Episode Synopsis "Walksleeper [naviarhaiku324 - sleeping, walking]"
sleeping, waking the emptiness of my mosquito net Chiyo-ni was born in the Ishikawa Prefecture in 1703. She began writing haiku poetry when she was 6, and her ability was soon recognized even though haiku by women were often dismissed and ignored at that time. Chiyo-ni was strongly influenced by Basho’s poetry (probably because her teachers were his students), but developed her own unique style. Seven days to make music in response to the assigned haiku: to participate visit https://www.naviarrecords.com/about/naviar-haiku Deadline: 25th March 2020 haiku by Fukuda Chiyo-ni http://haikukan.city.hakusan.ishikawa.jp/english/about/index.html picture by Ömürden Cengizhk https://unsplash.com/@omurden\
Listen "Walksleeper [naviarhaiku324 - sleeping, walking]"
More episodes of the podcast Carlos R
- Walksleeper [naviarhaiku324 - sleeping, walking]
- It's getting darker [naviarhaiku100 - Winter evening]
- Paradise by the C [disquiet0191 - heldchord]
- Overclocked [naviarhaiku081 - "tick tock" says the clock]
- Breathing silently [naviarhaiku079 - Silence in the room]
- You've been heard [soundbook016 - Radio Silence]
- Sæmundur's Heel [Soundbook011 - The Black School]