Billede af showet Out On The Ocean

Out On The Ocean

Podcast af Dominic Black

engelsk

Kultur & fritid

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Immersive conversations about how we're each of us navigating our way through life - written, presented and produced by Dominic Black.

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9 episoder

episode Episode 9: Skyscraper Stan cover

Episode 9: Skyscraper Stan

This is a podcast about living and this episode has a lot of it: the Fitzroy underground scene; the excesses of youth; being in a band; being in a society sleepwalking towards environmental catastrophe. You know, happy stuff. Doomscrolling, yelling into the chasm; books, crooners and gentrification. AND crackin songs. In this episode Stan plays: I Fell Over Flag of Progress A Little Light 21st Century Lullaby and a quick song that doesn't yet have a name... You can find Skyscraper Stan and the Commission Flats music at bandcamp: https://skyscraperstan.bandcamp.com/ [https://skyscraperstan.bandcamp.com/] And videos, gig details and other stuff at https://www.skyscraperstan.com.au/ [https://www.skyscraperstan.com.au/] Thanks so much Stan - what a treat.

10. mar. 2026 - 1 h 50 min
episode Episode 8: Spring Andante cover

Episode 8: Spring Andante

In the almanac of Ireland on RTE the writer Manchán Magan talks about the word magh – a measurement of distance in the old Irish – the distance that a bell or a cock-crow can be heard. Magh. I’ve been thinking of that idea for a couple of years now since I first heard it from my friend Colette Kinsella who produced that show – a fantastic radio producer and like-minded lover of sounds and the way we inhabit a world of sounds, and they – sounds – they inhabit us. You can find the episode I'm talking about here. [https://www.rte.ie/radio/podcasts/series/32164-the-almanac-of-ireland/] I met Colette when I was living in The Hague in 2023 and we hit it off immediately, not least because we shared a love for a bakery called Kitty’s Kitchen run by a most inspirational woman called Mary Bruton – though that’s another story. So me and Colette would meet in the morning, have scones and coffee, and talk about radio and sound and splashes and history and crack. And in the way of all the most fantastic friendships do, I’d always come away with my heart abuzz and my head ringing with ideas, the freshest of breezes blowing through me, and joy – how’s that for a far north Antrim man – joy at having spent that time with Colette. The distance a bell ring can be heard from the church – on a Sunday morning in The Hague the bells still ring as they have for centuries it seems like, a sound I miss now I’m no longer living there. The ringing, the voices of those bells, carrying out from the church tower through the air, over the hedges and ditches and streets and canals, grachts and puddles and briars and lawns and trams and shops – to us, me and Colette, sitting drinking coffee together. I’m going to play you something today – it’s very short. much shorter than this introduction – that I recorded in 2012 or so. It’s a poem by a fella called Phil Sprang, who became a friend very dear to me. I met him when he was 70 or so and he was a still a broad, slightly forbidding figure in an eternal plaid shirt. Who shook hands like a man who’d been on the tools all his life; would greet you with an arched eyebrow and a grim sceptical at eye, then a smile and he’d ask you in. He was a poet, Phil – a storyteller, house-builder, dramatist and writer, a San Francisco beatnik in the 60s, a sufi mystic in England in the 70s, a trekker and bluffer, and a lover of baseball, who’d pour a couple of glugs of Baileys into his morning coffee; a ghost of times past in Seattle’s great once literary boozer The Blue Moon Tavern and a string of other andcient drinking shops in Pioneer Square in the 60s; a student of the great American poet Theodore Roethke at the University of Washington, a skier a football player and a drinker of a couple of bottles of starpramoen pilsner each winter afternoon as we would sit talking in the glowering twilight; a man who described his life as a mystery in which he somehow managed to remain upright with no visible means of support. Who told me he didn’t fear death, he was curious to move onto the next stage of the journey and find out what was up ahead, round the bend. I last saw Phil in 2022 a few months before he died…I visited in him his retirement home, he’d had his beard shaved off and didn’t look like himself. He seemed shorn of more than his beard somehow, lying in a bed with the TV at the foot of the bed on all the time. When I told him I was there he reached out his hand, and called out to his first wife, then already gone, ‘Noni, Dominic’s here.’ I played him some of the things we’d recorded, sat with him on afternoons as the sun shone bright and blustery outside – that deep, West Seattle sunlight. I need a word that does for friendships what magh does for that ringing bell…a word for the distance from which friendships can still be felt within us, despite the passing of time and the vast spaces separating us. That they CAN still reach us even after all the seconds minutes hours days weeks months years that have passed, those friendships, seems miraculous, miraculous, and yet we feel them – ringing as they do within us like – well, a bell, what else…out across the water on a clear morning. This is Phil Sprang, my friend, the poet, Out on the Ocean. ---------------------------------------- You can hear more of Colette Kinsella's work at Red Hare Media - check it out. A treasure trove of lovely audio pieces. https://www.redharemedia.ie/ [https://www.redharemedia.ie/]

10. feb. 2026 - 8 min
episode Episode 7: Wet was the day, cold was the ground cover

Episode 7: Wet was the day, cold was the ground

And so in the end up where did Granny Brown go And what about Granda Leo Aunty Julia, Uncle James and their wee dog Rona Bernard, and Gerard and Roy Something to do with roving at night Something to do with the water A backyard lit by the kitchen light Something to do with the water Mum and dad, Bernie and John Ellie and James and Gerald, John Cochrane, John Francis and Uncle Ben Mary, Marie and John Butler Something to do with the kettle not boiled Something to do with the meal Something to do with the best china cups and The smokers around for their tea Something to do with the sycamore tree Something to do with the rowan Something to do with the hazel bush Something to do with the season Polly and Jeanie and old Billy Greer Paddy and Jack and Arthur Arty McAllister, Dessie McKeown Tony and Mrs. McKinley Something to do with the river in flood Something to do with the blackthorn Something to do with the red shade at night Something to do with the morning Something to do with the wheels of the world Something to do with the gulder Something to do with the wheel of the hurl And the eternal chip on the shoulder Something to do with the rose in the heather There’s cows coming down through the orchard Something to do with the weeds in the lane And evening out on the ocean Something to do with the chapel and clay Something to do with the sound Of a dog barking down round the end of the road Wet was the day, cold was the ground

7. feb. 2026 - 2 min
episode Episode 5: The Freedom of Harold Moss - Part 2 cover

Episode 5: The Freedom of Harold Moss - Part 2

Episode 4 of Out On The Ocean tells the first part of the story of Harold Moss - listen to that first. Thenmeet us back here. Recorded on March 14th 2016 in Tacoma, Washington, this second recording picks up the story from the early 1960s, and details the formation of the Tacoma Urban League; Harold's work with the NAACP; his route into local politics and the events that led to him being appointed Mayor of Tacoma in 1994. Harold's own reflections are fascinating and affecting, and he speaks with such a passionate intensity at times - though with a laugh always just around the corner. What this interview also gives us is an insight into the political landscape of the city of Tacoma throughout his time there. And while that might seem, on first listen, like a very particular set of circumstances, what's most striking is how so many of the fractures in American political life that Harold describes seem traceable right up to the prersent day. There is a treasure trove of material on Tacoman politics at HistoryLink.org - the online encyclopaedia of Washington State history. If you want a fuller account of the recall process that led to Harold first joining Tacoma City Council, check out this essay by Bill Baarsma - himself a former mayor of Tacoma: https://www.historylink.org/File/22806 [https://www.historylink.org/File/22806] The audio interview with Harold Moss was recorded as research for the HistoryLink essay on his life. Special thanks to Jennifer Ott and HistoryLink for granting permission to broadcast this audio. You can find the full essay here: https://www.historylink.org/File/20125 [https://www.historylink.org/File/20125] Harold Moss died on September 21st, 2020. If you liked this episode, please do share it and give it a review in ye olde podcast styllee fashion. Thanks, and see you soon, Dominic

13. nov. 2025 - 1 h 9 min
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En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
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