In the Southern Illinois region of Little Egypt, a sound recordist revisits the flat fields where once stood Pyramid Courts - the housing projects that formed the heart of the Black community of his hometown, Cairo. His mic gathers sonic ephemera of past, present, and future within the grasses, trees, and skies. Kids play, birds flock, a grandmother and granddaughter sage for protection from evil spirits, and an official who oversaw the projects’ closing reflects on its psychic toll. Throughout, a 1970 private release LP by the United Front of Cairo, a Black power movement led by Rev. Dr. Charles Koen, guides the sound recordist - and us - on a search for connections across struggles for liberation, near and far. On the battlefield, these voices march towards resurgence.