Call & Response

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Rating
4.9
from
111 reviews
This podcast has
21 episodes
Language
Publisher
Explicit
Yes
Date created
2021/04/05
Average duration
27 min.
Release period
9 days

Description

Call & Response draws upon the blues tradition of communal music making and listening. Hosted by Nashville-based musician and poet Adia Victoria, each episode is a back and forth between Adia and her guests, between their present work, and the lineage of musical ancestors that came before them, and between Adia and you. 

Podcast episodes

Check latest episodes from Call & Response podcast


Big Freedia: I Pray (And I Push)
2021/10/28
In the final episode of this season, Adia is joined by “Queen of Bounce” Big Freedia. From Beyoncé to Kesha, Freedia’s collaborations proudly reflect her upbringing in New Orleans, and the spirit of the church that resides in her. Adia and Freedia talk about what it means to be insistent on pursuing liberation, the relationship between good food and good music, and the power of community. Thank you for joining us in another season of leaning into the blues. For the playlist of songs curated for this week’s episode visit: https://bit.ly/cr-freedia / Music In This Week's Episode / Roy Ayers Ubiquity, “Everybody Loves The Sunshine” Beyoncé, “Get Me Bodied” The Jacksons, “Blame It On The Boogie” Big Freedia (feat. Jake Shears and Anjelika “Jelly” Joseph), “Not Today” Tank and the Bangas (feat. Big Freedia), “Big” Missy Elliott, “Bomb Intro/Pass That Dutch” Robert Johnson, “Sweet Home Chicago”
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Julien Baker: My Faith (Is The Fabric)
2021/10/21
The music of the South is always drawing upon the church, either relishing in it, or rebelling from it. When Memphis-born artist Julien Baker started reckoning with her faith, “the entire paradigm of my life evaporated.” Since then, Julien has channeled this reckoning into her music, lacing her lyrics with radical honesty and self-reflection. In this episode, Julien and Adia share about how their relationship to God and religion has influenced their music. For the playlist of songs curated for this week’s episode visit: https://bit.ly/cr-julien / Music In This Week's Episode / Robyn, “Between The Lines” Björk, “Big Time Sensuality” St. Vincent, “I Prefer Your Love” Patti Smith Group, “Because The Night” Hank Williams, “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” John Coltrane, “A Love Supreme, Pt. 1 - Acknowledgment” Little Bandit, “Nashville”
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Regina N. Bradley: Pleasure (For Pleasure’s Sake)
2021/10/14
From Bessie Smith to Megan Thee Stallion, Southern Black women have built on a long legacy of giving their bodies a voice through the blues. On this week’s Call & Response, hip-hop scholar Dr. Regina N. Bradley makes it clear that Southern Black music is not frozen in time, but embracing and challenging the issues connecting younger generations. For the playlist of songs curated for this week’s episode visit: https://bit.ly/cr-regina / Music In This Week's Episode / Rapsody, “Nina” Victoria Monét, “Ass Like That” Janet Jackson, “The Pleasure Principle” Angel Olsen, “Lark Song” The Chicks, “Gaslighter” Tweet feat. Missy Elliott, “Oops (Oh My)” Megan Thee Stallion, “Body” Nina Simone, “Feeling Good”
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Tressie McMillan Cottom: Can’t Have The Beat (Without The Burden)
2021/10/07
Tressie McMillan Cottom says the blues go beyond the beat and key. It’s a feeling born and inherited from the experience of Southern Black women. As Call & Response dives deeper into the blues, the sociologist and 2020 MacArthur fellow says she can hear the historical echoes of pain and urgency throughout Southern music -- and wants listeners to understand why they do too. For the playlist of songs curated for this week’s episode visit: https://bit.ly/cr-tressie / Music In This Week's Episode / The Shirelles, “Mama Said” Junior, “Mama Used To Say” 2Pac, “Dear Mama” Gladys Knight and the Pips, “I’ve Got To Use My Imagination” Dolly Parton, “Coat of Many Colors” Odetta, “Mother’s Blues (Little Children Blues)” Nina Simone, “Blues for Mama”
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Tré Burt: My Culture (My Identity)
2021/09/30
What happens when one artist’s work is read through the lens of another? Tré Burt’s rambling bluesman sound means his music is constantly compared to that of Bob Dylan, but as a Black man living in 2021, his writing draws from very different perspectives. In this interview, Tré and Adia distinguish what it means to write from experience versus observation, share how working blue-collar jobs has fed their artistic careers, and remember the late, great John Prine. Hear a playlist of songs curated for this week’s episode at https://bit.ly/cr-tre. / Music In This Week's Episode / Tré Burt, “I Cannot Care” Waxahatchee, “Light Of A Clear Blue Morning” Lil Nas X, “Sun Goes Down” Adia Victoria, “Carolina Bound” Buster Benton, “Money Is The Name Of The Game” Bill Withers, “Lonely Town, Lonely Street”
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Amythyst Kiah: Finding Roots (Redefining Yourself)
2021/09/23
Born in Chattanooga, and based in Johnson City, Tennessee, Amythyst Kiah’s sound is a blend of old-time music and fingerpicking blues with a punk-indie sensibility. Like many of us who came up in the South, Amythyst had to find and define her voice, even as she was told she couldn’t be into Green Day or into skateboarding and also play the guitar. This week’s episode of Call & Response is for the people who are facing the brave work of reclaiming themselves, for the people who have found solace in the company of a guitar, and it’s a hope for you – to keep pushing forward in your blues. For the playlist of songs curated for this week’s episode visit: https://bit.ly/amythyst. / Music In This Week's Episode / Leyla McCalla, “Girl” Precious Bryant, “Don’t Let The Devil Ride” Sunny War, “Mama’s Milk” Jessie Mae Hemphill, “My Daddy’s Blues” Elizabeth Cotten, “Gaslight Blues” Kyshona Armstrong, “Fear” Yasmin Williams, “Through The Woods”
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Jason Isbell: To Love (Is To Criticize)
2021/09/16
Just hours after a Confederate monument was removed in Richmond, VA, Jason Isbell made his take very clear: “Nostalgia requires a lack of examination.” Amid the backdrop of a region reckoning with its past, this week’s Call & Response features Adia Victoria speaking with Jason, the Grammy award-winning songwriter from Green Hill, Alabama. Jason reflects on his identity as a white Southern man, why he seeks communion in his work, and the pitfalls of unquestioned nostalgia in country music. Also, hear a new single featuring Jason Isbell from Adia Victoria’s upcoming album, “A Southern Gothic,” in this week’s playlist: https://bit.ly/cr-jason. / Music In This Week's Episode / Brittney Spencer, “Sober and Skinny” Mickey Guyton, “Remember Her Name” Amythyst Kiah, “Fancy Drones (Fracture Me)” Shemekia Copeland, “Give God The Blues” Allison Russell, “All of the Women” Joy Oladokun, “Bad Blood” Adia Victoria feat. Kyshona, Margo Price and Jason Isbell, “You Was Born To Die"
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Lucy Dacus: Writing Memories (Trusting Perspectives)
2021/09/09
Welcome back to Call & Response. To open season two of our show, Adia is joined by fellow Southerner and singer-songwriter Lucy Dacus, whose latest album, “Home Video” is drawn largely from her childhood journals. In their conversation, Adia and Lucy talk about growing up in the church, learning to trust your own voice, and questioning what it means to be a reliable narrator for your own life. We’re so excited to have you here with us for another season of leaning into the blues to make sense of this world. For the playlist of songs curated for this episode head over to https://bit.ly/cr-lucy. /Music In This Week's Episode/ Lucy Dacus, “VBS” The Roots feat. Monsters of Folk, “Dear God 2.0” Curtis Mayfield, “(Don’t Worry) If There’s A Hell Below We’re All Going To Go” The Louvin Brothers, “Sinner, You’d Better Get Ready” Kings of Leon, “The Runner” serpentwithfeet, “Fellowship”
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Live at Newport: It's Just Me And My Breath.
2021/07/29
“What could be possible in the future when it comes to our artists? What is possible when it comes to us looking at each other? What can be possible when we shun a scarcity mindset? When we say this table is big enough for all of us? No, f**k that. Let's build a new table where everyone has a full plate, because we understand that when we create, we are able to feed.” In this final episode of our mid-season special at Newport festival, Adia leaves us with a poem. Keep your heart and your ears wide open for Season 2 of Call & Response, coming September 9th.
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Live At Newport Folk Festival: Allison Russell
2021/07/27
On Saturday at Newport, Allison Russell convened a super group of BIPOC performers to take the stage lead by the legendary Chaka Khan. The very next morning, we recorded this conversation. “It's not going to take anything away from you to let us in,” says Allison. “I wanted everyone to be able to see and hear and feel this majesty, this diversity, these expansive, intensely individual artists.” In this equally expansive conversation, Adia and Allison explore what it means to create collectively, for artists to lift each other up, and what it could look like if the music industry did the same.
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Live At Newport Folk Festival: Margo Price
2021/07/26
“Sometimes the best thing to do is to listen and to not speak. Listening is where you're going to grow.” In this second episode of our mid-season special taped live at Newport Folk Festival, Adia catches up with her longtime friend, collaborator, and country music star Margo Price. Adia and Margo discuss how Margo has come to embody a radical honesty; both in her music and speaking out on what needs to change in the Nashville music scene. They talk about Margo’s love of Tina Turner and what it means to give credit to Black artists.
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Live At Newport Folk Festival: Jay Sweet
2021/07/25
“Americana and roots music has become too complacent. What we need now is to shake ourselves from feeling comfortable and start looking at the world around us.” We’re back for a mid-season special series recorded live at Newport Folk Festival, and in this episode, Adia sits down with Newport’s Director, Jay Sweet to dig into the Black roots of folk music. The two explore how Newport can serve as a platform for uncomfortable conversations so that it can grow and evolve with the expanding landscape of folk music, and what the festival’s return means for the artists and audiences it calls family.
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Podcast reviews

Read Call & Response podcast reviews


4.9 out of 5
111 reviews
loveiswise 2022/02/17
Best interview show I’ve listened to in forever
This show is just amazing. I LOVE being able to hear through her questions that the host is also a musician, but her radio voice and the questions she...
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King biscuit 2021/10/28
Blown away!
I am blown away by the content, the production quality, and the artistry Adia Victoria brings to interviewing. If I could give it 10 stars I would
sporkpost 2021/10/01
I put apple podcasts back on my iPhone to leave this 5 star rating
I rarely hear a podcast I enjoy, but this one is fascinating and Adia Victoria is an incredible interviewer.
cowboyji 2021/09/23
Thoughtful, passionate, important
Those words describe everything Adia Victoria does, and this show is no exception. Her authenticity and engagement come through in every conversation....
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Total garbage!!!! This is 2021/09/21
Awesome
Thank you Adia! You absolutely rock. Thank you. You are beyond needed and appreciated. Thank you for your voice
asdj 2021/09/17
At least very engaging and sometimes mind-blowing
Adia Victoria is brilliant at this. I love the way she approaches her interviews — always starting with a letter or poem she’s written to/for her subj...
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Hyde Park Native 2021/07/30
The best!
This is the best podcast of the year. I immediately listen as soon as there is a new ep our. Excited for season 2!
Lisa5976 2021/04/29
Stop, pour a glass of sweet tea & listen
Adia Victoria’s new podcast is a renaissance of art, storytelling, history and reflections. Makes me homesick for front porch conversations where hou...
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ang010101 2021/04/22
10/10
Amazing podcast, wonderful thought provoking conversations between strong creative women with voices
SoThatsWho 2021/04/18
Telling the Truth
In the crowded space of podcasting, Adia creates an auditorium of enlightenment. Adia, thank you for encouraging listeners in episode 2 to create art...
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