
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Multi-instrumentalist, composer and songwriter, host of the podcast Aria Code, and MacArthur Fellow Rhiannon Giddens’ latest collaboration is with the Italian pianist and percussionist Francesco Turrisi. Entitled there is no Other, the twelve songs explore the connections between European, Arabic, African-American and Mediterranean sounds and at once offer opposition to "othering" and “a celebration of the spread of ideas, connectivity, and shared experience” (Nonesuch Records).
The duo’s artistic cross-pollinations and discoveries draw from Italy, Ireland, Iran, Africa, and Brazil, among other places, and reflect the history of the movement of both people and instruments (with particular attention paid to both the trans-Saharan and the trans-Atlantic slave trade). Giddens and Turrisi have said in interviews that audiences probably won’t be thinking on how cultures meet and collide and create new forms, but perhaps as the players weave their magic, the result might also be that the music will start deep and productive conversations about migrations. Rhiannon Giddens and Francesco Turrisi, along with bassist Jason Sypher, join us in-studio to perform these songs. – Caryn Havlik
Here's the performance from May 1 in The Jerome L. Greene Space:
4.5
137137 ratings
Multi-instrumentalist, composer and songwriter, host of the podcast Aria Code, and MacArthur Fellow Rhiannon Giddens’ latest collaboration is with the Italian pianist and percussionist Francesco Turrisi. Entitled there is no Other, the twelve songs explore the connections between European, Arabic, African-American and Mediterranean sounds and at once offer opposition to "othering" and “a celebration of the spread of ideas, connectivity, and shared experience” (Nonesuch Records).
The duo’s artistic cross-pollinations and discoveries draw from Italy, Ireland, Iran, Africa, and Brazil, among other places, and reflect the history of the movement of both people and instruments (with particular attention paid to both the trans-Saharan and the trans-Atlantic slave trade). Giddens and Turrisi have said in interviews that audiences probably won’t be thinking on how cultures meet and collide and create new forms, but perhaps as the players weave their magic, the result might also be that the music will start deep and productive conversations about migrations. Rhiannon Giddens and Francesco Turrisi, along with bassist Jason Sypher, join us in-studio to perform these songs. – Caryn Havlik
Here's the performance from May 1 in The Jerome L. Greene Space:
6,097 Listeners
9,121 Listeners
1,539 Listeners
555 Listeners
3,108 Listeners
1,970 Listeners
360 Listeners
1,058 Listeners
222 Listeners
43,909 Listeners
38,173 Listeners
5,918 Listeners
7,691 Listeners
6,653 Listeners
999 Listeners
1,226 Listeners
16,361 Listeners
4,117 Listeners
9,298 Listeners
16,342 Listeners
1,020 Listeners
15,174 Listeners