Various Artists
Willem de Ridder & the Radio Art Foundation present Radiola
Dead Mind Records
/
2025
LP
28.99
DMR063
Edition of 200 copies
Incl. VAT plus shipping / Orders from outside the EU are exempt from VAT
Tracklist
1Hessel Veldman
2Rob Terwiel
3Arie Van Der Kooi
4Arthur Berkhoff
5Harry Teunissen
6Ad Van Der Koog
7Paul Van Der Velde
8Eelco Tamminga
9Lex Bruining
10Hubert Kuipers
11Ton Ruckert
12Lorenz Factor
13Ronald T Hart
14Koen Timmermans
15Hans Van Edam
16Peter Deijkers
17Peter Kaars
18Simple Simon

Between 1978 and 1984, Fluxus artist Willem de Ridder did a weekly radio show called De Radiola Improvisatie Salon. Listeners were invited to send in cassettes recorded at home and would get guaranteed air­time. Willem never listened to any of the tapes in advance. No censorship or personal taste were involved, just total artistic freedom. Long before social media existed, he understood that just providing a platform could ignite boundless creativity. Willem was a visionary, always pushing the boundaries of art and mainstream culture, while his interactive radio shows were breaking down the barriers between listeners and producers.

Unknown home tapers and independent artists would share their freshly recorded bedroom experiments with the world and Radiola became a catalyst for the rising Dutch tape scene. When the show gained popularity, broadcasts became open to the public and people would visit the salon to submit their latest cassettes in person. From these live events a network of independent labels emerged, releasing and exchanging cassettes. Punk was fading away but a new alternative to the mainstream was born.

Nobody seems to know what happened to the Radiola master cassettes, but somehow a few boxes survived and were archived by Marco van Dalfsen in 2022. We went through hours and hours of material and eventually compiled this album. A few names might sound slightly familiar, but our goal was to unearth the most obscure hidden gems of Dutch home taping culture. The result is an eclectic mix of ambient, industrial, lo-fi weirdness and experimental music and offers a unique glimpse into a very specific, but still relevant piece of the past.