Podcasts about Ghost Dance

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Best podcasts about Ghost Dance

Latest podcast episodes about Ghost Dance

Fine Pairings
Flames Between Foes: Origins

Fine Pairings

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 101:38


Dearly beloved, we are gathered here today to celebrate the enemies...turned lovers. In this mini-series, we'll dive into what makes the Enemies to Lovers tag tick. From loathing to lust, literature to fic, this first episode explores the background of what makes feuds change to fondness. Why do we love what we hate?  - Cocktail Pairing: The Lover & The Enemy “My love, your lover, the lover” - 1.75 oz dry gin, 0.5 oz St Germain, 0.5 oz Lillet Blanc, 1 oz grapefruit juice, 0.5 oz grapefruit simple syrup, and 1 dash of bitters "My enemy, your enemy, the enemy" - shot of Angostura bitters - Fine Pairings Podcast - A podcast about fanfiction: Where we pair ships with cocktails and reading with comedy. Got fanfic you'd like to share? Please email us at FinePairingsPodcast@gmail.com Remember to follow us on Tiktok, Tumblr, and Instagram @Finepairingspodcast and X (Twitter) @Finepairingspod - Additional Credits Title: "In Your Arms,” “Canon in D Major," “Ghost Dance,” “Gioachino Rossini: Ranz des Vaches,” “J. S. Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No4-1 BWV1049,” “Nothing Broken,” “Night on the Docks - Sax” Creator: Kevin MacLeod Source: https://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1500042 https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Kevin_MacLeod/Classical_Sampler https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Kevin_MacLeod/Oddities/Nothing_Broken/ https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Kevin_MacLeod/Jazz_Sampler/Night_on_the_Docks_-_Sax/ License: CC BY 3.0; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 Title: tabulation I. Creator: oji Source: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/oji/non-edible-sounds/tabulation-i/ License: CC0 1.0 Universal Title: starry night Creator: snoozy beats Source: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/snoozy-beats/single/starry-night/ License: CC BY 4.0; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Title: Seikilos Epitaph with the Lyre of Apollo Creator: Lina Palera (Lyre 2.0 Project player) Source: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/The_Music_of_Ancient_Greece/An_Appreciation/01_Seikilos_Epitaph_with_the_Lyre_of_Apollo/ License: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ Title: “Astroids,” “NPC Theme” Creator: HoliznaCC0 Source: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/holiznacc0/tiny-plastic-video-games-for-long-anxious-space-travel/astroids/ https://freemusicarchive.org/music/holiznacc0/chiptunes/npc-theme/ License: CC0 1.0 Universal Title: Bach - Aria Variata, BVW. 989 - Variation No. 2 Creator: Brendan Kinsella Source: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Brendan_Kinsella/Bachs_Aria_Variata/Bach_-_Aria_Variata_BVW_989_-_Variation_No_2/ License: CC0 1.0 Public Domain Title: Cinematic Duduk Creator: SamuelFJohanns Source: https://pixabay.com/music/ambient-cinematic-duduk-192901/ License: pixel bay content license; https://pixabay.com/service/license-summary/ LightingMatch2.wav by HerbertBoland Source: https://freesound.org/s/29678/ License: Attribution 4.0 Pouring Glass of Wine from Bottle by nebulousflynn Source: https://freesound.org/s/220303/ License: Attribution 4.0 Pouring_Martini.aif by bhweber Source: https://freesound.org/s/148167/ License: Creative Commons 0 Martini_Shaker.aif by bhweber Source: https://freesound.org/s/148168/ License: Creative Commons 0 Cocktail Sounds.wav by KenRT Source: https://freesound.org/s/319994/ License: Creative Commons 0 Ambiance_Bar_People_Loop_Stereo.wav by Nox_Sound Source: https://freesound.org/s/495522/ License: Creative Commons 0 1600s.mp3 by outerandeventhorizon Source: https://freesound.org/s/488809/ License: Creative Commons 0 Viking Calls by PoundSoundUK Source: https://freesound.org/s/641220/ License: Attribution NonCommercial 4.0 Shakespeare "Lover and His Lass" Lute and Wood Flute by soundsandrebounds Source: https://freesound.org/s/769807/ License: Creative Commons 0 Additional AFX from Freesound.org           Title: "In Your Arms" Creator: Kevin MacLeod Source: Incompetech.com  License: CC BY 3.0; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Title: “Newsroom Theme” Creator: FoolBoyMedia Source: Freesound.org  License: CC BY-NC 3.0; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ Additional AFX from Freesound.org

The Grimerica Show
#691 - Gregory Shushan, Ph.D - Near-Death Experience in Ancient Civilizations

The Grimerica Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2025 107:41


Interview starts at 39:10   Gregory Shushan, Ph.D joins us to chat about his upcoming book "Near-Death Experience in Ancient Civilizations - The Origins of the World's Afterlife Beliefs", his previous and his future writings and research.   We talk about the Epic of Gilgamesh, ancient China, cross cultural similarities and differences, The Greek debates, the connection with NDE's and the afterlife knowledge, Egypt and the focus on the dead, indigenous culture, the 3 days Enigma, mediumship and psychical research.   We also chat about direct revelation, the Ghost Dance, drugs and supplementation for experiences like this, the resurrection and rebirth, ancient initiations, toxic theology, Jesus, some culture focusing precisely on the rituals, being buried alive and the modern NDE research. https://www.gregoryshushan.com/   Become a Lord or Lady with 1k donations over time. And a Noble with any donation. Leave Serfdom behind and help Grimerica stick to 0 ads and sponsors and fully listener supported. Thanks for listening!! Help support the show, because we can't do it without ya.   Support the show directly: https://grimericacbd.com/ CBD / THC Gummies and Tinctures http://www.grimerica.ca/support https://www.patreon.com/grimerica http://www.grimericaoutlawed.ca/support www.Rokfin.com/Grimerica   https://www.eventbrite.com/e/experience-the-ultimate-hunting-adventure-in-alberta-canada-tickets-1077654175649?aff=ebdsshcopyurl&utm-campaign=social&utm-content=attendeeshare&utm-medium=discovery&utm-term=organizer-profile&utm-share-source=organizer-profile   The Eh-List YouTube Channel: https://youtube.com/@theeh-list?si=d_ThkEYAK6UG_hGX Adultbrain Audiobook YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@adultbrainaudiobookpublishing https://grimericaoutlawed.ca/The newer controversial Grimerica Outlawed Grimerica Show Check out our next trip/conference/meetup - Contact at the Cabin www.contactatthecabin.com Our audio book website: www.adultbrain.ca https://www.thegoldenteacher.co/#Grimerica10  Shrooms and Micro Dosing Darren's book www.acanadianshame.ca Grimerica on Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-2312992 Join the chat / hangout with a bunch of fellow Grimericans Https://t.me.grimerica https://www.guilded.gg/i/EvxJ44rk   Leave a review on iTunes and/or Stitcher: https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/grimerica-outlawed http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/grimerica-outlawed Sign up for our newsletter https://grimerica.substack.com/ SPAM Graham = and send him your synchronicities, feedback, strange experiences and psychedelic trip reports!! graham@grimerica.com InstaGRAM https://www.instagram.com/the_grimerica_show_podcast/ Tweet Darren https://twitter.com/Grimerica Can't. Darren is still deleted. Purchase swag, with partial proceeds donated to the show: www.grimerica.ca/swag Send us a postcard or letter http://www.grimerica.ca/contact/ Episode ART - Napolean Duheme's site http://www.lostbreadcomic.com/ MUSIC https://brokeforfree.bandcamp.com/ - Something Galactic Felix's Site sirfelix.bandcamp.com - Shakespeare's Sonnets

KPFA - Letters and Politics
A History of the Ghost Dance Religious Movement

KPFA - Letters and Politics

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2024 59:58


Guest: Louis S. Warren is the W Turrentine Jackson Professor of Western U.S. History at U.C. Davis. He is the author of the book author of Buffalo Bill's America, American Environmental History, and most recently,  God's Red Son: The Ghost Dance Religion and the Making of Modern America. Feature image: The Ghost Dance of 1889–1891, depicting the Oglala at Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, by Frederic Remington in 1890 on Wikimedia Commons. The post A History of the Ghost Dance Religious Movement appeared first on KPFA.

TsugiMag
Dark N Stormy au Glazart avec Mila Dietrich, Ghost Dance, Don Turi & no one famous

TsugiMag

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2024 53:15


Dark N Stormy, sombre et orageux, c'est ce qu'on vous propose ce soir et cette nuit sur Tsugi Radio en direct du Glazart. Ce soir, on sort un petit peu de notre Parc de la Villette, pour remonter vers la Porte de la Villette et vivre une folle nuit dans un des plus vieux et plus mythiques clubs de la capitale. Le Glazart, haut-lieu de l'after, haut-lieu de la drum and bass aussi, qui a toujours les musiques électroniques aux sons les plus durs et puissants. 4 artistes, ami.e.s de Tsugi Radio vont faire vibrer toute la nuit le dancefloor du Glazart : Ghost Dance, Don Turi, Mila Dietrich et no one famous.

YuriyVR
Ghost Dance (remaster)

YuriyVR

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2024 2:01


Oddcast · Hosted by Ramiro Lopez & Arjun Vagale

Track list: 1. Dusk Poem - Eve Of Conflict (Original Mix) 2. Yuuta - La Garota (Original Mix) 3. Nuke - Kaizen 4. Rheak - Captivating (Original Mix) 5. Miss Sheila - Eleven (Original Mix) 6. Shio Tian - Out of My Mind (Tony Romanello Remix) 7. Gunjack - Sucker Punch (Original Mix) 8. JAVAX - Horsepower (Original Mix) 9. Goncalo M - Stygian (Original Mix) 10. Ghost Dance, Don Turi - Skyzophonic (Original Mix) 11. 247 - What You Want (Original Mix) 12. Hullmen - Experimental

Watch This With Rick Ramos
#513 - Carnival of Souls - WatchThis W/RickRamos

Watch This With Rick Ramos

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2024 64:10


Ghost Dance for the Organ Girl: Herk Harvey's Carnival of Souls  This week Mr. Chavez & I continue our celebration of the Halloween season with a little-seen and incredibly influential cult film from 1962, Herk Harvey's Carnival of Souls. This is truly discovering diamonds in the landfill. Herk Harvey - a director and producer of industrial and educational films based in Lawrence, Kansas - would create one of the most influential films in cinema that would, somehow, remain almost completely unknown.  Harvey's film would be dismissed upon its intitial 1962 release, but would find an audience through television screenings (it was in the public domain) and public arthouse screenings beginning in 1989. Watching the film, it is easy to see Harvey's influence on such varied directors as David Lynch and James Wan, however its strongest influence seems to be on George A. Romero's first zombie film, NIght of the Living Dead. Take a listen as I introduce this forgotten classic to Mr. Chavez and we dig into the power of its images, sound design, and story. It's a fun talk. As always, we can be reached at gondoramos@yahoo.com - Many Thanks.  For those of you who would like to donate to this undying labor of love, you can do so with a contribution at https://www.buymeacoffee.com/watchrickramos - Anything and Everything is appreciated, You Cheap Bastards.

History 605
History 605 S4 Ep 13: The Ghost Dance's "Phantom Storm."

History 605

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2024 59:21


In this episode of History 605, Ben Jones sits down with Norman Matteoni, author of a new book, "A Phantom Storm: Sitting Bull, America, and the Ghost Dance."

Magic in the United States

For the Paiute of the late 1800s, the “Ghost Dance" promised a new world where the beloved dead would return home and white settlers would disappear into  the earth. It was a dance of hope and rebalance in a world devastated by U.S. policies bent on the destruction of Native cultures and sovereignty. This new dance was – and still is – often referred to as a ‘religion' by outsiders, even though the very words ‘religion', ‘magic', and ‘spirituality' are external ideas historically imposed upon indigenous practices. This story of the Ghost Dance is a story of grief, renewal and political resistance. But the story of Native dances and Ceremonies – and efforts by the U.S. government over the decades to restrict them – is also the story of just how limited the word ‘religion' really is.Featuring Jennifer Graber, Abel Gomez, Tria Blu Wakpa.

The Rest Is History
456. Fall of the Sioux: The Massacre at Wounded Knee (Part 3)

The Rest Is History

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2024 64:15


"I will bury my heart, at Wounded Knee" With Native American culture in free fall in the years following their triumph at the Battle of the Little Bighorn, the rise of the Ghost Dance - a form of spiritual expression that promised liberty from the oppression of 19th century American politics, modernisation and mass entertainment - brought a new hope to the Sioux. Even so, the once great war chieftain Sitting Bull, unable to see visions int the dance, and having allowed himself to be seduced by Buffalo Bill and the mass entertainment industry, found his authority in the Reservation waning. Meanwhile, a plan was being concocted to do away for him once and for all…his fate would set in motion a tragic chain of events that would culminate in a terrible, barbaric massacre at Wounded Knee Creek, where, amidst the bathetic winter snows, it seems that the Lakota had finally met their end.  Join Dominic and Tom for the epic conclusion to their mighty saga on the Lakota Sioux and the American Indian Wars, as they discuss the fate of Sitting Bull, the Ghost Dancers, and their last stand at the terrible Wounded Knee massacre.  EXCLUSIVE NordVPN Deal ➼ https://nordvpn.com/restishistory Try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee! *The Rest Is History LIVE in 2024* Tom and Dominic are back onstage this summer, at Hampton Court Palace in London! Buy your tickets here: therestishistory.com Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Producer: Theo Young-Smith Assistant Producer: Tabby Syrett Executive Producers: Jack Davenport + Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Rest Is History
455. Fall of the Sioux: The Ghost Dance (Part 2)

The Rest Is History

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2024 46:50


Following the tragic death of Crazy Horse and the ruthless cessation of the Sioux way of life, the last of the great Native American leaders were gradually picked off or repressed by the U.S. Government. Few though had so pitiful a fate as the once mighty Lakota War Chieftain, Sitting Bull. Having fled to Canada in search of peace from the relentless harrowing of his people, Sitting Bull finally returned and arrived at the Standing Rock Reservation in 1883. He was unprepared, however, for the changes wrought upon his people. With the explosion of railroads and the decimation of the already flailing buffalo populations, the Great Plains had been transformed into a desolate, barbed wasteland. While, the Native Americans within the reservations were increasingly coerced into Christianity by missionaries, or controlled by Federal agents. Then, news reached Sitting Bull and his people of a messianic figure from beyond the Rocky Mountains, who would come to liberate them from their plight. With him he brought the answer to their troubles: the Ghost Dance. Would it see the drums of war sound once more?  Join Dominic and Tom as they discuss the life of Sitting Bull in the years following his victory at the Little Bighorn: the destruction of the Plains, his time with the infamous Buffalo Bill, and the birth of the mystical, incendiary Ghost Dance.  EXCLUSIVE NordVPN Deal ➼ https://nordvpn.com/restishistory Try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee! *The Rest Is History LIVE in 2024* Tom and Dominic are back onstage this summer, at Hampton Court Palace in London! Buy your tickets here: therestishistory.com Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Producer: Theo Young-Smith Assistant Producer: Tabby Syrett Executive Producers: Jack Davenport + Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Legends of the Old West
BUFFALO BILL Ep. 5 | “The Wild West Abroad”

Legends of the Old West

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2024 34:22


Buffalo Bill Cody takes his popular Wild West production to Europe for years of tours and performances for royalty and the average fan alike. But as the production experiences unprecedented success abroad, tension builds at home in America between Native American societies and the U.S. government. The Ghost Dance movement gains momentum and leads to tragedies at Sitting Bull's home and Wounded Knee. Join Black Barrel+ for ad-free episodes and bingeable seasons: blackbarrel.supportingcast.fm/join Apple users join Black Barrel+ for ad-free episodes, bingeable seasons and bonus episodes. Click the Black Barrel+ banner on Apple to get started with a 3-day free trial. For more details, visit our website www.blackbarrelmedia.com and check out our social media pages. We're @OldWestPodcast on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. On YouTube, subscribe to LEGENDS+ for ad-free episodes and bingeable seasons: hit “Join” on the Legends YouTube homepage. To purchase an ad on this show please reach out: blackbarrelmedia@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Highroad to Humanity
My Place Among Them - The Story of John Iron Horse by J. Stanion

Highroad to Humanity

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2023 44:54


Gwen McPhail joins us to tell her great grandfathers story of being a teacher, principal and superintendent in the Federal Indian Service on reservations in Arizona, Wyoming, Montana, and North Carolina. The story is told by Gwen as written by her Great Grandfather back I the day. the Manuscript was passed down in the family but never published until now. The fear was of the truth being told of how the Government treats the Indians. In the book you find the events of Sitting Bull, one of the principals leaders of the Lakota people. The events in the book take place between 1878-1936. Amazon Story her website is istanion.com _______________________________ Nancy's Upcoming Speaking Events- Conscious Life Expo 2024'  https://consciouslifeexpo.com?ref=mge5otn Angel Workshop on Angel Communication using Spiritual law  New Life Expo Boca/Deerfield, Florida March 16&17th New Life Manhattan May 2024'

KALEO PHOENIX
Ordinary Time #25: Holy Ghost Dance

KALEO PHOENIX

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2023 27:57


In this episode, Pastor Tina preaches a powerful sermon guiding us through Matthew 25:31-46. For more information about Kaleo, visit kaleophx.com or follow us on social media @kaleophx.

Comic Book Rundown
Episode 678: The Sixth Gun 30-35

Comic Book Rundown

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2023 62:54


Becky Montcrief embarks on a Ghost Dance to witness what the terrifying, reality-shaping power of the Six Guns have wrought... and what they might yet bring about. But she is pursued by a band of fierce Skinwalkers, and in order to survive these supernatural hunters, she must fight side-by-side with the most unexpected of allies-the four horsemen of General Oliander Bedford Hume!Twitter: @comicrundownInstagram: @comicbookrundownEmail: comicbookrundown@gmail.comHosted by Joe Janero and Ron HanesEdited by Joe JaneroTheme song provided by one of the Sex Turtles (Joe Cubas)Find our t-shirts at Redbubble and TeePublic https://www.redbubble.com/shop/comic+book+rundown?ref=search_box http://tee.pub/lic/vBbIJZ4eLQ0c

Rebel Spirit Radio
The Ghost Dance with Michael Stuart Ani

Rebel Spirit Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2023 97:42


In this episode, author and documentary filmmaker Michael Stuart Ani joins me to discuss his book The Ghost Dance: An Untold History of the Americas. In a wide-ranging conversation, Michael discusses his experience of living with the Yanomami, his interactions with Carlos Castaneda and Timothy Leary, why commercializing plant medicines is another form of colonialism, and of course, The Ghost Dance.   Support Rebel Spirit Radio https://patreon.com/rebelspirit https://paypal.me/rebelspiritradio   Michael Stuart Ani https://www.talkingplants.org/   https://www.amazoniafoundation.org/   The Ghost Dance Amazon https://www.amazon.com/Ghost-Dance-Untold-History-Americas/dp/1535547650/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2Z3ZRAWXO1D46&keywords=the+ghost+dance&qid=1699037442&sprefix=the+ghost+dance%2Caps%2C128&sr=8-1   Bookshop.org https://bookshop.org/p/books/the-ghost-dance-an-untold-history-of-the-americas-michael-stuart-ani/12053081?ean=9781535547659   Connect with Rebel Spirit on Social Media Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rebelspiritradio X: @RebelSpiritRad Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rebelspiritradio/ https://www.rebelspiritradio.com #rebelspiritradio #ghostdance #talkingplants #yanomami

InObscuria Podcast
Ep. 200: Join Our Cult

InObscuria Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2023 87:45


We've been manipulating your brainwaves for 200 episodes, and now it's time we revealed the true intent of this podcast ruse… Do not attempt to resist, we've already infiltrated your inner-most grey matter. Go ahead and subject to our guidance and commandments. Some of you interact with us online on a normal basis, so you are already officers in our little army. For the rest of you, simply listen to our auditory purple Kool-Aid and JOIN OUR CULT!What is it we do here at InObscuria? Every show Kevin opens the crypt to exhume and dissect from his personal collection; an artist, album, or collection of tunes from the broad spectrum of rock, punk, and metal. He also now admits that this entire experiment has been a sinister scheme to enlist you into the ‘Scuria Cult. Our hope is that we turn you into a zombie follower… enjoy the show!Songs this week include:Death Cult – “Christians” from Ghost Dance (1983)Rival Cults – “Hot Blood And Rock N' Roll” from Indoctrination (2023) Hippie Death Cult – “Nice To Know You” from Nice To Know You (2022)Chain Cult – “We Are Not Alone” from We're Not Alone EP (2021)Softcult – “Drain” from See You In The Dark (2022)Margarita Witch Cult – “Be My Witch” from Margarita Witch Cult (2023)Cobra Cult – “The Devil's End” from Second Gear (2021)Please subscribe everywhere that you listen to podcasts!Visit us: https://inobscuria.com/https://www.facebook.com/InObscuriahttps://twitter.com/inobscuriahttps://www.instagram.com/inobscuria/Buy cool stuff with our logo on it!: https://www.redbubble.com/people/InObscuria?asc=uIf you'd like to check out Kevin's band THE SWEAR, take a listen on all streaming services or pick up a digital copy of their latest release here: https://theswear.bandcamp.com/If you want to hear Robert and Kevin's band from the late 90s – early 00s BIG JACK PNEUMATIC, check it out here: https://bigjackpnuematic.bandcamp.com/Check out Robert's amazing fire sculptures and metal workings here: http://flamewerx.com/

Deep Transformation
Charles Lawrence (Part 1) - Everything is Sacred: Native American Wisdom on Following Your Destiny, Living Joyously, Dying Fearlessly & Dancing in a World Beyond Everyday Consciousness

Deep Transformation

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2023 40:46


Ep. 100 (Part 1 of 2) | With extraordinary joyfulness and verve, Native American shaman Charles Lawrence tells the inspiring and fascinating tale of how as a young man, he left psychology, religion, and the white man's domesticated world in the dust when he became initiated on his journey by mythologist Joseph Campbell, and a paranormal world opened its doors. “If you have a destiny, you better go gracefully, or you'll get dragged by your heels,” Campbell told him. Indeed, to this day, now in his late 80s, Charles follows the call to ceremonies and Elder Councils all over the world, sharing his sacred shamanic energy and wisdom in blessing and benefit for all. Part Blackfoot by origin, Charles was baptized by traditional Hopi Elders, adopted by elders of Lakota and Coast Salish (Musqueam band), and acknowledged and accepted by Native American tribes and Indigenous Peoples near and far. Here, Charles transmits his love of life, his fearlessness around death, and his easy familiarity with the multidimensionality of existence, the limitlessness in every moment. “Is there joy in this moment in time?” he asks. “If not, why not?”In regard to our collective future, Charles tells us that solutions await us beyond our normal consciousness; in relation to our personal yearning, he describes the transformative power of being seen, being witnessed for who we are at the deepest level, to free our souls and break out of the box. He urges us to sing, to dance, and to “cry our own cry.” (“Nobody has your cry, your experience. You've got to cry your own cry.”) Charles also shares his liberating approach to death (“Dying is simple, just pull out the clutch and go into neutral!”), about how he acquired “death medicine,” a wonderful ability to help people make the transition, and his own death medicine practice. One cannot help but be thoroughly inspired and reinvigorated listening to Charles—as Roger wrote him afterwards, “You left a legacy of joy in all of us. I will sing and laugh more and open the door wider to Mystery because of it. And try to practice my last 10 breaths.” Recorded June 1, 2023.“What is it that's just waiting at any moment to burst out of us in joy?“(For Apple Podcast users, click here to view the complete show notes on the episode page.)Topics & Time Stamps – Part 1Introducing psychologist and Native American shaman Charles Lawrence (01:04)How Charles left Western psychology & religion behind in the dust, beginning with his meeting mythologist Joseph Campbell and the opening of several paranormal doors (02:33)Living your destiny: follow the guidance, the intuition, whatever shows up (06:42)Native American wisdom has much medicine for us today; the knowing that everything is sacred (08:02)The Native American attunement to nature, sense of interconnection, and knowing that elders are to be revered contrasts sadly with our present culture (10:11)Charles' call to meet Wallace Black Elk and his wife, Grace Spotted Eagle (12:17)Indigenous people's special lens on reality and the death medicine tradition of the Ojibwe (14:23)Charles' first Vision Quest in the Rockies while still a newbie (16:51)The Ghost Dance, the legend of the Broken Hoop, and inquiring into what would happen if we started gathering together again: weaving the basket of connection (19:10)How John came to travel with Wallace Black Elk, a man of connection and love with all beings...

Midnight, On Earth
Episode 167 - Talking Plants & Remembering the Ghost Dance w/ Michael Stuart Ani

Midnight, On Earth

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2023 131:12


In this episode, I am very honored to have legendary activist, author, speaker, and psychedelic elder.. Michael Stuart Ani. Michael shares powerful, captivating, historical knowledge as we traverse his history within psychedelia, entheogenic ethnobotany, and tribal cultures starting in the 1960s. We also talk about the impact of widespread plant medicine use on tribal cultures, and how the amazon still needs our help. As the episode continues, we talk about his history with uncontacted tribes, the mystical Ghost Dance -which Michael was called to find and reconstruct after a powerful Peyote session, and other riveting topics.. A timeless, enthralling episode.. Drop in!www.talkingplants.orgMichael Stuart Ani Bio:Michael Stuart Ani has been a student of plant wisdom for almost fifty years. As a young man, the Lakota sage, John Fire Lame Deer, guided him through his first peyote ceremony and then sent him south to Mexico in search of the steps of the Ghost Dance. A lost ritual of early humanity.. These steps led Michael to the Sierra Mazateca of Oaxaca, famous for its sacred mushrooms. From the 1960s through the 1970s, Ani lived in the Mazateca's most remote cloud forest and became the only outsider who was ever allowed to collect the sacred mushroom species of the region. During the 1980s, the steps of the Ghost Dance led Ani to the remote tribes of the Amazon Jungle. With his Amazonia Foundation, Michael was instrumental in fighting the epidemics among the Yanomami in the rainforests of Venezuela. His work in Venezuela was subsequently featured in the 1994 documentary, Yanomami, Keepers of the Flame, which won the US Environmental Film Festival's Best Documentary of the Year. Dedicated to helping the Yanomami survive the epidemics, Ani would periodically leave the jungle to raise money to support the medical effort. In this time he took on many different careers. He became an author, producer, university lecturer, and radio and TV guest speaker. During the early years of the 2000s, Ani focused his attention back on the Northern States of the Americas and worked to repatriate some of the very last genetically pure Bison to the Brule, Lakota tribes on the Rosebud reservation in South Dakota. While on Rosebud, Ani responded to the requests of tribal elder Leonard Crow Dog and brought an eyeglass clinic to the reservation. Because of his efforts in South America and Mexico, and his work to build a ceremony house for the renowned healer, Grandpa Roy Stone, the Amazonia Foundation was honored by being included as an organization under the umbrella of the National Congress of American Indians. Today Michael Stuart Ani lives in the cloud forest of the Sierra Mazateca with his partner, Heather, and dog, Gracie Goose. Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

End of the Road
Episode 273: Michael Stuart Ani: Indigenous Rituals/The Yanomami/The Mazatec/Spirit Guides including those Fabricated

End of the Road

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2023 67:59


Michael Stuart Ani is a writer, musician, director and explorer.  In the 1960s and 1970s, he lived in Mazateca's remote cloud forest and became the only outsider who was ever allowed to collect the sacred mushroom species of the region.  In the 1980s, he resided with the Yanomami people of the Amazon Rainforest, later co-founding the Amazonia Foundation in 1991.  With this foundation, he was instrumental in fighting the epidemics among the Yanomami.  This work was subsequently featured in the 1994 documentary, Yanomami, Keepers of the Flame, which won the US Environmental Film Festival's Best Documentary of the Year.   He also directed the documentary Coming Home, about the repatriation of pure American Bison to the Lakota people of South Dakota.   After many years guiding explorers through the remote parts of the Amazon, Ani was inducted into the Explorers Society under the guidance of Sir Edmund Hilary and Thor Hyerdahl. Michael is also the author of The Ghost Dance (2016), which was featured in Episode 123.  This just barely scratches the surface of Michael's remarkable journey.  His complete bio is at: www.michaelstuartani.com This podcast is available on your favorite podcast platform, or here:  https://endoftheroad.libsyn.com/episode-273-michael-stuart-ani-indigenous-ritualsthe-yanomamimazatecaspirit-guides Episode 123 which featured Ghost Dance, is available here:  https://endoftheroad.libsyn.com/episode-123-michael-stuart-ani-ghost-danceindigenous-ceremonies-with-entheogensthe-healing-gardentalking-plantsspirit-guides Have a blessed week!    

The Grimerica Show
#622 - Michael Stuart Ani - Ghost Dance - The Untold History of the America's

The Grimerica Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2023 105:28


Interview starts at 3045   Michael Stuart Ani joins us for a great chat about plant wisdom, the shaman community, the Ghost Dance, intertribal elder women taking control of pyscadelics, and saving the world from the green climate zealots. We chat about the Nazi's and psilocybin, MK Ultra, the mushroom religion, ancient ritual and ceremony, talking plants, addiction in the indigenous community, tonal singing, freedom and ferality, technofeudalism, and colonial eugenics control.   Michael Stuart Ani has been a student of plant wisdom for almost fifty years. He's a Legendary explorer, entheogen expert, plant whisperer, ethnobotanist, musician, author, and Ghost Dancer.   https://www.talkingplants.org/   In the intro we chat about the latest Contact at the Cabin - Montana Megafloods with Randall Carlson, Randall  and others talking about Malcolm Bendall Tech, Darren's travels across the border.   See links to the intro topics:   https://youtu.be/IogPBJyDFWw?si=9ikcYUVHRI_CfWuf Randall on podcast   https://www.youtube.com/@AlchemicalScience   Help support the show, because we can't do it without ya. If you value this content with 0 ads, 0 sponsorships, 0 breaks, 0 portals and links to corporate websites, please assist. Many hours of unlimited content for free. Thanks for listening!!   Support the show directly: http://www.grimerica.ca/support https://www.patreon.com/grimerica   http://www.grimericaoutlawed.ca/support www.Rokfin.com/Grimerica   Check out our next trip/conference/meetup - Contact at the Cabin www.contactatthecabin.com Our audio book page: www.adultbrain.ca Adultbrain Audiobook YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@adultbrainaudiobookpublishing Grimerica Media YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@grimerica/featured Darren's book www.acanadianshame.ca Grimerica on Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-2312992 Join the chat / hangout with a bunch of fellow Grimericans  Https://t.me.grimerica https://www.guilded.gg/i/EvxJ44rk Get your Magic Mushrooms delivered from: Champignon Magique  Mushroom Spores, Spore Syringes, Best Spore Syringes,Grow Mushrooms Spores Lab Buy DMT Canada Other affiliated shows: https://grimericaoutlawed.ca/The newer controversial Grimerica Outlawed Grimerica Show Leave a review on iTunes and/or Stitcher: https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/grimerica-outlawed http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/grimerica-outlawed Sign up for our newsletter https://grimerica.substack.com/ SPAM Graham = and send him your synchronicities, feedback, strange experiences and psychedelic trip reports!! graham@grimerica.com InstaGRAM https://www.instagram.com/the_grimerica_show_podcast/  Tweet Darren https://twitter.com/Grimerica Can't. Darren is still deleted. Purchase swag, with partial proceeds donated to the show: www.grimerica.ca/swag Send us a postcard or letter http://www.grimerica.ca/contact/ Episode ART - Napolean Duheme's site http://www.lostbreadcomic.com/  MUSIC https://brokeforfree.bandcamp.com/ - Lemonfade Felix's Site sirfelix.bandcamp.com - Hit Song

DJs, résident.e.s et festivals [Tsugi Radio]
Mila Dietrich B2B Ghost Dance (Septembre 2023)

DJs, résident.e.s et festivals [Tsugi Radio]

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2023 58:45


Rentrée Spéciale pour Mila Dietrich, qui vient avec un invité, Ghost Dance, en B2B ! Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

North Star Journey
How to build a legacy: The late artist Jim Denomie at Mia and beyond

North Star Journey

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 7:54


In early 2022, Jim Denomie, the internationally acclaimed painter, was in the thick of planning a mid-career exhibition with the Minneapolis Institute of Art. Then, cancer struck. Denomie died two weeks after his diagnosis. He was 66.That exhibition, “The Lyrical Artwork of Jim Denomie,” opened this summer, transformed into a posthumous survey of the latter half of the famous colorist's career — a career that skewered mainstream histories and purveyors of injustice, from Fort Snelling to Standing Rock, while championing the joy and resilience of Native communities.“It's a very bittersweet exhibition,” says Nicole Soukup, an assistant curator of contemporary art at Mia. Soukup had been planning the show closely with Denomie since 2019, up until the Ojibwe artist's death in 2022.“He was so beloved, not only in Minneapolis and St. Paul and Minnesota, but across the country and across the world. Words fail when you talk about somebody with such kindness and generosity and such a clear vision as an artist, and my words have failed me quite a bit in creating this exhibition,” she adds.Truth-tellerSoukup and Denomie's community say that the exhibition is just the beginning of building a legacy. As is the Jim Denomie Memorial Scholarship, created to help rising Native artists who embody what Denomie valued: truth and community.“I hope that he continues to inspire artists to do work that also speaks to what's going on in the world — artists as truth-tellers,” says author Diane Wilson, Denomie's wife of several decades. “That's a lot of what Jim was doing — speaking truth, both historically and in the present, about what has happened to and within Native communities, and that I hope will continue. I hope that's his legacy”At the entry of the exhibition, a 2016 video interview with Denomie loops.“My art reflects my identity and experience as a contemporary Native American male in the 21st century,” he says. Soukup says it was important to include Denomie's voice first. To allow Denomie to define himself, his art, in his own terms.“And also it reflects some of the government campaigns that affected Native culture in Minnesota and around the country to how it ultimately affected me through the assimilation campaign and the Relocation Act,” Denomie continues in the video. “And all of these issues defined or shaped my identity, and it's my identity that shapes my art." Todd Bockley, of the Minneapolis gallery that represents Denomie, says the artist brought to light difficult histories that many would prefer to keep hidden.“He was both humble and courageous to create and make public his interpretations of significant historical events of the past and present while also depicting his innermost thoughts and fantasies,” Bockley said.Denomie's artSoukup walks the galleries, surrounded by Denomie's paintings and totem-like sculptures. There are dreamy paintings of him and Wilson relaxing on a couch; of sensual landscapes with anthropomorphized animals on horseback; of spirituality and sexuality; as well as sculptures made from found objects — shells and plastic thingamabobs, feathers, buttons and bones.In his most iconoclastic paintings, Denomie, like the 15th-century artist Hieronymus Bosch, packs characters into every inch, collapsing time by pulling them from history, pop culture and current events. Several make repeat appearances: blue bunnies, a recurring motif that Denomie called “protectors,” the Dakota 38+2, American Indian Movement activists, “Wizard of Oz” characters, Barack Obama, Donald Trump, the Mona Lisa and figures representing Minneapolis police officers infamous for abusing two Native men with “rough rides” in the early 90s.All of his paintings swirl with his signature palette: violet, indigo, fuschia, turquoise, lime green, mustard yellow. The vibrant colors disarm, inviting in tough stories like a rainbow Trojan horse. These are Denomie's correctives to the historical record. Soukup and others have said Denomie paints the “ancestral present.”“These are paintings that you laugh at, and you also want to cry, you don't know which way you should react to it, but you're probably going to react both ways,” Soukup said.Take “Eminent Domain,” a 10-foot-wide canvas with a sort of pictographic map of the U.S.“Flying high above the scene in the sky, we have an eagle carrying away a dachshund and right next to them, you see Evel Knievel jumping his bike across the church,” Soukup says. “But directly below that you see depictions of sexual abuse by boarding schools and the Catholic Church; you see a depiction of the Ghost Dance from Wounded Knee and the reality of Wounded Knee, both in the 19th century and in the 1970s.”Across from it hangs “A Beautiful Hero, Woody Keeble.” Denomie has depicted, on horseback in a mountain range, the World War II and Korean War veteran Woodrow Wilson Keeble of the Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate. Taking fire at him are anthropomorphized birds and dogs with machine guns, while blue rabbits dot the snow-covered slopes. “The works in this room are centered around the theme of a beautiful hero and who determines a hero?” Soukup explains. “The question is who gets to write about history, who gets to learn about history, and what can we learn from questioning our sources about history? That is something that Jim did from the moment he started painting.”A righteous angerDenomie was an enrolled member of the Lac Courte Oreilles Band. Born in Hayward, Wis., he grew up in south Minneapolis. In many interviews and talks, he recalls how he knew he wanted to be an artist since he was a little kid, but he dropped out of high school when a counselor discouraged him from pursuing art. For decades, he did drywall and fell into a life of what he called “partying and addiction.” He returned to art in the 1990s, as well as American Indian studies at the University of Minnesota.“I went back to drywall, but it became a vehicle that allowed me to paint what I wanted to paint and not necessarily what I needed to sell,” Denomie says in the video. “And so I was able to develop more challenging, more witty, political, social commentary, which is probably what I'm most known for today.”He went on to paint with what Wilson calls a righteous anger, rooted in the government's treatment of Native people. This included his own family — his grandparents were taken and placed in Native boarding schools. When Jim was sick with cancer the first time, Wilson, their son, and some friends went to the pipeline protests at Standing Rock in South Dakota. Their son, she says, stayed for months, sending home stories to Denomie about the violent treatment of nonviolent activists. Denomie turned these stories into a series of paintings on Standing Rock, depicting ferocious dogs and fire hoses used on protesters in the dead of winter.In his paintings, that righteous anger mixed with wit and whimsy to create what Denomie called a “metaphorical realism.”  Put another way, his friend, the poet Heid E. Erdrich, wrote in the exhibition catalog that Denomie employed a “postmodern Anishinaabe mapping of events.”But Denomie's legacy isn't only in his art, says Soukup.“His legacy is going to be a lot of things, and things that we won't even know about, because we're only 16 months after his passing,” Soukup says. “But hand in hand with all of it is mentorship and care for community, friends, family. The amount of people who have stories, the amount of people who Jim gave undivided attention to, is profound.”Another longtime friend, mentee and fellow Ojibwe artist Andrea Carlson, agrees. She calls him her “art dad.” They first met when Carlson was an MFA student in the early 2000s and he visited her studio.“I didn't know what I was doing, but he was like, ‘Keep doing it,'” says Carlson, who is now based in Grand Marais, Minn. “I feel like I need to do that for other artists now, kind of take the Jim Denomie mandate, and apply it to other artists that are just starting out, because I needed that.”The two would go on to exhibit together at Mia in the 2007 “New Skins” show. And a few of Carlson's paintings are currently on display at Mia, just around the corner from Denomie's show.Leaving a voidDenomie's work held a particular place for Indigenous viewers.“Jim was always saving the last laugh for Native people,” Carlson says. “We have these very hard histories, but he wasn't going to just replay the hard histories, he was going to reserve healing and joy for Native people in his work.”Like Carlson, textile artist Maggie Thompson recalls always seeing Denomie show up at exhibition openings, whether the artist was just starting out or established.“I think because of his position in the art world, it was just like really cool to see him show up regardless of who or where,” Thompson says.Thompson is Ojibwe from the Fond du Lac Band and is based in Minneapolis. She was recently awarded the 2023 Jim Denomie Memorial Scholarship, an award that was created soon after his passing by the Denomie and Wilson Family, and the Minneapolis-based All My Relations Arts, the Native American Community Development Institute, and Bockley Gallery.Thompson is the second to receive the $10,000 award, after the 2022 inaugural recipient, Duluth artist Jonathan Thunder. She says the award has given her a boost at a moment when she was struggling, both emotionally and financially.“I was feeling a little lost and a little defeated,” Thompson said. “So I felt like receiving the award kind of gave me the motivation and gave me a reminder of why I do what I do.”Like Denomie, Thompson has demonstrated great commitment to the community. She mentors and employs young artists, both Native and non-Native, and even toured the Denomie exhibition with them. Thompson also often offers her northeast Minneapolis studio for community events.“I think art can be an important vehicle to keep that momentum and that engagement and give people another place to feel at home and welcome,” she says.What's left behindDiane Wilson says his community was shocked at Denomie's quick passing, which sparked the scholarship.“There was just this outpouring of ‘What can we do? How can we help?'” Wilson says. “That's why we set up that scholarship, because people needed to do something, so they poured their grief into donations.”In the wooded hills of Shafer, Minn., Wilson walks the grounds of the home and studios she long shared with Denomie.She points to a line of old carousel horses lying in tall grass.“He had this idea that eventually he was going to do an installation because he had flying horses in a lot of his paintings,” Wilson says.Behind them is a cut tree stump on a sawhorse.“That was going to be a next sculpture,” Wilson says. “He got sick so suddenly, that it's like he just left in the middle of a lot of projects.”Denomie's studio above their garage has remained much the same since his death, save for some paintings and drawings that were removed for the exhibition and archiving. Every surface is covered with materials and inspirations, from photos of friends and globs of paint to figurines of the California Raisins and the masks he collected from around the world.Wilson recalls coming up here from her writing studio next door. Music would be blasting — he always had his 60-CD player going while he worked, she says — and they would dance and joke around.“I wish he was here, But now that some time has passed I'm thinking about, well, how can we continue his legacy?” Wilson says. “I've been thinking about his space. It'd be nice to have creative energy in here again.”Wilson sits in their living room, beneath one of his paintings hanging over the fireplace. She says there will also be more exhibitions to follow — a group show at the University of Minnesota Nash Gallery in early 2024, and Wilson and others are planning another for his recent painting series of the Dakota 38+2 — some of his “best work,” she says.In the meantime, Wilson wants to return to the Mia exhibition, which she finds “poignant” because “he got to choose what people would see.”“What lingers really of his spirit in this plane is in his artwork. So when you see Jim's paintings, that's still where he resides,” Wilson says.“The Lyrical Art of Jim Denomie” is on view through March 2024. 

Ian Talks Comedy
Kevin C. Haney (Oscar winning Makeup Artist -Driving Miss Daisy, SNL 1979 - 1985)

Ian Talks Comedy

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2023 63:22


Oscar winning makeup artist Kevin Haney joined me to discuss growing up in Cinncinnati; watching monster movies but not being a fan of gore; working with Rick Baker and seeing Tom Savini while at Letterman; getting busted walking the streets as Frankenstein as a teenager; being cast in The Wizard of Oz but being enthralled by the old age makeup more than acting; reading Dick Smith's makeup book; being the makeup man his senior year of high school; doing makeup for the Ohio State production of Ghost Dance gets him noticed for "Altered States" at same time he was working on "Basket Case"; gets a job at NBC; is assigned to SNL; Barbara Armstrong is head of makeup; difference between white and black actors makeup; given Harry Shearer to appy makeup to; Lorne was against prosthetics; Doumanian takes over and he is assigned Gilbert Gottfried; makes him up to look like Master Po from Kung Fu; becomes department head in 1981; assigned to Joe Piscopo does Reagan, Sinatra, Nimoy & Iacocca makeup; creates, with Annette Bianco a Joe Piscopo wig; on camera in a Chinese Donahue sketch in April 1984; works on Piscopo's HBO specials; making up Eddie Murphy to look like Mohammed Ali; coaxed back for season 10 and hits it off with Martin Short; working with Dave Thomas; working on "Coccoon" and "Dick Tracy"; winning an Oscar for aging Dan Aykroyd in "Driving Miss Daisy"; Dustin Hoffman shot his "Dick Tracy" scenes later; working on Christopher Lloyd as Uncle Fester in "The Addams Family"; what it is like in a makeup chair; getting criticized for the aging in "Shawshank Redemption"; his work on beaten up Boggs not seen on camera; working on Friends flashback and Russ episodes; how "fat Monica' makeup was used to create Jiminy Glick; being retired; proud of his "Guardians of the Galaxy" crew; still best known for "Basket Case"

iMG's Polaroids
iMG's Polaroids: Episode 162

iMG's Polaroids

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2023 60:18


This week's album artwork is titled Sky Ruins by Tami! Please go give them a follow! https://www.pixiv.net/en/users/107492 Tracklist 00:21 | Messier - Oasis 08:29 | Sound Quelle & Lauren L'aimant - Colours (Nights In Bloom Remix) 13:08 | Carola - Work My Body 16:12 | Boom Jinx, Nitrous Oxide, Einar K, & Vintage & Morelli - Breathing (David Broaders Remix) 21:04 | Johan Vilborg & Meggie York - Saved [Tracks Of The Week] 25:41 | Andrew Bayer & Olan - Under Pressure (Andrew Bayer & Farius Remix) 30:56 | EDDIE & KILL SCRIPT - TORN OPEN (feat. Grabbitz) 34:40 | W&W - System Overload [Memories] 40:47 | Ghost Dance & Mila Dietrich - Let's Rave Darker 45:31 | ARS - Memory [Tracks Of The Week] 50:44 | Aphex Twin - Blackbox Life Recorder 21f [Tracks Of The Week] 54:02 | Matthias Vogt & Hans Berg - A Dream Fulfilled [Sunset Vibes]

iMG's Polaroids
iMG's Polaroids: Episode 161

iMG's Polaroids

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2023 119:29


This week's album artwork is titled City In The Clouds by CAI ZHICHAO! Please go give them a follow! https://www.artstation.com/trylea Tracklist 00:21 | Estiva & Diana Miro - Snow Flower 07:43 | Karma Fields - Me & U 10:13 | Kage - Dust [Tracks Of The Week] 13:28 | Icicle - Love (Phace S-Bahn Remix) [feat. Skittles] 18:57 | Ghost Dance & Markus Volker - Encore 24:07 | Arty - Zara (ALPHA 9 Remix) 29:34 | Scooter & Giuseppe Ottaviani - Hyper Hyper [Tracks Of The Week] 34:37 | Vintage Culture - Rock The Casbah [Memories: Remixed Edition] 37:30 | Dilate - Cortex 42:50 | Icicle - Dominate (Former Remix) 49:14 | Whales - No Rules 57:34 | DZMA - Fall Asleep (feat. Micah Martin) 1:01:57 | DIESEL & Hairitage - BANG YOUR HEAD [Tracks Of The Week] 1:04:43 | Trivecta & Caster - Leviathan 1:08:02 | Spag Heddy - Never Thought (feat. Micah Martin) 1:10:29 | Teminite & Skybreak - Accelerate [Tracks Of The Week] 1:13:54 | Icicle - Dominate (Clouds Remix) 1:17:31 | Ed E.t - Domination 1:21:33 | Technikore - Selfish 1:24:31 | P Money, Whiney, & Y-Zer - Saviour 1:27:54 | Alaguan - In The Darkness (Alaguan DnB Remix) 1:31:15 | Bensley & Justin Hawkes - Don't Be Scared 1:34:11 | RADWIMPS - Suzume (ID Edit) [feat. Toaka] 1:37:01 | Godlands & PLSMA - INNER FYRE 1:39:08 | Metrik - Fall To The Dust 1:42:26 | Scutoid & Icecore - Kickswitch Mania (ID Edit) 1:45:06 | REZZ & Grabbitz - Signal 1:47:35 | Notaker - Rainbow Eyes (feat. Danyka Nadeau) 1:51:59 | Kill The Noise & Feed Me - Mirage (feat. Tasha Baxter) 1:55:19 | Dabin - Worlds Away (feat. Trella) [Tracks Of The Week / Sunset Vibes]

Birdsong with Caiyuda Kiora
Ghost Dance, Talking Plants & ”Desheto” the Sacred Mushrooms of Oaxaca, Mexico | Michael Stuart Ani (2021)

Birdsong with Caiyuda Kiora

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2023 106:59


Michael Stuart Ani joins us for Season 1 (2021) of Birdsong. Michael has been a student of plant wisdom for fifty years. As a young man, the Lakota sage, John Fire Lame Deer, guided Michael through his first peyote ceremony and then sent him south to Mexico in search of the steps of the Ghost Dance. These steps led Michael to the Sierra Mazateca of Oaxaca, famous for its sacred mushrooms. From the end of the 1960's era through to the 1970's, Ani lived in the most remote part of the region. He became the only outsider who was ever allowed to collect Desheto, the sacred mushroom species of the deep tropical cloud forest of Chicon Nindo. He was instrumental in fighting the epidemics among the Yanomami people in the rainforests of Venezuela. He also helped to create a school to teach local indigenous people to be healthcare officers in the emerging Alto Orinoco Biosphere Reserve. His work in Venezuela was subsequently featured in the 1994 documentary, Yanomami, Keepers of the Flame, which won the US Environmental Film Festival's Best Documentary of the Year. Keepers of the Flame also became the feature film at the 1994 Brazilian Earth Summit. In 2002, Ani focused his attention back on the Northern States of the Americas and worked to restore some of the very last genetically pure Bison to the Brule, Lakota tribes on the Rosebud reservation in South Dakota. While on Rosebud, Ani responded to the requests of tribal elder Leonard Crow Dog and brought an eyeglass clinic to the reservation. Because of his efforts in South America and Mexico, and his work to build a ceremony house for renowned healer Grandpa Roy Stone, the Amazonia Foundation was honored by being included as an organization under the umbrella of the National Congress of American Indians. Michael has fulfilled his promise to Desheto by writing the book, “The Ghost Dance; an untold history of the Americas”. His catchprase “TALKING PLANTS” refers to a small group of fungi and plants that he believes have developed the ability to communicate with both humans and animals. Michael feels that these plants are key to survival in an uncertain future.    TIMESTAMPS: [6:05] Epidemics in the Amazon and losing jungle knowledge [7:55] Shamanic knowledge is received directly from the plants and spirit [10:34] LSD is GOD in pill form - Tim Leary [11:30] Honouring the sacred by learning the region and communing with the “talking plants” [14:30] Trailing the Ghost Dance, the very first ritual of the Americas [16:15] John Fire Lame Deer, Wounded-Knee and Ghost Dance [21:30] Communing with nature and learning from “talking plants” [27:20] It's not just difficult for US to survive in the forest… [29:05] Apprenticing to the immediate ecology to receive the secrets of the talking plants [31:38] Plants are part of controlling whats going on in the world today and the beginning of the “psychedelic movement” [35:25] Gaian intelligence & our Achilles heel as a species [38:50] Shamans are falling out of the trees [39:55] Tribal communal ceremonies vs deep medicine man ceremonies [43:17] Western culture and mental fragmentations [45:22] Michael's role to keep one lineage in-tact [47:29] Spiraling around to new beginnings by looking to plant medicine cultures of the past [50:00] Learning from Amazonian epidemics and returning to nature for CV-19 [55:16] Using cannabis in it's whole form as a medicine [56:49] Tobacco doesn't carry the same risk when using in its natural form [58:06] Mom + Pop farming is the way forward [59:01] There's a spiritual war in the jungles and it's going to affect us all… [1:01:51] How do you get people to care about ecological disaster? [1:07:46] We are still facing a global witch hunt [1:11:02] What myths of the ancient Americas can help us today? [1:12:23] The different types of animal totems… for people, plants and places [1:18:35] What does the ceremonial ritualistic context for taking the sacred mushroom look like? [1:23:00] The entire ritualistic process… (this is a real gift to listen to!) [1:34:02] Sacred things must be kept hidden… until the exact moment they are needed [1:37:25] What message does Michael have to pass on to those walking the shamanic path?  

History on Fire
[RERUN] EPISODE 58 Sitting Bull: Wounded Knee (Part 5)

History on Fire

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2023 177:21


“There a papoose cries by its mother's breast which, cold and insensible, can nourish it no more; there lies a young girl with her long hair sticky of blood, hiding her mutilated face… And here—here rests the beautiful young squaw whom yesterday I offered a cigarette—dying, with both her legs shot off. She lies there without wailing and greets me with a faint smile on her pale lips.” — First Sergeant Ragnar Ling-Vannerus“The Pioneer has before declared that our only safety depends upon the total extermination of the Indians. Having wronged them for centuries, we had better, in order to protect our civilization, follow it up by one more wrong and wipe these untamed and untamable creatures from the face of the earth.” — Frank Baum, author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz “Who would have thought that dancing could make such trouble? We had no thought of fighting.” — Short Bull “When he went to the bottom of the ravine, he saw many little children lying dead… He was now pretty weak from his wounds. Now when he saw all those little infants lying there dead in their blood, his feeling was that even if he ate one of the soldiers, it would not appease his anger… The Indians all knew that Dewey was wounded, but those in the ravine wanted him to help them. So, he fought with his life to defend his own people.” — From The Dull Knifes of Pine Ridge “What we saw was terrible. Dead and wounded women and children and little babies were scattered all along there where they had been trying to run away. The soldiers had followed along the gulch, as they ran, and murdered them in there. Sometimes they were in heaps because they had huddled together, and some were scattered all along. Sometimes bunches of them had been killed and torn to pieces where the wagon guns hit them. I saw a little baby trying to suck its mother, but she was bloody and dead. There were two little boys at one place in this gulch. They had guns and they had been killing soldiers all by themselves. We could see the soldiers they had killed. The boys were all alone there, and they were not hurt. These were very brave little boys.” From Black Elk Speaks By 1890, the Ghost Dance religion was spreading like wildfire in many reservations across United States. At a time when most Natives were facing utter hopelessness, it gave them something to hope in. But the murder of Sitting Bull orchestrated by a reservation agent, and the political machinations of the Harrison administration initiated a military crackdown against an otherwise peaceful movement. The sequence of events thus started would end in bloodshed at Wounded Knee on December 29, 1890, as the 7th Cavalry massacred nearly 300 Lakota—mostly women and kids. In this final episode of the Sitting Bull series, we explore the dynamics that led to Wounded Knee, the insane story of Iron Hail (aka Dewey Beard), how the Yanktons dealt with a traitor, the genocidal fantasies of the author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, and how Lakota culture endured—in spite of it all. If you feel generous and enjoy History on Fire, please consider joining my Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/historyonfire to access plenty of bonus content. For the rest of the year, History on Fire will be sponsored by BlueChew. BlueChew is a unique online service that delivers the same active ingredients as Viagra, Cialis,and Levitra -- but in CHEWABLE tablets and at a fraction of the cost!Try BlueChew FREE when you use our promo code HISTORY at checkout--just pay $5 shipping. Go to https://bluechew.com Bison is some of the healthiest meat you could possibly eat. Get yours at https://dakotapurebison.com/ History on Fire listeners get a discount by using the code HOF10 at checkout. This episode is also sponsored by https://tawkify.com/, the country's #1 modern matchmaking service that is designed to help you achieve relationship success. History on Fire listeners get a 20% discount by going Tawkify.com/HISTORYONFIRE

The Modern West
The Broken Hoop: Mending the Hoop Part 3

The Modern West

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2023 43:44


The Plains Tribes continue their winning streak at the Rosebud and Little Bighorn fights. But it only leads the federal government to crack down harder. Soon, many tribal leaders surrender and, in despair, take their people to live on tiny reservations. Then along comes a new ceremony: the Ghost Dance. And that changes the dynamics of the war drastically.

New Books Network
Rani-Henrik Andersson and David C. Posthumus, "Lakhota: An Indigenous History" (U Oklahoma Press, 2022)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2023 49:47


The Lakȟóta are among the best-known Native American peoples. In popular culture and even many scholarly works, they were once lumped together with others and called the Sioux. This book tells the full story of Lakȟóta culture and society, from their origins to the twenty-first century, drawing on Lakȟóta voices and perspectives. In Lakȟóta culture, "listening" is a cardinal virtue, connoting respect, and here authors Rani-Henrik Andersson and David C. Posthumus listen to the Lakȟóta, both past and present. The history of Lakȟóta culture unfolds in this narrative as the people lived it.  The book opens with an origin story, that of White Buffalo Calf Woman (Ptesanwin) and her gift of the sacred pipe to the Lakȟóta people. Drawing on winter counts, oral traditions and histories, and Lakȟóta letters and speeches, the narrative proceeds through such periods and events as early Lakȟóta-European trading, the creation of the Great Sioux Reservation, Christian missionization, the Plains Indian Wars, the Ghost Dance and Wounded Knee (1890), the Indian New Deal, and self-determination, as well as recent challenges like the #NoDAPL movement and management of Covid-19 on reservations. This book centers Lakȟóta experience, as when it shifts the focus of the Battle of Little Bighorn from Custer to fifteen-year-old Black Elk, or puts American Horse at the heart of the negotiations with the Crook Commission, or explains the Lakȟóta agenda in negotiating the Fort Laramie Treaty in 1851. The picture that emerges--of continuity and change in Lakȟóta culture from its distant beginnings to issues in our day--is as sweeping and intimate, and as deeply complex, as the lived history it encompasses. Joaquín Rivaya-Martínez es profesor de Historia en Texas State University. Sus intereses académicos incluyen la etnohistoria, los pueblos indígenas de las Grandes Llanuras y el Suroeste de EE.UU., la frontera México-EE.UU. y la América hispánica. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network

New Books in History
Rani-Henrik Andersson and David C. Posthumus, "Lakhota: An Indigenous History" (U Oklahoma Press, 2022)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2023 49:47


The Lakȟóta are among the best-known Native American peoples. In popular culture and even many scholarly works, they were once lumped together with others and called the Sioux. This book tells the full story of Lakȟóta culture and society, from their origins to the twenty-first century, drawing on Lakȟóta voices and perspectives. In Lakȟóta culture, "listening" is a cardinal virtue, connoting respect, and here authors Rani-Henrik Andersson and David C. Posthumus listen to the Lakȟóta, both past and present. The history of Lakȟóta culture unfolds in this narrative as the people lived it.  The book opens with an origin story, that of White Buffalo Calf Woman (Ptesanwin) and her gift of the sacred pipe to the Lakȟóta people. Drawing on winter counts, oral traditions and histories, and Lakȟóta letters and speeches, the narrative proceeds through such periods and events as early Lakȟóta-European trading, the creation of the Great Sioux Reservation, Christian missionization, the Plains Indian Wars, the Ghost Dance and Wounded Knee (1890), the Indian New Deal, and self-determination, as well as recent challenges like the #NoDAPL movement and management of Covid-19 on reservations. This book centers Lakȟóta experience, as when it shifts the focus of the Battle of Little Bighorn from Custer to fifteen-year-old Black Elk, or puts American Horse at the heart of the negotiations with the Crook Commission, or explains the Lakȟóta agenda in negotiating the Fort Laramie Treaty in 1851. The picture that emerges--of continuity and change in Lakȟóta culture from its distant beginnings to issues in our day--is as sweeping and intimate, and as deeply complex, as the lived history it encompasses. Joaquín Rivaya-Martínez es profesor de Historia en Texas State University. Sus intereses académicos incluyen la etnohistoria, los pueblos indígenas de las Grandes Llanuras y el Suroeste de EE.UU., la frontera México-EE.UU. y la América hispánica. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history

New Books in Native American Studies
Rani-Henrik Andersson and David C. Posthumus, "Lakhota: An Indigenous History" (U Oklahoma Press, 2022)

New Books in Native American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2023 49:47


The Lakȟóta are among the best-known Native American peoples. In popular culture and even many scholarly works, they were once lumped together with others and called the Sioux. This book tells the full story of Lakȟóta culture and society, from their origins to the twenty-first century, drawing on Lakȟóta voices and perspectives. In Lakȟóta culture, "listening" is a cardinal virtue, connoting respect, and here authors Rani-Henrik Andersson and David C. Posthumus listen to the Lakȟóta, both past and present. The history of Lakȟóta culture unfolds in this narrative as the people lived it.  The book opens with an origin story, that of White Buffalo Calf Woman (Ptesanwin) and her gift of the sacred pipe to the Lakȟóta people. Drawing on winter counts, oral traditions and histories, and Lakȟóta letters and speeches, the narrative proceeds through such periods and events as early Lakȟóta-European trading, the creation of the Great Sioux Reservation, Christian missionization, the Plains Indian Wars, the Ghost Dance and Wounded Knee (1890), the Indian New Deal, and self-determination, as well as recent challenges like the #NoDAPL movement and management of Covid-19 on reservations. This book centers Lakȟóta experience, as when it shifts the focus of the Battle of Little Bighorn from Custer to fifteen-year-old Black Elk, or puts American Horse at the heart of the negotiations with the Crook Commission, or explains the Lakȟóta agenda in negotiating the Fort Laramie Treaty in 1851. The picture that emerges--of continuity and change in Lakȟóta culture from its distant beginnings to issues in our day--is as sweeping and intimate, and as deeply complex, as the lived history it encompasses. Joaquín Rivaya-Martínez es profesor de Historia en Texas State University. Sus intereses académicos incluyen la etnohistoria, los pueblos indígenas de las Grandes Llanuras y el Suroeste de EE.UU., la frontera México-EE.UU. y la América hispánica. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/native-american-studies

New Books in the American West
Rani-Henrik Andersson and David C. Posthumus, "Lakhota: An Indigenous History" (U Oklahoma Press, 2022)

New Books in the American West

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2023 49:47


The Lakȟóta are among the best-known Native American peoples. In popular culture and even many scholarly works, they were once lumped together with others and called the Sioux. This book tells the full story of Lakȟóta culture and society, from their origins to the twenty-first century, drawing on Lakȟóta voices and perspectives. In Lakȟóta culture, "listening" is a cardinal virtue, connoting respect, and here authors Rani-Henrik Andersson and David C. Posthumus listen to the Lakȟóta, both past and present. The history of Lakȟóta culture unfolds in this narrative as the people lived it.  The book opens with an origin story, that of White Buffalo Calf Woman (Ptesanwin) and her gift of the sacred pipe to the Lakȟóta people. Drawing on winter counts, oral traditions and histories, and Lakȟóta letters and speeches, the narrative proceeds through such periods and events as early Lakȟóta-European trading, the creation of the Great Sioux Reservation, Christian missionization, the Plains Indian Wars, the Ghost Dance and Wounded Knee (1890), the Indian New Deal, and self-determination, as well as recent challenges like the #NoDAPL movement and management of Covid-19 on reservations. This book centers Lakȟóta experience, as when it shifts the focus of the Battle of Little Bighorn from Custer to fifteen-year-old Black Elk, or puts American Horse at the heart of the negotiations with the Crook Commission, or explains the Lakȟóta agenda in negotiating the Fort Laramie Treaty in 1851. The picture that emerges--of continuity and change in Lakȟóta culture from its distant beginnings to issues in our day--is as sweeping and intimate, and as deeply complex, as the lived history it encompasses. Joaquín Rivaya-Martínez es profesor de Historia en Texas State University. Sus intereses académicos incluyen la etnohistoria, los pueblos indígenas de las Grandes Llanuras y el Suroeste de EE.UU., la frontera México-EE.UU. y la América hispánica. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-west

History on Fire
[RERUN] EPISODE 57 Sitting Bull: Compulsory Civilization with a Side of Murder (Part 2)

History on Fire

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2023 87:34


“Sent to report on a story that wasn't there, reporters invented one.” — Heather Cox Richardson “Lakota will kill you.” — A meadowlark speaking to Sitting Bull in a vision “If the white men want me to die, they ought not to put up the Indians to kill me… Let the soldiers come and take me away and kill me, wherever they like. I am not afraid. I was born a warrior.” — Sitting Bull In historical terms, it was just a blink of an eye ago. In the mid-1800s, the Great Plains in the United States were still firmly in the hands of nomadic, buffalo hunting tribes. The looming threat of American expansion was still barely noticeable. But things changed quickly, and soon the tribes were locked in an existential struggle with the U.S. for control of the heartland of North America. One man rose among these tribes to lead his people to resisting the inevitable for over two decades. By the time he was 10 years old, the boy who would become the Lakota leader Sitting Bull, had killed his first bison by running him down and putting an arrow through its heart. In the opinion of his fellow tribesmen, his ability as a hunter and as a warrior was only second to his generosity in taking care of widows and orphans. In this fourth episode of this series, we'll see how incompetent government agents, unscrupulous journalists, corrupt politicians, and army officers blinded by their egos manufactured a crisis where there wasn't one. We'll also discuss Sitting Bull's take on the Ghost Dance, Agent McLaughlin's murderous plans, Buffalo Bill trying to save Sitting Bull, and a murder that sets in motion a much bigger tragedy. If you feel generous and enjoy History on Fire, please consider joining my Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/historyonfire to access plenty of bonus content. For the rest of the year, History on Fire will be sponsored by BlueChew. BlueChew is a unique online service that delivers the same active ingredients as Viagra, Cialis,and Levitra -- but in CHEWABLE tablets and at a fraction of the cost!Try BlueChew FREE when you use our promo code HISTORY at checkout--just pay $5 shipping. Go to https://bluechew.com Bison is some of the healthiest meat you could possibly eat. Get yours at https://dakotapurebison.com/ History on Fire listeners get a discount by using the code HOF10 at checkout. Big thank you to Wondery for sponsoring this episode. Follow their American History Tellers podcast wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen ad-free on the Amazon Music or Wondery app. Their most recent season focuses on The Insurrection of Aaron Burr - a Founding Father who fought valiantly for the Revolution – and would later become the highest ranking American official ever charged with treason.

History on Fire
[RERUN] EPISODE 56 Sitting Bull: Compulsory Civilization with a Side of Murder (Part 3)

History on Fire

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023 173:25


“Kill the Indian and save the man.” — Richard Pratt “The life my people want is a life of freedom. I have seen nothing that a white man has, houses or railways or clothing or food, that is good as the right to move in the open country, and live in our own fashion.” — Sitting Bull “The white man knows how to make everything, but he does not know how to distribute it.” — Sitting Bull “Possession—a war that doesn't end.” — John Trudell “We were faint with hunger and maddened by despair. We held our dying children and felt their little bodies tremble as their souls went out and left only a dead weight in our hands. They were not very heavy, but we ourselves were very faint, and the dead weighed us down. There was no hope on earth, and God seemed to have forgotten us.” — Red Cloud “Don't talk to me about Indians; there are no Indians left except those in my band.” — Sitting Bull “We shall live again.” — Comanche Ghost Dance songIn historical terms, it was just a blink of an eye ago. In the mid-1800s, the Great Plains in the United States were still firmly in the hands of nomadic, buffalo hunting tribes. The looming threat of American expansion was still barely noticeable. But things changed quickly, and soon the tribes were locked in an existential struggle with the U.S. for control of the heartland of North America. One man rose among these tribes to lead his people to resisting the inevitable for over two decades. By the time he was 10 years old, the boy who would become the Lakota leader Sitting Bull, had killed his first bison by running him down and putting an arrow through its heart. In the opinion of his fellow tribesmen, his ability as a hunter and as a warrior was only second to his generosity in taking care of widows and orphans. In this third episode of this series, we'll see how the U.S. government forcibly tried to change Lakota culture by outlawing their religion, removing kids from parents, and taking their land through laws such as the Dawes Ac. We'll also discuss the corruption of the agents in charge of reservations, Sitting Bull joining the Wild West Show, adopting Annie Oakley, befriending William Cody, giving away all he earned, Senator Henry Dawes wanting to ‘teach Indians to be selfish', President's Harrison terrible policies, the birth of the Ghost Dance movement, and much, much more.

Old Time Radio Westerns
The Ghost Dance of the Kiowas | The Cisco Kid (12-02-52)

Old Time Radio Westerns

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023


Original Air Date: December 02, 1952Host: Andrew RhynesShow: The Cisco KidPhone: (707) 98 OTRDW (6-8739) Stars:• Jack Mather (Cisco)• Harry Lang (Poncho) Exit music from: Roundup on the Prairie by Aaron Kenny https://bit.ly/3kTj0kK

The Cisco Kid - OTRWesterns.com
The Ghost Dance of the Kiowas | The Cisco Kid (12-02-52)

The Cisco Kid - OTRWesterns.com

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023


Original Air Date: December 02, 1952Host: Andrew RhynesShow: The Cisco KidPhone: (707) 98 OTRDW (6-8739) Stars:• Jack Mather (Cisco)• Harry Lang (Poncho) Exit music from: Roundup on the Prairie by Aaron Kenny https://bit.ly/3kTj0kK

Travel with Rick Steves
702 Touring Bath; Joy of Travel Writing; Ghost Dance in Berlin

Travel with Rick Steves

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2023 52:00


Soak in the history and the splendor of Bath, where Georgian architecture and mineral waters make it one of England's most attractive cities. Get a behind-the-scenes look at what happens when a travel writer researches guidebooks. And hear how Peter Wortsman's Jewish heritage forces him to grapple with some powerful ghosts from the past in Berlin. For more information on Travel with Rick Steves - including episode descriptions, program archives and related details - visit www.ricksteves.com.

Contain Podcast
140. - Survivance / Did The CIA Fund Good Art - Dominique Althoff

Contain Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2022 84:26


w/ Ojibwe musician & researcher Dominique Althoff of Black Seed Journal on indigenous post-nihilism, going from prison to UC Berkeley, and the question of whether the CIA contributed to good art... #Political assassinations, code talking, Peter Matthiessen, the Paris Review, and the CIA, Ghost Dance origins of Wounded Knee, the 1880 outlawing of ceremonial gift-giving, Black Twilight Circle, the Scorpions' ‘Wind of Change'...Gerald Vizenor & Survivance, what would Adorno say about hyperpop, the Russian nihilist movement, Clastres and the projection of Nietzsche onto indigenous anthropology, Hitler's fascination with American Indians, Indigenous Anarchy, & more. "Nihilism was a position we were put it...it's a position to overcome" "The field of intelligence is wide open right now" Consider supporting the show featuring full archive & projects by subscribing here

Beyond the Beats: EDM News and Culture
⌛ Season 4 Finale: Reflecting on a Crazy Year | Ep 158

Beyond the Beats: EDM News and Culture

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2022 51:12


Welcome to our Season 4 finale! We reflect on our favorite sets and artists of the year, our personal journies through this crazy year, and of course plenty of new music. This time, we're dedicating the new music section to some of the Artists We're Watching: MSFT, Use Caution, Ghost Dance, and Eloquin. Plus, we put two last artists to watch for this season on your radar: Monki and Joseph Ray. Tune in to hear all of this and more on Episode 158 of Beyond the Beats, a podcast about dance music news and culture. Get the full show notes on our website.BtB Twitter: @podBTB | BtB Instagram: @btb.pod | Alec's Twitter: alec_btb | Samir's Twitter: samir_btb

Horror Hussies
E42: The Ghost Dance 1982

Horror Hussies

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2022 102:21


Readin' With Phines
The Ghost Dance At Wonded Knee

Readin' With Phines

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2022 15:12


American Indian Myths and Legends, The Ghost Dance At Wonded Knee. IG: Everythingsjustphine --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/phines-jackson-jr7/support

Live and Amplified #Livecast
Ep. 536 #Livecast - Ghost Dance Band Full (Live and Amplified) - In a Jam Down by the River

Live and Amplified #Livecast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2022 36:42


Thank you Everyone for joining us! You can take the podcast on the go on Spotify! https://open.spotify.com/show/5dZ2LgaPYqKWWEKhlkjndO?si=391967b92f544265 If you are interested in supporting Live and Amplified, please check out our Socials! https://linktr.ee/LiveandAmplified Check out Ghost Dance Band at: https://www.facebook.com/GhostDanceBandOfficial We are a Music based Multi-Media Project, We feature independent musicians giving them the opportunity to showcase and talk about original content. if you have any questions or comments please send them to LNAMusicReview@gmail.com

Quest Friends!
15. Die Card

Quest Friends!

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2022 82:38


It's time for a party! ...at ScubaCorp. Oh dear. Content Notes: Very Harsh Sound (22:20-22:30) Character List: docs.google.com/document/d/1xWVJtsP38BZSjmhhWbqlt_mohn0ydh2RrHbxAGTwpkg/edit?usp=sharing   Listen to Us Weirdos Have to Stick Together! usweirdoscast.podbean.com Twitter: @usweirdoscast  Get an "I Crave Violence" T-Shirt: teepublic.com/t-shirt/35282363-i-crave-violence?ref_id=24896   Follow Quest Friends! Online: Website: questfriendspodcast.com  Patreon: patreon.com/questfriends Under the Neighborhood: questfriends.itch.io/neighborhood Merch Store: teepublic.com/stores/quest-friends?ref_id=24896 Facebook: facebook.com/QuestFriendsPodcast/  Instagram: @questfriendspodcast TikTok: @quest_friends Tumblr: questfriendspodcast.tumblr.com  Twitch: twitch.tv/questfriends Twitter: @Quest_Friends  YouTube (Main): youtube.com/channel/UC62OqSFLVUvqw-a_UaAryKA YouTube (Stream VODs): youtube.com/channel/UC6yKTPBk87QE3wkcaO-Wz1Q   Music Credits "Quest Friends! Hereafter Theme" by Miles Morkri: twitter.com/milesmorkri "Stop Engine.wav" by henrique85n (license): freesound.org/people/henrique85n/sounds/160443/ "Ghost Dance" by Kevin MacLeod (license): filmmusic.io/song/3802-ghost-dance "Party Crowd 1.wav" by Kolezan (license): freesound.org/people/Kolezan/sounds/246117/ "Spooky Halloween Night Cut D" by AdiGoldstein: pond5.com/royalty-free-music/item/75369121-spooky-halloween-night-cut-d Additional Music from Motion Array: motionarray.com/

Old Time Radio Westerns
Ghost Dance – The Lone Ranger (09-15-44)

Old Time Radio Westerns

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2022 30:16


Original Air Date: September 15, 1944Host: Andrew RhynesShow: The Lone RangerPhone: (707) 98 OTRDW (6-8739) Stars:• Brace Beemer (Lone Ranger)• John Todd (Tonto) Writer:• Fran Striker Producer:• George W. Trendle Music:• Ben Bonnell Exit music from: Roundup on the Prairie by Aaron Kenny https://bit.ly/3kTj0kK

The Lone Ranger - OTRWesterns.com
Ghost Dance – The Lone Ranger (09-15-44)

The Lone Ranger - OTRWesterns.com

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2022 30:16


Original Air Date: September 15, 1944Host: Andrew RhynesShow: The Lone RangerPhone: (707) 98 OTRDW (6-8739) Stars:• Brace Beemer (Lone Ranger)• John Todd (Tonto) Writer:• Fran Striker Producer:• George W. Trendle Music:• Ben Bonnell Exit music from: Roundup on the Prairie by Aaron Kenny https://bit.ly/3kTj0kK

Live and Amplified #Livecast
Ep. 525 #Livecast - Ghost Dance Band (Live and Amplified)

Live and Amplified #Livecast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2022 95:03


If you are interested in supporting Live and Amplified, please check out our Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/LiveandAmplified Check out the Live and Amplified Project at: www.Liveandamplified.net https://www.facebook.com/liveNamplified/ Check out Ghost Dance Band at: https://www.facebook.com/GhostDanceBandOfficial We are a Music based Multi-Media Project, We feature independent musicians giving them the opportunity to showcase and talk about original content. Make sure you check out our Web series and Music Videos at: https://www.youtube.com/user/bleacherbumstv if you have any questions or comments please send them to westoakstreetproductions@yahoo.com

The Indigenous Cafe Podcast
To Live As Quoted By Chief Sitting BUll

The Indigenous Cafe Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2022 62:06


Roman Orona takes you on a journey around the world of Indigenous Music. Indigenous Cafe brings you music, conversation and inspiration from the Indigenous People of North America and the Indigenous People from all over the world. On this weeks journey, we are traveling with a show titled, “To Live As Quoted By Chief Sitting Bull”. Chief Sitting Bull was born in 1831 in what is now South Dakota. was a Hunkpapa Lakota leader who led his people during years of resistance against United States government policies. He was killed by Indian agency police on the Standing Rock Indian Reservation during an attempt to arrest him, at a time when authorities feared that he would join the Ghost Dance movement. Artist's you will hear in the order they are played on this weeks show: THE INDIGENOUS CAFE PODCAST INTRO (00:00:00-00:01:42) “Inside of me there are two dogs. One is mean and evil and the other is good and they fight each other all the time. When asked which one wins I answer, the one I feed the most.” -Chief Sitting Bull 1. Northern Cree - “Crazy Legs” (Make A Stand) (00:01:42-00:04:23) 2. Tha Tribe - “Just Hum” (Best of Both Worlds) (00:04:23-00:07:35) 3. Joe Tohonnie - “Peyote Song 14” (Apache Peyote Songs) (00:07:35-00:10:07) PROGRAM BREAK (00:10:07-00:10:23) “As individual fingers we can easily be broken, but all together we make a mighty fist.” -Chief Sitting Bull 4. Tony Duncan & Darrin Yazzie - “Nakai Whippoorwill” (Singing Lights) (00:10:23-00:14:49) 5. Southern Scratch - “O'odham's Chote” (Waila, Tohono O'odham Tribe) (00:14:49-00:17:49) 6. Makaha Sons of Ni'ihau - “ Kaho'olawe” (Unforgettable) (00:17:49-00:20:00)  Roman Orona (Host) (00:20:00-00:20:53) “For us, warriors are not what you think of as warriors. The warrior is not someone who fights, because no one has the right to take another life. The warrior, for us, is one who sacrifices himself for the good of others. His task is to take care of the elderly, the defenseless, those who can not provide for themselves, and above all, the children, the future of humanity.” -Chief Sitting Bull 7. Los Traveros Cuyanos - “Bolivian Medley” (El Condor Pasa: Pan Flute Music from the Andes of Peru) (00:20:53-00:23:50) 8. Jim Pepper - “Senecas (As Long As The Grass Shall Grow” (Pepper's Pow Wow) (00:23:50-00:29:34)  PROGRAM BREAK (00:29:34-00:29:45) “It does not take many words to tell the truth.” -Chief Sitting Bull  9. Maya Jupiter - “Inshallah” (Never Said Yes) (00:29:45-00:34:14) 10. Insingizi - “Ngizobambelela” (Spirit Of Africa) (00:34:14-00:36:53) 11. Tha Tribe - “Round Dance” (Emery: Pow-Wow Songs Live) (00:36:53-00:40:01)  Roman Orona (Host) (00:40:01-00:40:41) “It is through this mysterious power that we too have our being, and we therefore yield to our neighbors, even to our animal neighbors, the same right as ourselves to inhabit this vast land. -Chief Sitting Bull 12. Thunderhill - “Intertribal” (The Clash Of The Titans) (00:40:41-00:46:04) 13. Mike Love - “This Too Shall Pass” (This Too Shall Pass - Single) (00:46:04-00:48:41) PROGRAM BREAK (00:48:41-00:48:55) “If a man loses anything and goes back and looks carefully for it, he will find it.” -Chief Sitting Bull 14. Te Vaka - “Tutuki” (Magalogalo) (00:48:55-00:53:25)  15. Pacific Curls & Sarah Beattie - “Whakamahara” (Pacific Celta) (00:53:25-00:55:22) Roman Orona (Host) (00:55:22-00:57:09) “Hear me people: We have now to deal with another race - small and feeble when our fathers first met them, but now great and overbearing. Strangely enough they have a mind to till the soil and the love of possession is a disease with them. These people have made many rules that the rich may break but the poor may not. They take their tithes from the poor and weak to support the rich and those who rule.” -Chief Sitting Bull 16. N'we Jinan Artists - “New Morning” (Skicin Generation) (00:57:09-01:01:34) DONATION ADVERTISEMENT (01:01:34-01:01:50) The Indigenous Cafe Podcast is hosted by Roman Orona and brought to you by iamHUMAN Media. iamHUMAN Media is a non-profit 501(c)(3) focused on raising the awareness of social discourse to all humans through development of programs and artistic ventures (music, movies, stage performances, books, workshops, concerts, film festivals, community outreach, community building, panel discussions, etc.)  to  foster and promote unity in diversity and community fellowship acknowledging that all HUMANs are related simply by being HUMAN. Below are ways to help us continue our programming or to learn more about us: https://paypal.me/iamHUMANmedia?locale.x=en_US Website: www.iamHUMANmedia.com Email: indigenouscafe1@gmail.com

TrueAnon
Episode 235: Ghost Dance (Three-tah) [trailer]

TrueAnon

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2022 5:11


To hear the full episode, subscribe at patreon.com/TrueAnonPod ---------- We slide on back to Utah for our third episode on the alleged ritual abuse case — and for our second episode on a fake Native American. Close your eyes and drink the ayahuasca, we're going to pretend church. James Mooney's Ghost Dance recordings (1894): publicdomainreview.org/collection/james-mooney-s-ghost-dance-recordings-1894 NOTE: Since this episode was recorded it has emerged that David Leavitt attempted to broker a deal between former Ukrainian president Victor Yuschenko and the Northern Cheyenne to export buffalo to Western Ukraine in exchange for custody of his step grand foster niece. He also lost his June 28th re-election bid.

Historia Canadiana: A Cultural History of Canada
55 - Plains Natives: Outline, Cultural Survival & Representations

Historia Canadiana: A Cultural History of Canada

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2022 68:41


In which we discuss cultural practices that emerged in and about Plains Natives communities before, during, and after early colonization! Topics include powwows, the Ghost Dance, and Paul Kane. --- Contact: historiacanadiana@gmail.com, Twitter (@CanLitHistory) & Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/CanLitHistory). --- Support: Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/historiacanadiana); Paypal (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/historiacanadiana); the recommended reading page (https://historiacanadiana.wordpress.com/books/) --- Sources/Further Reading: 1894 Sioux Ghost Dance. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3tMXbxVTby8 Axtmann, Ann. “Performative Power in Native America: Powwow Dancing.” Dance Research Journal, vol. 33, no. 1, Congress on Research in Dance, 2001, pp. 7–22, https://doi.org/10.2307/1478853. Corrigan, Samuel W. “The Plains Indian Powwow: Cultural Integration in Manitoba and Saskatchewan.” Anthropologica, vol. 12, no. 2, Canadian Anthropology Society, 1970, pp. 253–77, https://doi.org/10.2307/25604831. Ens, Gerhard J. "buffalo hunt." The Oxford Companion to Canadian History, Oxford University Press, 2004. Francis, Daniel. The Imaginary Indian: The Image of the Indian in Canadian Culture, Arsenal Pulp Press, 2011. Milloy, John S. "Plains Aboriginals." The Oxford Companion to Canadian History, Oxford University Press, 2004. Paul Kane, Assiniboine Hunting Buffalo, https://www.gallery.ca/collection/artwork/assiniboine-hunting-buffalo