Get Up in the Cool
A podcast by Cameron DeWhitt - Wednesdays
462 Episodes
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Presents: Basic Folk with Mali Obomsawin
Published: 8/1/2021 -
Episode 257: Em Hammond (Old Time Banjo, Bass, and Flatfooting)
Published: 7/28/2021 -
Episode 256: Nicole Ball and Max Rainwater (Falling on the Melody, One Way or Another)
Published: 7/21/2021 -
Episode 255: Dear Crow (Penka Jane Culevski and Brian Lindsay)
Published: 7/14/2021 -
Episode 254: McKain Lakey (Polyphony, Bad-Ass Ladies, and a Full-Circle Hodge-Podge of Joy)
Published: 7/7/2021 -
Episode 253: Palmer T. Lee (Old Time Melodic Three-Finger Banjo)
Published: 6/30/2021 -
Episode 252: Jesse Partridge (Trad Music Barriers, David Kaynor, and Queer Optics)
Published: 6/23/2021 -
Episode 251: String and Shadow (Puppets, Masks, Busking, and Old Time)
Published: 6/16/2021 -
Episode 250: Judy Hyman (The Horseflies, Ithaca Style Old Time, and Inevitable Change in Tradition)
Published: 6/9/2021 -
Episode 249: The Wules (Christina Osborn and Michael Cullinan)
Published: 6/2/2021 -
Episode 248: E.V. Sheldon (Senseless, Post-Rational Love)
Published: 5/26/2021 -
Episode 247: Ethan Hawkins (Old Time Guitar and Fiddle)
Published: 5/19/2021 -
Episode 246: Devon Flaherty (Collecting 78's and Banjo Self-Actualization)
Published: 5/12/2021 -
Episode 245: Casey Murray & Molly Tucker (Writing Original Tunes and Contra Dance Music)
Published: 5/5/2021 -
Episode 244: Gaye Harrison (Selections from Dear Old Illinois)
Published: 4/28/2021 -
Episode 243: Sheila & Jesse (Twin Fiddling)
Published: 4/21/2021 -
Episode 242: Kalia Yeagle (Professing Old Time Music, Asking Better Questions, and the Alaska Fiddle Sound)
Published: 4/14/2021 -
Episode 241: Seth Shumate (Old Time Harmonica)
Published: 4/7/2021 -
Episode 240: Carling Berkhout (Paths to Old Time, Writing Original Tunes, and Musical Identity)
Published: 3/31/2021 -
Episode 239: Sarah Kate Morgan (Mountain Dulcimer)
Published: 3/24/2021
Get Up in the Cool features conversations and musical collaborations with some of Old Time music's heaviest hitters, like Ken Perlman, Adam Hurt, Spencer & Rains, and Jake Blount. As an interviewer, Cameron balances an effusive curiosity for the potential of traditional music with a dogged respect for its origins. Serving as audience surrogate, Cameron asks illuminating questions to Old Time's best and brightest while telling the larger story of the tradition's modern era.