Photo by Martin Rietze
Photo by Martin Rietze
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La Caldera #2
Originally aired on Wednesday, April 21st, 2004
The mouth of a volcano, from which pours the hot lava. The sound of Latin American soul - as selected by Buenos Aires native, composer Laura Andel, who plays traditional folk music to the latest computer music, and all shades in between. Laura Andel presents music from the Winti tradition of Suriname; new sounds from Argentinian composers Alejandro Iglesias-Rossi, Santiago Vazquez and Dino Saluzzi; music from composer Hermeto Pascoal and traditional music from the northeast of Brazil; music from the Afro-Peruvian coast by Nicomedes Santa Cruz, and music performed by Gregorio Mendoza and recorded live in Bolivia.
Other shows from Indigenous Worlds
Hosted by Ned Sublette
Originally aired Friday, February 24th, 2012

Ned Sublette assembled this show to feature the hip Cuban rhythms of 1960; the pachanga along with tastes of bolero, mambo, and boogaloo. This late Feb. 2012 we honor Jimmy Sabater, an architect of boogaloo of that era, who died recently in New York.


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Hosted by David Weinstein
Originally aired Monday, October 31st, 2011

David Weinstein hosts singer Qian Yi, composer Du Yun, musician/producer Dave Liang of the Shanghai Restoration Project, and Rachel Cooper of the Asia Society where a China-India symposium takes place Nov. 3-6, 2011. Not your mother's Chinese music.


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Hosted by Jeannie Hopper
Originally aired Monday, July 25th, 2011

Jeannie Hopper hosts the São Paulo born, New York based A&R, film producer, music supervisor and compiler Béco Dranoff who is a co-producer of the extraordinary and highly anticipated 2011 release of Red Hot + Rio 2, honoring the 60s Tropicalia wave.


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Hosted by Elliott Sharp
Originally aired Monday, April 18th, 2011

Improvised music to accompany the dance of a usually-female shaman. Performed by an ensemble including Park Jong Sul-Changgo, Park Jung Sun-Ajaeng, Kim Bang Hyun-Taegum, Kim Chan Sub-Haegum, Han Se Hyon-Piri, Jung Jung Min-Ching, Hong Ok Mi-Haegum.


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Hosted by Jeannie Hopper
Originally aired Wednesday, October 13th, 2010

ARTonAIR.org's Jeannie Hopper welcomes Grammy Nominated international recording artists Les Nubians to our studios. Sister duo Hélène Faussart and Célia Faussart grace us with a live performance, accompanied by a few of their fellow band mates


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Hosted by Elliot Stapleton
Originally aired Friday, March 12th, 2010

This past year saw the release of the incredible 10-CD box set Alan Lomax in Haiti. Elliot Stapleton speaks with ethnomusicaologist, Gage Averil,l about Lomax, Haitian music and his involvement with relief efforts to Haiti.


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Hosted by Jeannie Hopper
Originally aired Friday, January 29th, 2010

One week after the catastrophic earthquake that struck Haiti on January 12, 2010, Groove Collective hosted a benefit concert for the continuing relief efforts within the country, proving that "l'union fait la force".


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Hosted by Jeannie Hopper
Originally aired Monday, September 14th, 2009

Congratulations, New York Gypsy Festival! This year marks the festival's fifth anniversary, and AIR's Jeannie Hopper talks with festival organizer Mehmet Dede about the growing popularity of the genre.


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Hosted by Jeannie Hopper
Originally aired Monday, July 13th, 2009

AIR's Jeannie Hopper with Scott Kettner of the Brooklyn-based Nation Beat whose music is inspired by the Afro-Brazilian rhythms of maracatu, Chico Science & the Mangue Beat movement of Recife, Brazil as well as New Orleans second-line funk and jazz.


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Hosted by Jeannie Hopper
Originally aired Monday, June 22nd, 2009

AIR's Jeannie Hopper speaks with Mehmet Dede, co-producer of Istanbulive:The Sounds & Colors of Turkey, and musicians Sertab Erener and Demir Demirkan, whose project Painted on Water is featured in the festival.


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Hosted by Lucy Simanjuntak
Originally aired Monday, May 5th, 2008

Charles Hutagalung was an illustrious Indonesian singer/song writer and member of the legendary Indonesian 70s pop band The Mercy's. The following selections are from his album Flower Sound, a collection of Malayan songs dating back to the 60s.


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Hosted by Lucy Simanjuntak
Originally aired Monday, April 14th, 2008

Keroncong is a genre of Indonesian music with a great deal of influence by the Portuguese, who dominated Southeast Asia in the late 1500s, and introduced to the local culture their indigenous styles and western elements Mariati is one of the masters.


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Hosted by Jeannie Hopper
Originally aired Monday, January 28th, 2008

A national hero to the Garifuna people, Andy Palacio preserved the roots of their rhythm and language through his musical creations. Listen in for a tribute to this influential artist who passed away in January 2008.


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Hosted by Lucy Simanjuntak
Originally aired Monday, June 25th, 2007

For Venice Biennale 2007, producer Lucy Simanjuntak created a compilation that features traditional and contemporary songs from the islands of Indonesia.


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Hosted by Elliott Sharp
Originally aired Monday, July 17th, 2006

From the Indonesian island of Roti, Sasandu creates sounds using only instruments constructed of bamboo and coconut leaves. The recording is from the collection of the long-lost Tokyo-based King Record Company and is no longer findable except here.


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Hosted by Ned Sublette
Originally aired Monday, July 10th, 2006

Besides presenting music by master timbalero Jimmy Delgado and by the Spanish Harlem orchestra, Latin music expert Ned Sublette also makes sure you hear El Gran Combo, Chamaco Ramírez singing with Tommy Olivencia, and the young Gilberto Santa Rosa.


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Hosted by Nathan Salsburg
Originally aired Monday, June 19th, 2006

Exploring a rare style of religious singing called "lining out" that dates back to before 1640 in America. These hymns and psalms are still alive in several regions of the the deep south and Scotland today. Produced by Nathan Salsburg.


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Hosted by David Weinstein
Originally aired Monday, May 22nd, 2006

Music rescued by artist Michael Fabian from old vinyl recordings, probably from the 1940s and 1950s. A soora (or sura) is any of the 114 chapters or sections of the Koran (Quran).


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Originally aired Monday, November 7th, 2005

Os Mutantes is the eclectic Brazilian rock band that typified (together with Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil) the global futurism of the Tropicalista movement of Brazil in the late '60s.


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Originally aired Sunday, June 5th, 2005

Sounds with an Indian accent made, played or waylaid by New Delhi-based Punita Singh who explores sound in multiple contexts; as music, language, art and science. This show was produced with Peter Nagy for one of our Venice Biennale radio adventures.


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Originally aired Tuesday, May 31st, 2005

A selection of music, both instrumental and vocal, from Kalimantan, the Indonesian part of Borneo. The instruments represented are all varieties of lutes from the region, both plucked and bowed.


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Originally aired Tuesday, April 5th, 2005

David Grubbs, guitarist, pianist, and vocalist, and founding member of Squirrel Bait, Bastro, and Gastr del Sol and is the man behind Rickets and Scurvy and other classic CDs produced this program of experimental rock - from Sweden!


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Hosted by Elliott Sharp
Originally aired Monday, August 30th, 2004

Elliott Sharp plays tracks from the 1969-1975 Golden Years of Ethiopian pop from the Buda Musique set. Noted for its similarities to American rock and soul, Golden Years pop is easy on Western ears. Pitchfork rated the Hypnotic Grooves release a 9.2.


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DJ Rekha is a producer, activist and founder of Basement Bhangra, Bollywood Disco, and Mutiny club nights. She was named one of the most influential South Asians in the United States by Newsweek magazine.


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This eclectic mix from the DJ, producer, activist and founder of Basement Bhangra features a South Asian flare with songs from the well known to the more obscure, including M.I.A., Prince, songs from Bollywood, and Bhangra.


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