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Out of the Woods - Show #386 - 9-2-17

Aug. 24, 2017, 12:04 p.m.
This version of the program is divided into 6 segments so broadcasters who desire to use this content can insert your station info, etc. The segments vary in length. Out of the Woods is an earthy, wires and wood, mostly acoustic program featuring some of the best new and established artists from the worlds of folk, bluegrass, singer-songwriters, alt.country, Americana, classic country, old-time, Celtic, and everything that falls in between. The show is an unpredictable mix flowing like a river between moods, often with an edge or in a melancholy minor key. On occasion, Out of the Woods features interviews and live in-studio performances with national and international touring musicians. Past guests have included artists such as Bela Fleck, Si Kahn, Brown Bird, Dana Robinson, Steve Gillette & Cindy Mangsen, Kate MacLeod, Bill Bourne, Karl Shiflett, Rachel Bissex, Darryl Purpose, Bow Thayer, Cosy Sheridan and many others. Out of the Woods grew out of Jon 'Chip' Colcord's former acoustic programs, The Song Swap and Music For The Mountain, separate folk and bluegrass programs which aired in New Hampshire during the 1990s. As a child, Colcord grew up a ravenous music fan with an ear for both rock and folk. All of these influences converge on Out of the Woods to bring you a mix which is as much on the edge as it is down home. Folk music with a rock 'n' roll soul



Music For The Mountain Bluegrass - Show #170 - 9-1-17

Aug. 24, 2017, 12:01 p.m.
Music for the Mountain is a weekly bluegrass radio program featuring that hard-driving bluegrass sound, with classic and new tunes running the gamut from Bill Monroe to Sierra Hull. The program is posted here in two sections for broadcasters to insert breaks for station identification, etc. Please be careful to add enough additional material as the length of the segments will vary from week to week



Sounds Irish 8-24-17

Aug. 24, 2017, 11:59 a.m.
Sounds Irish is a weekly program coming straight from County Wicklow in Ireland, hosted by Joe Bollard, one of the elder statesmen of the Irish show band scene. Each program features a variety of Irish and Irish-related songs from many different genres, along with a healthy dose of banter from your host. Please consider adding Sounds Irish to your stations' weekly lineup of programs. All we ask is that we know where the show is being aired so that we can give mention on the program. To contact the show, it is best to send email to Joe Bollard directly at everton274@sky.com The 2-hour program is posted weekly in multiple parts for broadcasters to insert their own breaks.



CPR News, August 24, 2017

Aug. 24, 2017, 11:10 a.m.



CV Columbus and Venezuela

Aug. 24, 2017, 9:56 a.m.



Let's Have Homecoming - Program # 2

Aug. 24, 2017, 6:22 a.m.



Upstate Radio Theatre 1711

Aug. 24, 2017, 6:04 a.m.
An hour of Old Time Radio. http://qualityradioproductions.blogspot.com



Upbeat Music Hour Show 62

Aug. 24, 2017, 5:47 a.m.
Golden Oldies (70s, 80s, 90s)



Upbeat Music Hour Show 61

Aug. 24, 2017, 5:44 a.m.
Golden Oldies (70s, 80s, 90s)



Reggae Explorations #101

Aug. 23, 2017, 9:05 p.m.
Hosted by Mike Roots, “Reggae Explorations” on Wednesdays from 1:00p to 3:00 PM, is WAPJ’s longest running show, having its start (as “Positive Vibrations”) at the station’s inception in March of 1997. On “Reggae Explorations” you’ll hear a mix of tracks from newer and lesser known artists, classic tunes, and deeper cuts than you would normally hear elsewhere. In addition, you’ll be treated to the “Motherland Track of the Week”, a “Lovers Rock Set” and even the occasional “surprise” selection. Mike Roots is a reggae artist and reviewer, and brings an inside perspective with interesting facts to enhance the listening experience. Tune in to “Reggae Explorations” for your weekly excursion into the world of strictly conscious, roots and culture, reggae music.



Donald Drumpf Theatre Vol. 32

Aug. 23, 2017, 7:32 p.m.
Donald Drumpf Theatre: Vol. 32 Know Your Rights. This week, our hero returns to the scene of the crime. An original radio theatre show each week, with most sounds culled from the previous week, about a fictional, theatrical presidency. Contradictions tell the story, with songs, skits, and clips from political news shows and late-night comedy routines. The definition of "radio theatre" is stretched here, with an updated Dickie Goodman and/or Richard Foreman-meets-mashup style sometimes, and a more straightforward take other weeks. Currently, the network has ordered another 15 episodes, but there are threats of cancellation. Anyone who would like to work on a production, or have their work air in this timeslot, should contact info@wgxc.org.



Cheeze Pleeze # 687

Aug. 23, 2017, 6:11 p.m.
The in laws are coming to the show...in the form of inlaw songs...yes, there is such a thing, a cool hippie song from a well known actor from the 70s and it's time for a trip to the saloon with some piano sounds of a bartender type.



Birthplace of the Industrial Revolution? Stroud's towering old textile mills in Gloucestershire

Aug. 23, 2017, 4:29 p.m.



The Mixed Tape - August 22, 2017

Aug. 23, 2017, 1:31 p.m.
Brian Cleveland is joined by the awesome participants from Local 107.3FM's first-ever Youth Radio Camp to play a selection of new Canadian music. This week's episode features tracks from Adam Washburn, Canailles, Pick A Piper, Philippe B, and more.



Christine Ahn on No. Korean-US Stand-Off

Aug. 23, 2017, 11:41 a.m.
On the third day of joint US-So. Korean military exercises on North Korean border, activist, writer, and scholar Seoul-born Christine Ahn speaks about the necessity of securing a peace treaty between the two Koreas and the so far insurmountable obstacles to doing so, the most important of which is the client state relationship that South Korea has with Washington and how the US uses the conflict with the North in its efforts to counter China economically. She speaks about the difficulty the new So. Korean president, Moon Jae-in, has in standing up to Washington, given that the US would exert control over the South's army in any conflict with the North, although Moon has promised that there will be no war on the peninsula during his presidency. One of the problems, Ahn, notes, is determining exactly what is the Trump administration's position since while Sec of State Rex Tillerson tries to assure the world and Kim Jong-un that overthrowing his regime is not the US objective, CIA Director Mike Pompeo says publicly that it is. The ongoing exercises appear to substantiate Pompeo's goal since it includes preparation for regime decapitation. Ahn also takes the listener back to the earlier history of the South when it was dominated by US backed dictators while the North benefited from its trade with the East European Socialist Bloc during the Cold War up to the time of impeached president Park Geun-hye who created an extensive blacklist of political and artistic critics of her administration which included Ahn, herself, who tells about finding herself of Park Geun-hye's “no fly” list. Park Geun-hye, she notes, was ready to forgive Japan for its abuse of 200,000 Korean women who were forced into roles as “comfort women” for the Japanese army during its occupation and was ready, under pressure from Washington, to make South Korea part of a military alliance with Japan and the US, despite the unpopularity of Japan among the South Korean public. And much more.



Jeff Blankfort: News/Op: Ugly History of Korean War

Aug. 23, 2017, 11:10 a.m.
This commentary begins with Steve Bannon being given the ax for the wrong reason by Trump, for stating that there is no military solution to US-Korea standoff and US should withdraw its troops in exchange for the verified freezing by North of its nuclear weapons program. The rest of the program explores the bloody history of what has been referred to as “the forgotten war” citing comments from US officials including Gen. Curtis Le May, Defense Secretary Robert Lovett, Dean Rusk, and rare description of the carnage by Gen. MacArthur, He concludes with quotes from pamphlet by British Official John Pratt showing that the South initiated the war.



CPR News, August 23, 2017

Aug. 23, 2017, 9:23 a.m.



Between the Lines for the Week Ending September 1, 2017

Aug. 23, 2017, 8:54 a.m.
No Government Safeguards Stand Between Donald Trump and Nuclear War; DOJ Demands Data on 1.3 million Visitors to Anti-Trump Website; Groups Joined Forces to Make New Haven, CT One of the Nation’s Leading Sanctuary Cities



Are We Still Racists?

Aug. 23, 2017, 1:10 a.m.
Radio Curious revisits a conversation about racism with Dr. Francis Adams, co-author of “Alienable Rights: The Exclusion of African Americans in a White Man’s Land, 1619 to 2000.”



These Are the Times . . . And You Can Change Them: Carl Dix, Charlottesville! Trump/Pence Must Go; Eulogy for Heather Heyer; National Climate Assessment and Trump; Unconstitutional Moves Against J20 Protester

Aug. 22, 2017, 8:47 p.m.
Carl Dix, the Clash in Charlottesville and the aftermath. Plus the eulogy from Susan Bro, mother of Heather Heyer. Katharine Hayhoe, an author of the National Climate Assessment, summed up its 600 pages - It's real . . .It's us; It's serious; And the window of time to prevent dangerous impacts is closing fast. Stephanie Lacambra, joins us to talk about what they have called the unconstitutional methods being used by the prosecution protesters from Jan 20, Inauguration Day.



Newfangled Retrofitting: BlocPower's Donnel Baird

Aug. 22, 2017, 5:22 p.m.
Compared with new buildings, older buildings tend to eat up a lot more energy and produce and trap a lot more pollution. Whether it’s an old church, a broken-down community center, an under-funded school building, or public housing, too often these older buildings don’t get retrofitted due to fiscal constraints. This week on Sea Change Radio, we speak with Donnel Baird, the founder and CEO of BlocPower, a startup that uses technology to retrofit buildings in financially underserved communities. Not only does this work result in long-term energy savings and more humane conditions, BlocPower offers these benefits at a much lower cost than was previously available. Baird explains BlocPower’s business model, tells us what inspired him to start the company, and talks about the challenges that the current political environment brings.



CPR News, August 22, 2017

Aug. 22, 2017, 1:20 p.m.



Radioactivity from Madame Curie to Fukushima (ONE of ONE)

Aug. 22, 2017, 1:16 p.m.
This is a small tribute to Dick Gregory, who also needs to be remembered for his antinuclear work, embedded in a program about the phenomenon of radiation and ways to monitor it. Opening with a clip from the song Radioactivity by Kraftwerk, leading into a sketch of the life and death of Madame Curie. She discovered radiation but was unable to understand its danger and died from radiation poisoning. Next the comedian Dick Gregory who states that radiation is worse than hunger and war: “Because I can feel hunger. I can see war. .. I cannot see radiation... I look around one day and I am dead.” On to the synopsis of 36 years in the life of a Geiger counter builder, Dan Sythe, whose main goal was to help people with their health issues. The huge scale of radiation contamination becomes clear when one follows him on his travels from Chernobyl to Fukushima with visits to the Marshall Islands, the Lakota, Navajo, and Cherokee Nations to Khazakstan, to people harmed by uranium mining, milling, processing, and nuclear weapons development... all over the world. Ending with Steven Starr, Senior Scientist with Physicians for Social Responsibility, who eloquently explains the extreme danger that Cesium 137 poses that is present in all fuel-pools at nuclear power power plants.



The Jazz Scene 1711

Aug. 22, 2017, 12:16 p.m.
An hour of mainstream Jazz. http://qualityradioproductions.blogspot.com



Frequency Theory 1729 "Destruction DNA"

Aug. 22, 2017, 10:44 a.m.
Hard music for a hard week. jazz echoes and resounds, hip-hop hides itself in a dream, saxophones weep.



Let's Have Homecoming - Program # 1

Aug. 22, 2017, 5:43 a.m.
A program featuring Homecoming singers from The Gaither Series Homecoming Music Collection. www.sbbradio.net



Power In The Darkness

Aug. 22, 2017, 5:25 a.m.
The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit Show - A musical mid-life crisis -- a late-night search for meaning and happiness airs on WRIR LP Monday nights from 9 PM to 11 PM. Stream the show @ www.wrir.org



If Music Could Talk - Aug 20 2017

Aug. 21, 2017, 6:52 p.m.



Post-Pulse Trumped reflections + Prayerful books + more!

Aug. 21, 2017, 6:42 p.m.
Tracing the troubling Trump trail back to Orlando’s Pulse; religion preys on 3 queer writers; there’s no High Court road to marriage equality in Northern Ireland, Pakistan lawmakers ponder protections for trans people, the Texas Speaker re-flushes the Governor’s "bathroom bill", skinheads pepper spray St. Petersburg Pride-sters, Iceland asexuals expand the queer acronym, and more LGBTQ news from around the world; plus trailblazing U.K. singer/songwriter Tom Robinson is still "Glad To Be Gay"!



60 - Summer Jams, vol. 2

Aug. 21, 2017, 6:35 p.m.
Journey Without Maps brings you vintage, rare, and underground global music from uncharted sonic territories. Every week, I unearth a new musical landscape: African soul & funk, Latin rhythms, eastern European electronica, Middle East psychedelic, Asian surf rock … and more.



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