Épisodes

  • The Invisible Labour of Music Making
    Feb 21 2021

    The labour theory of value says the value of a product should be determined by the amount of labour expended on it. If that was true, music would be very, very expensive to buy. But it's almost free these days.

    So how do we reconcile the countless hours of behind-the-scenes work that goes into every little 3-minute song on an album? In this episode, I interview musicians Nick MacLean and Jordi Comstock about the the invisible labour of music making.

    www.carmelmikol.com/hyacinth-podcast

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    27 min
  • The Music: Margaritas and Magical Unicorns
    Feb 7 2021

    In the first episode of a new Hyacinth Podcast sub-series "The Music," I interview two of my best friends and longtime collaborators - Kim Wempe and Norma MacDonald are both songwriters and emergency room nurses (in the middle of a global pandemic).

    We talk about music, work, and the fine art of balancing real life and artistic practice.

    www.carmelmikol.com/hyacinth-podcast

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    24 min
  • The Farewell
    Jun 14 2020

    In this episode, I wrap up Season 1 with the most beautiful words I could find to leave you with: a story from the prodigy poet, Ocean Vuong, and a gorgeous meditation from the iconic Mary Oliver.

    And while the world aches and calls out for justice, I also leave you with one small story of my own.

    www.carmelmikol.com/hyacinth-podcast

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    12 min
  • The Art of Accessibility
    May 10 2020

    Instead of "getting back to normal," why don't we use this extraordinary time in the world to reimagine how we make things and who we make them for?

    What if we integrate accessibility into everything we do going forward? And what if accessibility was more than just a utilitarian exercise, but an artistic practice as well?

    This episode includes interviews with arts-based disability scholar Dr. Carla Rice and adaptive circus artists Erin Ball and Vanessa Furlong.

    www.carmelmikol.com/hyacinth-podcast

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    36 min
  • A Love Letter for Difficult Times
    Apr 12 2020

    Explore the way small and private intimacies of human life persist and even thrive in times of major upheaval. Meet me in the one place we can still travel to: into the words of others who have lived through life’s great cruelties.

    I compile excerpts from some of the things I've been reading during this crisis and share a love letter that I discover, by happy accident, in the front cover of one of my books. Are these small things enough to get us through these difficult times? 

    This episode is a gentle way of being together when we must be apart. It is a love letter for difficult times.

    www.carmelmikol.com/hyacinth-podcast

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    17 min
  • Into the Archive
    Mar 8 2020

    There’s a box under my basement stairs that I haven’t opened for ten years. I thought I knew what was inside. But when I finally get the courage to open it, I encounter a mystery that goes beyond my own family archive and leads me to ask: What does “the archive” mean and who gets to decide “what remains” there?

    To find out, I follow archivist Heather Home into a vault at the Queen's University Archives and speak with Dr. Kristin Moriah and Dr. Mark Campbell, whose research confronts important issues around what is missing in institutional archives and why. Plus, we learn how black studies and the culture and artistic practice of hiphop could reshape traditional archival processes.

    www.carmelmikol.com/hyacinth-podcast

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    38 min
  • Imagining Democracy
    Feb 9 2020

    Democracy is under threat across the globe. Humanities studies are in decline in universities around the world. Is there a connection?

    This episode is not about politics. It's about democracy as an idea. It's about the skills needed to be democratic citizens, including deliberative discussion and community-building, and how the humanities are central to teaching us how to think and act democratically.

    Guests:
    Dave Meslin - Democracy activist and author of Tear Down: Rebuilding Democracy from the Ground Up

    Dr. Amanda Anderson - Professor of English, Director of the Cogut Institute for the Humanities at Brown University, and author of Psyche & Ethos: Moral Life After Psychology

    Dr. Cecil Foster - Professor at University of Buffalo and author of They Call Me George: The Untold Story of Black Train Porters and the Birth of Modern Canada

    I also explore important ideas from Pulitzer prize-winning American author Marilynne Robinson and Kandice Chuh of the CUNY Graduate Centre in New York.

    www.carmelmikol.com/hyacinth-podcast

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    32 min
  • Dhiru Thadani - The Interviews
    Jan 31 2020

    Bonus episode: Hear my extended interview with architect and planner Dhiru Thadani. We discuss the history of urbanism as a design theory and the enduring value of beauty in our public and civic spaces.

    We first met Dhiru in Episode 5: Looking for Beauty. This is our full conversation. If you enjoy this interview, be sure to subscribe and check out my regular, curated episodes on your favourite app or at www.hyacinthpodcast.com. Connect with @hyacinpodcast on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram

    www.carmelmikol.com/hyacinth-podcast

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    33 min