
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Kara Jackson has a mind like a diamond and a voice like maple syrup. She has always been drawn to music as a medium, but you probably first heard of her as the National Youth Poet Laureate. Cutting her teeth as a performing poet gave Jackson a huge public platform as well as a sense of how form can be a foundation for expression.
Now, at the ripe age of 23, Jackson has released her stunning debut album, ‘Why Does The Earth Give Us People To Love.’ As the title suggests, this album reflects on love and loss. Kara has some fantastic insights about how embracing grief, and sharing it with others, can lead us to a healthier culture. She also shares about how her parents’ political convictions have influenced her concept of an artist’s role in the world.
One of my favorite moments in my conversation is where Kara articulates how she sees her work in conversation with Black artists who came before her. What a gift, to hear a brilliant young artist speak so clearly about how their creativity fits into a bigger tradition. We cannot wait to see what she does next.
*** lizzie and Kara talked about Kara’s poem “anthem for my belly after eating too much” at the top of the interview. Click here to read.
Follow Basic Folk on social media: https://basicfolk.bio.link/
Sign up for Basic Folk's newsletter: https://bit.ly/basicfolknews
Help produce Basic Folk by contributing: https://basicfolk.com/donate/
By The Bluegrass Situation4.9
8484 ratings
Kara Jackson has a mind like a diamond and a voice like maple syrup. She has always been drawn to music as a medium, but you probably first heard of her as the National Youth Poet Laureate. Cutting her teeth as a performing poet gave Jackson a huge public platform as well as a sense of how form can be a foundation for expression.
Now, at the ripe age of 23, Jackson has released her stunning debut album, ‘Why Does The Earth Give Us People To Love.’ As the title suggests, this album reflects on love and loss. Kara has some fantastic insights about how embracing grief, and sharing it with others, can lead us to a healthier culture. She also shares about how her parents’ political convictions have influenced her concept of an artist’s role in the world.
One of my favorite moments in my conversation is where Kara articulates how she sees her work in conversation with Black artists who came before her. What a gift, to hear a brilliant young artist speak so clearly about how their creativity fits into a bigger tradition. We cannot wait to see what she does next.
*** lizzie and Kara talked about Kara’s poem “anthem for my belly after eating too much” at the top of the interview. Click here to read.
Follow Basic Folk on social media: https://basicfolk.bio.link/
Sign up for Basic Folk's newsletter: https://bit.ly/basicfolknews
Help produce Basic Folk by contributing: https://basicfolk.com/donate/

38,478 Listeners

6,829 Listeners

29,060 Listeners

5,978 Listeners

3,150 Listeners

366 Listeners

2,615 Listeners

245 Listeners

1,412 Listeners

4,117 Listeners

447 Listeners

395 Listeners

4,639 Listeners

15,855 Listeners

10,736 Listeners