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By Tony Dunbar
The podcast currently has 14 episodes available.
Denise Dunbar Perkins and Cynthia Lyle Rhodes are both aunts of host Tony Dunbar, who were high school classmates (Calumet High School/Chicago-1968). At Calumet High School their school choir often won citywide music competitions. They also went to High School with R&B Vocalist, Chaka Khan. This conversation discusses the music and the times of the late-60’s and early-70’s along with providing funny antidotes you can only get when talking among family. This is part 2 of a 4-part interview.
Recorded November 12, 2020 (The week of Thanksgiving)
Reverend Dr. Denise Dunbar Perkins and Cynthia Lyle Rhodes are both aunts of host Tony Dunbar, who were high school classmates (Calumet High School/Chicago-1968). At Calumet High School their school choir often won citywide music competitions. They also went to High School with R&B Vocalist, Chaka Khan. This conversation discusses the music and the times of the late-60’s and early-70’s along with providing funny antidotes you can only get when talking among family. This is a 4-part interview.
Recorded November 12, 2020 The week of Thanksgiving
Zemrah Songstress is a Chicago featured vocalist with a newly released project, Love is Possible, is joined my lyricist, Pamela Wilks who wrote a number of songs for the recently released project Together they share about the spiritual connection in their relationship, collaboration around music as well as their younger days and reflections of past social movements and current racial climate. This is a 3-part interview
Recorded February 14, 2021
Creola Kizart Hampton – is the Founder and President of Greater Works Inc. She is a former Marketing and PR Executive having work for Ogilvy and Mather Advertising as well as Burson & Marsteller (now known as Burson Cohn & Wolfe) Public Relations. Creola is a renowned AIDS (and now COVID-19) advocate in the Black Community. She generously shares her memories of the Season One song, meeting Dr. Martin Luther King as a child as well as profound insights on racial and social justice. This is part 1 of a 4-part interview
Creola Kizart Hampton – is the Founder and President of Greater Works Inc. She is a former Marketing and PR Executive having work for Ogilvy and Mather Advertising as well as Burson & Marsteller (now known as Burson Cohn & Wolfe) Public Relations. Creola is a renowned AIDS (and now COVID-19) advocate in the Black Community. This is Part Two of our four part One Song Playlist interview with Creola. Part 2 continues our Part One conversation on music and extends to discussions of the Vietnam War, the resistance to Martin Luther King in the Black Community as well as the murder of Sam Cooke.
This is part 2 of the 4- part interview with our guest; two of Detroit’s legendary and most effective and influential community organizers Professor Gwen Winston and Monica Lewis Patrick. This 2nd episode picks up where we left off in part one, transitioning the discussion from the 1967 Detroit riots to Dr Martin Luther King’s pivot in that same year to expand the civil rights movement to a broader human rights agenda towards addressing poverty in the United States along with King’s increased focus on the Vietnam War.
This episode was recorded in December of 2020
Professor “Momma” Gwen Winston is the Principal/President for g. bailey winston enterprises (gbwe) and Executive Director of the Wisdom Institute. Beyond being a master facilitator and one of the most respected and sought after community organizers in Southeastern Michigan, she is a fountain of wisdom and inspiration Monica, the CEO of We the People of Detroit, is a renowned water as a human rights advocate connected to the Flint clean water crisis and the Detroit water shut-off crisis. She is known as the Water Warrior. This interview with the Motown Matriarchs is simply edutainment at it’s best. This is part 1 of a 4-part interview.
Interview with Anthony Moseley, the Artistic Director, and Dr. Marcus Robinson, the Executive Director of Collaboraction, a racial/social justice theatre group. Put on your seatbelts, this conversation is quite the ride; with the journey starting with the discussion of the cultural relevance of the Five Stairsteps’ 1970 classic, to commentaries on culture, economics, technology, along with sharing Collaboraction’s commitment to racial justice. This is a 3-part interview
This native of Maryland is the current Provost of Academic Affairs at Salt Lake Community College, and chemist by education and trade. He's also an established musician who was in a soul music band (saxophonist) that played soul classics throughout the Salt Lake Valley region of Utah. In this episode beyond his fond memories of O-o-h Child, the spiritual and intellectual Dr. Sanders discuss his study of Dr. Martin Luther king and Civil Rights Movement, the post-Civil Rights era that started after King’s death, the Soul Scene in Salt Lake City Utah, and his personal life journey from Maryland to Utah with a stop in Minnesota along the way. This is part 1 of a 3-part interview. For parts 2 and 3 join our One Song Playlist Patreon Community: patreon.com/onesongplaylist
Recorded December 12, 2020
We appreciate you listening to One Song Playlist, and for Season one we are featuring O-o-h Child by a Chicago family musical group the Five Stairsteps, which was released in April of 1970…. And in that year our guest Salm Kolis was a young college student on the Carbondale campus of Southern Illinois University. She was also in the midst of what she refers to as her personal radicalization along with many other college students at the time
We caught up with Salm in November of 2020 right after the national election, which lent opportunity for her to share about her decades long connection to the Socialist Workers Party. This extraordinarily interesting interview covers other topics including art, medicine, and education as well as the pandemic. I’m sure you’ll enjoy this one.
The podcast currently has 14 episodes available.