How to Submit

If you have an idea for a sonic haiku, we’d love to hear from you. Email us at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). Include a telephone number and we will contact you if we need more information.
If you interested in making a haiku yourself, keep reading.

Submission Guidelines

We’re looking for mini-audio shorts with a vivid sense of place - specifically, a Michigan place.

Think evocative… transporting, familiar, quirky or all of the above.

Think short…. Like haiku, these are short but full: a moment, carefully observed. Sonic Haiku on the radio are 30 seconds in length, total. (Your contribution will be 20 seconds max. However, please send us good ‘trail’ before and after the 20 seconds.)

Think Michigan…. We’re looking for Sonic Haiku that create a vivid sense of place somewhere in the state. A Sonic Haiku can feature narration, interview or simply the sound of the place itself. It can also be a memory of a sound.

Really, 20 seconds?! Can you give me an example?

Visit the main Sounds of the State to listen to examples. These examples take different approaches, but they’re all inspired in some way by this question: “When you think of a memorable sound somewhere in Michigan, what do you think of?”

Format:

Length: Your haiku needs to be 20 seconds maximum, although the actual audio you deliver may contain up to 10 seconds of trail at the beginning and the end so that we can mix the into and outro elements smoothly.

Be prepared to revise. These 20 seconds of audio need to be vivid and utterly precise while maintaining a sense of shape. It’s surprisingly challenging! We can help if you’d like feedback.

Source of Sounds: Your piece should be inspired by the sounds of Michigan. We’re interested in real experiences and real sounds so your piece should include original source recordings, either through an interview or a field recording.

Looking for ideas? We are especially interested in sounds and memories having to do with the seasons, iconic Michigan locations, Michigan industries and sounds from the western and northern parts of the state.

Process for submission:

Submit your sonic haiku as an mp3 to: .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). Include the title of the haiku and a one sentence description of the piece. Also include your daytime phone number in case we need to contact you.

If the piece is chosen for broadcast, we will contact you. The piece will be packaged and then broadcast on Michigan Radio intermittently throughout the year.

Deadline/ Timeframe:

This is a rolling call.

What’s in it for me?

Well, at this point we can’t offer compensation other than this: the chance to play in the audio sandbox with other radio/audiophiles, plus, the chance to hear your piece on one of the best NPR stations in the country! Your haiku will also appear online, along with credits, at http://www.soundsofthestate.org.

Where did this idea come from?

We take playful inspiration from two great audio projects: the Sonic ID project at WCAI as well as the Third Coast Festival Short Docs competition.


Sounds of the State is curated by Stephanie Rowden and Katherine Weider. Series music by Michael Gould.

Interested in an internship with Sounds of the State?