محتوای ارائه شده توسط Music. تمام محتوای پادکست شامل قسمتها، گرافیکها و توضیحات پادکست مستقیماً توسط Music یا شریک پلتفرم پادکست آنها آپلود و ارائه میشوند. اگر فکر میکنید شخصی بدون اجازه شما از اثر دارای حق نسخهبرداری شما استفاده میکند، میتوانید روندی که در اینجا شرح داده شده است را دنبال کنید.https://fa.player.fm/legal
محتوای ارائه شده توسط Music. تمام محتوای پادکست شامل قسمتها، گرافیکها و توضیحات پادکست مستقیماً توسط Music یا شریک پلتفرم پادکست آنها آپلود و ارائه میشوند. اگر فکر میکنید شخصی بدون اجازه شما از اثر دارای حق نسخهبرداری شما استفاده میکند، میتوانید روندی که در اینجا شرح داده شده است را دنبال کنید.https://fa.player.fm/legal
A podcast about music and dance across cultures hosted by Georgia Curran and Mahesh White-Radhakrishnan. We discuss research in ethnomusicology and the anthropology of sound and movement. We also play tracks and excerpts by independent artists especially providing a platform to hear vulnerable and not widely heard performance traditions.
محتوای ارائه شده توسط Music. تمام محتوای پادکست شامل قسمتها، گرافیکها و توضیحات پادکست مستقیماً توسط Music یا شریک پلتفرم پادکست آنها آپلود و ارائه میشوند. اگر فکر میکنید شخصی بدون اجازه شما از اثر دارای حق نسخهبرداری شما استفاده میکند، میتوانید روندی که در اینجا شرح داده شده است را دنبال کنید.https://fa.player.fm/legal
A podcast about music and dance across cultures hosted by Georgia Curran and Mahesh White-Radhakrishnan. We discuss research in ethnomusicology and the anthropology of sound and movement. We also play tracks and excerpts by independent artists especially providing a platform to hear vulnerable and not widely heard performance traditions.
Music!Dance!Culture! Episode 6: "The sounds of shackles breaking" with Soundz of the South Soundz of the South (SoS) is a Hip Hop group/movement from the outskirts of Cape Town building an international working-class counter-culture. In this episode co-produced with guests researcher Sudiipta & interviewees Anela, Tsidi Bang Bang, Khanya Athule from SoS, we discuss activism and art, SoS's creative response to xenophobic violence in South Africa and challenging gender injustice. Languages: English, isiXhosa. See this on YouTube: ( https://youtu.be/qar0CYlNZz0 ). Images featured by Sudiipta Dowsett or with permission from Soundz of the South Music featured Thina by Soundz of the South featuring Java, Anela, Karl Myz, Millz and Tsidi - https://sos1.bandcamp.com/track/thina (excerpt 1:38-3:00) Train Cypher against Xenophobia by Soundz of the South(SOS), Poetics and Phillippi High Speaks (2015) shot by C'de Anele - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4VpTLhbGtho (excerpt 9:05-10:48 featuring Lukhanyo Zondani aka Freeze Jargon rapping and Millz The First leading a struggle song) Dragons Head by Soundz of the South featuring rapper Skills, Anela Jahmena and Sudiipta, beats by Kunta Official Beats from album K'ltsha Kulture album produced as part of Sudiipta's PhD research - https://open.spotify.com/track/0cu3p0d8WvTiwakcpMMVeL?si=075245998fe34def (18:21-22:34) (features excerpt from Martin Luther King Jr.’s last speech) Anisaboni by Soundz of the South from album Freedom Warriors Vol. 4. - https://sos1.bandcamp.com/track/anisaboni (26:41-31:24) Zivume by Soundz of the South from album Words of Rebel Sistah - (explained 37:01-38:35 and excerpt sung live 41:43-41:55) - https://soundcloud.com/s_os/zivume-anela-sos?in=s_os/sets/words-of-rebel-sistah&utm_source=clipboard&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=social_sharing Words of Rebel Sistah compilation - https://soundcloud.com/s_os/sets/words-of-rebel-sistah (42:45-44:55) Links: Website - https://www.soundzofthesouth.org/ Bandcamp - https://sos1.bandcamp.com/ Crossroads: I live where I like by Koni Benson (2014) (40:15-42:44) Research by Dr. Sudiipta Shamalii Dowsett https://research.unsw.edu.au/people/dr-sudiipta-shamalii-dowsett/publications Rebel Sistah Cypher: Hip-hop as embodied practice for social change - https://freilich.anu.edu.au/research/projects/rebel-sistah-cypher-hip-hop-embodied-practice-social-change-0 -- Music!Dance!Culture! is produced by Georgia Curran & Mahesh White-Radhakrishnan. This ep guest co-produced with Sudiipta Dowsett & Soundz of the South members Anela Jahmena, Tsidi Bang Bang & Khanya Baba. Theme music by Mahesh, remixed & produced by Arian Pearson. Sound design by Mahesh featuring transitions by Alexis Weaver. Thanks to all artists featured in this episode. Thanks to Sydney Conservatorium of Music, SCM Work in Progress Group, University of New South Wales, PARADISEC, Australian Anthropological Society, the Freilich Project for the Study of Bigotry (Australian National University) and our supporters. www.music-dance-culture.com…
Music!Dance!Culture! Episode 3. Born for this gift with amaXhosa rapper MC Kideo In this episode co-produced with guests researcher Sudiipta Dowsett and interviewee amaXhosa rapper MC Kideo (aka Makhi Mketho), we hear about Kideo’s journey becoming a rapper growing up in Khayelitsha a township on the outskirts of Cape Town in South Africa’s western cape. Kideo talks about the influence of traditional forms such as Imbongi poetry and Kwaito music on his own development as a rapper, the way he began by performing the verses of others and gradually introduced his own, the role of other hiphop artists and spaces to exhibit his work and his heartfelt reflections on the tensions between amaXhosa traditional culture and the influence of western culture and Christianity. Features recorded music tracks and a sample of live performance. Contains some strong language and brief reference to violence. Featured photo of MC Kideo taken by Laduduma Music featured by MC Kideo and other artists Kutyiwa by MC Kideo (Backyard Crew) releaesed 2016 - https://soundcloud.com/kideolakakintlebackyard/kideo-kutyiwa (excerpt: 1:55-2:40) Emthandazwen by Spijojo Heavyweight produced by Joejo. (6:08-7:13) Poetry performance by HRH Zolani Mkiva for 2010 Fifa Men’s World Cup - FNB Praise Singer (8:07-8:52) I'm Not In a Hurry by Kideo featuring Soska & Agmaad released 2013. (12:24-13:22) Ndizobhubha by MC Kideo released 2017 (16:36-20:11) Kutyiwa by MC Kideo (see details above) (full track 27:48-30:51) Live performance of verse from track One-Two (31:14-31:49) Unyana Wolahleko by MC Kideo ft Sudiipta Dowsett and Shadow (aka Left Eye) due for release by Monotoca Music in 2023 (33:55-39:31) Sound effect samples used Radio tuning noise https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6GIrIs4Q_y4&t=2s Fire sound effect in high quality https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mz9ftphTWTM&t=11s Research by Dr. Sudiipta Shamalii Dowsett Dowsett S, 2020, 'The Routes of Hip-Hop in Cape Town: Collective Performance Practices and the Embodied Sociality of the Ghetto', in Peddie I (ed.), Bloomsbury Handbook of Popular Music and Social Class, Bloomsbury, New York, pp. 485 - 506 Dowsett S, 2019, 'Transformative effects of hip-hop events in Khayelitsha, South Africa', in Walters T; Jepson AS (ed.), Marginalisation and Events, Routledge Dowsett, Sudiipta. Revolutionary but gangsta: hip-hop in Khayelitsha, South Africa. Diss. UNSW Sydney, 2017. Glossary amaXhosa - Xhosa people isiXhosa - Xhosa language spaza - a genre of rap music from the townships near Cape Town kwaito - a form of South African popular dance music Imbongi - South African praise poet Music Dance Culture is produced by Georgia Curran and Mahesh White-Radhakrishnan. This episode is guest co-produced with Sudiipta Dowsett and MC Kideo, also known as Makhi Mketho, a big thanks to both of them. Theme music by Mahesh, remixed and produced by Arian Pearson. Sound design by Mahesh featuring transitions by Alexis Weaver. Thank you to all the artists featured in this episode: MC Kideo, Backyard Crew, Soska, Agmaad, Shadow also known as Left Eye, Heavyweight Spijojo and The Honorable Zolani Mkiva - links in our shownotes. Thanks also for support from Sydney Conservatorium of Music, the University of New South Wales, Abongile Biggz Aprils and PARADISEC and to our beta listeners James Humberstone and Jennifer White-Radhakrishnan.…
In this episode we interview researcher and performer Sudiipta Shamalii Dowsett, our collaborator on the previous episode and the two episodes to come about her research on representing place through hip-hop in First Nations cultures in Central Australia and South Africa as well as her own experience of hip-hop. Music Dance Culture is produced by Georgia Curran (she/her) and Mahesh White-Radhakrishnan (they/them). Theme music by Mahesh, remixed and produced by Arian Pearson. Sound design by Mahesh with inputs from Alexis Weaver. Thanks to Sydney Conservatorium of Music, the Australian Anthropological Society, PARADISEC, Sudiipta Dowsett and Jennifer White-Radhakrishnan, This episode was recorded and produced on the unceded lands of Aboriginal people of the Sydney region, the Southern Highlands and Northern New South Wales. We acknowledge and pay our respects to all elders past, present and emerging. We would also like to respectfully acknowledge the roots of hip-hop in African American and Afro-Caribbean cultures especially acknowledging the tragic legacies of the transatlantic slave trade and celebrate the hopes of emancipation and step towards justice taken on this day, the 19th of June 1865 (Juneteenth). http://music-dance-culture.com musicdanceculturepodcast@gmail.com Photo: Sudiipta Dowsett with Metabolism discussing the track 'Got Time' at Phumzile Productions studio in Kuyasa, Western Cape, South Africa. Taken by MC Kideo. Shownotes (chronological) 3:18-3:25 - Mahesh on ABC Radio National’s The Music Show: Dances across the Indian Ocean <> Sudiipta Dowsett profile: https://www.unsw.edu.au/staff/sudiipta-dowsett 5:45- 6:25 - Some publications by Sudiipta Dowsett, S.S., 2019. Transformative effects of hip-hop events in Khayelitsha, South Africa. In Walters T; Jepson AS (eds.). Marginalisation and Events, Routledge, pp. 110-126. Dowsett, Sudiipta Shamalii, 2020, 'The Routes of Hip-Hop in Cape Town: Collective Performance Practices and the Embodied Sociality of the Ghetto', in Peddie I (ed.), Bloomsbury Handbook of Popular Music and Social Class, Bloomsbury, New York, pp. 485 - 506 11:20-11:30, 18:55-19:05 - Baker Boy hip hop in English and Yolngu-Matha language (First Nations from Top End Australia). Marryuna, <> 11:35-14:20 - Warlpiri culture (First Nations from Central Australia), Milpirri Festival and connection to place. See Music!Dance!Culture! Ep 3 On Milpirri and digging yams of knowledge with Wanta Steven Jampijinpa Patrick and Jerry Jangala Patrick Milpirri Festival - https://tracksdance.com.au/landing/lajamanu-milpirri-indigenous See also Music!Dance!Culture! Ep 5 on hip hop from Khayelitsha, Western Cape, South Africa (details to come) 13:00-13:05 - AAS - The Australian Anthropological Society 19:05-20:40 - Baker Boy’s father dancing to ‘Ice Ice Baby’ from Baker Boy’s Facebook page: <> Baker Boy’s Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/dabakerboy/ 20:40-21:30 - Writer’s Block Crew page: https://soundcloud.com/writersblockcrew Places referred to Wangal Country Nimbin, Wyabal Country, Northern New South Wales Surry Hills, Gadigal Country, Sydney Lajamanu, Northern Territory, Australia Khayelitsha, Western Cape, South Africa…
Music!Dance!Culture! Episode 3. On Milpirri and digging yams of knowledge with Wanta Steven Jampijinpa Patrick and Jerry Jangala Patrick We learn about a Warlpiri traditional culture and hip-hop festival called Milpirri with its creative director Wanta Steven Jampijinpa Patrick and his father, Warlpiri elder, Jerry Jangala Patrick who performs Jardiwanpa. Produced by Georgia Curran and Mahesh White-Radhakrishnan with guest co-producers Sudiipta Shamalii Dowsett, Wanta Steven Jampijinpa Patrick and Jerry Jangala Patrick. Theme music by Mahesh, produced by Arian Pearson. Sound design by Mahesh with sound samples from Alexis Weaver. Thanks to Jangala, Jampijinpa, the Lajamanu Community, Tracks Dance Company, Monkey Marc, Grace Marshall, PAW Media, Sydney Conservatorium of Music, the Australian Anthropological Society, PARADISEC, Alexis Weaver , Samuel Curkpatrick, Bronwyn Griffiths, Jennifer Biddle, the Curran-Palmer Family and Jennifer White-Radhakrishnan. http://music-dance-culture.com musicdanceculturepodcast@gmail.com Music featured from Milpirri by Tracks Inc., Jampijinpa, Jangala and Lajamanu Community Discipline: https://vimeo.com/321366994?embedded=true&source=vimeo_logo&owner=9282219 Justice - Restoring the Balance (Coming to get ya) : https://vimeo.com/321366955?embedded=true&source=video_title&owner=9282219 Other music Emu Dreaming song by Monkey Marc and Elf Transporter with Wanta Jampijinpa Patrick, Jangala and Lajamanu community: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yDK1s5kc7nk Other links: Tracks Dance Company: https://www.tracksdance.com.au/landing/lajamanu-milpirri-home-page Australian Research Council Linkage Project (LP190100552) Indigenous Futurity: Milpirri as Experimental Ceremony Monkey Marc: https://www.monkeymarc.org/ Elf Tranzporter in conversation with Wanta Jampijinpa - Palka: http://on.soundcloud.com/ABAZt Warlpiri skin names https://www0.anu.edu.au/linguistics/nash/aust/wlp/skins.html Yankirri – digging for knowledge: https://www.tracksdance.com.au/milpirri-dance/yankirri-emu-digging-knowledge-2007-2016 Milpirri colour groups: https://www.tracksdance.com.au/colour-groups-0 Research publications on Milpirri Dowsett, Sudiipta Shamalii 2021. Sampling Ceremony: Hip-hop Workshops and Intergeneration Cultural Production in the Central Australian Desert. The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology 22(2-3): 184-202. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14442213.2021.1914713?journalCode=rtap20 Patrick, W. S. J., and J. L. Biddle. 2018. “Not Just Ceremony, Not Just Dance, Not Just Idea: Milpirri as Hyperrealism, a Key Word Discussion.” Visual Anthropology Review 34 (1): 27–35. http://anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/var.12150…
This ep dedicated to the late Rachel Outschoorn explores Portuguese Burgher káfriinha. Guests: A/Prof. Hugo Cardoso, Asian Portuguese creole language expert, then Newton & Felicita Sellar, Angelo & Tharniya Pietersz, Kiliptan Sellar & Rushman Outschoorn who play in one of the main Portuguese Burgher music and dance groups in Batticaloa. Synopsis Mahesh: káfriinha in Portuguese Burgher culture and Sri Lanka present and past. Hugo Cardoso: how he got into studying Asian Portuguese creole languages, language situation in South Asia following Portuguese colonialism, first impressions of Indo-Portuguese performance, value of music in language documentation and revitalisation, song 'Montááyantu loteem ooru' performed by Rachel Outschoorn with Newton Sellar. Links: DSLP FB page: https://www.facebook.com/srilankaportuguese/ SLP language learning instagram page (Patrícia Costa & Vyvonne Joseph): https://www.instagram.com/srilankaportuguese/ Newton Sellar and group: what is káfriinha, importance of káfriinha to Portuguese Burgher identity, earliest memories of music, women in káfriinha, the significance of "sakudii" (shaking) in káfriinha dance movement, hopes for the future. Burgher Folks: https://www.facebook.com/Burgher-Folks-Sri-Lanka-108371357178747 Music featured Live performances - Second káfriinha - Tharniya Pietersz (violin) [1:17:17-1:17:49] - Tééra isti tééra - Burgher Folks - [1:22:37-1:24:59] - Boos boos boos boos- Burgher Folks - [1:25:43-1:27:09] From Cardoso, Hugo C. 2017. Documentation of Sri Lanka Portuguese . Endangered Languages Archive. Handle: http://hdl.handle.net/2196/00-0000-0000-000F-CB5E-2 . - slp049_8 Rachel Outschoorn- koranjaniita (song), [0:06-0:36] - slp035_1 Newton Sellar house rehearsal [2:03-3:54] - slp095_1 Newton Sellar & group at Eastern University (áádi aavndu kapáátu) [3:50-4:30] - slp059_4 Philomena Jonathan báyla songs [13:57-16:03] - slp040_6 Iva Andrado (violin), Edward Outschoorn (rabáána), Remina Andrado, Frida Silva, Jacinta Silva, Noel Sellar (saláári) - song: béétál yabotáá [23:50-24:45] - slp001 Afro-Sri Lankan performance Colombo (Arabi Chayaca Lora) [31:57-33:30] - slp039_1 Fourth káfriinha [46:54-50:39] - slp039_2 (Fifth káfriinha) [1:02:24-1:05:45] - slp039_7 Rachel & Newton: montááyantu loteem ooru [39:33-41:32] From Ian Russell Smith (collector), 1973. Indo-Portuguese (Sri Lanka) . Collection IRS01 at catalog.paradisec.org.au [Open Access]. https://dx.doi.org/10.4225/72/56E825242DE0C - IRS01-SLP15-A- Batéé Batéé, Hector Tenarrenz, Rennie Ockersz, Rachel Outschoorn, Kulaavadi group with music. (Recorded simultaneously by Ian Smith and Kenneth David Jackson [12:40-16:26 in orig, 1:29:01-1:32:56 in podcast] - IRS01-SLP13-B, "Music played when bride and groom are going to their room. Recorded 26/5/74, Batticaloa. Announcer Ronald Rosairo (born 1906). Clarence Hendrick – leader & violin, Monica Ockersz – violin, Freddy Sellar - mandolin, Festus Peters – guitar, Ivo (Iva) Andrado – drum" [8:25-10:13 in orig, 9:43-11:43 in podcast] and "Cafferinha dance (third)" [20:10-22:00 in orig, 58:28-59:23 podcast] Other - Vāda baila by MS Fernando and Milton Silva (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gDjfhu9Q-nw) [7:45-8:20] Produced by Mahesh White-Radhakrishnan & Georgia Curran Theme music by Mahesh remixed by Arian Pearson Thanks to Australian Anthropological Society, Sydney Conservatorium of Music, PARADISEC, Hugo Cardoso, Ian Smith, Kenneth David Jackson, Newton & Felicita Sellar, Angelo & Tharniya Pietersz, Kiliptan Sellar, Rushman Outschoorn, Joe Gould, Vera Williams Tetteh, Jennifer White-Radhakrishnan and Dinali Fernando. http://music-dance-culture.com musicdanceculturepodcast@gmail.com…
Music and dance are at the heart of many significant cultural events and often represent and affirm distinct cultural identities. In Part 1 of our first episode we discuss the value of music and dance in diverse cultural contexts and reflect on the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic on musical expression in various cultural contexts. We chat to Arian Pearson, Yolngu musician, producer and Head Sound Engineer with Mulka Music, about his passion for community music projects and development as well as some of the exciting activities going on in East Arnhem Land. “I truly believe that music is a part of development for every human being growing up” Arian Pearson, Yolngu musician and producer Links to resources · ‘The Value of Ethnographic Research on Music’, guest edited by Georgia Curran and Mahesh White-Radhakrishnan – https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14442213.2021.1913511 · ‘Voices of the Rainforest: A Day in the Life of the Bosavi’, produced by Steven Feld and Dennis Leonard – https://www.voicesoftherainforest.org/ · East Arnhem Live concert series – https://www.eastarnhemland.com.au/east-arnhem-live · Djatpangarri by Yirrnga Yunupingu (produced by Arian Pearson) – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZjCmtMrPjZg · Märi Wurrapa, by Dhapanbal Yunupingu (produced by Arian Pearson) - https://music.apple.com/au/album/m%C3%A4ri-wurrapa/1365589822?i=1365590145 · Dhapanbal Yunupingu - https://www.abc.net.au/triplejunearthed/artist/dhapanbal-yunupingu/ · The Mulka Project – https://yirrkala.com/about-the-mulka-project/ (above photo of Arian Pearson from this website) · East Journey – https://www.abc.net.au/triplejunearthed/artist/east-journey/ · ‘Reflections and Voices: Exploring the Music of Yothu Yindi’ with Mandawuy Yunupingu, by Aaron Corn – https://sydneyuniversitypress.com.au/products/78828 · The National Recording Project – http://www.aboriginalartists.com.au/NRP.htm · Australian Anthropology Society (AAS) 2021 conference (24 Nov-1 Dec 2021) – www.aasconf.org Note regarding AAS conference: Panel on 'Continuity and change in performance' hosted by Dr. Georgia Curran (she/her) and Dr. Mahesh White-Radhakrishnan (they/them) on 30 Nov 2021. Panel access requires registration with payment (see website for details). Plenary sessions (on 24, 25 and 26 Nov) featuring First Nations scholars are open access to First Nations peoples. For details on how to register, please email the plenary convenor Dr Gretchen Stolte (Nez Perce, she/her) directly for further information on how to access them (gretchen.stolte(AT)uwa.edu.au). Please subscribe to Music!Dance!Culture! on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.…
In Part 2 of our first episode, we discuss the study of diverse musics and the value of ethnomusicology as it has developed over the 21st century. We interview Emeritus Professor Anthony Seeger about growing up in a family central to the American folk music scene, his field research with the Kisedje in Brazil, and his roles as the director of the Archives of Traditional Music at Indiana University and Smithsonian Institution. Seeger speaks about establishing ‘Smithsonian Folkways Recordings’ which brings together rich collections of socially engaged music from various parts of the world. This episode includes some tracks from one of these albums ‘Vocal Art of the Suyà’ which Seeger produced in collaboration with the Kisedje, as well as some more recent activist musical responses to the current pandemic environment. “It seemed to me that there was something about music that had an impact not just on aesthetics and beauty and how we feel about lovely things, but on the everyday actions of people, the lives of people and the activities of government.” Anthony Seeger, Distinguished Professor of Ethnomusicology, University of California Links to resources · ‘The Value of Ethnographic Research on Music’, guest edited by Georgia Curran and Mahesh White-Radhakrishnan – https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14442213.2021.1913511 · ‘Musical Connections Amid the Global Pandemic’ curated by Nicholas Ng – https://www.westernsydney.edu.au/iac/music_and_performing_arts/musical_connections_amid_the_global_pandemic_-_series_1 · ‘Stellar Mansions’ composed by Nicholas Ng – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86G3VWH6dCQ · ‘Why Suyá Sing: A Musical Anthropology of an Amazonian People’ by Anthony Seeger – https://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/?id=p072024 · ‘Ethnomusicology Matters’ edited by Marko Kölbl, Marko, Hande Saglam and Ursula Hemetek – https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/id/52e79713-c8c8-440b-9261-7a226b947ab0/external_content.pdf · Smithsonian Folkways Recordings – https://folkways.si.edu/ · SLDRT! By Le Monde est en Flammes – https://lemondeestenflammes.bandcamp.com/ . Donate through ‘Wave of Hope’ – https://www.facebook.com/WaveOfHopeForTheFuture · Australian Anthropology Society 2021 conference – www.aasconf.org · Mugglestone, E., 1981. Guido Adler's “The Scope, Method, and Aim of Musicology”(1885): An English Translation with an Historic-Analytical Commentary. Yearbook for Traditional Music , Volume 13, pages 1-21. · Australian Anthropology Society (AAS) 2021 conference (24 Nov-1 Dec 2021) – www.aasconf.org Note regarding AAS conference: Panel on 'Continuity and change in performance' hosted by Georgia and Mahesh on 30 Nov 2021. See website or show notes for Episode 1 Part 1 for details.…
Music!Dance!Culture! is a show for anyone who loves music, dance and other performing arts around the world and the study of it. Hosts Georgia Curran and Mahesh White-Radhakrishnan introduce the podcast what it's all about and what to expect from Season 1. Features the show theme music composed and performed by Mahesh and remixed and produced by Arian Pearson. Visit www.music-dance-culture.com for more details.…
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