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Where is the border between sky and space? That's what 5-year-old Matthias of Durham, New Hampshire wants to know. Alesandra, 3 of Bella Vista, Arkansas wants to know why we can't hold air. In this episode from 2020, we're joined by anthropologist Hugh Raffles, a professor at The New School, and by astronomer John O'Meara, chief scientist at the Keck Observatory. And we have special scoring by cellist Zoë Keating.Download our learning guides: PDF | Google Slide | Transcript
On this episode, I spoke to Emmy Award-winning and Grammy-nominated composer Jeff Russo about his work on the limited series Ripley. Ripley stars Andrew Scott, Johnny Flynn and Dakota Fanning. Russo's upcoming projects include Nicholas Tomnay's What You Wish For; and FX's series Alien. His music can be heard on shows such as FX's Fargo, for which he received an Emmy in 2017 and three additional nominations; Peacock's Mrs. Davis; HBO Max's Love and Death; Amazon Prime's The Consultant; Showtime Networks' The Man Who Fell to Earth; CBS All Access's Star Trek: Discovery, and Clarice; Paramount +'s Star Trek: Picard and Star Trek: Strange New Worlds; Netflix's The Umbrella Academy; FX's Legion and Snowfall; and more. His film credits include Chiwetel Ejiofor's Rob Peace, which premiered at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival; Bartlett Sher's Oslo, which he co-scored with Zoë Keating and for which he received an Emmy nomination; Paul Dektor's American Dreamer; Sabrina Doyle's Lorelei; Noah Hawley's Lucy in the Sky; Peter Berg's action-thriller film, Mile 22; and Jon Avnet's Three Christs.
In the ninth episode of Tell Me About Your Bike, Wesley sits down with fellow freaky fast bike courier Kyle Goshen in the studio to discuss their worst crashes, riding recumbents, and avoiding fights with motorists.Listen to Radiolab! Check out their old Time episode, with an appearance by looping cellist Zoë Keating. Zoë also sat down with Jad Abumrad and explained her creative process.If you enjoy the essays I read from Need for the Bike, buy a copy for yourself or a cycling friend. Support the show
In Episode 3 of “Tell Me About Your Bike,” Liz Schleeper and I meet in her bike room to discuss the joys of making #friends on a #bike, learning to #mountainbike at night in a #tidewater #swamp, debate whether #poisonivy is worse than a #brokenrib, the challenge of being outclassed by other riders and explore the value of democratic trail systems. #mtb #evma #ipswich #eastcoastbicycles #clubrides #757 #757bikelife #bikenorfolk #norfolklovesbikes #tellmeaboutyrbikeListen to Zoë Keating on RadioLab.Support the show
Welkom terug bij een nieuwe aflevering van Kalm met Klassiek, dé podcastserie voor je dagelijkse momentje rust. Ook vandaag heeft Ab weer rustgevende muziek voor je klaarstaan. Het enige wat jíj dus nog maar hoeft te doen is ervoor te zorgen dat je je op je gemak voelt. Maak het jezelf comfortabel. Ga even lekker zitten of misschien zelfs even liggen. En als de zon buiten schijnt, ga daar dan even in zitten. Want de muziek van vandaag gaat over de zon!
Another week, another episode! Rachel reaps the consequences of too much phone use, when she comes down with a case of Texting Thumb! Walls has a disappointing dining experience, but makes up for it by binging movies and lots and lots of Below Deck Mediterranean. Rachel riffs on which archetype she'd be in a murder Mystery. Walls considers what she would tell her past self about these two years of pandemic life. Walls recommends a funny feel-good pick-me-up in Whose Line is it Anyway?, and Rachel suggests taking a listen to the moody, dramatic cello music of Zoë Keating. Ever been disappointed by a fancy restaurant? Who would you be in a murder mystery?? Tell us about it on Instagram and Twitter, or you can send an email or voice memo to withrachelandwalls@gmail.com! Supporters! THANK YOU! To join them, tap the "Support" button here. Music by Royer Bockus LINKS! Laugh your troubles away with Whose Line is it Anyway on HBO Max Listen to the superb soundscapes of cellist Zoë Keating --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/withrachelandwalls/support
Kalm met Klassiek is jouw dagelijkse dosis klassieke ontspanning. Deze hele week klinkt muziek van vrouwelijke componisten uit het heden, het verleden en van over de hele wereld. Je adem is het ultieme instrument om rust te vinden. De muziek van vandaag is perfect om je adem te leiden.
WISCONSIN MUSIC PODCAST Season 2, Episode 46 Emily White Author and Podcast host of: How to Build a Sustainable Music Career and Collect All Revenue Streams This week we have the author of the book and podcast under the same name titled: How to Build a Sustainable Music Career and Collect All Revenue Streams Emily White is a Partner at Collective Entertainment and the Founder of #iVoted Festival. She is the author of the #1 Amazon best-selling How to Build a Sustainable Music Career and Collect All Revenue Streams and the Host of the book's accompanying podcast of the same name. The podcast is the #1 Music Business podcast in America and has charted on six continents with listeners in 115+ countries. After witnessing slim margins in the 2016 U.S. Election, White was inspired to get out the vote. The result was a new initiative called #iVoted in which over 150 venues in 37 states let fans in on election night 2018, who showed a selfie from outside of their polling place. The movement pivoted in 2020 due to the pandemic and created the largest digital concert in history, which took place on election night 2020. Over 450 artists participated in #iVoted Festival 2020, all booked per the data of the top streaming artists in key swing states whose margins are often decided by the size of a concert venue. Artists including Billie Eilish, Trey Anastasio of Phish, Playboi Carti, Jim James of My Morning Jacket, Maggie Rogers, Colin Meloy of The Decemberists, Living Colour, Young the Giant and countless more have participated in #iVoted Festival. The #iVoted team quickly followed up by creating #iVoted Festival Georgia for the 2021 special elections that determined control of the U.S. Senate. #iVoted is currently building #iVoted Festival 2022 for The United States' next national Election Day - November 8th, 2022. White is an in-demand speaker and consultant due to her expertise within the modern music and sports industries, artist development, social media, and beyond. In the media, White has been on the cover of Pollstar Magazine with her name additionally gracing the cover of Billboard magazine. Her work has been additionally profiled in Variety, Fast Company, Forbes, Bloomberg, Rolling Stone, Pitchfork, Alternative Press, Brooklyn Vegan, The Fader, Stereogum, Relix, CNN, Vox, The Huffington Post, ESPN, and more. She is a frequent guest blogger for Hypebot as well as Midem in Cannes, France where she is a regular speaker. In addition, White has proudly served on the boards of Well-Dunn, Future of Music, CASH Music, SXSW, The David Lynch Foundation Live while additionally serving on The Grammys' Education Committee and Pandora's Artist Advisory Council. She was named to Billboard's 2020 Women in Music Executives of the Year list. White's career spans the entertainment industry, carving out a unique path that defines a modern maven. White began her journey at Northeastern University in Boston, with experiences at Powderfinger Promotions, WBCN-FM, Q Division and Skope Magazine. Upon seeing The Dresden Dolls play on campus, White introduced herself to front-woman Amanda Palmer, quickly integrating into a core member of the band's team. White and The Dresden Dolls grew up professionally together beginning at SXSW and continuing through White's graduation day, in which she did graduate, but didn't walk due to the band kicking off a three continent tour with Nine Inch Nails at Coachella. Prior to graduating, White completed work with Boston's legendary promoter, Don Law Company, while working deep within the local music scene before becoming a world-class tour manager. An internship at MTV / VH1 UK solidified White's early love for international business and view of a modern, global economy. Retiring from tour managing at age 23, including runs with Imogen Heap and festivals ranging from Glastonbury to Fuji Rock, White accepted a position at Madison House Inc. in New York working with artists such as The Fiery Furnaces, Dinosaur Jr., The Secret Machines, Angelique Kidjo, and Taj Mahal, as well as members of The String Cheese Incident and Drive-By Truckers. White wrote a pre-Radiohead In Rainbows “name your own price” distribution model that was passed along to iconic producer Bob Ezrin in 2007. A job offer at Michael Cohl's Live Nation Artists followed with White project managing Zac Brown Band's debut release when he was signed along with Madonna, U2 and Jay-Z. In 2008, White launched Whitesmith Entertainment with Keri Smith to oversee the careers of musicians and comedians such as Brendan Benson of The Raconteurs, Margaret Cho, The Hush Sound, Amanda Palmer, Eric Burdon, Family of the Year, Hockey, The Autumn Defense, Fox Stevenson and W. Kamau Bell. Whitesmith additionally successfully consulted on Jay Mohr's goal of being nominated for Comedy Album of the Year at the 2016 Grammys. White is a former Division I scholarship swimmer, who is the daughter and granddaughter of award winning swim coaches. Following the 2012 Olympic games White launched a sports management division with inaugural client Anthony Ervin, an Olympic gold medalist known as the “rock star” of Olympic swimming. In 2016, White signed head U.S. Olympic Women's Swim Coach David Marsh and Olympic gold medalist Kaitlin Sandeno, expanding the sports' division further. White additionally works with the world's leading expert in sports and politics, Dave Zirin. And began working with Japanese-American triplet and two-time Olympian Jay Litherland following his silver medal performance at the Tokyo 202(1) Olympics. In 2017 White released her debut book, Interning 101; a how-to guide for interns in modern business. The book is based on the “intern manifesto” handbook created by White and is published by 9GiantStepsBooks. How to Build a Sustainable Music Career & Collect All Revenue Streams is White's second book. It is a #1 Amazon best-seller and a course book at countless universities. In 2019, White became an adjunct instructor at New York University's Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music within NYU's Tisch School of The Arts. In 2021, How to Build a Sustainable Music Career and Collect All Revenue Streams launched as a podcast. White brings her best-selling book to life by interviewing hand-picked guests whom she considers experts on each chapter or even the entire book. Guests include Justin Vernon of Bon Iver, Imogen Heap, Kam Franklin of The Suffers, Warped Tour Founder Kevin Lyman, Songtrust President Molly Neuman, CAA's Akin Aliu, Zoë Keating, Ariel Hyatt, Artivist Steff Reed, Patrick Sansone of Wilco and The Autumn Defense, Donald S. Passman, Bandcamp Founder Ethan Diamond, Terrorbird's Lauren Ross, Symphonic GM Nick Gordon, #iVoted CMO and Co-Founding Collecting Entertainment Partner Melissa Garcia, Mandolin CEO Mary Kay Huse, Artist Nikki Hill, ASCAP's Loretta Muñoz, and more. White is thrilled to have Co-Founded Collective Entertainment with longtime colleague Melissa Garcia. Collective Entertainment houses all of White's entrepreneurial work and beyond. Website: https://www.collectiveentinc.com/emily-white Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Collective-Entertainment-532081957157605 Twitter: http://twitter.com/CollectiveEnt_ iVote: http://ivotedfestival.com/news Podcast: https://anchor.fm/sustainablemusiccareer ---------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------- Wisconsin Music Podcast is: Created, hosted, mixed, mastered, and edited by: Zach T Fell of ZTF Studio (www.ztfStudio.com) Sponsored by: Diamond Dave Photography ZTF Studio Podcast Theme Music created by: Nate Wycoff of Frequency Farm Recording Studio Podcast Voice Over performed by: Dean Bundy Syndicated on: cwHipHop.com – Wisconsin's online Hip Hop radio station
SommerSnak 3 tager form som en tiprunde-bonanza, hvor vi deler inspiration og gode ideer til sommeren og efteråret. Det handler både om klassiske krigsfilm, podcast om mænds problemer, cyberpunkede computerspil, sorte huller og meget mere. Vi tager tre runder med et tip hver – plus lidt bonus – så der er masser af ideer at hente. LINKS RUNDE 1 Worlds Greatest Con – podcast om et "svindelnummer" under Anden Verdenskrig Vild med dance – DR-dokumentarserie om 90'ernes dancemusik i Danmark "Black Holes. The Edge of All We Know" på Netflix BONUS: YouTube-video om cellisten Zoë Keating (der har lavet musikken til dokumentaren om de sorte huller) RUNDE 2 Cyberpunk 2077 er nu endelig ved at være værd at spille Mænd der knækker – podcast om mænds problemer "Living in Data" af Jer Thorp – om brug og misbrug af data RUNDE 3 Angiv mål i Google Kalender BONUS: Reclaim.ai automatiske kalenderrokader Black Hawk Down – klassisk krigsfilm med politisk kritik "The Imagineering Story" på Disney+ BONUS: Inside Pixar PRAKTISK DataSnak har fokus på it-faglige og it-politiske emner, og nørder igennem med alt fra automatisering over sikkerhed til uddannelse i den digitale verden. Podcasten behandler også SAMDATAHKs relevante aktiviteter såsom kurser, faglige initiativer, kommunikation og værktøjer og tilbud, som man kan få, når man er it-medlem i HK. Formål er at gøre lytterne klogere på hvad der sker i deres arbejdsliv her og nu og i fremtiden, og gå i dybden med problemstillinger fra it-professionelles hverdag. Tovholderen på podcasten er it-faglig konsulent Jeppe Engell. De øvrige to værter er Adam Bindslev og Anders Høeg Nissen. DataSnak udkommer hveranden mandag. Tak fordi du lytter med! Får du lyst til at komme med ris og ros, kan du sende en e-mail til jeppe.engell@hk.dk - og hvis du har tekniske spørgsmål eller kommentarer kan de sendes til anders@podlab.dk
June 28th marks the anniversary of a mass shooting that took place inside a newsroom in Annapolis, Maryland, killing five journalists. On this week's On the Media, an intimate portrait of the staff of the Capital Gazette in the immediate aftermath of the death of their colleagues — and then over the next several years as they contend with a corporate takeover, buyouts, and the loss of their newsroom. Reported by Chris Benderev of NPR's Embedded. Part 1: The Attack. Listen. Part 2: The Aftermath. Listen. Part 3: The Layoffs. Listen. Music in this week's show: Time Is Late — Marcos Ciscar feat. Joakim Johansson We Insist — Zoë Keating
How to Build a Sustainable Music Career and Collect All Revenue Streams
Zoë Keating is the only musician Host Emily White has ever met that does not need to read the book this podcast is based on. Zoë is an old and dear friend of Emily's, as they first met when Emily was tour managing Zoë and Imogen Heap in the Winter of 2006. Emily interviewed Zoë for the book's foreword which is available via an exclusive excerpt with Hypebot here. This podcast episode is the audio recording of that conversation and contains more than what is available in the book and Hypebot piece. In fact, Emily never planned on releasing this conversation as it was initially recorded so Emily could transcribe Zoë's words for the book's foreword. With Zoë's blessing this conversation is now a podcast episode for the world to hear. Emily personally loves the foreword of the book as much as the entire book! And the feedback from the written version of Zoë's thoughts has been overwhelming from artists in the best possible ways. We hope you enjoy this conversation between Emily White and the incomparable Zoë Keating on how Zoë continues to build a sustainable music career and collects all revenue streams. Happy listening! Follow Zoë on Twitter HERE. Questions? Reach out to @EmWizzle on Twitter. Book this podcast was based on: https://www.collectiveentinc.com/book2. 10% off w/ code PODCAST Email List to be directly contacted when S2 & the book's next edition drops: https://bit.ly/SustainableList CREDITS: Creator, Executive Producer, Producer, & Host: Emily White Engineer: Nathan Cain Music: Matthew Wang Sponsorship: info@c-ent.com Graphics: Neelu Mohaghegh --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sustainablemusiccareer/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sustainablemusiccareer/support
Welcome to How to Build a Sustainable Music Career and Collect All Revenue Streams! Based on Emily White's #1 Amazon best-selling book of the same name, this debut episode gives you an overview of the book and this podcast series. Emily has never seen the modern music industry presented to artists in order - from creation to execution or recording to release. Similarly, as a veteran of the industry, Emily was repeatedly finding money owed to artists. She realized that if this was happening to artists with large followings and teams in place, that it was most likely happening to countless artists. Thus, How to Build a Sustainable Music Career and Collect All Revenue Streams was born. This podcast takes you through each chapter of Emily's book, with hand-picked guests who breathe life into each chapter's topic, taking the listener along their own journey to achieve the podcast's title. Tune in every Monday for a new episode. Next week Emily will be releasing her interview with Zoë Keating, which is the foundation of the foreword of the book, as Zoë is one of the only artists Emily has ever met that doesn't need to read this book. We hope you enjoy and look forward to experiencing this odyssey with you! Questions? Reach out to @EmWizzle on Twitter. Book this podcast was based on: https://www.collectiveentinc.com/book2. 10% off w/ code PODCAST Email List to be directly contacted when S2 & the book's next edition drops: https://bit.ly/SustainableList CREDITS: Creator, Executive Producer, Producer, & Host: Emily White Engineer: Nathan Cain Music: Matthew Wang Sponsorship: info@c-ent.com Graphics: Neelu Mohaghegh --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sustainablemusiccareer/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sustainablemusiccareer/support
Should all-white choirs sing Negro Spirituals? What does the contemporary discourse of race look like to arts leaders who have been in the game for decades? Is Hip Hop part of the classical tradition? Dr. Louise Toppin joins Garrett to unpack these topics while showcasing her lifelong dedication to the music born from Afro-American culture. Garrett and Scott wrap up their celebration of Women's History Month by honoring the music of Julia Kent, Zoë Keating, Beyoncé, and others. For the weekly TRILLOQUY, the guys speak to the newly legislated violence against women and trans people, and honor some of the women who have stood up against voter suppression and sexual assault. Playlist: LIl Nas X - "Montero (Call Me By Your Name)" Guiseppe Tartini - "Devil's Trill" Sonata Niccolò Paganini - Caprice No. 24 Igor Stravinsky - "A Soldier's Tale (L'Histoire du soldat)" Sinead O'Connor - "Success Has Made a Failure of Our Home" perf. Denyce Graves - "Scandalize My Name" Erik Koskinen - "Devil's Blues" Tracy Chapman - "Baby Can I Hold You" Beyoncé - "I Care" Julia Kent - "Through the Window" Zoë Keating - "Sun Will Set" William Grant Still - "Ennanga" perf. Louise Toppin - "Guide My Feet" More: Downbeat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9Fz6GqjMC8&t=7s American Composers Forum Job Opportunity: https://composersforum.org/about/job-opening/ Dr. Louise Toppin: http://africandiasporamusicproject.org/dr-louise-toppin Lil Nas X Claps Back at Critics of ‘Montero’ Video: https://variety.com/2021/music/news/lil-nas-x-montero-video-twitter-1234939496/ SNL Owes Sinéad O’Connor an Apology: https://blog.usejournal.com/snl-owes-sinéad-oconnor-an-apology-a79174a45fdd Did the Tulsa Opera Dismiss a Black Composer Over One Line?: https://www.vulture.com/2021/03/tulsa-opera-fires-composer-one-line.html CDC Director Warns of ‘Impending Doom’ as Cases Rise: https://www.webmd.com/lung/news/20210329/cdc-directdor-warns-of-impending-doom-as-cases-rise When can the arts reopen? Dr. Fauci says, ‘If we are careful … sometime in the fall’: https://www.minnpost.com/artscape/2021/03/when-can-the-arts-reopen-dr-fauci-says-if-we-are-careful-sometime-in-the-fall/ Georgia Republicans’ ban on giving voters water epitomizes the GOP’s disturbing priorities: https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/georgia-republicans-petty-crusade-against-giving-voters-water/2021/03/26/bf30d98e-8e5e-11eb-a6bd-0eb91c03305a_story.html Arkansas and South Dakota pass bans targeting transgender minors: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/29/arkansas-transgender-healthcare-ban-minors A Minnesota man can’t be charged with felony rape because the woman chose to drink beforehand, court rules: https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2021/03/26/minnesota-rape-alcohol/
By Arnold LobelBackround track by Zoë Keating
Brent Weichsel is deep into the world of RPG. (Role-Playing Games). Brent is also non-binary and goes by the pronouns of they/them. The talk is split into 2 halves, gaming and gender identity/awareness, connected by the arc of identity. This is Brent’s normal, and their journey into self-discovery has only recently begun. I was so honored, touched, and moved that they shared their “normal” with me and with you. Thank you for listening. If you are having a challenging time with transition, identity and gender confusion, just not being comfortable in your own skin, Brent has offered their open arms to you. Reach out to them on Twitter. ❤️ Brent’s Twitter: @bsweichsel
In this special episode, Joe Sparrow spoke to musicians Zoë Keating and David Lowery - two of the most prominent voices for artists' rights in the streaming era. They spoke in the light of recent public discussions about how the model pays off for musicians – #BrokenRecord in the UK for example – and how they think streaming could and should improve. Keating has regularly published her streaming income data to further transparency around payouts for artists, and Lowery runs artist-rights blog The Trichordist, and and also filed a class action lawsuit against Spotify in 2015, which was settled in 2017. You can read the accompanying article on Music Ally here. Sign up for Music Ally's streaming TV show: https://musically.lnk.to/TVShowSignup Follow us on: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/musicallybiz/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/musically Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/musicallyfb/ For more knowledge: http://learn.musically.com Music Ally is a Knowledge Company http://musically.com
George Howard spoke with artist Zoë Keating about the effects COVID-19 is having on the music ecosystem, her own revenue streams, and what her path forward may look like. All music in this episode has been performed by Zoe Keating and is used with her permission. Visit zoekeating.com for more. For more from Entrepreneurship & Art go to www.entrepreneurshipandart.com
Carly, George, and Dan discuss the Black Lives Matter protests, George's interview with Zoë Keating, Dan's panel for the Recording Academy, Carly's upcoming persona article, and how we encourage each other and hold each other accountable. Read the show notes: https://www.entrepreneurshipandart.com/blog/podcast-black-lives-matter-and-encouragement-accountability
Where is the border between sky and space? That's what 5-year-old Matthias of Durham, New Hampshire wants to know. Allesandra, 3 of Bella Vista, Arkansas wants to know why we can't hold air. We're going to get scientific, but also philosophical and imaginative with anthropologist Hugh Raffles, astronomer John O'Meara, and, a special treat, cellist Zoë Keating, who scored the episode for us to help us really feel it!
As part of a month-long campaign called the Purple Project for Democracy, (a strictly non-partisan, apolitical effort that a number of other large news organizations have also contributed to) we are featuring a series of conversations about an alarming loss of trust, faith and devotion by Americans for American democracy -- and what to do about it. Bob is one of the Purple Project organizers. Democracy is in trouble. Not necessarily because of our current political mayhem, or even because of the accumulated sins and failures of American society, but because vast swaths of the public are giving up on the system that has governed us for 243 years. Here are some alarming data points: One, in 2018 only 33% of the general population expressed trust for government. Two, among 1400 adults asked about the importance of democracy, only 39% of younger participants said “absolutely important.” Three, in a 2018 Democracy Fund survey of 5000 Americans, 24% of respondents expressed support for “a strong leader who doesn’t have to bother with Congress or elections,” and either a “strong leader” and 18% for “army rule. The more complicated question is what as a society we are to do about it? In this mini-series we’ll be talking that over, but we’ll begin with the actual state of public sentiment and public participation. Eric Liu is the co-founder and CEO of Citizen University and Co-chair of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship. He and Bob discuss potential solutions for taking on widespread disaffection. Music: We Insist by Zoë Keating
La música ejerce su influencia en nuestros estados de ánimo. Puede elevarnos y potenciar nuestra euforia y puede acompañarnos en nuestros momentos más sombríos y melancólicos, arropándonos con su manto, sirviéndonos de consuelo en un momento de desolación. Así que no es en absoluto disparatado decir que la música nos hechiza con su encantamiento. Anoice, Zoë Keating, Max Richter, Theophany, Chris Spheeris & Paul Voudouris, Andy Pickford, Ordet, Disasterpeace, Bradley Cooper & Nelson, OOIOO, Lady Gaga, Hemby, Lindsey y Ratiere.
A cellist since the age of eight, Zoë Keating pursued electronic music and contemporary composition as part of her Liberal Arts studies at Sarah Lawrence College in New York. I came across her music almost 10 years ago and love it so much I reached out to see if she would be interested on being on the show. Not only did she respond, she left us reeling from her incredible live performance and chat on art + entrepreneurship. Now she’s back on tour with her latest album Snowmelt. In this episode, we go deep into personal growth, dealing with incredible loss, balancing parenthood and career, and landscape for independent artists. Enjoy! Today's episode is brought to you by CreativeLive. CreativeLive is the world's largest hub for online creative education in photo/video, art/design, music/audio, craft/maker and the ability to make a living in any of those disciplines. They are high quality, highly curated classes taught by the world’s top experts -- Pulitzer, Oscar, Grammy Award winners, New York Times best selling authors and the best entrepreneurs of our times.
Cellist and composer Zoë Keating is a one-woman orchestra. She uses a cello and a foot-controlled laptop to record layer upon layer of cello, creating intricate, haunting and compelling music. Zoë is known for both her use of technology - which she uses to sample her cello onstage - and for her DIY approach, releasing her music online without the help of a record label.
108 years ago on March 25, 1911 — The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire kills 146 people, becoming the deadliest industrial accident in the city's history — Disturbingly, a similar deadly fire would occur on the same day 79 years later at the Happy Land Club, a story covered in episode 14 of the podcast 4 years ago on March 26, 2015 — A gas explosion and fire destroys three buildings at Second Ave and St. Marks March 26 in History: Central Park "Be-In" on Easter Sunday in Sheep Meadow One year ago on March 26th — NTSB Releases Report on Deadly East River Helicopter Crash — Listen to episode 12 of the podcast for the full story on the East River helicopter crash 110 years ago on March 30, 1909 — The Queensboro Bridge opens to traffic 34 years ago on March 31, 1985 — The First WrestleMania is held at Madison Square Garden — WrestleMania 2019 — April 7th at MetLife Stadium 39 years ago on April 1, 1980 — 33,000 transit workers go on strike, bringing subways and buses to a standstill for 11 days 4 years ago on April 2, 2015 — Two women are arrested in Jamaica, Queens for planning terrorist bombings March 27 in History: The Disappearing House March 28 in History: Alfred Hitchcock's 'The Birds' Premieres in New York March 29 in History: The 'Mad Bomber' Puts Manhattan on Edge The AGBC News podcast is just getting started, and we need your support. A Great Big City is built on a dedication to explaining what is happening and how it fits into the larger history of New York, which means thoroughly researching every topic and avoiding clickbait headlines to provide a straightforward, honest, and factual explanation of the news. Individuals can make a monthly or one-time contribution at agreatbigcity.com/support and local businesses can have a lasting impact by supporting local news while promoting products or services directly to interested customers listening to this podcast. Visit agreatbigcity.com/advertising to learn more. Park of the day Great Kills Park in Staten Island If you're looking for a scare, try your hand at paranormal investigating! The Morris–Jumel Mansion in Upper Manhattan is holding a night of ghost hunting where you can learn about the history of the house and see the equipment ghost hunters use when investigating old properties. Tickets are required and the event takes place from 8pm to 11pm on Saturday, March 30th — Morris–Jumel Mansion Paranormal Investigation Concert Calendar This is the AGBC Concert Calendar for the week of Tuesday, March 26 Billy Idol and Steve Stevens are playing Town Hall on Wednesday, March 27th at 8pm. Failure and Swervedriver are playing Warsaw on Friday, March 29th at 7pm. The Cure, Def Leppard, Janet Jackson, Radiohead, Roxy Music, Stevie Nicks, and The Zombies are playing The Barclay Center on Friday, March 29th at 7pm. Methyl Ethel and Teen are playing Elsewhere on Friday, March 29th at 7pm. HalfNoise, Liam Benzvi, and Lip Talk are playing Market Hotel on Friday, March 29th at 8pm. Nils Frahm is playing Brooklyn Steel on Friday, March 29th at 8pm. Better Oblivion Community Center, Christian Lee Hutson, and Lala Lala are playing The Bowery Ballroom on Friday, March 29th at 8pm. Sasha Sloan is playing Bowery Ballroom on Saturday, March 30th at 8pm. Zoë Keating are playing Joe's Pub on Sunday, March 31st at 7pm and 9:30pm. Simple Creatures is playing Public Arts on Monday, April 1st. Avey Tare and Nathan Bowles are playing Market Hotel on Monday, April 1st at 8pm. Cradle of Filth, Raven Black, and Wednesday 13 are playing Irving Plaza on Wednesday, April 3rd at 6pm. Ex Hex and Moaning are playing The Bowery Ballroom on Thursday, April 4th 8pm. Matmos and Keith Fullerton Whitman are playing Pioneer Works on Thursday, April 4th at 7pm. Whitey Morgan and the 78's is playing Gramercy Theatre on Friday, April 5th at 7pm. Teen Body and Sean Nicholas Savage are playing Sunnyvale on Friday, April 5th at 7:30pm. Arthur and Ghost Orchard are playing Baby's All Right on Friday, April 5th at 8pm. Broncho is playing Elsewhere on Saturday, April 6th at 7pm. Find more fun things to do at agreatbigcity.com/events. Learn about New York Here's something you may not have known about New York: Central Park's Great Lawn was originally a reservoir of fresh water for city's water supply system. In 1931, it was filled in with material excavated from Rockefeller Center and the Eighth Avenue subway Weather The extreme highs and lows for this week in weather history: Record High: 86°F on March 29, 1945 Record Low: 10°F on March 29, 1923 Weather for the week ahead: Light rain on Sunday, with high temperatures rising to 68°F on Saturday. Intro and outro music: 'Start the Day' by Lee Rosevere — Concert Calendar music from Jukedeck.com
I've definitely seen this one before. I can't quite put my finger on where — Facemash? Soundjammers? Twibbles? Show me again, website. Yes, I'm sure I've watched this before. I remember making it. We marinated the chicken in mayo, which made it extra juicy! (Ed: this actually works.) Here's the thing. When I saw it, there was a person there, more than just hands. A face and a personality, you know? And yet here we are with a twenty-five second portrait video compressed to hell and claiming to be something else. Who would do such a thing? Do you really think someone would do that? Just go on the internet and steal content? Everything is a Remix (See also) Mystery Science Theatre 3000 and Rifftrax Ship of Theseus 🧀Cheesy Pasta🍝 A capella maybe isn't as dumb as I thought: Skyrim Theme Straight No Chaser Star Wars/John Williams As long as we're talking about compositions with a single instrument, how about some Zoë Keating? Andrew's Favorite Mashups Brahms v Radiohead — A mashup of Brahms' 1st Symphony and OK Computer, then re-scored and arranged for orchestra. See also. More. I'll spare you Copland v Bon Iver because I'm sure you'd rather listen to good music. Mouth Moods — So bad, so dumb, so brilliant. Reanimated pop music, Frankenstein's Monster-style. If Robot Chicken did music and loved Smashmouth. I can't recommend it enough/stay far away. Girl Talk — Feed the Animals — Basically my entire pop music vocabulary comes from this. A virtuoso-level combination of rap, pop, folk, and rock together into something that becomes more than its parts. The ur-mashup. Also came on a super-cool matte black CD that basically never left my car stereo. Daft Science — Daft Punk + Beastie Boys. Cut/pasted/mixed/resampled. I love it. Call me a Hole — Hey, and this is crazy, but I just met you, so HEAD LIKE A HOLE Shake it Off (The Perfect Drug) — Modern pop goes really well with Nine Inch Nails. Who would have thought? Both albums by the Avalanches — Not technically mashups, but really excellent music derived entirely from samples. Basically Ian's kryptonite.
Can BART noise damage your hearing? An East Oakland comedian finds his voice at his grandma's funeral.A conversation with cellist Zoë Keating. We dig into KALW's history to find out which employee has been here the longest.
Show Notes In which we look at Zoë Keating’s ongoing kerfuffle with YouTube. Is YouTube strong-arming indie artists? Should megacorporations force all their clients—customer and producer—to fit in a one-size-fits-all setup, or should they take the long view and do what is best not only for the bottom line but also for the relationship between artist and audience. Oh, and what about those monopolies and monopsonies? They might have some extra ethical responsibility, too! Before You Go LEGO Announces Doctor Who Set for Later this year FCC announces intent to regulate broadband under Title II: “This Is How We Will Ensure Net Neutrality” (FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler) The Verge summarizes and editorializes Music “Let It Burn” by Magic Giant. Used by permission. “Winning Slowly Theme” by Chris Krycho, who has been practicing piano so that he’ll eventually be able to sit down at some glorious Bösendorfer or Steinway and dazzle you with a real version of this. Links “What should I do about Youtube?”—Zoë Keating’s original post “Clarity”—her follow-up with her transcript of the conversation Ben Thompson: “Dear Zoë Keating: Tell YouTube to Take a Hike” The Guardian recaps the affair: “Zoe Keating v YouTube: key sticking points in Google’s latest music row” David Lowery on the whole business: “Zoë Keating vs YouTube: The End of an Artist’s Right to Choose Where Their Music Appears on The Internet.” Previous episodes: 1.01: Massive Emotional Contagion Follow/Subscribe Twitter: @winningslowly @chriskrycho @scarradini App.net @winningslowly @chriskrycho Subscribe RSS iTunes
Episode 13 Download the show Zoë Keating joined us to talk about her music and how she connects with people online. Zoë is a Classical cellist, who uses the techniques of electronic music using a ‘cello, both recorded and most […]