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THIS WEEK on the GWA Podcast, to end this season, we interview Nellie Scott, Director of the Corita Art Center in California, on SISTER MARY CORITA! Sister Mary Corita Kent is the legendary Los Angeles icon, pop artist, activist, nun, and educator, known for her prints and posters filled with luminous block colours and text that reflected her concerns about poverty, racism, and war, and which are filled with messages of peace and social justice. Born in 1918 to a working class Catholic family in Iowa, when the Corita was five she moved with her family to Hollywood. In 1936, aged 18, Corita graduated from the Los Angeles Catholic Girls' High School and entered the religious order of the Immaculate Heart of Mary where she took the name Sister Mary Corita (where she went on to head up the art dept!) Corita's work ranges from figurative and religious to incorporating advertising images and slogans, popular song lyrics and passages from the Bible. In the ‘60s, her work became increasingly political, urging viewers to consider poverty, racism, and injustice. She was a groundbreaker and considered by many to be at the front of the Pop Art movement ~ whilst also teaching (and being a nun!) full time. Reappropriating symbols for a spiritual message, such as Aeroplanes for guardian angels; Wonder Bread as the eucharist; Corita's art gained attention for its ability to find joy in the everyday. She infused pop elements into her work, and throughout the ‘60s, her work became increasingly political, urging viewers to consider the social injustices of the time. -- LINKS: Ten Rules Audio Project with Dublab Radio here: https://www.corita.org/tenrules Ten Rules Chronicle Book (April 2023) here: https://www.chroniclebooks.com/products/new-rules-next-week Baylis Glascock film here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1hRjih1uLmampB8DI2s2n4Nup7i3Pmacc/view Thomas Conrad film here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1vBcaCDRMLRAINXBYVDP3TyJmt2IL5fOD/view Rebel hearts doc on IHC here: https://www.rebelheartsfilm.com/ ENJOY! Follow us: Katy Hessel: @thegreatwomenartists / @katy.hessel Research assistant: Viva Ruggi Sound editing by Nada Smiljanic Artwork by @thisisaliceskinner Music by Ben Wetherfield https://www.thegreatwomenartists.com/ -- THIS EPISODE IS GENEROUSLY SUPPORTED BY CHRISTIES: www.christies.com
Originally aired Sunday, October 31st 2021 on Dublab Radio. 1. Lucifer (Mort Garson) - “Witch Trial” 1971 / 2020 Sacred Bones 2. North Satellite - “Evil” 2021 Startree 3. Danger Boys - “Haunted Zone” 2021 Periodica, Italy 4. Haruomi Hosono With Friends Of Earth - “Strange Love” 1984, Japan 5. Brazil - “Tvoj Svijet” - 1990, Yugoslavia / 2020 Dark Entries 6. Betty Lavett - ‘Witch Craft In The Air” 1962 Lu Pine Productions 7. Quinn Harris - “Supernatural Thing” 1975 Cantilever / 2020 Tidal Waves/Day End 8. Ty Segall - “Despoiler of Cadaver” 2018 Drag City 9. Bam Bam - “Where's Your Child?” 1988 Desire, UK 10. Ramasandiran Somusundraam - “Electronic Heart” 1974 Magma, Italy / 2013 Leng 11. Sault - “Scary Times” 2020 Forever Living Originals 12. Beach Boys - “My Solution” 1970 / 2021 Capital/Brother 13. Virgil Caine - “Swamp Witch” 1971 Fulcrum 15. Sylvia - “Easy Evil” 1974 Vibration 16. Barry Reynolds - “I Scare Myself” 1982 Island 17. Froid Dub - “The Murderer” 2021 DELODIO, France 18. John DiStefano - “Knocking at My Door” 1982-1996 / 2019 Concentric Circles 19. Larry's Rebels - “Halloween” 1968 Columbia, Australia 20. Tommy Mandel - “Haunted (By The Girl He Always Wanted)” 1980-1987 / 2018 Invisible City Editions 21. Gazebo - “Lunatic” 1983 Baby Records, Italy 22. East Coast Love Affair - “Don't Be Afraid” 2020 Athens of the North, UK 23. Minoru 'Hoodoo' Fushimi - “Mizuko No Tamashii Hyakumademo (Unborn Fetus' Dream Lives For One Hundred Years)” 2017 Left Ear, Japan 24. Baal - “No God / Astaroth” 1996 / 2016 Mental Experience 25. Neil Young - “Vampire Blues” 1974 Reprise 26. Kevin Ayers - “Lunatics Lament” 1970 Harvest, UK 27. The Frantics - “Werewolf” 1960 Dolton 28. Nina Harker - “L'affreuse” 2020 Animal Biscuit/La République des Granges/Le Syndicat des Scorpions 29. The Mighty Ryeders - “Evil Vibrations” 1977 Sun Glo 30. The Poppy Family - “Shadows on My Wall” 1969 London Records, Canada 31. Prince - “Dance With the Devil” 1989
Episode 093 of the Quarantine Tapes sees Paul Holdengräber and sports journalist Howard Bryant take a deep dive into how the sports world is responding to the ongoing protests. Howard tries to parse what is performative and what is powerful in the response from both athletes and the corporate sports culture in the past weeks. Paul and Howard also dig into the history of protest in sports and talk about how Howard has been thinking lately about figures like Jackie Robinson and Paul Robeson. Finally, Howard offers his opinion on what dissent and protest in sports may look like in the future.Howard Bryant is the author of nine books, Full Dissidence: Notes From an Uneven Playing Field, The Heritage: Black Athletes, A Divided America and the Politics of Patriotism, The Last Hero: A Life of Henry Aaron, Juicing the Game: Drugs, Power, and the Fight for the Soul of Major League Baseball, Shut Out: A Story of Race and Baseball in Boston, the three-book Legends sports series for middle-grade readers, and Sisters and Champions: The True Story of Venus and Serena Williams, illustrated by Floyd Cooper, and contributed essays to 14 others. He has been senior writer for ESPN since 2007 and has served as the sports correspondent for NPR’s Weekend Edition Saturday since 2006. In 2017, he served as the guest editor for the Best American Sports Writing anthology. Previously, Mr. Bryant worked at the Washington Post, the Boston Herald, The Record (Hackensack, NJ), the San Jose Mercury News and the Oakland Tribune.
Balls: Beatie Wolfe interviews 'first lady of rock 'n roll' Suzi Quatro about breaking down barriers and rewriting the rules for women in a male-dominated rock culture. Listen to this show that takes you from Elvis to Leather Tuscadero via the power of limitless swagger.Orange Juice for the Ears with “musical weirdo and visionary” (Vice) Beatie Wolfe explores the power of music across Space, Science, Art, Health, Film & Technology by talking to the leading luminaries in each field from Nobel Prize winners to multi-platinum producers and hearing the music that has most impacted them, their “Orange Juice for the Ears”. Beatie Wolfe is an artist who has beamed her music into space, been appointed a UN Women role model for innovation and held an acclaimed solo exhibition at the V&A Museum.Suzi Quatro’s Orange Juice for the EarsFirst song that imprinted? “Don’t be Cruel” by Elvis PresleyFirst album that shaped who you are? (plus which song to play) "Stuck Inside of Mobile (with the Memphis Blues Again)" by Bob Dylan - from Blonde on BlondeThe music you would send into Space? “Pathetique” by BeethovenSong you would have at your memorial? “When I Fall in Love” by Nat King ColeAlbum you would pass onto your kids? (plus which song to play) “Rosie” by Jackson Browne - from Running on EmptyThe show opens with “Can the Can” by Suzi Quatro.This episode of Orange Juice for the Ears first aired live on LA’s dublab radio but is also available as a podcast. This show was Mastered by Dean Hovey. For rights reasons, the music in this podcast version is shorter than in the original broadcast.
Identity: Beatie Wolfe interviews artist and activist Gregg Deal whose work deals with indigenous identity and pop culture, touching on issues of race relations, historical consideration, and stereotype. Listen to this show that takes you from the roots of punk rock to performance art like “The Last American Indian on Earth” via the thread of disrupting spaces. Orange Juice for the Ears with “musical weirdo and visionary” (Vice) Beatie Wolfe explores the power of music across Space, Science, Art, Health, Film & Technology by talking to the leading luminaries in each field from Nobel Prize winners to multi-platinum producers and hearing the music that has most impacted them, their “Orange Juice for the Ears”. Beatie Wolfe is an artist who has beamed her music into space, been appointed a UN Women role model for innovation, and held an acclaimed solo exhibition at the V&A Museum.Gregg Deal’s Orange Juice for the EarsFirst song that imprinted? “Ohio” by Crosby, Still, Nash and YoungFirst album that shaped who you are? (plus which song to play) - “Low Self Opinion” by Rollins Band - from End of SilenceThe music you would send into Space? “Sex and Violence” by the ExploitedSong you would have at your memorial? “Hurt” by Johnny CashAlbum you would pass onto your kids? (plus which song to play) “Waiting Room” by Fugazi - from 13 SongsThe show first aired live on LA’s dublab radio but is also available as a podcast. This podcast was Mastered by Dean Hovey. For rights reasons, the music in this podcast version is shorter than in the original broadcast.
Concentrated: In light of what is going on in the world right now, Beatie Wolfe wanted to create a selection of some of her favorite inspiring stories from her Orange Juice for the Ears guests to date about rising to adversity, finding balance within the chaos, reconnecting to what matters and weathering the many storms of life.During this special you'll hear Beatie Wolfe in conversation with CNN’s multiple award-winning global correspondent Sara Sidner; Sea Shepherd Captain & Board Member Peter Hammarstedt; Austrian sound inventor (of the ubiquitous Intel bong) & HealthTunes founder Walter Werzowa; author, producer, business owner & international drummer Queen Cora (with Prince for over 5yrs & Beyoncé for 3yrs) and Grammy/Tony/Emmy winning songwriter and Songwriter Hall of Fame inductee Allee Willis.Orange Juice for the Ears with “musical weirdo and visionary” (Vice) Beatie Wolfe explores the power of music across Space, Science, Art, Health, Film & Technology by talking to the leading luminaries in each field from Nobel Prize winners to multi-platinum producers and hearing the music that has most impacted them, their “Orange Juice for the Ears”. Beatie Wolfe is an artist who has beamed her music into space, been appointed a UN Women role model for innovation, and held an acclaimed solo exhibition at the V&A Museum.Tracks played during this Orange Juice for the Ears compilation:“Rainbow Connection” by Kermit, a song that reminds Beatie Wolfe of Sara Sidner because of how they first connected at the LA Times NewStory festival“Think About Your Troubles” by Harry Nilsson (from the animated movie The Point), a song that reminds Beatie Wolfe of Sea Shepherd Captain Peter Hammarstedt“True Love Will Find You In The End” by Daniel Johnston, a track Beatie Wolfe most associates with Walter Werzowa“Purple Rain” (live at the Superbowl) by Prince, a track Beatie Wolfe most associates with Queen Cora as she was performing with him at this historic halftime show“(Sittin’ On) the Dock of the Bay” by Otis Redding, a track Beatie Wolfe most associates with Allee Willis as Allee was sitting on the dock of the bay when Redding’s plane crashedThe show closes with the track Allee Willis chose to play at her memorial, “September” by Earth, Wind & Fire, although sadly that time came much sooner than the world would have wishedThe show first aired live on LA’s dublab radio but is also available as a podcast. This podcast was Mastered by Dean Hovey. For rights reasons, the music in this podcast version is shorter than in the original broadcast.
Rhythm: Beatie Wolfe interviews author, producer, business owner, and international drummer Queen Cora (with Prince for over 5yrs and Beyoncé for 3yrs) about the power of patterns and being a multi-dimensional creative. Listen to this dublab radio show that takes you from visual journaling to living out those dreams via the thread of life’s upbeats and downbeats. Orange Juice for the Ears with “musical weirdo and visionary” (Vice) Beatie Wolfe explores the power of music across Space, Science, Art, Health, Film & Technology by talking to the leading luminaries in each field from Nobel Prize winners to multi-platinum producers and hearing the music that has most impacted them, their “Orange Juice for the Ears”. Beatie Wolfe is an artist who has beamed her music into space, been appointed a UN Women role model for innovation and held an acclaimed solo exhibition at the V&A Museum.Queen Cora’s Orange Juice for the EarsFirst song that imprinted? “Simple Pleasures” by Bobby McFerrinFirst album that shaped who you are? “Think (About It)” by Lyn Collins - from Think (About It)The music you would send into Space? “What About” by Queen CoraThe song you would have at your memorial? “I Am Light” by India Arie The album you would pass onto your kids? “Birdland” by Quincey Jones - from Back on the Black The show opens with “Purple Rain” (live at the Superbowl) by Prince, a track Beatie Wolfe most associates with Queen Cora as she was performing with him at this historic halftime show. The show first aired live on LA’s dublab radio but is also available as a podcast. This podcast was Mastered by Dean Hovey. For rights reasons the music in this podcast version is shorter than in the original broadcast.
Get slimed by one of Philly’s finest! Kurt Vile is indeed a cat to slither to. His slinky slank sound is super soul for the generation on hold. Stop, don’t get up from that couch! Plop down and put on something nice like these “sprout session” sounds. Kurt cruised into dublab to play some fine sunny stoned songs. So please enjoy and when this cat is in your hood sway on over and say hello.
Lee “Scratch” Perry In Conversation with Mark “Frosty” McNeill Mark “Frosty” McNeill recently interviewed dub pioneer and all around mystic Lee "Scratch" Perry in Los Angeles. Flowing along with Perry’s stream of consciousness, the recording captures an astonishing mix of inventive poetry, animal impersonations, words of wisdom, and even some singing. Today, you will hear this interview in full. Frosty invited some of his favorite artists to flip, melt, and mutate the raw interview into new forms, which you can dive into on dublab.com. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been shortened. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Oceans: Beatie Wolfe interviews Sea Shepherd Captain & Board Member Peter Hammarstedt about a life spent protecting the oceans from illegal whaling, fishing and seal clubbing. Listen to this dublab radio show that takes you from teenage activism to the longest maritime pursuit in history via the power of determination. Orange Juice for the Ears with “musical weirdo and visionary” (Vice) Beatie Wolfe explores the power of music across Space, Science, Art, Health, Film & Technology by talking to the leading luminaries in each field from Nobel Prize winners to multi-platinum producers and hearing the music that has most impacted them, their “Orange Juice for the Ears”. Beatie Wolfe is an artist who has beamed her music into space, been appointed a UN Women role model for innovation and held an acclaimed solo exhibition at the V&A Museum. Peter Hammarstedt’s Orange Juice for the Ears First song that imprinted? “I Won’t Back Down” by Tom Petty First album that shaped who you are? “Wake Up” by Rage Against the Machine - from their self-titled album The music you would send into Space? “Left Over Sea Running” by Dr. Roger Payne & Humpback Whales The song you would have at your memorial? “Safe at Anchor” by Kate Wolf The album you would pass onto your kids? “The Thread” by Cary Ann Hearst - from Lions & Lambs The show opens with “Think About Your Troubles” by Harry Nilsson (from the animated movie The Point). The show first aired live on LA’s dublab radio but is also available as a podcast. This podcast was Mastered by Dean Hovey. For rights reasons the music in this podcast version is shorter than in the original broadcast.
This month we take a microscopic look at Organoids, tiny self-organized, three-dimensional tissue cultures that are derived from stem cells. Specifically, we identify how they can be used to make a “mini inner-ear” as well as how they are assisting scientists to better understand inner ear disease. For a closer look, please visit a study published by Karl R Khoehler et al., 2017 in Nature Biotechnology. About Dr. Yewande Pearse: Born and bred in North London, Dr. Yewande Pearse completed her PhD in Neuroscience at King's College London in 2016. She is now based in Los Angeles, where she works as a Research Fellow, developing a stem cell therapy treatment for a rare childhood brain disease. Outside of the lab, Yewande is a collaborator of Science Gallery Detroit, sits on the Programming Committee Spring/Summer 2019 at Navel Los Angeles, and was a TEDMED Research Scholar for the 2018 Stage Program. Yewande also writes for Massive, an online science media platform. Sound Science Podcast is produced by dublab. Please visit dublab.com to find out more!
Documenting: Beatie Wolfe interviews award winning filmmaker, documentarian and producer, Lesley Chilcott of An Inconvenient Truth and Waiting for “Superman”, about her new documentary Watson and the privilege of sharing truth. Listen to this dublab radio show that takes you from vegetarian fast food to whale poop via love for our environment. Orange Juice for the Ears with “musical weirdo and visionary” (Vice) Beatie Wolfe explores the power of music across Space, Science, Art, Health, Film & Technology by talking to the leading luminaries in each field from Nobel Prize winners to multi-platinum producers and hearing the music that has most impacted them, their “Orange Juice for the Ears”. Beatie Wolfe is an artist who has beamed her music into space, been appointed a UN Women role model for innovation and held an acclaimed solo exhibition at the V&A Museum. Lesley Chilcott’s Orange Juice for the Ears First song that imprinted? “Whip It” by DEVO First album that shaped who you are? Dream Into Action by Howard Jones - track played “Life in One Day” The music you would send into Space? Tonga whale song The song you would have at your memorial? “Goodbye to You” by Scandal The album you would pass onto your kids? “Chuncho” by Yma Sumac (ee-ma sumac) - from The Ultimate Yma Sumac Collection” The show opens with “From Green to Red” by Beatie Wolfe, a song Beatie wrote after seeing An Inconvenient Truth. The show first aired live on LA’s dublab radio but is also available as a podcast. This podcast was Mastered by Dean Hovey. For rights reasons the music in this podcast version is shorter than in the original broadcast.
Beatie Wolfe interviews Phil Crowe, Chief Creative Officer of the award-winning VFX company The Mill, about the value of creative constraints and distilling the brief. Listen to this dublab radio show that takes you from chasing bees in Barnsley to the big screens of the Superbowl via the strength of relationships. Orange Juice for the Ears with “musical weirdo and visionary” (Vice) Beatie Wolfe explores the power of music across Space, Science, Art, Health, Film & Technology by talking to the leading luminaries in each field from Nobel Prize winners to multi-platinum producers and hearing the music that has most impacted them, their “Orange Juice for the Ears”. Beatie Wolfe is an artist who has beamed her music into space, been appointed a UN Women role model for innovation and held an acclaimed solo exhibition at the V&A Museum. Phil Crowe’s Orange Juice for the Ears First song that imprinted? “The Winner Takes it All” by ABBA First album that shaped who you are? The Stone Roses by The Stone Roses - track played “Waterfall” The music you would send into Space? “Waterloo Sunset” by The Kinks The song you would have at your memorial? “If I Can Dream” by Elvis The album you would pass onto your kids? Histoire De Melody Nelson by Serge Gainsbourg - track played “Cargo Culte” The show opens with “So Long, Marianne” by Leonard Cohen, a track Beatie Wolfe most associates with Phil. The show first aired live on LA’s dublab radio but is also available as a podcast. This podcast was Mastered by Dean Hovey. For rights reasons the music in this podcast version is shorter than in the original broadcast.
Beatie Wolfe interviews Steve “Pav” Pavlovic, Australian music entrepreneur and Modular founder about being a maverick (and rogue) in the music industry. Listen to this dublab radio show that takes you from escaping The Can to taking over the Sydney Opera House via the power of DIY. Orange Juice for the Ears with “musical weirdo and visionary” (Vice) Beatie Wolfe explores the power of music across Space, Science, Art, Health, Film & Technology by talking to the leading luminaries in each field from Nobel Prize winners to multi-platinum producers and hearing the music that has most impacted them, their “Orange Juice for the Ears”. Beatie Wolfe is an artist who has beamed her music into space, been appointed a UN Women role model for innovation and held an acclaimed solo exhibition at the V&A Museum. Pav’s Orange Juice for the Ears First song that imprinted? “Mama Weer All Crazee Now” by Slade First album that shaped who you are? Aladdin Sane by David Bowie - play track “Aladdin Sane” The music you would send into Space? “Says” by Nils Frahm (from Spaces) The song you would have at your memorial? “Seabird” by Alessi Brothers The album you would pass onto your kids? XX by The XX - play track “Islands” The show opens with “Hey! What’s Your Name” by Coloured Balls, a track Beatie Wolfe most associates with Pav because of him introducing her to the Sharpies subculture in Australian. The show first aired live on LA’s dublab radio but is also available as a podcast. This podcast was Mastered by Dean Hovey. For rights reasons the music in this podcast version is shorter than in the original broadcast.
Aaron Paar is a DJ/Producer with a show on Dublab entitled "Stomping Grounds." He is also 1/2 of the seminal Deep House duo Teflon Dons that had multiple underground hits and were the first act to feature mega vocalist Gregory Porter. In this episode, we speak about him relaunching Worldship Music and upcoming releases, Martin Scorsese and Quentin Tarantino, the upcoming movie "The Irishman", fundamental issues with Policing, and much more. Find Worldship Music on Bandcamp Check out Stomping Grounds Radio on Dublab Radio
Björk In Conversation with Mark "Frosty" McNeill Frosty recently had the opportunity to interview Björk, one of our all-time creative music heroes. In this intimate audio portrait, the visionary artist brings us back to her adventurous, music-filled childhood to share the evocative sounds that influenced her. She sheds light on how natural environments manifest themselves in her sonic landscapes, discusses the potent role of humor in her work, reflects on the energetic balance between each of her albums, and the epiphany that led her to embrace her eternal music maker role. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been shortened. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Beatie Wolfe interviews Sara Sidner, CNN's multiple award winning global correspondent, about presence in the face of fear and the importance of humane reporting. Listen to this dublab radio show that takes you from horse whispering to dodging bullets via the thread of human compassion. Orange Juice for the Ears with “musical weirdo and visionary” (Vice) Beatie Wolfe explores the power of music across Space, Science, Art, Health, Film & Technology by talking to the leading luminaries in each field from Nobel Prize winners to multi-platinum producers and hearing the music that has most impacted them, their “Orange Juice for the Ears”. Beatie Wolfe is an artist who has beamed her music into space, been appointed a UN Women role model for innovation and held an acclaimed solo exhibition at the V&A Museum. Sara Sidner’s Orange Juice for the Ears First song that imprinted? “Isn’t She Lovely” by Stevie Wonder First album that shaped who you are? Purple Rain by Prince - track played “When Doves Cry” The music you would send into Space? “Waltz of the Flowers” by Tchaikovsky The song you would have at your memorial? “I Will Always Love You” by Dolly Parton The album you would pass onto your kids? Songs in the Key of Life by Stevie Wonder - track played “Love’s In Need of Love Today” The show opens with “Rainbow Connection” by Kermit, a song that reminds Beatie Wolfe of Sara because of how they first connected at the LA Times NewStory festival. The show first aired live on LA’s dublab radio but is also available as a podcast. This podcast was Mastered by Dean Hovey. For rights reasons the music in this podcast version is shorter than in the original broadcast.
Beatie Wolfe interviews Ale Cohen, director of dublab, about twenty years dedicated to the growth of music, arts and culture. Listen to this dublab radio show that takes you from Arthur Russell to Los Shakers via a smashed up record. Orange Juice for the Ears with “musical weirdo and visionary” (Vice) Beatie Wolfe explores the power of music across Space, Science, Art, Health, Film & Technology by talking to the leading luminaries in each field from Nobel Prize winners to multi-platinum producers and hearing the music that has most impacted them, their “Orange Juice for the Ears”. Beatie Wolfe is an artist who has beamed her music into space, been appointed a UN Women role model for innovation and held an acclaimed solo exhibition at the V&A Museum. Ale Cohen’s Orange Juice for the Ears First song that imprinted? “0303456” by Raffaella Carrà First album that shaped who you are? Love and Rockets by Love and Rockets - track played “I Feel Speed” The music you would send into Space? “Money, Money” from the 1972 film version of Cabaret The song you would have at your memorial? “Wheel of the Law” by Kendra Smith The album you would pass onto your kids? La Conferencia Secreta del Toto's Bar by Los Shakers - track played “Mas Largo Que El Ciruela” The show opens with “This is How We Walk on the Moon” by Arthur Russell, which reminds Beatie Wolfe of Ale because of his band's performance at an Arthur Russell tribute night and because it was the reference track for a Beatie Wolfe x Laraaji collab track to commemorate dublab's 20th and Bedrock.LA's 10th anniversaries, that comes out in quadraphonic. This show first aired live on LA’s dublab radio. For rights reasons the music in this podcast version is shorter than in the original broadcast.
Beatie Wolfe interviews Rohan Silva, the co-founder of Second Home & former policy adviser to the British Prime Minister, about creating socially conscious businesses. Listen to this dublab radio show that takes you from Wakefield's public library to Hollywood's "anti-WeWork" via making change at Number 10. Orange Juice for the Ears with “musical weirdo and visionary” (Vice) Beatie Wolfe explores the power of music across Space, Science, Art, Health, Film & Technology by talking to the leading luminaries in each field from Nobel Prize winners to multi-platinum producers and hearing the music that has most impacted them, their “Orange Juice for the Ears”. Beatie Wolfe is an artist who has beamed her music into space, been appointed a UN Women role model for innovation and held an acclaimed solo exhibition at the V&A Museum. Rohan Silva’s Orange Juice for the Ears First song that imprinted? “Tomorrow Never Knows” by The Beatles First album that shaped who you are? “Wandering Star” from Portishead’s Dummy The music you would send into Space? “Loaded” by Primal Scream The song you would have at your memorial? “Come Together” by The Beatles The album you would pass onto your kids? “Tangled Up in Blue” from Bob Dylan's More Blood, More Tracks The show opens with “It’s Oh So Quiet” by Bjork, a track Beatie Wolfe most associates with Rohan Silva from their first meeting in Libreria, Second Home’s bookshop. This show first aired live on LA’s dublab radio. For rights reasons the music in this podcast version is shorter than in the original broadcast.
FROM THE VAULTS: Brian McBride of Stars of The Lid In 2005, Brian McBride of Stars of The Lid dropped by dublab for a live rendition of his album, When the Detail Lost its Freedom. We hope you can join us! FROM THE VAULTS is an ongoing curation project produced by Ben Sinclair, resurfacing rare live performances and DJ sets recorded during dublab’s first ten years. Live at dublab Radio is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Visit dublab.com to find out more!
Beatie Wolfe interviews Janet Billig Rich (former Nirvana, The Smashing Pumpkins, Hole manager and Rock of Ages, Moulin Rouge Theatre Producer) about the music industry, past and present, and how she went from selling t-shirts for Sonic Youth and REM, age 16, to managing her favourite bands to becoming the youngest senior executive at Atlantic Records. Listen to this dublab radio show that takes you from grunge to broadway via the power of passion. Orange Juice for the Ears with “musical weirdo and visionary” (Vice) Beatie Wolfe explores the power of music across Space, Science, Art, Health, Film & Technology by talking to the leading luminaries in each field from Nobel Prize winners to multi-platinum producers and hearing the music that has most impacted them, their “Orange Juice for the Ears”. Beatie Wolfe is an artist who has beamed her music into space, been appointed a UN Women role model for innovation and held an acclaimed solo exhibition at the V&A Museum. Janet Billig Rich’s Orange Juice for the Ears First song that imprinted? “I Feel the Earth Move” by Carole King First album that shaped who you are? Let It Be by The Replacements - track played “Unsatisfied” The music you would send into Space? “Fuck and Run” by Liz Phair The song you would have at your memorial? "In My Life" by The Beatles The album you would pass onto your kids? Cuz I Love You by Lizzo - track played “Truth Hurts” The show opens with "About a Girl (Live)” (from MTV Unplugged) by Nirvana, a track Beatie Wolfe most associates with Janet Billig Rich as she is the first person credited for making the show happen. This show first aired live on LA’s dublab radio. For rights reasons the music in this podcast version is shorter than in the original broadcast.
In conjunction with his 2012 album, Iradelphic , Clark stopped by the dublab studio for a performance. Thanks to Warp Records for making this happen! Live at dublab Radio is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Visit dublab.com to find out more.
Azar Lawrence In Conversation with Mark "Frosty" McNeill Legendary saxophonist, Azar Lawrence, stopped by the dublab studio to talk with Mark “Frosty” McNeill. Lawrence’s visionary work, Bridge into the New Age, was recently reissued to the delight of cosmic minded music lovers everywhere. Hope you can join us for this special episode of In Conversation! In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been shortened. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
This ya mix was done by Scratch Famous for Tom Chasteen's (DubClub) show Meditation of Sound on Dublab Radio. I put together this mix highlighting some of my favorite tunes, some exclusive Japanese reissues and original music, and the exciting new voice of Deadly Dragon’s own Jonny Go Figure. 1. Don Drummond – Last Call (Coxsone Pre) 2. Matt Sounds –Seven Samurai (G Stone/Overheat) 3. Justin Hinds – Why I should Worry (Treasure Isle/Push Music) 4. Helmsley Morris – Think I’m a Fool (Clancy’s Pre) 5. Bob and Tyrone – I Don’t Mind (Studio One Pre) 6. Gloria Crawford – You Miss Me (Treasure Isle / Push Music) 7. Prince Buster – All My Loving (Fab) 8. Matt Sounds – Baku Steady (G Stone / Overheat) 9. Lee Thompson Ska Orchestra Feat. Bitty McLean – Fu Manchu (Axe Attack Records) 10. Dave Barker – Don’t Let the Sun Catch You Crying (Upsetter Pre) 11. Tommy McCook – Psychedelic Reggae (Treasure Isle / Push Music) 12. Hippy Boys – Nigeria (Gay Feet) 13. Winston Turner & Untouchables – Apollo 13 Explosion (Pisces) 14. Sounds Unlimited – Middle East Skank (Scorpio) 15. Cornell Campbell – Magic Spell ( Jackpot) 16. Mudies All Stars – Theme From The Gun Court (Moodisc) 17. Heptones – Love Without Feeling (Jungle) 18. Inge Larsen – Love Is Gone (Moodisc) 19. John Holt – Gone Is Love (Moodisc) 20. Mudies All Stars – Kick Them Face (Moodisc) 21. Vin Gordon – Red Blood (Studio One) 22. Dub Specialist – Bionic Dub (Studio One) 23. Dubforce – Liar Dub (Dubforce/Overheat) 24. Lee Perry & Upsetters – Upsetters Shuffle Dubfiles remix (Beatnik/Pressure Sounds) 25. God Sons – South East Trumpet (Southeast) 26. Don D Junior – Zion Youth (Fe Me Time) 27. Freddy McKay – I’m a Free Man (Studio One) 28. Lloyd Crosdale – Set Me Free (London Records) 29. Tony Brown – Inflation (London Records) 30. Slowly Sounds Feat. Courtney John – The Right Way (Slowly Sounds) 31. Skatalites – Ceiling Bud (Ximeno) 32. H2O – Medusa Pt. 2 (Aquarius / Pressure Sounds) 33. Dennis Brown – When You Are Down Dub (Joe Gibbs) 34. Earl Daley – Love and Happiness (Scorpio) 35. Ronnie Davis – I Won’t Cry (U Man Rites) 36. Diggory Kenrick – Psalm 16 (Now Records) 37. Vivian Jackson & Prophets – Judgement on The Land (Prophets) 38. Diggory Kenrick & Prophets – Vengence (Now Records) 39. Don Drummond Junior – Fisherman Special (Globe Records) 40. The Aquarians – Arise (Aquarius / Pressure Sounds) 41. Tartans – Solid as A Rock (Rythem Force) 42. Tidals – What a Great Day (Sunshot) 43. Dillinger – Dread no Warrior (Gorgon) 44. Rothadam – I Was Born To Be a Rebel (Shella) 45. Karl Bryan & Count Ossie – Black Up (Coxsone) 46. Sound Dimension – Blank 47. Lennie Hibbert – Real Hot (Creation LP) 48. Jackie Mittoo – Who Done It (Coxsone) 49. Lloyd Charmers – Who Done It (Splash) 50. James Eastwood – Darkest Night (Scorpio) 51. Nana MacLean – Give Love Another Try (Studio One) 52. Linval Thompson – Another Man (Marts) 53. Barrington Levy – Deep In The Dark (BL Sounds) 54. Prince Pampidoo – Do You Mommy Know (Lightning) 55. Jah Peter – Silent Zone Rock (Armagedon) 56. Rock It So Good 57. Ringo – New Yorker (Atomic Bum) 58. Pablo Roots – Reggae Mr. Operator (Stepping Lightning) 59. Nice Up The Dance Dub (King Culture) 60. Barry Brown – Nice Up The Dance (King Culture) 61. Stamma Ranks – Stamma Special (King Culture) 62. Linval Thompson – Fussing & Fighting (Medtone) 63. Itals – Dis Yah Time (Hopewell Surviors) 64. Vin Gordon – Harbour View Rock (Rattie Soul) 65. Itals – Ina Dis Ya Time (Spiderman) 66. Trinity – Ready Done (Spiderman) 67. Yellow Man – Over Me (Spiderman) 68. Clement Irie – Mr Magnificent (Hummingbird) 69. Jonny Go Figure – Vinyl Lover (Bent Backs) 70. Koffee – Raggamuffin (Frankie Music) 71. Johnny Osbourne – Let There Be Love (Version City) 72. Johnny Osbourne – No Ice Cream Dub (Special) 73. Salaam Remi – Acid Rain (Acid Rain) 74. Ghost – Come Back Again (Acid Rain) 75. Omar Gosh – New Millenium (Acid Rain)
Inspired by Massive Science's Science Hero Series, this episode features some of our favorite women in science. Resources: Massive Science, Janaki Ammal, Annie Easley, Wang Zhenyi, Marie Curie About Dr. Yewande Pearse: Born and bred in North London, Dr. Yewande Pearse completed her PhD in Neuroscience at King's College London in 2016. She is now based in Los Angeles, where she works as a Research Fellow, developing a stem cell therapy treatment for a rare childhood brain disease. Outside of the lab, Yewande is a collaborator of Science Gallery Detroit, sits on the Programming Committee Spring/Summer 2019 at Navel Los Angeles, and was a TEDMED Research Scholar for the 2018 Stage Program. Yewande also writes for Massive, an online science media platform. Sound Science Podcast is produced by dublab. Please visit dublab.com to find out more!
K. Leimer In Conversation with Mark "Frosty" McNeill Palace of Lights founder, K. Leimer, joins host, Mark “Frosty” McNeill, to talk about the experimental recording and composing techniques that he began exploring in the mid 70s with multi-track tape machines and instruments like the Micromoog. Leimer’s catalog includes 20 solo albums plus collaborative albums with Savant and Marc Barreca. In 2014, RVNG Intl. released A Period of Review (Original Recordings: 1975 - 1983), featuring unheard portions of Leimer’s archives. Irrational Overcast, his newest solo LP, is out now through First Terrace Records. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been shortened. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Akiko Yano In Conversation with SunEye This week we bring you an interview with legendary musician, Akiko Yano. LA duo, SunEye, travel with Yano through her 40 year career, from her break out hit “Japanese Girl” in 1976, to her work with Yellow Magic Orchestra, to her recent collaboration with Rei Harakami. We hope you can join us for this very special episode of In Conversation. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been shortened. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
This month’s episode is about the way the brain processes loss and why we experience the emotion of grief. We’ll be thinking about the evolutionary relevance of grief, how the brain modulates it’s own experience of grief, and what actually happens in the brain when it experiences what is considered “normal grief." We will also be looking at the healing power of music by exploring how one organization has used it to help countless youth during times of loss. The scientific interests of our first guest, Dr. Mary-Frances O’Connor, lie in understanding emotions at the experiential and physiological level. Her work has primarily focused on a bereaved population due to the wide-ranging emotional responses to this specific event of loss. In particular, she studies the neurobiological, immune, and autonomic parameters that vary between individual grief responses. Her techniques have included functional and structural neuroimaging, immune and endocrine analysis of saliva and blood, and psychophysiological assessment of heart rate variability. Continually interested in novel ways to evoke emotion, especially grief, Dr. O' Connor uses personalized stimuli, reaction time paradigms, written emotional disclosure, and virtual worlds in her work. Our second guest, Dr. Peter Freed, is a psychiatrist in New York. He received his medical degree from University of California San Francisco School of Medicine and has been in practice for 20 years. Resources: Science of Grief and Aim4theHeart About Dr. Yewande Pearse: Born and bred in North London, Dr. Yewande Pearse completed her PhD in Neuroscience at King's College London, in 2016. She is now based in Los Angeles, where she works as a Research Fellow, developing a stem cell therapy treatment for a rare childhood brain disease. Outside of the lab, Yewande is a collaborator of Science Gallery Detroit, sits on the Programming Committee Spring/Summer 2019 at Navel Los Angeles, and was a TEDMED Research Scholar for the 2018 Stage Program. Yewande also writes for Massive, an online science media platform. Sound Science Podcast is produced by dublab. Please visit dublab.com to find out more!
Tashi Wada In Conversation with Mark "Frosty" McNeill Tashi Wada joins Mark "Frosty" McNeill to talk about his latest collaborative album, Nue, released by RVNG Intl. Nue furthers the familial and creative bond between Tashi Wada and his father, Fluxus artist Yoshi Wada, alongside a supporting ensemble, including Julia Holter, Simone Forti, Cole MGN, and Corey Fogel. Combining synthesis with a spectrum of acoustic instruments and non-equal tempered tuning techniques, Nue is a uniquely personal statement from Tashi Wada compelled by collaboration and the ensuing spaces shared and explored. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been shortened. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Cate Le Bon and Tim Presley In Conversation with Mark "Frosty" McNeill Cate Le Bon and Tim Presley of Drinks joined Mark "Frosty" McNeill to talk about their recent album, Hippo Lite. We hope you can joins us for this delightful trip in and behind their music! In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been shortened. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
FROM THE VAULTS: Low Res From The Plug Research DATs Joins us for a live set of wild, nearly undefinable future jazz, hip-hop and experimental electronics by early Plug Research, Sublime Records and Mille Plateaux artist, Danny Zelonky aka Low Res. Likely recorded between ’98 and ’00, this set is a lost treasure created by an artist crucial to the 90s electronic music scene in Los Angeles. Low Res and other artists, such as Allen Avenessian, Joe Babylon, and Dimitri Fergadis aka Pthalocyanine, would all release music on Plug Research prior to second-generation artists like Daedelus and Flying Lotus (who came to define the label for some time). FROM THE VAULTS is an ongoing curation project produced by Ben Sinclair, resurfacing rare live performances and DJ sets recorded during dublab’s first ten years. Live at dublab Radio is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Visit dublab.com to find out more!
William Basinski In Conversation with Mark "Frosty" McNeill Composer and musician, William Basinski, joins Mark "Frosty" McNeill this week on In Conversation. He shares several lovely anecdotes about growing up in close proximity to the US space program in Texas and Florida, his current projects, and offers a behind the scenes glimpse of his latest release, On Time Out of Time. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been shortened. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
K Á R Y Y N stopped by the dublab Studio to perform pieces from her latest work, THE QUANTA SERIES, released through Mute Records this year! Live at dublab Radio is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Visit dublab.com to find out more!
Lynell George In Conversation with Mark "Frosty" McNeill This week on In Conversation we have journalist and author, Lynell George, sharing why certain music and sounds have come to define Los Angeles for her. We hope you can join us and host, Mark "Frosty" McNeill, as we get to know a city far different then the Hollywood version we have have all come to know. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been shortened. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
In 2009, Flying Lotus joined us for a live set. We are happy to bring you this dynamic performance again! Live at dublab Radio is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Visit dublab.com to find out more!
Girma Yifrashewa In Conversation with Mark "Frosty" McNeill This week we are revisiting our episode with pianist and composer, Girma Yifrashewa. While on a North American tour, he stopped by the dublab studio to speak with host, Mark “Frosty” McNeill. Over the course of their conversation, he shared some thoughts about his stunning album, Love and Peace, escaping to the mountains in his native Ethiopia, his deep and abiding passion for the piano, and much, much more. We hope you can join us for this very special episode of In Conversation. Girma Yifrashewa combines the ecstasy of Ethiopian harmony with the grandeur of virtuoso piano technique. Yifrashewa began his training at the Yared School of Music in Ethiopia and went on to study at the Sofia State Conservatory in Bulgaria, the Royal Academy of Music in London and the Hochschule fur Music Und Theater in Germany. A highly accomplished performer of classical repertoire, he has chosen to remain in Ethiopia, helping to forge a classical tradition for his country. Currently, Yifrashewa works to promote Ethiopian and classical music through cultural commissions and extensive touring throughout Africa, Europe and beyond. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music by Matteah Baim. Excerpts of piano pieces heard in this episode were composed and played by Girma Yifrashewa. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Elisabeth Waldo In Conversation with GB This week we are revisiting our episode with the groundbreaking composer, conductor, ethnomusicologist, and classical violinist, Elisabeth Waldo. She graciously welcomed dublab to the historic Rancho Cordillera del Norte to discuss her long career in music, which began more then 70 years ago. Her career began in 1940 with an invitation to join the All-American Youth Orchestra for a tour of South and North America. It was on this tour her interest in Native American music began. After the Youth Orchestra disbanded, Waldo began playing as first violin for the Los Angeles Philharmonic. After a year, she decided to return to Latin America to tour as a solo performer. While in Mexico, she met and befriended the artist, Diego Rivera. To make it possible for modern musicians to perform the rare Mesoamerican music they both loved, He encouraged her to develop her own musical notation for it. During this time, Waldo also frequently played with Agustin Lara and the legendary Ymu Sumac. Upon returning to Los Angeles, Waldo formed her own ensemble. They used instruments from South and North America as well as western classical instruments to play her original compositions. The albums Maracatu, Rites of the Pagan, and Realm of the Incas followed soon after. She was among the first to bring these instruments and musical traditions into a recording studio. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Exerts of music heard in this episode are by Elisabeth Waldo. Sound editing, theme song and additional music by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Producer, composer, and DJ, Hudson Mohawke, stopped by Flying Lotus' show, Brainfeeder, for a live set. We hope you can tune in for a frenetic performance. Live at dublab Radio is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Visit dublab.com to find out more!
Andy Hughes In Conversation with Mark "Frosty" McNeill In 2000, Andy Hughes- DJ, producer, member of The Orb- stopped by dublab for a live set and interview with Mark "Frosty" McNeill. Hughes discussed his recent decision to leave The Orb, various past collaborations with the likes of Robert Fripp and Galliano, coming up through the ranks of the electronic music scene in London during the 1990s, and much more! In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons, the music choices featured in the original broadcast have been shortened. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Ella Jenkins In Conversation with Mark "Frosty" McNeill The First Lady of Children’s Music, Ella Jenkins, has been infusing growing spirits with a love for rhythm, melody and diversity through her workshops, broadcasts and recordings since the 1950s. Her string of popular albums for Folkways Records have been a staple in homes and schools for decades, helping nurture children’s natural love for movement, song and social connection. Ella Jenkins makes our world a brighter place and we’re thrilled to share her conversation with Mark “Frosty” McNeill. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons, the music choices featured in the original broadcast have been shortened. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
We’re all familiar with the idea that we should be getting an average of 8 hours of sleep a night. But we are not all as familiar as to why. And for some of us, the value we place on a good night sleep is trumped by the value we place on the underground music scenes that have thrived on staying up all night, nourishing us in a different way. This month on Sound Science, we explore the science of sleep and pay tribute to rich underground night time music scenes past and new, asking whether we can enjoy dancing the night away, while maintaining good sleep health. Our first guest this week is Dr Russel Foster, Head of the Nuffield Laboratory of Ophthalmology and the Sleep and Circadian Neuroscience Institute at Oxford University. His research interests span both visual and circadian neurobiology with a focus on the mechanisms whereby light regulates vertebrate circadian rhythms. We are also joined by Foreigner Aka Adam Cooper, a multi-disciplinary creative best known as a DJ, designer, and event producer. He has a monthly show on NTS Radio and is responsible for blessing LA with some of the best events it’s ever seen, including Junkyard Jouvert, Midnight (Made in L.A. afterparty) and RAIL UP. About Dr. Yewande Pearse: Born and bred in North London, Dr. Yewande Pearse completed her PhD in Neuroscience at King's College London, in 2016. She is now based in Los Angeles, where she works as a Research Fellow, developing a stem cell therapy treatment for a rare childhood brain disease. Outside of the lab, Yewande is a collaborator of Science Gallery Detroit, sits on the Programming Committee Spring/Summer 2019 at Navel Los Angeles, and was a TEDMED Research Scholar for the 2018 Stage Program. Yewande also writes for Massive, an online science media platform. Sound Science Podcast is produced by dublab. Please visit dublab.com to find out more!
Margo Guryan In Conversation with DJ Nobody While most of Margo Guryan’s fans know her classic 60s pop hits, Sunday Morning or Take a Picture, few have heard about her days in the jazz world or as a songwriter and lyricist. From behind the scenes or a microphone, she’s been a dynamic force within the music world since the late 1950s. We hope you can join us for this special episode of In Conversation! In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons, music from the original broadcast has been shortened. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Big Jay McNeely In Conversation with Mark "Frosty" McNeill Rhythm and Blues hero, Big Jay McNeely, was famous for whipping audiences into a frenzy. Known as the King of the Honkin’ Sax, his guttural, brassy blasts coupled with an intense onstage presence blew down walls the world over. McNeely’s hits on wax were equally potent. 1949’s “The Deacon’s Hop” is a lasting R&B instrumental and 1959’s “There Is Something on Your Mind” can eternally be found in cars cruising low and slow. Big Jay passed away in late 2018 at the age of 91 years old but just prior, Mark "Frosty" McNeill was fortunate enough to visit his home to conduct this career-spanning interview. In their hour-long conversation, Big Jay took us from his upbringing in the rustic Watts of the 1930s to the energetic peak of Los Angeles’ Central Avenue scene to the bustle of New York City’s Birdland circa 1957. Enjoy this visit with an iconic trailblazer. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been shortened. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
The Psychedelic era of the mid-60s was a time of social, musical and artistic change influenced by psychedelic drugs, but behind the cultural curtain, a world of research was beginning to open up into the therapeutic potential of these drugs - one that was unfortunately short lived. In 1970, President Richard Nixon called Timothy Leary, the Harvard psychologist famously known for advocating the exploration of the therapeutic potential of psychedelic drugs as a cure-all for societies woes, "the most dangerous man in America." As a backlash to their role in the cultural upheaval of the 1960s, the majority of these drugs were declared illegal, driving hallucinogenic research and culture underground. Now, these drugs are in the midst of a revival, as new research indicates treatment options for a variety of mental illnesses and disorders, too valuable not to investigate. As psychedelic drug research bubbles back up to the surface in labs across the globe - we ask whether these drugs have a role beyond disease and if their use in creative practice will ever loose the stigma. Our first guest, Rahel Debebe, front woman of folk-prog-jazz band Hejira, talks to us about seeing colors and shapes when she hears music and how that has influenced her creativity. Vocalist and song writer, Debebe has performed to sold-out audiences in venues such as the Royal Albert Hall and the Sydney Opera House. Hejira, will release their album Thread of Gold in February 2019. Later in the episode, we are joined by Dr. Charles Grob, Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics at the UCLA School of Medicine. He talks to us about the turbulent history of psychedelic drug research. Dr. Grob has conducted the first government approved psychobiological research study of MDMA, and was the principal investigator of an international research project in the Brazilian Amazon studying the visionary plant brew, Ayahuasca. He has also published the first approved research investigation in decades on the safety and efficacy of psilocybin in the treatment of anxiety in patients with advanced-stage cancer. About Dr. Yewande Pearse: Born and bred in North London, Dr. Yewande Pearse completed her PhD in Neuroscience at King's College London, in 2016. She is now based in Los Angeles, where she works as a Research Fellow, developing a stem cell therapy treatment for a rare childhood brain disease. Outside of the lab, Yewande is a collaborator of Science Gallery Detroit, sits on the Programming Committee Spring/Summer 2019 at Navel Los Angeles, and was a TEDMED Research Scholar for the 2018 Stage Program. Yewande also writes for Massive, an online science media platform. Sound Science Podcast is produced by dublab. Please visit dublab.com to find out more!
Yves Tumor In Conversation with Maria Minerva Yves Tumor joins Maria Minerva to talk about his new music and the inspirations behind it. Tumor’s latest album, Safe in the Hands of Love, released through Warp Records, traverses musical genres, creating a new sonic world in the process. We hope you can tune in! In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and theme music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Juana Molina In Conversation with Mark "Frosty" McNeill Argentine sound visionary Juana Molina joined dublab co-founder Mark "Frosty" McNeill for a reflective session. Together, they dove into the creation of her most recent album Halo and the expansive field of resonance surrounding her ever-evolving being. This program was broadcasted live from Ableton’s Loop in Hollywood. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Art Laboe In Conversation with Josh Kun Broadcasting icon, Art Laboe, is our guest this week on In Conversation. Dublab board member, Josh Kun, sits down with Laboe at his Original Sound Studio on Sunset Boulevard to revisit the history of his illustrious 70 year career and explore his intimate nightly connection with listeners cruising the California streets or listening close for the voice of a loved one. We are proud to bring you an in-depth interview with this legendary radio personality! A sprightly 87 years young at the time of this interview, Laboe continues to hold one of the top rated slots in Southern California radio, one of the world’s most important markets. He graces the airwaves six nights a week with his Art Laboe Connection program. The format of the show is an exception amongst commercial radio, emphasizing a direct connection with the community. Throughout each show he takes dedications from listeners and sends their songs and kisses over the airwaves to loved ones, many of whom are incarcerated. His radio show is a pipeline through which the emotions and wishes of listeners are transmitted. The songs heard on the Art Laboe Connection are a refreshing and heartfelt break from the glossy buzz flooding much of the dial. While Art plays tried and trued favorites every show his playlist varies widely night to night based on to listener requests and his mood. On any given episode you’re likely to hear rare doo-wop, R&B or sweet soul cuts played nowhere else. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Kumi James aka BAE BAE In Conversation with shesaid.so Radio Kumi James aka BAE BAE joins us this week on In Conversation. shesaid.so Radio hosts a captivating interview with this dynamic Los Angles based DJ, filmmaker and artist. James likes to focus on music that feels empowering to her, honing in on women of color and femme artists who are claiming their influence in this world, and who also exist within the black diaspora: R&B, Hip Hop, Dancehall, Jersey Club, Bounce, Afrobeat & more. She does a monthly show on NTS with Fuck U Pay Us, a black, mostly queer, female punk group. Kumi is a PhD student at USC in Media Arts and Practice. She’s a multidisciplinary artist and has produced music for dance performances and works on creating safer party spaces for queer, black, indigenous and POC in Los Angeles. shesaid.so is a global community of womxn who work in the music industry. Formed by members of the Los Angeles chapter, the shesaid.so Radio LA team aims to motivate, connect, and showcase the work of inspiring womxn worldwide. The monthly show will feature interviews and themed discussions exploring industry news, trends and womxn’s ever evolving forms of influence within the music ecosystem. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Kelan Phil Cohran In Conversation with Carlos Niño In 2012, multi-instrumentalist, composer, educator, and historian, Kelan Phil Cohran sat down with Carlos Niño at The Last Bookstore in downtown LA. Over the course of the interview, Cohran shares stories and insights from his vast experience not only as a musician but also as a dedicated historian and thinker. We hope you can join us for this unique journey through the life and work of a truly remarkable musician. Kelan Phil Cohran played a range of instruments from the trumpet, to the harp, to the Frankiphone, which he invented. He made significant contributions to the Sun Ra Arkestra during the 60s. As a major figure in Chicago, he influenced the formation of the world renowned Earth, Wind and Fire, was the father and mentor of 8 of the 9 members of the celebrated contemporary band Hypnotic Brass Ensemble, and lead the independent community based Artistic Heritage Ensemble. He is credited with helping to re-introduce the rich cultural history that had been lost or suppressed during the trans-Atlantic slave trade. “Language is the derivative of song” -Phil Cohran In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear this broadcast in full, please visit dublab.com.
Daniel Miller In Conversation with DJ Lady C Mute Records turns 40 this fall and to help celebrate we are bringing you an interview with label founder, Daniel Miller. Along with host, DJ Lady C, Miller discusses the origins of the label, DJing in Mongolia, what lies ahead for Mute and much, much more. We hope you can tune in for this special episode! Mute is marking this milestone with a whole host of special events and releases, stretching over 2018 and beyond. You can visit Mute 4.0 (1978 > Tomorrow) to find out more. About Mute: Since its launch in 1978, the label has grown from Miller’s one-man bedroom operation into an a global entity that encompasses Mute, the recently revived label NovaMute, Mute Song (publishing), Noviton (booking agency) and Mute Management, with offices in London and New York. Running parallel to its strong commercial track record, the guiding spirit behind Mute has always been one of artistic freedom and creative adventure. Mute has nurtured, grown up with and worked with artists as diverse as Depeche Mode, Laibach, New Order, Goldfrapp, Erasure, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Ben Frost, Throbbing Gristle, Liars, Mick Harvey, Irmin Schmidt and Can. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Gavin Bryars In Conversation with Mark McNeill Composer and musician, Gavin Bryars joins host, Mark McNeill, this week on In Conversation. Together, they delve into his unique and expansive career in music. From studying with John Cage, to founding the Portsmouth Sinfonia, to being the first artist singed to Brian Eno’s Obscure Records, Bryars can be sighted as one of the most influential composers of the post-minimalist era. Enjoy absorbing some illumination from one of the brightest minds creating today. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com
Suzanne Ciani and KamranV In Conversation with Alejandro Cohen In celebration of Suzanne Ciani‘s historic release, LIVE Quadraphonic, dublab’s Alejandro Cohen hosted a special broadcast of the album followed by an interview with the artist. Joined by producer, KamranV, they explore Buchla's long forgotten Quadraphonic format, the earliest true 360° listening experience of its kind, and how it was finally translated to vinyl. The record features Ciani’s first solo Buchla performance in nearly 40 years! In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear this broadcast in full, please visit dublab.com.
Lydia Lunch In Conversation with Jenny NONO Legendary no wave artist Lydia Lunch joins Jenny NONO this week on In Conversation. A beacon of non-commercialism and a fiery advocate of individualism within the music world for almost 40 years, Lunch takes us on a raw and raucous trip through her life and work. It’s a ride you won’t want to miss! "I think punk rock is a joke." - Lydia Lunch from In Conversation In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Brandon Coleman In Conversation with Mark de Clive-Lowe Brandon Coleman sat down with Mark de Clive-Lowe and Los Guapos at the Freehand Hotel to discuss his new record, Resistance, out September 14 on Brainfeeder. They were joined by Kamasi Washington, Techdizzle, Allakoi Pete, Samir Moulay, and Dale Black for a conversation about collaborating, their influences, and much more. Tune in for a glimpse behind the scenes and into the world of an incredible group of musicians! In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Jace Clayton In Conversation with Mark McNeill In his book Uproot: Travels in 21st Century Music and Digital Culture, Jace Clayton aka DJ /rupture takes us with him as he traverses the globe. He shares some of these stories and his observations about the nature of music making and sharing in the our times with dublab co-founder, Mark McNeill. We hope you can tune in for this wide ranging and inspiring conversation. “Indeed, when Clayton talks about techniques such as transcoding and compressing – the art of squeezing recorded music into easily exportable and copyable packets of data – he could almost be talking about the journeys of refugees and migrants: “This is the sound of files that have survived patchy connections and erroneous metadata, straddling pirate servers and shaky Bluetooth transfers and YouTube rips, evading spam filters en route to Russian wares sites, to end up on a desktop or in some web video accompanied by an equally messed-up JPeg.” -The Guardian In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Jess Sah Bi & Peter One In Conversation with Mark McNeill This week Mark McNeill welcomes Jess Sah Bi & Peter One onto the dublab airwaves to share some insights into their album, Our Garden Needs Its Flowers, reissued by Awesome Tapes from Africa. The duo’s 1985 debut album is a soulful country-folk treasure. Created in Côte d’Ivoire, it caused huge ripples throughout Africa upon its release. About Jess Sah Bi & Peter One: In the 1980s, Abidjan’s Jess Sah Bi & Peter One became one of the most popular musical acts in not just the Ivory Coast (Côte d’Ivoire), but broader West Africa, eventually performing with a full band to stadium-sized audiences at home and throughout Benin, Burkina Faso and Togo. Although they’d been popular radio and television performers for several years prior, the catalyst for Jess and Peter achieving this new level of stardom was their debut album, Our Garden Needs Its Flowers, recorded and released in 1985. In contrast with the heaving funk, disco and reggae sounds of the day, Our Garden Needs Its Flowers was a lush fusion of traditional Ivorian village songs and American and English country and folk-rock music. Jess and Peter sang in French and English, delivering beautifully harmonized meditations on social injustice and inequality, calls for unity across the African continent, an end to apartheid in South Africa and the odd song for the ladies, all set against lush guitar riffs, rustic harmonica and rollicking feel-good rhythms. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com
Linda Perhacs In Conversation with DJ Nobody Linda Perhacs sat down with DJ Nobody to discuss the reissue of her 1970 album Parallelograms. Over the course of their conversation, we get a feeling for the unique creative process that made this album such a timeless classic. Perhacs explains how Parallelograms was created not from a desire to be a professional artist or musician, but rather as an expression of her experiences with the natural world. She also shares some thoughts on using a combination of synthesizers and acoustic instruments now and where she sees her work going from here. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Van Dyke Parks In Conversation with Carlos Niño Our guest this week is composer, arranger, and musician, Van Dyke Parks. His contributions to popular music help to define the sound of an era. Over his 50 year plus career, he has worked with Harry Nilsson, Bonnie Raitt, Randy Newman, Frank Sinatra, Judy Collins, Haruomi Hosono, just to name a few. He is perhaps best known for his work on the Beach Boys' album, Smile, and his 1967 solo album, Song Cycle. In this interview with Carlos Niño, Parks speaks about creating the first "concept" record, learning clarinet the hard way, his love for arranging, and much, much more. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Smith & Mighty In Conversation with Mark McNeill This week on In Conversation we travel back to 1999 to hear an interview with trip-hop pioneers, Smith & Mighty. During their interview with Mark McNeill, they share stories from Bristol (not the one in Texas), and the 90s music scene that saw the rise of bands like Portishead and Massive Attack. We hope you can tune in for this raw, funny, and energizing episode. At the time this interview was recorded, Smith & Mighty consisted of Rob Smith, Ray Mighty and Peter Rose. They had been DJing together since 1985, and had eventually started the label Three Stripe Records. In 1999, they were supporting their second full-length album, Big World Small World, released on !K7. They had also produced records for Massive Attack and Fresh Four. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Aaron Paar is a DJ/Producer with a show on Dublab entitled "Stomping Grounds." He is also 1/2 of the seminal Deep House duo Teflon Dons who had multiple underground Deep House hits including "Eve of The Freak Styles", "Sun Fist Rising", and were the first act to feature mega vocalist Gregory Porter. In this episode, we speak about the art of Sampling and making beats on an SP1200, the Kung Fu references in Teflon Dons music, Tomorrowland 2018, hustling and grinding as an independent artist, record collecting and much more. Check out Aaron Paar on Dublab Radio: http://dublab.com/labrat/labrat-aaron-paar/
Ewa Wojciak In Conversation with Jenny NONO Our guest this week is Ewa Wojciak, co-creator, publisher and art director of the legendary publication, NO MAG. Melding the music, fashion, art, and politics that were coalescing around the burgeoning LA punk scene of the early 80s, NO MAG offers a unique view into that era. In her conversation with Jenny NONO, Wojciak takes us back to a time charged with rebellion, humor, and innovation, and encourages us to carry that spirit forward as we face the challenges of today. Along with her work on NO MAG, Ewa Wojciak was also the first art director for the LA weekly, a Cannon Films creative director and is a professor at USC. “Punk was about not being part of traditional society. It was about inventing your own voice and your own personality.” - Ewa Wojciak In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Tim Lawrence In Conversation with Paule Raffaele and Barbie Bertisch Love Injections hosts, Paule Raffaele and Barbie Bertisch, welcome author, Tim Lawrence, to Red Bull Studios to talk about his latest book Life and Death on the New York Dance Floor: 1980-1983. The book charts the renewal of the post-disco party scene in the early 1980s and in the process reveals one of the most creative and dynamic periods in the history of the New York City. During the interview, Lawrence shares some of his own experiences from that time and how finding a home within that community profoundly changed the course of his own life. Tim Lawrence is Professor of Cultural Studies at the University of East London and the author of Love Saves the Day: A History of American Dance Music Culture: 1970-1979 and Hold On to Your Dreams: Arthur Russell and the Downtown Music Scene: 1973-1992, both also published by Duke University Press. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Tom Tom Club In Conversation with Daiana Feuer This week on In Conversation we are joined by Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz of Tom Tom Club. They sat down with Daiana Feuer to discuss their sonic roots, their other band, Talking Heads, and the creative currents flowing around all of us. This wide ranging interview kicked off with a vivid description of their initial recording sessions in the Bahamas and the dynamic group of artists and producers they met there. We were left with a tangible feeling for that time and for the creative paths blazed by our guests. In 1981, feeling the music scene around them was growing too serious and dreary, the duo took a break from their band, Talking Heads, to pursue a new project, Tom Tom Club. It was born out of a wish to transport listeners to a more agreeable atmosphere and to make them dance. To find out more about this groundbreaking and widely sampled band, you can visit tomtomclub.com In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com
Juan Atkins In Conversation with Dan “Dex” Caballero This week on In Conversation we take a trip back through dublab’s archives to the year 2000 and an interview with techno originator, Juan Atkins. During his talk with Dan “Dex” Caballero, Atkins paints us a compellingly down to earth portrait of his life on the cutting edge of music, at one point likening it to turning the lights of a car off on a country road and traveling in darkness. We hope you can tune in for this notion bending and insightful conversation with a pioneer of electronic music. To find out more about Juan Atkins, you can go to Metroplex Records. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com
Harold Budd In Conversation with Alejandro Cohen and Mark McNeill Composer and musician, Harold Budd, stopped by dublab’s studio to share stories from his musical journeys of the past, present, and future. Over the course of his career, he has written stunning solo compositions, such as his 1978 harp and choir infused album, The Pavilion of Dreams. He also crafted the groundbreaking ambient records, The Pearl and Ambient 2: The Plateaux of Mirror, with Brian Eno. Other collaborations include projects with the Cocteau Twins, David Sylvian and Daniel Lanois. In our conversation with Budd, he touches upon his days in the army with Albert Ayler, his love for the immediacy of the California Space and Light Movement, the moment he knew he wanted a life in music, and much, much more. To find out more about Harold Budd and his music you can visit: haroldbudd.com In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com
Nobuko Miyamoto, “Atomic” Nancy Sekizawa, and Mia Yamamoto In Conversation with Zen Sekizawa This week we bring you Music in the Asian American Movement: Interviews with Nobuko Miyamoto, “Atomic” Nancy Sekizawa, and Mia Yamamoto. Hosted by Zen Sekizawa, the episode takes a deep dive into the intersectionality of music, activism, identity, and culture in the United States. From a family’s return to Los Angeles after being removed to WWII Japanese Internment Camps, to working in the courts as a transgendered civil rights attorney, to fronting punk bands, their collective stories take us on a powerful journey that crisscrosses the country and spans generations. About our guests: Nobuko Miyamoto – Artivist, member of Grain of Sand and Founder of Great Leap Inc. “Atomic” Nancy Sekizawa – Owner and the heart and soul of the historic punk institution The Atomic Cafe. Mia Yamamoto – Transgender criminal defense attorney and civil rights activist. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Martin Gore In Conversation with Mikey Nightchilde This week we are joined by Martin Gore of Depeche Mode. He shares the story behind he first instrumental record, MG, with VSSL Radio host, Mikey Nightchilde. We also get a glimpse into the first heady days of Depeche Mode and his long relationship with Mute Records. Martin Gore is a founding member of the British band Depeche Mode. He wrote many of the their biggest hits including Policy of Truth, Personal Jesus and Enjoy the Silence. For more about Martin Gore and his album, MG, you can visit: Mute Records or martingore.com. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Terry Callier In Conversation with Carlos Niño The legendary Terry Callier was one of the first artists to ever grace dublab’s studio for a live performance. He joined Carlos Niño in 1999 for a chat about the music he loved, the nature of touring, and much more. We hope you can join us for a very special episode of In Conversation. Born in Chicago in 1945, Terry Callier began recording for Chess Records while he was still in high school. His childhood friends included the music greats Curtis Mayfield and Jerry Butler. While attending the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, he became influenced by the folk movement and John Coltrane. His debut album, The New Folk Sound of Terry Callier, was released in 1964. In 1970, he joined the Chicago Songwriters Workshop and began collaborating with the producer and arranger, Charles Stepney (Earth, Wind and Fire). During this time, he also co-wrote the Dells’ hit The Love We Had (Stays on my Mind). He went on to release several more albums of his own music for Cadet Label and Elektra. By the 1990's, his music was enjoying a resurgence and he began to record and tour again. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Slowdive In Conversation with Mark Van Hoen Channel of Light host, Mark Van Hoen, caught up with Neil Halstead of Slowdive for a mid-tour conversation about the evolution of the band from their start in the late 80s to the present day. Slowdive formed in 1989 in Reading, Berkshire (UK). The band primarily consisted of Rachel Goswell (vocals, guitar), Neil Halstead (vocals, guitar), Nick Chaplin (bass), and Christian Savill (guitar). Several drummers played with the band, including Ian McCutcheon, Adrian Sell, and Simon Scott who drummed on the first and second albums. The shoegaze pioneers released four albums between 1991 and 1995. The band reformed in 2017 and released the self-titled album Slowdive. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Exerts of music heard in this episode are by Slowdive. Sound editing, theme song, and additional music are by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Elisabeth Waldo In Conversation with GB Groundbreaking composer and conductor, classical violinist, and ethnomusicologist, Elisabeth Waldo, graciously welcomed dublab’s GB to the historic Rancho Cordillera del Norte to share insights from her 70 years in music. As you’ll discover, Waldo’s trademark multicultural music is a unique expression of her devotion to the world’s diverse cultures. Her career began in 1940 with an invitation to join the All-American Youth Orchestra for a tour of South and North America. It was on this tour her interest in Native American music began. After the orchestra disbanded, Waldo began playing as first violin for the Los Angeles Philharmonic. She soon decided to return to Latin America to tour as a solo performer. While in Mexico, she met and befriended the artist, Diego Rivera. To make it possible for modern musicians to perform the rare Mesoamerican music they both loved, He encouraged her to develop her own musical notation for it. During this time, Waldo also frequently played with Agustin Lara and the legendary Ymu Sumac. Upon returning to Los Angeles, Waldo formed her own ensemble. They used instruments from South and North America to play her original compositions. The albums Maracatu, Rites of the Pagan, and Realm of the Incas followed soon after. She was among the first to bring these instruments and musical traditions into a recording studio. We hope you enjoy this illuminating conversation with a true California treasure. You can visit elisabethwaldomusic.com to find out more. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Exerts of music heard in this episode are by Elisabeth Waldo. Sound editing, theme song and additional music by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
Gil Scott-Heron In Conversation with the audience In 2001, our friends at Canongate Books presented a concert with Gil Scott-Heron in Scotland. Jamie Byng from Canongate was a longtime friend and supporter of Scott-Heron. In this recording, Scott-Heron exudes a sense of comfort from performing in the company of friends, including the percussionist Larry McDonald. Canongate passed this recording to dublab for an exclusive broadcast in 2001. We’re happy to be able to share exerts from the performance again for this episode of In Conversation. Gil Scott-Heron, a seminal American musician, writer, and performer, began his career in the early 1970's with the albums Small Talk at 125th and Lenox and Pieces of a Man. He blended jazz, blues, political expression and spoken word to create a unique genre he called “bluesology.” Inspiring the generations that came after, his work is considered by many to be one of the forebears of rap and neo-soul. One of his most well known poems, The Revolution Will Not Be Televised, has entered into our collective imaginations becoming a touchstone in mainstream culture. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing, theme song and additional music for this episode by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com. A special thanks to Jamie Byng, Peter Collinridge and Canongate Books.
MJ Lallo In Conversation with Mark McNeill Mark McNeill welcomed MJ Lallo onto his show Celsius Drop for some conversation and cosmic cruising. Working as a voice over artist for NASA and the Vatican Observatory, Lallo created soundtracks for the swirling stars of the Milky Way. These space fueled explorations were only part of her pioneering experiments into creating compositions with her voice and early effects processors. Diving into the dance music scene of San Francisco in the early 80's, she soon found a home for her multi-layered vocal approach to pop. Lallo went on to pursue work in film, television, and advertising. We hope you can join us for this refreshing conversation with an animated creative spirit. Lallo’s self-released 1988 cassette The Channeled Voice was recently reissued by Full Spectrum Records, two radiant space boogie numbers from her second album Voices from the Night Sky and an ambient song from her debut were recently pressed on the Star Child Going Home 12 inch by Seance Centre and they have a 2xLP collection of her music on the way. For more on MJ Lallo visit: creating voices.com. In Conversation is produced by dublab. Sound editing and music by Matteah Baim. Due to rights reasons music from the original broadcast has been removed. To hear more, please visit dublab.com.
BRUNETTO, un auténtico todoterreno y referente de la escena electrónica nacional que no hace mucho nos volvió a sorprender con su 4º álbum de estudio “Sheroine”. Pocos como él han sabido compaginar en la última década las labores de músico, compositor, redactor musical y responsable de prensa de sellos como Irregular o Disboot, artistas como Trentemøller, Modeselektor, Telefon Tel Aviv, TSOWC… y agencias como Freelastica o Miraclemgmt. Musicalmente hablando estamos ante un amante de las texturas atmosféricas y cinemáticas. Siempre que se presenta la ocasión, Brunetto se condena a sí mismo a caminar junto a la artista visual Xarlene, a la cual admira desde siempre. Para la primera Edición del Movistar Livesoundtracks Festival, el próximo sábado 25 de abril en el Convent dels Àngels (MACBA). Brunetto & Xarlene proponen crear una experiencia audiovisual única, partiendo de una versión libre y personal de "Alicia en el país de las maravillas" mítico cuento de Lewis Carroll que inspiró a diversos directores cinematográficos y que forma parte del inconsciente colectivo de varias generaciones.
LiveSoundtracks podcast #7