We'll celebrate the omnipresence of love with Sly & the Family Stone and Pharoah Sanders, search for The Dolphins with Richie Havens, and go Walking in Space with the original Japanese cast of Hair.
We'll celebrate the omnipresence of love with Sly & the Family Stone and Pharoah Sanders, search for The Dolphins with Richie Havens, and go Walking in Space with the original Japanese cast of Hair.
The Appalachian Sunday Morning is a two hour all Gospel Music Radio program with radio station & program host Danny Hensley. The program is recorded live each Sunday morning while being broadcast on 91.7 FM Community radio and streamed world wide on www.sbbradio.org.
This program is uploaded to SoundCloud, RSS.com, radio4all, Podbean and iTunes to mention a few.
This week's show features an American jazz singer from Glasgow, the original version of 16 Tons, Dean Martin re-imagining a popular Mexican melody, a rockabilly wild man who became an Arizona State Representative and a whole lot of other favourites.
Indigenous in Music with Larry K - Gary Small in our Spotlight Interview (Blues, Reggae)
Welcome to Indigenous in Music with Larry K, Today we welcome Gary Small, award-winning guitarist, songwriter, and proud member of the Northern Cheyenne Nation. With a career spanning decades, Gary’s music blends blues, reggae and rock like no other. He’s here to talk about his brand-new EP Guitar Man, and his powerful new single Silent No More, created with Patty Davis to honor Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women. Read all about Gary at our place at www.indigenousinmusicandarts.org/past-shows/gary-small
Enjoy music from Gary Small & the Coyote Bros, Billy Joe Green, Bluedog, Thea May, MATCITIM, QVLN, Morgan Toney, Patty Davis, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Aysanabee, Susan Aglukark, Nige B, Coletta, Rezcoast Grizz, Quantum Tangle, Indian City Fiebre Amarilla, Flimingo Star, Jota Quest, Rellik, Midnight Shine, Tracy Bone, Leela Gilday, Paula Lima, Julian Taylor, Trent Agecoutay,
William Prince and much more.
Visit us on our home page to learn about us and our programs at www.indigenousinmusicandarts.org, check into our Two Buffalo Studios and our SAY Magazine Library to find out all about our Artists and Entrepreneurs.
Indigenous in Music with Larry K - Gary Small in our Spotlight Interview (Blues, Reggae)
Welcome to Indigenous in Music with Larry K, Today we welcome Gary Small, award-winning guitarist, songwriter, and proud member of the Northern Cheyenne Nation. With a career spanning decades, Gary’s music blends blues, reggae and rock like no other. He’s here to talk about his brand-new EP Guitar Man, and his powerful new single Silent No More, created with Patty Davis to honor Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women. Read all about Gary at our place at www.indigenousinmusicandarts.org/past-shows/gary-small
Enjoy music from Gary Small & the Coyote Bros, Billy Joe Green, Bluedog, Thea May, MATCITIM, QVLN, Morgan Toney, Patty Davis, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Aysanabee, Susan Aglukark, Nige B, Coletta, Rezcoast Grizz, Quantum Tangle, Indian City Fiebre Amarilla, Flimingo Star, Jota Quest, Rellik, Midnight Shine, Tracy Bone, Leela Gilday, Paula Lima, Julian Taylor, Trent Agecoutay,
William Prince and much more.
Visit us on our home page to learn about us and our programs at www.indigenousinmusicandarts.org, check into our Two Buffalo Studios and our SAY Magazine Library to find out all about our Artists and Entrepreneurs.
Apartheid Israel overextended itself with its brutal aggression against Iran and was forced to back down after massive retaliation. While it continues with the brutal genocide in Gaza, the Apartheid state is militarily exhausting itself and its American backers at the same time.
Cold facts about Hargrove, the labour "leader" who took CAW-Unifor out of the NDP, supported Liberals, Israel, and promoted raids on CLC member unions.
1. The Bottom Line - MF Grimm & Krohme
2. Perfect Match - Tom Caruana ft. Large Professor, Tiye Phoenix and Nick Maxwell
3. Keep Pushin' - Davu Flint
4. Honor Among Bandits, No More Bryson - Kaydron
5. Kick The Ballistics - Godfather Don & Jazz Spastiks
6. Caffeine - Boho Fau & Elevated Soul
7. Comfy - Benny Zenn & Sez
8. Under The Sun - Remulak
9. Life - Kice Of Course & J. Scott da illesT
10. Wherever You Are - URBS & Cutex ft. T.R.A.C.
11. Shine On (original and remix) - Solar C & Reazhun
12. The Machine - Tall Black Guy & 5 Jacksons
13. Night Town - KLIM & Keyness
14. 2 Wheel Gliding - Telemachus
15. Crushed Grapes - Via Linez & Saipher Soze
16. 2nd Call - C-Red & Agent M ft. Masta Ace
17. Summer Rain - Finn Kinnara
18. Listening - J-Live ft. Kola Rock
19. Fool Me Twice - Elaquent ft. Joe Bae
20. Sunniest of Days - Kimmortal ft. Shad and Franky
21. Art Official Intelligence - Spy MC ft. Ruste Juxx
22. Nothing To See Here - Evidence
23. At Peace - Apollo Brown
The power of people to break the siege on Gaza is undeniable, but it faces immense obstacles. From the Freedom Flotilla Coalition to global marches and solidarity campaigns, civilians around the world have risked their safety to challenge Israel’s blockade and deliver aid directly to Gaza. Imagine if every country sent a relief boat—hundreds of vessels carrying food, medicine, and hope. The sheer scale could overwhelm Israeli enforcement and force the world to confront the injustice. Yet history shows that Israel has consistently intercepted these missions, often with military force, as seen in the deadly 2010 raid on the Mavi Marmara, the 2025 seizure of the Madleen, and the drone attack on the Conscience ship near Malta. These actions, often in international waters, violate international law but continue with impunity, backed by powerful allies. Still, people have the power to disrupt, expose, and mobilize. Breaking the siege will require not just courage, but coordinated global action—through diplomacy, legal pressure, and sustained public outrage that demands accountability. As Ahmed Alnaouq said in a recent interview: The question is no longer whether people can stop the siege, but whether the world will allow them to succeed.
The political hegemony of Zionist ideology is losing its grip. Stephen Lewis has spoken out, and political action such as weekly vigils are gaining popular support.
This week on the show, hosts Nora Barrows-Friedman and Ali Abunimah speak with author, journalist and director of Just World Educational Helena Cobban. She analyses the U.S./Israeli war on Iran and how the 12-day war impacted Gaza. On the Resistance Report, the Electronic Intifada’s Jon Elmer takes us inside the battle of Khan Younis. He tells us about a Qassam ambush that disabled an Israeli tank, and nearly captured the Commander of the 36th Division, one of 130 qualitative resistance operations in Khan Younis in the month of June alone. And we hear about what it means now that the al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza City has run out of the most elemental tool of medicine, saline.
In the premiere of their new miniseries Trading Unlocked, Kyle and Sean dive deep into the emotional undercurrents of trading, starting with one of the most misunderstood and impactful emotions—fear. Rather than treating fear as a flaw to be eliminated, Sean reframes it as a functional, even necessary ally. Together, they explore how fear shapes our trading behaviors, from risk management to hesitation, and how it can serve as critical data rather than a threat to be suppressed.
Listeners will learn how to build awareness of their fear responses, utilize mindfulness to reframe those reactions, and even personify fear to create a more constructive relationship with it. The duo also shares tools like grounding techniques, self-compassion strategies, and the importance of “adding to the experience” rather than fighting emotions.
Whether you're a seasoned trader or just beginning to navigate the psychological side of markets, this episode offers relatable insights, practical takeaways, and a compelling start to a series that reimagines emotional intelligence as the ultimate trading edge.
Sonic Café, that’s the Brooklyn Charmers with there amazing cover of Steely Dan’s, Kid Charlemage, so hey welcome to the café, I’m your host Scott Clark and this is episode 441. This time the Sonic Café presents a thing we’re calling, covering the oldies. That’s because the most current original artist release in this set is Chris Issak’s 1989 Wicked Games release. We’ll spin London Grammar’s haunting 2016 cover of the song. The oldest original artist release in the set is the Moody Blues 1967 classic Nights in White Satin. We’ll spin the Dickies with there 2018 cover, and boy does it rock. We’ll also bring you another Sonic Café two for two double spin. Near the bottom of the hour listen for Allison Young, and then the Atlanta Rhythm Section, both covering Spooky, the Dusty Springfield classic, all that plus Britney Spears covering Joan Jett’s I Love Rock and Roll, Breathe Carolina covering Michael Jackson’s Billie Jean, and you get the idea. So crank your radio up as the Sonic Café covers the oldies, with ahh a few enlightening, comedic and educational pop culture shorts thrown in as ahh public service, from way out here on the coast of the mighty Pacific, Here’s Blondie’s 2005 cover of T Rex’s 1971 hit Bang the Gong, and as always we’re the Sonic Café.
Thomas Jefferson, the third President of the United States of America, stands as one of the lead political theorists of American history. His ward republican theory required an agrarian population, a government originating in the individual household, and a consistently questioning and rebellious public.My guest in this edition of Radio Curious is Mr. Jefferson, personified by Clay Jenkinson.We discussed what has gone wrong in the US since Mr. Jefferson was President and addressed some of his concepts of what are necessary for a democracy.
The book Thomas Jefferson recommends is “The History of the Peloponnesian War,” by Thuclydides.
The book C. Jenkinson recommends is “In the Absence of the Sacred,” by Jerry Mander.
Originally Broadcast: May 21, 1994
US bombing of Iran is part of its crowbar policy of smashing and breaking of sovereign states (such as Iraq, Syria, & Libya), and will not cease until resistance and international solidarity put a stop to it.