The Listener Podcast

Martyn

The Listening Planet, podcast series draws from a lifetime of recording the natural world across more than 60 countries and five continents, offering listeners an intimate journey into Earth’s most remarkable soundscapes. Each episode immerses audiences in authentic recordings of birds, mammals, insects, amphibians, and entire ecosystems — from fragile rainforests and vast oceans to deserts, wetlands, and remote wilderness. Through these soundscapes, you reveal the hidden voices of nature, the rich diversity of global biodiversity, and the changing health of our planet. Blending storytelling, science, and decades of field experience, the series invites listeners not only to hear the natural world, but to understand its beauty, its complexity, and the urgent need to protect it for future generations.

  1. Grasshopper warbler

    Mar 31

    Grasshopper warbler

    There are moments in life that quietly reshape you. Not with noise or drama… but with something subtle. Unexpected. For me, one of those moments came just outside the suburbs of Birmingham. I had travelled out toward the border of Wales searching for something I had only read about. A bird I had never heard before. The grasshopper warbler. When I finally heard it, I didn’t believe it. It wasn’t birdsong. Not in any way I understood at the time. It was a reel. A continuous mechanical trill, like an insect caught in a loop. My instinct was to look down into the grass, not up for a bird. It confused me. Drew me in. Was it a call… or a song? That moment changed something in me. Because suddenly, the natural world wasn’t what I thought it was. The neat categories disappeared. Birds didn’t just sing like birds. Insects didn’t just sound like insects. Everything blurred. Years later, here in Florida, I heard that same deception again. The grasshopper sparrow. Even the name carries the confusion. And yet this time, there was something else attached to the sound. A weight. The Florida subspecies is critically endangered. That faint, insect-like buzz… is disappearing. And it made me think back to that first moment in the meadow. How innocent it was. How full of discovery. I didn’t know then that some of these sounds would become rare. That one day, hearing them would feel like holding onto something fragile. There are other birds that cross that boundary. The savannah sparrow. The soft ticking trill of the dark-eyed junco. But none of them compare to that first encounter. Because that was the moment I stopped just hearing nature… …and started listening. 🌍 Why This MattersWhen sounds disappear, we don’t always notice straight away. But they are often the first sign that something is wrong. Sound is the barometer of the natural world. And right now… it’s telling us a story we can’t afford to ignore. www.thelisteningplanet.com

    7 min
  2. Eagles

    Mar 26

    Eagles

    I’ve always loved eagles. Not just admired them… loved them. The first time I saw one was in Scotland in 1978, over Glencoe. A golden eagle riding the thermals above Rannoch Moor. It wasn’t flying… it was owning the sky. That moment never left me. Since then I’ve been lucky enough to record them across the world — from the reintroduced white-tailed eagles on the Isle of Rum, to bald eagles in North America, and even the extraordinary harpy eagle deep in the forests of Costa Rica. There are around 60 species of eagle on this planet. Sixty different expressions of power, silence, and survival. And here’s the thing… If an eagle is still there, it means everything beneath it is still holding together. The rivers still have fish. The forests still breathe. The land is still alive. They are not just birds… they are a sign that the system still works. And yet, one of my favourite things about them is this… For all that size and power, their voice is completely unexpected. Not the dramatic scream you hear in films (that’s usually a red-tailed hawk). The real call of an eagle is far more delicate… almost surprising. But don’t let that fool you. Those talons would remind you very quickly who you’re dealing with. I’ve spent my life recording the true voices of the natural world, because reality is always more interesting than the version we invent. And every time I see an eagle, I feel the same thing I did back in 1978… Wonder. Because as long as eagles are still in the sky, there is still something left worth protecting. www.thelisteningplanet.com #TheListeningPlanet #Eagles #Nature #Wildlife #SoundOfNature #Biodiversity #Conservation

    10 min

About

The Listening Planet, podcast series draws from a lifetime of recording the natural world across more than 60 countries and five continents, offering listeners an intimate journey into Earth’s most remarkable soundscapes. Each episode immerses audiences in authentic recordings of birds, mammals, insects, amphibians, and entire ecosystems — from fragile rainforests and vast oceans to deserts, wetlands, and remote wilderness. Through these soundscapes, you reveal the hidden voices of nature, the rich diversity of global biodiversity, and the changing health of our planet. Blending storytelling, science, and decades of field experience, the series invites listeners not only to hear the natural world, but to understand its beauty, its complexity, and the urgent need to protect it for future generations.