Comments for In The Land Of The Summer

Caption: photo by Hamed Saber from Flickr

Produced by Mariza Dessi

Other pieces by Littleglobe

Summary: "In The Land Of Summer" is a fictional piece written by Marzia Dessi. Marzia's land of the summer can be seen as an allegory for growing up or the environmental degradation our world is experiencing.
 

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A wonderfully textured piece

“In the Land of the Summer” was certainly unexpected. Marzia Desai gives us a breath of fresh air by weaving her message about the environment into a fictional piece. It is simply written, reminiscent of a vividly illustrated children’s book.
Desai uses music and sound as the pictures that illustrate and give color to her narrative. When fall comes, the sound of leaves rustling in the wind
Her voicing is also full of rhythm and full of texture. She speaks in a sort of monotone, her sentences lilting in the same way each time. Sometimes, this becomes repetitive, but it certainly gives Desai’s piece a character all its own.
I only wish the ending hadn’t been so abrupt. I was hoping for more of a conclusion. Still, this piece is certainly different.
It would be well suited for programming concerning the environment, change, or creative radio.
In the Land of the Summer is a good listen that is worth hearing more than once; each time there is a new idea, a new meaning to the allegory waiting to be discovered.

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Hopi High School

This was a very interesting piece. I try and influence my fellow peers to conduct such pieces as this. The tone and message was very clear. The way it was like a poem with a more "flavor". The background music topped everything off. Very nice. Keep up the good work.

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Hopi High School

This was a very interesting piece. I try and influence my fellow peers to conduct such pieces as this. The tone and message was very clear. The way it was like a poem with a more "flavor". The background music topped everything off. Very nice. Keep up the good work.

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Surprising, mysterious

We usually think of youth-produced features as news, commentaries, vox pops, or public affairs pieces, so Marzia's story is a refreshing change. I loved the juxtaposition of her reading with the sound effects and background music. Marzia's vocal delivery lends a formal tone to a story that seems lighthearted at some moments, dystopian at others. music. Unexpected turns of phrase like, "What is the place you want so much?" surprised me and kept me listening through to the end. But I couldn't shake the feeling that the underlying message of the piece was something very, very dark.