
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Producer and author Ian Brennan has worked with world music, folk music, traditional music, and has a feel for the DIY and lo-fi punk aesthetic. He produced Tinariwen’s Grammy-winning album, Tasili, but he has also recorded and amplified many voiceless communities – like the Zomba Prison Project (Malawi), Khmer Rouge Survivors (Cambodia), The Good Ones (Rwanda), and now, most recently, one of the most persecuted groups on the planet- people living with Albinism in East Africa - the Tanzania Albinism Collective.
Ian Brennan joins us in the studio to talk about traveling to the island of Ukerewe, the largest inland island in Africa, and “a place so remote that historically people often traveled there to abandon their children with albinism and now serves as a haven for many with the condition.” There, members of the Standing Voice community held workshops and worked with the local community of those with albinism – the “unheard,” hunted, feared, & murdered for their supposedly magical body parts. Hear the "un-professional" musicians of the Tanzania Albinism Collective, who grew up separated and shamed about their condition, not allowed into places where people gather and sing – like church, and relegated to “other-ness.”
4.5
137137 ratings
Producer and author Ian Brennan has worked with world music, folk music, traditional music, and has a feel for the DIY and lo-fi punk aesthetic. He produced Tinariwen’s Grammy-winning album, Tasili, but he has also recorded and amplified many voiceless communities – like the Zomba Prison Project (Malawi), Khmer Rouge Survivors (Cambodia), The Good Ones (Rwanda), and now, most recently, one of the most persecuted groups on the planet- people living with Albinism in East Africa - the Tanzania Albinism Collective.
Ian Brennan joins us in the studio to talk about traveling to the island of Ukerewe, the largest inland island in Africa, and “a place so remote that historically people often traveled there to abandon their children with albinism and now serves as a haven for many with the condition.” There, members of the Standing Voice community held workshops and worked with the local community of those with albinism – the “unheard,” hunted, feared, & murdered for their supposedly magical body parts. Hear the "un-professional" musicians of the Tanzania Albinism Collective, who grew up separated and shamed about their condition, not allowed into places where people gather and sing – like church, and relegated to “other-ness.”
6,133 Listeners
9,131 Listeners
1,548 Listeners
555 Listeners
3,116 Listeners
1,970 Listeners
361 Listeners
1,058 Listeners
222 Listeners
43,967 Listeners
38,189 Listeners
5,932 Listeners
7,700 Listeners
6,670 Listeners
1,003 Listeners
1,235 Listeners
16,393 Listeners
4,122 Listeners
9,301 Listeners
16,352 Listeners
1,046 Listeners
15,237 Listeners