Podcast appearances and mentions of clinton walker

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Best podcasts about clinton walker

Latest podcast episodes about clinton walker

The Rock the Ripple Podcast
Dale Holmes and Madeleine Doherty and All Things Sky to Earth

The Rock the Ripple Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2024 75:32


On this episode of the podcast, we chat all things Sky to Earth with Dale Holmes and Madeleine Doherty, including the latest on their Sky to Earth podcast and Sky to Earth Conference that kicks off Wednesday 8th May! There are some phenomenal speakers in the lineup for this conference, including the likes of Will Keller, Clinton Walker, Steven and Evan Strong, Anneke Lucas, Ole Dammegard, Cathy O'Brien, David Whitehead, Tom Barnett and Dale Holmes. Grab your tickets to the Sky to Earth Conference below ⇣ ▸ Sky to Earth Conference: https://steacademy.podia.com/ste-academy-conference-2024

Pablo for Breakfast - Triple M Karratha
People of the Pilbara : Clinton Walker

Pablo for Breakfast - Triple M Karratha

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2023 29:54


Clinton joined Pablo to discuss what inspired him to start his tourism company, his recent tourism awards and where is tourism headed in the Pilbara. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

clinton pilbara clinton walker
Business News - WA
At Close Of Business September 5 2023

Business News - WA

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2023 10:59


Jack McGinn and Tom Zaunmayr discuss the growth of a tourism industry in the Pilbara at the hands of Ngarluma and Yindibarndi man Clinton Walker. Plus: Yara on domestic gas; footballers set sights on urban winery, and Hudson's hand up again.

pilbara clinton walker
The RegenNarration
146. The RegenNarration Soundtrack 2022: Highlights from our guests this year

The RegenNarration

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2022 79:01


This is our customary sign-off episode for the year – a package of highlights from our brilliant array of guests throughout 2022, accompanied by some of the music and sounds of Country you heard along the way. Here's the ‘track list': 1. Jess Beckerling (ep 105) 2. To A Forests Dream, by Cloudjumper (sourced from the Free Music Archive) – podcast intro 3. To The System, by The Public Opinion Afro Orchestra, then ... 4. Flamenco Rhythm, by Sunsearcher (sourced from the Free Music Archive) – Petrine McCrohan (ep 106) 5. Di Haggerty (ep 107), including ... 6. To Rockin' in the 80s, by Dr Sparkles (sourced from the Free Music Archive) 7. To Regeneration, by Amelia Barden - Damon Gameau (ep 108), Clinton Walker (ep 109) 8. Kate Chaney (ep 110) 9. To Stones & Bones, by Owls of the Swamp - Kate Chaney (ep 110), David Pollock (ep 111) 10. David Pollock 11. Natalie Davey (ep 112), including ... 12. To You Shine, by the kids with Tura Music 13. María Inés Cuj & Rony Lec (ep 113) 14. To Faraway Castle, by Rae Howell & Sunwrae – Cathy McGowan (ep 114), Tanya Massy (ep 115) 15. Tanya Massy 16. Louise O'Neill (ep 116) 17. Eugene Eades including his song – Looking Back to Yesterday Again, performed with Bruce Anthony (ep 117) 18. Agostino Petroni (ep 118) 19. To Temporary, by Yen Nguyen – Kim Paul Nguyen (ep 119) 20. Tony Rinaudo (ep 120) 21. Kate Chaney MP (ep 121) 22. Ode to Kate, by your podcast host (ep 121 Extra) 23. Damon Gameau, at a screening of Regenerating Australia (ep 122) 24. Fred Provenza (ep 123) 25. To Stones & Bones, by Owls of the Swamp – Jane Slattery (ep 124), Paul Cleary (ep 125) 26. Serenity Hill with Kirsten Larsen (ep 126) 27. To a tune by Jeremiah Johnson – Ian Congdon & Courtney Young near Rutherglen, Victoria (ep 127), Jade Miles near Stanley, Victoria (ep 128) 28. To Cycles, by Simon Edwards – the late Hazel Henderson (ep 129), Valerie Brown at home in Canberra (ep 130) 29. Kate Fenech at a screening of Regenerating Australia in Busselton WA (ep 131) 30. Kristy Stewart at the family farm in the Otways, Victoria (ep 132) 31. Jodie Jackson (ep 133) 32. Amanda Cahill at home in Brisbane (ep 134) 33. Ross O'Reilly at High Valley Dawn, Yeppoon, Central Queensland (ep 135) 34. Terry & Pam McCosker at home in Yeppoon (ep 136) 35. Robert Pekin at the Food Connect Shed in Brisbane (ep 137) 36. Matthew Evans by the Swan River / Derbal Yerrigan (ep 138) 37. Douglas Rushkoff (ep 139) 38. Bruce Pascoe live at the Quantum Words Festival on Schools Day in Walyalup / Fremantle (ep 140) 39. Oral McGuire, Greg Mullins & Lesley Head live at the Quantum Words Festival in Boorloo / Perth (ep 141) 40. Ian & Di Haggerty live in their shearing shed (ep 142) 41. Heidi Mippy later in that shed(ep 143) 42. To The Deep Ocean is Calling, composed by Eva Holm Foosnæs with lyrics by T Aarskog and Karen O'Brien – Karen O'Brien (ep 144) 43. To Wildflower Meadow, by The Eternal Page (featuring Karen O'Brien's son Jens Stokke) – Paul Hawken (ep 145), the late Frank Fisher (ep 145 Extra) 44. To Regeneration - best wishes for the new year! 45. Closing the year with the end of our old theme song, The System, by The Public Opinion Afro Orchestra. Title image: the Martuwarra / Fitzroy River, at Natalie Davey's place (ep 112) (Anthony James). With thanks to all the wonderful musicians who generously granted permission for their music to be heard here. Find more: To access the full catalogue of episodes, head to our website https://www.regennarration.com or wherever you get your podcasts. The RegenNarration is an independent, ad-free, freely available podcast, thanks to the generous support of listeners. If you too value what you hear, please consider joining them by becoming a podcast patron, donor or partner at https://www.regennarration.com/support. Thanks for listening, have a wonderful festive season and see you again in 2023!

Confessions of a...
St Arnaud

Confessions of a...

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2022 29:52


The journey continues. Tales of books, banjos and Bad Seeds bring us to St Arnaud, a small town in central Victoria. Join Greg Appel, Eddy Jokovich, Gavin Roy Butler, David Hines, Clinton Walker. A bunch of old men and an unexpected lady!

tales bad seeds st arnaud david hines clinton walker
The RegenNarration
109. Cultural Economies at the Greatest Rock Art Gallery in the World, with Clinton Walker

The RegenNarration

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2022 56:51


Clinton Walker is a Traditional Custodian of the incredible Murujuga (or Burrup Peninsula), on the north-west coast of Australia. You might recall my conversations with archaeologist Peter Veth and the co-authors of Songlines, Lynne Kelly and Margo Neale, last year. They all related back to this place – where the Songlines start, as Clinton puts it. So at the end of last year, as my family and I headed south from the Kimberley, Clinton and I met up to record a yarn for the Clean State podcast, the spin-off series from The RegenNarration specific to my home state of Western Australia. Some of you may have had a listen. It's a shorter snappier format. But on this particular hot summer morning, with so much at stake here right now, and so much to appreciate about what he's up to, Clinton and I settled in for an extended chat. So here's the rest of what we recorded together. I've patched in my intro from the Clean State podcast here first, to help set the scene for you: Murujuga houses the largest rock art collection in the world – around one million petroglyphs, some dating back about 40,000 years. The World Heritage nomination for this place is a shoe-in, unless it's jeopardised by current industry expansion plans – most notoriously, the Scarborough Gas Field proposal, currently being challenged in court and elsewhere, with the stakes running far beyond this incredible ancient place. But there are better ways to go about things here. And Traditional Custodian Clinton Walker is uniquely placed to say. He was a highly paid technician with one of the mining companies here, but he ultimately couldn't bear the harm it was causing his Country. He now runs an extremely successful tour operation called Ngurrangga Tours, and is living the message that sustainable industries such as Indigenous cultural tourism are enormously beneficial - economically, for Country, and for bringing our cultures together. So join us, as Clinton sits us down on a very special part of his Country for that yarn. This conversation was recorded on Country at the Murujuga National Park, on 13 December 2021. Note: The Cultural Heritage Reform Bill has since passed the WA State Parliament, without alteration. Title slide image: Clinton Walker (supplied). You can see more photos on The RegenNarration website (link below). Music: Stones & Bones, by Owls of the Swamp Regeneration, composed by Amelia Barden, from the soundtrack of the new film Regenerating Australia (featured in the previous episode) - https://theregenerators.co/regenerating-australia/ Discover more: To hear the rest of my conversation with Clinton, tune in to episode 9 of the Clean State podcast, a spin-off series from The RegenNarration specific to Western Australia – https://www.cleanstate.org.au/podcast Ngurrangga Tours - https://www.ngurrangga.com.au/ If you'd like to hear my conversations with the co-authors of Songlines: The Power & the Promise, Lynne Kelly and Margo Neale, tune into episodes 92 and 93 – https://www.regennarration.com/episodes/092-songlines-lynne-kelly and https://www.regennarration.com/episodes/093-songlines-margo-neale And for more on the sophisticated migration of First Nations peoples to and across these lands, and the extraordinary natural-cultural value of Murujuga – and more on how to resolve the current planning issues too – tune into my chat with Peter Veth for episode 83 - https://www.regennarration.com/episodes/083-regenerating-in-deep-time Thanks very much to the generous supporters of this podcast, for making this episode possible. If you too value what you hear, please consider joining them by heading to the website at https://www.regennarration.com/support. Thanks for helping to keep the show going! And thanks for listening.

RN Breakfast - Separate stories podcast
Suburban Songbook chronicles the history of Australia's homegrown songwriting

RN Breakfast - Separate stories podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2021 6:46


Music writer Clinton Walker has launched his 11th book, Suburban Songbook: Writing Hits in Post-War / Pre-Countdown Australia. It celebrates the coming-of-age of Australian music, transitioning from a cover version culture in the 50s and 60s to one where original songwriting came to dominate.

Rock N Roll Pantheon
Rock's Backpages Ep. 106: Jennifer Otter Bickerdike on Nico + Jackson Browne + Britney Spears

Rock N Roll Pantheon

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2021 67:18


In this week's podcast, Mark and Jasper are joined by the excellent Dr. Jennifer Otter Bickerdike to talk about her new Nico book, You Are Beautiful and You Are Alone: The Biography of Nico. Jennifer shares the story of where the idea for the book came from and contemplates comparisons of Nico with Marianne Faithfull. The three of them also consider her remarkable music from Chelsea Girl to Camera Obscura and her time in the Velvet Underground that led to long-lasting collaboration with John Cale.They then listen to two excerpts from the week's audio interview with Jackson Browne, in which he reminisces about cheap rents in Los Angeles and learning the piano, plus why he often doesn't write political songs. Following the sad news of rapper Biz Markie's death, the trio pay tribute to his infectious humour and joyful singing.Talk then turns to what's new in the library, with Mark highlighting pieces about Bob Dylan, Debbie Harry and M People's Mercury Prize success among others and Jasper selecting David Kamp's oral history of the Brill Building and an early Britney Spears review, which sparks discussion of Jennifer's upcoming book Being Britney: Pieces of a Modern Icon and the horrors of Britney's guardianship. Many thanks to special guest Jennifer Otter Bickerdike. You Are Beautiful and You Are Alone: The Biography of Nico is published by Faber and available now. Visit Jennifer's website at jenniferotterbickerdike.com.Pieces discussed: Nico by Jennifer Otter Bickerdike, Nico by Peter Jones, Nico by Clinton Walker, Nico by Geoffrey Cannon, Jackson Browne audio, Cold Chillin' Records/Biz Markie, Bob Dylan: Don't Look Back, John Lennon, Sex Pistols, Radiohead, Young Bob Dylan, The Tremeloes, Blondie, M People, Lyrics not poetry, Britney Spears, The Brill Building, Grime, Lavine Hudson and Women music journalists in America 1920–1960.

Rock N Roll Pantheon
Rock's Backpages Ep. 106: Jennifer Otter Bickerdike on Nico + Jackson Browne + Britney Spears

Rock N Roll Pantheon

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2021 68:18


In this week's podcast, Mark and Jasper are joined by the excellent Dr. Jennifer Otter Bickerdike to talk about her new Nico book, You Are Beautiful and You Are Alone: The Biography of Nico. Jennifer shares the story of where the idea for the book came from and contemplates comparisons of Nico with Marianne Faithfull. The three of them also consider her remarkable music from Chelsea Girl to Camera Obscura and her time in the Velvet Underground that led to long-lasting collaboration with John Cale. They then listen to two excerpts from the week's audio interview with Jackson Browne, in which he reminisces about cheap rents in Los Angeles and learning the piano, plus why he often doesn't write political songs. Following the sad news of rapper Biz Markie's death, the trio pay tribute to his infectious humour and joyful singing. Talk then turns to what's new in the library, with Mark highlighting pieces about Bob Dylan, Debbie Harry and M People's Mercury Prize success among others and Jasper selecting David Kamp's oral history of the Brill Building and an early Britney Spears review, which sparks discussion of Jennifer's upcoming book Being Britney: Pieces of a Modern Icon and the horrors of Britney's guardianship.  Many thanks to special guest Jennifer Otter Bickerdike. You Are Beautiful and You Are Alone: The Biography of Nico is published by Faber and available now. Visit Jennifer's website at jenniferotterbickerdike.com. Pieces discussed: Nico by Jennifer Otter Bickerdike, Nico by Peter Jones, Nico by Clinton Walker, Nico by Geoffrey Cannon, Jackson Browne audio, Cold Chillin' Records/Biz Markie, Bob Dylan: Don't Look Back, John Lennon, Sex Pistols, Radiohead, Young Bob Dylan, The Tremeloes, Blondie, M People, Lyrics not poetry, Britney Spears, The Brill Building, Grime, Lavine Hudson and Women music journalists in America 1920–1960. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Rock's Backpages
E106: Jennifer Otter Bickerdike on Nico + Jackson Browne + Britney Spears

Rock's Backpages

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2021 67:18


In this week's podcast, Mark and Jasper are joined by the excellent Dr. Jennifer Otter Bickerdike to talk about her new Nico book, You Are Beautiful and You Are Alone: The Biography of Nico. Jennifer shares the story of where the idea for the book came from and contemplates comparisons of Nico with Marianne Faithfull. The three of them also consider her remarkable music from Chelsea Girl to Camera Obscura and her time in the Velvet Underground that led to long-lasting collaboration with John Cale.They then listen to two excerpts from the week's audio interview with Jackson Browne, in which he reminisces about cheap rents in Los Angeles and learning the piano, plus why he often doesn't write political songs. Following the sad news of rapper Biz Markie's death, the trio pay tribute to his infectious humour and joyful singing.Talk then turns to what's new in the library, with Mark highlighting pieces about Bob Dylan, Debbie Harry and M People's Mercury Prize success among others and Jasper selecting David Kamp's oral history of the Brill Building and an early Britney Spears review, which sparks discussion of Jennifer's upcoming book Being Britney: Pieces of a Modern Icon and the horrors of Britney's guardianship. Many thanks to special guest Jennifer Otter Bickerdike. You Are Beautiful and You Are Alone: The Biography of Nico is published by Faber and available now. Visit Jennifer's website at jenniferotterbickerdike.com.Pieces discussed: Nico by Jennifer Otter Bickerdike, Nico by Peter Jones, Nico by Clinton Walker, Nico by Geoffrey Cannon, Jackson Browne audio, Cold Chillin' Records/Biz Markie, Bob Dylan: Don't Look Back, John Lennon, Sex Pistols, Radiohead, Young Bob Dylan, The Tremeloes, Blondie, M People, Lyrics not poetry, Britney Spears, The Brill Building, Grime, Lavine Hudson and Women music journalists in America 1920–1960.

Rock's Backpages
E106: Jennifer Otter Bickerdike on Nico + Jackson Browne + Britney Spears

Rock's Backpages

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2021 67:48


In this week's podcast, Mark and Jasper are joined by the excellent Dr. Jennifer Otter Bickerdike to talk about her new Nico book, You Are Beautiful and You Are Alone: The Biography of Nico. Jennifer shares the story of where the idea for the book came from and contemplates comparisons of Nico with Marianne Faithfull. The three of them also consider her remarkable music from Chelsea Girl to Camera Obscura and her time in the Velvet Underground that led to long-lasting collaboration with John Cale. They then listen to two excerpts from the week's audio interview with Jackson Browne, in which he reminisces about cheap rents in Los Angeles and learning the piano, plus why he often doesn't write political songs. Following the sad news of rapper Biz Markie's death, the trio pay tribute to his infectious humour and joyful singing. Talk then turns to what's new in the library, with Mark highlighting pieces about Bob Dylan, Debbie Harry and M People's Mercury Prize success among others and Jasper selecting David Kamp's oral history of the Brill Building and an early Britney Spears review, which sparks discussion of Jennifer's upcoming book Being Britney: Pieces of a Modern Icon and the horrors of Britney's guardianship.  Many thanks to special guest Jennifer Otter Bickerdike. You Are Beautiful and You Are Alone: The Biography of Nico is published by Faber and available now. Visit Jennifer's website at jenniferotterbickerdike.com. Pieces discussed: Nico by Jennifer Otter Bickerdike, Nico by Peter Jones, Nico by Clinton Walker, Nico by Geoffrey Cannon, Jackson Browne audio, Cold Chillin' Records/Biz Markie, Bob Dylan: Don't Look Back, John Lennon, Sex Pistols, Radiohead, Young Bob Dylan, The Tremeloes, Blondie, M People, Lyrics not poetry, Britney Spears, The Brill Building, Grime, Lavine Hudson and Women music journalists in America 1920–1960.

Big Kat Lounge
BKL Episode 43 with Clinton Walker

Big Kat Lounge

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2021 37:49


Welcome to the Big Kat Lounge Podcast Episode 43 with Clinton Walker

Praise The Lord
Episode 3: Praise The Lord Radio Action 1-10-2021

Praise The Lord

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2021 60:00


I got a generous donation from Clinton Walker to my Pay Pal Me account that helps me pay for my expenses for doing Praise The Lord. So I dedicated a song to him as a thank you. https://paypal.me/pools/c/8vCXUWvWHA

Stock Day Media
Sugarmade, Inc. and Its Partner, Budcars, Discuss The Potential of On Demand Cannabis Delivery on The Stock Day Podcast

Stock Day Media

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2020 8:53


The Stock Day Podcast welcomed Sugarmade, Inc. (SGMD)(“the Company”), a product and branding marketing company investing in operations and technologies with disruptive potential. CEO of the Company, Jimmy Chan, as well as the CEO of Budcars, Clinton Walker, joined Stock Day host Everett Jolly. 

Agenda
EP 60 DECADISM AND DELETED PLAYLISTS

Agenda

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2018 56:33


Energy Australia literally closed their gender pay gap overnight, Spotify and Smirnoff brought out the Equalizer to anaylze spotify users’ gendered listening habits, and a newly published book (Deadly Woman Blues by Clinton Walker) claiming to detail "a graphic history of black women in Australian music" has been pulled from the shelves after it was slammed for inaccuracies and for being culturally insensitive by the women profiled. We also spoke to Catriona Moore and Jacqueline Millner about a book that they co-edited, called Feminist Perspectives on Art - an anthology of essays that are indebted to feminist theory, practice, activism and methodology.

New Books in Popular Culture
Clinton Walker, “Deadly Woman Blues: Black Women and Australian Music” (NewSouth Books, 2018)

New Books in Popular Culture

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2018 16:39


In Deadly Woman Blues: Black Women and Australian Music (NewSouth Books, 2018), Australian writer Clinton Walker presents a group biography of the black women who made Australian music. Through his graphic portraits of 100 black women who have shaped Australian music, including Indigenous music, jazz, country, gospel, soul, R&B and hip-hop, Walker explores issues about gender, race and genre in the industry. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Clinton Walker, “Deadly Woman Blues: Black Women and Australian Music” (NewSouth Books, 2018)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2018 16:39


In Deadly Woman Blues: Black Women and Australian Music (NewSouth Books, 2018), Australian writer Clinton Walker presents a group biography of the black women who made Australian music. Through his graphic portraits of 100 black women who have shaped Australian music, including Indigenous music, jazz, country, gospel, soul, R&B and hip-hop, Walker explores issues about gender, race and genre in the industry. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Music
Clinton Walker, “Deadly Woman Blues: Black Women and Australian Music” (NewSouth Books, 2018)

New Books in Music

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2018 16:52


In Deadly Woman Blues: Black Women and Australian Music (NewSouth Books, 2018), Australian writer Clinton Walker presents a group biography of the black women who made Australian music. Through his graphic portraits of 100 black women who have shaped Australian music, including Indigenous music, jazz, country, gospel, soul, R&B and hip-hop, Walker explores issues about gender, race and genre in the industry. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Australian and New Zealand Studies
Clinton Walker, “Deadly Woman Blues: Black Women and Australian Music” (NewSouth Books, 2018)

New Books in Australian and New Zealand Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2018 16:39


In Deadly Woman Blues: Black Women and Australian Music (NewSouth Books, 2018), Australian writer Clinton Walker presents a group biography of the black women who made Australian music. Through his graphic portraits of 100 black women who have shaped Australian music, including Indigenous music, jazz, country, gospel, soul, R&B and hip-hop, Walker explores issues about gender, race and genre in the industry. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Documentary Podcast
Country Down Under

The Documentary Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2016 26:51


Country music is commonly associated with downtrodden, lovelorn, white inhabitants of America's rural south, but it has also long been a significant form of expression for Australia's Aboriginal peoples. Country music became popular 'down under' during the first half of the 20th Century. Thanks to gramophone recordings, wind-up radios and touring bands, it even reached the bush where most Aboriginals lived, often more or less imprisoned on missions and government-controlled reserves. At a time when their own cultural heritage was being systematically erased, country music became a medium through which they could maintain their practice of sharing stories via the oral tradition. Its resonance was enhanced by melodies which tended towards the melancholic. As one musician put it “country music was all about loss, and we'd lost everything”. Through country music, Aboriginal people were able to give voice to their personal experiences and ongoing struggles for justice. Songs describe, for example, how babies and land were stolen, incidents of racism, poor living conditions, and high levels of incarceration. Country music, far from its origins, has thus become a deeply moving and powerful Aboriginal activism art form. With contributions from Auriel Andrew, Kev Carmody, Roger Knox, Sue Ray, Glenn Skuthorpe and Clinton Walker.

america australia songs aboriginal kev carmody clinton walker