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By Clarice Assad
5
1111 ratings
The podcast currently has 18 episodes available.
In this episode, the young and scintillating soprano Bridget Ann Johnston shares her expertise on the history of yodeling, a vocal technique believed to be thousands of years old. It appears in several cultures throughout the times, including polyphonic music of Central Africa, Persian music, the Alpine countries, and its influence in American folk music.
A native from Lisboa, Portuguese Sara Serpa is a singer, composer, improviser, who through her practice and performance, explores the use of the voice as an instrument. Serpa has been working in the field of jazz, improvised and experimental music, since moving to New York in 2008. Her ethereal music draws from a broad variety of inspirations including literature, film, visual arts as well as history and nature. In this episode we explore her career as a singer and a composer leading up to a conversation about her latest album Recognition, released in June 2020. A multi-disciplinary work that traces the historical legacy of Portuguese colonialism in Africa through moving image and sound.
Edson Cordeiro is a Brazilian countertenor and pop and jazz singer. His repertoire covers everything from opera and lieder to traditional Brazilian folksongs to 1970s disco music. It includes covers of Nina Hagen, Janis Joplin, Prince and Édith Piaf, along with medieval psalms. As a vocal talent, Cordeiro has a four-octave voice. This episode is a fun, light hearted conversation with this incredible Brazilian legend, a pioneer in many areas, not only in the music realm.
Brazilian singer-songwriter and guitarist Joyce Moreno is a female icon of some of the best music that the country has produced up to this point in time. In this episode, Joyce shares intriguing insights about her career, her journey into crafting her space as a female musician in a world dominated by men, the good, the bad, and the ugly of the music industry over the past decades, among other gems.
As a concert narrator, Jamie Bernstein has appeared everywhere from Beijing to London to Vancouver. In addition to her own scripted narrations. Jamie also performs standard concert narrations, such as Walton’s “Facade,” Copland’s “A Lincoln Portrait” and her father’s Symphony No. 3, “Kaddish.” A frequent speaker on musical topics, Jamie has presented talks around the world, from conferences in Japan to seminars at Harvard University. In Spanish-speaking locations such as Madrid and Caracas, Jamie narrates en español—thanks to her Chilean-born mother Felicia, who raised her three children to be bilingual.
Lila Palmer is a dramatist, facilitator and classically trained soprano. In this episode, we explore bullying in the music industry. An illegal recording of a live performance where a tenor cracks terribly on a high note prompted me to ask questions. Lila, a beautiful, energetic writer, speaker, and person, voices her opinions in elegant, clear, and emotionally compelling ways.
Singer Dianne Reeves and Guitarist Romero Lubambo have been making music together for decades. In this episode, we explore this unique kind of partnership and the magic behind this connection. What is the glue that holds it together? What type of training do improvisational artists go through to stay on the same page, no matter how intricate the musical liberties they take with each other? Here you'll find that the higher the leaps, the more at stake; they always land together.
The podcast currently has 18 episodes available.