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  • Welcome to the last episode of Sleeping with the Moon and thank you for listening throughout the year. The December story is called 'The Moon is Cold’.

    … 'The harsh rule of Sun has blistered the land and burnt many lives. Packs of wild dogs hunt without mercy through the long claws of night. Many have been forced to flee and now it is time for us to make our escape along the waterways, searching for safety, longing for a new place to call home.

    As the longest night and darkest hour draw near Beaver sets off on a threatening voyage and finds himself in a land governed by the primitive mind of the Cold Moon.

    A tale of hope, belief, instinct and recognition’ ...

    Dedicated to Awet, Ali and Tahmina

    If you want to hear any of the January-August stories live, meet Michael and participate in creative workshops - run by Michael and other artists - on the splendour of Clevedon Pier in North Somerset (including a bar), you can find more information below.

    https://clevedonpier.co.uk

    01275 878846

    Credits

    Written and performed by Michael Loader

    Music written and performed by Mark Smulian

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    Mind Harp World

    Naturally Bristol

  • Welcome to the latest episode of Sleeping with the Moon a rich mix of sound and words, exploration and worlds.

    Watching the light draining from the November forest of last year drew me into the question of when do I cease differentiating colour and ultimately seeing colour, so I thought having an artist as the protagonist would be appropriate.

    Researching the life and work of poet and artist William Blake has inspired a further deepening of experience.

    … “And you feel warmed in the swell of orange gleaming light; lifted by the blue dome of cloud-streaked sky painted by the wings of angels.

    And you feel wrapped in the burnished bronze of autumnal hues; bewitched by the transfiguring flames of sunset.

    And you feel spellbound by the reflection of Heaven in the depths of a pool; enticed by the smouldering scent of drifting smoke” ...

    Dedicated to an artist I know very well, Gail Mason

    www.gailmason.co.uk

    Credits

    Written and performed by Michael Loader

    Music: created and performed by Martin Solomon and Holly Jenkinson

    Poetry: William Blake

    Photo: Michael Loader

    Produced: Pommy Harmar

    Links

    www.martinsolomon.com

    https://soundcloud.com/hollyjenkinson

    www.naturalbristol.wordpress.com

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  • October’s full moon was called the Hunters Moon by the first Nations and peoples of northern Europe, as it was a time when animals were fattening for the lean winter months and therefore a good time for hunting.

    This month’s story takes its inspiration from last year’s sleep out, a recent autumnal walk along the Wye Valley, the observation of ravens close to my home and the potent symbolism of birds from other cultures.

    Credits

    Thanks go to Ted Hughes for his poetry

    Story and music written and performed by Michael Loader

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    www.naturalbristol.wordpress.com

  • Welcome to the ninth episode from September’s full moon sleep out of last year when Michael made the journey to Devon to meet a friend and then step along the Tarka Trail alongside the full Torridge flow.

    "The sum of our labours is borne, Reaping the sowing through the knowing of timely planting and nurtured growingNow’s the season to pick and savour, relish the flavour, replenish and store,Bung in the freezer before the real winter freezer appears"

    Dedicated to Shaun and friendship

    Thanks to 

    Dominic Hall-Thomas for his drifting, somnolent music which compliments the sense of autumn's slow descent, so perfectly, and

    Pommy Harmar for her production expertise.

    Credits

    Written and performed by Michael Loader

    Music written and performed by Dominic Hall-Thomas

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    www.naturalbristol.wordpress.com

  • Welcome to the eighth episode of Sleeping with the Moon charting the 12 encounters and adventures Michael Loader had in 2021 with the twelve full moons.

    On August 22 the night of a Blue Moon Michael drove just beyond Porlock in West Somerset before walking to The Valley of Rocks near Lynton North Devon.

    With references to Coleridge and Wordsworth; thinking of and meeting friends along the way sharing personal moments and life stories, this episode features music by Amy Summers and ends with a poem written by Michael of the Grey Lady rock that haunts the valley, inspired by Kubla Khan.

    Credits

    Written and performed by Michael Loader

    Music written and performed by Amy Summers - Intermezzo for Piano and Solo Strings

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    Instagram: amy.composer

    soundcloud.com/amy-summers

    www.naturalbristol.wordpress.com

  • In July 2021 I made my way to the shores of the Severn estuary at Littleton on Severn and Whale Wharf intrigued by the story of the whale that came ashore in 1885.

    Inspired by the tale and its location, the tragedy that it stirred and the experiences encountered on a brooding moonless night set the scene for July’s episode of ‘Sleeping with the Moon’ alongside the music of Julian Leeks, the poetry of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the musicianship of double bass player Lizzie Tucker.

    Credits

    Written and performed by Michael Loader

    Music performed live by musician and artist Lizzie Tucker on her double base

    Julian Leeks The Pains of Sleep. To hear Julian’s latest release please go to: https://apple.co/3ALsNBF or  https://amzn.to/3yICI9A or search for “Entwined by Sound World and the Bristol Ensemble” at any good download/streaming site.

    Samuel Taylor Coleridge, The Pains of Sleep

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    www.lamosaics.co.ukwww.naturalbristol.wordpress.com
  • At the end of June 2021 I took off with my friend Mark to West Somerset to walk through the night along the Quantock spine - I felt challenged.

    Meeting, eating, planning and a pint put us in the mood to trek. Here is the result with the help of many moon serenading poets, atmospheric music and for the first time a story that took off into the realms of the imagination, whilst remaining firmly footed in our overnight experience. Thanks for the challenge Mark.

    Thanks to...

    Alfred Noyes, John Milton, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, William Wordsworth and Tamany Baker for their poetry

    Mark Smalley my nightjar lark companion

    Credits

    Written and performed by Michael Loader

    Music written and performed by Martin Solomon. Himalayan Foothills

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

  • Welcome to Sleeping with the Moon charting my 12 full moon sleepovers of 2021.

    Last May I climbed in the evening's dying light onto Cadbury Iron Age hillfort in North Somerset on the eve of our daughter’s birth 22 years ago to the day. 

    The moon rose Jaffa-ripe in the east as the sun sank below the western horizon towards the sea’s high tide range.

    Springtime gestation to early summer awakening blossoms ready to unfurl

    Late spring beginning to full waxing blooming the lunar dance blisters and burns

    28 nine’s growing towards flower child’s becoming the full moon rises and falls

    Late summer conception to late May reception the flower child nears its call

    Thanks go to Lindsey Rose Inman for her song, ’Sing the Pain Away’, which conveys so much vulnerability alongside late spring potency and the fully-fledged power of early summer

    Credits

    Words written and performed by Michael Loader

    Music written and performed by Lindsey Rose Inman

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    https://soundcloud.com/lindsey-rose-inman

    www.naturalbristol.wordpress.com

  • Welcome to Michael Loader’s monthly episodes of full moon sleepovers from 2021. In April last year he climbed the heights of Brockley Combe in North Somerset, in the footsteps of Samuel Taylor Coleridge to meet the ‘Pink Moon’ – a super moon in full glow.

    … “Since becoming a selenophile, a lover of the moon named after Selene the ancient Greek moon goddess, I am looking forward to my first conscious bout of moon delusion tonight when the moon will look even bigger when it appears on the horizon. This eagerly anticipated moment will be accompanied by, I hope, its pinkish hue, due to atmospheric distortion or air pollution; or something more poetic like the awakening energy of spring?” … 

    Credits

    Written and performed by Michael Loader

    Music written and performed by Amy Summers

    Asclepius

    Night

    Instagram: amy.composer

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    [email protected]

    www.naturalbristol.wordpress.com

  • Welcome to the third episode of ’Sleeping with the Moon’ a month by month exploration into the dark, meeting new encounters to inspire fresh enquiry and writing - from my twelve 2021 nightly visitations.

    Native American Indians called the March Moon the Worm Moon for this was the time when worm casts first appeared after winter’s frozen grip.

    Last year in the twilight of late March I walked to nearby woods to meet a friend under clear skies, to ponder and wonder about the riches that the underworld provides, including the mycelium networks and of course the ever present worm.

    "I’ve now been asleep for a total of 20,805 nights, which sounds a lot and I feel the time has come to wake up in the dark and explore what lies in my shadows; to be awake at night and experience the flip side of the ‘day faced coin’. And so I set out on the cusp of betwixt and between in the dusky day-night ...To stand horizontally asleep, and lie vertically awake”

    Credits

    Written and performed by Michael Loader

    Music composed and performed by Holly Jenkinson

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Dedicated to Alan my dear ‘wormy friend' 

    Links

    https://hollyjenkinson.bandcamp.com/https://soundcloud.com/hollyjenkinsonwww.naturalbristol.wordpress.com
  • … "Climbing higher I search for the moon, yearning for its quenching glow, and with cyclopic torch upon my head lighting ground, bush and branch, pronounce that this man with ‘Lanthorn, dog and bush of thorn presenteth Moonshine, for I am the Man I’ th’ Moon’ searching this Athenian wood eager for the reacquaintance of love that slumbers beyond the horizoned edge” ...

    'The Hunger Moon, a name derived from Native Americans appears at the end of winter when game was scarce and edible plants were few for animals and humans. 

    The moon was also known as Little Famine Moon when the threat of famine after long winters was real.

    People in pre-industrial times were acutely aware of the abundance and scarcity of food. Most of us, on the other hand, have lost our connection to those cycles' - Dorian Winslow

    In the second of Michael’s moon sleepovers we walk into Goblin Combe to satisfy our thirst for connection with Nature.

    Credits

    Written and performed by Michael Loader

    Music composed and performed by Mark Smulian

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    marksmulian.com https://mindharp.worldhttps://naturalbristol.wordpress.com
  • We trained the wolf to be our companion, we replaced him to make way for a new best friend and now we fight him through persecution towards extinction or support him with rewilding absolution.

    So, who’s in control and who owns who? Where is the wild and where is the free? Who has been tamed and who owes who? And who will be free howling when the Full Wolf Moon is rising?

    In this first episode Michael tells the full moon story inspired by his sleepover with the Wolf moon of January 2021.

    Credits

    Written and performed by Michael Loader

    Music composed and performed by Martin Solomon. Wind Chimes, Song of Solomon

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    www.martinsolomon.comwww.naturalbristol.wordpress.com