Avsnitt

  • If you don't know the Orion, what are you waiting for? You're missing out on a hot trend (of the summer of 1963 in East Germany)!

    In our first episode, we explored the story of the Lipsi, a new dance East Germans created in 1958 to compete with Western trends. In this episode, we continue the story by exploring the Orion, the GDR's answer to the twist, as well as some other experiments in international socialist choreographies of the 1960s. Lions and tigers and Orion - Oh my!

    Watch our reconstruction of the Orion: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkhMTQvoNUQ

    Dance Orion yourself with this basic step tutorial:

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/xCRiMkGFUFc

    In Playing the Archive, ethnomusicologists Sydney Hutchinson and Hannah Judd dive into experimental archival research with interviews, radio plays, & more. This podcast is a part of the Second World Music project. To learn more, and find more of our dance videos, visit http://secondworldmusic.wordpress.com.

    Playing the Archive © 2025 by Sydney Hutchinson/Second World Music is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

  • European colonists derided them as "headhunters." Christian missionaries forbade them from practicing traditional music and dance. The Indian army continues to target them. But the Naga people of northeast India are still there. In this episode we talk with Senti Toy, a New York-based Naga ethnomusicologist and musician, about how she created the sound exhibit "I will not weep" for the Humboldt-Forum. What does cultural survival sound like in Nagaland today? What can songs tell us about Naga history and resistance?

    In Playing the Archive, ethnomusicologists Sydney Hutchinson and Hannah Judd dive into experimental archival research with interviews, radio plays, & more. This podcast is a part of the Second World Music project. To learn more, visit http://secondworldmusic.wordpress.com.

    Playing the Archive © 2025 by Sydney Hutchinson/Second World Music is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

  • Saknas det avsnitt?

    Klicka här för att uppdatera flödet manuellt.

  • How should socialist youth dance? How can social dance be more socialist? These questions may not be keeping YOU up at night, but things might look differently if you were an East German cultural functionary!

    In this episode, we go into the story of the Lipsi, a new dance East Germans created in 1958 to compete with Western trends. We also talk about how the Second World Music project came about, the process of reconstructing dances from archival materials, and how people have reacted to the Lipsi - both back then and at present.

    In Playing the Archive, ethnomusicologists Sydney Hutchinson and Hannah Judd dive into experimental archival research with interviews, radio plays, & more. This podcast is a part of the Second World Music project. To learn more, visit http://secondworldmusic.wordpress.com.

    Playing the Archive © 2025 by Sydney Hutchinson/Second World Music is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International