Music To Watch Seeds Grow By

Seeds Excursions

A thoughtfully curated collection of ambient, minimalist, and new-age soundscapes designed to be the perfect soundtrack for moments of sowing seeds. www.musictowatchseedsgrowby.com

Episodes

  1. Jun 17

    Seeds Mix #11: Patricia Wolf’s Wander in the Garden

    Patricia Wolf’s recent release on Music To Watch Seeds Grow By, Yarrow (the 9th edition in the series), emerged from weeks spent at the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory in Gothic, Colorado, working alongside ecologists studying plants, pollinators, and the slow pressures of a changing climate. The album maps a Yarrow’s life from root to seed: the conditions needed to grow, the quiet underground, the moment a flower opens to something that might carry it further. Field recordings from those Colorado summers are woven through the compositions, leaving room, as Wolf puts it, for the natural sounds to come through – her way of sharing an emotional inner life when thinking about these environments. For this mix, Wolf turned her attention to morning. Imagining this year’s Watching Trees festival crowd coming down from a long night of dancing – we talked her through in the afterglow of this year’s edition. Wolf built A Wander in the Garden for that specific threshold hour – somewhere between nine and ten, when birdsong starts to reassert itself and the body wants something slow, expansive, and unhurried. The anchor track arrived first: the Cosmic Tones Research Trio’s Photosynthesis, from which everything else grew. What follows is a walk through an imaginary garden with several climates – shade beneath a linden tree, open meadow thick with yarrow and field poppy, a pine grove smelling of warm sap, an orchard of cherries and mulberries just beginning to ripen. If she had to name the plant that holds this hour best, Wolf chooses lavender: something with a direct line to the nervous system, a quiet insistence on calm. A Wander in the Garden feels like it was made for a specific time of day – that early morning threshold before the world fully wakes. What does that hour feel like to you, and what does the garden sound like then?When I made this mix I was thinking about your Watching Trees festival and while I was unable to be there, I had fun with this mix pretending that I was in charge of the music in the morning when people would be waking up after a long night of dancing. With that in mind, the time might be somewhere between 9 and 10am, many hours after sunrise, but still early enough to feel like morning. The garden wouldn’t be silent then, but natural sounds would be more prominent. People in the garden would notice birdsong, the sound of the wind in the trees, the sound of animal footsteps and calls. You imagined an audience just coming down from a night of dancing. How does that change what you reach for musically? Is there a particular plant or part of the garden that holds that same quality of gentle landing?After a night of physical exertion and heavy mental stimulation it is nice to listen to something more calm, slow, and expansive. If I had to choose a plant in my imaginary garden to pair with this relaxing experience, I’d choose lavender. It has a powerful calming effect on the nervous system. Was there a specific moment on the walk – a particular turning, or a sound — that the mix grew out of?I was listening to the Cosmic Tones Research Trio’s new album and when I heard their track “Photosynthesis” I knew that I had to use that one for this mix. From that track the mix grew and grew. If the garden at that hour had a temperature, a colour, a smell – what would they be?This garden would be quite large and would have a few different microclimates to allow for many species of plants to grow. Since this is a wander through the garden, I imagined the garden to be a dynamic one .The area beneath the old linden tree would be fragrant with its blossoms. It would also be cool and dark in the shade. Then, in an open meadow, there would be a large variety of native wildflowers with bumblebees, butterflies, and honey bees flying from flower to flower. That area would be a bit warmer since it’s exposed to the direct sun. It would be a multicoloured space with Yarrow, Everlasting-Pea, Wild Chamomile, Cleavers, Columbine, Creeping Thistle, Field Poppy, and many other flowering plants. When the wander takes you to the pine grove, the warm smell of sap can be detected. A bit further on is an orchard with cherries, apricots, apples, plums, figs, mulberries, and pears. The mulberries and cherries are fragrant and ripening. You can smell their fruit and take some to eat. Birds and plants share the same early morning – birdsong is often the first sign that something is growing, moving, returning. How do you hear birds in relation to the garden? Do they feel like part of it, or visitors to it?I have a strong belief that all life on this planet is interdependent and entwined. Birds rely on plants in many ways; sometimes for food, sometimes for nesting, sometimes as a place to hide. In turn, many plants rely on birds for seed dispersal. Did you know that a seed that has passed through the digestive system of a bird or animal has a significantly higher chance of germinating? Resident bird species will likely use the garden year-round, but migratory birds will only use the garden as a temporary stop as they travel to their intended destination. What’s the first plant you notice when you step outside in the morning, and does it ever find its way into what you make?Imagine that I am at this festival, and the first plants that I notice are the old, strong oaks. I like to think of the entire ecosystems when working on music inspired by nature. In that way, oaks have found their way into my work. Seeds need darkness before they need light. Do you think music made for early morning carries something of that same in-between quality – not quite night, not yet day?I think that music and art made on the cusp of something should carry a bit of all that it encompasses. The transition from night to day is a mutable time and should transform gradually. How do environmental sounds – birdsong, wind through leaves, the first insects – find their way into what you make?I do field recording and am very attracted to listening to the natural world. I like to release the field recordings without music, but sometimes I get a strong feeling when I am on a particular excursion or while listening back to the recordings and feel inspired to compose music to it. I like to play with the bits of empty space in the recording and leave room for the natural sounds to come through. It’s my way of sharing my thoughts and emotional inner life when I am thinking about these environments. Check out her Seeds release here Soundcloud Instagram Tracklist: The Cosmic Tones Research Trio – Photosynthesis}Andrew Pekler – Waterway RhythmAndy Aquarius – Under Der LindenSlowfoam – Divine Morpho, Shimmering (feat. RAN PARK)Luke Wyland – PollinatorsBonnie Prince Billy – Willow, Pine and OakSaloli – ButterflyJohn Carroll Kirby – Messages in WaterMaxime Denuc – PapillonsGraintable – Rain in the TreesPhil Geraldi – Chorus in GreenGreen-House – Under the OakYu Su – Ripe FruitsOlof Dreijer – Fern Valley This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.musictowatchseedsgrowby.com

    1h 2m
  2. May 4

    Seeds Mix #10: Salamanda’s A Cradle for Basil

    Seeds Mix #10: Salamanda's A Cradle for Basil“Everyone needs a moment of silence every once in a while,” Basil seems to know this, too. Salamanda create a bed for Basil’s germination. Watching something small grow in your kitchen makes you pay close attention. The Seoul-based duo Salamanda and the next artist stepping up for Seeds understand this. Uman (Sala) and Yejin (Manda) spent a day watching a single basil plant on a windowsill, noticing how the light shifted across its leaves, water gathered at its roots, and time slipped by. What started as a simple observation turned into a meditation on the inner life of a plant and what it means to really listen to something living. Basil droops in the cold, grows too fast in the heat, and can wilt from too much attention; it needs a moment, too. Salamanda noticed that this silence is a pause for space, where the real growth happens. For them, music fills that space… Manda talks about understanding her own feelings by looking at her plants. When she feels down, the plants seem to react. They reflect something back: being present, paying attention, and giving and receiving care. This mix comes from that kind of language, asking you to keep coming back to care for the same small plant. If basil could think, what would it think of you? Get your headphones on. Listen to the way a plant listens to light…Tracklist:C.Debussy – Piano Trio In G Minor, L 3 – 2. ScherzoOval – Cross SellingSalamanda – introduce my atom which is my favorite oneBadlands – My Time Will Come AgainBon Iver – 29 #Strafford APTSMaxine Funke – Lucky PennyOra Clementi – Paradigm and PlacesSalamanda – KaliVoyage Futur – blending inTulips – RubinSalamanda – hungry snailSalamanda – the blue wineLia Kohl – Car Horns (feat. Patrick Shiroishi)Salamanda – Melting HazardCarl Stone & Asuna – A Salsa NocturneJason Kolàr – 〒154-0011Componium Ensemble – Automata (for celesta, glockenspiel and spring-tank guitar)Salamanda – Full of MushroomsSalamanda – La Fille Aux Yeuh De LinBen Lumsdaine – RenormalizerNueen – Structure of DesirePinkcourtesyphone – to be expected This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.musictowatchseedsgrowby.com

    1h 1m
  3. Mar 10

    Seeds Mix #9: Hamie Jouse’s mixtape for benevolent collusion Kodama

    Deep in the Yorkshire woods, multi-disciplinary artist and producer Jamie House – aka Hamie Jouse – has been quietly splitting light into a thousand tiny rainbows. Best known for his hypnotic visual installations and art direction across DIY music spaces from Old Red Bus Station to Resonance, House found himself at last year’s Watching Trees festival doing something beautifully meta: filming daytime trees to project back onto their evening counterparts through a cascade of prisms. The “arty b******t” behind it, as he puts it, was about bridging gaps of time and space and memory – creating past tense ghosts of daylight. But really, “it just looked pretty, and the trees and sun had it all covered.” Whilst setting up his spectral light show on the Bush of Ghosts stage, Tia and Wil (that’s us) caught wind of the music he was playing. What unfolded in those early morning hours was something special – patient, ambient-soundscapes with a deep understanding of the fractal nature of the forest, where every process is made up of countless sub-processes doing their best impression of one solid bit. This mix captures that philosophy; energised yet gently held, pulsing yet ambient. Mirroring both the slow, steady rhythm of plant growth and the constant, quick reactions within the cells. There are rarely right angles in the forest, just lots of individual leaves doing their thing- a benevolent collusion with the kodama, those forest sprites that House channelled through his psychogeographic, hauntological light work. From the Rhubarb Triangle of West Yorkshire, where he dabbles in ambient matters with his long time friend Aaron during hazy Sunday afternoon straggler zones, overlooking different vistas, House has created something that feels like plugging into the mainframe with beings deep in the woods, under a very full moon. Always bring a memory stick, indeed. Who are you? You, probably ∞♡… Musically though I’m just a product of a load of great communities, bands, parties and people I’ve been with, in and around. In no particular order… Duke, Comfort Peter, Fever, Endless City, Old Red, Resonance, NARR, HCE, Wizold Sage, Dima Rabik, Amateur Hour, Workshop, Map, Slop, LTJ, Phaedra, a Village Mind, Giggle + a few more that never got round to the naming process. Also any I’ve forgotten because it was too much fun. Long live DIY music in all forms, nooks and crannies. Why are you here? I was doing some special lighting for the Bush of Ghosts at Watching Trees which involved filming the daytime trees each day then projecting them back onto their evening counterparts through a load of prisms. The arty b******t behind it is that it was trying to bridge the gaps of time and space and memory, creating past tense ghosts of the daylight. Using the projector as the one light source, the prisms split the beam into thousands of tiny rainbows all containing it’s own unique hue and personality alongside the essence of the original whole. It was inspired by the whole psychogeographic cut up tape drift animism forest sprite faerie kodama hauntological kinda thing but it also just looks pretty and I didn’t realy have to do much cus the trees and the sun have it all covered. As I spent so much time messing with the projectors on the stage I was playing some music during setup and Tia and Wil enjoyed it, so here I am 🙂 I have dabbled in ambient matters with my mate Aaron (A far better gardener and DJ than me) for a looooooong time now, so it has been real nice to share this with a wider audience outside the usual sunday afternoon hazy straggler zones overooking different vistas of west yorkshire. Always bring a memory stick! When are you happiest? I’m trying to be happiest right now but yesterday I found that quite hard and who knows about tomorrow. I do really love plugging into the mainframe and being with beings deep in the woods under a full moon though. Maybe even with some tunes on. Are there specific genres or styles of music that you feel naturally complement the act of planting seeds? Planting seeds is great but it takes a certain amount of energy and foresight to plant seeds right now that you might never even see fully grown in your lifetime. I like to feel energised and gently held by benevolent tunes with a pulse and not too many sudden movements. I feel like planting seeds is one of the biggest movements you can do to reclaim your physical, mental and emotional space from the machine, so lyrics and samples that encourage thought about this process always compliment it nicely. How important is minimalism in music designed for slow, organic processes like plant growth? I feel like minimalism has its place but the natural world can actually be pretty maximal most of the time. It’s just our new world has so much noise we now see that natural chaos as calming. Every process is made up of countless sub-processes, self replicating patterns and individual parts doing an impression of one solid bit. The fractal nature of this is something I like to play with and bring out in music – what is fast and what is slow? What is ambient? It’s totally subjective but I love music which somehow manages to pack itself with energy but still remain relaxed and ambient – that’s very seedish. There’s rarely a right angle in the forest, but you’ll find a hell of a lot of them in the topiary and landscaping of royal gardens. That’s a nice tree, but it would be a lot nicer if it was a cube. Once you zoom in there’s no right angles though, just a load of individual leaves doing their thing doing their best impression of one. How do you approach creating music that mirrors the slow, steady rhythm of plant growth? I love music that manages to mirror this on all levels, some elements showing the slow steady rhythm and some parts mirroring the constant quick reactions and interactions within the cells of the plant. I think we project speed onto the plant from our own perspective when comparing it to the speed at which our lives unfold, but I love to think about how time perception can vary from species to species. What role does silence or pauses play in evoking the growth process in your music? I love to walk as many places as I can and whenever I walk I enforce a strict no-music rule, apart from in emergencies of course. This silence brings an opportunity to do some deeper listening to things like the wind in the trees and the birds doing their thing and the dual carriageway in the distance. These are all very helpful things and can be fed back into the cycle of creation nicely. What instruments or sounds to you evoke the feeling of nature and growth most effectively? Acoustic instruments which require a human to function feel the most natural and fitting for the garden to me. It’s great what we’ve done with synths and electronics in the last 70 years or so, but that’s so new compared to the entire history of nature and humans. I reckon some of the older plants might be a bit confused about kick drums and what they are doing on the turf. We’re all going to have to find a symbiotic relationship though – everybody loves a kick drum sometimes. I like to imagine how many of them I’ve heard in my life and how different it all is now to when you heard the first one. What did you grow in your garden this year? I’m from the Rhubarb Triangle which is almost as exciting as the Bermuda or Wold Newton Triangle. Wakefield is the rhubarb capital of the world, so it would be rude not to grow a bit even if it’s just for bragging rights and crumbles. The trick to good rhubarb is forcing it to grow earlier than it would naturally, keeping it in total darkness, making it constantly reach for a light it is unlikely to find. It’s not too kind to the rhubarb but that’s the truth, it’s not nice but it makes the taste way better for us bigger and more advanced beings doing the harvesting. What do you find most challenging about caring for new plants? I’m actually naturally terrible at caring for plants. I’m trying my best and I really love them but I really do struggle with almost every aspect of it. Plants are the chaos which requires the order of the seasons and surrounding environment to flourish. My current life contains a chaos to order ratio that can be no good for the plants if I’m honest. Maybe when life changes I can be trusted to look after some in my own space. For now I visit them at their own homes and it works well for both of us, I think or hope there’s mutual respect. A cornus is not just for christmas. Have you ever used music or other sensory experiences while tending to your plants?A few of us are working at the moment to create a sensory garden, arranged in separate areas for feel, smell, taste, sight and sound and with the grey areas between the categories seeping into each other’s spaces. There were a lot of different plants, lights and sounds of all descriptions – not one of them will have the power to overwhelm the senses or create a negative experience for any of the other plants or for the people loitering in the flowerbeds. All of them will be a treat for at least one of the senses. Nature is such a holistically sensory experience, I love the idea that gardens are kind of like playlists of curated moments. Check out Jamie’s portfolio: https://www.hamiejouse.co.uk/art Soundcloud: https://www.soundcloud.com/hamie_23 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hamie_jouse Ironic Hill – Chorus Kuzich – Morning SunJohn Haycock ft Rob Dunford – Dapple ShadePalta – Tabt optagelsessssoftpatch – Bowling for LoopsAgron – Should I feel bad for doing ThisWizold Sage – Comfort Heater Christian Kleine – Beyond Repair (Version)Golden Bug & In Fields – BlindEx-Terrestrial – Everybody DreamsTakao – Bird EnsembleDavid Versace – Heart to HeartBarker – Fluid MechanicsShhhhh – Pond Natter420 aka Galcher Lustwerk – Untitled 6Motoko & Myers – PloverZam

    1h 1m
  4. 09/17/2025

    Seeds Mix #1: A Walk In The Woods With Woo

    Organic exploration with our first Music To Watch Seeds Grow By signings… Some musical journeys begin with a whisper, a gentle rustling of leaves, and a breath of sound. For brothers Clive and Mark, aka the legendary Woo, this journey has been unfolding since the 1970s through a four-decad long sonic odyssey of discovery… Their latest output on our very own Music To Watch Seeds Grow By imprint is an ode to Sweet Peas. One of a series of five unreleased albums from their archives, it’s a thoughtfully curated collection of ambient, minimalist, and new-age soundscapes designed to be the perfect soundtrack for moments of sowing these seeds, which accompany every release in quiet reflection. “To our surprise and delight, Sweet Peas can be planted in the autumn and they’ll blossom in the coming spring” notes Clive. To accompany this creation, they’ve created “A Walk in the Woods with Woo” mixtape, where Stevie Wonder’s forest-infused melodies dance with Marlene Dietrich’s vocals and Schubert’s transcendent strings paint aural woodland landscapes. Each track is a seed, carefully planted, slowly unfurling its own unique narrative. It’s a meditation on growth, on patience, on the delicate art of nurturing something beautiful from the smallest of beginnings. FULL INTERVIEW WITH WOO HERE:www.theransomnote.com/music/mixes/se…oods-with-woo/ This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.musictowatchseedsgrowby.com

    50 min

About

A thoughtfully curated collection of ambient, minimalist, and new-age soundscapes designed to be the perfect soundtrack for moments of sowing seeds. www.musictowatchseedsgrowby.com