
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


“An improvisation with the natural vibrations of a certain place and time – via plant bioelectricity, latent electromagnetic radiation, and even the earth’s resonant hum…” Tarun Nayar, musician and biologist, captures the song of a mushroom’s bioelectricity, using the movement of water inside fungi and plants as electrical resistance. Like human skin, a mushroom skin possesses electrical properties which can be transposed into sound.
For more plant music, check out his page and full album.
let’s protect wild places ✨
listen to plant ragas 🌱🎶
Lifeworlds Page
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Alexa Firmenich5
1717 ratings
“An improvisation with the natural vibrations of a certain place and time – via plant bioelectricity, latent electromagnetic radiation, and even the earth’s resonant hum…” Tarun Nayar, musician and biologist, captures the song of a mushroom’s bioelectricity, using the movement of water inside fungi and plants as electrical resistance. Like human skin, a mushroom skin possesses electrical properties which can be transposed into sound.
For more plant music, check out his page and full album.
let’s protect wild places ✨
listen to plant ragas 🌱🎶
Lifeworlds Page
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

10,558 Listeners

1,848 Listeners

10,149 Listeners

1,169 Listeners

375 Listeners

1,019 Listeners

503 Listeners

1,648 Listeners

1,045 Listeners

156 Listeners

93 Listeners

1,100 Listeners

411 Listeners

114 Listeners

114 Listeners