to the bones, we love voices, figths and feelings & we will never tell the truth. Every 1. and 3. Sunday at 11 pm on reboot.fm