Lacey_Slow Radio.pdf (301.52 kB)
Slow radio, easy listening and the ethics of care
The BBC is just one major broadcaster that has in recent years begun highlighting ‘slow radio’, with broadcasts of immersive sound walks, nature recordings and audio close-ups of nostalgic, meditative or restorative sounds, or by extended long-form or ‘free-form’ features. These are promoted as ‘an antidote to today’s frenzied world’, a chance ‘to step back from the busy hurly-burly of life’. The circulation of sounds described as mindful, relaxing, or serene has only garnered pace with the pandemic. This chapter aims to explore how listening figures in these experiments in ‘slow radio’ and what that might tell us about the ethics of care in broadcast communication. Different modes of listening – distracted or focused, indiscriminate or discerning – have been used as markers of distinction throughout radio history. This is at play in the way ‘slow radio’ is distinguished from ‘easy listening radio’, for example, though they share a rhetoric about care for the listener in providing an acoustic balm for the trials of modern living. Slow radio is commonly framed in terms of an ethics of care for the self, a defensive and privatised response to the ‘malign velocities’ (Noys, 2014) of contemporary life. But there are also signs of a participatory ethic of care in relation to creative practitioners, in terms of “liberating” producers from the shackles of a schedule. The most radical experiments in slow radio, framed explicitly as subversive, work with a more politicised or public ethic of care. This chapter addresses questions about the ethics and aesthetics of broadcast radio and whether there is something specific in these discourses about slow radio about the ethics of the ear.
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Accepted version
Journal
The Listening Biennial ReaderPublisher
The Listening BiennialVolume
2nd edPage range
95-116Pages
184.0Book title
The Listening Biennial ReaderISBN
9783982316673Department affiliated with
- Media and Film Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes
Legacy Posted Date
2022-12-07First Open Access (FOA) Date
2023-01-20First Compliant Deposit (FCD) Date
2022-12-06Usage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
Licence
Exports
RefWorks
BibTeX
Ref. manager
Endnote
DataCite
NLM
DC