ID: bdb1a8eb-d1bf-4460-b085-65e920d34571

Reuderink, Peter / SWL BDXC 2262

This was the first time I heard about this project unfortunately. I do hope there are more to come. In The Netherlands I could see the carrier wave kicking in for all movements on 8.0, 9.1 and 9.6 MHz, but too poor to receive modulation unfortunately. I thought I heard a choir in movement XXIV, which was directed to Europe, but it was just to weak to confirm. CW demonstrated its value and although I had to manually decode I could translate part of your poem in movement XXVII. Maybe consider 10 rather than 20 wpm next time? I received nothing on 7.4 or 5.26 MHz in any of the movements.
Thanks for putting all of this together, looking forward to the reception reports of other listeners (especially the SSTV and waterfall pics), looking forward to your QSL! Kind regards, Peter Reuderink, The Netherlands.

Reception Reports

Expand a row below for details.

Netherlands, 52.0841, 4.9022
Date Movement Media
Expand XXV. Saxophonal Stochastic Ghost Resonances
Time
03:53:00
Frequency (MHZ)
9.1
Antenna
Megaloop FX active outdoor loop, 1.2 m diameter
Receiver
ICOM R8600
SINPO
1 4 3 3 1
Note

On both 9.1 and 9.6 I could see the carrier kicking in at 03:53:00 starting Movement XXV.
Unfortunately the signal was too weak to pick up some modulation on 9.6 kHz (which should play saxophone music).
On 9.1 kHz I could clearly recognize the solid tone in the waterfall, at 700 kHz. I made a screenshot of the start of Movement XXV, showing the carrier and the silent tone modulation.

Expand XXVII. Doubt and Circuitry
Time
04:04:00
Frequency (MHZ)
9.1
Antenna
Megaloop FX active outdoor loop, 1.2 m diameter
Receiver
ICOM R8600
SINPO
2 5 2 2 2
Note

CW message. Unfortunately not stable enough for automatic decoding, so I did the first part by ear:
IF MY VOICES LOW GHOSTS SHUNDER MEANING INTO THE (......) YOUR BONES

From the movements this one yielded the best results, despite the fact that the antenna direction was not optimal for Europe. Once again shows the power of morse code. I included an MP3 clip of the signal.