play_arrow

keyboard_arrow_right

skip_previous play_arrow skip_next
00:00 00:00
playlist_play chevron_left
volume_up
chevron_left

Great Lakes

The GREAT LAKES ODYSSEY Radio Hour – Climate Creates Culture

Adrian V 10 March 2024 2081 128 4


Background
share close

The Great Lakes Odyssey Radio Hour is broadcast on NPR (National Public Radio)

s2.e1.GREAT LAKES ODYSSEY Radio HourCLIMATE CREATES CULTURE How we live, where we live, is determined by what the weather patterns are. We examine how climate shapes and defines our culture.

Oxford University professor, international historian, and author Peter Frankopan helps us think through the implications of climate change on the Great Lakes. Andrew McAnsh is a composer, award-winning trumpeter and masters graduate of the Berklee Global Jazz Institute, shares Music of the Great Lakes: A Songbook for the Canadian Indigenous. Music: Akua Tuta, song and lyrics by Claude McKenzie/Erich Michel Poirier/Florent Vollant, as performed with Robbie Robertson & The Red Road Ensemble. Also, Rick Charbonneau and the Red Shadow Singers. And poetry performance by Penn Kemp with Bill Gilliam.

s2.e1. GREAT LAKES ODYSSEY Radio Hour Music & Art Credits

Painting by P.J. Falkner

Music Credits

Title – Big Five Water
Artist – Ray Bonneville

Title – St. Mary’s River Fantasy
Album – Nocturnes
Artist – Rusty McCarthy

Title – Back To The Water
Album – Back To The Water
Artist – Rick Charbonneau

Title – Orchestral Medley
Artist/Composer – Doug Wilde & Manteca

Title – Manteca Medley
Artist/Composer – Manteca

Title – At The End Of The Yard
Album – Secret Places
Artist/Composer – Doug Wilde

Title – Tell Rockefeller
Artist/Composer – Manteca

Title – Busking In Deadwood
Album – Augmented Indifference
Artist/Composer – Manteca

Title – Oh Brother
Album – Thank You For The Ride
Artist/Composer – Andrea Ramolo

Title – Songs Of The Great Lakes
Artist/Composer – Andrew McAnsh

Title – Akua Tuta
Album – Music For The Native Americans
Artist – Kashtin w. Robbie Robertson & The Red Road Ensemble
Composer – Claude McKenzie / Erich Michel Poirier / Florent Vollant

Title – Creator
Album – Ghost Dance Songs
Artist/Composer – Red Shadow Singers

Title – Night Orchestra
Artist – Penn Kemp & Bill Gilliam
Composer – Penn Kemp

This program produced by GLOW Radio Partners in venture with The Borderline Events Co.

Visit: raybonneville.com

Visit: rustyandmaja.com

Visit: facebook.com/rick.charbonneau.90

Visit: manteca-music.com

Visit: dougwilde.com

Visit: andrearamolo.com

Visit: andrewmcansh.wordpress.com

Visit: pennkemp.weebly.com

Great Lakes Odyssey World

Inspired by the 50th anniversary of the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement, the Great Lakes Odyssey World is a multi-national effort to strengthen and explore our relationship with the natural wonders known as the Great Lakes.

In this part of the project, we have created a multi-part audio series looking at the way the Great Lakes shape our lives, our livelihoods, our health and our culture.

50 years ago, folks in the media and elsewhere were ready to declare the Cuyahoga River and Lake Erie “dead.”

The thought so appalled citizens in Canada and the United States, they forced their national governments to act.

Because, of course, the Great Lakes shape the life of both Canada and the United States. And, of course, the Great Lakes are a single system stretching from Duluth to Ottawa and down the St. Lawrence seaway. What happens to any of the Lakes will soon happen to the others.

So, the politicians of 50 years ago negotiated the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement, “for the purpose of restoring, protecting and enhancing the Great Lakes and the Great Lakes basin.”

50 years later, we can see the agreement worked. We see more fish, cleaner water, and less pollution. Unlike the early settlers and colonials, who mostly saw the Lakes as a resource to tap, we now recognize, like the First Nations, the Lakes are part of our identity. They shape our relationships, our songs and celebrations of place, the way we eat, how we play, and what we make, or sell, or harvest.

50 years since the wake-up call of a burning river, Great Lakes Odyssey wants to learn how we live and love, hurt and restore the incredible gift which is the Great Lakes.

We will explore Great Lakes art and artistic expression, and meet the artists, writers, musicians who make it. We will also dip into Great Lakes history and lore – and learn from the people who have been here the longest and know it the best: The People of the Three Fires, the Anishinaabek.

On our Odyssey around the Great Lakes, we will also hear from people working to prevent poisonous algal blooms or stop the spread of invasive species. We will meet visionaries undoing decades of development that hardened shorelines, emptied marshes and wetlands, and destroyed critical spawning grounds. We will talk to people working to ensure all beings have access to pure drinking water.

Because none of us can live without pure drinking water.

In this wondrous place we call the Great Lakes, we know we are blessed by these Sweet Water Seas. We claim them as our H.O.M.E.S. as the emotionally accurate mnemonic says. They are Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, and Superior, and they are our HOMES.

As long as humans have lived in, and of and through the Lakes, people have told stories about them, sung about them, and gloried in this great gift of the long departed Ice Age. Left by glaciers thousands of years ago, they are the World’s storehouse of fresh water. If they are drained… or ruined… or damaged, they can never be replaced.

So, as we travel around the Great Lakes basin, we want to see how we are doing – what we are doing – how we’re feeling and what we’re learning as we try to live as lovers and restorers – and children and family – of the being whom the Anishinaabek call Nayaano-nibiimaang Gichigamiin, the five freshwater seas.

We hope to galvanize, inspire, and motivate you to strengthen, support and steward the Great Lakes to a beautiful and healthy future.

So please join us on this magical, dare we say “magical mystery tour” of the Great Lakes basin and Great Lakes culture.

Rate it
Previous post