Top shelf música popular brasileira from Uli Costa e Sandália de Prata; a tribute to Ángel Pedraza of Grupo Kual? who passed away two weeks ago; new technocumbia from Corpus Christi's El Dusty; the forthcoming single by Rolando Bruno y el Grupo Arévalo from Buenos Aires; Anatolian rock hot off the presses by Şatellites and Derya Yıldırım & Grup Şimşek; the brand new single from Nusantara Beat; Allata Broulaye's Wassoulou sound; Red Baraat mashes up qawwali with Hava Nagila
Best friends become enemies. Enemies are friends. Business is great. The market tanks. Winter yesterday, summer today, new rules tomorrow. Welcome to whiplash, the time of self-inflicted wounds. What to do? We talk with Dana R. Fisher, expert in social action and author of "Saving Ourselves". Then senior Australian scientist David Karoly with the frank view from Down-Under.
This episode is "Defending the Bolivarian Revolution: Delegates Report Back from Venezuela", a webinar sponsored by the International Manifesto Group.
It features delegates to the recent inauguration of Nicols Maduro, who will discuss the situation in Venezuela, the US's attempts at regime change, and the importance of defending the Bolivarian Revolution.
International Manifesto Group: https://internationalmanifesto.org
YouTube Video: https://www.youtube.com/live/V4vk5rnW3uw?si=Qt9imvbdttseQMok
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 week, we feature music from these artists - Marvin & Vernell Morrow, The Churchmen, The Marksmen Quartet, Tim Lineberry and Friends, Eli Nelson & King's Highway and more.
This program is uploaded to SoundCloud, RSS.com, radio4all, Podbean and iTunes to mention a few.
Is this week's show different from previous weeks? Not really. It's the same mix of blues, country, rock & roll, gospel, jazz and everything else but it is all new tunes, mixed together in a unique blend. There's a 1950s integrated rockabilly band, an R&B pioneer who died just as the sound was taking off, some fine gospel quartet harmony and some clever songwriting in the classic honky-tonk style from Big Fancy, AKA Blake Bamford.
Mar 10 "Empowering Native Enterprise: Chris James on NCAIED and RES 2025"
Today, we’re excited to welcome Chris James, President and CEO of the National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development. Chris has played a key role in boosting economic opportunities for Native communities. He’s here to discuss the upcoming Reservation Economic Summit (RES) 2025, taking place on March 10th at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. RES is the top event for Indigenous businesses, offering valuable resources and networking. Tune in for a conversation on the future of Native enterprise and empowerment! Listen to our interview on Spotify HERE
ABOUT CHRIS JAMES
Chris James is President and CEO of the country’s foremost and oldest Native American, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian business and economic development-focused organization, The National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development. Since 1969, The National Center has served as an important connector between corporate America and Native-owned businesses seeking to enter their supply chains and provides invaluable training and educational resources for businesses and entrepreneurs. Since Chris joined the organization in 2017, The National Center has more than doubled its annual revenue, expanded its national footprint and programming, and boosted its staff.
In addition to growing the annual Reservation Economic Summit (RES), Chris guided the development of the Native Edge Institute series, one-day training sessions designed to give both established and emerging entrepreneurs the tools they need to take their next step. In addition, The National Center has an increased focus on international trade, including the formation of the Arizona MBDA Export Center. The National Center has also created public-facing platforms in NC Magazine and the Native Edge podcast.
As a former senior official in Department of Treasury and Small Business Administration for the entirety the Obama administration, Chris has unique expertise in government contracting, supply chains, underserved markets, community development financial institutions and access to capital, and issues affecting small business issues.
Chris serves on numerous boards and leadership committees, including with the SBA, Federal Communications Commission, United States Trade Representative, Export-Import Bank of the United States, World Trade Organization, the Center for Indian Country Development at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Junior Achievement USA, and First Peoples Worldwide. He is a frequently requested speaker, panelist, moderator, and guest for a wide variety of conferences, events, and organizations. He has testified on Native American and Alaska Native policy before Congress.
James has first-hand knowledge and experience in Native-owned enterprises; his family owned several businesses on the Qualla Boundary in western North Carolina – the reservation for the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. His first job after college was with the tribe’s Community Development Financial Institution, the Sequoyah Fund.
"Host Sofia Rose Waman visited the Community Church of Boston to bring us the insightful discussion between Dr. Thair Ahmad and Dr. Brian Wispelway. Together, they explored the realities unfolding in Gaza and the West Bank."
Sonic Café, from New Zealand that’s Gin Wigmore from 2010, so hey welcome to the café, I’m Scott Clark and this is episode 425. This time the Sonic Café brings you the comedy of Ryan Hamilton in a thing we’re calling bicycling with a death wish! So there’s that. Plus later on physicist Brian Cox suggests that we might just be alone in the universe. So listen for that. Our eclectic music mix is really fun. Pulled from the last 52 years we’ll spin Garage Band rock from the Mockers, also music from Foster the People, St. Vincent, the Vamps, and a Progressive Rock tune from 1974. Listen for German band Triumvirat, with their hit Lucky Girl, and ahh the list goes on. Then near the bottom of the hour we’ll take the Sonic Café time machine back to 1967. Listen for the amazing Etta James with an R&B classic. All that plus a word from our latest sponsor Ed’s Shoplift Emporium. At Ed’s they encourage you to shop lift anything you want. So drop by Ed’s today, where everything is ahh a real steal. All that and more as the Sonic Café goes bicycling with a Death wish, from the 2022 Dropout Boogie album, these are the Black Keys, and we’re the Sonic Café.
This episode highlights the news, interviews and reports from our podcast and livestream broadcasts from March 3rd and 6th, 2025.
On this episode, we speak with Sarah Leah Whitson from the non-profit group DAWN. Their 172-page submission to the International Criminal Court urges the investigation and prosecution U.S. officials for aiding and abetting Israeli war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide in Gaza. Columbia students join us to talk about the latest NYPD crackdown on Palestine protests. We speak with emergency room physician Dr. Mimi Syed about how Israel’s genocide is a war on Palestinian children and the healthcare system. And contributing editor Jon Elmer details Israeli ceasefire violations in his resistance report.
The week before St. Patrick's and before we get into the sing-along pub classics, we present a program showcasing the modern diversity in Celtic fare. Join us for an Eccodek remix of the McDades, Tau And The Drones Of Praise, fresh La Bottine Souriante and new Toxic Frogs. You got yer Celt In A Twist with Patricia Fraser.
Join us for rockin' Moroccans (new Bab L'Bluz and Sami Galibi), tropical hot sauce from Montreal (MTL Sauce Picante), hypnotic Portuguese from Sus, Nigerian slow cook from Dele Sosimi and The Estuary while Skeewiff re-invent Misrilou, the tale of love between a Greek Christian and an Egyptian Muslim girl. Get your global groove on with World Beat Canada Radio!
Static-free, hassle-free, commercial-free and best of all, tariff-free. Join Patricia Fraser for the freedom of music from the Celtic world, featuring old favorites in contemporary arrangements and creative new expressions based on timeless traditions. You got yer Celt In A Twist, the best mix for 25 years.
The future is global. Only isolationists like tRump would disagree. World Beat Canada is an open door to what the future of music sounds like. Join us for new tracks by Agatha Catel, Miramar, La Pandemic & Kwashibu Area Band PLUS local debuts from Locarno and the return of the Force Majeure, Five Alarm Funk!
Rosie Stephenson-Goodknight has been a Wikipedia editor since 2007 and an administrator since 2009. She has 100,000+ edits to her credit and has created more than 4,000 new articles. In 2015, she co-founded a volunteer project called Women in Red, to address gender bias in Wikipedia content. In 2021, she was elected to the Board of Trustees of the Wikimedia Foundation (wikimediafoundation.org)
WINGS: Women's International News Gathering Service
A brand new program featuring all Bluegrass Gospel music with Host Danny Hensley. Roots of My Heritage celebrates the music I grew up with and still enjoy to this day. A one hour program that is broadcast live and recorded for distribution for radio stations across the globe through iTunes, RSS.com, Radio4all, Podbean and of course SoundCloud.
This episode features music from Eli Nelson & Kings Highway, The Marksmen Quartet, Travis Alltop, Middle Cross, Carl Towns and more.
Broadcast locally in Powell, Tennessee on 91.7 FM Community Radio and streaming world wide on www.sbbradio.org