Afropop Worldwide
Saturdays at 11 p.m. on 88.5 NEPM
This Peabody Award-winning radio program is dedicated to music from Africa and the African diaspora. Hosted by Georges Collinet from Cameroon, Afropop Worldwide bridges continents and cultures through the power of pop, telling some of the most important stories of our time along the way.
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The feat the Los Angeles group Wild Up achieves in interpreting the music of Julius Eastman is the refusal to attempt impersonation — the musicians make him their muse without fetishizing him.
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This Juneteenth, pianist Lara Downes remembers the freedom that has been hard fought and hard won.
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Gunther Schuller died on Sunday, June 21, in Boston. He was 89. Schuller was a Renaissance man of the Space Age. He began playing French horn with the New York Philharmonic when he was 16, became principal horn of the Cincinnati Symphony at 17, and for the better part of the next 75 years excelled at more endeavors than virtually anyone else in modern music.
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Only Bob Dylan can say definitively how much his decision to “go electric” was inspired by the buzz swirling around Paul Butterfield that weekend. But as far as I’m concerned, if Butterfield wasn’t there, Dylan’s electric premiere wouldn’t have happened until a later date.
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Two guests on Tertulia voiced concerns about the possibility of losing hundreds of acres of forest in Shutesbury for the installation of solar panels.
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The Brazilian singer Flora Purim helped create the sound of jazz fusion. Now, as she releases what she says will be her final album, it's time to give her artistic legacy its due.
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Greg Tate's death left an immeasurable hole in the universe of cultural criticism. Vernon Reid, Matana Roberts, Jared Michael Nickerson and Christina Wheeler pay tribute to his music as Burnt Sugar.
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No matter how complex and ambitious his music got, Mingus didn’t stray too far or too long from the vernacular of the blues, the music of the Pentecostal churches of his youth, and the swing that fueled his passion to play music in the first place. This is not apparent in everything he composed, but sooner or later he returns to these first principles, and it gives his subjective vision its universal resonance.
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I take note of these patronizing attitudes toward Donaldson, not only with respect to the remarkably sustained quality of the music he’s played over the course of his 65 year-long career, but in light of the continual decline in the audience for jazz.
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Ah, but Pops knew to leave us always wanting a little bit more!