David Martin and Sardar Guvenc comprise the Minneapolis jazz guitar duo. The duo plays a lot of great standards. You might expect that of a jazz group, but for this one, playing standards is a welcome change from the players’ normal. David and Sardar talked to Phil Nusbaum about their duet.
Stay Human steps it up today, with stories of standing up and being in the moment – Gail Otteson goes down the basement stairs, Sarah Baker gets on stage with Mary Wilson, and Terry O’Brien makes a new category on those forms that want to know what demographic you fit yourself into. Homer and Howlin Wolf meet up at the lakeshore, and Charlie Parson bakes Blue Ribbon biscuits, all of it happening here.
As we deal with wildfires and drought likely brought on or intensified by climate change, we wanted to know more about the strategy of carbon pricing as a way to combat climate change. Dr. Stephen Polasky, professor of Ecological/Environmental Economics at the University of Minnesota, joined Brian to tell us more about carbon pricing.
WTIP’s The Roadhouse is supported in part by funding from the Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund.
In today’s FULL and EXTENDED Untold Story of Central Minnesota, Arts & Cultural Heritage Producer Jeff Carmack attends the Stearns History Museum’s Breakfast Club presentation of Dr. Annette Atkins, professor emeritus from the College of St. Benedict St. John’s University.
Following the death of George Floyd, Dr. Atkins began developing a program called “Missing Pieces” that detailed the racial makeup and development of the St. Cloud area so that we might all have a better idea of where we came from in order to be able to move into a better future.
In today’s Untold Story of Central Minnesota, Arts & Cultural Heritage Producer Jeff Carmack attends the Stearns History Museum’s Breakfast Club presentation of Dr. Annette Atkins, professor emeritus from the College of St. Benedict St. John’s University.
Following the death of George Floyd, Dr. Atkins began developing a program called “Missing Pieces” that detailed the racial makeup and development of the St. Cloud area so that we might all have a better idea of where we came from in order to be able to move into a better future.
We’re handling all kinds of hand tools this week on Stay Human – Aaron Wenger’s collection of stone tools, and then some really, really old tools with Bill Marshall. Lynda Griffith reaches inside the accordion, M’Lou Brubaker describes the tools she’s made, and Leonard Clark remembers a tool he held onto for a long time.