Transmissions

Community, Oral History, Research Lucia Scazzocchio Community, Oral History, Research Lucia Scazzocchio

XMTR Festival Selects: Slag Speaks (Extract)

Emily Candela (UK 2025)

Emily Candela UK (2025)

5 min

‘Slag Speaks’ centres on a seemingly unassuming specimen found in the backroom archive of the Lapworth Museum of Geology in Birmingham: a small chunk of slag, cast off by a Bilston steelworks in the 1950s. Slag is an industrial by-product of steel production that is found all around the post-industrial West Midlands. While it is indelibly linked to the region, it lacks the public attention and respect reserved for monuments and the monetary value of the glistening minerals displayed in the front of the museum. Slag is easily dismissed. But it is a persistent and powerful reminder of the industrial past. ‘Slag Speaks’ is a polyvocal life story of slag, including voices of a steelworker, curator, geologist and the fictional voice of slag herself. Together, these voices stitch together themes of labour, the blurring line between human-made and natural, and the dynamics of the often-overlooked, or ‘slagged-off’ industrial byproduct and post-industrial region.

Produced by: Emily Candela in partnership with the Lapworth Museum.

It is part Emily’s Arts Council funded Sonic Minerals project that sits at the intersection of her audio and experimental history practices, and explores the role podcasting can play in museums.


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Audo Essay, Research, Storytelling Lucia Scazzocchio Audo Essay, Research, Storytelling Lucia Scazzocchio

Ways of Knowing: Cosmic Visions - Moon Stories

The World According to Sound (US 2023)

The World According to Sound (US 2023)

13 min

The World According to Sound work with universities to translate academic research into sound. Each season has a radically different format and topic. This current series Cosmic Visions
explores the spirit of inquiry, which spans tens of thousands of years, was cultivated by civilizations around the globe, and has been shaped by ways of thinking that may seem at first “unscientific,” but which have led to great leaps in our understanding of the cosmos.  Cosmic Visions is produced in collaboration with Johns Hopkins University.

Storytelling was one of the earliest ways humans tried to make sense of the heavens. The first object of major study was the moon, and that's because of an uncanny ability it has to keep time.

Produced by Chris Hoff and Sam Harnett

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