Podcasts about dinga gaba

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Best podcasts about dinga gaba

Latest podcast episodes about dinga gaba

Dj J.Squared
Just Mixing 9/14

Dj J.Squared

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2024 61:48


1. Voodoo Whiskey Blueberry Muffins2. Babert Boogie Oogie (Original Mix)3. Adri Block The Love I Need (Jackin Dubb)4. Vick L. Do For Love (What You Won't Do) Vick L. feat R.J Green (Dj J.Squared edit)5. Early Motions Late Night Coffee High6. Danny Cruz To Be Real (Original Mix)7. Disco Incorporated Super Disco (Original Mix)8. Martello, Audio Jacker All The Things (Original Mix)9. Mike Newman, Antoine Cortez Quintessence10. Frankie Beverly & Maze Before I Let Go11. N'Dinga Gaba, DJ Spen, Marc Evans Until You (Original Mix)12. Simon Kennedy One Number13. Serge Funk Can't Get Enough (Original Mix)14. Ross Couch Love Affair15. Re-Tide, Moon Rocket, Mike Anderson Think Twice Feat. Mike Anderson (Original Mix)16. Change, Re-Tide Hold Tight (Re-Tide Remix Traxsource Exclusive)Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/dj-jsquared/donations

change mixing squared dj spen moon rocket frankie beverly martello mike newman re tide get enough original mix marc evans until you original mix dinga gaba
Dj J.Squared
This Is Only The Beginning 5.24

Dj J.Squared

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2024 60:13


1. ChemarsMore & More (Original Mix)2. Roland Clark, Richard EarnshawI Get Deep (Richard Earnshaw Remix)3. Jhonattan PenagosDisco House (Original mix)4. Rhemi, HanleiFallin' (Original Mix)5. City Soul ProjectCodes & Symbols6. Adri Block, TrojU Better Turn Around (Oiginal)7. Frankie Knuckles pres. Director's Cut feat. B. SladeYou Make Me Feel (Mighty Real) (A Director's Cut Production)8. Mena KeysEarth, Wind & Fire EP (Earth Bound (Mena Keys Club Mix))9. Matone RemixA taste of Honey - Sayonara (Matone Remix)10. House MusicBarry White Come On Club House Remix11. Bill WithersAin't No Sunshine12. George BensonGive Me the Night13. Ian Wallace365 (Ian Wallace Edit)14. House MusicMir #002 Jackson 5 'Blame It On The Boogie' (Sean Synergy Remix)15. N'Dinga Gaba, DJ Spen, Marc EvansUntil You (Original Mix)16. Simon Pagliari, Cream Sound Factory Spirit Of Chicago.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/dj-jsquared/donations

Dj J.Squared
My Offering 1/24

Dj J.Squared

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2024 57:53


CajmereFunktified (Original)Ian Wallace365 (Ian Wallace Edit)N'Dinga Gaba, DJ Spen, Marc EvansUntil You (Original Mix)Re-Tide, Moon Rocket, Mike AndersonThink Twice Feat. Mike Anderson (Original Mix)Simon Pagliari, Cream Sound FactorySpirit Of ChicagoSmokey Robinson & The MiralcesThe Tears Of A Clown RemixSimon Pagliari, Cream Sound FactorySpirit Of ChicagoMattei & OmichIntermission Feat. Desiree Renee (Original Mix)The Gap BandEarly in the MorningThe SpinnersI'll Be AroundGeraldBlow Your House DownDj ShadowChaka Khan - Through the fire - Dj Shadow - House MixDemuirLuvin' to Nothing1Kenny 'Dope' GonzalezEarth, Wind & Fire - Brazilian Rhyme 'Beijo' (Kenny 'Dope' Gonzalez Remix)Patrick OakenGeorge Duke - I Love You More (Patrick Oaken Remix)16WerkshySave Our Love (Original Mix)Unknow9981578_Gonna_Fonky_Tonite_Original_MixBrooklyn Classic, Smash HunterFly (Smash Hunter Mix)Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/dj-jsquared/donations

Dj J.Squared
How It Is Now . .

Dj J.Squared

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2023 60:24


1 Until You feat. Marc Evans (SpeN'Dinga XtreMix)DJ Spen, Marc Evans, N'dinga Gaba2 Down Like That (Nu Disco Mix) Dave Leatherman, HP Vince, Samo3 Boogie Oogie (Original Mix)Babert4 Magic In You (Feat. Natalie Conway) (Original Mix) Husky, Natalie Conway5 The Love I Need (Jackin Dubb) Adri Block6 People On A Party (Original Mix) Mark Lower7 Until You (Original Mix) N'Dinga Gaba, DJ Spen, Marc Evans8 La romance (Extended Club Mix) Roman D'Amour9 Can't Get Enough (Original Mix) Serge Funk10 1000Xxx's (Original Mix) Twism, B3RAO11 Fools Believe Samma Lone12 Before I Let Go Frankie Beverly & Maze13 Magic In You (Feat. Natalie Conway) (Original Mix) Husky, Natalie Conway14 Do For Love (What You Won't Do) Vick L. feat R.J Green (Dj J.Squared edit) Vick L. feat R.J Green (Dj J.Squared edit)15 Falling Back Into Love (DJ Spen Edit) Brian Power, Marc Evans, DJ Spen16 Promises (Mousse T.'s Extended Disco Shizzle Remix) Calvin Harris, Sam Smith, Mousse T.17 More & More (Original Mix) ChemarsSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/dj-jsquared/donations

Dj J.Squared
Getting It Off My Chest 3/23

Dj J.Squared

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2023 60:14


1 The Love I Need (Jackin Dubb) Adri Block2 Falling Back Into Love (DJ Spen Edit) Brian Power, Marc Evans, DJ Spen3 Quintessence Mike Newman, Antoine Cortez4 Rhythm Of The Night (GA Remix) Stones & Bones, Groove Assassin5 Do For Love (What You Won't Do) Vick L. feat R.J Green (Dj J.Squared edit) Vick L. feat R.J Green (Dj J.Squared edit)6 Jamaica Phunk (Original Mix) Block & Crown, Marc Rousso7 1000Xxx's (Original Mix) Twism, B3RAO8 La romance (Extended Club Mix) Roman D'Amour9 Everlasting Dr Packer10 Fly (Smash Hunter Mix) Brooklyn Classic, Smash Hunter11 Funk U! (Original Mix) Moon Rocket12 George Duke - I Love You More (Patrick Oaken Remix) Patrick Oaken Remix13 Before I Let Go Frankie Beverly & Maze14 Until You (Original Mix) N'Dinga Gaba, DJ Spen, Marc Evans15 NODJINSH E03/ Louie Vega Josh Milan - Your Body (Dance Ritual Dub) Louie VegaSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/dj-jsquared/donations

Dj J.Squared
LoVe Mix 2023

Dj J.Squared

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2023 60:38


1 Magic In You (Feat. Natalie Conway) (Original Mix) Husky, Natalie Conway2 Disco op zaterdag Schroder & Van Der Meer3 Glad to Win (Original Mix) Block & Crown, Chris Marina4 Glad to Win (Original Mix) Block & Crown, Chris Marina5 Everlasting Dr Packer6 Come With Me Now (Nu Disco Mix) HP Vince, Dave Leatherman, Perry Hotter7 All The Things (Original Mix) Martello, Audio Jacker8 Before I Let Go Frankie Beverly & Maze9 Quintessence Mike Newman, Antoine Cortez10 La romance (Extended Club Mix) Roman D'Amour11 One Number Simon Kennedy12 Until You (Original Mix) N'Dinga Gaba, DJ Spen, Marc Evans13 Marvin Gaye - I Want You (deep soulful dance house remix)Marvin Gaye14 The Love I Need (Jackin Dubb) Adri Block15 Rhythm Of The Night (GA Remix) Stones & Bones, Groove Assassin16 We Were Lovers (Original Mix) Disco M17 Love is You (Cajual 20 Year Anniversary Mix) Cajmere Russoul Presents Ari Lourdes18 Falling Back Into Love (DJ Spen Edit) Brian Power, Marc Evans, DJ SpenSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/dj-jsquared/donations

Dj Fresh (SA) #AnotherFreshMix
[EPISODE 188] #AnotherFreshMix #FreshTuneTuesday! 28062022

Dj Fresh (SA) #AnotherFreshMix

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2022 141:50


01. Dunn's SA - Alma Para Alma (Original Mix)02.  Chief Joint & TimAdeep - Summer (Original Mix)03.  N'Dinga Gaba, Sahffi - Summer Breeze (Fka Mash Re-glitch)04.  Kid Fonque - Unfold05.  Dunn's SA - Lugar Sagrado (Original Mix)06.  Dearson - Spirit (feat. Uncle R) [Rodney SA Remix] 07.  Devine Maestro & Mark Lane - Phumelela (Deepconsoul Memories Of You Remix) (feat. MarleySoul)08. Koks & Sir Vee, Sir Vee The Great & BlaQ Afro-Kay - House Nation09. Luka, Xabizo - Rotting Flowers (Tea White Enchanted Remix)10. Tevin Campbell - Can We Talk (TimAdeep Dub Rework)11.  STI T's Soul - Hypnotic12.  SculpturedMusic feat. Robert Owens - Get Home (LaTique's Rare Dub)13.  DysFonik & Da Real Emkay - Testimony14.  The Real Husbands Of House - Zaphed Out (Main Mix)15.  Stimela - Go On 'live your life' (TimAdeep cassette Rework)16.  Kamza Heavypoint - Nomathemba (feat. Oshn Indoni)17.  Kaynine - Sobabili (feat. Saga Sithi)18.  Pierre Johnson - Alone Again19.  Godgy Podgy - A Wonderful World20.  Imprazen - Whatsapp Me (feat. Snare)21.  Kinetic T - Adventure (Original Mix)22.  Zico SA - Until My Last Breath23.  Kato Change, Winyo & SURAJ - Suna (Da Africa Deep Afrikan Remix) 

dunn rework snare koks timadeep kato change winyo sahffi summer breeze fka mash re dinga gaba
Banished by Booksmart Studios
Whitewashing History?

Banished by Booksmart Studios

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2021 30:05


In the mid-1930s, Russian-born muralist Victor Arnautoff was commissioned by the New Deal’s Public Works of Art Project to paint a series of frescoes at sites around the San Francisco Bay Area. One of his more ambitious undertakings covered 1,600 square feet of wall space inside the lobby and stairwells of George Washington High School, depicting scenes from Washington’s life as a military leader and statesman. Parts of the work portray a slaughtered Native American and enslaved African-Americans, which Arnautoff — a Communist whose art was an outgrowth of his activism — deliberately foregrounded.Whatever his intentions at the time, Arnautoff is now at the center of a heated controversy among students, parents and community members, some of whom find the images traumatizing and want them “painted over” or removed. Host Amna Khalid spoke with those on both sides of the issue, equally passionate and resolute. She brings us the story.* FULL TRANSCRIPT* ALLISON COLLINS: A Native American that is dead on a wall and having people walk over him? That has cultural significance.DR. JOELY PROUDFIT: Enough is enough. Stop with the racism, stop with the dehumanization, stop with the genocidal artwork. Not in our public schools.COLLINS: That painful history is not something that needs to be consistently in children’s faces.JOHN LEARNED: Hey, as hard as those things are to look at, that's what really happened. There’s Indians that want to tell their history, they want people to know what happened.AMNA KHALID: This is a story of a painting — “Life of Washington,” by Russian artist Victor Arnautoff. It hangs on the walls of a high school in San Francisco. And I say walls because it’s actually 13 separate paintings covering 1600 square feet. It’s a series of vivid and sometimes violent vignettes from George Washington's life. The first panel is of Washington in his 20s. Later on, a scene from the French and Indian War. The Boston Tea Party. Winter at Valley Forge. Surrender at Yorktown.There are members of the community who find some of these images disturbing. Even traumatizing. One painting shows colonists walking past a Native American, dead on the ground. Another is of enslaved African-Americans on Washington’s plantation at Mount Vernon. Many students want the murals ... gone.Of course, it’s not that simple. First, there’s a logistical problem: these are frescoes, which means they were applied directly onto the wet plaster of the walls. But the bigger problem is philosophical: Should we remove the art? Because there are just as many who want these frescoes to stay exactly where they are — where they’ve been since 1936 — forcing us to confront the atrocities of America’s founding for nearly a century. But do they really belong… in a high school?I’m Amna Khalid, and this is Banished.How do we reckon with painful reminders of past sins? What responsibility do we have to shield our children — or adults for that matter — from material that they find offensive? What do we do about paintings and ideas, even people, that we now find unacceptable? Do we just cancel them? What does that even mean? In the case of one high school in San Francisco, it might mean destroying art.TRACY BROWN: The mural depicts violence and triggers emotional trauma, creating an unsafe environment which may get in the way of student learning.  This mural has had no teaching significance ...AMY ANDERSON: The depiction of indigenous warriors attacking white soldiers, who stand with the arms raised in surrender, erases the reality that George Washingtion ordered all-out war without diplomacy against indigenous peoples.TRONG: This mural is not teaching students about the history of slavery and indigenous genocide under George Washington or other settlers. Instead it is teaching students to normalize violence and death of our Black and indigenous communities. Paint it down.AK: Those are the voices of parents and students pleading with the San Francisco school board to paint over the mural. On social media, the movement is called “hashtag paint it down.” One of the women you heard was Amy Anderson. She’s an indigenous mother whose son was in 10th grade at the time. Here she is, again before the school board, on the image of the dead warrior face down on the ground.ANDERSON: The size and placement of the deceased American Indian warrior creates in me a deep sadness for the millions of indigenous people who were killed by forced assimilation or all-out war. With the signers of the U.S. Constitution, George Washington stands beside the fallen warrior, but not a single eye is diverted in his direction. There is no remorse for his death. And students and staff who are rushing to beat the bell breeze past this every day.AK: In June, 2019, the school board voted to paint over the murals. The total cost, including a lengthy environmental impact review, would run to about three quarters of a million dollars.PROUDFIT: My name is Dr. Joely Proudfit. I am Luiseño Payómkawichum. I am the director of the California Indian Culture and Sovereignty Center at Cal State San Marcos and the chair of the American Indian Studies Department at Cal State San Marcos.AK: Dr. Proudfit applauded the Board’s decision. She says the murals are from the perspective of European invaders, they are simply inaccurate and that they are dangerous.PROUDFIT: These false and harmful images do a number on our self-esteem and especially the self-esteem and the aspirations of our young people, especially our children. It reinforces negative stereotypes about non-native people. It keeps us in the past as a people that has been defeated or conquered in some capacity. It internalizes biases, stereotypes, misunderstandings, ignorance, furthers this notion of manifest destiny and colonization.AK: Interpreting art is obviously subjective. We could argue for years, and we have, over what these paintings are communicating. But perhaps a good place to start is with the artist himself. Do we have any idea of what Victor Arnautoff intended when he painted these murals?CHERNY: Arnautoff was living at a time when people on the left were very conscious of the oppression of people of color and wanted to dramatize that.AK: Robert Cherny is the author of Victor Arnautoff and the Politics of Art.CHERNY: And you see that in the four largest murals, he is centering people who were often being either ignored or actively erased. You know, the French and Indian wars mural puts a Native American in the center, the Revolutionary War puts working people in the center, Mount Vernon plantation puts enslaved Black people in the center and the settlement of the West puts a dead Native American in the center.AK: In centering the dead Native American, Arnautoff is critiquing fellow artists of the time, who portrayed colonization as worthy, even laudable.CHERNY: The white settlers are always painted in a fashion that makes it clear that they are being celebrated by the artist, that the artist is celebrating the settlement of the West by white men and women who are taking over empty territory. Arnautoff is breaking with that pattern to show that the white settlers were moving into territory that they had acquired by war, that they had acquired by killing the original inhabitants.AK: If those were Arnautoff’s intentions when he painted these murals, they haven’t always been interpreted that way. They first became controversial back in the 1960s, when Black students at the school started demanding more positive representations of African-Americans on the walls.Now what’s interesting is that the solution at that time was not to cover the murals, but to add even more art. The school commissioned a young Black artist named Dewey Crumpler to paint response murals. He would depict the historic struggles of African Americans, Native Americans and other minorities. Crumpler still lives in the Bay Area, and remembers that when he took the job he had one condition.CRUMPLER: I would only make the mural if they left that mural in place because Arnautoff was trying to expose a history that should be told and understood, even though he knew that the imagery was not easy imagery. He wanted to tell a truth about the contradiction of a Founding Father who signed a document that said, “We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal and endowed with certain inalienable rights.”He and those other signers of the Great Document, and it is a great document, while standing on the neck, while standing on the neck of African peoples who are under his boot, laying on the ground that belongs to the millions of Native Americans who also have died, shed blood, fighting for their right to their space.AK: There are certainly many Native Americans who agree with Dewey Crumpler that the murals are painful, but they are truthful and should remain. Robert Tamaka Bailey is a Choctaw elder who told me that these paintings are imbued with deep layers of symbolism and meaning. You just have to know where to look.BAILEY: And that’s the first thing that I saw in this one particular mural that had the dead native in it. If you looked in the bottom right hand corner, there's a chief that's sitting there handing a peace pipe over to a settler with his tomahawk behind the back of the settler. That’s the ways of the white man. What they did is they got us to lay our weapons down, came to us, try to make treaties, and then they took. They broke the treaty. What was pointed out to me later that I didn't notice was there's a tree right behind the chief, and if you looked at it, the branch is broken. Arnautoff was conveying there the broken treaties. And when I saw the images of the settlers stepping over the dead bodies of the native in gray — it's the only pictures of all of ’em that was not colored, it was in gray — I immediately thought, here's the gray area of what we're being taught about George Washington.AK: John Learned, of the Cheyenne Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma, is another Native elder who wants these murals to stay. He sees them as a unique opportunity to remember and to address history.LEARNED: Unfortunately, it was a dark time for American Indians and that, that mural really has an opportunity to tell the story. And I think it'd be great if they, if they added that to their curriculum there in, in California to talk about what the United States and the state of California and the eradication efforts that they took to wipe out American Indians. When you get rid of something, it's gone. It’s finished. You're not talking about it and this mural in California has an opportunity to talk about the history.AK: I asked Dr. Proudfit, the professor at Cal State, what she would say to those Native Americans who are in favor of keeping the murals.PROUDFIT: It's like saying, well, we talked to some African-American folks and you know what, they're OK with the N-word so we're gonna go ahead and use it. No, no, no. And let me tell you how disingenuous the people who want to keep up these murals have been. They have gone so far as to go out of state, find some Native Americans, or self-defined Native Americans that agree with keeping these murals up. But you know what they don't do? They don't listen to the very people whose lands they are on who are opposed to it. And while, yes, not all of us think exactly alike. The majority, and we have ample evidence, when our own national associations like the APA, like the ASA, like Illuminative, have done national surveys to find that these types of images are harmful to us, take our majority word for it. It is inappropriate and we would not allow for this type of racist antics and imagery for any other population.AK: I looked at the surveys that Dr. Proudfit cited. The images that Native Americans were asked about, and that many actually found harmful, were of sports Mascots and other caricatures. They had nothing at all to do with the kind of artistic renditions in the murals.The evidence that I did find of what some Native Americans think about Arnautoff’s murals was from February, 2021. A group of Native American leaders from across the country wrote to the school board protesting the decision to cover the murals. The paintings, they concluded, should be used as educational tools.Of course, there is also the argument that this kind of art simply does not belong on the walls of a high school. Again, Dr. Proudfit.PROUDFIT: This is a public school that should provide safe working and learning environments for all students, not simply just native students, but all students. And so these harmful effects, these stereotypical harmful toxic narratives hurt not only native students, but non-native students who are still learning or have yet to learn about the original nations and people of this land. We would not tolerate this for any other population. What if George Washington High School had images painted by someone who's trying to depict dead Jewish people at the hands of Nazis. Do you think that would be okay to have those images up in a public school?AK: But hang on. Isn’t that part of being a student — contending with deplorable, even distressing, truths? That’s how Dewey Crumpler sees it.CRUMPLER: Let me just say that the most important place for young people to confront difficulty is in high school, just before you get into the world. So a young person seeing difficult imagery, that's a perfect opportunity for teaching. Okay, you're not going to read Huckleberry Finn because of some words. They're offensive. I was offended by them. But, if it's in the world, it's for me. If it's in the world, I have a right to it. I have a right to know it. I have a right to experience it, and it's my youth that helps prepare me for it, even though it will be problematic. That's how we learn to overcome the difficulties.CHERNY: I think we can probably assume that Arnatouff wanted them to be a bit disturbed.AK: Robert Cherny, the author of the book about Arnautoff, says that Arnautoff was deliberate in placing the murals. He wanted them to be precisely where they are, in the lobby and stairwells of a public high school.CHERNY: He wanted them to confront the reality that the settlement of the West had come at an enormous cost to the original inhabitants of the West. He said that it was expansion by war and peace, that he wanted the students to confront the fact that they were living in a place that had been taken from the first people by force. I think that Arnautoff wanted them to be troubled by the image that he was presenting there. He wanted them to be disturbed, I don't think he was trying to traumatize them or offend them, he was trying to get them to think.AK: But what about the fact that now we're in different times, maybe if he was alive today, he'd be part of, you know, people on the left who are campaigning for the rights of people of color, and that's perhaps what he was doing then. But now we know the history. How would you respond to people who say: Well, this may have been all well and good and revolutionary and wonderful when he painted them, but we have moved on and we no longer need these murals.CHERNY: Well, do we ever need art at all? I mean, there's a really big question here. If we disagree with something in the past, do we just erase it and pretend it never happened? You know, that's what Arnautoff was in fact objecting to in the way he presented his art. He was objecting to the erasure of people of color. He was objecting to the erasure of slavery and genocide. And if we say that, okay, maybe his intent was okay, but his intent is irrelevant, and therefore we have to just erase him and his art. I find that really very troubling because we, we’re not learning from it in that case. To me, the purpose of art, any art, is to make you think. And if it is purely decorative, it's not art, it's decoration. And I think that if we are going to ban art that makes you think because someone might be offended by thinking about those topics, then, you know, our culture is going to be a very sad one, I'm afraid. I hope I never see that.AK: In 1935, the San Francisco Chronicle published an interview with Victor Arnautoff. He told the paper: “As I see it, the artist is a critic of society.” What Arnautoff could not have foreseen was that decades later, society would become a critic of the artist.The longer I think about this issue, the more I find myself wondering, why must the solution be reduced to only two options: cover the murals OR let them stay up? Can’t we come up with a more creative solution? How about keeping the murals up and contextualizing them? Well it turns out, Dewey Crumpler suggested exactly this decades ago when he painted his response murals. He asked the school board to put up explanatory plaques alongside Arnautoff’s artwork, much the way museums do.CRUMPLER: Every generation is different. They confront new issues, and therefore you have to give them information, otherwise they will misunderstand all the implications and symbolisms that are all over those murals. Whether it's Arnautoff or my mural in the future, unless something is done to explain them, to make them clear, this will crop up again.AK: As it stands, these murals are devoid of any signposts that tell us where we are and what they might mean.CRUMPLER: Those murals have to be contextualized. And when you are young, everything looks larger than it is. When I saw those murals in 1966, I was incensed by them and they looked huge. When I came back to engage them, they were much smaller. And I’d come to understand profoundly why he used those images. In fact, one of the people who had been most vociferous about taking those walls down, once he, like me, had graduated from college, he apologized to me: “Mr. Crumpler, I really appreciate what you painted. I appreciate those murals greatly, but if I understood what Arnautoff was doing, I would’ve never done what we did.”He couldn't have come to that realization if I had joined them and said, “Yes, let's tear this s**t down. And when we tear it down, I'll paint over every bit of it.” Because they would have been prepared to do that, but the foresight of the board, because they were not going to permit this painting to be destroyed. And it was very important to all those board members and people who had been trained in the notion and understanding of art. But this new cohort of people, they're not trained in the arts, they don't really have that same sense of the importance of an artistic work.I tried to create a worthy dialogue but of course, once I had made that mural, the school board relaxed and they didn't do what I said at the dedication they should do. You have to use those murals as teaching tools and you have to put plaques next to them that explain them.AK: To my mind, that is the smartest solution. High school, where children are becoming adults, isprecisely the place where they need to confront troubling ideas. I asked Dr. Proudfit whether contextualizing Arnautoff’s murals by putting up written explanations might be a way forward.PROUDFIT: A public high school is not the place for that conversation, we are not at that point and we are far from that point. And the analysis or the example you just gave of the promise that was made 50 years ago, 60 years ago, and that that promise has went unmet, American Indians know about broken promises. We're very familiar with broken promises. This is a safety issue. This is a health and wellness issue. Okay, so if that means you take those walls out and you put them in storage until, I don't know, 10, 20, 30, 40, whenever people want to get around to telling the truth, and telling the truth from all sides, then maybe they can be brought out and have that discussion. But I would make a point to say that public high schools are not that place because we don't have the capacity, the information, the people, the structure to have those conversations. And so while that's a noble and nice idea, we are so far from that. And no, we don't believe that that will happen given the 50 years of lies.AK: Mark Sanchez is a member of the San Francisco school board. He says that, sadly, Dr. Proudfit is right, that the school will likely never put up these plaques.SANCHEZ: I don't have a lot of faith that that will happen, even if that's what the board decided to do.AK: Why? You have faith that something that hasn't been removed for so long, has stayed on the walls, now there is faith that we can remove it. Why not have faith that we can actually use it and teach it, which is what an educational institution is about?SANCHEZ: Given the history of that school and the trajectory of what's happening at that school, I don't believe that they would be able to do that.AK: So, tell me, the school will actually be able to paint over these huge murals, but they won't be able to put up plaques contextualizing it.SANCHEZ: I don't believe that they would, no.AK: And why is that?SANCHEZ: Well, they've had how many decades to do that?AK: But is that a reason to destroy something then?SANCHEZ: I don't believe that the school has the wherewithal or the gumption to move in that direction, to use that piece of art as an educational tool.AK: It boggles the mind why the school board refuses to explain these murals, an initiative that would cost mere pennies compared to the three quarters of a million dollars needed to paint over the artwork. Why can’t these public school officials find a creative solution that simultaneously preserves the art, acknowledges hurt feelings and uses these murals as educational tools? I find myself wondering, is this controversy a symptom of something larger that plagues our society? Are our core values so fundamentally divergent that our differences can no longer be bridged?It’s easy to remove works of art when people are offended by them. At times, it can even feel like the humane thing to do. But we must ask ourselves: How does erasing depictions of our history truly help us?CRUMPLER: To me, to destroy Arnautoff's mural would be to destroy truth.AK: We still don’t know how this particular controversy will ultimately play out. The alumni association has a lawsuit pending to preserve these murals. What we do know is that there are countless other works of art, many in public places, awaiting their own public outcry. Once more, Dewey Crumpler.CRUMPLER: Censorship and cancel culture is all around us. That's why art has to be free to do its work, even though it can make individuals very upset and angry. It's a worthy subject that an inanimate object can actually do something to a human being, can make a human being think, can make a human being angry. But the point is you have to work your way through it. Working your way through it is the point of life itself.AK: Who gets a voice in the telling of a story and who gets left out? Why do certain words, ideas and even people get canceled? What does the use of such strategies to silence tell us about our times and our society? These are the issues we’ll be exploring throughout this year on Banished.If you’d like to see photographs of the “Life of Washington” murals and Dewey Crumpler’s response murals, visit our website BooksmartStudios.org. And if you’d like to hear more of our conversation with Dewey Crumpler and other exclusive content, please consider becoming a paying subscriber to Booksmart Studios.I’d like to thank Lope Yap and Peta Cooper for all their help with today’s episode. Banished is produced by Matthew Schwartz and Mike Vuolo. N’Dinga Gaba and Chris Mandra mixed the audio. If you have any thoughts about today’s episode, please leave us a comment at BooksmartStudios.org.This is Banished. I’m Amna Khalid. This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit banished.substack.com/subscribe

Finest Radio Show Underground House Music
FINEST RADIOSHOW #288 (02-06-2018)

Finest Radio Show Underground House Music

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2018 58:05


This ends the 2018 first season ;-) Thank you for all the support along this first 6 months! Finest 288 playlist: [sociallocker id="448"] 01. S.E.L, Gary Hudgins - The Sweetest Pain (MoBlack Soul Mix) [Quantize Recordings] 02. Ism - Loop (N'Dinga Gaba & Richard Earnshaw Remix) [Global Diplomacy] 03. George Lesley - Too Nice (feat Rhey Osborne) [Merecumbe Recordings] 04. Luchi & Raizer - See the Light (Manousos Remix) [Grooveland Music] 05. Audiodope, FevaSoul - Lightwork (Soulful Session SemiSonic Remix) [Timeless People] 06. Jonny Montana, Craig Stewart, Stephanie Cooke - Never Thought (J. Crocker Moodlit dub) [Wiggly Worm Records] 07. Dave Mayer - No Limits (Dub) [Salted Music] 08. Hardage, Gil Scott-Heron - Hysterical Years (Paolo Madzone Zampetti remix) [BBR] 09. Jovic Evic - Macaka (A.P.84Bit Remix) [Blacksoul Music] 10. Vincenzo - Eyes Shut [Be Adult Music] [/sociallocker] See you on next season!  

Kader's Soulful/Deep/Afro House Podcast (Live Mixes)

Greetings Podo’s, Here’s a little something while I run off on vacation!!!! Stay Blessed and please do leave a comment below letting me know how you are. I miss you guys. I’ve set it so that I have to approve comments because I was getting way too many adverts and weird shit. So don’t worry about the comment not showing up when you press enter, I’ll approve them as soon as I get back. Music wise, this one flows “soulful” but off course with deep organic sensibilities. Lyrically strong and no instrumentals, although I do give you that instrumental mashup in the transitions. I begin and end with Luka/Sio Blackwidow combinations… you’re welcome. Tracklist: 1. Luka feat Sio Blackwidow – Invite Me In (Original Mix) 2. Mi Casa feat Pascal Morais – The Power Is You (Enoo Napa Travellerz Remix) 3. Julian Gomez feat Sio – 1000 Memories (Atjazz Galaxy Aart Remix) 4. Marie Joly & Black Coffee – Gratitude feat Rebeca Murray (Pablo Fierro Remix) 5. Kid Fonque & D-Malice – Life Is Real feat. Ruby White (D-Malice Expression) 6. D.General feat Samantha Lake – Because I Love You (Original Mix) 7. Marcel Vogel – Moon Child (Soul Clap Remix) 8. Afro Warriors feat. Toshi – Uyankenteza (Hyenna Remix) 9. N’Dinga Gaba & Jaidene Veda – Beautiful feat Josh Milan (Doug Gomez Merecumbe Soul Remix) 10. Oscar P, Marcus Pearson – Violet (Hallex M & Loic L Remix) 11. Addvibe feat Tamba Benoit – Sada (N'Dinga Gaba Diplomacy Soul Remix) 12. Jamie 326 & Masalo – Testify (Original Mix) 13. Luka feat Sio Blackwidow – Yum Yum (N'Dinga Gaba Diplomacy Soul Remix)

Candice McKenzie’s Dolly Mixture – SSRadio
Candice McKenzie’s Dolly Mixture 17th Oct 2015

Candice McKenzie’s Dolly Mixture – SSRadio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2015 1:01


This Weeks Broadcast Was LIVE And This Podcast Is The Recording Of The Show. A Sweet Treat Of Soulful, Uplifting, Inspirational House Music #SUIHouse DJ Hypnosis – “I Believe I Can” (Chymamusique Mix) Janice B, N’Dinga Gaba – “Feeling Fine” (Original) Luis Radio – “Volcano” (Original) Timmy Vegas – “Timmy’s Choir” (Soulful Mix) Dawn Tallman, […] The post Candice McKenzie’s Dolly Mixture 17th Oct 2015 appeared first on SSRadio.

choir volcanos uplifting mixture feeling fine ssradio dolly mixture dinga gaba candice mckenzie
Sunclock Radioshow
N’DINGA GABA #009

Sunclock Radioshow

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2015


N’DINGA GABA - For info and tracklist visit www.sunclock.it

Sunclock Radioshow
N’DINGA GABA #009

Sunclock Radioshow

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2015


N’DINGA GABA - For info and tracklist visit www.sunclock.it

Finest Radio Show Underground House Music
FINEST RADIOSHOW #227 (16-11-2013)

Finest Radio Show Underground House Music

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2013 60:10


Michele McCain - All I Can Do (Playa de Ubatuba Fiesta Mix) [BKR] Dolls Combers feat Carla Prather - Touch My Soul (DC Original Vocal Mix) [Dolls Combers] Soul Deep Collective - Tell Me Whatcha Need (Vocal) [Integrity] Urban Sound Lab feat Selina Campbell - Nothing New (Phil Asher Remix) [Room Control] Rhemi - I'm Losing You (Amped Organ Mix ) [Rhemi Music] Falomir! - Make U Dance (Lounge'n'Deep mix) [Underground Mjuzieek Digital] Davidson Ospina & Jenny Mayhem - Could Be (Vocal Mix) [Ospina Digital] Michi Lange - Brothers & Sisters (Rewind Clubmix) [Deeptown Music] Christian Hornborstel & Alfred Azzetto – 84 Kingstreet (Original Main Mix) [Purple Music] N'Dinga Gaba & DJ Spen feat Marc Evans - Until You (Original Mix) [Quantize]

Justin West's Podcast
Justin West Live On Solar Radio Tuesday 5th June 2012

Justin West's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2012 120:10


JW Playlist 5th June 2012 Solar Radio 1 – Carolyn Victorian & DJ Oji - “He Loves Me” (DJ Oji Original Mix) – 95 North 2 – Kenny Bobien & Swift Of DJN Project – “What A Way” – Sugar Groove 3 – Viola Sykes – “(My Baby) He Loves Me” – Blaze Imprints 4 – Brothers Johnson – “The Real Thing” (DJCZ Edit) – A&M CDR White 5 – Hands Of DJ 5 feat Matthew Yates – “Nothing I Wouldn’t Do” – CDR White 6 – Erin Leah & N’Dinga Gaba – “Rocker” (N’Dinga’s Downtown Remix) – Quantize 7 – DJ Fudge – “Garito Breeze” (Caldo EP) – Tejal 8 – Getto Kitty – “Stand Up & Be Counted” – Stroud 9 – Mickey & Them – “UFO” – GC Records 10 – Headhunters – “If You’ve Got It, You’ll Get It” – Arista 11 – Max Martinez feat MJ White – “Back To The One” (Max’s Afro Vox Mix) – Liberate 12 – Oscar P vs Moba Sound – “Voices” – Open Bar 13 – Jovonn – “Blues House” – Room Control 14 – Melchyor A – “For Joy” (JW’s “Quickie” Radio Friendly Edit) – Razana Productions CDR White 15 – Jessica Lauren Four – “White Mountain” – Freestyle 16 – Joey Negro & The Sunburst Band – “In The Thick Of It” – Z Records 17 – Temptations – “Law Of The Land” – Tamla Motown 18 – Don Ray – “My Desire” (Jay Negron Extended Instrumental Edit) – Polydor CDR White

Dj J.Squared
Dark Winter Mix

Dj J.Squared

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 40:18


My Love (feat Jess Glynne)Route 942UNKNOWN3Ecstasy (The Layabouts vocal mix)Portia Monique4I Want Your AttentionMoon Boots5Frequency FreakinBlock & Crown6UNKNOWN7Until You (feat Marc Evans)N'Dinga Gaba & DJ Spen8UNKNOWN9Baby LoveThe Journey Men10UNKNOWN11Music In You (David Penn remix)Purple Disco Machine, Lorenz Rhode12All The ThingsMartello13Reset (Opolopo remix)Namy14Back In Time (feat Miles Bonny - Crackazat extended remix)ChrissySupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/dj-jsquared/donations

Dj J.Squared
It Just Is 2

Dj J.Squared

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 60:38


1 We Used To Say (Original Mix) Sebb Junior2 Frequency Freakin (Original Mix) Block & Crown3 Higher Black Loops4 Pimp Mobile (Sonny Fodera Mix) Oscar P. & Gianluca Pighi5 People On A Party (Original Mix)Mark Lower6 Bring Together Mo'funk, Roland Clark7 A House Thing (Micky More & Andy Tee Deep Mix) Paggi & Costanzi, Roland Clark8 Brooklyn Love Anthony Mea9 Promises (Mousse T.'s Extended Disco Shizzle Remix)Calvin Harris, Sam Smith, Mousse T.10 Until You (Original Mix) N'Dinga Gaba, DJ Spen, Marc Evans11 Music in You (feat. Lorenz Rhode) (David Penn Remix)Purple Disco Machine, Lorenz Rhode, David Penn12 Seventies Feat. Elisabeth (Original Mix) Re-Tide, Elisabeth13 Your Day Is Coming (Earl TuTu & John Khan Remix) Jersey Maestros, Jonathan Holman, Earl TuTu, John Khan14 What Is House Music Chopstick & Johnjon, CeCe Rogers15 Josephine (OtherSoul Re-Rub)Ferrari, Bergamasco, Marc Evans, ANTONELLO FERRARI, ALDO BERGAMASCO, OthersoulSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/dj-jsquared/donations

Dj J.Squared
OFFERING

Dj J.Squared

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 60:55


1Bobby Caldwell - What You Won't Do for Love (House remix)House remix2 Fly (Smash Hunter Mix)Brooklyn Classic, Smash Hunter3Boogie Wonderland (Remix #4)Earth, Wind & Fire4I'm An Addict (4 Ur Love) (Original Mix)Chocolate Dice5You Know How To Love Me (Joey Negro Extended Disco Mix)Phyllis Hyman, Joey Negro6Brooklyn LoveAnthony Mea7Frequency Freakin (Original Mix)Block & Crown8People On A Party (Original Mix)Mark Lower9What Is House MusicChopstick & Johnjon, CeCe Rogers10HigherBlack Loops11Birthday of Blackness (Club Mix)Cazz Ear, Natasha Kitty Katt12Music in You (feat. Lorenz Rhode) (David Penn Remix)Purple Disco Machine, Lorenz Rhode, David Penn13Pimp Mobile (Sonny Fodera Mix)Oscar P. & Gianluca Pighi14Bring TogetherMo'funk, Roland Clark15Until You (Original Mix)N'Dinga Gaba, DJ Spen, Marc Evans16Set The Tone (Original Mix)Scott Diaz17Fly Away (Dennis Ferrer Remix)Damian Lazarus, The Ancient Moons, Afronaut Zu, Dennis Ferrer18Back In Time (Crackazat Extended Remix)Chrissy, Miles Bonny, Crackazat19NODJINSH E03/ Louie Vega Josh Milan - Your Body (Dance Ritual Dub)LouieSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/dj-jsquared/donations

Four the Love of House
4 The Love Of HOUSE OCT/2019 Part 2

Four the Love of House

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 61:48


1Bobby Caldwell - What You Won't Do for Love (House remix)House remix2 Fly (Smash Hunter Mix)Brooklyn Classic, Smash Hunter3Boogie Wonderland (Remix #4)Earth, Wind & Fire4I'm An Addict (4 Ur Love) (Original Mix)Chocolate Dice5You Know How To Love Me (Joey Negro Extended Disco Mix)Phyllis Hyman, Joey Negro6Brooklyn LoveAnthony Mea7Frequency Freakin (Original Mix)Block & Crown8People On A Party (Original Mix)Mark Lower9What Is House MusicChopstick & Johnjon, CeCe Rogers10HigherBlack Loops11Birthday of Blackness (Club Mix)Cazz Ear, Natasha Kitty Katt12Music in You (feat. Lorenz Rhode) (David Penn Remix)Purple Disco Machine, Lorenz Rhode, David Penn13Pimp Mobile (Sonny Fodera Mix)Oscar P. & Gianluca Pighi14Bring TogetherMo'funk, Roland Clark15Until You (Original Mix)N'Dinga Gaba, DJ Spen, Marc Evans16Set The Tone (Original Mix)Scott Diaz17Fly Away (Dennis Ferrer Remix)Damian Lazarus, The Ancient Moons, Afronaut Zu, Dennis Ferrer18Back In Time (Crackazat Extended Remix)Chrissy, Miles Bonny, Crackazat19NODJINSH E03/ Louie Vega Josh Milan - Your Body (Dance Ritual Dub)LouieSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/four-the-love-of-house/donations