Folk song by Woody Guthrie
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You know those moments when a photograph or film clip feels like it's speaking hidden truths? New School professor and interdisciplinary artist Isaiah Winters returns to share how rigorous archival research fuels his photography, film, and mixed-media practice. From earning his MFA at Parsons to documenting pro-Palestinian campus protests and exposing housing inequities, Isaiah shows how historical fragments—old photographs, 16 mm and 35 mm film, collages—become living narratives that confront nationalism, indexicality, and structural racism.MFA to professor: completing his Parsons MFA and stepping into a full-time teaching role in The New School's photo departmentArchival layering: fusing historical photographs, film, and collage to interrogate narratives of nationalism and memory“This Land Is Your Land” revisited: investigating segregation, Indigenous displacement, and public memory in national parksUnpacking housing myths: exposing GI Bill disparities, postwar suburbanization, and systemic racism in American housingOn-campus documentation: capturing student-led pro-Palestinian encampments and the resurgence of fascist undercurrentsAnalog expansion: why he embraces 35 mm and experimental video to turn archives into urgent calls for changeCatch Isaiah Winters's first conversation here: Whether you're an educator, activist, or lover of visual storytelling, Isaiah's approach will open new pathways for seeing archives as living tools—and may inspire your next creative act. Photograph by Isaiah Winters Host: Rob LeeMusic: Original music by Daniel Alexis Music with additional music from Chipzard and TeTresSeis. Production:Produced by Rob Lee & Daniel AlexisEdited by Daniel AlexisShow Notes courtesy of Rob Lee and TransistorPhotos:Rob Lee photos by Vicente Martin for The Truth In This Art and Contrarian Aquarian Media.Guest photos courtesy of the guest, unless otherwise noted.Support the podcast The Truth In This Art Podcast Fractured Atlas (Fundraising): https://www.fracturedatlas.orgThe Truth In This Art Podcast Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/thetruthinthisart.bsky.socialThe Truth In This Art Podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/truthinthisart/?hl=enThe Truth In This Art Podcast Website: https://www.thetruthinthisart.com/The Truth In This Art Podcast Shop: Merch from Redbubble ★ Support this podcast ★
Baby Booming America Back Again...Roe vs. Wade Overturned by Iamthevoiceinthebook Wilson Iamthevoiceinthebook.com Amazon.com BABY BOOMING AMERICA BACK AGAIN...ROE VS. WADE OVERTURNED TELLS A SHORT POIGNANT HISTORICAL VIEW OF AMERICA, BEING A GREAT NATION AND HOW ALL IS FAIR IN "LOVE AND WAR, BUT IN THE DUE PROCESS OF TIME, THIS BOOK HIGHLIGHTS "THE FUTURE OF AMERICANS!" BABY BOOMMERS BOOMED AMERICA AND MADE IT GREAT AND PROSPERIOUS; THEN AN "ANTI-BOOM" HAPPENED THAT MADE AMERICA FRAGILE. THIS "ANTI-BOOM" LEFT AMERICA IN POVERITY OF THE WORST KIND. POVERTY OF SURVIVAL IS THE WORST THING TO HAPPEN TO AMERICA; A COUNTRY CAN ONLY SURVIVE THROUGH THE BIRTH FROM THE WOMB THAT GROWS INTO THE BIRTH OF OUR NATION. BABY BOOMING AMERICA BACK AGAIN...ROE VS WADE OVERTURNED IS A BOOK THAT WILL LET YOU SEE THE FALL FROM THE MOUNTAIN TOP DOWN INTO THE VALLEY'S RAVINE. NOW YOU SEE HOW TO SABATOGE A NATION; A NATION THAT SLAUGHTERS THE FRUIT OF THE FUTURE AMERICANS IN THE WOMB OF THEIR MOTHERS IS A FALL FROM GRACE OFF THE PURPLE MOUNTAINS AND FALLING INTO THE LILIES DOWN IN THE VALLEYS SO LOW. THIS LAND IS YOUR LAND, IT IS MY LAND, BUT THE FUTURE BELONGS TO OUR UNBORN. THE UNBORN ARE THOSE IN THE WOMB OF TIME, ASTRONAUTS IN THE SPACE OF THE WOMB, WITH ONE STEP FROM LANDING ON THIS EARTH, BUT THEY WERE ABORTED BY THE LAW OF ROE VS. WADE!THIS BOOK WILL GIVE YOU A BROAD LOOK, FAR BEYOND THE WARS, AND THE POVERTY THAT ONE CAN PUT A PRICE TAG ON; THIS BOOK WILL TAKE ONE HEARTACHE OF ONE PERSON AS LIKE A VIRUS THAT COULD LIVE ONLY INSIDE THE BODY OF A HOST THEN REDISPOSED INTO A BACTERIAL INFECTION THAT CAN LIVE IN THE BODY AS WELL AS ON THE LAND WHICH SOON AFFECTED THE BLOOD OF THE WORLD INTO A SEPTIC POISON WHEN THE BLIND LEADS THE BLIND AND THEY ALL FELL INTO THE DITCH! BABY BOOMING AMERICA AGAIN...ROE VS. WADE OVERTURNED, WHETHER IT BE PEOPLE, PLACES DATES, WHERE-EVER, WHATEVER, HOWEVVER AND EVERYTHING LIKE THAT "IT IS WHAT IT IS," BUT AT THE END OF THE DAY, ITS' THE UGLY TRUTH OF HOW AND WHY AMERICA OVERTURNED ROE S. WADE IN THE HOPES OF BABY BOOMING AMERICA BACK AGAIN!
This Land Is Your Land, Americans
We report on FFRF's efforts to keep Christian nationalists in check around the country. Honoring the anniversary of the birth of the anti-fascist singer/songwriter Woody Guthrie, we hear the funk/soul version of "This Land is Your Land" performed by Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings. Then, FFRF's Legal Director Patrick Elliott describes our lawsuit challenging the Louisiana law requiring the posting of the Ten Commandments in all public-school classrooms and our efforts to rein in Oklahoma's Christian nationalist State Superintendent of Public Education.
805 Beer has a new Authentico Film featuring local Jade Jackson performing the icon "This Land Is Your Land"
This Land Is Your Land. I am a long time fan of Woody Guthrie. He is one of the worlds great song writers in the English language and many of his words are as relevant today as they were when he wrote them. He was also an American activist who agitated and educated and sang for social equality, immigration reform, peace and fairness. He stood against fascism, racism, war, corruption and for a clean environment. He sang about love, for workers rights and a better life for all.
Think you know renegade roots songwriter icon Ani DiFranco? Think again! We are happy to bring you this special rebroadcast as Ani celebrates the 25th anniversary reissues of legendary albums Living In Clip and Little Plastic Castles which we dive into in this talk. Ani is more than a songwriter and singer of course. Call her an activist, author, and free-spirited feminist folk leader - who recently released her lushly orchestrated twenty-second album: Revolutionary Love. Many things have been said about the music Ani DiFranco has created for the last thirty years since she burst on the scene with her fiery self-titled LP in 1990. With her shaved head on the cover, fearlessly bisexual love songs, dexterous guitar work and hold-no-prisoners lyrics sparing no one from her poetic magnifying glass, DiFranco's persona became almost synonymous with a rejuvenated women's movement that blossomed in the late-1990's Lilith Fair moment. And yet she was always a bit more committed to the cause than some of her more pop-leaning contemporaries, who faded away as soon as their hits subsided. Framing herself somewhere between the rebellious folk-singing teacher Pete Seeger and the gender-fluid show-stopping rock spirit in Prince, (who she recorded with after he became a fan,) DiFranco was always just as passionate about raising awareness for abortion rights, ensuring safety for gay and trans youth and bringing music to prisons, as she was promoting her latest musical experiment. She began playing publicly around age ten, and as a nineteen-year-old runaway from Buffalo, NY, she started her own label, Righteous Babe Records, that allowed her to operate free of corporate (and overwhelmingly male) oversight. Indeed, despite gaining a wide international fanbase she has released every album herself since the beginning — as well as championing genre-defying songwriters like Andrew Bird, Anaïs Mitchell, Utah Philips, and others. It was DiFranco's encouragement that helped Mitchell's opus Hadestown become a Tony-winning Broadway smash. DiFranco may have been deemed a bit too left-of-center for pop radio, but her beloved 1997 live record Living In Clip went gold. Let's get something out of the way real quick: was this male podcast host initially a bit intimidated to dive into her encyclopedic album collection after admiring her work from afar and believing the songs were not meant for his ears? Indeed. I grew up with girlfriends and fellow musicians who rocked Ani's Righteous Babe pins and patches on their jean jackets like they were religious ornaments. What I found during this mind-bending conversation, and after listening to her polished and mystical newest record especially, was that DiFranco has never tried to push away people that don't look or talk like her — or tried to mock or belittle conservative movements she doesn't agree with or understand. There is a deep kindness and empathy in her songwriting that I never expected and in her 2019 autobiography, No Walls And The Recurring Dream, she acknowledges how lonely and exhausting it can be trying to fight against a societal tide that doesn't want to stop and give you space to be who you are. What became increasingly clear during our conversation was that DiFranco wants to make music for everyone. She prides herself on her quirky, multi-generational fanbase — with grandparents and kids, dads and sons, daughters and aunties alike singing along to favorites like “Both Hands,” “Untouchable Face,” and covers like Woody Guthrie's “This Land Is Your Land” at packed shows across three continents.
Woody Guthrie was born in Oklahoma this day in 1912. We discover more about the American folk singer – and hear his classic, "This Land Is Your Land." Paul Hare shares the latest market trends from Wall Street. Also, CNBC's article about the best states for business has a distinctive Southern tilt.
In June 2022 the Government consulted on proposals to abolish hope and development value when assessing compensation for land compulsorily purchased for certain kinds of schemes. Nine months after it closed, a response has yet to be published, but many CPO professionals made the point at the time that the proposals would be unfair and that there was no evidence that the risk of paying hope value compensation was deterring promoters from bringing forward CPOs. On 13 March 2023, however, the Government tabled amendments to the Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill, which is currently at Committee Stage in the House of Lords. One such amendment would allow “a minister confirming a compulsory purchase order to direct, in certain cases involving affordable housing, health or education, that compensation should be assessed on the basis that no new planning permission would be granted for the land”. It is known from last June's consultation document that the Government view is that hope value can lead to “perverse outcomes” that “artificially inflate” compensation because the valuation assumes permission will be granted, even in cases where the likelihood of permission being granted may be relatively low. What though about the practical impacts of this change? Should the need for housing (and in particular affordable housing) trump the “equivalence” compensation principle? Will the risk of CPO on this basis spook the development sector such that the measures are in any event counter-productive? This episode is a recording of friend of the podcast Simon Ricketts' Planning Law Unplanned Clubhouse discussion on this subject that took place on 23 March 2022 during which Simon put these questions to Raj Gupta, Jonathan Stott, Greg Dickson, Rebecca Clutten, Venus Galarza and David Baker. Some accompanying reading. The June 2022 CPO reform consultation https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/compulsory-purchase-compensation-reforms-consultation/compulsory-purchase-compensation-reforms-consultation The Compulsory Purchase Association's response to the 2022 reform consultation https://www.compulsorypurchaseassociation.org/compulsory-purchase---compensation-reforms--consultation.html "LURB in the Lords - No Hope" (Raj's Blog) https://www.townlegal.com/wp-content/uploads/Compulsory-Reading-LURB-in-the-Lords-%E2%80%93-No-Hope.pdf Government amends Bill to allow councils to buy land for affordable housing at existing use value (£) https://www.planningresource.co.uk/article/1817953/government-amends-bill-allow-councils-buy-land-affordable-housing-existing-use-value The LURB Amendments https://bills.parliament.uk/bills/3155/publications Some accompanying listening. This Land Is Your Land by My Morning Jacket https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5AvTezD4XIU In Color by My Morning Jacket https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P2XzUYneUcc 50 Shades T-Shirts! If you have listened to Episode 45 of the 50 Shades of Planning Podcast you will have heard Clive Betts say that... 'In the Netherlands planning is seen as part of the solution. In the UK, too often, planning is seen as part of the problem'. Sam said in reply that that would look good on a t-shirt and it does. Further details can be found here: http://samuelstafford.blogspot.com/2021/07/50-shades-of-planning-t-shirts.html
Grace and Alvina discuss their plan for talking about what epic stuff they want to achieve, they discuss the HarperCollins strike, and talk about holiday traditions! See complete show notes at www.bookfriendsforever.com. Click here to become a Patreon member: https://www.patreon.com/Bookfriendsforever1. Click here for Grace's Newbery poster https://shop.carlemuseum.org/category/books/autographed-books/grace-lin. Pre-order "Once Upon a Book" with a free virtual school visit: https://shop.carlemuseum.org/once-upon-book-pre-order
The Rev. David Goldberg's homily from Sunday, October 30th, 2022, and "This Land Is Your Land" by Cameron Dezen Hammon and The Five O'Clock Band.Produced by St. Mark's Episcopal Church, Houston, TXMixed by Luke Brawner of Milieu Media GroupAdditional music: Turning on the Lights by Blue Dot Sessions
CHET CHET y'all! It's time to dig into episode 3 of AppleTV's SEE, starring Jason Momoa! Crazy Sybeth Caine is on the loose, and Maghra is afraid her escape may lead to war with Trevantis. But those darn renegade Witchfinders are at it again, and they almost kill Kofun! Wren shows up and confirms that Trevantis is up to no good and there are a lot of bombs at the House of Enlightenment that need to get destroyed before they destroy Pensa. And Harlan is confirmed to have one hell of a c**k. What did you think of SEE, episode 3, entitled This Land Is Your Land? Did you like it? Hate it? Are you sick of Kofun? Let us know in the comments and in our Discord community that you can join for free here: http://www.saltynerddiscord.com And if you like our content and want to support the show, sign up for our members area here: ▷ SUPPORT THE SHOW: http://www.saltynerdclub.com/ By becoming a Patron of the Salty Nerd Podcast you help us to create great content AND get awesome perks! Check out our Patreon page through the link above for more detail. Thank you! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/saltynerd/support
Please share this music with your friends and family at the BBQ! Celebrating the music of the USA, Her Independence and Declaration of Our Unalienable Rights The music includes: Star Spangled Banner, God Bless The USA, This Land Is Your Land, God Bless America, America The Beautiful and more. Artists include: Charlie DanielsKate SmithWoody GuthrieSimon and GarfunkelRay CharlesToby KeithLee GreenwoodJohnny CashAretha FranklinThe Mommas and The PoppasNeil DiamondJimi HendrixNeil YoungKaren NewmanLady Gaga Send us the songs you would like to hear. Contact Us - Veterans Radio
The Rev. David Goldberg's homily from Sunday, July 3rd, 2022, and "This Land Is Your Land" by Cameron Dezen Hammon and The Five O'Clock Band.Produced by St. Mark's Episcopal Church, Houston, TXMixed by Luke Brawner of Milieu Media GroupAdditional music: Turning on the Lights by Blue Dot Sessions
| Artist | Title | Album Name | Album Copyright | | Jim Dan Dee | Bleed Me Dry | Real Blues | | | Anthony Geraci | Corner Of Heartache And Pain | Blues Called My Name | | Ian Siegal | Psycho | Stone By Stone | | | Stacy Jones | We Are Gonna Make It Through | World On Fire | | | Mudlow | Crocodile Man | Bad Turn | | | | The Lucky Ones | Kate and Dan | Slow Dance, Square Dance, Barn Dance | Son Of Dave | Knock Off | Call Me KIng | | | Robbin Kapsalis and Vintage#18 | Lost Souls | Soul Shaker | | | Dion | I Got My Eyes On You Baby feat. Marcia Ball & Jimmy Vivino | Stomping Ground | | | Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings | This Land Is Your Land | Blues Women Anthology V5 | | The Rev Jimmie Bratcher | One Rock | Gospel Blues Vol 1 | Bongo Boy Records | | Alberta Hunter | Nobody Knows The Way I Feel This Morning | Blue Ladies | | | Howie Casey & The Seniors | I Ain't Mad At You (Roberta) | John, Paul, George, Dave, Brian, Tony & More; The Birth of the | Michael Rubin | Kama Sutra Girl | I'll Worry If I Wanna | | | Danny Thompson; Eric Bibb; Eric Bibb & North Country Far | 1912 Skiing Disaster [Instrumental] | The Happiest Man in the World
Pinkie Sings "This Land Is Your Land" by Woody Guthrie
With today being Memorial Day, we wanted to share our 2018 interview with David Carter, the designer of the USS Arizona Mall Memorial on the University of Arizona campus, and it's going to include some parts we've not previously aired. Today is May 29th, my name is Tom Heath and you're listening to "Life Along the Streetcar". Each and every Sunday our focus is on Social, Cultural and Economic impacts in Tucson's Urban Core and we shed light on hidden gems everyone should know about. From A Mountain to UArizona and all stops in between. You get the inside track- right here on 99.1 FM, streaming on DowntownRadio.org- we're also available on your iPhone or Android using our very own Downtown Radio app. Reach us by email contact@lifealongthestreetcar.org -- interact with us on Facebook @Life Along the Streetcar and follow us on Twitter @StreetcarLife--- And check out our past episodes on www.lifeAlongTheStreetcar.org, Spotify, iTunes or asking your smart speaker to "Play Life Along The Streetcar Podcast." Our intro music is by Ryanhood and we exit with music from Sharon Jones, "This Land Is Your Land."
The Rev. David Goldberg's homily from Sunday, May 29th, 2022, and "This Land Is Your Land" by Cameron Dezen Hammon and The Five O'Clock Band.Produced by St. Mark's Episcopal Church, Houston, TXMixed by Luke Brawner of Milieu Media GroupAdditional music: Turning on the Lights by Blue Dot Sessions
Grace and Alvina talk about all things music, including their first concerts, their relationship with music as children, and music books. See complete show notes at www.bookfriendsforever.com. Click here to become a Patreon member: https://www.patreon.com/Bookfriendsforever1
with Rev. Clay Nelson Recorded by Auckland Unitarian Church 8th May 2022 Some have called “This Land Is Your Land” an alternative national anthem in America. It was written and first sung by Woody Guthrie. Growing up in small-town Oklahoma, Guthrie heard church hymns, outlaw ballads, blues, fiddle tunes and popular music. The Guthries had been fairly prosperous — Woody's father was a small-time politician and businessman — but the family unravelled during the Depression and his mother's mental illness. That's when Woody took to the road to be a street entertainer. For more information see https://aucklandunitarian.org.nz/fifth-uu-principle-versus-creeping-authoritarianism/
Sintonía: "Walking In Dub" - Burning Spear "Rated X" - Kool & The Gang; "Hicky Burr" - Quincy Jones featuring Bill Cosby; "I Don't Know" - Ruth Brown; "Brown Bag" - Ivan "Boogaloo Joe" Jones; "We Got More Soul" - Dyke & The Blazers; "Get The Money" - Mongo Santamaria; "Don´t Do It" - Syl Johnson y "To Sxoleio" de Olympians, extraídas de la BSO del film "Soul Kitchen", coescrita y dirigida por Fatih Akin en el 2009 "This Land Is Your Land" - Sharon Jones & The Dapkings; "Taken At All" - Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young; "The Snow Before Us" - Charles Atlas; "Lost In Detroit" - Rolfe Kent y "Genova" de Charles Atlas, extraídas de la BSO de la película "Up In The Air", coescrita y dirigida por Jason Reitman en el 2009. Escuchar audio
Our theme song this week is This Land Is Your Land by Whitesnake. We're joined by Dan Bublitz as we discuss our deepest, darkest most unimportant secrets, like how Mr. Inevitable sees the world and every molecular structure as a collection of different colored cheezits. To find more of dan and what's he's up to you can look him up at dbublitzcomedy on instagram, twitter and tiktok. On Facebook under Dan Bublitz Jr. Comedy, also check on his YouTube channel Dan Bublitz Jr and his website danbublitz.com.
The Numinous Podcast with Carmen Spagnola: Intuition, Spirituality and the Mystery of Life
Today, I'm going to make a few people really happy because this is the Bruce Springsteen Niche Episode that more than a handful of you have been waiting for. The episode where I explain the long-lasting appeal of Bruce Springsteen as told through select Springsteen tracks arranged in order of progressive maturity of narrative voice. The journey takes us from frustrated youth in a small town, to emergent adult getting into trouble, an adult desire for love and reconciliation with the past, deepening radicalization as the hardships of life are revealed to be so often caused by oppressive systems of class and hierarchy, and finally a swell of hope and resilience as a more mature voice of elderhood emerges. Features 15 of his 60+ albums. I have created this playlist in Tidal but I'm going to add a list of each track and the specific album it appears on - because the specific recording matters. This is a musician who is known for tireless touring having played over 2,600 concerts since he signed with Columbia Records in 1972. But of course, he had a career before that - Bruce Springsteen has been the front man of a rock and roll band since his first gig as a 17 year old with his band called The Castiles in 1965 and he's never had any other job since. Never had a workin man job. Not a day. But his dad did. His dad had lots of jobs, it was hard for him to keep jobs. Partially because of declining industrial jobs around New Jersey intensifying in the mid-60s, but also because Bruce's dad struggled with alcoholism and undiagnosed depression and schizophrenia, and that became a defining feature of Bruce's life and his music, wrestling with intergenerational demons and the mirroring of one family's life in the larger decline of America as a country and an idea at the end of the 20th century. Follow along with the songs with a free trial on Tidal (credit card required) or search the following recordings wherever you get your music, (possibly even YouTube). Playlist Growin' Up, Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. (1973) Born to Run, Born To Run, (1975) Thunder Road, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band Live 1975-1985 The River, The River (1980) Working on the Highway, Born In The USA (1984) Johnny 99, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band Live 1975-1985 (1985) Badlands, Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978) Dancing In The Dark, Born in the USA (1984) I'm on Fire, Born In The USA (1984) Human Touch, Human Touch (1992) Brilliant Disguise, Tunnel of Love (1987) My Hometown, Born In The USA (1984) Born In the USA, Born In The USA (1984) Bring ‘Em Home, We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions (2006) The Ghost of Tom Joad, The Ghost of Tom Joad (1995) Devils & Dust, Devils & Dust (2005) Shenandoah, We Shall Overcome (2006) Blood Brothers, Greatest Hits (1995) O Mary Don't You Weep, We Shall Overcome (2006) Pay Me My Money Down, We Shall Overcome (2006) We Shall Overcome, We Shall Overcome (2006) This Land Is Your Land, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band Live 1975 - 1985 (1986) Reason To Believe, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band Live 1975 - 1985 (1986) Better Days, Lucky Town (1992) Hello Sunshine, Western Stars (2019) References Covers and Springsteen Songs by Other Artists Blinded By The Light, Mannfred Mann's Earth Band (1976) Because The Night, Patti Smith (1978) Because The Night, 10,000 Maniacs (1993) Because the Night, Co.Ro (1992) Movie: Blinded By The Light, Gurinder Chadha (2019) Netflix: Springsteen on Broadway Album: Traveling Wilburys, Vol.1 Pete Seeger on the Johnny Cash Show: Bring Them Home (1970) Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band Live at C.W.Post College, Greenvale NY (1975) Autobiography: Born To Run (2016)
Three more Virginia stores file for union elections, including the Huntsman Square Starbucks in Springfield, VA. Today's labor quote: Woody Guthrie. Today's labor history: Woody Guthrie writes “This Land Is Your Land.” @wpfwdc #1u #unions #LaborRadioPod @AFLCIO @SBWorkersUnited @va_labor Proud founding member of the Labor Radio Podcast Network.
Jeff Slate is an ASCAP award winning singer-songwriter from New York City. He co-founded the 1980's mod/punk band the Mindless Thinkers, and in the mid-90's released The Townshend Tapes, on which The Who's Pete Townshend acted as executive producer. He later opened for Sheryl Crow on her “Tuesday Night Music Club” tour before founding the band The Badge in 1997, who released three albums and countless singles, EPs and live “bootleg” sets, two “best of” compilations, and went on to become darlings of the UK/European “mod” scene in the 2000's. In 2010 Slate released the solo single “Dreamtime,” which featured Earl Slick (Lennon, Bowie) and Carlos Alomar (Bowie, Lennon), as well as other alums of David Bowie's bands. Birds of Paradox, his first solo album of original material, was released in 2012. It was followed in November 2013 by Imposters & Attractions, and his contribution to the Pete Quaife Foundation Kinks tribute album Shoulder To Shoulder in 2015, which honored the band's late bassist. His 2016 album Secret Poetry was another all-star affair, lauded by critics and fans alike. A video of the song “Letter From Paris (Showed Me The Way)” featuring Slate and Slick, was directed by Patrick McGuinn.Jeff's music has appeared in advertising and films and on television, including in the hit show Gossip Girl. Over the past decade Slate has been a regular contributor to the Wall Street Journal, The New Yorker, Esquire, Rolling Stone, and many other publications, writing about music and culture, and has appeared on television and radio numerous times, including on former-Sex Pistol Steve Jones's Los Angeles drive time show Jonesy's Jukebox, and SiriusXMs Volume channel, where Slate is also a guest host, as well as the BBC numerous times. He is the co-author of the 2017 book The Authorized Roy Orbison, written with the late legend's sons, and has written liner notes for albums by Orbison, the Small Faces, Shawn Colvin, for the Stax Records 60th anniversary reissue series and for The Beatles' 50th anniversary edition of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. In 2018 Slate wrote the 10,000+ word essay included in Bob Dylan's More Blood, More Tracks, the 14 edition of his long-running Bootleg Series. In 2019 Slate appeared onstage at the first World Of Bob Dylan conference in Tulsa, Oklahoma, sponsored by the Bob Dylan Center there, where he interviewed The Byrds' Roger McGuinn and performed with the legend. He also performed at all-star concerts celebrating The Clash's album London Calling in New York and L.A. In 2020, and Slate appeared at a show in Los Angeles fronting the band from the “Echo In The Canyon” film, as well as at an all-star concert at New York City's Town Hall honoring the 80th birthday of the Woody Guthrie song “This Land Is Your Land.”During the 2020 lockdown, Slate performed over forty Facebook Live and Instagram Live streaming concerts to thousands of fans each week, including one for the Martin Guitars series “Jam In Place,” and released the live album Lockdown Live taken from those performances. He also released the single and animated video “Heartbreak,” which featured Slick, Duff McKagan and other rock and roll luminaries, and contributed a cover of the Traveling Wilburys' song “Handle With Care” with his band to the official celebration of Tom Petty's 70th birthday.Slate proudly plays a Martin OM-28E Retro Acoustic Guitar with Martin Strings, as well as Hofner basses and Vox amps.Photo credit: Rachel NaomiLearn More about Lyte Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Jeff Slate is an ASCAP award winning singer-songwriter from New York City. He co-founded the 1980's mod/punk band the Mindless Thinkers, and in the mid-90's released The Townshend Tapes, on which The Who's Pete Townshend acted as executive producer. He later opened for Sheryl Crow on her “Tuesday Night Music Club” tour before founding the band The Badge in 1997, who released three albums and countless singles, EPs and live “bootleg” sets, two “best of” compilations, and went on to become darlings of the UK/European “mod” scene in the 2000's. In 2010 Slate released the solo single “Dreamtime,” which featured Earl Slick (Lennon, Bowie) and Carlos Alomar (Bowie, Lennon), as well as other alums of David Bowie's bands. Birds of Paradox, his first solo album of original material, was released in 2012. It was followed in November 2013 by Imposters & Attractions, and his contribution to the Pete Quaife Foundation Kinks tribute album Shoulder To Shoulder in 2015, which honored the band's late bassist. His 2016 album Secret Poetry was another all-star affair, lauded by critics and fans alike. A video of the song “Letter From Paris (Showed Me The Way)” featuring Slate and Slick, was directed by Patrick McGuinn.Jeff's music has appeared in advertising and films and on television, including in the hit show Gossip Girl. Over the past decade Slate has been a regular contributor to the Wall Street Journal, The New Yorker, Esquire, Rolling Stone, and many other publications, writing about music and culture, and has appeared on television and radio numerous times, including on former-Sex Pistol Steve Jones's Los Angeles drive time show Jonesy's Jukebox, and SiriusXMs Volume channel, where Slate is also a guest host, as well as the BBC numerous times. He is the co-author of the 2017 book The Authorized Roy Orbison, written with the late legend's sons, and has written liner notes for albums by Orbison, the Small Faces, Shawn Colvin, for the Stax Records 60th anniversary reissue series and for The Beatles' 50th anniversary edition of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. In 2018 Slate wrote the 10,000+ word essay included in Bob Dylan's More Blood, More Tracks, the 14 edition of his long-running Bootleg Series. In 2019 Slate appeared onstage at the first World Of Bob Dylan conference in Tulsa, Oklahoma, sponsored by the Bob Dylan Center there, where he interviewed The Byrds' Roger McGuinn and performed with the legend. He also performed at all-star concerts celebrating The Clash's album London Calling in New York and L.A. In 2020, and Slate appeared at a show in Los Angeles fronting the band from the “Echo In The Canyon” film, as well as at an all-star concert at New York City's Town Hall honoring the 80th birthday of the Woody Guthrie song “This Land Is Your Land.”During the 2020 lockdown, Slate performed over forty Facebook Live and Instagram Live streaming concerts to thousands of fans each week, including one for the Martin Guitars series “Jam In Place,” and released the live album Lockdown Live taken from those performances. He also released the single and animated video “Heartbreak,” which featured Slick, Duff McKagan and other rock and roll luminaries, and contributed a cover of the Traveling Wilburys' song “Handle With Care” with his band to the official celebration of Tom Petty's 70th birthday.Slate proudly plays a Martin OM-28E Retro Acoustic Guitar with Martin Strings, as well as Hofner basses and Vox amps.Photo credit: Rachel NaomiLearn More about Lyte
Are you in a situationship with your hometown? What does it mean to belong to Seattle in the 2020s? Interloper hosts a conversation and artist talk with Elisheba Johnson to discuss her solo show “Non-Committal”. Johnson is one of the exhibiting artists in the conversation series “This Land Is Your Land.” To see documentation of Johnson's solo exhibition “Non-Committal”, go to www.interloperinterloper.com/past-conversations.
How is hair a form of resistance? What place does feminine rage have in contemporary society and White institutions? Interloper hosts a conversation with Deja Milany to discuss her solo show “Pathways”. Milany is one of the exhibiting artists in the conversation series “This Land Is Your Land.” To see documentation of Milany's solo exhibition, go to www.interloperinterloper.com/past-conversations.
What does hair have to do with community and how many heartbeats do we have until we die? Join the Interloper hosts as they introduce their third conversation series, This Land Is Your Land.
Paul Hanges, CEO of JibJab speaks with Office Hours host Spencer Rascoff about how the L.A.-based digital entertainment studio has attained success beyond its viral videos by moving into the eCards space and using its unique blend of satirical humor to compete with rivals Hallmark and American Greetings. Founded in 1999 by brothers Evan and Gregg Spiridellis, the company first achieved widespread attention during the 2004 U.S. presidential election. Their video of candidates George Bush and John Kerry singing “This Land Is Your Land” became a viral hit. JibJab has produced commercials and short videos for clients including Sony, Noggin, Cartoon Network, Nickelodeon, PBS Kids, Sprout, NBC, Qubo and Disney before focusing on what eventually became their flagship personalized eCard and messaging services. They've seen surprising success with their animated sticker-making program which became a top App Store download. In 2019, JibJab was acquired by the private equity firm Catapult Capital.
Pinkie Sings Woody Guthrie's Song "This Land Is Your Land" Producer Renee plays Piano + Guitar. https://www.pinkiethepigpodcast.com
This podcast kills fascists! Join the Dead Beat Film Society as we celebrate our 5 year anniversary talking Woody Guthrie, his singing style, his guitar playing, his speaking cadence, his jokes, his mannerisms and David Carradine's complete inability to act out any of them on screen, along with discussions on folk music history, Bob Dylan and the 1960's folk scene, the Dust Bowl, unions, solidarity with the working class, whether prior knowledge of Guthrie makes this a better film, unstreamablity, the first use of the Steadicam, selling out, This Land Is Your Land, our recasting with Luke Perry, and our proposed sequel. So grab a guitar and get to gettin' for an in depth Bound For Glory film analysis! (Special Guest: Greg Vandy) Click here to listen to Greg's show The Roadhouse on KEXP! Click here to pickup Greg's book 26 Songs In 30 Days!
"It's up to you and me to care for this land and everyone and everything that calls it home."What can you do to address the exploitation of the poor, oppressed, and the created world around us?//James 1:27Religion that is pure and undefiled before God, the Father, is this: to care for orphans and widows in their distress.Psalm 24:1The earth is the Lord's and all that is in it, the world, and those who live in it.//This episode was written, recorded, and produced by Rev. Jim Keat, the Digital Minister at The Riverside Church. Background tracks include Barefoot by Podington Bear, This Land Is Your Land by Woody Guthrie and covered by Elizabeth Mitchell, and This Land Is Your Land solo Slide Guitar by Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band.Visit www.trcnyc.org/BeStillAndGo/ to listen to more episodes from all seven seasons of Be Still and Go.Visit www.trcnyc.org/Donate/ to support this podcast and other digital resources from The Riverside Church that integrate spirituality and social justice.
In this episode, poet AlephBa recites a message to his fellow Americans. With background music by John Denver, Bob Dylan and others, including such American classics as "This Land Is My Land, This Land Is Your Land....." Enjoy! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/alephba/support
Celebrating the music of America while US citizens celebrate the 4th of July. The music includes: Star Spangled Banner, God Bless The USA, This Land Is Your Land, God Bless America, America The Beautiful and much more. Singers include: Kate Smith, Woody Guthrie, Simon and Garfunkel, Ray Charles, Toby Keith, Lee Greenwood, Johnny Cash, Aretha Franklin, The Mommas and The Poppas, Neil Diamond, Neil Young, Lady Gaga, Jimi Hendrix and more..
For 4th of July, I flashback the historical backgrounds of 7 American patriotic songs. Theme Song: "Dance Track", composed by Jessica Ann CatenaSongs Mentioned: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5x25E3J68knu4aTuxvVVKg?si=76ac585fce5e408d“The Star Spangled Banner” (1812)“You're a Grand Old Flag” (1904)“Hail to the Chief” (1812/1829)“America, the Beautiful” (1913)“America (My Country ‘Tis of Thee)” (1831)“God Bless America” (1938)“This Land Is Your Land” (1944)
Quizmasters Lee and Marc meet to ask, suss and answer a general knowledge quiz with topics including Fast Food, First # Hits, Lucky Charms, Product Mascots, Classic TV, NBA Records, The Periodic Table, Movies, Video Games, NHL, Famous Races, World War II, The Vinyl Revival, Product Endorsements and more! Round One FAST FOOD - What two fast food restaurants feature an identical Happy Star logo, and are both owned by parent company CKE? FIRST #1 HITS - "Wake Up Little Susie" was the first number one hit by what group? LUCKY CHARMS - Citing it as his lucky charm, which Pokémon card did Logan Paul wear to the ring in his 2021 exhibition boxing match with Floyd Mayweather (#6 in the Pokédex)? PRODUCT MASCOTS - Mr. Whipple was the mascot of what brand name product from 1964-1985? CLASSIC TELEVISION - What recurring SNL character first appeared in a sketch entitled ""Jaws II"" on the Candice Bergen-hosted episode in Season 1 (1975)? NBA RECORDS - What ex-Laker currently holds the NBA record for most career personal fouls? Missed Corrections 153 - Ajax is a Dutch football team, not Spanish. 153 - Warner Brothers does actually not own Movie World, they license their properties to Village Roadshow. 153 - Woodie Guthrie's “This Land Is Your Land” could be a good hint for Lee's ocean current question. Round Two PERIODIC TABLE - Which soft, silvery white alkali metal has the atomic number 3? MOVIES - Tromaville, the fictional setting where most Troma Entertainment films take place, is said to be located in which U.S. state? VIDEO GAMES - In Pac-Man, what color is the ghost named Clyde? NHL - What West Division NHL team's home arena was flooded in 1995, causing the only NHL game on record ever to be cancelled due to rain? FAMOUS RACES - What race was started in 1911 by a man named Carl Fischer? WORLD WAR II - Which British prime minister declared war on Germany in 1939, leading Britain into WWII? Rate My Question VIDEO GAMES - What video game, that won the 1996 Game of the Year award, is credited with creating and popularizing the color coded rarity system for in game rewards? Factoid Alert VIDEO GAMES - In 1978, what video game is popularly believed to have caused a shortage of Yen coins in Japan? Final Questions THE VINYL REVIVAL - Celebrating the 50th anniversary of its first release, what album sold 246,000 copies in 2019, making it the best selling album on vinyl in a single year since the vinyl revival began in 2007? WORLD WAR II - Against which country did Hitler launch Operation Barbarossa? PRODUCT ENDORSEMENTS - Which athlete has appeared on the Wheaties cereal box the most? Upcoming LIVE Know Nonsense Trivia Challenges June 16th, 2021 - Know Nonsense Trivia Challenge - Point Ybel Brewing Co. - 7:30 pm EDT June 24th, 2021 - Know Nonsense Trivia Challenge - Ollies Pub Records and Beer - 7:30 pm EDT June 21st, 2021 - Know Nonsense Trivia MEGAQUIZ on Twitch - 8:00 pm EDT You can find out more information about that and all of our live events online at KnowNonsenseTrivia.com All of the Know Nonsense events are free to play and you can win prizes after every round. Thank you Thanks to our supporters on Patreon. Thank you, Quizdaddies – Tommy (The Electric Mud) and Tim (Pat's Garden Service) Thank you, Team Captains – Dylan, Shaun, Lydia, Gil, David, Aaron, Kristen & Fletcher Thank you, Proverbial Lightkeepers – Nabeel, Patrick, Jon, Adam, Ryan, Mollie, Lisa, Alex, Spencer, Kaitlynn, Manu, Mo, Matthew, Luc, Hank, Justin, Cooper, Elyse, Sarah, Karly, Kristopher, Josh, Lucas Thank you, Rumplesnailtskins – Alex, Doug, Kevin and Sara, Tiffany, Allison, Paige, We Do Stuff, Mike S., Kenya, Jeff, Eric, Steven, Efren, Mike J., Mike C. If you'd like to support the podcast and gain access to bonus content, please visit http://theknowno.com and click "Support."
This week on The Show On The Road, we bring you a truly inspiring talk with the activist, author, and free-spirited feminist folk icon Ani DiFranco, who just released her lushly orchestrated twenty-second album: Revolutionary Love. Many things have been said about the music Ani DiFranco has created for the last thirty years since she burst on the scene with her fiery self-titled LP in 1990. With her shaved head on the cover, fearlessly bisexual love songs, dexterous guitar work and hold-no-prisoners lyrics sparing no one from her poetic magnifying glass, DiFranco's persona became almost synonymous with a rejuvenated women's movement that blossomed in the late-1990's Lilith Fair moment. And yet she was always a bit more committed to the cause than some of her more pop-leaning contemporaries, who faded away as soon as their hits subsided. Framing herself somewhere between the rebellious folk-singing teacher Pete Seeger and the gender-fluid show-stopping rock spirit in Prince, (who she recorded with after he became a fan,) DiFranco was always just as passionate about raising awareness for abortion rights, ensuring safety for gay and trans youth and bringing music to prisons, as she was promoting her latest musical experiment. She began playing publicly around age ten, and as a nineteen-year-old runaway from Buffalo, NY, she started her own label, Righteous Babe Records, that allowed her to operate free of corporate (and overwhelmingly male) oversight. Indeed, despite gaining a wide international fanbase she has released every album herself since the beginning — as well as championing genre-defying songwriters like Andrew Bird, Anaïs Mitchell, Utah Philips, and others. It was DiFranco's encouragement that helped Mitchell's opus Hadestown become a Tony-winning Broadway smash. DiFranco may have been deemed a bit too left-of-center for pop radio, but her beloved 1997 live record Living In Clip went gold. Let's get something out of the way real quick: was this male podcast host initially a bit intimidated to dive into her encyclopedic album collection after admiring her work from afar and believing the songs were not meant for his ears? Indeed. I grew up with girlfriends and fellow musicians who rocked Ani's Righteous Babe pins and patches on their jean jackets like they were religious ornaments. What I found during this mind-bending conversation, and after listening to her polished and mystical newest record especially, was that DiFranco has never tried to push away people that don't look or talk like her — or tried to mock or belittle conservative movements she doesn't agree with or understand. There is a deep kindness and empathy in her songwriting that I never expected and in her 2019 autobiography, No Walls And The Recurring Dream, she acknowledges how lonely and exhausting it can be trying to fight against a societal tide that doesn't want to stop and give you space to be who you are. What became increasingly clear during our conversation was that DiFranco wants to make music for everyone. She prides herself on her quirky, multi-generational fanbase — with grandparents and kids, dads and sons, daughters and aunties alike singing along to favorites like “Both Hands,” “Untouchable Face,” and covers like Woody Guthrie's “This Land Is Your Land” at packed shows across three continents. I had my own goosebumps-inducing moment singing with Ani that I'll never forget. The oldest folk festival in America, The Ann Arbor Folk Fest, once put me on stage to sing harmony on “Angel From Montgomery” with DiFranco at the acoustically perfect Hill Auditorium. I attended the University Of Michigan years earlier and I saw John Prine sing that classic in that same room, and it felt like a full circle moment. Seeing how DiFranco transfixed the crowd that night, and how the women songwriters and musicians offstage especially watched her with such admiration made me want to see what her music — which I had never fully listened to — was all about. If you have a chance, listen to Revolutionary Love start to finish, and stick around to the end of the episode to hear DiFranco read lyrics as poetry.
In today's podcast, Charlie West, shares some information from the church and world calendars including information about St. Matthias, Emily Morgan, Muhammad Ali and Paul Harvey. He also gives us a challenge: 1) write an “Ode to the Cornish/Finnish Pasty” 2) write a verse to This Land Is Your Land from a perspective other than your own – ie, a maple tree, an animal on the verge of extinction, an animal not on the verge of extinction (the squirrels in our backyard waiting for us to plant stuff in the garden for them to dig up), the Mars rover Perseverance, an 11 year old (I just read The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie about the 11 year old Flavia deLuce). You can read along in Charlie's blog “Words Twice a Week” at https://wordstwiceaweek.blogspot.com.
UNITE HERE Local 23 member, immigrant and organizer: “We showed that when we fight, we win." Today's labor history: Woody Guthrie writes “This Land Is Your Land”. Today's labor quote: W.E.B. DuBois. @wpfwdc #1u #unions #LaborRadioPod @AFLCIO @unitehere23 Founding member of the Labor Radio Podcast Network
This day in history, Folk singer Woody Guthrie penned his most famous song, which over the years has become a second anthem to a diverse crowd of Americans. "This Land Is Your Land," including the often dropped final verses, whether claimed by conservative activists, civil rights leaders, or the Tabernacle Choir, persists as a basic part of American tradition. The beloved ballad is sung by school-aged children and aging hippies alike, in spite of its complicated historical roots. The fact that the song can mean so many things to so many people is a paradox that makes it so very American, because no matter what the singer believes the truth still sings “This land is made for you and me!” ‘Inside Sources with Boyd Matheson,’ Opinion Editor at Deseret News, takes you inside the latest political news and current events, providing higher ground for today's discussions. Listen live Monday through Thursday from 11 am to noon at 1160 AM and 102.7 FM, online at KSLNewsradio.com, or on the app. Listen on-demand as a podcast on your favorite platform or web browser. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram. Produced by KellieAnn Halvorsen. Want more Boyd? Don’t forget to listen to his Deseret News podcast ‘Therefore, What?,’ sign up for his weekly newsletter, and follow him on Twitter. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
UNITE HERE Local 23 member, immigrant and organizer: “We showed that when we fight, we win." Today’s labor history: Woody Guthrie writes “This Land Is Your Land”. Today’s labor quote: W.E.B. DuBois. @wpfwdc #1u #unions #LaborRadioPod @AFLCIO @unitehere23 Founding member of the Labor Radio Podcast Network
Continuing our weaving of The American Tapestry Project, today, searching for the “common objects of our love”, we'll examine America's great diversity in three classic American songs – Irving Berlin's God Bless America, Woody Guthrie's This Land Is Your Land and James Weldon Johnson's Lift Every Voice and Sing. We'll also ask whatever happened to Washington's Birthday and what is the Uniform Monday Holiday Act that created Presidents Day? Speaking of Washington's birthday, in a mini-bio we'll examine George Washington, the man whose name everyone knows and about whom most know nothing at all beyond he could not tell a lie (he could) and he chopped down a cherry tree (he didn't). Whose view of Washington is correct – the 1776 Project Report that says he is “a peerless hero” or the San Francisco Board of Education, who, scorning him, removed his name from a school building? (Hint – neither; he is both greater and more complicated than either seem to understand).
Segunda entrega de las 25 canciones indispensables de la historia del folk, según la última encuesta realizada por Folk Alley, toda una referencia para el estilo. Eso nos permite reencontrarnos con algunos de los pioneros que hicieron posible el desarrollo de la música popular y lograron que las audiencias se fueran ampliando, que aquellos sonidos de marcadas raíces sonoras salieran de los pequeños y selectos reductos de sus comienzos y alcanzaran, incluso, los primeros puestos de las listas de éxitos, algo que parecía impensable. Músicos como Pete Seeger, Gordon Lightfoot, Joni Mitchel, The Kington Trio o Bob Dylan, entre otros, marcaron aquellas sendas que tuvieron en Woody Guthrie a su gran referente. "This Land Is Your Land", creada por el músico de Oklahoma como respuesta de "God Bless America" de Irvin Berline, que era demasiado complaciente y muy poco realista, ha sido elegida como por Folk Alley como la más representativa de la historia del folk. Escuchar audio
Insights and advice from someone who hunts every day, all season: pro guide and manager of Pheasant Bonanza hunt club Trent Leichleiter. Trent is in the field daily, and his dogs must perform - so, his advice on helping our own dogs to peak performance are GOLD.From steadiness to critical commands, introducing gunfire to necessary equipment, Trent has some tips. From the dumb things we do, to what are the best rewards for compliance? What should we avoid, and what should we always do to ensure great dog work? When, and when not to, use the e-collar.Trent offers shooting tips and etiquette advice on hunting with multiple dogs and hunters, too.We look at the three top priorities to ensure our sport's future, as defined by your survey responses; get your hunting reports from last weekend; "Handle It" covers the best food treats, and "This Land Is Your Land" offers you a public-access tip: don't trust your mobile mapping app completely - here's why... and it's all brought to you by:Sage & Braker Mercantile, Electronic Shooters Protection, Dr. Tim's performance dog food; UplandNationDeals.com, Happy Jack, FindBirdHuntingSpots.com and Gunner.
Join us for Episode 31 or Episode 4 of Season 2 or how every you like to count em up!! It is a new year and we are done with counting so let's celebrate the inauguration with an excellent show!! Starting off is our Hater Call of the week we were left a very intense voice mail by mister Gaines himself fresh of his Amazing Grace performance. Which get's us asking the Question of the show? Who would you have sing for you at your make-believe Inauguration specifically National Anthem, This Land Is Your Land and Amazing Grace. Then we get into nostalgic tv like late 80's early 90's sitcoms, crime dramas and Saturday morning cartoons then Chris and Dean battle this week on the filmography of Dabney Coleman! Plus we get back to our interviews with Remember When, and our guest is Devaney Gilbert AHS Alumni, former co-star on the hit teen drama Allen The Tv Show! Plus the staples of the show Sports with Tj and everyone's favorite Troy Time!!! Follow, Like and Subscribe!! The show is available wherever you get your favorite Podcast and catch us on YouTube to catch all the GüD Vibes!! Support the show (https://twitter.com/GuDVIBESpodcast?s=20)
"There is always light If we're brave enough to see it; There is always light If we're brave enough to be it." - Amanda Gorman So what's next? Last week was the presidential inauguration here in the United States and there were so many power of "The Only" moments. Kamala Harris became the first woman — and person of Black and South Asian descent — to be sworn in as Vice President by the first Latina Supreme Court Justice, Sonia Sotomayor. Jennifer Lopez called for unity in Spanish after singing This Land Is Your Land. But it was the words of Amanda Gorman, the country's first National Youth Poet Laureate, that left many speechless. Her words were healing for our souls. These are the moments that move us; when we see and hear someone who owns their power and owns their voice when we feel the power of words creating a collective magical moment. This is Power, Presence, and Representation. This is being YOU, Amplified!® This is why I do what I do: to awaken your power of the Only. "We need to continue to do the work, but we need to do it differently." - Angela Chee On today's show, I talk about the power of this moment in time, the power of the Only principles, and why we need more bridge-builders. We talk about how we can begin to move forward and how you can put your principles into action. "I see a vision of the future that is empathetic, diverse, open, and united." - Angela Chee Show Notes: Notable moments of the 2021 inauguration The power of the Only principles How to be a bridge-builder How we can begin healing How to put your principles into action "This is why I do what I do." - Angela Chee Brand and Resource Mentions: The Power of the Only Podcast Episode 1: Welcome to The Power Of “The Only” Thanks for being a part of this bold and powerful conversation on The Power of The Only! Whether you feel like the only one in your company, industry, or community or the only woman in the room, we're here to support you in stepping up, speaking up through power, presence, and representation, and to make an impact in your personal and professional life. Want even more insider tips, resources, and training to help you own your voice and power and step into your leadership. Join me in my free, invite-only YOU, Amplified!™ community! You can also join the conversation on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Twitter. Learn more about this episode of The Power of The Only with Angela Chee at www.angelachee.com/35
We talk about the three "I" words in the news: insurrection, impeachment and inauguration. We hear part of Amanda Gorman's inaugural poem, "The Hill I Climb," freethinker John Legend's Inauguration-Day performance of "Feeling Good," and Sharon Jones' rendition of "This Land Is Your Land." FFRF attorney Patrick Elliott describes our newest lawsuit challenging a discriminatory Trump administration regulation. Then U.S. Representative Jared Huffman, co-founder of the Congressional Freethought Caucus, joins us to describe his experience during the insurrection, the impeachment of Trump and the Inauguration of President Biden.
Welcome to Majority.FM's AM QUICKIE! Brought to you by justcoffee.coop TODAY'S HEADLINES: The world is a little bit safer today. Joe Biden is back in the White House after four years of malarkey and madness, and ready with seventeen day one actions. Meanwhile, Donald Trump’s flunkies began to face international sanction almost immediately upon the end of his tenure. And his most loyal followers are distraught – how sad. And lastly, supply shortages are causing states to cancel thousands of appointments for people who hoped to get the coronavirus vaccine. Here’s hoping Biden can turn this situation around, and fast. THESE ARE THE STORIES YOU NEED TO KNOW: The Trump era is over. Joe Biden yesterday was sworn in by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts as the forty-sixth president of the United States. In his inaugural speech, surrounded by thousands of National Guard troops who were mostly off-camera, Biden addressed the violence at the Capitol on January 6th. He vowed that white supremacy and domestic terrorism will never prevail. He said QUOTE Today we celebrate the triumph not of a candidate but of a cause, the cause of democracy... Democracy has prevailed ENDQUOTE. He also called for unity, calling it the path forward at a historic moment of crisis and challenge. Kamala Harris, the first woman vice president and the first VP of color, was sworn by Justice Sonia Sotomayor. She was escorted to the platform by Eugene Goodman, a Capitol Police officer who faced down members of the mob two weeks ago. Lady Gaga belted out the national anthem, Jennifer Lopez sang “This Land Is Your Land,” and young poet Amanda Gorman recited a poem she completed only after the insurrection. Garth Brooks also performed. Biden wasted no time attempting to undo some of the worst actions of Donald Trump’s tenure in the White House. He signed seventeen executive orders, memorandums and proclamations yesterday, according to the New York Times. He ended Trump’s efforts to leave the World Health Organization and enacted a mask mandate on federal property. He signed orders reversing Trump’s immigration crackdowns, and repealed Trump’s so-called Muslim Ban. He signed a letter indicating that the US will rejoin the Paris climate accords, and an executive order overturning several of Trump’s destructive environmental policies. He also extended federal moratoriums on evictions and on federal student loan payments. Not bad for a first day. China Sanctions Trump Cronies Donald Trump took his last trip on Air Force One yesterday morning, landing in Florida, where with any luck he will endure a form of internal exile. Republican state representative Anthony Sabatini has proposed renaming US Route 27 after Trump, according to the Washington Post. But Democratic members of Congress Joaquin Castro of Texas and Linda Sanchez of California plan to introduce legislation banning federal property from ever being named in Trump’s honor. Sanchez went so far as to tell People magazine that QUOTE not even a bench [should] ever bear the name of this traitor ENDQUOTE. Trump surrendered the White House after a late night of signing last-minute pardons and other clemency orders for one hundred and forty-three people, the New York Times reports. Beneficiaries included Steve Bannon, his former chief strategist; Elliott Broidy, one of his top fund-raisers in 2016; and a series of politicians convicted of corruption. The White House did not announce the pardons until after midnight. As Biden was being sworn in yesterday, China imposed sanctions on former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, trade adviser Peter Navarro, and other Trump administration officials, saying they had damaged the US-China relationship with QUOTE crazy moves ENDQUOTE. Tough break, fellas! State capitols around the country were mostly calm but under heavy guard yesterday for fear of more violence by Trump supporters. Biden’s inauguaration also drove Trump’s most rabid supporters, the followers of the Q-Anon conspiracy theory, to despair. Some, however, are still urging their comrades to QUOTE trust the plan ENDQUOTE, and hold out hope for a miraculous Trump revival. Whatever. Finally, HuffPost reports that federal authorities yesterday arrested Joe Biggs, a prominent member of the Proud Boys who promoted the Capitol insurrection. It’s too late for a Trump pardon now. Harsh, bro. US States Suffer Vaccine Shortages The push to inoculate Americans against the coronavirus is hitting a roadblock, the Associated Press reports. A number of states are reporting they are running out of vaccine, and tens of thousands of people who managed to get appointments for a first dose are seeing them canceled. The full explanation was unclear, but last week the Health and Human Services Department suggested that states had unrealistic expectations for how much vaccine was on the way. About half of the thirty-one million doses distributed to the states by the federal government have been administered so far, according to the AP. However, only about two million people have received the two doses needed for maximum protection against Covid-19. Countries across Europe are also having problems getting enough doses. In the US, some states have suggested they may run out of vaccine by today and are unclear when new doses will arrive. New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said yesterday that the city had to cancel twenty-three thousand appointments for people awaiting their first dose this week, the AP reports. The reason? Inadequate supply. In Florida, local media reported a similar problem in the Miami area, where the Baptist Health care system canceled appointments that had been scheduled for first doses. San Francisco’s health department said it is likely to run out of vaccine today, in part because the state pulled back on administering a batch of Moderna shots after several health workers suffered what may have been a bad reaction. West Virginia, which has run one of the speediest vaccination drives in the country, in part by using small-town pharmacies, said it didn’t receive an expected increase in doses this week. This is where the feds need to step in and use the government’s vast resources to boost production. Capeesh? AND NOW FOR SOME QUICKER QUICKIES: Kroger yesterday pulled the Indiana Oath Keepers from its community rewards initiative, which funneled an unknown amount of donations from customers to the right-wing extremist group. But according to the Washington Post, the Indiana Oath Keepers are still participants in a similar donation program called Amazon Smile – at least for now... The AP reports that Italian police have recovered a five-hundred-year-old copy of a Leonardo da Vinci painting that was stolen from a Naples church during the pandemic. The man whose apartment police found the painting in claimed he’d bought it at a market. Sounds like a real bargain. Police in the United Kingdom found eight hundred and twenty-six cannabis plants in an indoor farm in London’s financial district, Reuters reports. The plants were in a building near the Bank of England. But we thought banker types preferred cocaine? In the final hours of the Trump presidency, immigration officials detained a nine year-old Haitian boy with a valid US visa, separated him from his elder brother and incarcerated him, the Guardian reports. Vladimir Fardin was sent to a refugee resettlement facility in southern California as an unaccompanied minor, and his older brother Christian Laporte was deported to Mexico. Advocates are worried about the boys and appalled at the cruelty of the Trump policy. May America be done with such inhumanity forever. JAN 21, 2021 - AM QUICKIE HOSTS - Sam Seder & Lucie Steiner WRITER - Corey Pein PRODUCER - Dorsey Shaw EXECUTIVE PRODUCER - Brendan Finn
Whitney thinks Lady Gaga should have sang a different song. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The lead singer of Jane’s Addiction and founder of Lollapalooza, Perry Farrell is an alternative icon. On this week’s People Have The Power Farrell joins host Steve Baltin to discuss three decades of Lolla, the role of music in the pandemic and his wide-ranging playlist of protest songs, from 1940’s “This Land Is Your Land” to 2020’s “State Of The Union.”
I'm thrilled to share this latest episode of The Libby O Show featuring NY/Nashville artist Marc Scibilia! His upcoming album “Seed Of Joy” reminds us of the silver linings and acknowledges the nostalgia we experience in this life when faced with uncertainty. We chat about everything including his new home studio, collaborating with Cory Wong on his latest single “This Dream,” and how grilling inspires him creatively. Stream the full album everywhere this Friday, November 13th: https://tonetree.ffm.to/seedofjoyalbum Acoustic performance of "Good Times," written with Jeffrey Steele. Marc has written for artists as diverse as superstar DJ Robin Schulz (the pair's “Unforgettable” is a certified Gold, #1 single, currently boasting more than 65 million streams on Spotify alone), singer/songwriter Ben Rector, and rappers Jim Jones, Rick Ross, and Fabolous; his original “How Bad We Need Each Other” can be heard in Samsung's 2020 campaign ,”Stay Apart, Stay Together,” and his version of This Land Is Your Land” was featured in Jeep's “Beautiful Lands” Super Bowl Commercial.
“The Clash had unapologetic music and unapologetic politics,” Tom Morello tells host Steve Baltin on this week’s People Have The Power. Morello has clearly l learned well as he has been rock’s most fervent activist for much of the last two decades. He talks about where that passion comes from, from Coltrane to the Clash.
Robin Wheeler loves music and found herself in a nine year journey to write an in-depth biography of singer songwriter Woody Guthrie. Vance Crowe and Robin sat down to discuss her journey and learn what draws so many people to Guthrie's music and legacy.Join the Articulate Ventures Network https://www.articulate.ventures/Find Robin on Twitter: @RobinDawnAgainInstagram: rwheeler1022Website: robindwheeler.com
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Woodrow Wilson Guthrie as born in 1912 in Oklahoma, U.S.– He died in 1967 . He was an American singer-songwriter, who is considered one of the most significant figures in American western folk music. His music, including songs, such as "This Land Is Your Land", has inspired several generations both politically and musically Guthrie wrote hundreds of country, folk, and children's songs, along with ballads and improvised works. He frequently performed with the slogan "This machine kills fascists" displayed on his guitar. This land is your land, this land is my land From California to the New York Island From the Redwood Forest to the Gulf Stream waters This land was made for you and me. As I was walking that ribbon of highway I saw above me that endless skyway I saw below me that golden valley This land was made for you and me. I roamed and I rambled and I followed my footsteps To the sparkling sands of her diamond deserts While all around me a voice was sounding This land was made for you and me. There was a big high wall there They tried to stop me The sigh was painted said Private property But on the back side it didn't say nothing This land was made for you and me When the sun came shining, and I was strolling And the wheat fields waving and the dust clouds rolling A voice was chanting, As the fog was lifting, This land was made for you and me. This land is your land, this land is my land From California to the New York Island From the Redwood Forest to the Gulf Stream waters This land was made for you and me. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/uirapuru/message
Zane Williams se ha refugiado en Hill Country tras una carrera en solitario que ha dejado hasta siete álbumes muy recomendables. La banda la completan músicos de la solvencia del trovador Paul Eason, con tres álbumes propios además de ser el guitarrista habitual de Kevin Fowler, el multiinstrumentista Andy Rogers y una base ritmo que conforman el batería de Houston Lyndon Hughes y el bajista de Austin Sean Rodríguez. “Janie Lynn” se nos antoja como una canción perfecta para inaugurar el mes de julio en su primer fin de semana. El quinteto, con base en Texas, está encantado caminando por parajes fronterizos entre el country, el bluegrass y el folk, tal y como se manifiesta en su disco de debut, de título homónimo en el que aparecen ciertas referencias a Tom Petty, Jerry Jeff Walker o a James Taylor, como es el caso de “Somewhere Down The Road”, una canción con reflexiones de carretera donde, una vez más, las armonías vocales completan un edificio sonoro pleno de sugerencias. Hay personajes inolvidables, en el mejor de los sentidos, y ese es el caso de Tom Petty, el artista de Florida que nos abandonó hace casi tres años. Su carrera en solitario nos dejó tres álbumes impagables y el segundo de ellos, el mítico Wildflowers de 1994 se convirtió en una de las joyas de su discografía. En realidad, todos los Heartbreakers estuvieron al lado de su líder, excepto el batería Stan Lynch que fue sustituido por Steve Ferrone. Gracias a la familia de Petty y a sus archivos, se ha recuperado esta maqueta de uno de los temas punteros de aquel registro como es el caso de“You Don’t Know How It Feels”. En este caso, está grabada en su estudio casero un año antes de la edición del disco y los seguidores impenitentes del músico encontrarán diferencias en la letra, como una muestra más del proceso de creación. La versión que hoy escuchamos de “You Don’t Know How It Feels” da una sensación mucho más íntima y personal de la original. Además, encontramos un verso que más tarde aparecería en la penúltima canción de aquel mismo álbum, Crawling Back to You" que reflejó, como todo aquel Wildflowers, los 20 años de fracaso de Tom Petty en su matrimonio con Jane Benyo, de quien se divorciaría dos años más tarde. Había estrofas como "Estoy tan cansado de estar cansado/Seguro que la noche seguirá al día/La mayoría de las cosas que me preocupan/Nunca suceden de todos modos". Las sesiones de grabación de Wildflowers comenzaron en 1992, cuando el músico de Florida tenía la intención de dar continuidad a su debut en solitario Full Moon Fever del 89. Pero Petty había llegado a un acuerdo con Warner, con quien había grabado como miembro de los Traveling Wilburys, y aunque mantuvo a Rick Rubin como co-productor junto a Mike Campbell, decidió tomar el mando de aquel proyecto. De hecho, grabaron casi 30 canciones con la intención de que el álbum fuera doble, pero la compañía le convenció de que eligiera poco más de una docena. El éxito fue absoluto. Tras la muerte del músico se retomó la idea que él mismo expresó en sus últimos días de completar aquel proyecto, pero las diferencia entre la familia fue dilatando los tiempos. Ahora todo parece resuelto. El nuevo álbum de los Jayhawks, XOXO, que se publicará la próxima semana, evidencia que Gary Louris no tiene el monopolio del ahora cuarteto, especialmente en cuanto a la autoría de las canciones, aunque también existe un reparto en el protagonismo vocal. Además, la participación de Tim O’Reagan, Karen Grotberg y Marc Perlman se muestra sólida y sugestiva. O’Reagan y Grotberg, por ejemplo, han participado junto a Louris en la composición de “Bitter Pill”, que ilustra la búsqueda interminable de la felicidad sin conformarse con cada momento y que a nivel de texto es una especia de continuación de "Lovers Of The Sun" del álbum Paging Mr. Proust de hace cuatro años. Aquel disco llegó tras el fugaz regreso a los Jayhawks de Mark Olson, la banda regresó a una formación de cuarteto, la misma que editó en 1997 Sound of Lies y que fue responsable de un álbum tan brillante como Smile en 2000 y la misma que nos ha regalado XOXO en pleno 2020. Entre aquella docena de canciones selectas encontramos “Lovers Of The Sun”, donde los Jayhawks parecían estar mucho más cerca de Liverpool que de Minneapolis. El espíritu de los Beatles había hecho mella en Gary Louris y a nivel de texto ahora tiene continuidad en “Bitter Pill”, de su último álbum. El cantante y compositor Ray LaMontagne se ha esmerado en Monovision, su último álbum, convirtiéndolo en un prodigio a nivel creativo con ejemplos palpables del estilo de "I Was Born to Love You", donde la sencillez e incluso la discreción se adueñan de una historia mil veces contada. Este octavo disco del músico de New Hampshire es volver a lo básico, con una portada que incluso enfatiza con la idea mediante una vieja grabadora de cinta abierta. La calidez y la artesanía protagonizan un trabajo reconfortante de tonalidades sepia que resulta imprescindible en estos tiempos. Es prácticamente indiscutible que las mejores composiciones de aquellos tiempos convulsos de comienzos de los 70 fueron repartiéndose por distintos álbumes del canadiense Neil Young, como si quisiera esconder el sufrimiento que la separación de su novia de entonces supuso en su vida. Aun así, parece que dejó algunos temas de estructura poderosa como “Separate Ways”, que ahora ha utilizado para abrir “oficialmente” Homegrown. La amargura del final de aquella relación con la actriz Carrie Snodgress, es un impacto frontal en el disco El tono melancólico de Homegrown se establece de inmediato con "Separate Ways", con Ben Keith en el Steel, el contrapunto de Levon Helm y un recuerdo sonoro inevitable de Harvest, aunque en aquel legendario trabajo el sentimiento era totalmente inverso. Neil Young empezó a cantar en su gira del 93 y dejó de hacerlo en la de 2014, cuando su matrimonio con la desaparecida Pegi Young se estaba desmoronando. Self Made Man es el nombre genérico del nuevo disco de las hermanas Rebecca y Megan Lovell, nativas de Calhoun, en Georgia, a quienes conocemos como Larkin Poe desde 2010. Cinco años antes, junto a su otra hermana, Jessica, habían formado el trío Lovell Sisters. Seis Eps y cinco álbumes de estudio es la tarjeta de presentación de esta pareja que ahora reside en Nashville rompiendo la imagen habitual de Music Row. Ellas tienen una evidente herencia sureña, con sus raíces humedecidas por el rock, el country y el blues. Su esfuerzo por trascender les ha hecho dominar buena parte de los modos y maneras de esos estilos básicos de la música popular, procurando mostrar una diversidad de sonidos que combinan modernidad y tradición sin que parezca disonante o artificioso. Este quinto disco ha escalado hasta la primera plaza de las listas de blues de Billboard, gracias a canciones como "Back Down South", con la que resulta bastante lógico que haya quienes hablen de ellas como de las “hermanas pequeñas de los Allman Brothers”. Puede parecernos mentira, pero ya hace dos años que Susan Santos fue premiada en los European Blues Award como Best Performance y en 2019 se llevó el LA Music Critics Award de la californiana ciudad de Los Angeles, al mejor álbum gracias a No U Turn, su quinto y último disco por el momento. Además, el pasado verano la vimos al lado de Billy Gibbons en las Noches del Botánico, y no ha parado girar por Europa y Estados Unidos en los meses previos a la pandemia. Por suerte, tuvo tiempo de grabar en en North Hollywood y regalarnos el estreno de “Dirty Money”, uno de los cortes de su próximo EP. Con una evolución creciente y un marcado acento de progreso, la artista extremeña contó con una base de ritmo formada por el batería Anthony Morra, un nativo de Nashville con un más que suficiente prestigio, y el bajista Fabrizio Grossi, que también ha ejercido como productor de un trabajo rotundo, enérgico y que permite que Susan Santos muestre sus habilidades como instrumentista. Hoy es 4 de julio. En este día de 1776, el Congreso Continental Americano adoptó la Declaración de Independencia. Aquella fecha pasó a ser la del cumpleaños de los Estados Unidos de América. Han pasado 244 años, y en la despedida de nuestro programa de hoy queremos felicitar a aquel país y escuchar a una de las bandas que se han mostrado más activas en estos tiempos de pandemia: Old Crow Medicine Show. Su líder, Ketch Secor, nos ha regalado una nueva canción que compuso antes de la muerte de George Floyd y de las protestas posteriores. “Pray For America” pretende ser un escape, una forma de reflexionar y dar sentido a ciertas cosas… todos juntos. Secor ha comentado que se ha fijado en canciones inmortales como “Blowin’ In The Wind”, “God Bless America” o “This Land Is Your Land” por su mensaje universal, en el que todos puedan verse reflejados. Es una respuesta al racismo, es un grito de justicia ante el colapso económico o la brutalidad policial y tiene mucha intención de inspirar la unidad y poner al día ese libro de canciones de la música americana que parece necesitar actualizarse. Escuchar audio
Wyatt Cenac (HBO's Problem Areas) and Atsuko share the things they'd done in the past to fit in, and pontificate on the song "This Land Is Your Land."RATE LET'S GO, ATSUKO 5-STARS!Leave a fun comment & Atsuko will respond to it on air!BECOME A PATREON MEMBER & SUPPORT US TODAY:www.patreon.com/LetsGoAtsukoFOLLOW ATSUKO:https://twitter.com/atsukocomedyhttps://twitter.com/LetsGoAtsukohttps://www.instagram.com/atsukocomedyhttps://www.instagram.com/LetsGoAtsukowww.atsukookatsuka.comwww.letsgoatsukoshow.comLET'S GO, ATSUKO! IS A FOREVER DOG PODCAST:https://foreverdogpodcasts.com/podcasts/lets-go-atsuko
ARE YOU KNOWLEDGABLE ABOUT AMERICA AND ITS HISTORY? NOW IS THE TIME TO TEACH WHAT AMAERICA IS AND STANDS FOR, BUT ALSO TO HELP THEM APPRECIATE LIVING IN THIS GREAT COUNTRY. IT IS YOUR JOB AS A PARENT AND GRANDPARENT TO TEACH THE TRUTHS OF AMERICA AND OUR HISTORY.
Author Brad Schreiber joins S.T. Patrick to discuss his new book Music is Power: Popular Songs, Social Justice, and the Will to Change. For two hours, Schreiber and Patrick discuss the impact of protest music (or more aptly, socially conscious music) on the culture and on their lives (while playing many of the songs discussed). Some of the topics discussed are the qualities that make up a socially conscious song, if American and British popular music working bottom-up made socially conscious music more plentiful, the Vietnam era, the misuse of Bruce Springsteen songs, what "This Land Is Your Land" really means, The Man in Black, The Dixie Chicks versus "W," the impact of "the end of the Sixties," Marvin Gaye in 1970, whether the music of the 1980s is underrated as socially conscious music, and much more. Brad Schreiber was on Episode 051 of the Midnight Writer News Show discussing Revolution’s End: The Patty Hearst Kidnapping, Mind Control, and the Secret History of Donald DeFreeze and the SLA. He can be found at BrashCyber.com. To purchase garrison.: The Journal of History & Deep Politics, go to http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/MidnightWriterNews.
'“Over the years, we've taken artists who may know each other, may have played with each other 20-30 years ago, and it's sort of a reunion. I remember being backstage last year when Dave Bromberg and Tom Chapin – at one point they were both in the New York music scene – and they were saying ‘ya remember when we played the Village Gate?' Or to see Richie Havens hugging Odetta … just so many stories. We try to do it in the form of a song-swap; put them all up on stage together and they go round robin and do two songs each, and at the end of the show they usually do one big ‘Goodnight Irene' thing or ‘This Land Is Your Land.' It's just great.” That's Bruce Newman, Memphis tax and entertainment lawyer extraordinaire, talking about 25 years of the annual benefit concerts known as Acoustic Sunday Live. For the second year in a row, 2019's concert will benefit Protect Our Aquifer, the nonprofit group started by Ward Archer dedicated to public oversight of our precious Memphis water.
The Rev. Miller's homily from September 1st, 2019. "This Land Is Your Land" performed by Cameron Dezen Hammon and the 5 p.m. band.
Woody Guthrie's ‘This Land Is Your Land' and his son, Arlo Guthrie's ‘City Of New Orleans (written by the under appreciated Steve Goodman) can be considered anthems of a nation. The first being a response to the status quo - ‘God Bless America' and the second an homage to life on the rails.Duration - 33:02VoxBox: Compilation of various artists performing ‘This Land Is Your Land' and the ‘City Of New Orleans'Music Credit: Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings - This Land Is Your Land & Arlo Guthrie - The City Of New Orleans
Bem vindos à Zona do Crepúsculo! Angélica Hellish e Marcos Noriega conversaram sobre o oitavo episódio da nova versão de The Twilight Zone, "Lugar de Origem" (Point Of Origin) um episódio que analisa o tratamento que os imigrantes recebem do governo americano e a crescente xenofobia em todo o mundo. Escute o programa no Anchor ou no Spotify! Se quiser receber nossos podcasts sem falta procure-nos como Além da Imaginação Podcast. Acesse o nosso canal no Ok.Ru ou no nosso canal no Telegram para assistir aos episódios da série clássica. Mencionados: Filmes: O Profeta (2009) Deepan: O Refúgio (2015) / Roma (2018) Que Horas Ela Volta? (2015) / Texto: Roma e a perversidade colonial / Por que eles não podem passar? / Músicas: This Land Is Your Land de Woodie Guthrie / Eu Só Peço A Deus (Solo Pido A Dios) Beth Carvalho e Mercedes Sosa. Inscreva-se no nosso canal no Youtube. Os podcasts também estão sendo publicados por lá. Nossos podcasts sobre a série clássica são publicados às segundas e sextas feiras, assine o feed e não perca nenhum programa! Curta e acesse as nossas páginas no Facebook: Além da Imaginação Podcast e MasmorraCine, Nosso Grupo Fãs de Além da Imaginação. Todos os episódios da série clássica estão sendo publicados por lá. Os episódios da série The Twilight Zone podem ser assistidos em qualquer ordem pois são histórias fechadas! Assista o episódio e escute o podcast. Curta e siga a nossa página com fotos de bastidores da série! The Twilight Zone Behind The Scenes (@tzbehindthescenes)Clique aqui e acesse o melhor grupo dos Fãs de Além da Imaginação no Facebook!IMPORTANTE! Gosta do nosso trabalho e quer que ele continue? Doe via PIX! Nossa chave é pixmasmorracine@gmail.com ou seja nosso padrinho ou madrinha nos apoiando no Padrim ou no Colabora aí. Ajude a manter os podcasts independentes, como o nosso no ar, apoie. Assista antes de escutar o programa! Tem Spoilers! Episódio disponível com legendas em: http://bit.ly/2w4FvIS Quer pedir um episódio ou comentar o que achou do podcast? Mande um feedback pra gente pelos e-mails: contato.cinemasmorra@gmail.com ou alemdaimaginacaopodcast@gmail.com
Bem vindos à Zona do Crepúsculo! Angélica Hellish e Marcos Noriega conversaram sobre o oitavo episódio da nova versão de The Twilight Zone, “Lugar de Origem” (Point Of Origin) um episódio que analisa o tratamento que os imigrantes recebem do governo americano e a crescente xenofobia em todo o mundo. Mencionados: Filmes: O Profeta (2009) Deepan: O Refúgio (2015) / Roma (2018) Que Horas Ela Volta? (2015) / Texto: Roma e a perversidade colonial / Por que eles não podem passar? / Músicas: This Land Is Your Land de Woodie Guthrie / Eu Só Peço A Deus (Solo Pido A Dios) Beth Carvalho e Mercedes Sosa. Inscreva-se no nosso canal no Youtube. Os podcasts também estão sendo publicados por lá. Nossos podcasts sobre a série clássica são publicados às segundas e sextas feiras, assine o feed e não perca nenhum programa! Curta e acesse as nossas páginas no Facebook: Além da Imaginação Podcast e MasmorraCine, Nosso Grupo Fãs de Além da Imaginação. Todos os episódios da série clássica estão sendo publicados por lá. Os episódios da série The Twilight Zone podem ser assistidos em qualquer ordem pois são histórias fechadas! Assista o episódio e escute o podcast. Considere nos apadrinhar com qualquer valor no Padrim. Assim você ajuda para que consigamos manter o nosso site e continuar publicando os podcasts! Assista antes de escutar o programa! Tem Spoilers! Episódio disponível com legendas em: http://bit.ly/2w4FvIS Quer pedir um episódio ou comentar o que achou do podcast? Mande um feedback pra gente pelos e-mails: contato.cinemasmorra@gmail.com ou alemdaimaginacaopodcast@gmail.com
Bem vindos à Zona do Crepúsculo! Angélica Hellish e Marcos Noriega conversaram sobre o oitavo episódio da nova versão de The Twilight Zone, “Lugar de Origem” (Point Of Origin) um episódio que analisa o tratamento que os imigrantes recebem do governo americano e a crescente xenofobia em todo o mundo. Mencionados: Filmes: O Profeta (2009) Deepan: O Refúgio (2015) / Roma (2018) Que Horas Ela Volta? (2015) / Texto: Roma e a perversidade colonial / Por que eles não podem passar? / Músicas: This Land Is Your Land de Woodie Guthrie / Eu Só Peço A Deus (Solo Pido A Dios) Beth Carvalho e Mercedes Sosa. Inscreva-se no nosso canal no Youtube. Os podcasts também estão sendo publicados por lá. Nossos podcasts sobre a série clássica são publicados às segundas e sextas feiras, assine o feed e não perca nenhum programa! Curta e acesse as nossas páginas no Facebook: Além da Imaginação Podcast e MasmorraCine, Nosso Grupo Fãs de Além da Imaginação. Todos os episódios da série clássica estão sendo publicados por lá. Os episódios da série The Twilight Zone podem ser assistidos em qualquer ordem pois são histórias fechadas! Assista o episódio e escute o podcast. Considere nos apadrinhar com qualquer valor no Padrim. Assim você ajuda para que consigamos manter o nosso site e continuar publicando os podcasts! Assista antes de escutar o programa! Tem Spoilers! Episódio disponível com legendas em: http://bit.ly/2w4FvIS Quer pedir um episódio ou comentar o que achou do podcast? Mande um feedback pra gente pelos e-mails: contato.cinemasmorra@gmail.com ou alemdaimaginacaopodcast@gmail.com
The Rev. Miller's homily from March 10th, 2019. "This Land Is Your Land" performed by Cameron Dezen Hammon & the 5 p.m. band.
The Rev. Miller's homily from August 26th, 2018. "This Land Is Your Land," performed by Cameron Dezen Hammon and the 5 p.m. band.
The Reverend Sam Smith's sermon from April 29th, 2018. "This Land Is Your Land" performed by Cameron Dezen Hammon and the 5 p.m. band.
Gregg Spiridellis has been making things go viral on the web since before the term VIRAL was even a thing. His company, JibJab has been producing web videos since the dialup dotcom era, producing hits you might remember such as Elf Yourself, Nasty Santa and This Land Is Your Land. JibJab has survived the dotcom bust, the coming of broadband, the coming of YouTube, the coming of social media and the mobile internet. What you’ll hear today is absolutely a masterclass in pivoting, in adapting a business model to thrive in every new technology environment and embracing every new platform and paradigm. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Quote: “The devil is always in the details, right?” —Mark Baird About: If the State of Jefferson ever formed, it’s unlikely Anthony Bourdain would ever travel there for its pizza or burritos. Mark Baird, the “unofficial” leader of the State of Jefferson movement, likes to think they’d be known for their buffalo burgers. Though, he’ll admit, he’s in the minority. Most people behind this movement, he says, would probably prefer beef. Being in the minority is a feeling he’s had for quite some time. Living in Northern California with Baird’s heavy libertarian point-of-view would likely drive most people crazy, and out of the state. But Baird wants to stay. He’d just prefer he was living in a new state, a State of Jefferson. Feeling that he’s had no representation in how Sacramento operates, this semi-retired pilot and former buffalo rancher has spent the past several years convincing thousands of citizens along with cities, counties and mayors to join his grass-roots movement. In Part II of II of this story, we ask how Baird plans to form this new state and look into the financials, legality and likelihood of whether the State of Jefferson can ever live up to being more than just a state of mind. Show Notes: [00:25] Mark Baird’s speech on 05.31.17 in front of California State Capitol building in Sacramento [00:55] “Borough” by Blue Dot Sessions [02:25] See Citizens for Fair Representation et al. v. Padilla Recommended: A recent 60 Minutes profile of Gov. Brown (CBS News) [02:30] The photo of California Gov. Jerry Brown looking at a flag of the State of Jefferson [04:15] “This Land Is Your Land” performed by Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings [04:50] Recommended: Listen to Part I before listening to this episode [09:35] Light reading on Kevin Hendrick (The Union) Earlier profile of the movement (The Sacramento Bee) [11:45] One of the first counties the State of Jefferson movement made its case back in 2013 (Siskyou Daily News) Results of Ballot Measure A in 2014 on the matter of state-split question And an economic overview [12:00] Light reading on Tehama County [12:25] Results of Del Norte County’s state-split ballot measure (Associated Press) [13:05] “Jefferson State of Mind” performed by local musician CQ [13:20] Official map of the State of Jefferson and its declared counties Results of Measure G on state-split question The county’s Board of Supervisors placing issue on the ballot (The Sacramento Bee) A short news brief on the results of the vote (USA Today) And an economic overview [13:40] Light reading on Lassen County [13:45] Map of the State of Jefferson according to Keep It California [16:30] “Borough-Alternate Opening” by Blue Dot Sessions [16:55] Richard Seel’s presentation on the State of Jefferson’s financial model called “Show Me the Money” An earlier presentation of his model The latest spreadsheet detailing the financial model [17:00] Light reading on Steve Baird And on budgets and spending (NASBO) And on state budgets and the federal government (NASBO) And a break down of how state budgets are formed (California Budget Project) [17:45] A short primer on state taxes and revenue (National Association of State Budget Officers) [19:05] List of U.S. States by budget size [19:10] A bigger breakdown of state budgets including Nebraska Holistic overview of California’s total debt (California Policy Center) Related: An old report from 60 Minutes on the state budget crisis Unrelated: A primer on the federal debt and deficit [20:30] The $340 billion number comes from a 2014 report (Los Angeles Times) [20:55] “Borough Celeste-Solo” by Blue Dot Sessions [21:35] Light reading on zero-percent interest rates (Investopedia) And additional reading on the California wildfires (BBC News) [22:05] Light reading on Montana’s wildfires and its budget short fall (Rapid City Journal) Related: New Mexico’s list of state departments [22:30] California’s list of 343 state agencies [24:50] Light reading of an old profile on Peter Thiel (The New Yorker) [25:00] “Sunset on the Ganja Farm” by The State of Jefferson Band [25:10] More on the Colorado pot boom (The Denver Post) [26:15] More on Dan Walters (@DanCALmatters) here [27:00] An overview of California’s economic output by region (The Sacramento Bee) And an economic forecast (Calif. Department of Transportation) [28:30] Current breakdown of Siskyou County, where Baird lives [30:05] Light reading on U.S. history and the partitioning of states Additional reading on how to become a state (How Stuff Works) [30:25] Light reading on how admission into the Union And Puerto Rico (Newsweek) President Donald Trump comments on San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz Soto (Fox News) [32:10] More on the Washington D.C.’s bid for 51 (NPR) A much deeper and thorough dive on how Tennessee became a state [32:40] Light reading on the Tennessee Plan (The Orlando Sentinel) [32:55] “Tennessee” by Jimmy Martin [34:05] Light reading on the City (Town) of Fort Jones [35:15] The original lawsuit filed against California Secretary of State Alex Padilla [36:20] “Lamb Drop-Minor Feel” by Blue Dot Sessions [38:05] “Coronea” by Blue Dot Sessions [38:20] Note: The Citizens for Fair Representation is technically a DBA for the State of Jefferson Formation, which is based in Nevada, as noted here. And confirmed here. (Yreka News) California’s State Constitution of 1879 (see: Article V) [38:50] California’s population growth over the years [39:15] Representation ratio based on California population in 1879 Additional reading here Recent column on the measure in the New York Times [39:40] Light reading on the Apportionment Act of 1929 [40:10] More on the Hamilton-Vinton Model Power In Numbers: Reapportionment and the Constitution (Constitution Center) Congressional Apportionment: Past, Present and Future (Duke University) The House of Representatives Apportionment Formula: An Analysis of Proposals for Change and Their Impact on States (Congressional Research Service) The 1911 House Reapportionment (House.gov) Op-ed for enlarging the number of representatives (The New York Times) Methods of Apportionment (US Census) [39:40] Related reading on Congressional Apportionment: [41:40] Herbert Hoover’s full speech in St. Louis, MO in 1932 (CSPAN) [42:50] Assemblymember Paul Fong on Local Edition [42:55] See Article XIX here [43:15] Light reading on the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 [43:30] More on California’s apology to the Chinese here (TIME) [46:10] “Velejo-Atmo” by Blue Dot Sessions [47:50] “Lord Weasel-Thoughtful Bridge” by Blue Dot Sessions [48:00] Full text of the Declaration of Independence (National Archives) [48:25] Background on Margalynne Armstrong [48:40] “March on Gumdrop Field-Cello Leader” by Blue Dot Sessions The 14th Amendment The impeachment of Andrew Johnson (Politico) Recommend Listen: More Perfect’s American Pendulum II [48:45] Light reading on: Recommend Listen: More Perfect’s The Political Thicket [50:15] Audio from Baker v. Carr (Oyez) [50:20] Audio from Reynolds v. Simms (Oyez) [50:40] “The Telling” by Blue Dot Sessions Related: The Guarantee Clause and California’s Republican Form of Government (UC Berkeley) [53:10] Guarantee Clause [53:30] Citizen for Fair Representation and Baird’s motion to intervene in LaVergne v. United States House of Representatives [52:10] More on the State of California’s motion to dismiss the Citizens for Fair Representation lawsuit (Siskyou Daily News) [54:25] More on Scott Stafne [01:00:40] “Velejo-Tense” by Blue Dot Sessions Historian Robert Calhoon polls support for the Revolution around 40 percent US Department of Veteran Affairs numbers Some additional forum chatter on Reddit’s r/AskHistorians Some light reading on Three Percenters Some recommended viewing on the Three Percenters (VICE) More additional reading on the Three Percenters (Anti Defamation League) And one last bit on the Three Percenters (politicalresearch.org) Light reading on the Oath Keepers (VICE) Additional reading on the Oath Keepers (Washington Post) A profile on the Oath Keepers (Mother Jones) [01:00:50] Some links to debunk the “three-percent myth” Excerpt played from this airing [01:01:55] “Jefferson State of Mind” on KCNR 1460 Southern Poverty Law Center’s spotlight on the State of Jefferson Oregon Public Broadcasting Quartz Gawker St. George News Los Angeles Times [01:03:30] More on LaVoy Finicum from [01:03:50] Light reading on the Malheur Standoff (The Oregonian) [01:04:10] Released video of Finicum’s traffic stop [01:07:00] “Olsted Harten” by Blue Dot Sessions [01:10:00] Recommended Podcast: Closer Than They Appear[01:10:10] Recommended Podcast Newsletter: Constant Listener
The Rev. Smith's homily from November 12th, 2017. "This Land Is Your Land," performed by Cameron Dezen Hammon and the 5 p.m. band.
This week Anthony Lewis and Aurora Bubbaloo talk about Season 3 Episode 13 of Fear The Walking Dead “This Land Is Your Land” including our thoughts on the episode, what we loved, what we didn’t, and give it our personal 1 out of 5!!! Buy sweet Walking Dead stuff from Think Geek using this link to help Read more about Hear The Walking Dead #56 – This Land Is Your Land[…]
Talking Through This Land is Your Land Man, is it getting stuffy in here? I don’t remember a time when so much danger was around every pantry corner. Low on Guns, low on Hope and low on Air made for a thrilling episode for our Walker-Ranch Gang. Nick and Troy have a short-lived road trip to save the Clan and Alicia gets her biggest moral test. And Madison. Well, you’ll see. With only the breath we have left in our lungs. Join us as we discuss Season 3 Episode 13 of Fear the Walking Dead, titled This Land is Your Land, This Land is My Land, From California to… Oh sorry, I can’t help it. At least I know all the words. A Tough episode for Alicia… That was one brutal episode, especially for Alicia. I think this episode turns a corner for her. I don’t think there is any question that she’s a badass. Ratings are up! S3E13 got a 0.88 in the 18-49 demographic, with 2.364 million viewers, which is up from 0.75 and 2.078 million viewers last week. Send in your feedback! Remember to leave us your feedback for Fear the Walking Dead S3 E14, titled El Matadero by Tuesday at 6 PM Eastern/5 PM Central. Other Fun Stuff! Please remember to subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts. Subscribing to us helps us move up in the rankings, so it’ll help us out tremendously! You’ll also get new episodes when they’re released. And while you're in there, leave us a rating or review! It only takes a few minutes and it also helps us out! And check out our Facebook group! apple podcasts Google Podcasts
Talking Through This Land is Your Land Man, is it getting stuffy in here? I don’t remember a time when so much danger was around every pantry corner. Low on Guns, low on Hope and low on Air made for a thrilling episode for our Walker-Ranch Gang. Nick and Troy have a short-lived road trip to save the Clan and Alicia gets her biggest moral test. And Madison. Well, you’ll see. With only the breath we have left in our lungs. Join us as we discuss Season 3 Episode 13 of Fear the Walking Dead, titled This Land is Your Land, This Land is My Land, From California to… Oh sorry, I can’t help it. At least I know all the words. A Tough episode for Alicia… That was one brutal episode, especially for Alicia. I think this episode turns a corner for her. I don’t think there is any question that she’s a badass. Ratings are up! S3E13 got a 0.88 in the 18-49 demographic, with 2.364 million viewers, which is up from 0.75 and 2.078 million viewers last week. Send in your feedback! Remember to leave us your feedback for Fear the Walking Dead S3 E14, titled El Matadero by Tuesday at 6 PM Eastern/5 PM Central. Other Fun Stuff! Please remember to subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts. Subscribing to us helps us move up in the rankings, so it’ll help us out tremendously! You’ll also get new episodes when they’re released. And while you’re in there, leave us a rating or review! It only takes a few minutes and it also helps us out! And check out our Facebook group! apple podcastsGoogle Podcasts
Man is it getting stuffy in here? I don't remember a time when so much danger was around every pantry corner. Low on Guns, low on Hope and low on Air made for a thrilling episode for our Walker-Ranch Gang.
Man is it getting stuffy in here? I don't remember a time when so much danger was around every pantry corner. Low on Guns, low on Hope and low on Air made for a thrilling episode for our Walker-Ranch Gang.
Man is it getting stuffy in here? I don't remember a time when so much danger was around every pantry corner. Low on Guns, low on Hope and low on Air made for a thrilling episode for our Walker-Ranch Gang.
Talking Through This Land is Your Land Man, is it getting stuffy in here? I don’t remember a time when so much danger was around every pantry corner. Low on Guns, low on Hope and low on Air made for a thrilling episode for our Walker-Ranch Gang. Nick and Troy have a short-lived road trip to save the Clan and Alicia gets her biggest moral test. And Madison. Well, you’ll see. With only the breath we have left in our lungs. Join us as we discuss Season 3 Episode 13 of Fear the Walking Dead, titled This Land is Your Land, This Land is My Land, From California to… Oh sorry, I can’t help it. At least I know all the words. A Tough episode for Alicia… That was one brutal episode, especially for Alicia. I think this episode turns a corner for her. I don’t think there is any question that she’s a badass. Ratings are up! S3E13 got a 0.88 in the 18-49 demographic, with 2.364 million viewers, which is up from 0.75 and 2.078 million viewers last week. Send in your feedback! Remember to leave us your feedback for Fear the Walking Dead S3 E14, titled El Matadero by Tuesday at 6 PM Eastern/5 PM Central. Other Fun Stuff! Please remember to subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts. Subscribing to us helps us move up in the rankings, so it’ll help us out tremendously! You’ll also get new episodes when they’re released. And while you’re in there, leave us a rating or review! It only takes a few minutes and it also helps us out! And check out our Facebook group! apple podcastsGoogle Podcasts
The TNTtalk Podcast is back to dissect the latest installment of Fear The Walking Dead titled ‘This Land Is Your Land'. Tracey and Tameche (TNT) share some “blowback” (their version of feedback) from listener Melissa followed by 3 questions from each host, unbeknownst to the other. Each host shares their thoughts on each question about […] The post TNTtalk on So Many Shows Podcast: Discuss ‘Fear The Walking Dead' S3E13 appeared first on So Many Shows!.
David Brody from Elvis Duran and The Morning Show & Jamie from Lite FM in NYC break down "Fear The Walking Dead" SEASON 3 ep12 "This Land Is Your Land" and give you the latest The Walking Dead news Twitter: @David_Brody @JMegs514 @Walkers_Talkers Instagram: @Walkers_Talkers Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
David breaks down Woody "This Land Is Your Land" Guthrie (dead white Commie bastard ANYHOLE™ with a Klan ass dad) and his poems about not being a piece of shit for 2 seconds; Donald Trump descended from heaven in the 1980s to give David career advice; Woody Guthrie wrote a song about Trump's dad and it's a hot ass banger.
Don't miss the opportunity to help your children appreciate the country in which they live. Be proud to be an American family.
This Land Is Your Land - by Woody Guthrie This land is your land, this land is my land From California to the New York Island From the Redwood Forest to the Gulf Stream waters This land was made for you and me. As I was walking that ribbon of highway I saw above me that endless skyway I saw below me that golden valley This land was made for you and me. I roamed and I rambled and I followed my footsteps To the sparkling sands of her diamond deserts While all around me a voice was sounding This land was made for you and me. When the sun came shining, and I was strolling And the wheat fields waving and the dust clouds rolling A voice was chanting, As the fog was lifting, This land was made for you and me. As I went walking I saw a sign there And on the sign it said "No Trespassing." But on the other side it didn't say nothing, That side was made for you and me. One bright sunny morning in the shadow of the steeple By the Relief Office I saw my people — As they stood hungry, I stood there wondering if This land was made for you and me. This land is your land, this land is my land From California to the New York Island From the Redwood Forest to the Gulf Stream waters This land was made for you and me.
SHOW NOTESTo open (1:45), Kelly and I discuss the song. We listened to three versions – on from TBLS Vol. 1-3 one from TBLS Vol. 9: Witmark Demos, and one from Folksinger’s Choice recorded in early 1962 with Cynthia Gooding. Daniel waxes poetic (3:00) about the chances, o the chances (or the desire for our brains to have order and meaning, especially after the black hole of Dylan & The Dead that the attendant’s at the Tower of Song would pair one of Dylan’s earliest songs — from Bonnie Beecher’s apartment during the holidays in 1961 — with his Nobel Prize in Literature speech delivered on June 4, 2017.The Nobel Prize in Literature 2016Kelly (4:40) loved the song and found herself singing it throughout the week. It’s simple, its short, the musicality prevails through the strong finger-picking. We try to determine (5:00) if we could hear the noted progression from his pre-New York self, his post-Columbia contract self, and his post-Bob Dylan self. Each version was unique in its own way — but none more proficient than another. (Once we flesh out this period, give The Minnesota Hotel Tapes a proper listen, and maybe raise some money to get that dang Karen Wallace tape, we’ll speak more on the subject.) Kelly’s favorite was the slower Witmark version, which had an extra verse (7:35):The weak and the strong and the rich and the poor Gathered there together, ain’t room for no more Crowded up above and crowded down below When someone disappears, you never even know.In David Pitacshe’s book, Song of the North Country: A Midwest Framework to the Songs of Bob Dylan, he notes (8:00) that New York is a town of “the kickers and the kicked.” “Dylan links the the kicked poor with the country — while wealthy urbanites like ‘Mr. Rockefeller’ and ‘Mr. Empire’ sit silently on their comfortable perches” (pg. 28). Not to disparage lovely Iowa, but I compare the excising of the above line with the omission of,There was a big high wall there that tried to stop me. The sign was painted, said ‘Private Property.’ But on the backside, it didn’t say nothing. This land was made for you and meandOne bright sunny morning in the shadow of the steeple, by the relief office I saw my people. As they stood hungry, I stood there wondering if God Blessed America for mefrom “This Land Is Your Land” (and is similar to what Dylan would encounter in a few months with "Talkin' John Birch"). Coca-Cola conceptions of America juxtaposed with a radical conception of freedom, liberty, private property. Why did Dylan keep “country” in on of the versions he sang? (He’d swap it with “city” in another.) Kelly felt it was “country” in the macro sense, hard times in America, while Daniel kept in the Midwest and imagined “New York Town” as somewhere the author was trying to conceptualize to fit into his ever-changing sense of scope. It’s the push and pull of being woke and contending with where you came from.In the end, what always gave this song oomph was its finale — When I leave New York, I’ll be standing on my feet. It just feels good to sing, good to dream on. So far, that and Dylan singing, Don’t ask me nothin about nothin / I just might tell you the truth in "Outlaw Blues" are two of Kelly’s favorite Dylan moments.History of New York (11:30)“that was a big theme this week, go figure.” Daniel wants the beginnings of New York. “What was once New York, er, is now New Amsterdam, or the other way around.” Henry Hudson, in 1609, “found” the island of Manhattan, also known as Manna-hatta that was occupied by Algonquins. Hudson went to the Dutch king guy and said there’s some cool stuff in Manhattan and the Dutch king, Schure, creates West India Trading Company — for beaver. In 1624, 30 Dutch families roll into Manhattan. In 1626, Dutch buy Manhattan. Urban legend of $24 is wrote. They paid (with the help of Mr. Minuit, in Dutch money (not shekels, gilders!) equivalent to about $1,000. We own Manhattan and the Lenape ain’t happy but they’re sellin their beaver, we’re sellin our beaver. There’s windmills. There’s 36 bars. Priorities. This guy Jonas Bronck shows up and buys some land. Wilhelm Kiff, becomes leader of New Amsterdam, he builds a wall to keep out the “savages” — this becomes Wall Street. Peter Stuyvesantwas peg-legged. People liked him: “Everything is cool. He’s not obsessed with building walls. Everything is going great. We’re drinkin, we’re smokin…” Hold up!,” Stuyvesant shouts from the back. He wanted to keep people out of New Amsterdam — not just drunks and criminals, but also Jews and Quakers… Everyone: “Guess what, while you weren’t paying attention over the last 40 years, people here aren’t really Dutch anymore. We’re kinda from everywhere.” Enter: King Charles II. III? II. One of the Charles’s sends a fleet and is, like, “Hey!” Not a single shot is fired as the English take control of New Amsterdam. Charles’ brother was the Duke of York. Yeah, you’re piecing this together!Brief aside on Cynthia Gooding (19:00)Bio of Cynthia Gooding! Kelly loved her voice and just wanted to know everything. She was born in Minnesota — “where Bob Dylan was born, see, I remembered!” — and moved to New York City — “see, it’s all relevant!” Elekra Records president found her a “folk party” (let that sink in) in Greenwich Village. She sings in Spanish, Italian and Turkish. She recorded “La Bamba” years before Ricky Vallance did. Folksinger’s Choice on WBAI in NYC. First interview with Bob Dylan. We listened to the final song of the program. She moved to Spain to record flamenco music. Worked for the National Endowment of the Humanities. Died in 1988 in NJ. We talk about her in relation to Alan Lomax. And excerpt her talking with Dylan at the end where she asks if he’ll wear the hat when he’s rich and famous. He says he’ll never rich and famous. Can’t ask for a better segue into the present.The Nobel Prize (23:45)It’s a lot to wrap your head around, especially if you haven’t been around for the entire ride. It was nice to hear more about his life(see Vol. 1 – No Direction Home for more), especially with the piano underneath. The connection of American songwriting with him —through Buddy Holly (who transferred his powers to him) onto Leadbelly and forward. From The New YorkerWhat he is saying is that he learned his consummate literary technique—how to wield metaphor and make simile sing, how to sew his songs with rhyme and spin a whole uncanny scene from a perfectly worded image—from the great vernacular tradition of American songwriting, a vast library stored not on shelves but in minds and chord-picking fingers.Dylan rhapsodizing (27:45) was one of the highlights for Daniel. Then… the book report (29:30)! Moby-Dick, All Quiet on the Western Front, and The Odyssey. Heylin notes, Dylan “saw himself as part of this process — as an interpreter of a hoary ol’ tradition of self-expression, not as an originator of new forms of song”(Bob Dylan: The Recording Sessions 1961-1994, pg.2). While we aren’t under any kind of microscope that Dylan is under, we are all products of our time and culture and the myth of Dylan’s original sin is something that we also carry around as distraction from the truth that the love we project, the words we write, the proclamations we attest to are just sirens of our shared history writ large. Better to own that than try to explain your originality.So what about all this plagiarizing? (32:00) Noisey’s headline: TFW the book report is due tomorrow morning and it’s midnight already. Importantly, they note: “Dylan began (and will likely end) his career recording covers before he decided to toss Biblical archetypes and pop-culture references together and set them to electric folk-rock, so he’s a synthesist by nature.” Slate was out for blood but their interviews with academics was gold:Longtime Dylan fan and George Washington University English professor Dan Moshenberg told me no alarm bells went off for him while reviewing the passages. Gwynn Dujardin, an English professor from Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, had more issues with Dylan’s approach, noting the irony that “Dylan is cribbing [from] a contemporary publication that is under copyright instead of from Moby-Dick itself, which is in the public domain.” A final reviewer, Juan Martinez, a literature professor at Northwestern University, said, “If Dylan was in my class and he submitted an essay with these plagiarized bits, I’d fail him.But it’s not up to them.As The New Yorker put it, after Dylan claims to have read Don Quixote and A Tale of Two Cities in grammar school, “Welcome to Dylan Self-Mythologizing 101.” To close with Dylan’s speech (34:00):That’s what songs are too. Our songs are alive in the land of the living. But songs are unlike literature. They’re meant to be sung, not read. The words in Shakespeare’s plays were meant to be acted on the stage. Just as lyrics in songs are meant to be sung, not read on a page. And I hope some of you get the chance to listen to these lyrics the way they were intended to be heard: in concert or on record or however people are listening to songs these days. I return once again to Homer, who says, “Sing in me, oh Muse, and through me tell the story.Dylan will die one day but these songs will live on. Who hasn’t gone for lists of Nobel, Man Booker, National Book Award, Pulitzer Prize winners to pick the next book, play, poem? Dylan will be unique on this hypothetical list for some hypothetical kid discovering him a hundred years from now. Hopefully he isn’t asking, “What’s music?” or lamenting that guitars don’t work well under water, but if there is a world then, that person will be stumbling upon a treasure trove of people — like us, in our so-far small way — who devote time and resources to this artist.All of that and Kelly kept replaying the ending to Battletar Galactica. Typical! Then Daniel got all personal and macro about life beyond the podcast… though Kelly got stoked about a future space episode! (38:00)THE EPISODE’S BOOKLET & PLAYLISTRECOMMENDATIONSRecommendations: Kelly (41:20). DMX. Wu-Tang. Not Smashing Pumpkins(though she thinks she invented the phrase “Chicago grunge”) and the podcast Throwing Shade.Daniel (43:20): our Spotify playlist, Spotify’s Summer Rewind, and Titus Andronicus’ 2010 album, The Monitor (and an easter egg on the episode’s excerpt of “The Battle of Hampton Roads”).ENDINGS (46:00)I surprised Kelly with two drawings from random.org (who should just sponsor us at this point). First, we pick 3 numbers, 1 through 98, for Dylan’s Theme Time Radio Hour, our next in The Supplemental Series. Kelly selected three incorrect numbers but chose “Dreams.”Then, our OG list (49:30). 1 out of 527.Kelly guessed 493. It was 356.Could have been "You're Gonna Quit Me" but is "Ring Them Bells" from 1989's Oh, Mercy.Follow us wherever you listen to podcasts. See our real-time playlist See That My Playlist is Kept Clean on Spotify. Follow us intermittently on Twitter and Instagram.Tell your friends about the show, rate and review wherever they let you, and consider supporting us by subscribing or at Patreon. This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit signonthewindow.substack.com/subscribe
Allison, Noah and Tel Aviv Review Host Gilad Halpern discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week. This Land Is Your Land, This Land is My Land (An Expropriation Meditation) We discuss the bill approved by the Knesset this week that allows the expropriation of privately-owned land in the occupied territories, and the end-of-days public debate that ensued. Playing with Fire We mull over the firing of a rocket from Gaza towards a Jewish town and the pounding IDF response that was meant to be a warning but might nudge us to a war that nobody seems to want. The Pious Floozies of the IDF A viral cartoon aimed at persuading religious women to opt out of army service to avoid boredom, ennui and sexual harassment. Practically everyone attacked the cartoon’s producers. But we ask, do they sorta have a point kinda maybe? Music by Static and Ben-El Tavori: Zahav Kvish ha-Hof Silsulim Stahm
L.A. based band Chicano Batman talks "This Land Is Your Land," Coachella & more. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
After some election postmortem, including hearing Neil deGrasse Tyson say we need to "make America smart again," we report two FFRF state-church victories in public schools. We listen to Sharon Jones sing her funk version of "This Land Is Your Land." Then former nun (who is now a "none") Marion Kenneally describes her 16-year life in a convent before she became an atheist. Her fascinating new book is One Nun's Odyssey: A Memoir.
Woody Guthrie captured the promise and frustration of the America he once knew in his famous song 'This Land Is Your Land.' Watch as country singer Jason Isbell learns the song's missing lyrics and... The latest in science, culture, and history from Smithsonian Channel.
Otis talks about the events that lead to Woody Guthrie writing his iconic classic, This Land Is Your Land.
RAMBLIN' JACK ELLIOTT is one of the last true links to the great folk traditions of this country. Bob Dylan called him "King of the Folksingers." He ran away from his Brooklyn home at fourteen to join the rodeo and learned his guitar from a cowboy. In 1950, he met Woody Guthrie. Jack became so enthralled with the life and composer of This Land Is Your Land, The Dust Bowl Ballads, and a wealth of children's songs that he completely absorbed the inflections and mannerisms, leading Guthrie to remark, "Jack sounds more like me than I do." He has recorded forty albums; wrote one of the first trucking songs, Cup of Coffee, recorded by Johnny Cash; championed the works of new singer-songwriters, from Bob Dylan and Kris Kristofferson to Tim Hardin; became a founding member of Bob Dylan's Rolling Thunder Revue; and continued the life of the traveling troubadour influencing Jerry Jeff Walker, Guy Clark, Tom Russell The Grateful Dead and countless others. In 1998, President Bill Clinton awarded Jack the National Medal of the Arts, proclaiming, "In giving new life to our most valuable musical traditions, Ramblin' Jack has himself become an American treasure." He is a Five-time Grammy Nominee and a two time Grammy winner including an award for "Best Traditional Blues Album" in 2009. At 83, Ramblin' Jack is still on the road continuing to set his mark on the world of music. NELL ROBINSON & THE ROSE OF NO-MAN'S LAND is a new album project that integrates the heritage of Nell'a Alabama family serving in 250 years of war. Most of the source material for the songs are from archived letters, documents, mementos and generational lore, all centered on war and service. Beginning with Revolutionary War to the present, Robinson weaves historic familial history with her lush vocal quality and artisan storytelling with musical guidance by Grammy Winning producer Joe Henry. Joining Nell on WoodSongs, will be her band plus Ramblin' Jack Elliott who appears as a special guest on the release. Robinson will be working with non-profits benefiting veterans as she tours. As an activist, she wants to draw attention and funds for the needs of veterans, especially in areas of healthcare and soul repair.
On The Gist, Slate editors and special guest Brooke Gladstone from NPR’s On the Media debate American icons from the Smithsonian Summer Showdown contest. Slate’s Culture Editor Dan Kois speaks on behalf of Bao Bao, Slate’s Deputy Editor John Swansburg argues for the Star-Spangled Banner, Slate’s editor–in-chief Julia Turner makes the case for “This Land Is Your Land” by Woody Guthrie, and NPR’s Brooke Gladstone defends the George Washington Lansdowne portrait. For the Speil, Mike discusses the many forms of useless stats we hear all the time. Also, we’d like to welcome new listeners who discovered the show on This American Life this weekend. We’re glad you’re here. Get The Gist by email as soon as it’s available: slate.com/GistEmail Subscribe to the podcast in iTunes: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/slate…id873667927?mt=2 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Peter Paul & Mary 是上世纪60年代最受欢迎的重唱组合,后来的几十年也证明了他们是音乐历史上生命最长久的团体之一。他们的根比任何一个民谣团体都要扎得深,他们的影响力所波及的听众群是其他民谣团体可望不可及的。 这个三人组合在他们的传奇生涯中共获得了5个格来美奖,发行了5张Top 10专辑,6张金唱片和3张白金唱片。Peter Paul & Mary 由 Peter Yarrow,Paul Stookey 和 Mary Travers 组成,他们原来分别活跃于音乐界。在一段几乎有如传奇的历程之后,在后来 Bob Dylan 的经纪人 Grossman 的建议下,正式组成三重唱。 1962年五月,他们首度以《Lemon Tree》打进排行,一炮而红,接着又以老前辈 Pete Seeger 的《If I Had a Hammer》得到了排行的第十名,同时荣获“最佳合唱团体”和“最佳民歌录音”等两项格莱美奖。这是他们自己最钟爱的歌曲之一,对政治,对世情都提出了批判,也树立起后来他们许多“抗议”歌曲的模式。 事实上,他们三个人之所以能够情投意合,除了音乐上的理念相近,更因为他们对于政治的思想都一致。他们不但在歌曲中唱出自己的想法,还经常一起积极的去参与各种群众运动,而且数十年如一日,并不像许多人那样,在稍微上了点年纪之后就冷淡下来。而除了自身的创作,他们还独具慧眼的采用了好些“新人”的作品,包括Bob Dylan,John Denver和来自加拿大的Gordon Lightfool 等等,就是因为Peter, Paul & Mary 率先唱红了他们的作品,他们才开始引起广泛注意的。 【播放曲目】 01. Blowin' In the Wind 02. Early Morning Rain 03. Wedding Song (There Is Love) 04. Where Have All The Flowers Gone 05. The Cruel War 06. Lemon Tree 07. 500 Miles 08. For Baby 09. Don't Laugh At Me 10. Don't Think Twice, It's Alright 11. This Land Is Your Land
Peter Paul & Mary 是上世纪60年代最受欢迎的重唱组合,后来的几十年也证明了他们是音乐历史上生命最长久的团体之一。他们的根比任何一个民谣团体都要扎得深,他们的影响力所波及的听众群是其他民谣团体可望不可及的。 这个三人组合在他们的传奇生涯中共获得了5个格来美奖,发行了5张Top 10专辑,6张金唱片和3张白金唱片。Peter Paul & Mary 由 Peter Yarrow,Paul Stookey 和 Mary Travers 组成,他们原来分别活跃于音乐界。在一段几乎有如传奇的历程之后,在后来 Bob Dylan 的经纪人 Grossman 的建议下,正式组成三重唱。 1962年五月,他们首度以《Lemon Tree》打进排行,一炮而红,接着又以老前辈 Pete Seeger 的《If I Had a Hammer》得到了排行的第十名,同时荣获“最佳合唱团体”和“最佳民歌录音”等两项格莱美奖。这是他们自己最钟爱的歌曲之一,对政治,对世情都提出了批判,也树立起后来他们许多“抗议”歌曲的模式。 事实上,他们三个人之所以能够情投意合,除了音乐上的理念相近,更因为他们对于政治的思想都一致。他们不但在歌曲中唱出自己的想法,还经常一起积极的去参与各种群众运动,而且数十年如一日,并不像许多人那样,在稍微上了点年纪之后就冷淡下来。而除了自身的创作,他们还独具慧眼的采用了好些“新人”的作品,包括Bob Dylan,John Denver和来自加拿大的Gordon Lightfool 等等,就是因为Peter, Paul & Mary 率先唱红了他们的作品,他们才开始引起广泛注意的。 【播放曲目】 01. Blowin' In the Wind 02. Early Morning Rain 03. Wedding Song (There Is Love) 04. Where Have All The Flowers Gone 05. The Cruel War 06. Lemon Tree 07. 500 Miles 08. For Baby 09. Don't Laugh At Me 10. Don't Think Twice, It's Alright 11. This Land Is Your Land
Peter Paul & Mary 是上世纪60年代最受欢迎的重唱组合,后来的几十年也证明了他们是音乐历史上生命最长久的团体之一。他们的根比任何一个民谣团体都要扎得深,他们的影响力所波及的听众群是其他民谣团体可望不可及的。 这个三人组合在他们的传奇生涯中共获得了5个格来美奖,发行了5张Top 10专辑,6张金唱片和3张白金唱片。Peter Paul & Mary 由 Peter Yarrow,Paul Stookey 和 Mary Travers 组成,他们原来分别活跃于音乐界。在一段几乎有如传奇的历程之后,在后来 Bob Dylan 的经纪人 Grossman 的建议下,正式组成三重唱。 1962年五月,他们首度以《Lemon Tree》打进排行,一炮而红,接着又以老前辈 Pete Seeger 的《If I Had a Hammer》得到了排行的第十名,同时荣获“最佳合唱团体”和“最佳民歌录音”等两项格莱美奖。这是他们自己最钟爱的歌曲之一,对政治,对世情都提出了批判,也树立起后来他们许多“抗议”歌曲的模式。 事实上,他们三个人之所以能够情投意合,除了音乐上的理念相近,更因为他们对于政治的思想都一致。他们不但在歌曲中唱出自己的想法,还经常一起积极的去参与各种群众运动,而且数十年如一日,并不像许多人那样,在稍微上了点年纪之后就冷淡下来。而除了自身的创作,他们还独具慧眼的采用了好些“新人”的作品,包括Bob Dylan,John Denver和来自加拿大的Gordon Lightfool 等等,就是因为Peter, Paul & Mary 率先唱红了他们的作品,他们才开始引起广泛注意的。 【播放曲目】 01. Blowin' In the Wind 02. Early Morning Rain 03. Wedding Song (There Is Love) 04. Where Have All The Flowers Gone 05. The Cruel War 06. Lemon Tree 07. 500 Miles 08. For Baby 09. Don't Laugh At Me 10. Don't Think Twice, It's Alright 11. This Land Is Your Land
Whassup, YIPpers?? We are back in the game with an awesome interview with April Rose - an alumna of UNMATA and the Bellydance Superstars - AND a special mini-moment with Zoe Jakes! Tammy updates us on what's going on around the web, Mary gives a (somewhat overdue) revue of Tribal Con, and both of them wonder how they managed to mention so many silly video clips in one episode. Hmmm....Photo by Pixie VisionDownload Episode 60Or Listen Here: On This Episode:"Does Your Teacher Have Your Best Interest At Heart?" - Sa'diyya (via Gilded Serpent)"Reversal of a Policy - Men In Class" - Shay's blog Adventures of a Tribal Dancer"iPhone make up App...FREE" - Make up and Hair for Dancers (tribe.net)"Thought for the Week" - Tribal Pilgrims (Sakura Tribal blog)Dance Walking Fitness with Ben Aaron (youtube.com)My top three awesome flash mob scenes from Step Up 4: (Who cares about plot?) - Restaurant mob (not my favorite dance, really, but I love the song!) - Office mob - Opening street scene Mardi Love and Ela Rogers come to South Florida! (I'm totes going!!!)Datura OnlineSedona Soul FireSara Beaman at Tribal Con 2013Sahira at Tribal Con 2013Amy and Kari being awesome during a soundboard glitchJaylee at Tribal Con 2013"Afterglow" - Phaeleh feat. SoundmouseSparrow - "Weight of the World" at Alternacirque"Jack Sparrow" - The Lonely Island feat. Michael BoltonApril RoseTribal Con"Critical languages" government grants"April Rose, Dance documentary"Suhaila SalimpourApril Rose's "Keeping On" set at Tribal Fest 2012Gilded Serpent Gig BagAubre HillApril Rose in "I See You" (The part we talked about starts at about 1:50)April Rose in "Parasitic" (My favorite part starts at 1:40! Creepy!!)Los Angeles Bellydance Academy - Stevie Cabaret (a.k.a. Stefanya)April Rose in her short drum solo with BDSSApril Rose in her super cute stripe-y top! - Photo by Leah PerryEarth ShipsYacht rockRihanna "Pour It Up" (Money song)Rihanna "Birthday Cake" (I like this choreo...)Stina Nordenstam "Little Star"Woody Guthrie "This Land Is Your Land"Wait Wait Don't Tell MeSavage LovecastThe Dinner Party DownloadGoats Screaming Like HumansTaylor Swift and the GoatsTrue Facts About the SeahorseYip Yip Aliens from Sesame StreetSkip vonKuskeFingathingElitrickKids (on SoundCloud)Zoe Jakes and Beats AntiqueExtra Action Marching BandFeatured Music:Album: Set Sail - Amazon or Artist: SparrowSongs: Weight of the World, Bird Song, Set SailAlbum: Tribal Beats, Vol. 3 - Amazon or Track 1: "Loss" - Skip vonKuskeTrack 2: "Rock the Whole Planet" - FingathingTrack 3: "Eli Saidi" - ElitrickKidsAdditional Music:Album: The Gathering Season - Amazon or Artist: SolaceSongs: All