Is song connected to even deeper roots than time and place? Can music and song can bring us closer to the non-human world? Does musical meaning arise from the experience of inhabiting the world and is it shared freely between humans and birds and trees and ‘all our relations’?
We explore all this and much more with the wonderful Sam Lee. A highly inventive and original singer, folk song interpreter, passionate conservationist, song collector and successful creator of live events. Alongside his organisation, The Nest Collective, Sam has shaken up the music scene breaking boundaries between folk and contemporary music and the assumed places and ways folksong is appreciated.
And he is the author of the acclaimed ‘The Nightingale’, a book about a bird whose presence and reassurance of nature represents an English totemism, a symbol of a visceral relationship with the natural world, myth and identity. Mixing grief, hope and vision for the future, we explore how Nature projects on to us, not us on to Nature.
Sam Lee website
The Nightingale book
Old Wow album
Some of the ideas and references we make in this podcast can be found here:
Jeannie Robertson - MacCrimmons Lament
Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan
Bernard Butler
Buzzard
Totem
Anthropomorphism
Heron
Kestrel
Ornithology
Totem Pole
Ray Mears
Shamanism
Music Declares Emergency
Wembley Stadium
Hans Christian Andersen
J M W Turner
Hawthorn
Supermoon
Ecology
Solastalgia
Caroline Lucas MP
Benedict MacDonald - Rebirding
Monsanto
Siren Calling
Fridays for Future
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