Podcast appearances and mentions of jane kramer

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Best podcasts about jane kramer

Latest podcast episodes about jane kramer

Soul Cafe Podcast
ResistanceFestpromowithRISSIPALMER

Soul Cafe Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2025 27:14


https://www.eventbrite.com/e/resistance-fest-resist-hate-reclaim-love-tickets-1257161336399?aff=oddtdtcreator The above is a link to purchase tickets for the RESISTANCE FEST on June 14 from 3pm-8pm with RISSI PALMER, Jennifer Knapp, Abigail Dowd, Jess Klein, Maia Kamil and Jane Kramer. The RESISTANCE FEST is on lawn in front of Life'sJourney UCC at 2121 Edgewood ave in Burlington, NC. This episode is an interview with Rissi Palmer—check her out at: www.rissipalmermusic.com.

Soul Cafe Podcast
Episode21withHannahKaminerandJaneKramer

Soul Cafe Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2024 47:34


Make sure you check out both Hannah Kaminer at: www.hannahkaminer.com and Jane Kramer at: www.janekramermusic.com

A Fresh Story
Women's Voices Making Change: Jane Kramer

A Fresh Story

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2023 64:34


A Fresh Story, season 5, episode 8 We had the honor of talking to singer-songwriter and all-around amazing human Jane Kramer. Jane discussed how she managed through the breakup of her band, and the loss of her friends, her divorce and finding herself again, and how she ultimately carved out a space for herself in Asheville, North Carolina and discovered her ethereal voice and songwriting ability. We chatted about how she met her husband and her path to motherhood, as well as how fresh starts can be the most beautiful moments in our life. We dive into her music and lyrics, and how she writes about loss, love, and grief. Jane Kramer, hailing from Asheville, North Carolina, is an accomplished and soulful musician captivating audiences with her folk-infused melodies and heartfelt lyrics. With a voice that echoes both strength and vulnerability, Kramer has become a prominent figure in the vibrant Asheville music scene. Her authentic storytelling and evocative performances reflect the rich musical tapestry of the region while carving out a distinctive space for her in the world of Americana and folk music. With deep roots in the musical traditions, culture and lore of her beloved Appalachia, Kramer's songs are introspective, gracefully gritty and fiercely memorable. They elegantly sweep listeners down the gravel roads and southern coastal highways, midnight truck stops and lonely motel rooms of hard learning and lead home to the wooded Blue Ridge Mountains with moving acceptance of our flawed human experience. Kramer's live performances are equally as poignant and engaging; rich with accessible, warm, often hilarious storytelling and gracefully lifting the veil between audience and performer. Enjoy this episode with Jane, check out her music, and follow Jane on Instagram. You can listen to Jane Kramer on Spotify here!

The Overlook with Matt Peiken
Story Parlor Residency | Women's History and Currency

The Overlook with Matt Peiken

Play Episode Play 44 sec Highlight Listen Later Mar 31, 2023 33:50


In our continuing audio residency with Story Parlor, we close out Women's History Month by paying tribute to local women artists and their work. Music, poetry, and prose in this episode come from Laura Boswell, Tracey Schmidt, Tina Collins, Ali McGhee, Jane Kramer and Alli Marshall.Support The Overlook by joining our Patreon campaign!Advertise your event on The Overlook.Instagram: AVLoverlook | Facebook: AVLoverlook | Twitter: AVLoverlookListen and Subscribe: All episodes of The OverlookThe Overlook theme song, "Maker's Song," comes courtesy of the Asheville band The Resonant Rogues.Podcast Asheville © 2023

Unsung History
The National Women's Conference of 1977

Unsung History

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2023 51:08


In her 2015 book, Gloria Steinem described the National Women's Conference of 1977 as “the most important event nobody knows about.” The four-day event in Houston, Texas, which brought together 2,000 delegates and another 15,000-20,000 observers was the culmination of a commission appointed first by President Ford and then by President Carter, and was and funded by Congress for $5 million to investigate how federal legislation could best help women. The excited delegates believed that the conference would change history, so what happened, and why do so few people now even remember that it happened. Joining me to help us learn more about the National Women's Conference are Dr. Nancy Beck Young, the Moores Professor of History; and Dr. Elizabeth Rodwell, Assistant Professor of Digital Media, who are both on the leadership team for The Sharing Stories from 1977 project through the Center for Public History at the University of Houston. Our theme song is Frogs Legs Rag, composed by James Scott and performed by Kevin MacLeod, licensed under Creative Commons. The mid-episode music is “Retro Disco Old School” by Musictown from Pixabay. The episode image is from the final mile of the Torch Relay on its arrival to Houston on November 18, 1977. From left to right: Bella Abzug, Sylvia Ortiz, Peggy Kokernot, Michele Cearcy, Betty Friedan, Billie Jean King. Photo courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration. Additional sources: Divided We Stand: The Battle Over Women's Rights and Family Values That Polarized American Politics, by Marjorie J. Spruill, Bloomsbury Publishing, 2017. “Women Unite! Lessons from 1977 for 2017,” by Marjorie Spruill, Process :A Blog for American History, from the Organization of American Historians, The Journal of American History, and The American Historian, January 20, 2017. “The 1977 Conference on Women's Rights That Split America in Two,” by Lorraine Boissoneault, Smithsonian Magazine, February 15, 2017. “Sisters of ‘77 [video],” Directed by Cynthia Salzman Mondell and Allen Mondell, March 1, 2005. “Spotlight: National Women's Conference of 1977,” by Chucik, National Archives, November 16, 2017. “Women on the Move: Texas and the Fight for Women's Rights,” Texas Archive of the Moving Image.  “National Women's Conference, 1977,” by Debbie Mauldin Cottrell, Handbook of Texas Online, Texas State Historical Association. “The 1977 National Women's Conference in Houston Was Supposed to Change the World. What Went Wrong?” by Dianna Wray, Houstonia Magazine, January 20, 2018. “Road Warrior: After fifty years, Gloria Steinem is still at the forefront of the feminist cause,” by Jane Kramer, The New Yorker, October 12, 2015. “What's left undone 45 years after the National Women's Conference,” by Errin Haines, The 19th, March 25, 2022. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Da World According to Starks
D.W.A.T.S. “Saturday Morning Edition”

Da World According to Starks

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2022 18:08


Giselle making moves “Tom Brady Moving Backwards”, Jacque Vaughn New Coach of the Brooklyn Nets, Aaron Carter's Fiancé moves out the house days later after the late singer found in a tub dead, Jane Kramer claims husband wouldn't perform oral sex for yrs! “Gee I wonder why!?”

Lady Parts TV: The Podcast
Special Edition Post Election 2020 Podcast - Part 2

Lady Parts TV: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2020 27:29


So many of you reached out with questions and confusion about our political system and our elections. Today, the day we elected Joe Biden for our new president and Kamala Harris for our new vice-president, we feature Jane Kramer to answer some of your questions and discuss this monumental election. PART 2 OF 2.

Lady Parts TV: The Podcast
Special Edition Post Election 2020 Podcast - Part 1

Lady Parts TV: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2020 40:47


So many of you reached out with questions and confusion about our political system and our elections. Today, the day we elected Joe Biden for our new president and Kamala Harris for our new vice-president, we feature Jane Kramer to answer some of your questions and discuss this monumental election. PART 1 OF 2.

Lady Parts TV: The Podcast
Special Edition Post Election 2020 Podcast - Part 2

Lady Parts TV: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2020 27:29


So many of you reached out with questions and confusion about our political system and our elections. Today, the day we elected Joe Biden for our new president and Kamala Harris for our new vice-president, we feature Jane Kramer to answer some of your questions and discuss this monumental election. PART 2 OF 2.

Lady Parts TV: The Podcast
Special Edition Post Election 2020 Podcast - Part 1

Lady Parts TV: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2020 40:47


So many of you reached out with questions and confusion about our political system and our elections. Today, the day we elected Joe Biden for our new president and Kamala Harris for our new vice-president, we feature Jane Kramer to answer some of your questions and discuss this monumental election. PART 1 OF 2.

First Thought
Bee Wilson: Food, the Vital Frontier

First Thought

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2020 55:06


In this episode, celebrated food writer Bee Wilson joins Catherine Cleary, journalist and food writer with The Irish Times, to discuss our evolving relationship with food and the way we live (and eat) now. Bee Wilson is a journalist and historian and the author of five books on food-related subjects, the most recent being The Way We Eat Now: Strategies for Eating in a World of Change (2019). She has been described by Jane Kramer of the New Yorker as having “the kind of narrative charm that could carry large chunks of scholarship; weave them together; sprinkle them with asides, experiences, suppositions, and strong opinions; and entertain you.”   Bee Wilson is chair of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery.   This First Thought Talk was recorded in front of a live audience at NUI Galway as part of Galway International Arts Festival's Autumn 2019 First Thought Talks programme https://www.giaf.ie/talks/food-the-vital-frontier

Speaking of Travel®
The Power of Music & Art Offers Hope With Singer/Songwriter Jane Kramer

Speaking of Travel®

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2020 48:25


Asheville-based singer/songwriter Jane Kramer and her husband Jason Sandford, founder of the popular blog Ashvegas, are adjusting to a new reality and creating solutions to support each other during these changing times. They share how the art community finds creative ways to reach people virtually during a time that prevents us from experiencing music, art and culture with others in person. Jane discusses what she believes is the role of artists and musicians in society, particularly during times of great change and what it's like being a full-time musician during this global pandemic and how this affects her work.Jane and Jason talk about what is inspiring them now and how people can best support artists and musicians.Photo by Carrie Kramer Frey

I Don't Speak German
Episode 39: Matt Shea and White Supremacy in the Pacific North West (with Jason Wilson)

I Don't Speak German

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2019 167:29


To round off our first year, Daniel is joined by special guest Jason Wilson to talk about the fascinating figure Representative Matt Shea.  Hopefully this edition will please those listeners who've been asking for longer episodes! Content Warning. Notes and links (thanks to Jason for this compilation): Kenneth S Stern (1997) A force upon the plain : the American militia movement and the politics of hate. https://www.worldcat.org/title/force-upon-the-plain-the-american-militia-movement-and-the-politics-of-hate/oclc/1002393469&referer=brief_results Kathleen Belew (2019) Bring the war home the white power movement and paramilitary America https://www.worldcat.org/title/bring-the-war-home-the-white-power-movement-and-paramilitary-america/oclc/1129866369&referer=brief_results (great overview and analysis of lots of things we discussed) Linda Gordon (2018) The second coming of the KKK : the Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s and the American political tradition https://www.worldcat.org/title/second-coming-of-the-kkk-the-ku-klux-klan-of-the-1920s-and-the-american-political-tradition/oclc/1076323469&referer=brief_results (really good material on the 1920s Klan in Oregon)  Jane Kramer (2003) Lone patriot : the short career of an American militiaman. https://www.worldcat.org/title/lone-patriot-the-short-career-of-an-american-militiaman/oclc/52724431?referer=br&ht=edition David A Neiwert (1999) In God's country : the patriot movement and the Pacific Northwest https://www.worldcat.org/title/in-gods-country-the-patriot-movement-and-the-pacific-northwest/oclc/493949695&referer=brief_results (Exhaustively detailed contemporaneous work on the militia movement in PNW) David Neiwert (2009) The Eliminationists: How Hate Talk Radicalized the American Right https://www.worldcat.org/title/the-eliminationists-how-hate-talk-radicalized-the-american-right/oclc/7390575626&referer=brief_results (This speaks to the right generally but is important for our context) David Neiwert (2018) Alt-America : the rise of the radical right in the age of Trump https://www.worldcat.org/title/alt-america-the-rise-of-the-radical-right-in-the-age-of-trump/oclc/1017576651?referer=br&ht=edition (Best view of the current moment from long time PNW reporter) David Helvarg (2004) The war against the greens : the "Wise-Use" movement, the New Right, and the browning of America https://www.worldcat.org/title/war-against-the-greens-the-wise-use-movement-the-new-right-and-the-browning-of-america/oclc/53993117&referer=brief_results (Specific account of the development of anti-environmental politics in the west) Marilyn Lake and Henry Reynolds (2011) Drawing the global colour line : white men's countries and the international challenge of racial equality https://www.worldcat.org/title/drawing-the-global-colour-line-white-mens-countries-and-the-international-challenge-of-racial-equality/oclc/1052849084&referer=brief_results (Just brilliant in historicizing the development of white supremacy - in thought and policy - across settler colonial societies around the turn of the twentieth century. Pankaj Mishra draws on it here https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/30/opinion/race-politics-whiteness.html)  Chip Berlet and Matthew Lyons (2000) Right-wing populism in America : too close for comfort https://www.worldcat.org/title/right-wing-populism-in-america-too-close-for-comfort/oclc/247742295?referer=br&ht=edition (Chip and Matthew have done lots of fantastic work but this is essential) James Corcoran (1991) Bitter harvest Gordon Kahl and the Posse Comitatus : murder in the heartland https://www.worldcat.org/title/bitter-harvest-gordon-kahl-and-the-posse-comitatus-murder-in-the-heartland/oclc/1087601191&referer=brief_results Mark Fenster (2008) Conspiracy theories: secrecy and power in American culture. https://www.worldcat.org/title/conspiracy-theories-secrecy-and-power-in-american-culture/oclc/1087739570?referer=br&ht=edition (Chapter 2 has a good discussion of the 1995 congressional hearings on the militia movement)  James Coates (1995) Armed and dangerous : the rise of the survivalist right https://www.worldcat.org/title/conspiracy-theories-secrecy-and-power-in-american-culture/oclc/1087739570?referer=br&ht=edition (Pretty good contemporaneous account of the different strands underpinning the militia movement and the 1990s far right) Elinor Langer (2004) A hundred little Hitlers : the death of a black man, the trial of a white racist, and the rise of the neo-Nazi movement in America https://www.worldcat.org/title/hundred-little-hitlers-the-death-of-a-black-man-the-trial-of-a-white-racist-and-the-rise-of-the-neo-nazi-movement-in-america/oclc/1037466174&referer=brief_results (Important account of white supremacist movements in PNW in 1980s and 1990s)  Leonard Zeskind (2009) Blood and politics : the history of the white nationalist movement from the margins to the mainstream https://www.worldcat.org/title/blood-and-politics-the-history-of-the-white-nationalist-movement-from-the-margins-to-the-mainstream/oclc/965823835?referer=br&ht=edition Leah Sottile (with Ryan Haas on the podcasts) Bundyville https://longreads.com/bundyville/ (Definitive journalistic take on Matt Shea’s place in the contemporary patriot movement in PNW) Daniel Levitas (2001) The Terrorist Next Door The Militia Movement and the Radical Right. https://www.worldcat.org/title/terrorist-next-door-the-militia-movement-and-the-radical-right/oclc/229019637?referer=br&ht=edition James A. Aho (1995) The politics of righteousness : Idaho Christian patriotism https://www.worldcat.org/title/politics-of-righteousness-idaho-christian-patriotism/oclc/931074407?referer=br&ht=edition (Incredible, now-underread contemporaneous sociological work on the 1990s far right in Idaho, including Richard Butler/Aryan Nations) Daniel HoSang and Joseph Lowndes (2019) Producers, Parasites, Patriots: Race and the New Right-Wing Politics of Precarity https://www.worldcat.org/title/producers-parasites-patriots-race-and-the-new-right-wing-politics-of-precarity/oclc/1090989510&referer=brief_results (Very good current scholarship, great analysis of patriot movement and some direct analysis of Joey Gibson/Patriot Prayer)  Michael Barkun (2004) Religion and the racist right : the origins of the Christian identity movement https://www.worldcat.org/search?qt=wikipedia&q=isbn%3A080782328 Other stuff: Me on Ruby Ridge: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/aug/26/ruby-ridge-1992-modern-american-militia-charlottesville Me on the local context of Malheur: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/jan/14/oregon-militia-occupation-revolt-motivation-politics-public-land-ranching-environment And here is the link to an upload of John Trochmann’s Blue Book https://docdro.id/BZnxAiI  

The Sundilla Radio Hour
The Sundilla Radio Hour #312

The Sundilla Radio Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2019 58:52


The Sundilla Radio Hour for the week of 04/08/2019 featuring: Fox Run Five “Sometimes Love Is Not Enough” Fox Run Five (Fox Run 2019) 4:38 Adam Carroll “My Only Good Shirt” I Walked in Them Shoes (Adam Carroll 2019) 2:42 Kelly Hunt “Sunshine Long Overdue” Even the Sparrow (Kelly Hunt 2019) 2:49 Pierce Pettis “Very Same Moon” Father's Son (Compass 2019) 3:50 RUNA “Dance in the Graveyards” TEN (The Errant Night) (RUNA 2019) 5:10 Eric Lee “Life Without You” Heartache Town (Eric Lee 2018) 3:10 Tiffany Williams “When I'm Gone” When You Go (Tiffany Williams 2019) 3:19 Jonathan Byrd “It Don't Make Sense” Pickup Cowboys (Jonathan Byrd 2018) 2:19 Lizzy Plotkin “The Hat Song” We Will Sing (Lizzy Plotkin 2019) 3:04 Rj Cowdery “Somewhere a Place” What If This Is All There Is? (RJ Cowdery 2019) 4:19 Savannah King “Fresh Start” Cliffrose (Savannah King 2019) 4:10 Rebecca Loebe “Ghosts” Give Up Your Ghosts (Blue Corn 2018) 3:23 Jane Kramer “Valley of the Bones” Valley of the Bones (Jane Kramer 2019) 4:17

The Sundilla Radio Hour
The Sundilla Radio Hour #311

The Sundilla Radio Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2019 58:52


The Sundilla Radio Hour for the week of 04/01/2019 featuring: FY5 “Watch Out for the Blues” Eat the Moon (Swingfingers 2015) 4:59 Kora Feder “I'd Be a Maria” In Sevens (Kora Feder 2019) 3:42 The Haunted Windchimes “Sun Shining Bright” Rattle Your Bones (Western Jubilee 2016) 4:35 Hafdis Huld “The Bargain Store” Variations (Red Grape 2018) 03:13 Adam Carroll “Walked in Them Shoes” I Walked in Them Shoes (Adam Carroll 2019) 3:06 Dori Freeman “Any Wonder” Dori Freeman (2016) 3:09 D.C. Bloom “Saint of All Lost Causes” Pack Up the Moon (D.C. Bloom 2019) 3:13 Mary Bragg “Fixed” Violets as Camouflage (2019) 3:09 Eric Lee “The Garden (Where No Burdens Will Pass Through)” Heartache Town (Eric Lee 2018) 3:09 SONiA “Who Am I” By My Silence (Disappear 2019) 4:03 Nathan Bell “Blood Like a River” Blood Like a River (American Family) (Stone Barn 2014) 3:19 Jane Kramer “Singin's Enough” Valley of the Bones (Jane Kramer 2019) 3:15 The Honey Dewdrops “Ecola” Anyone Can See (The Honey Dewdrops 2019) 3:14 Karyn Oliver “Edwina” A List of Names (Buxom County 2019) 3:39

The Sundilla Radio Hour
The Sundilla Radio Hour #310

The Sundilla Radio Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2019 58:52


The Sundilla Radio Hour for the week of 03/25/2019 featuring: Tim Grimm “Thirteen Years” A Stranger in this Time (Cavalier 2017) 4:44 Ashley & Simpson “Deep River Blues” Off to Here Land (Randomosity 2019) 3:06 Sam Gleaves “If I Could Write a Song” Ain't We Brothers (Community 2015) 4:00 Lizzy Plotkin “Cochetopa” We Will Sing (Lizzy Plotkin 2019) 4:28 Sugarcane Jane “How Do You Know” Southern State of Mind (Arena 2018) 4:08 Karrnnel Sawitsky & Daniel Koulack “Goofing Off Theme” Fiddle & Banjo: Tunes from the North, Songs from the South (Kos Green 2015) 1:07 Eric Jude “Lower than Angels” American Lament (Eric Jude 2018) 3:47 Beth Wood “Call When You Get Home” The Long Road (Joy Echo 2018) 2:57 Danny Schmidt “Blue-Eyed Hole in Time” Standard Deviation (Live Once 2019) 4:06 Jane Kramer “Valley of the Bones” Valley of the Bones (Jane Kramer 2019) 4:17 Escaping Pavement “White Pines” Road Warriors (Escaping Pavement 2019) 3:50 Marci Geller “I'm Not Your Yet” Square Peg (Sonic Underground 2015) 3:04 Jefferson Ross “Arvin” Dogwood Cats (Jefferson Ross 2015) 5:15

BPR Arts and Performance
After Losing Nearly Everything Defining Her Life, Jane Kramer Found Her Own Musical Voice

BPR Arts and Performance

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2019 4:55


Jane Kramer almost had it too good. She was in a loving, long-term relationship, making music as part of the Barrel House Mamas and engaged in a career in social work. "Within about six or eight months, all those things collapsed," Kramer said. "I was really, really broken. I was just in the wreckage and the shrapnel of all the ways my life here had decayed, and feeling like a tremendous failure, coupled with losing a dear friend in a really tragic way. Suddenly, I didn't know how to find my identity, even here, in these mountains, where for all intents and purposes I came to be myself."

Speaking of Travel®
Singer-Songwriter Jane Kramer Makes Dazzling Music and Loves to Travel

Speaking of Travel®

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2018 48:48


Although Jane Kramer’s roots are in the traditional music of Appalachia, she tells us how traveling influences her songwriting and explains her method for tapping into the soul of each place she visits. And she sings for us too! Jane's newest album will be released this fall. www.janekramermusic.com

Arts and Sciences
Writer-In-Residence: Jane Kramer

Arts and Sciences

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2012 110:07


Jane Kramer, the Fall 1999 Sidney Harman Writer-in-Residence at Baruch College, is the European correspondent for The New Yorker and writes on the "Letter from Europe" column for the magazine. The lecture covers readings from her works. The event begins with an introduction by Roslyn Bernstein, director of the program.

Arts and Sciences
Writer-In-Residence: Jane Kramer

Arts and Sciences

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2012 110:07


Jane Kramer, the Fall 1999 Sidney Harman Writer-in-Residence at Baruch College, is the European correspondent for The New Yorker and writes on the "Letter from Europe" column for the magazine. The lecture covers readings from her works. The event begins with an introduction by Roslyn Bernstein, director of the program.