Sonic Entanglements Podcast examines the history of sound in Southeast Asia, through conversations with sound experts: historians, archivists, sound engineers, artists, and scholars.
Sonic Entanglements Podcast is hosted and produced by meLê yamomo. Thijs van den Geest is our sound engineer and sound editor, and Jean Barcena is our publicity manager. Our theme music is created by Markus Hoogervorst. This podcast is funded by the Dutch Research Organization.
New episodes of the podcast will be regularly uploaded here.
Listen to the latest episode:

2.2 Ramon Santos – Sonic Entanglements Podcast
The second season of Sonic Entanglements entitled “Dari Akar ke Mekar,” (Indonesian for “From roots to blossoms”) is hosted and produced by Gardika Gigih. In this four-part series, Gardika traces how field recordings of Philippine traditional music cultures inspire new works by Filipino contemporary composers. This episode, and the two forthcoming ones, expands on the role of sound archives and their role in reimagining the future of Philippine musical heritage through contemporary compositions. In this second episode, Gardika interviews Ramon Santos, a pioneering Filipino composer and ethnomusicologist. Together, they discuss Dr. Santos' creative process, his experiences with the Ibaloi community in northern Philippines, and the ways in which Southeast Asian music traditions continue to inspire new modes of artistic expression today.
Sonic Entanglements Season 2 is hosted and produced by Gardika Gigih during his research fellowship at the University of the Philippines Center for Ethnomusicology (UPCE), funded by the EU-JPICH Project Decolonizing Southeast Asian Sound Archives (DeCoSEAS).
The Sonic Entanglements podcast is created by meLê yamomo. Our theme music is created by Markus Hoogervorst. For more information, visit www.sonic-entanglements.com.
- 2.2 Ramon Santos
- 2.1 Roan Opiso and Dino Guadalupe (University of the Philippines Center for Ethnomusicology)
- 1.7 Nadja Wallaszkowits (Part 1) | Vienna Phonogram Archive: The Role of Scientific Sound Archive in Academic Research
- 1.8 Nadja Wallaszkowits (Part 2) | How did sound recording and archiving shape the way we listen?
Subscribe to Sonic Entanglements at




