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SALONG

SALONG was a group of artists from different disciplines who met at regular intervals to share knowledge and reflect on listening, listening art and listening attitudes.

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start to listen (dutch)

A toolbox for teachers and pupils to grow in their listening website is in Dutch. START TO LISTEN consists of two panels: a listening moment and a class conversation. For this website, we made a [growing] list of fragments. The intention is to listen to one fragment in class at a time [in the suggested order] and then discuss it during a class conversation.

walkingevent

The London Ear: sound-themed guided walk

Listen your way round the City of London on a Sunday morning, and find out about its fascinating sounds – past, present and future. A guided walk like no other, The London Ear explores the City of London through the medium of sound. The walk blends real-time listening with stories about sounds from the City’s

Andrew Stuck
walkingevent

Canal Listening Walk: Kensal Rise to Stonebridge Park

We will walk and listen together along the canal, from Kensal Rise to Stonebridge Park, where we will end up in a cafe and have a chat. This route is 3.4 miles, but we’ll walk slowly, so it will take about two and a half hours.  The idea is to walk in silence, but we

Andrew Stuck
walkingevent

Contested developments in Peckham: A Practical Listening walk

Listening walk through housing estates that face redevelopment

Andrew Stuck

lonning, lonnin

Cumbrian dialect term for ‘lane’ – but a quite specific lane. Lonnings are usually about half a mile long, low level and often with a farm at the end. Many have specific names known only to the local villagers. Hence, Bluebottle Lonning, Lovers Lonning, Fat Lonning, Thin Lonning, Squeezy Gut Lonning or Dynamite Lonning. In the north-east the spelling is lonnin and seems to refer more to an alley than a country lane. The Scottish equivalent is ‘loan’.

Added by Alan Cleaver
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