WCRS Podcast - yourmusic
Your Music Music from Zimbabwe
1:58:39 minutes (108.63 MB)
2 hours of traditional music from Zimbabwe. In the first hour we feature the Mbira ( pictured here), and in the second hour we have music from the Ndebele people.
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59:24 minutes (54.38 MB)
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Your Music Brandi Carlile and Grace Potter
1:59:26 minutes (109.34 MB)
2 live-recorded concerts. One from Brandi Carlile, and one from Grace Potter and the Noctournals, both of who were headliners at the 2015 Floydfest music festival.
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your music the other southern heritage
1:58:53 minutes (108.84 MB)
folks defending the confederate flag often claim it's a symbol of 'southern heritage". I don't buy that for a hot second. Do you? No one ever asks them what they mean by that, but they volunteer things occasionally - stuff about "states rights" and the imposition of government over-reach. They'll claim that it's "not about slavery and hate". They might as well claim that slavery itself wasn't about bondage or involuntary labor. Their revising of history has a subtler side, however when even more enlightened reflections on Southern culture overlook the experiences of people of color and, in particular, women of color. This edition of Your Music features all female artists from the South who had or have tremendous influence, most of whom were or are not white - a forgotten aspect of "Southern heritage", and one truly worth celebrating. You'll hear Josephine Baker, Big Mama Thornton, Sister Rosetta Tharp, Mahalia Jackson Pura Fe, Memphis Minnie, Hazel Dickens, Bobbi Humphrey, Odetta and more.
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Your Music The Black is Greener on the Other Side
1:58:08 minutes (108.16 MB)
As the South Carolina legislature debates removing the confederate flag, this week's show takes a musical look at the ugliness of racism through the music of racists, and a diverse African American response (don't worry; only the first three songs are racist).
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1:59:52 minutes (109.74 MB)
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1:59:08 minutes (109.07 MB)
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Your Music McCoury x 3
1:59:22 minutes (109.28 MB)
2 live-recorded sets featuring 3 generations of the McCoury family. In the first hour we hear Del McCoury and his band which includes his sons, Ronnie (Mandoline) and Rob ( Banjo) in their set opening the 8th annual Delfest. The second hour is a set from the same festival by a group called the Broomestix, which includes Ronnie McCoury's son, Evan on guitar.
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Your Music Kent State, Banda, and Jingo Ba
1:59:20 minutes (109.25 MB)
1st 40 minutes; protest songs from the Viet Nam era
then; live-recorded Banda music from Mexico
2nd hour; various artists on the theme of the African traditional rhythm, Jingo Ba
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