Cultural Manifesto - podcast cover

Cultural Manifesto

WFYI Public Mediawww.wfyi.org
Each week on Cultural Manifesto, Kyle Long reveals stories and sounds from the creative frontlines of the past and present. Through music, archives and artist interviews, discover how creators shape meaning with sound, in Indianapolis and well beyond. Tune in each week to this WFYI Public Media show for discoveries that will delight your ears and expand your understanding of our shared world.
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Episodes

Music producer Oliver Lastname

This week Kyle Long speaks with house music producer Oliver Lastname, also known as Jeremy “Jace” Wallace, a prolific video director in the Indianapolis music scene. Long also talks to the experimental pop artist Percbuddy, a project created by the Indianapolis-born high school student Moses Kaufmann.

Jan 07, 2022

2021 Year in Review

This week Kyle Long listens back at some of his favorite local music, and interviews of 2021, and looks ahead to some of the interviews he'll be featuring in 2022. Enjoy music and words from artists including Emily Wells, Ebony Rhythm Funk Campaign, Skypp, 81355, Pavel and Direct Contact, Public Universal Friend, Hanna Benn, and Marcus Jade.

Dec 30, 2021

Music from Santa Claus

This week we're enjoying music from Santa Claus... Santa Claus, Indiana to be specific. We’ll look back on the work of Ray Scrivener. Ray found success working in the country music industry before moving to Santa Claus, Indiana to build his own music empire. The records Ray issued have become cult classics among fans of psychedelic garage rock, rhythm and blues, and rockabilly music.

Dec 22, 2021

Hoosier Sisters with Transistors

Director Lisa Rovner’s important new documentary “Sisters With Transistors” explores the stories of electronic music’s female pioneers. Indiana has produced many extraordinary women who’ve made important contributions to electronic music. This week, enjoy music and words from artists including Priscilla Mclean, Suzanne Ciani, Hanna Benn, the all-woman synth rock band Software and more.

Dec 16, 2021

Hal McGee’s Underground Noise

This week Kyle Long talks with Hal McGee. During the 1980s, Hal and his former partner Debbie Jaffe recorded and released groundbreaking noise music and industrial music on an underground cassette label called Cause and Effect, operating out of their apartment in downtown Indianapolis. Though the label functioned as a modest, do-it-yourself project, Cause and Effect had a global impact.

Dec 10, 2021

Steve Allee

This week we explore the career of Indianapolis jazz keyboardist, composer, and arranger Steve Allee. Among his many accomplishments, Allee toured with jazz legend Buddy Rich as a teenager, co-founded the Baron Von Ohlen Quintet - a groundbreaking 1970s Indianapolis jazz ensemble, and served as musical director for the Bob and Tom radio show.

Dec 02, 2021

Remembering Slide Hampton

This week on Cultural Manifesto we pay tribute to the legendary Indianapolis composer, arranger, and trombonist Slide Hampton. Slide Hampton passed away earlier this week. He was 89 years old. Slide was one of the most accomplished musicians to emerge from the Indianapolis scene. He was a two time Grammy winner, and a recipient of the National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters award.

Nov 24, 2021

The Life and Music of Caroline Peyton

This week, Kyle Long looks back at the life and music of Caroline Peyton, one of the most powerful voices in the history of Indiana music. She was adept at performing a diverse variety of music, including jazz, folk and psychedelic rock. During her career, Peyton recorded experimental free-form art music and provided vocals for Disney movies including Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, and Pocahontas.

Nov 18, 2021

Terence Blanchard

This week Kyle Long talks with Grammy Award-winning jazz trumpeter and Oscar-nominated film composer Terence Blanchard. Earlier this year, Blanchard made international news when his opera “Fire Shut Up in My Bones” was performed at the Metropolitan Opera in New York. This was the first performance of an opera composed by an African American in the Met’s 138 year history.

Nov 11, 2021

The Return of the Walker Theatre

The Walker Theatre is reopening after a long period of renovation. This week we’ll look at two upcoming events at the Walker. We’ll be speaking with jazz drummer Kenny Phelps, he’s hosting an autobiographical music review titled The Artisan. We’ll also talk with playwright Vernon A. Williams, the author of "Price of Progress: The IUPUI and Indiana Ave Story”.

Nov 04, 2021

Radio Free Naptown (Rebroadcast)

This week we're revisiting a conversation with Don Worsham and Steve Everitt of Radio Free Naptown. From 1968 to 1972 a group of brilliant young Indianapolis pirate radio broadcasters unified their skills and talents to create the “bootleg” radio station WRFN. The “electronics whiz-kids” operating WRFN evaded the FCC for four years - even transmitting from a horse pasture to elude detection.

Oct 27, 2021

Indianapolis Sound Maps

A sound map is a sonic representation of a specific site or location. This week, we'll explore two different projects that have created sound maps of Indianapolis. Eric Salazar joins Kyle Long to discuss Classical Music Indy's CMI City Sounds series. Then, we'll listen to Kyle's 2017 conversation with Michael Kaufmann, the founder of Sound Expeditions, a collection of 30 site-specific pieces.

Oct 21, 2021

Hispanic Heritage Month

Join guest-host Karla Lopez-Owens for a special Hispanic Heritage Month edition of Cultural Manifesto. Enjoy an hour of Hispanic Hoosier music from the past and present including Rick Espinoza, Paula Monsalve, Amanda Perez and more.

Oct 14, 2021

Charlie Ballantine’s Tribute to Thelonious Monk

Kyle Long talks with the Indianapolis jazz guitarist Charlie Ballantine about his new double album titled “Reflections/Introspection: The Music of Thelonious Monk”, featuring Ballantine's arrangements of compositions by the jazz icon Thelonious Monk.

Oct 07, 2021

Public Universal Friend

Kyle Long talks with Jody Friend of Public Universal Friend about the band's debut album "Perennials." The record served as a coming out for Jody, the group’s vocalist and songwriter, who used the project’s release to publicly acknowledge her identity as a trans woman.

Sep 30, 2021

Lotus Festival 2021

Kyle Long explores this year's edition of the Lotus World Music and Arts Festival in Bloomington, Indiana. Every year, Lotus Festival brings musicians from across the world to the Hoosier state for an exciting weekend of music and culture. Hear from artists performing at this year's festival, including the Bloomington-based singer-songwriter David Dávila González of Matixando.

Sep 23, 2021

Richard “Sleepy” Floyd / Indy Jazz Fest 2021

Naptown drummer Richard ”Sleepy” Floyd is a fixture in the Indy jazz scene, and he’s also one of the curators of the 2021 Indy Jazz Fest. Sleepy joins Kyle Long this week to talk about this year's roster - which features Thundercat, Moonchild, Victor Wooten, Cory Henry, and many others - along with Native Sun’s ”Legalize Being Black," a composition addressing the Black Lives Matter movement.

Sep 16, 2021

Orval “Baggie” Hardimon: Kokomo Legend

Orval “Baggie” Hardimon is a legend of the Kokomo music scene. This week, Kyle Long shares rare records released by Hardimon in the 1940s, as well as an unreleased recording from Hardimon’s Kokomo home in 1961 featuring the iconic jazz organist, Jimmy Smith. This episode also celebrates the 50th anniversary of Marvin Gaye’s “What’s Going On” — an album featuring three songs co-written by Indianapolis-born James Nyx, Jr.

Sep 09, 2021

Daniel Smith and Electric Jesus

This week Kyle Long's guest is veteran indie rock musician Daniel Smith. You may know Smith from his work with the Danielson Famile, or his solo project Brother Daniel. Kyle talks with Smith about the music he composed for the film "Electric Jesus", a coming-of-age comedy about a fictitious Christian hair metal band named 316.

Sep 01, 2021

Bobby Rush: From The Avenue to Beale Street

Enjoy an hour of words and music with the Grammy-winning blues legend Bobby Rush, known as the "King of the Chitlin' Circuit". He and Kyle Long discuss his time performing on Indiana Avenue with Muddy Waters during the early 1950s. Rush has a new book out titled "I Ain't Studdin' Ya: My American Blues Story."

Aug 25, 2021

Rich Hyne’s Old Naptown Blues

Kyle Long talks with Indianapolis folk musician Rich Hynes. He has a new album out titled “Old Naptown Blues", a collection of eight songs that pay tribute to legendary Indianapolis musicians like Scrapper Blackwell and Yank Rachell, and historic Indianapolis neighborhoods like Stringtown, Brightwood, Mars Hill, and Fountain Square.

Aug 19, 2021

Pioneers of Hoosier Latin Music

Kyle Long continues his ongoing look at the history of Latinx music in Indiana with an hour of recordings from the pioneers of Hoosier Latin music. Explore rare and unreleased tracks from artists including Johnny Ramos and Los Latinos, Bob Najera, Rick Espinoza, and others.

Aug 12, 2021

Jordan Munson

Kyle Long discusses “Making a Killing Year” with its creator, Indianapolis-based composer, performer and multimedia artist Jordan Munson. Rebel Music returns with Karla Lopez, as she interviews Elysia Lucida Smith, the owner of Irvington Vinyl and Books about the relationship between music and activism. This episode also features a tribute to Eugene “Teddy” Vincent, the Indianapolis-based entrepreneur and musician who died tragically last weekend at the age of 33.

Aug 05, 2021

The Forgotten Jazz Fest

Many years ago, Kyle Long purchased a mysterious hand-labeled reel-to-reel tape at an Indianapolis garage sale. This tape contained the only known recordings of the 1961 Indiana Jazz Festival, in Evansville, Indiana. The event featured performances from Duke Ellington, Dave Brubeck, The Staple Singers, and many others. This week, the music will be heard publicly for the first time in 60 years.

Jul 29, 2021

The Musical Legacy of Mary Byrne

Kyle Long talks with activist Mary Byrne. You may have heard of her work advocating for the LGBTQ+ community in Indiana, but Byrne also had a significant role in Hoosier music history. From 1978 to 1984, Byrne was the owner of Labyris, a feminist nightclub and music venue that hosted some of the biggest names in women’s music. She also served as the director of the National Women’s Music Festival.

Jul 22, 2021

The Music of J. Russel Robinson

Explore the music of the Hoosier songwriter J. Russel Robinson, an important figure in early jazz and blues music. Robinson was born in Indianapolis, and began composing hit songs while he was still a student at Shortridge High School. Some of the biggest stars in American music recorded Robinson’s songs, including Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Bessie Smith, Judy Garland, Ray Charles, and more.

Jul 14, 2021

Pavel and Direct Contact / Sonny Singh

Pavel Polanco-Safadit and Leah Crane of the Indianapolis-based Latin jazz band Pavel and Direct Contact discuss their new album “Dia Bonito." Then, Brooklyn-based activist and musician Sonny Singh shares the latest single from his solo project, as well as some tracks that have influenced his work in music.

Jul 07, 2021

Idris Busari

Meet Idris Busari, a Nigerian-born musician living in Goshen, Indiana who creates music under the name Omogo Reloaded. Kyle Long samples some of his music and talks with Idris about his work with Radio Horizonte, a bilingual radio station based in northern Indiana. Plus, Wendy Catalán Ruano shares her work as an immigrant rights activist with the Indiana Undocumented Youth Alliance and Cosecha.

Jun 30, 2021

Lē Weaver - Part Two

Part two of our series exploring the history of Software, an all-female Indianapolis synth-rock band Software, featuring the band's co-founder Lē Weaver. Software was active in Central Indiana from 1983 to 1986, and recorded two full length cassettes. The music of Software incorporated influences from electronic music, folk, progressive rock, and punk.

Jun 24, 2021

Lē Weaver - Part One

Kyle Long presents part one of a two-part series with Lē Weaver, a founding member of the all-female Indianapolis synth-rock band Software. Software was active in Central Indiana from 1983 to 1986, and recorded two full length cassettes. The music of Software incorporated influences from electronic music, folk, progressive rock, and punk.

Jun 17, 2021
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