old.wrek.org August, 2023 | WREK Atlanta, 91.1 FM - Part 2

Archive for August, 2023

Gold Soundz 8.28.23: Coming of Age!

This weeks Gold Soundz theme was songs that would be in a coming of age movie! Some examples of our favorites are Lady Bird, Edge of Seventeen, Perks of Being a Wallflower, and Call Me By Your Name! So take a deep breath, think about every heartbreak, failed prom, summer before senior year, angsty 17 year old out there before listening to this playlist….

Words // F.R. David
Science Beat // Have A Nice Life
Guitar Romantic Search Adventure // Wallows

Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains) // Arcade Fire
Scott Street // Phoebe Bridgers 
Seventeen // Sharon Van Etten

Change // Alex G
Kids // Current Joys 
Coming of Age // Julia Jacklin 

Hands Down // The Greeting Committee 
Class of 2013 // Mitski
Young // Vacations
Heroes // David Bowie (AKA the Tunnel Song) 

Sub Saharan Vibes — August 28, 2023

  1. Kandiafa — Bana Magny
  2. Amadou & Miriam — La Réalité
  3. Mama Sissoko — Soleil de minuit
  4. Eppi Fanio — Ikoko
  5. Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni Ba f/ Amy Sacko, Afel Bocoum & Ahmed ag Kaedi- DĂ©sert Nianafing
  6. Lijadu Sisters — Bobby
  7. Thomas Mapfumo & The Blacks Unlimited — Muchoni (The Self-Exile)
  8. Miriam Makeba — Laktushona Ilanga
  9. Shina Williams & His African Percussionists — Gboro Mi Ro
  10. Group Doueh — Kar Labyad Doueh
  11. Monique Seka — Okaman

Crush #217 – Grocery Store Sunset

Annie Zhang on Twitter: "just another tweet abt how incredible the sunsets  from your hometown grocery store parking lot are 🥺  https://t.co/rgO0ojVnbX" / Twitter

This week we began at our new time (6pm on mondays!) with a moody/melancholy playlist with the vibe of grocery store sunsets… capturing that melancholy feeling of leaving the grocery store during beautiful sunset.

 

Spotify link here

 

Playlist for tonite

kisses – Slowdive

Happen – Drop Nineteens

Don’t Fade Away – Beach Fossils

Inference (I) – Fog Lake

Lush – Chlorine

Gold Ribbon – Infinity Cutter

No Heaven – Big Blue World

How to Make a Person Happy – it was warmer then

Both Hands On the Wheel – Amateur Takes Control

Summer’s Gone – The Stargazer Lilies

My Angel Lonely – Wild Nothing

Alone in the Universe – The Daysleepers

Rainbow spell – TRPP

Last Night’s Haze – Star Horse

focus the present – A Shoreline Dream 

I'm not the only one to notice this right? : r/memes

continental drift 8/28/23- turkey

For today’s episode, we’re looking at Turkey! You can find the playlist here and listen back to the episode here.

The Republic of Turkey is a country that lies mostly in West Asia, but which peeks just a tad into Southeast Europe. It borders the Black, Mediterranean, and Aegean Seas, as well as the countries of Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Greece, and Bulgaria.  With a bit over 85 million people, it is the 17th-largest country by population. The official and predominantly-spoken language of Turkey is Turkish, but a multitude of other languages are spoken throughout the country such as Kurdish, Arabic, and Zazaki.

Anatolia is the name of the geographic region that is now Turkey. For a large swath of time starting in the 13th century, Anatolia would be under the control of the Ottoman Empire, and as such, music of the region would be heavily influenced by the Ottomans. There’s an incredibly rich tradition of Ottoman classical music originally meant to be performed in Ottoman palaces. Turkish music theory itself is a vast and expansive subject, so we won’t get super deep into it in the episode, but one thing worth noting is that it has roots in both Persian and Greek musical styles. This is important because as Persian classical music started to fall by the wayside, the music of the Ottoman Empire would begin to synthesize Persian and Byzantine music styles into a unique Ottoman identity.

Folk & Classical Music Segment

Kemençe improvisation in Makam Segah // Sufi Music Ensemble

Tanbur impovization in Makam HĂĽzzam // Sufi Music Ensemble

Ud improvisation in Makam Hicaz // Sufi Music Ensemble

Üsküdar’a gider iken // Safiye Ayla

Moving on from folk music, the military music of the Ottoman Empire was particularly of note. Ottoman military bands, sometimes called mehteran, are the oldest recorded military bands, to the extent that later instances of military marching bands, even to this day, are derived from the Ottoman Empire. Beyond simply copying the formation of military bands themselves, though, the Western world also found something very appealing about the mehteran sound and composers like Mozart and Beethoven ended up writing music inspired by it.

Mehteran + Imitation of Mehteran Segment

Yelkenler Biçilecek // Mehter

TĂĽrkler Geliyor // Mehter

Rondo Alla Turca // Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

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Modern-day mehteran

In spite of this sort of passing of Ottoman music traditions into Europe, cultural exchange is often a two-way street, and while Ottoman music styles made their way into the works of Western European composers, the landscape of Ottoman, and eventually Turkish Republican, music would shift to become much closer to Western European music styles. As far back as the early 19th century, Turkish musicians would receive instruction in both Ottoman and Western musical traditions, and when the Ottoman Empire finally fell after the end of World War 1, the new Republic of Turkey underwent a large-scale cultural revolution intended to align it with Western culture.

The first president of Turkey, Ataturk, in order to sort of cultivate a national identity, made efforts to ban Ottoman-style music from being broadcast over radio or published and taught to musicians in a formal context. This would essentially force Western musical tradition to become the predominant musical tradition in Turkey, but in the meantime, for a number of reasons including geographical proximity to Arabic-speaking countries and Arabic-speaking immigrants into Turkey, the Turkish music scene in the 1960s would shift to favor the musical style known as Arabesque.

Arabesque Segment

Geceler // BĂĽlent Ersoy

Acıların Kadını // Bergen

Also in the 1960s, rock music made its way from the US and UK to Turkey, and as is prone to occur, cultural syncretism between Turkish folk music and rock led to the birth of Anatolian rock.

Anatolian Rock Segment

Silinmeyen Hatıralar // Erkin Koray
Kızılcıklar // Barış Manço & Kaygısızlar
Kalk Gidelim // Altin GĂĽn

Erkin Koray

Turkish Pop To Close the Episode
Kaçın Kurası // Sezen Aksu
Şımarık // Tarkan

Playlist for Lost in the Stacks, Aug 25, 2023 (“Anyone? Anyone?”), episode 571

Hear the show at http://traffic.libsyn.com/lostinthestacks/LITS_Episode_571.mp3

“Getting Better” by the Beatles

File this set under BF632 .O28
“You’ll Never Be As Good As That” by Butterglory
“I’m in Comfort” by Happy Trendy

File this set under LB2331 .B34
“College” by Treasure Island
“Charlie Brown” by the Coasters
“Go to Class” by the Debbie Downers

File this set under Z711.2 .L43
“In With the New” by Emily Elbert
“Out With the Old” by Schnauser

“Blue Yodel No. 8, Mule Skinner Blues” by Jimmie Rodgers