Episodes

  • Music of the Mountains: Where to be and what to see -- Brandy Ray of Brandywine and the Mighty Fines
    Oct 5 2024

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    Brandy Ray vividly remembers the date on which her current primary project, Brandywine and the Mighty Fines, performed live for the first time: March 6, 2020. This is because, a week later, COVID-19 caused the world to shut down. The band could finally kick themselves into gear once regulations were lifted, starting with a handful of gigs and booking more and more as they cemented the lineup.

    The core lineup of the band consists of Brandy on mandolin and vocals, her husband Joshua Ray on guitar and vocals, and Matthew Schexnyder on guitar and vocals, with all three serving as the primary songwriters as well. Early in the band’s run, Emerson Lamm contributed banjo and Lena Dow contributed bass and vocals. Currently, Maya Fabrikant will often contribute vocals and fiddle, Joe Gibb will often contribute bass, and Neil Mitchell will often contribute drums. However, the Rays and Schexnyder are the consistent core members.

    The name started as an in-joke from Brandy, or “Brandywine” herself. Due to her extroverted personality and excitement for interacting with others, as well as her consistent role in behind-the-scenes management, the band has crafted themselves around her being a central role. She jokingly called the other members the “Mighty Fines” because they have ultimately had longer experiences performing music. Gibb studied bass, and Joshua and Schexnyder have played guitar for most of their lives.

    However, Brandy had only started playing the mandolin a year before the band formed, having dabbled in music only occasionally throughout her life before then. Joshua knew Brandy loved to sing, so he bought her a mandolin and encouraged her to explore a new avenue of her musicality. She hasn’t looked back since.

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    42 mins
  • Then and Now Episode 7: Mollie O'Brien and Rich Moore
    Oct 3 2024

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    Mollie O’Brien and Rich Moore first met in 1981 and had both been in several bands in the bar scene before then. They had sometimes performed together but hadn’t fully leaned into being a duo. After getting married and having children, they realized it was much harder to perform in the bar scene than it was before. They decided to lean more into performances as a duo in 2006, when their daughters had graduated high school. They primarily perform American Roots music.

    O’Brien grew up in Wheeling, West Virginia, where she frequently attended local performances of famous artists. At a young age, she learned to play piano and sing along with it. In high school, she and her brother Tim performed various songs (especially from Peter, Paul, and Mary) at churches and coffeehouses.

    Meanwhile, Moore grew up in Philadelphia, where, at the age of 12, he saw The Beatles performing on the Ed Sullivan Show and became completely absorbed in the idea of music. His mother had already been a pianist and his dad a classical choral singer, and that Christmas, he got his first guitar and (coincidentally) started learning songs from Peter, Paul, and Mary.

    The two love being able to share music with an audience, and they love being able to perform music together in the studio. O’Brien loves the process of getting the song just right in the studio, and Moore loves the technical aspects of recording in the studio. The two have various solo and duo albums, including their duo albums 900 Baseline and Saints and Sinners, and even though they sometimes have a hard time getting categorized, they are always passionate about the music they create.

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    31 mins
  • Local Campaign Spotlight: Alisa Witt of Gilpin County Public Health for Forward Together
    Oct 1 2024

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    As we transition into October, it's time to give a spotlight to an advertising campaign we've been promoting in the podcast for the last couple of months, so here to talk about the Forward Together Campaign is Alisa Witt from Gilpin County Public Health!

    Thank you for listening to The Mountain-Ear podcast featuring the news and culture from peak to peak.

    If you would like to be featured in the podcast, contact the host at media@themountainear.com!

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    23 mins
  • Music of the Mountains: Where to be and what to see -- Nat Lefkoff
    Sep 28 2024

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    Nat Lefkoff has been playing music and writing songs since he was around the age of nine – songs which he now considers terrible. For him, music started as a hobby and developed into a passion, and he performed in several bands throughout junior high and high school. He found himself getting more comfortable performing in local bars and other venues, and eventually, he moved to Washington to attend college, where he became involved in more projects.

    Around his college years, he started DIY touring of his own projects, and in 2017, he released his debut self-titled album. Just before the COVID pandemic hit, he was gearing up to play music full-time after his career as a teacher in the Santa Cruz area. Once the pandemic came, he had to put his full-time music career on hold for a while, eventually getting a job in disaster relief at quarantine centers and homeless shelters.

    After some time, he worried he was compromising his dreams for a stable life. However, one day a song came to him in a dream. He recorded the chorus to this song, which ultimately developed into the title track of his sophomore album, Heavy Lifting, and took this as a sign to finally play music full-time.

    Over the last three years, he has found an immense amount of support among the musicians he has befriended and performed with, and he still plans on focusing on music full-time for the rest of his life. He cites Neil Young as an early influence, remembering that his dad would play Young’s songs in the car and pause to emphasize great lyrics.

    Thank you for listening to The Mountain-Ear podcast featuring the news and culture from peak to peak.

    If you would like to be featured in the podcast, contact the host at media@themountainear.com!

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    22 mins
  • Local Events Spotlight: Arts at the Center Opening with Photographer Marc McClish and Painter/Curator Annie Thayer
    Sep 26 2024

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    For this week's Wednesday episode of The Mountain-Ear Podcast, we hear from artist Marc McClish (a photographer of what he calls "chromascapes") and curator Annie Thayer (who has also focused on painting, particularly landscapes, since 2001) to hear about the upcoming opening ceremony for the Arts at the center event at the Nederland Community Center!

    *Note: The musician playing at this event is John Meerts, not John Meets.

    Thank you for listening to The Mountain-Ear podcast featuring the news and culture from peak to peak.

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    41 mins
  • Music of the Mountains: Where to be and what to see -- Randy McIntosh and Blessing Chimanga of Kutandara
    Sep 25 2024

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    In 1999, Amy and Randy McIntosh co-founded an organization of their own to continue teaching music from the African diaspora. They called it Kutandara, a Zimbabwe term meaning “to come together and have fun.” The two have now fully cemented their roles in the organization – Amy as the executive director, Randy as the artistic director, and both as instructors. After Randy had been denied opportunities to teach African music, he could now teach through his own program, which started in Lafayette. After moving locations over the next few years as nearby tenants became tired of the constant music, Kutandara finally settled in their current Boulder location.

    Kutandara has taught multiple groups over the last 25 years. These groups include Kunaka (meaning “really good”), Takapenga (meaning “we are awesome”), and Shamwari (a Shona term for greeting a friend). Currently, it teaches three primary groups. The adult group, Kutandara, includes three different bands: Kutandara Kombi, or the “little” band, with three marimbas, electric mbira, drum set, hosho, guitar, and vocals; Kutandara Marimba, in which seven musicians play bass, baritone, tenor, alto, and soprano marimbas; and Kutandara Marimba Experience, which includes the 7-piece marimba orchestra, drum set, electric mbira, guitar, electric bass, and percussion. Then, there’s the senior teen band Tanaka, loosely meaning “we have arrived.” Finally, there’s the junior teen band Mhodzi, which means “seeds,” a shorthand method of conveying the idea of those members being the seeds of tomorrow.

    Through these groups, Kutandara is dedicated to teaching people of all ages how to play music from the African diaspora, properly play a show, stay engaged the entire time, set up for a show, and get comfortable performing in front of an audience. Randy, who always found himself nervous playing piano by himself, loves performing with these groups and seeing them bring the pieces to life every show.

    While the program still uses the name Kutandara, it was incorporated as a non-profit in 2017. At that point, Amy and Randy dissolved Kutandara Center as a legal entity and reformed it as the 501(c)(3) entity Moon and Stars Foundation, named after one of Randy’s most popular original compositions.

    Over the years, Kutandara students have traveled to various places focused on African music, transitioning from visiting the Zimbabwe Music Festival (which Kutandara produced in Boulder in 2009) to Zimbabwe itself. The organization has been able to directly connect more with Zimbabwe, including meeting a local musician, Blessing “Coach Bled” Chimanga, on a 2017 trip to the country. After being asked to produce the annual Kutandara fundraiser for three separate years, Blessing became the first visiting artist of the organization.

    Thank you for listening to The Mountain-Ear podcast featuring the news and culture from peak to peak.

    If you would like to be featured in the podcast, contact the host at media@themountainear.com!

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • Mountain Tales with Maryann Rosen: The History of Voting Rights and the Importance of Casting your Ballot
    Sep 24 2024

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    On this week's Monday edition of The Mountain-Ear Podcast, we hear from Maryann Rosen about why it's important historically and currently to cast your ballot, especially with the national elections coming up in just over a month!

    Thank you for listening to The Mountain-Ear podcast featuring the news and culture from peak to peak.

    If you would like to be featured in the podcast, contact the host at media@themountainear.com!

    SUBSCRIBE ONLINE and use the COUPON CODE PODCAST FOR A 10% Discount for ALL NEW SUBSCRIBERS https://www.themtnear.com/subscribe/

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    29 mins
  • Local Events Spotlight: Art Reception with Serene Karplus and Boulder Philharmonic Trio with Sophie Maeda at the Nederland Community Library
    Sep 19 2024

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    The Nederland Community Library has been hosting the photographs of Serene Karplus since the beginning of July, but on October 1st, that display will be coming down. To celebrate the closing of the display, Serene will be hosting an artist reception in the Nederland Community Library's brand-new Reading Garden. This will be immediately followed by a concert from a performing trio from the Boulder Philharmonic. Listen to this episode for more details from Serene and from Sophie Maeda, Artistic Coordinator of the Philharmonic and one of the members of the trio!

    Thank you for listening to The Mountain-Ear podcast featuring the news and culture from peak to peak.

    If you would like to be featured in the podcast, contact the host at media@themountainear.com!

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    41 mins