
June Solstice 2026 with Stefano Arrigoni
Solstice comes from the Latin solstitium – sol (sun) and sistere (to stand still): the moment when the sun appears to pause in its movement. A brief illusion of stillness. The longest day, the fullest expansion of light, and yet, from this very point, transformation has already begun. The brightest moment already carries the beginning of its own disappearance. Gathering recordings captured during different solstices, across distant places and years, this mix follows movements of appearance, disappearance, and return. Each recording holds a specific moment of listening, a fragment of a landscape that has already changed, a trace of something that cannot happen twice in the same way. Some recordings have been split and reintroduced at different moments, creating small cycles inside the composition. They disappear and resurface, carrying the memory of their previous occurrence while being transformed by their new surroundings. Like seasons, tides, or the movement of light, repetition becomes a way of sensing change rather than sameness. Different environments slowly orbit around each other: distant temporalities briefly aligning, moments of stillness revealing movement, and sounds returning as reminders that nothing ever truly stands still.
Tracklist:
- [00:00 – 03:18] Melissa Pons – The Griffon Vulture Cliff | Portugal
- [03:04 – 03:37] Vladimir Bocharov – Altai Kuyus (part 1) | Russia
- [03.53 – 05:28] David Woje – Mountain Thunderstorm | USA
- [04:11 – 14:33] Andy Martin – A very long chat (part 1) | USA
- [04:17 – 05:25] Jocelyn Robert – Thousands of Kittiwakes Calling | Faroe Islands
- [05:09 – 06:39] Rafael Diogo – Under the Stream | Kosovo
- [05:34 – 09:49] Melissa Pons – Here be Dragonflies (part 1) | Portugal
- [08:59 – 11:55] Axel Macke – Nature is Waking Up in the North Sea Island Juist | Germany
- [11:21 – 15:45] Melissa Pons – Stream in the Summer Mediterranean Forest | Portugal
- [13:41 – 21:06] Andrius Mack – Night Time in a Great Cormorant Colony | Lithuania
- [17:00 – 18:10] Vladimir Bocharov – Altai Kuyus | Russia
- [19:04 – 21:20] Ivo Vicic – Thunderstorm and DC | Croatia
- [20:51 – 24:42] Seth Seeway Willamette -Wetland Oregon (part 1)
- [22:55 – 30:33] Melissa Pons – Here be Dragonflies i (part 2) | Portugal
- [24:12 – 30:07] Jan Brelih – Middle Andaman Mangroves | India
- [29:28 – 40:39] Andy Martin – A Very Long Chat (part 2) | USA
- [35:02 – 40:12] Vladimir Bocharov – Altai Kuyus (part 2) | Russia
- [39:10 – 41:59] Seth Seeway Willamette – Mojave Thunder (part 2) | USA
Stefano Arrigoni is a sound artist and anaesthesiologist based in Marseille whose work explores listening as an active process of transformation. Moving between electroacoustic composition, field recording, and modular synthesis, he investigates the fragile thresholds of perception. Rooted in psychoacoustics, phenomenological observation, and self-experimentation, his practice examines how sonic environments shape the way we perceive, inhabit, and make sense of the world. https://soundcloud.com/stefanoarrigoni
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