The Signal in the Air — When Your Work Travels Without You
By Rafi Mercer
It is a strange feeling hearing your work arrive somewhere before you do.
Not physically — but atmospherically.
This morning, a small signal reached me. A mention of Tracks & Tales drifting through the airwaves of Monocle Radio — a network I’ve listened to for years while travelling, writing, and sometimes simply sitting with a record turning beside me.
I have always liked radio for one simple reason: you never quite know where it will land. A broadcast leaves a studio and disappears into the world — slipping quietly into kitchens, taxis, hotel rooms, and headphones on long walks through unfamiliar cities.
And now, somehow, this small listening project has entered that current.
The moment felt subtle rather than dramatic. No fireworks. No announcement. Just a quiet realisation that something which began as a single sentence on a blank page has begun to move through the cultural atmosphere.
The sentence, if you remember, was this:
No one listens anymore.
Or perhaps more precisely:
We gave away our attention in return for convenience.
That thought stayed with me for years. Through the end of record stores, the rise of streaming, the strange compression of music into background noise. And yet, alongside all of that, something else was happening too — something quieter but far more interesting.
People were beginning to listen again.
Vinyl returning not as nostalgia but as ritual.
Listening bars appearing in cities from Tokyo to London to Los Angeles.
Small rooms dedicated not to volume, but to presence.
A slow correction.
When Tracks & Tales began, it wasn’t a business plan. It was more like an act of cultural cartography. A way of mapping the places where sound still matters.
Cities.
Rooms.
Albums.
Moments where music is not merely heard, but attended to.
Over the past months that map has grown in ways I could never quite predict. Thousands of pages written. Tens of thousands of readers arriving quietly from around the world. The first subscribers — not customers exactly, but early believers in the idea that attention itself might be worth protecting.
And now a small ripple in the radio waves.
Hearing the project mentioned on Monocle felt fitting for another reason too. Monocle has always understood something that many media platforms forgot: that culture lives in places.
In cafés.
In record shops.
In the slow rituals of cities.
The world is not just information — it is atmosphere.
And atmosphere is built from sound.
For those curious about the programme itself, the segment aired within The Stack, one of Monocle’s long-running cultural broadcasts exploring global media and publishing — you can explore the show here: monocle.com/radio/shows/the-stack/.
And if you’d like to hear the moment itself, the conversation appears within this episode:
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/episode/2fH61r8vn5ULFwws6YehZj?si=qd23CtfTTluUHF0Igtx6vg
or
Apple:
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-stack/id557523504
What struck me most about hearing the mention wasn’t pride. It was perspective. The project is still young. In truth, it is only just beginning to take shape. A few thousand readers is not a movement. A mention on the radio is not a destination.
But it is a signal.
A sign that somewhere, someone else is hearing the same frequency.
I often think about how ideas travel. Not through advertising campaigns or aggressive growth strategies, but through resonance. Someone reads something that feels true. They mention it to a friend. A journalist notices it. A radio presenter speaks about it on air.
The signal moves.
And eventually, if the frequency is right, it finds the people who were already tuned to it.
That is the quiet ambition behind Tracks & Tales. Not to shout about music, but to protect the spaces where listening still happens.
The rooms.
The records.
The small cultural rituals that remind us attention is not something to surrender lightly.
Because once you begin listening again — really listening — the world starts to sound different.
And when that happens, something remarkable occurs.
You realise the signal was always there.
You just needed to tune in.
Quick Questions
What is this essay about?
A reflection on hearing Tracks & Tales mentioned on Monocle Radio — and what it means for a small listening project beginning to travel beyond its origin.
Why does radio matter here?
Radio represents cultural transmission. A signal leaving one place and arriving unexpectedly somewhere else — much like ideas about listening culture spreading quietly across cities.
What does the moment represent?
Not a finish line, but an early signal that the frequency of Tracks & Tales is beginning to resonate with others.
Rafi Mercer writes about the spaces where music matters.
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