Podcasts about modern folk

  • 28PODCASTS
  • 59EPISODES
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  • 1EPISODE EVERY OTHER WEEK
  • Apr 21, 2025LATEST

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Best podcasts about modern folk

Latest podcast episodes about modern folk

Let It Roll
Led Zeppelin flew their folk flag high

Let It Roll

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025 42:36


Hosts Nate Wilcox and Dave Thompson conclude their mini-series discussing Dave's book An Evolving Tradition: The Child Ballads in Modern Folk and Rock Music -- buy the book to support the show. This episode covers the 1970s high water mark of folk rock in the UK Led Zeppelin's controversial third album, and where folk has gone since. GO TO THE LET IT ROLL SUBSTACK TO HEAR THE FULL EPISODE -- The final 15 minutes of this episode are exclusively for paying subscribers to the Let It Roll Substack. Also subscribe to the LET IT ROLL EXTRA feed on Apple, Spotify or your preferred podcast service to access the full episodes via your preferred podcast outlet. We've got all 350+ episodes listed, organized by mini-series, genre, era, co-host, guest and more. Please sign up for the email list on the site and get music essays from Nate as well as (eventually) transcriptions of every episode. Also if you can afford it please consider becoming a paid subscriber to support the show. Thanks! Have a question or a suggestion for a topic or person for Nate to interview? Email letitrollpodcast@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook. Let It Roll is proud to be part of Pantheon Podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Let It Roll
Fairport Convention and Pentangle led the UK folk-rock movement

Let It Roll

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2025 57:40


Hosts Nate Wilcox and Dave Thompson continue their mini-series discussing Dave's book An Evolving Tradition: The Child Ballads in Modern Folk and Rock Music -- buy the book to support the show. This episode covers the emergence of UK folk-rock out of the hippie, psychedelic ballroom scene in the late 1960s. Dave and Nate discuss the formation of Pentangle a sort of super group comprised of Jacqui McShee (vocals); John Renbourn (vocals and guitar); Bert Jansch (vocals and guitar); Danny Thompson (double bass); and Terry Cox (drums). They also discuss the formation and evolution of Fairport Convention from a band modeled on the Jefferson Airplane to the greatest and most influential of the UK folk-rock groups. GO TO THE LET IT ROLL SUBSTACK TO HEAR THE FULL EPISODE -- The final 15 minutes of this episode are exclusively for paying subscribers to the Let It Roll Substack. Also subscribe to the LET IT ROLL EXTRA feed on Apple, Spotify or your preferred podcast service to access the full episodes via your preferred podcast outlet. We've got all 350+ episodes listed, organized by mini-series, genre, era, co-host, guest and more. Please sign up for the email list on the site and get music essays from Nate as well as (eventually) transcriptions of every episode. Also if you can afford it please consider becoming a paid subscriber to support the show. Thanks! Have a question or a suggestion for a topic or person for Nate to interview? Email letitrollpodcast@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook. Let It Roll is proud to be part of Pantheon Podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Let It Roll
Paul Simon dived into the UK folk scene at a key time

Let It Roll

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 49:37


Hosts Nate Wilcox and Dave Thompson continue their mini-series discussing Dave's book An Evolving Tradition: The Child Ballads in Modern Folk and Rock Music -- buy the book to support the show. This episode discusses the UK folk scene from the peak of skiffle and Lonnie Donegan through the network of UK folk clubs who featured an open mic format that produced many of the leading talents of the coming UK folk-rock movement. We also discuss Paul Simon's sojourn to the UK during a career lull for Simon & Garfunkel and how he scored the biggest Child Ballad hit with an arrangement he "picked up" from a UK Guitarist. GO TO THE LET IT ROLL SUBSTACK TO HEAR THE FULL EPISODE-- The final 15 minutes of this episode are exclusively for paying subscribers to the Let It Roll Substack. Also subscribe to the LET IT ROLL EXTRA feed on Apple, Spotify or your preferred podcast service to access the full episodes via your preferred podcast outlet. We've got all 350+ episodes listed, organized by mini-series, genre, era, co-host, guest and more. Please sign up for the email list on the site and get music essays from Nate as well as (eventually) transcriptions of every episode. Also if you can afford it please consider becoming a paid subscriber to support the show. Thanks! Have a question or a suggestion for a topic or person for Nate to interview? Email letitrollpodcast@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook. Let It Roll is proud to be part of Pantheon Podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Let It Roll
Bob Dylan Made the US Folk Boom and Then Bust

Let It Roll

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2025 45:29


Hosts Nate Wilcox and Dave Thompson continue their mini-series discussing Dave's book An Evolving Tradition: The Child Ballads in Modern Folk and Rock Music -- buy the book to support the show. This episode discusses the peak of the Folk Boom in the US with the rise of Peter, Paul, & Mary, Ian & Sylvia, Judy Collins' continued success and the rise of Bob Dylan. We cover Dylan's use of Child Ballads as source material and his ultimate abandonment of the scene. GO TO THE LET IT ROLL SUBSTACK TO HEAR THE FULL EPISODE-- The final 15 minutes of this episode are exclusively for paying subscribers to the Let It Roll Substack. Also subscribe to the LET IT ROLL EXTRA feed on Apple, Spotify or your preferred podcast service to access the full episodes via your preferred podcast outlet. We've got all 350+ episodes listed, organized by mini-series, genre, era, co-host, guest and more. Please sign up for the email list on the site and get music essays from Nate as well as (eventually) transcriptions of every episode. Also if you can afford it please consider becoming a paid subscriber to support the show. Thanks! Have a question or a suggestion for a topic or person for Nate to interview? Email letitrollpodcast@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook. Let It Roll is proud to be part of Pantheon Podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Let It Roll
Joan Baez, Judy Collins, and Tom Rush led the pre-Dylan American Folk Boom

Let It Roll

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 45:20


Hosts Nate Wilcox and Dave Thompson continue their mini-series discussing Dave's book An Evolving Tradition: The Child Ballads in Modern Folk and Rock Music -- buy the book to support the show. This episode discusses the Child Ballads about Robin Hood and the folk revival's odd disinterest in them as well as the explosion of the American Folk Revival led by Joan Baez, Judy Collins, and Tom Rush. GO TO THE LET IT ROLL SUBSTACK TO HEAR THE FULL EPISODE-- The final 15 minutes of this episode are exclusively for paying subscribers to the Let It Roll Substack. Also subscribe to the LET IT ROLL EXTRA feed on Apple, Spotify or your preferred podcast service to access the full episodes via your preferred podcast outlet. We've got all 350+ episodes listed, organized by mini-series, genre, era, co-host, guest and more. Please sign up for the email list on the site and get music essays from Nate as well as (eventually) transcriptions of every episode. Also if you can afford it please consider becoming a paid subscriber to support the show. Thanks! Have a question or a suggestion for a topic or person for Nate to interview? Email letitrollpodcast@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook. Let It Roll is proud to be part of Pantheon Podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Let It Roll
Alan Lomax, Pete Seeger, Josh White & Jean Ritchie and the first Folk Revival

Let It Roll

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2025 43:49


Hosts Nate Wilcox and Dave Thompson continue their mini-series discussing Dave's book An Evolving Tradition: The Child Ballads in Modern Folk and Rock Music -- buy the book to support the show. This episode covers the collision of the Child Ballads with the leaders of the first American popular Folk Revival featuring leaders of the movement like Alan Lomax, Pete Seeger, Josh White and Jean Ritchie. GO TO THE LET IT ROLL SUBSTACK TO HEAR THE FULL EPISODE-- The final 15 minutes of this episode are exclusively for paying subscribers to the Let It Roll Substack. Also subscribe to the LET IT ROLL EXTRA feed on Apple, Spotify or your preferred podcast service to access the full episodes via your preferred podcast outlet. We've got all 350+ episodes listed, organized by mini-series, genre, era, co-host, guest and more. Please sign up for the email list on the site and get music essays from Nate as well as (eventually) transcriptions of every episode. Also if you can afford it please consider becoming a paid subscriber to support the show. Thanks! Have a question or a suggestion for a topic or person for Nate to interview? Email letitrollpodcast@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook. Let It Roll is proud to be part of Pantheon Podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Let It Roll
The Carter Family popularized the Child Ballads and Burl Ives built a new tradition

Let It Roll

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 45:48


Hosts Nate Wilcox and Dave Thompson continue their mini-series discussing Dave's book An Evolving Tradition: The Child Ballads in Modern Folk and Rock Music -- buy the book to support the show. This episode covers the first popular American revival of the Child Ballads by artist like The Carter Family and jazz singer Maxine Sullivan. We also cover the beginnings of the popular folk revival by artists like John Jacob Niles and Burl Ives. GO TO THE LET IT ROLL SUBSTACK TO HEAR THE FULL EPISODE-- The final 15 minutes of this episode are exclusively for paying subscribers to the Let It Roll Substack. Also subscribe to the LET IT ROLL EXTRA feed on Apple, Spotify or your preferred podcast service. We've got all 350+ episodes listed, organized by mini-series, genre, era, co-host, guest and more. Please sign up for the email list on the site and get music essays from Nate as well as (eventually) transcriptions of every episode. Also if you can afford it please consider becoming a paid subscriber to support the show. Thanks! Have a question or a suggestion for a topic or person for Nate to interview? Email letitrollpodcast@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook. Let It Roll is proud to be part of Pantheon Podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Let It Roll
The President's Daughter Recorded A Child Ballad

Let It Roll

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2025 55:15


Hosts Nate Wilcox and Dave Thompson continue their mini-series discussing Dave's book An Evolving Tradition: The Child Ballads in Modern Folk and Rock Music -- buy the book to support the show. This episode covers Francis James Child himself and how the whole ballad collecting thing went big time, with the trend impacting the recording career of Woodrow Wilson's first lady, one of America's first female astronomers and many more. GO TO THE LET IT ROLL SUBSTACK TO HEAR THE FULL EPISODE-- The final 15 minutes of this episode are exclusively for paying subscribers to the Let It Roll Substack. Also subscribe to the LET IT ROLL EXTRA feed on Apple, Spotify or your preferred podcast service. We've got all 350+ episodes listed, organized by mini-series, genre, era, co-host, guest and more. Please sign up for the email list on the site and get music essays from Nate as well as (eventually) transcriptions of every episode. Also if you can afford it please consider becoming a paid subscriber to support the show. Thanks! Have a question or a suggestion for a topic or person for Nate to interview? Email letitrollpodcast@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook. Let It Roll is proud to be part of Pantheon Podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Let It Roll
Sir Walter Scott, Pepys, and Charles Dickens: The Literary Roots of The Ballad Tradition

Let It Roll

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2024 54:20


Hosts Nate Wilcox and Dave Thompson continue their mini-series discussing Dave's book An Evolving Tradition: The Child Ballads in Modern Folk and Rock Music -- buy the book to support the show. This episode covers the very oldest examples of The Child Ballads, with lyrical themes dating back to the ancient Egyptians and Greeks, as well as the contributions of major literary figures like Sir Walter Scott and Charles Dickens. GO TO THE LET IT ROLL SUBSTACK TO HEAR THE FULL EPISODE-- The final 15 minutes of this episode are exclusively for paying subscribers to the Let It Roll Substack. We've got all 350+ episodes listed, organized by mini-series, genre, era, co-host, guest and more. Please sign up for the email list on the site and get music essays from Nate as well as (eventually) transcriptions of every episode. Also if you can afford it please consider becoming a paid subscriber to support the show. Thanks! Have a question or a suggestion for a topic or person for Nate to interview? Email letitrollpodcast@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook. Let It Roll is proud to be part of Pantheon Podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Let It Roll
Let It Folk: The Ancient Repertoire the Genre Built On

Let It Roll

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2024 45:51


Hosts Nate Wilcox and Dave Thompson kick off a mini-series discussing Dave's book An Evolving Tradition: The Child Ballads in Modern Folk and Rock Music -- buy the book to support the show. GO TO THE LET IT ROLL SUBSTACK TO HEAR THE FULL EPISODE-- The final 15 minutes of this episode are exclusively for paying subscribers to the Let It Roll Substack. We've got all 350+ episodes listed, organized by mini-series, genre, era, co-host, guest and more. Please sign up for the email list on the site and get music essays from Nate as well as (eventually) transcriptions of every episode. Also if you can afford it please consider becoming a paid subscriber to support the show. Thanks! Have a question or a suggestion for a topic or person for Nate to interview? Email letitrollpodcast@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook. Let It Roll is proud to be part of Pantheon Podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Discover the Horror
Episode 85 - Modern Folk Horror

Discover the Horror

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2024 110:19


Wake Wood (2009), The Wind (2018), Apostle (2018) Folk horror has its roots in tales of witches and paganism, stretching back centuries. In cinema, the term "folk horror" was first coined by Rod Cooper in Kine Weekly to describe the 1971 classic Blood on Satan's Claw. However, the themes that define folk horror—witchcraft, ancient rituals, and the eerie power of nature—have been present since the earliest days of film. A prime example is Benjamin Christensen's Häxan (1922), which delves into witchcraft and age-old rites. Regardless of its origins or definitions, folk horror has endured over time, weaving its way through the history of cinema. In recent decades, the genre has experienced a remarkable resurgence, not just in the United States but globally. This renewed interest may owe much to Kier-La Janisse's expansive 2021 documentary, Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched, which shone a spotlight on the subgenre and sparked widespread conversation. With the recent release of Volume Two of Severin's All the Haunts Be Ours box sets, now seems the perfect time to explore some of the standout modern folk horror films from the past two decades. So, venture with us into the remote villages, pagan rites, and shadowy woods where all the horrors sit waiting for you in the dark corners where people rarely go.  Films mentioned in this episode: Abigail (2024), Alucarda (1977), Apostle (2018), Birth/Re-birth (2023), Blood on Satan's Claw (1971), Cuckoo (2024), Dracula (2006), Five Nights at Freddy's (2023), Flesh and the Fiends (1960), Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire (2024), Isolation (2005), Pet Sematary (1989), Rosemary's Baby (1968), Underworld (2003), Wake Wood (2009), The Wicker Man (1973), The Wind (2018), Witchfinder General (1968), Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched (2021), Zombie (1979)

WBHM 90.3 Public Radio
‘Iced Cherries’: Joe D. Nelson's take on modern folk and age old tropes

WBHM 90.3 Public Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2024 3:50


Other Record Labels
Bud Tapes - (Modern Folk Trio Band, Helens, Johnny G and the Music Factory)

Other Record Labels

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 62:55


In this episode of Other Record Labels, Scott shares in an insightful conversation with Emmet, the mastermind behind BudTapes, a record label based in the Pacific Northwest city of Portland, Oregon.  Like the say, "Fake it till you make it!" ★★ This episode is presented by Hypeddit - Learn more at http://otherrecordlabels.com/hypeddit   Emmet's journey into the music industry started when he submitted his own music to a label he deeply admired. However, he soon discovered that this particular label wasn't a "real" record label per se; it was more like a "fake label" used to release their friends' music. This revelation was an eye-opener for Emmet, who had always harbored dreams of running his own record label. It showed him that, just like that admired label, he too could create a platform for artists with Bud Tapes. In truth, many of us are navigating our paths in the music industry by pretending we have it all figured out until we actually do. It reinforces the notion that we're all in this together, learning and growing as we go along. A sentiment that Emmet and I discuss in this week's episode!   Download my FREE Record Label Toolkit: Http://otherrecordlabels.com/toolkit

The Sundilla Radio Hour
The Sundilla Radio Hour #541

The Sundilla Radio Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2023 59:01


The Sundilla Radio Hour for the week of 08/28/2023 featuring: Tim Grimm “The Lake” The Turning Point (2013 Cavalier) 4:44 Muhammad Seven & the Spring “Baby I Ain't from Nowhere” Single (2023 Nima Samimi) 4:26 Amy Speace “Cottonwood” Tucson (2022 Windbone) 4:20 The Milk Carton Kids “When You're Gone” I Only See the Moon (2023 Far Cry) 2:45 Sofia Talvik “Desert Nights” Center of the Universe (2023 Makaki) 3:44 Benny Bleu “Lost Goose” March of the Mollusk (2023 Benny Bleu) 2:33 Lily DeTaeye “St. Vrain” Hive Mind (2023 Lily DeTaeye) 3:47 Sarah Peacock “Your Angel” Sarah Peacock Live (2011 Sarah Peacock) 4:04 Vincent Cross “Zora's Blues” Old Songs for Modern Folk (2016 Vincent Cross) 2:29 P.J. Pacifico “Only for Today” Well I'll Be (2005 Viper) 4:52 Allison Russell “Nightflyer” Outside Child (2021 Birds of Chicago) 4:55 Dan Weber “Call It a Night” The Way the River Goes (2022 Dan Weber) 3:28 Buffalo Rose & Tom Paxton “I Give You the Morning” Rabbit (2022 Misra) 3:31

Goldmine Magazine
The interesting influence of child ballads on rock music

Goldmine Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2023 38:32


Longtime Goldmine contributor Dave Thompson comes on the Goldmine podcast to talk about his latest book, An Evolving Tradition: The Child Ballads in Modern Folk and Rock. It's an interesting conversation on how ancient child ballads have been a huge influence on artists ranging from Led Zeppelin to Simon & Garfunkel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Aquarium Drunkard - SIDECAR (TRANSMISSIONS) - Podcast
Transmissions :: The Modern Folk

Aquarium Drunkard - SIDECAR (TRANSMISSIONS) - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2023 78:28


Writing about The Modern Folk's Modern Folk One in our AD 2022 Year in Review, we called it, “A blend of field recordings, astral zones, freak outs, leisurely jams, and rustique concrète from the ever-prolific Josh Moss.” That gives you a little sense of the kind of music Moss creates with his ultra-prolific recording project. Head over to his Bandcamp and you'll find dozens and dozens of releases. Moss is such an inspiring creator, completely beholden to doing his own thing explicitly, so naturally, this conversation wanders down strange paths—from Bigfoot to Bob Dylan—and stands as one of our most discursive episodes to date.  This episode originally aired exclusively for our Patreon supporters, and we're sharing it in the main feed as a reminder that if you want to support Aquarium Drunkard on Patreon, you'll get access to bonus audio and more. Support Aquarium Drunkard on Patreon. Transmissions is a part of the Talkhouse Podcast Network. Next week on Transmissions? Next week on the show, David John Morris of Red River Dialect joins us to discuss monasticism and music.  This episode of Transmissions is brought to you by Dad Grass. Go to Dadgrass.com/Transmissions to try it out.

Aquarium Drunkard - SIDECAR (TRANSMISSIONS) - Podcast
Transmissions :: Bruce Licher (Independent Project)

Aquarium Drunkard - SIDECAR (TRANSMISSIONS) - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2023 57:22


Welcome to Transmissions. The name Bruce Licher commands respect in the underground world of independent rock. As musician and letterpress artist with Independent Project Press, he's created art and bespoke album packaging for artists like R.E.M., Stereolab, Camper Van Beethoven, and more, and created music with post-punk combo Savage Republic, instrumental rock pioneers Scenic, and other projects. In 2020, he reactivated his Independent Project label, which he originally founded in 1980. On this episode, Bruce joins host Jason P. Woodbury to discuss his album art creations, his time in the Mojave Desert, the Southwestern dream-pop scene of the ‘90s, his letterpress origins, his work with R.E.M. and much more. He's a lifer and a true example of sticking to your vision—we're really honored to have him on the show this week, and of course honored to have you joining us for this conversation.  Support Aquarium Drunkard on Patreon. Transmissions is a part of the Talkhouse Podcast Network. Next week on Transmissions? Next week on the show, The Modern Folk. This episode of Transmissions is brought to you by Dad Grass. Go to Dadgrass.com/Transmissions to try it out.

Humans of Jeju
Modern Folk Painting Artist Lucy Sson

Humans of Jeju

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2022 24:32


Every Thursday, reporter Jae delivers real life stories of fascinating people who live in Jeju in various ways. Meet the ‘people living in Jeju' by listening to their actual voices along with the stories of their exciting life in Jeju. Lucy Sson (Son Bit-na), who majored in oriental painting, with her husband lived in Australia and moved to Jeju Island. Now, she lives on the island with her husband, their child, and their cat named ‘Dorongi' as if they are traveling in Jeju and paints Jeju folk painting while informing the warm and simple Jeju folk painting to more people. Let's listen to her story of painting Jeju folk painting and living on Jeju Island.

My Rock Moment
Legendary Photographer Henry Diltz on The Doors, Laurel Canyon and The Modern Folk Quartet: Part One

My Rock Moment

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2021 39:28


Today My Rock Moment catches up with legendary rock photographer Henry Diltz. His iconic photos have graced hundreds of album covers and have been featured in books, magazines and newspapers. He's best known for his work with The Doors, Crosby, Stills & Nash, Neil Young and his photo photographic essays of Woodstock and the Monterey Pop Festival.In Part One of our discussion we'll talk about his own musical journey in LA with the Modern Folk Quartet, the move to photography, his work with the Laurel Canyon folk rock scene, and his time working on the Morrison Hotel and Crosby, Stills & Nash album covers. To check out some of Henry's work - sold exclusively though The Morrison Hotel gallery in Los Angeles - visit: https://www.morrisonhotelgallery.com

The New Flesh
J.K. Rowling - Modern Folk Devil

The New Flesh

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2021 93:46


---ARTICLES AND LINKS DISCUSSED“We've Had ENOUGH!!” Australia's SCARY New Pandemic Powers – Russell Brandhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BnwBTGDCLVQ---The Rittenhouse Trial: A Legal Scholar Responds – Quillette:https://quillette.com/2021/11/23/the-rittenhouse-trial-a-legal-scholar-responds/---JK Rowling: the making of a modern folk devilhttps://www.spiked-online.com/2021/11/23/jk-rowling-the-making-of-a-modern-folk-devil/---School removes names of Winston Churchill and JK Rowling to be more ‘diverse' – iNews UK:https://inews.co.uk/news/education/school-removes-names-of-winston-churchill-and-jk-rowling-to-be-more-diverse-1308970---J.K. Rowling Writes about Her Reasons for Speaking out on Sex and Gender Issues:https://www.jkrowling.com/opinions/j-k-rowling-writes-about-her-reasons-for-speaking-out-on-sex-and-gender-issues/---J. K. Rowling and the trans activists: a story in screenshots – Boodleoops:https://medium.com/@rebeccarc/j-k-rowling-and-the-trans-activists-a-story-in-screenshots-78e01dca68d---SUPPORT THE NEW FLESHPatreon:https://www.patreon.com/user?u=61455803Buy Me A Coffee:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/thenewflesh---Instagram: @thenewfleshpodcast---Twitter: @TheNewFleshpod---Follow Ricky: @ricky_allpike on InstagramFollow Jon: @thejonastro on InstagramFollow AJ: @_aj_1985 on Instagram---Logo Design by Made To Move: @made.tomove on InstagramTheme Song: Dreamdrive "Chase Dreams"

NTVRadyo
Eurovision maceramız – 3. Bölüm

NTVRadyo

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2021 25:22


Can Doğan ile Şarkılar ve Hikayeleri'nde Türkiye'nin Eurovision yıllarına bakmaya ve o şarkıların hikayelerini dinlemeye devam ediyoruz. 1978 yılında Ulusal yarışmada finale kalan sesleri ve hikayelerini dinliyoruz. Türkiye'de 232 şarkı arasından yarı finale 12 şarkı kaldı ve finalde 5 isim vardı... Peki neydi o şarkılar? Aydın Tansel – Hiç Şansım Yok, Nükhet Duru – Anılar, Ali Rıza Binboğa – Baharım Sensin, Ayça Oktay – Küçük Kız, Rezzan – Bu Gece, Nükhet Duru ve Modern Folk Üçlüsü – Dostluğa Davet, Serpil Barlas ve İkinci Baskı – Yaşamana Bak, Grup Karma – İmkansız ve finalin galibi; Nilüfer ve Grup Nazar – Sevince

Cry About It
American Buffalo Ghost is creating the future of folk music and preserving its historic past | Ep. 13

Cry About It

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2021 54:16


On this episode, I sit down with Sean Flynn of American Buffalo Ghost to talk about how he's creating the future of folk music at the same time that he's preserving it's historic past. We talk what goes into making a great folk song, writing music as a story, and how the music is in people's blood. We even dive into some talk about the blues!---Highway 81 Revisited: "After scrapping an album he felt did not represent his true feelings and musical approach, Sean Flynn, who performs as American Buffalo Ghost, today released another, entirely different, stripped-down and honest album called “Folk Songs and the Weird Americana.”"American Buffalo Ghost - Two Days in February (Full Documentary): https://youtu.be/YSa9EqC5pjE​Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/americanbuff...​Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/americanbuf...​Bandcamp: https://americanbuffaloghost.bandcamp...​Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/5NJMr...​

Brokedown Podcast/Osiris Media
The Modern Folk

Brokedown Podcast/Osiris Media

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2021 137:58


Greetings Dead Freaks.We've got a great chat with Josh Moss of The Modern Folk. Josh's music ranges from gentle folk to, well, out there and covers a lot of points in between. We talk about his recent and upcoming releases and spin a huge mix of Grateful Dead.I also take a few minutes to remember the late Rick Harris. Known for his work on the brilliant Thoughts On The Dead blog, Rick passed recently and he will be sorely missed. If you're not familiar with his work, please head over to https://www.thoughtsonthedead.com and check it out. Go Easy, Rick.The Modern Folk has a vast catalog. Among the most recent is "Primitive Future/Lyran group" from Eiderdown Records. You can also find his "American Mountain" tape (only a couple left!) and so much more at themodernfolk.bandcamp.com.Allow me to remind you that the Brokedown Podcast is part of the Osiris Media. Osiris is creating a community that connects people like you with podcasts and live experiences about artists and topics you love. Check out OsirisPod.com to stay in the loop.Also, if you would like a BrokedownPod t-shirt or sticker or other merch in that vein, please head over to my Redbubble virtual merch table. All proceeds go straight toward hosting costs and are much appreciated.Don't forget to follow the @BrokedownPod twitter account for regular news, live tweetstorms of shows as I listen, and other minutiae. We also have an Instagram account with the same handle. If you like pictures of things, you can find that here: BrokedownPod Instagram. Also, if you use Apple Podcasts, please consider posting a review as it really help get the word out.Also, please keep sending your metaphorical cards and letters. Leave a comment on the blog or hit me up on any of the above social media. Let me know what I'm doing right, wrong, or horribly wrong.

Rock N Roll Pantheon
Performance Anxiety: Side Projects: Music & The Paranormal with Morgan Geer & Josh Moss

Rock N Roll Pantheon

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2020 62:03


This is a weird episode. It's all about music and the paranormal. But the really weird part is the panel I've put together. I'm joined by former guest Morgan Geer of Drunken Prayer, first time guest Josh Moss of The Modern Folk, & my daughter Maggie. We discuss Mothman, Bigfoot, ghosts & their loopholes, & the music written about them. I would love you guys to check Drunken Prayer & The Modern Folk on bandcamp. Drunken Prayer has a great Christmas single out now & you can pick up The Modern Folks' entire discography (all 22 releases) for $5.This show was a lot of fun. A little silly, a little serious, and a lot strange. If you enjoy this podcast, consider treating us to a cup of coffee at ko-fi.com/performanceanxiety.com There's no commitment. I hope you enjoy this episode. If not, keep an eye out for the men in black, because I know they're fans.This show is a part of Pantheon Podcasts

Performance Anxiety
Side Projects: Music & The Paranormal with Morgan Geer & Josh Moss

Performance Anxiety

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2020 62:03


This is a weird episode. It's all about music and the paranormal. But the really weird part is the panel I've put together. I'm joined by former guest Morgan Geer of Drunken Prayer, first time guest Josh Moss of The Modern Folk, & my daughter Maggie. We discuss Mothman, Bigfoot, ghosts & their loopholes, & the music written about them. I would love you guys to check Drunken Prayer & The Modern Folk on bandcamp. Drunken Prayer has a great Christmas single out now & you can pick up The Modern Folks' entire discography (all 22 releases) for $5.This show was a lot of fun. A little silly, a little serious, and a lot strange. If you enjoy this podcast, consider treating us to a cup of coffee at ko-fi.com/performanceanxiety.com There's no commitment. I hope you enjoy this episode. If not, keep an eye out for the men in black, because I know they're fans.This show is a part of Pantheon Podcasts

Performance Anxiety
Side Projects: Music & The Paranormal with Morgan Geer & Josh Moss

Performance Anxiety

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2020 64:03


This is a weird episode. It’s all about music and the paranormal. But the really weird part is the panel I’ve put together. I’m joined by former guest Morgan Geer of Drunken Prayer, first time guest Josh Moss of The Modern Folk, & my daughter Maggie. We discuss Mothman, Bigfoot, ghosts & their loopholes, & the music written about them. I would love you guys to check Drunken Prayer & The Modern Folk on bandcamp. Drunken Prayer has a great Christmas single out now & you can pick up The Modern Folks’ entire discography (all 22 releases) for $5. This show was a lot of fun. A little silly, a little serious, and a lot strange. If you enjoy this podcast, consider treating us to a cup of coffee at ko-fi.com/performanceanxiety.com There’s no commitment. I hope you enjoy this episode. If not, keep an eye out for the men in black, because I know they’re fans. This show is a part of Pantheon Podcasts

Bearcast Media Podcasts

Join us this week for a Deep Cuts dive into Modern Folk! Listen in this week for a wide variety of the last 20 years' best folk offerings, from Wilco to Fleet Foxes.  

Post Amp
*Bonus Episode - Modern Folk Revival*

Post Amp

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2020


To all of our faithful listeners who have subscribed and supported us so far - thank you!! We wanted to share this bonus episode with you as a slight detour from our usual album deep-dives and to let you know what we have to offer on our Patreon. We hope you enjoy it, and click on the link below to subscribe!Click here for our Spotify playlists for this and past episodes: https://open.spotify.com/user/kd8l2yvse4sbkeka389htt4o1?si=e5ITPI5EQ4q8ljwPN-3B3QJoin our Patreon for exclusive Bonus Content and to be a part of our private community! https://www.patreon.com/postampLeave us a comment below or visit the website to leave a message: https://www.chwstudios.com/post-amp-podcast

Matthias Interviews Musicians: A Pop Songwriting Podcast
7. Canyon City on the "Modern Folk" Label, Growing Up in Fargo, and Writing Songs about Water

Matthias Interviews Musicians: A Pop Songwriting Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2020 38:41


This week, I speak with Paul Johnson, who performs under the moniker Canyon City, about what "modern folk" means to him, growing up and playing in a folk trio with his parents in Fargo, North Dakota, and writing emotional and vividly descriptive songs (and speculate as to why so many of them revolve around fire and water). Since its inception in 2015, the project has become known for its distinctive whispery vocals layered over intimate acoustics orbiting candidly emotional storytelling. As Johnson self-released a series EPs and LPs over the last five years, the industry took notice, with Canyon City frequenting Spotify editorial playlists and winning praise from media like NPR, Paste, American Songwriter and more. His combined streams on Spotify alone surpass 100 million, with an average of 1.3 million monthly listeners. It's quite easy to see exactly why Johnson is a streaming giant. His songwriting—fusing conversational narratives with modern-folk textures in the vein of Gregory Alan Isakov, The Tallest Man On Earth, and Noah Gundersen—is rich in emotional detail. Now, Canyon City prepares to release Circling The Sun, a warm, inviting and sweetly cinematic EP primarily written and produced in household settings, save for a bit of recording at the local Library. He teamed back up with Nashville-based producer Zachary David who added his own homespun elements to the project. David, who is also a TV/film composer, used found objects (think couch kickdrums, t-shirt slapping snares and crumpled paper percussion) around the home when producing the EP, partially out of necessity due to Covid19. But the unorthodox arrangements only enhance the EP's lived-in aesthetic. Please go and follow Canyon City at: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/6TdfKQvrdHZdr4DIzjuWOr Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/artist/canyon-city/1019253812 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CanyonCityMusic Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CanyonCityMusic Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/canyoncitymusic Twitter: https://twitter.com/CanyonCityMusic *** You can follow me on Twitter at http://twitter.com/MKLikesMusic --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/matthias-kaseorg/support

The Sundilla Radio Hour
The Sundilla Radio Hour #373

The Sundilla Radio Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2020 59:01


The Sundilla Radio Hour for the week of 06/15/2020 featuring: Joy Oladokun “Charleston” Carry (2016 Well Records) 4:59 Crys Matthews “These Old Hands” These Old Hands – EP (2019 NewSong Recordings) 3:45 Darryl Purpose “Life Based On a True Story” Singer-Songwriter Heaven – the Songs of Kevin Faherty (2009 Gamblers Grace Music) 4:45 Maya De Vitry “In the Meantime, I Love You” How to Break a Fall (2020 Mad Maker Studio) 3:04 Ellis Delaney “The Finest Adventure” Ordinary Love (2020 Ellis Delaney) 3:50 Vincent Cross “Zora's Blues” Old Songs for Modern Folk (2016 Vincent Cross) 2:29 The Mammals “California” Nonet (2020 Humble Abode Music) 2:57 Tre Burt “What Good” Caught It from the Rye (2020 Oh Boy Records) 3:22 Bronwynne Brent “Like the Thunder” Deep Black Water (2011 Bronwynne Brent) 2:29 Stan Rogers “Forty-Five Years” Fogarty's Cove (1977 Fogarty's Cove Music) 3:31 Vivian Leva “Time is Everything” Time Is Everything (2018 Vivian Leva/Free Dirt Records) 3:05 Scott Fab “The Time of Our Lives” Someday Soon Somehow (2020 Scott Fab) 2:56 Eliza Meyer “Hello Stranger” Hello Stranger (2020 Eliza Meyer) 3:16 Heather Pierson Acoustic Trio “Thunderous Voices” Singin' (2017 Heather Pierson) 3:16

Utalk Radio
IG Live 9: Modern Folk Singer, Songwriter and Recording Artist Alice Howe

Utalk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2020 26:25


Utalk Hosts Steve and Kati sat down with special guest Modern Folk Singer Alice Howe for a conversation. We meet Alice at the NAMM (National Association Music Merchants) Show. Steve and Kati talk about how social media is being used in the protests. Alice brings us up to date with what she is has been doing during the Covid19 lockdown. Alice tells us how she got started in Folk Music and playing the guitar. We talk about how Alice was involved in a telethon raising money for homeless in LA and the Covid Emergency Fund as well as her experience being at a protest. We talk about how music is a tool that can be used in ways to help get issues talked about. It is a platform that Alice uses to get her voice heard. Alice performs a song for us check out the show for more!Follow us on social media @utalkradio. Check out Alice on social media @alicehowemusic.

Cambridge Breakfast
Cambridge Breakfast: Modern folk songs for CB4

Cambridge Breakfast

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2020 7:19


A new musical project is getting underway in North Cambridge that aims to capture the character of the CB4 area. Julian speaks to Anna Hester, who is one of those involved.

Get Up in the Cool
Episode 179: The Canote Brothers (Teaching Stringband Class, Old Time Community, and The Peculiar Modern Folk Process)

Get Up in the Cool

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2020 48:06


Welcome to Get Up in the Cool: Old Time Music with Cameron DeWhitt and Friends! This week’s friends are The Canote Brothers! We recorded this at my home a couple weeks ago during the Portland Old Time Music Gathering. Tunes in this episode: Meat and Potatoes Sheeps and Goats Go to Pasture Stone Mountain Wobble Obama’s March to the Whitehouse Wilson Douglass’ Durang’s Hornpipe Down in the Old Hometown Bonus tracks: Cherokee Rag Visit The Canote Brothers’ website to buy their albums, check out their tour dates, and sign up for their stringband class! http://canote.com/ Mossy Roof, the online archive of The Canote Brothers’ classes! https://stringband.mossyroof.com/ Support Get Up in the Cool on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/getupinthecool

Soul Fire Wisdom
The Art and Soul of a Modern Folk Singer

Soul Fire Wisdom

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2019 35:00


Kate talks with Rosanne Olson. Rosanne is an Author, Photoographer, Singer, Songwriter, Poet and modern folk singer making an impact with her music. We will talk about her journey, the folk genre, her inspiration and influences, as well as, the roll of music in society. Rosanne will tell us how her photography and music have connected and what led her to her current path. Tune in for an inspiring show.

The Sundilla Radio Hour
The Sundilla Radio Hour #337

The Sundilla Radio Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2019 59:02


The Sundilla Radio Hour for the week of 09/30/2020 featuring: Buskin & Batteau & Tom Rush “One Month Crazier” Click: Songs By Neale Eckstein & Friends (2014 Neale Eckstein) 5:02 Joe Crookston “Riding the Train (The Meter Maid Mix)” Georgia I'm Here (2014 Joe Crookston) 4:18 Ordinary Elephant “Lady in the Elevator” Before I Go (2017 Ordinary Elephant) 3:37 Dave Potts “$12.99 (Live)” Live At Sundilla (Live) (2012 Dave Potts) 3:45 Heather Pierson Acoustic Trio “Ain't Gotten Around” Still She Will Fly (2015 Heather Pierson) 3:59 Nathan Bell “Blood Like a River” Blood Like a River (American Family) (2014 Nathan Bell) 3:18 Kelly Bosworth “Tell Me” Kelly Bosworth (2014 Kelly Bosworth) 3:24 Dave Carter & Tracy Grammer “Gentle Arms of Eden” Drum Hat Buddha (2014 Signature Sounds Recordings) 3:03 Naked Blue “Weightless” Weightless (2013 Naked Blue) 3:52 Chuck Brodsky “Bill & Annie” Letters In the Dirt (1996 Red House Records) 3:38 Melissa Greener “Ballad of the Snow Leopard & the Tanqueray Cowboy” Dwelling (2010 Melissa Greener) 3:44 Austin MacRae “Keeper” Keeper (2017 Austin MacRae) 5:06 Shawna Caspi “Never Enough” Forest Fire (2017 Shawna Caspi) 3:07 Vincent Cross “As the Crow Flies” Old Songs for Modern Folk (2016 Vincent Cross) 3:02

dirt snow leopards nathan bell modern folk red house records naked blue shawna caspi
Rick Lee James Podcast Network
Voices In My Head Podcast Episode 337: Around The Mic 2 with Brothers McClurg

Rick Lee James Podcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2019 56:57


Voices In My Head Podcast Episode 337: Around The Mic 2 with Brothers McClurgOld Bear Records beloved band, Brothers McClurg has made a career on stripping things down to theraw and the simple. From the musical approach of the album, to the direct way that they sharematters of faith and God in their lyrics, "Around the Mic Two"achieves taking the complicated matters of our lives and comforts us, the listener, through songs; songs that are adorned with the theme of God's unfailing love and His promise to always be with us. Over the last few years, BrothersMcClurg has drawn inspiration to write the songs featured on "Around the Mic Two" and have fullyembraced their live, stripped down sound laden with some of the most beautiful harmonies anddynamic solo guitar work in Modern Folk and Gospel Music. Each of the songs featured on "Aroundthe Mic Two" were performed live and tuned up during their 2018 tours, which includes a cover song bytheir grandfather, Pappy McClurg and the original McClurg Family Singers that became a fan favoriteon the road. NEW ALBUM,AROUND THE MIC TWO,AVAILABLE ONSeptember 20, 2019 BROTHERS MCCLURG SOCIAL LINKSBUY THE ALBUM - https://amzn.to/2Oad7iR Brothers McClurg Web Site - http://brothersmcclurg.com Brothers McClurg Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/brothersmcclurg/   As always, thank you for listening to Voices In My Head.  About Your Host: Rick Lee JamesOfficial Web Site: www.RickLeeJames.comGet Rick Lee James Latest Album: https://fanlink.to/RLJThunderFor Booking Inquiries  Click Hereor contact Gary StriplingBy Phone: 904.745.9151By Email: gary@themanagementagency.comManagement General Office Hours:Monday – 11Am – 5PMTuesday – 11Am – 5PMWednesday – Office closedThursday – 11Am – 5PMFriday – 11AM – 5PMSaturday – 11AM – 5PM This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rickleejames.substack.com/subscribe

Voices In My Head (The Official Podcast of Rick Lee James)
Voices In My Head Podcast Episode 337: Around The Mic 2 with Brothers McClurg

Voices In My Head (The Official Podcast of Rick Lee James)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2019 56:57


Voices In My Head Podcast Episode 337: Around The Mic 2 with Brothers McClurg Old Bear Records beloved band, Brothers McClurg has made a career on stripping things down to the raw and the simple. From the musical approach of the album, to the direct way that they share matters of faith and God in their lyrics,   "Around the Mic Two"achieves taking the complicated matters of our lives and comforts us, the listener, through songs; songs that are adorned with the theme of God's unfailing love and His promise to always be with us.   Over the last few years, Brothers McClurg has drawn inspiration to write the songs featured on "Around the Mic Two" and have fully embraced their live, stripped down sound laden with some of the most beautiful harmonies and dynamic solo guitar work in Modern Folk and Gospel Music. Each of the songs featured on "Around the Mic Two" were performed live and tuned up during their 2018 tours, which includes a cover song by their grandfather, Pappy McClurg and the original McClurg Family Singers that became a fan favorite on the road.   NEW ALBUM, AROUND THE MIC TWO, AVAILABLE ON September 20, 2019   BROTHERS MCCLURG   SOCIAL LINKS BUY THE ALBUM - https://amzn.to/2Oad7iR   Brothers McClurg Web Site - http://brothersmcclurg.com   Brothers McClurg Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/brothersmcclurg/       As always, thank you for listening to Voices In My Head.    About Your Host: Rick Lee James Official Web Site: www.RickLeeJames.com Get Rick Lee James Latest Album: https://fanlink.to/RLJThunder For Booking Inquiries  Click Here or contact Gary Stripling By Phone: 904.745.9151 By Email: gary@themanagementagency.com Management General Office Hours:Monday – 11Am – 5PM Tuesday – 11Am – 5PM Wednesday – Office closed Thursday – 11Am – 5PM Friday – 11AM – 5PM Saturday – 11AM – 5PM

Modern Folk
018 Charlotte Dupont: Human Design

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2019 102:41


Charlotte Dupont is an Intuitive Human Design guide and through her 1-1 sessions, she guides people back to their true authentic selves through the system of Human Design and intuitive channeling. Charlotte began studying Human Design in 2017 as a means of self-exploration and reprogramming subconscious beliefs; it changed her life. Charlotte has read over 250 human design charts and conducts remote 1-1 sessions from her home in Bend, Oregon.    Cosmic Profile: Sun in Gemini Moon in Aquarius Ascendent in Virgo  6/2 Emotional Projector    Website: http://www.charlottedupont.com/ Social Media: @charlotteldupont Scheduling: https://app.acuityscheduling.com/schedule.php?owner=15794648     Travis Wiggins  Human Design Chart   Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com  

Modern Folk
017 Tyler Sharp: Modern Huntsman

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2019 83:00


  Tyler SharpModern Huntsman     Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com  

The Sundilla Radio Hour
The Sundilla Radio Hour #314

The Sundilla Radio Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2019 58:52


The Sundilla Radio Hour for the week of 04/22/2019 featuring:   James Keelaghan “Cold Missouri Waters” A Recent Future (Tranquilla 1996) 4:59 Ordinary Elephant “Jenny & James” Honest (Berkalin 2019) 3:28 Martyn Joseph “Luxury of Despair” Kiss the World Beautiful (Pipe 2014) 5:07 The Honey Dewdrops “”Rainy Windows” Anyone Can See (The Honey Dewdrops 2019) 3:02 Adam Klein “Low Flyin' Planes” Low Flyin' Planes (Broken Hill Songs 2019) 5:18 Birds of Chicago “Remember Wild Horses” Real Midnight (Five Head Entertainment 2016) 4:46 Rain Perry “Vapor” Let's Be Brave (Precipitous 2019) 3:33 Adam Carroll “The Last Word” I Walked in Them Shoes (Adam Carroll 2019) 2:39 Sara Trunzo “Late Summer Bouquet” Dirigo Attitude (Sara Tunzo 2019) 3:22 Vincent Cross “As the Crow Flies” Old Songs for Modern Folk (Rescue Dog 2016) 3:02 Beth Wood “Old Things” The Long Road (Joy Echo 2018) 4:06 Kora Feder “Dance with Me” In Sevens (Kora Feder 2019) 3:35 Brooks Williams “Mama's Song” Lucky Star (Brooks Williams 2018) 3:02

Modern Folk
016 Bend Forest School: Nature Immersion Education with Rae Alberg and Lauren Van Coutren

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2019 48:38


Around Our House: Well, here is a final update on my experiment to ditch my smartphone and convert to a simple cell phone with no data and no apps. It was all going ok enough, I was still communicating with the world, though more slowly and quite cumbersomely. The audio on it was quite terrible, as can be heard on episode 14, where I used my speakerphone to interview Luke Cirillo at Out of Ashes Farm. The camera was horrible and I never used it. I couldn’t figure out how to load music files and listen to them. Texting was functional but slow, and group texting was not an option,  which I realized put me out of the loop on conversations between family and friends both. Those are all the bad things. The best thing about that crappy phone was that it didn’t connect to facebook, instagram or email. I was thankful for that and I am grateful for some of the new habits and boundaries I have created around these platforms. My crappy phone recently died after getting soaked on a particularly wet day of spring skiing. I was glad I still had my old Iphone. The minute I reconnected it, I myself felt more connected, which is truly a weird thing to me. For the foreseeable future I plan to use my iphone and approach the technology with respect and healthy boundaries. In other news, Emily and I recently filled our freezer with local meat. We purchased a beef box from Vaquero Ranch at the recommendation of our friends David and Meagan from Boundless Farmstead. Their beef box is a great product and it doesn’t demand quite as big a financial commitment or freezer space as a quarter, a half, or a whole cow. With the box you get a variety of cuts from ground beef, to steaks, roasts and stew meat. The price is fair, the transaction was personal and friendly and the quality of the meat is top notch.  Also this last month we purchased our half hog from the good folks at The Great American Egg in Powell Butte Oregon. We had signed up for a butchering class, where we would have been hands on in breaking down our half hog and preparing it for our freezer. I was bummed when the class was cancelled due to Snowpocalypse 2019. Central Oregon Butcher Boys ended up doing the work for us. They provide a great service and do an excellent job. If you have a farm raised or hunted animal that you need butchered in central Oregon, these are your guys.  So I read a really interesting book this last month. It is called Vaccines, Autoimmunity and the Changing Nature of Childhood Illness. The author, Thomas Cowan, is a medical doctor with over three decades experience working as a pediatrician. Dr Cowan talks about how the goal of the extensive vaccine program suggested by the CDC is to provoke an immune response, and that is precisely what we are seeing with the alarming rise in the rate of autoimmune illness and chronic disease in children. These conditions include food allergies, environmental allergies, asthma and autism. Dr Cowan also talks about what we deny our children when we vaccinate them and protect them from the opportunity to aquire certain illnesses in childhood. Childood illnesses such as the flu, chicken pox and the measles and their accompanying fever, are rites of passage of sorts for a childs immune system. This is something that I feel is often anecdotally reffered to, knowledge that exists as an old wives tale of sorts. Dr Cowan explores the science behind how the immune system develops and the difference between immunity conferred by vaccines versus immunity acquired through illness. This information is particularly relevant currently in Oregon, where HB 3063 is being hurried through State Legislature. This bill aims to mandate full compliance with the CDC vaccination schedule for children in Oregons Public and Private School Systems. I urge families to do some research into the implications of this before they offer their support for this bill, or through inaction do nothing for or against it. I fully appreciate the sensitivity of the discussion over vaccines and understand that people have very strong and deep feelings on both sides of this issue. I just hope people understand the consequences we may see when if we give up our freedom of choice on this issue. For more information on this, you can visit oregoniansformedicalfreedom.com The information in Dr Cowans book dovetails nicely with the work of Dr Zach Bush, of Farmers Footprint, which I talked about and recommended on last months show. Our choices of how to fill our pantry and how to feed our bodies directly affect our health and the health of our environment. How are some of these choices being made for us, with things like GMOs sneaking onto grocery store shelves or the effects of being downwind or downstream of the application of glyphosate/Roundup on foodcrops. If you are interested in learning more about the science surrounding how our bodies are responding to vaccines, pesticides, and environmental toxins then you need to look into the work of Zach Bush and Thomas Cowan. They are shedding light on the science that the CDC, the FDA, Big Agriculture and Big Pharma are hesitant to aknowledge or downright trying to suppress. Understanding the issues that these two Doctors are highlighting is one of the most important things you can do if you want to be an informed advocate for your health, the health of your family and the long term sustainability of our species. That sounds dramatic, and it is. This is serious stuff that deserves our attention. What kind of things are you learning on these topics? Who are you reading? What films are you watching? I admit, I am taken by the info these guys are putting out there. But I remain open to hearing other opinions. I would love to hear some rational critiques of these doctors work so that I can more fully understand these issues. So if you have come across some compelling information on these topics, please share with me! I suppose this is a good time to move onto our guests for the show today. As I mentioned early, Rae Alberg and Lauren Van Coutren joined me recently for a talk about the Bend Forest School. Rae Alberg is an educator, mother, and lover of all things colorful, creative, muddy and green. She has over 15 years of experience in the early childhood field, many spent working, thinking, dreaming and planning a program that supports the whole child. Rae has a Masters Degree and Oregon Teaching License in Early Intervention/Early Childhood Special Education as well as a graduate certificate in Infant Toddler Mental Health from Portland State University. In 2016, Rae became a Certified Forest Kindergarten Teacher through CedarSong Nature School’s Teacher Training program..  Lauren Van Coutren has always felt at home in nature. Growing up in the woods of Maine, she spent most days outside, exploring the natural world around her.  Lauren feels that these childhood experiences contributed to her passion to provide children with experiences to heal and grow in nature.  After graduating with a BA in Therapeutic Recreation, Lauren found herself in a Psychiatric hospital working with adolescents. She led groups to teach her patients healthy ways to cope with stress and build confidence. This work was deeply important, but Lauren knew there was something missing. This feeling led her to Bend in 2006 to work for a Wilderness Therapy program. The missing piece was nature. It was here that she witnessed her students grow in lasting and life-changing ways. Lauren was no stranger to this transformation for herself. She was challenged in ways that ultimately built confidence and instilled personal growth.  Lauren earned a MA in Early Childhood Education. Lauren’s most recent educational experience has been as a elementary teacher in the Bend La Pine School District. For 6 years, Lauren has worked as a 3rd grade and Kindergarten teacher. Working at LaPine and Rosland Elementary schools in LaPine, Lauren was able to utilize abundant nature opportunities right in the schools’ backyard.  I hope that you enjoy my talk with Rae and Lauren. Please rate or review Modern Folk on apple podcasts, subscribe, and share this show with someone you think would be interested. Thanks for listening to Modern Folk. Guest Interview: Rae Alberg and Lauren Van Coutren of Bend Forest School Bend Forest School Cedarsong Nature School Waldkindergarten   Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com  

Modern Folk
015 Sherri Mitchell: Sacred Instructions, Indigenous Wisdom for Living Spirit-Based Change

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2019 76:27


IntroductionWelcome, new moon, new Modern Folk. I am very excited for you to hear my interview with my guest today. I recently had the honor of connecting with Sherri Mitchell, the author of the book Sacred Instructions. If you know me well personally, or listen to this show, then you have heard me talk about Sherri Mitchell before. Her book and her teachings have inspired me deeply and changed my life and I am extremely excited to share our conversation with you. But first, here is a brief update on what Emily, Clemence and I have been up to.. If you are listening to this on the release date, March 6, then perhaps you have set some intentions for yourself during this time of opportunity and new beginnings. If you are listening to this at some other time….well then hello from the past. As i have mentioned several times, Emily and I have committed to doing a 3 day cleanse every new moon this year. We take this time to clean up our inputs…..omitting coffee, alcohol, processed sugars, grains, dairy. And also taking more time for individual and family reflection and goal setting. This is basically replacing the 2 or three week cleanses we often do once or twice a year. This also represents a tangible step towards our goal to physically, spirituality and emotionally orient ourselves to real and observable phenomena around us.  Releasing this podcast on new moon is another step in that process, one that i had overlooked, but that was recommended by my friend and previous guest on the show, Allison Murphy. These are subtle changes, in practice and in perspective, but they feel good. Hunting. I have been researching hunting quite a bit lately. I am a complete newcomer to hunting and there is a lot to learn. I find the whole idea of hunting both exciting and intimidating. There is also the choice of bow or rifle. I am pretty sure I have settled on bow hunting for this first season. I have gone back and forth on this many times in my mind. Ultimately though, everything about bow hunting feels like a better fit for me. Typically, bow season is late summer/early fall so it isnt quite as cold out, which in my mind makes for more pleasant time in the woods. Bowhunting requires a more intimate knowledge of the animal being hunted. I like the idea of learning more about the animals I am hunting. This really goes back to the idea of orienting to the natural world around me. For much of my life i have been oriented to the seasons in a very different way. When i was a kid, summer was when the swimming pool was open and we would visit the grandparents. Winter was when we would cross our fingers hoping for now days to cancel school and we would build forts with sticks and leaves left behind from autumn. As an adult, winters have been for skiing, all the other season are for mountain biking. Summer used to be for climbing road trips. I used to think there were only rumors of Elk in the forests of oregon, i sure never saw one from my mountain bike or on a hike in the Three Sisters Wilderness. Now I am learning that the elk are up there, but they are smart and observant and stay far away from the areas where me and most everyone else from Bend is recreating. So yes, hunting….I hope to use it as a means to understand the seasons and the land and how I am part of the whole thing rather than just a spectator, consumer, or recreator. The same can be said of our efforts to grow more food here in our yard.  Again, small changes, big lessons and better late than never. It is snowy and snowing outside currently in Bend. The last couple weeks have shown us that winter did not forget about us. However, Spring is just around the corner and I am looking forward to getting outside and pruning my trees. I love pruning trees but i always feel like I have taken off way too much. My friend Megan over at Boundless had some recommendations for my trees, I should have her and David over for dinner and to formulate a pruning plan. I also will be expanding the capacity of our garden so i need to prepare a new garden bed. I am looking forward to getting some seeds in the ground as soon as all this snow melts, which may be a while. In the dietary realm, I have been avoiding wheat this last month, and I have been feeling pretty good about it. I have known for years that i should probably avoid wheat, both from the results from a food intolerance test and also from personal observations about how my body and my mind responds to wheat. Interestingly, the intolerance test told me to avoid wheat, not gluten. This means that according to this test, i can still eat other grains containing gluten including rye and spelt. Emily has been making some delicious Sourdough 100% rye bread, and we have also made SD rye, spelt biscuits and spelt pizza. Last winter i did most of the bread baking but Emily has taken the reigns on the bread baking, I need to get myself back in the game. Anyhow, I feel really good having omitted wheat from my diet. Some things I have been learning from lately. Rich Roll Podcast, Two episodes with guest Zach BushGMO's, Glyphosate and Healing the Gut The Science and Spirituality of Personal and Planetary Transformation Farmers Footprint, is a series of short films that shed light on how big pharma and big agriculture have eroded our soils and our health in the name of making more money and under the disguise of scientific progress. The film also shows how small farms are using the techniques of regerative agriculture to take back the land and the health of their families and communities. This film highlights what i believe are some of the most biggest opportunities at hand to address important issues from individual and community health to national security to environmental stewardship.   Heart of Business, Heart of Money online class with Mark Silver This is something that Emily discovered and when she brought it up as something that we could maybe do together i thought it sounded like a great idea. At first glance the class looks like a course on money and i immediately pictured sessions on budgeting, spending, debt and topics like that. Now, while those topics are discussed, the class is really more about understanding and healing our emotional and spiritual relationships with money and with our selves. It has been really interesting and has helped me to put certain parts of my life into better perspective. For me personally, some of the key words or feelings that come up when money or spending or debt is involved are scarecity, paralization, fear, hoarding, security and protection. These teachings have helped me to be less controlled by some of these concepts and find a bit more of a feeling of abundance and safety. I am sure that anyone working through these teachings would describe it differently because it is very personal work.  But i have found it helpful, so i wanted to share that with you. Most of what i have been pondering or working on these last few months falls into one of a couple broad themes. Listening to your heart, and finding your true path, and sharing your gifts with the world. Environmental stewardship, manifested in regenerative agriculture, local food, social justice issues. These themes are a large part of what Modern Folk is meant to explore. Also, these themes are among the many important topics addressed by my guest on the show today. Sherri Mitchell, Weh’na Ha’mu Kwasset is an Indigenous rights activist, spiritual teacher, and transformational change maker. Sherri was born and raised on the Penobscot Indian reservation (Penawahpskek).  She speaks and teaches around the world on issues of Indigenous rights, environmental justice, and spiritual change. I hope you enjoy our discussion.  Interview Notes: Setting the stage for an open conversation. Acknowledging white male privilege Sharron Blackie. The Hedge School Podcast. Sacred Instructions Creation stories Everything is connected Quantum entanglement Original Sin, Illusions of separation Compassionate awareness Michelle Alexander. The movement is no longer the resistance, the resistance is now the opposition to the movement. Healing Turtle Island Ceremony   Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com  

The Broken Glass Podcast
Episode 11: Finding Your Unique Sound with Kristin Rebecca

The Broken Glass Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2019 36:07


Meet Kristin Rebecca. Maryland based modern folk singer-songwriter who beautifully incorporates the Celtic harp into her music. Listen in as we talk about her unique instrument and how she discovered it, how she developed her sound, grew her career without knowing anyone in the industry, and what it's like to secure a PR and management team in her genre. Resources: Fringe EP Where Fairies Dwell Tales, Trials, Truths www.kristinrebecca.com Instagram Facebook Kristin Rebecca's Recommendations: www.indieonthemove.com www.undiscoveredmusic.net

Modern Folk
014 Luke Cirillo: Regenerative Pig Farming at Out of Ashes Farm

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2019 61:14


Around our house: Well, my mom Margaret was in town for a little over three weeks in January. She came to visit with Emily and I yes, but truthfully she was here to be a grandma. She goes by Mimm and our daughter Clemence loves her. I think Mimm was the mom called her great aunt. It is a pretty good grandma name I feel. Anyhow, having my mom around definitely reinforced just how wonderful it is to have support when raising a family. Neither Emily or I have any family in central Oregon. So far, our work schedules have been such that we have not needed any childcare, and for that we are so thankful but it is a busy life and having Mimm around gave us time to work on our home, see some friends and have some dates together. It seems ironic, hypocritical, or something like that to me that I simultaneously talk about the importance of family and elders so much on this show, but also live so far away from my own family. I think about it all the time. One thing I talk and think about is the individualism and the sense of entitlement of younger generations, including myself. I take full responsibility for striking out on my own when I was 23 and moving all the way across the country leaving my family and the place I grew up to move to a place where I new no one, had no community. At the time, that move was fueled by a need to get out of the suburbs and out of the city, towards the mountains, like minded people and a slower pace of life. 15 years later I still feel those initial imperatives, but things have changed a bit. While the initial draw to this place was mountain bike trails, snowboarding, and rock climbing I have since truly fallen in love with the people, the forests, and the land. I have been inspired and drawn in by the work people are doing in the Northwest to build vibrant small businesses that are responsible to their communities. I am watching as my friends follow their dreams to become farmers, artists, musicians, healers, and advocates for social change. Many of them have been featured on this podcast. So anyhow, I miss my family so very much, but I don’t think that I could ever move back closer to my family and keep my sanity. I know that there are people doing similarly great work in Atlanta and probably all over the country, and I would love to hear more about it all, I just haven’t seen it and felt it the way I do in the northwest. I would like to think that everyone feels that way about where they live. I hope so. I hope that when people look around they are proud of what their neighbors and community members are doing. I would really love to hear more about other people feelings around these ideas. I know that so many of my friends have moved away from their homes for various reasons. When you step back and evaluate it all, what do you feel? Or if you are living where you grew up, what do you feel about that? What connection do you have to the place where you put your roots? Is it one that you are fond of? I often wish that I was generations into a place, and reaping the rewards of longstanding connection to a place. What does that feel like? So yeah, this is just me thinking and feeling out loud, kinda canoeing in the sea of my own individualism and entitlement and trying to make sense of it all. Fun stuff huh??? We recently had a gathering to celebrate the January Wolf Moon Total Lunar eclipse. The gathering was great. A handful of friends joined us around the fire to ponder the heavens and give thanks. We didn’t, see the moon however. It was too cloudy out. I thought it was a bummer, but my friend Cathasach informed me that historically it may have been considered a bad idea to look directly at such celestial events. So perhaps things worked out just as they should have. Right about the time of the release of this show Emily and I will be doing our second new moon cleanse of the year. This is just a quick three day cleanse we have commited to doing each new moon. Last month was great. Oh yeah, our couch! The couch that I made turned out great. It took about three days of my work, if I had more proper tools and a better workspace or friendly weather, I could probably have done it in a day. That’s for my work on the frame. Alicia at NW Trading Post and Howl Attire made custom waxed canvas covers and they turned out amazing. We are happy to support a local artist in the building of our furniture. Oh, and another update on the downgrading of my phone. I have been enjoying and benefitting from not having the internet in my pocket. All in all it has been a great thing. I do miss the camera and group text but hey, small price to pay to take some of my time back. The first time I really regretted changing to a simpler phone was when I was recording the interview you are getting ready to listen too. The sound quality is noticibly less good than on a more sophisticated phone, so I apologize for that both to my listeners and to Luke, my guest. instagram.com/outofashesfarm/   Interview: Luke Cirillo is a farmer at Out of Ashes Farm, along with his wife Allison. About 7 years ago Luke and Allison moved out to a little farm in Redland, Or, without really knowing what they were doing. They still consider themselves learners. As time has gone, they have gained greater clarity about the shape their farm is taking, and how they want to serve the ends of local ecological farming.  Luke and Allison focus on water-harvesting systems, soil building, perennial poly-cultures and small animal production systems. They breed pigs and raise them for meat harvest, chickens and ducks for eggs, and set all of that in the context of fruit, nut and berry production. Their system is still quite young, but already beginning to take shape. I hope you enjoy the interview with Luke. instagram.com/outofashesfarm/   Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com  

Modern Folk
013 Carol Delmonico & Casey Davis: Living in Intentional Community

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2019 87:57


Around Our House: I recently went out and visited Higher Ground intentional living community here in Bend Oregon. While there I sat down and had a chat with Casey Davis and Carol Delmonico, two people who have made Higher Ground their home and their community. This was a really interesting conversation that I have been looking forward to for a long time, stemming from my own dreams to live in, or maybe even create, an intentional community. If you are interested in learning more about the ins and outs of living in community with others, what that means, what it looks and feels like, then you are in the right place. Stick around for the second half of the show. But first, here is what Emily, Clemence and I have been up to for this past month…. Since I last sat down to record an episode Thanksgiving has come and gone, as has Winter Solstice, Christmas and New Years. We have been spending time reflecting on what the holiday season means to us, and a large part of that has been centered around gratitude. One thing Emily and I have incorporated into our daily practice is closing out our day by having a talk about what we are grateful for. It is usually the last thing we do before we turn out the lights and go to sleep. It has been a really nice reflective practice and it has felt especially pertinent during the holiday season. Another things that Emily and I have been talking more about is deepening our practice of spirituality and celebration that is tied to the cycles of the sun and the moon, as well as the observable changes of the seasons, the changing behavior of the plants and the animals according to these cycles throughout the year, and how all of this affects us and makes us feel. We have each always had deep personal connections to the natural world and a greater energy in the universe but now we are really trying to come together to understand one another’s beliefs and feelings and find traditions that we can share with our daughter and our community. For starters, we have committed to doing a new moon reset with each new moon for 2019. Mostly this will entail paying particular attention to our diet during the days around each new moon. We will be omitting sugars, caffeine, alcohol, grains, and dairy. I’m sure there are other things as well, but those are the ones that come to mind. We tend to eat pretty well around here, but we thought that we would use the cleansing and renewing energy of the new moon to renew our commitment to eating well and respecting our bodies each month. The next new moon is January 6th, which is Sunday by the way, in case you listen to this in time and care to join us. Also, coming up later this month there is a total lunar eclipse early the morning of January 20th. I am planning on getting up around 4:30 am and starting a fire in my back yard to observe the eclipse. I find total lunar eclipses to be amazingly beautiful. I remember the first time I really watched one closely and felt like I was observing the moon for the enormous celestial sphere that it is, a giant rock rotating the earth, rather than a glowing disk of light in the sky. That was a powerful moment for me and one I always enjoy reliving with total lunar eclipses. Anyhow, I have invited some friends over for 5am lunar viewing at my place. If you didn’t get the invite and you want to come and are in the area, let me know! And finally, I have been busy with family time. Enjoying the company of my wife and my daughter and our wonderful community of friends. This winter continues to be all that I hoped, rest, reflection, gathering with friends and family, as well as some time outdoors. There has been lots of planning and dreaming in this time of the year as well. One of the Big Dreams we cannot stop talking about is how to create a community living situation for us and some of our closest friends. The more we talk about it, the more it seems like it could be a reality. Which brings me to our guest interview today.   Guest Interview: Casey Davis and Carol Demonico Higher Ground Intentional Living Community Casey Davis is a designer, mom, activator and community builder, Casey was born and raised in Bend, OR. She's done extensive informational design for environmental non-profits to visually explain technical data as well as informational projects for trails and wilderness sites for the United States Forest Service. She filters the work that comes her way, focusing her talents and energy into projects that create a world that works for all. When she isn't designing for businesses, Casey is passionate about community building, local activism and urban design. Her current "side" project is creating a new intentional community with the working title, The Bend Living Neighborhood Project. She served on the City of Bend's Central Westside Citizen Advisory Committee and currently is a member of the City's Citizen Transportation Advisory Committee. She recently self-published and interactive journal with Carol Delmonico entitled, Stoke Your Woke. Carol Delmonico is a passionate crusader, and deep listener, a nature-lover, avid reader, crazy-good laugher, and mother of two children. After working 18 years as an RN in a hospital setting she wanted a change and embarked on an eclectic educational path: Life and Health Coaching Certifications, The Embodied Life, Laughter Yoga, Heartmath, Nonviolent Communication and reading zillions of books on human potential and spirituality. She has helped over 3,000 clients of all shapes, sizes and colors. Her creative self-expression shows up in her reverence for the natural world, singing and dancing, laughing, writing poetry, and facilitating “sofa sessions” and “soul circles” with friends. Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com

Modern Folk
012 Allison Murphy: Turning Words into Action

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2018 90:49


Around our house: Downgraded phone update  talk and text only plan, no data, no social media definitely miss the convenience at times appreciate being more present most of the day Homemade couch update cushions are custom cut and ready for covers custom waxed canvas covers by Howl Attire Wrapping up 2018 and Year 1 of Modern Folk Grateful for guests, listeners and support from family and friends Stephen Jenkinson Come of Age Orphan Wisdom School Now enrolling for 2019 Sherri Mitchell Sacred Instructions Youtube Interview: My guest this month is Allison Murphy. It is hard to pin Allison down and tag her with a label that feels appropriate, as she has so many interests and pursuits. Allison is an artist, designer, seamstress and the owner of Utilitu, a small business in Bend Oregon, where she creates custom clothing and also teaches sewing to both children and adults. In a collaborative effort with family and friends, Allison is teaching herself to farm and currently tends a small passel of heritage hogs. She is committed to a personal journey of understanding and reconnecting with her ancestors through the study of the Gaelic language. Allison not only believes, but also truly lives like everyone and everything is her teacher. As a gift to her community, Allison demonstrates how the only thing between you and your dreams is turning your words into action. She lives in a yurt with her partner and two children.   Damn THIS MUFFIN is delicious! Superhero Muffins from Run Fast Eat Slow Heritage breeds of hogs Commercial agriculture & CAFOs tamworth pigs gloucestershire oldpots Utilitu  KPOV the Point 88.9 Bjork song:  Come To Me (off her ‘Debut’ album) Specific lyrics in the chorus: You know that I adore youYou know that I love youSo don't make me say itIt would burst the bubbleBreak the charm  Alchemy with John Gibbons: #075 Jordan Maxwell - What’s Going On   Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com  

Modern Folk
011 Sky Sharp: Raising Superior Grassfed Beef, A Humble and Spiritual Approach

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2018 67:27


Around our house: Addiction to Technology Dumbgrading phone to ZTE Z432  talk/text only no data, no Facebook or Insta!! Howl Attire Wool Shirt Review Building homemade custom couch inspired by Suttle Lodge  photos to come Joybird, awesome couches if you're in the market for one Harvesting Holiday Turkeys with Boundless Farmstead Call for suggestions for guests Who would you like to learn more about? Looking for someone experienced with community living Interview: My guest this month is Sky Sharp, the rancher at S&L Superior Grassfed Beef. I recently went out to Sky's ranch and had a look around. He showed me the land that he cares for, the soil he nurtures, and the grass that he tends, so that his cows can be their best. He talked about his love for the animals and his responsibility to give them both the best life and also the most stress free and humane death. Sky also drove home the importance of not only knowing where your food comes from, but the importance of knowing that it was honored in its growth, its harvest, its preparation and its consumption. Litsten in on our talk, and hear how Sky raises grassfed cows as a way of working for a healthier self, community and planet. Sharp & Lighthorse Superior Grass Beef Allan Savory and the Savory Institute and Holistic Livestock Management  Allan Savory Ted Talk Warpony Saddlery  Sky's other business Didn't talk about it on the show, but pretty amazing   Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com  

Modern Folk
010 Kaycee & Cathasach: Making Music and Deep Ancestral Remembering with The Gold Rust

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2018 58:39


Around our house: Autumn Equinox Dinner at Boundless Farmstead Learning to hunt for meat Slowing down, grounding at home and in community Building personal spiritual practice Connecting with ancestors Ancient wisdom, Deep remembering Hedge School Podcast, guest Sherri Mitchell Sacred Instructions, Sherri Mitchell Interview: My guests on the show this month are Kaycee and Cathasach of the band The Gold Rust. KC boy and KC girl, as they are sometimes addressed to avoid confusion, are artists, musicians, storytellers and generally engaged community members. They are a bit of a dynamic duo. I think you will really enjoy hearing about their creative process as well as some deeper talk on history, ancestry and much more.The Gold RustThe Gold Rust Facebook Occupied Cascadia Documentary The Golden Harp  Ancestral Medicine with Daniel Foor, PHD     Photo of The Gold Rust by Sarah B. GilliamModern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com  

Modern Folk
009 Eli Goodall: This Island Earth

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2018 89:40


Around our house: Gardening updates Winter Creek Nursery S&L Ranch Superior Grassfed Beef The Great American Egg, pork harvest and butcher class Autumn Equinox Dinner at Boundless Farmstead Green Savers Stephen Jenkinson Rewild Yourself Podcast with guest Stephen Jenkinson Daniel Vitalis Interview: My guest on the show this month is Eli Goodall, the musician behind the project This Island Earth. Eli draws inspiration from music, sounds, cultures and landscapes from around the world to create his unique style of experimental and artistic World Music. This Island Earth is releasing a new album later this month, its called Wounded Tropic. Eli states “this is an album abouth the natural world, our ghosts, our children, the fears we hold, and the future we hope to create." Listen and hear more about Eli’s creative process, what inspires him and some of the deep personal concepts that underly his music. www.thisislandearthisalive.com contact Eli if you are interested in attending album release show in mid Septembercontact@thisislandearthisalive.com   Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com  

Modern Folk
008 Alicia Renner: The Person and the Passion Behind Howl Attire.

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2018 58:42


Around our house: Busy summer, thinking of projects for Autumn Gardening Rabbits for meat, maybe this fall How our values can guide our purchasing decisions  Looking for quality products made locally, regionally, etc Clothing Brands we have found: Taylor Stitch Everlane Nettles Tale Ship John Howl Attire Interview: My guest on the show this month is Alicia Renner. Alicia is a Cascadian who grew up in Canada and now lives in Central Oregon where she owns and operates two businesses. By watching her mother and teaching herself she has learned the trade of sewing and now, through her business Howl Attire, she crafts durable goods for the outdoors with natural fibers. While Alicia does indeed enjoy to sew, she has many other passions which drive her. Listen to the show to hear all about how she got started and how she finds inspiration in the beauty all around her. Howl Attire. Handmade clothing and accessories made of natural fibers, built to last. For both women and men. Custom orders. Northwest Trading Post. Northwest outdoor goods, clothing, accessories and jewelry. Sourced from makers in the Northwest including Central Oregon, Canada and Native Peoples. Tree Planting in Canada. Planting saplings in clear cuts.Outland and Dynamic are two companies to look at if your interested. Alicia’s personal journey of learning her trade and how she came to commit herself to her work. There is more to a creator than their creations. Cultivating awareness for the beauty around us all and being thankful that we can experience it and pursue our passions. Considering how to scale up Howl as demand grows. Cascadia Keeping old knowledge and skills alive. Photo of Alicia by Breezy WintersModern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com  

Modern Folk
007 Kitchen Wisdom with Anna Witham of 123 Ramen

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2018 75:02


Around our house: Busy June and July, friends and family visiting Solstice Celebration Acknowledging the output of energy at this time of year Baby is nearly walking Aware Parenting continued successes Emily talks about the science of Traditional Foods Diet  Dr Emily Wiggins Interview: Guest Anna Witham of 123 Ramen and The Root Cellar discusses her approach to feeding her family and her community the most nourishing foods possible.  What is 123 Ramen? Using what is available. Relationship and community building through local transactions. Weston A Price and Traditional Foods Diet Nourishing Traditions by Sally Fallon Fermented foods Pastured Animals Raw Milk The Root Cellar Farm Dinner Series this summer, follow Root Cellar on social media   Photo of Anna Witham by Shawn LinehanModern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com  

Speaking of Travel®
5jBarrow Experience a Beautiful Side of Humanity Through Music and Travel

Speaking of Travel®

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2018 49:56


Eryn Murman and Jason Hite of 5jBarrow recently took a one-year tour of the US, moving their life out of NYC and into a van, getting married, and finding out how different our culture is from town to town. They explain how busking is different in cities and towns like NYC, Asheville, New Orleans, Burlington, San Francisco, and how they witnessed their music to be an amazing tool in breaking down walls between themselves and strangers. Travel has taught Eryn and Jason to go with the flow and trust that things will fall into place.

Modern Folk
006 Nathan Bettger: Exploring Spirituality, Scratching the Surface

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2018 65:58


Around our house: Farmers Market in full swing. Gardening, yard improvement. Missing loved ones, searching for self. "Doing the work". Engaging fully in activities. Appreciating the connectedness of everyone Finding ourselves through spirituality. Stephen Jenkinson on death and dying. Die Wise by Stephen Jenkinson  Interview: Guest Nathan Bettger discusses his work as a hospital chaplain and a spiritual guide.  The work of a hospital chaplain. What is a spiritual guide? Are Generation X, Y, etc spiritually lost? The importance of Elders. Rites of Passage. Deepening our connection with spirituality. natebettger.com Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com  

Modern Folk
005 Boundless Farmstead: Feeding the Village and Building Community

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2018 50:24


Around our house: Yard improvement with an environmental/ethical approach. Low water use plants Seeding with white clover and drought resistant grass mix from Landsystems Nursery Native flowers and shrubs from Winter Creek Nursery Planting trees for shade, fruit and to encourage a pleasant microclimate Gardening with Central Oregon Seed Exchange Bend Farmers Market Aware Parenting and Attachment Parenting Modern Mamas Podcast Crying in arms  The Aware Baby by Aletha J Solter Interview: David and Megan from Boundless Farmstead discuss their path to becoming farmers and their community minded approach to their craft.    Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com  

Modern Folk
004 Comedy, Collaboration and Community with Shanan Kelley

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2018 61:15


  Around our house:           Food and Nutrition Whole grain spelt sourdough bread recipe from Breadtopia Saurkraut and other fermented goodies from Wild Fermentation Home cheesemaking success and challenges, recipe from Artisan Cheesemaking at Home Weekly veggie box from Agricultural Connections Central Oregon Locavore Heritage Pork and pasutred chickens from Piggyback Ranch Raw milk from Kalebaugh Farms           Adventures in Parenting Teething, crawling, sleeping (or not) Whole food diet for baby, traditional diets and Weston Price Interview: Shanan Kelley, comedian and host of the Night Light Show discusses her unique combination of comedy, collaboration, and community.  Comedy and collaboration as healing tools The womens movement Night Light Show Shanans work with World Muse The value of being a good listener in your community Shanankelley.com Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com    

Modern Folk
003 Nurturing Your Creative Voice with Artist Sheila Dunn

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2018 54:06


Around our house: Host Travis Wiggins gives listeners a personal background and describes why he felt compelled to create Modern Folk. Guest Interview: Artist Sheila Dunn shares her story of becoming a full time artist; including how family, educators and community supported her along the way. Sheila also describes mentoring young artists and using her art as a tool for conservation and activism.sheiladunnart.com   Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com

Modern Folk
001 Local Food Economies with High Desert Food and Farms Alliance

Modern Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2018 40:53


Around our house: Cleansing to bring in new year Whole30 cleanse Dealing with cravings Interview: Katrina Van Dis of High Desert Food and Farm Alliance Local food systems in Central Oregon Veggie prescription program Learning to shop and cook with real food on a budget Central Oregon Farm Directory Volunteer opportunities Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com

The Sundilla Radio Hour
The Sundilla Radio Hour #226

The Sundilla Radio Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2017 58:52


The Sundilla Radio Hour for the week of 07/31/2017 featuring: Ordinary Elephant “Another Day” Before I Go (Berkalin 2017) 4:41 Shawna Caspi “Love in a Moving Van” Forest Fire (Shawna Caspi 2017) 3:41 Gordie Tentrees Band “Love in Ink” Less is More (Buckaroo 2015) 4:02 Friction Farm “Stars” So Many Stars… (Friction Farm 2017) 3:49 Rick Drost “Don't Remember Train” Turning the World (Rick Drost 2017) 3:38 SONiA & Disappear Fear “Farmland and the Sky” Live at Maximal (Disappear 2016) 4:10 Rebb Firman “Two Thousand Miles” Songs I Left Behind (Lemon Cove 2017) 3:24 Amber Cross “Trinity Gold Mine” Savage on the Downhill (Amber Cross 2017) 2:39 D.C. Bloom “Gone Forever Days” Just Another Song and Dance Man (Sunnysky Days 2017) 3:39 Molly Tuttle “You Didn't Call My Name” Rise (Molly Tuttle 2017) 4:25 Vincent Cross “Passing Through” Old Songs for Modern Folk (2016) 2:31 Low Lily “The Girl's Not Mine” Live on the Sundilla Radio Hour (Sundilla 2016) 3:11

modern folk sky live
Everything Folk
Everything Folk 1 - The Star of the County Down

Everything Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2010 5:10


Our pick this week is the Star of County Down. Seth's pick was Straight furrows version of the song, Katie's was TheIambicpen's version. You can listen to Katie's song on youtube and you can listen/buy to Seth's on last.fm