Writing

Academic Work

I am currently a PhD candidate in the department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology at Indiana University, Bloomington, studying community radio.

"New Sounds to Imagine": Coalition, Coltrane, and Mediating Personhood in San Francisco’s Fillmore District

Processes of displacement and gentrification, often framed as projects of urban renewal and preservation, have long shaped the demographics of San Francisco in often drastic and inequitable ways. Once known as the Harlem of the West and today commemorated as the city’s historic Jazz Preservation District, the city’s Fillmore neighborhood has long been saddled with racialized narratives of blight and poverty related to its palimpsestic histories of primarily Japanese and Black communities, even as it continues to hold space for specifically coalitional institutions and services. This article examines two of those bodies, the Saint John Will-I-Am Coltrane African Orthodox Church and the community radio station KPOO, as interconnected mediative nodes in a network of sound, place, and personhood that work together in the generation of aural imaginaries that make possible anti-hegemonic reinterpretations of what it means to belong in San Francisco. Working with sources in human geography, cultural studies, sound studies, and public history, I contextualize and analyze a broadcast of the devotional program Uplift to better understand the existential value of these nonprofit organizations for San Franciscans facing large-scale erasure and their capabilities to generate new geographic possibilities that counter reductive, top-down narratives of local identity.

Hungary on Hoosier Airwaves: Echoes of Diasporic Community in Reverend Stephen J. Vrabely’s Radio Music Archives

In early 2022, Alan Burdette, former Director of the Archives of Traditional Music (ATM), drove four and a half hours from Bloomington into Kendall County, Illinois, to pick up a donation of around 1400 well-kept shellac, lacquer, and vinyl discs. A gift from the family of Reverend Stephen J. Vrabely (1923 – 1994), the records consist almost entirely of Hungarian music published in the 1940s and 1950s, running the gamut from opera to brass bands to crooning, and featuring some of the most popula

Sensory Prompt Challenge: Seismic Epistemologies of the Great Sand Waste

It was all dunes, say developers, until the late 19th century, when the settlers shaped what was then called the “Great Sand Waste” into the largely residential western half of the city. Growing up there, we knew this story and its moral: that we were all raised on hubris, that one strong quake could sink us. Locals walk the beach with equal measures of love and fear, gazing out to sea as both meditation and memento mori.

When I’m back there, I glide through these so-called Wastelands down Tara

On-Air Worldbuilding: Why Community Radio Still Exists and We Should Listen

On July 14, 2023, the Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education subcommittee of the U.S. House of Representatives’ Committee on Appropriations proposed a budget that would, among other things, wholly defund the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) by 2026. In doing so, it would cut off the primary financial support that allows thousands of non-commercial radio stations across the country to maintain their independence from corporate interests and serve audiences across the nation in r

Music Journalism

I began writing for the music section of culture zine PopMatters in 2016, and occasionally write for other local arts publications. Below is an archive of my features, including reviews, premieres, and special sections.

Nuevos Ríos Debut with Astonishing Takes on Tradition » PopMatters

Less than a year after her luscious solo debut, Pacífico Maravilla, Nidia Góngora returns, this time as the frontwoman of Nuevos Ríos. Alongside her are members of her longtime group, Canalón de Timbiquí, and Toulouse-based Reco Reco, an ensemble that focuses on plugged-in renditions of South American styles. Together, the collective perform lively, electrified versions of music from Góngora and Canalón de Timbiquí’s finely honed repertoire, continuing to bear witness to the traditions and lifew...

Ohyung Offers Vivid Heartland Impressions on 'Iowa' » PopMatters

Composer and performer Ohyung (Lia Ouyang Rusli) takes an impressionist approach with real depth on the new experimental album Iowa. Created based on her 11-month stay in the album’s namesake state, Iowa, is an act of counter-cartography.Against the grain of static pastoral heartland narratives, it portrays the state from an on-the-ground viewpoint as an ever-changing palimpsest. Spacious electronics and samples evoke vast and open landscapes, stories of life and loss, and social tensions and op...

Los Sara Fontan Fight for a DIY Future on 'Consuelo' » PopMatters

It’s simple enough to account for the cutthroat kind of gravitas at the forefront of Consuelo, the sophomore release from experimental Catalan duo Los Sara Fontan. Like most of us, violinist Sara Fontán and percussionist Edi Pou are fed up with many of the phenomena that shape our small world: rising authoritarianism, the worsening climate crisis, the slow and fast violence borne of technocapitalism, war, genocide, and the rest. Accordingly, they have a lot to say about Consuelo, an album remark...

Tinariwen's 'Hoggar' Is a Brilliant, Bittersweet Homecoming » PopMatters

It’s been nearly 50 years since the founders of Tishoumaren group, Tinariwen, first started making music together, and nearly 25 years since their Radio Tisdas Sessions brought them to a global audience. In that time, they have been key in shaping how audiences around the world conceptualise Tuareg art and society, no easy task for any one band. Tinariwen‘s tenth album, Hoggar, shows them continuing to shape this representational paradigm.The group’s music is perhaps more poignant than ever, mad...

Fabiano do Nascimento Blossoms on the Organic, Tender 'Vila' » PopMatters

In the near-decade since my first Fabiano do Nascimento review (of 2017’s Tempo dos Mestres), his catalogue has expanded in beautiful ways. With preternaturally nimble fingers blazing, he has dabbled with electronic loops, collaborated with other luminaries (most notably saxophonist Sam Gendel, with whom he recorded atmospheric The Room), and always held strong to his carioca roots in making music inspired by Brazilian folkloric idioms and popular forms. His new album Vila is the latest and full...

Fågelle Finds Melancholy Release in Glorious Gloom » PopMatters

Gloom, glorious gloom, permeates the musical catalogue of singer-songwriter Fågelle (Klara Andersson), and new album Bränn min jord overflows with it. There are screams, cries, and field recordings. There is a sense throughout that we are swinging between mourning and desperation. Most importantly, there is Fågelle, coolly confident and unpredictable as a composer and performer. Even in the record’s most sedate moments, there is always something simmering within her. As Bränn min jord moves from...

Yoshiko Sai Is Luminous on the Reissued 'Mikkou' » PopMatters

The creative world of Yoshiko Sai is a multimodal thing. It is not limited by strict adherence to certain genres or media, but is instead as expansive and as variable as her imagination. Interested in drawing, reading, and making music from childhood, Sai hit an unexpected turning point in the early 1970s when illness left her bedridden for a year. She found solace in surreal literature and the craft of poetry, which she quickly translated into songwriting. Between 1975 and 1978, she released fo...

Neba Solo and Benego Diakité Are Masters of Their Traditions » PopMatters

There’s a sincerely grounded quality to A Djinn and a Hunter Went Walking. The new album from balafonist Neba Solo and donsongoni (hunter’s harp) player Benego Diakité–their first as a duo–shines a light on two Malian musicians who are masters of their repertoires. Each performer hails from a different cultural background, with Solo trained in Senufo traditions and Diakité rooted in the Wassoulou region, and they come together here with an understated ease. It makes for a soothing work from star...

Tigran Hamasyan Seeks Meaning on Rapturous 'Manifeste' » PopMatters

In the liner notes of his new album Manifeste, pianist and composer Tigran Hamasyan writes, among other things, that his role as an artist is to facilitate catharsis. This idea goes back to Aristotle and has been explored by countless artists and philosophers across countless media since. Even so, I am sure I have never felt quite the same level of catharsis as when I listen to Manifeste.What Hamasyan offers here is not just release but ecstasy. In its earthiest, growliest moments, it is still t...

Sonetos del Amor Oscuro Brilliantly Set Lorca to Music » PopMatters

Granadino poet and playwright Federico García Lorca wrote the poems published as Sonetos del amor oscuro in the last years before his assassination. They are heartrending pieces, bursting with love, eroticism, and the keen sorrow that seemed to undercut every aspect of Lorca‘s life, according to friends and acquaintances like poet Vicente Aleixandre, who once wrote of Lorca that “su corazón no era ciertamente alegre”: his heart was certainly not joyful. Indeed, many of Lorca’s struggles are well...

Imarhan Brilliantly Re-Invent Their Sound on 'Essam' » PopMatters

When quintet Imarhan emerged onto the world stage with their first City Slang release ten years ago, they stood out for their keen melodic sensibilities within the international tishoumaren scene. Hailing from the southern Algerian oasis city of Tamanrasset, they offer a distinct iteration of what has been referred to as desert blues, in which they adorn the melancholy core of the genre with often intricate lines and flourishes that recall popular styles of the Arab Maghreb.Their fourth album, E...

Wesli Follows Diasporic Threads Through Haiti » PopMatters

When it comes to expressing Haitian cultural histories and advocating for awareness of the postcolonial issues that continue to shape Haitian life today, Haitian-Canadian artist Wesli (Wesley Louissaint) has always been a man of many words and sounds. On his seventh album, Makaya, he is at his most loquacious, with 24 tracks that clock in at almost two hours. It’s a maximalist work, but each element of it is placed and executed with clear intent.Wesli, along with a substantial international coho...

Amadou & Mariam Bid a Poignant Farewell » PopMatters

It was still early in the year when we learned of the passing of Amadou Bagayoko, one of the eponymous halves of the internationally beloved Bamakoan duo Amadou & Mariam, alongside wife and creative collaborator, Mariam Doumbia. The duo’s final album, L’amour à la folie, was already all but complete; it was released on 24 October, Amadou’s 71st birthday.It’s been more than 20 years since their Manu Chao-produced international breakthrough Dimanche à Bamako and nearly 50 years since the duo’s fir...

The 10 Best Global Music Albums of 2025 » PopMatters

It’s been a year of roadblocks, shutdowns, tariffs, walls, incarcerations, deportations, and other less tangible sociopolitical obstacles. Authoritarianism is on the rise, and jobs for human workers are declining. It’s harder than ever to get music and artists into the United States. Here’s the thing: we make music anyway. We draw on everything we know and everything we feel, and we make music anyway. We seek out the music of others. Others become familiar. Community grows in uneven and surprisi...

Antibalas Get Back to Basics on 'Hourglass' » PopMatters

Over the last 27 or so years, Antibalas have made a tremendous impact on contemporary music. With grooves that call to mind the best of 1970s Afrobeat and a globally inclusive understanding of jazz, this dynamic ensemble has kept the funk faith into the 21st century. Each album feels fresh, with sounds that are classic but never retro.Producers Martín Perna (also a baritone saxophonist and the group’s founders) and Marcos García (guitarist and sometimes vocalist for Antibalas since 2003, though...

Da Lata Celebrate 25 Years with 'Edge of Blue' » PopMatters

Multi-instrumentalist Chris Franck and DJ and producer Patrick Forge have been making music under the moniker Da Lata for a good quarter-century now. In all that time, the gist of the project has remained largely consistent: Da Lata‘s music is warm, soulful, and made, more or less, in collaboration with (or at least inspired by) artists working with musical styles that have emerged from African-Brazilian interchanges.It’s a comfortable niche for Da Lata, which has done an admirable job of making...

Syd dePalma Leads Us to an Uncanny 'Paris' » PopMatters

When I say that Syd dePalma’s new album, Paris, is dreamlike, I mean it literally. Echoes abound, sculpting recognizable rock, folk, and pop stylings into imaginative new shapes. As he plays with light and shadow, the borders between fantasy and reality blur. The familiar soars. An eerie melancholy fills even the most straightforward of dePalma’s melodies, a desperation buried deep in the foundation of every line he sings. The lyrics are uncanny, the sounds constantly shifting. Only two years ou...

Sessa Harnesses Soulful Sparks on Gorgeous LP » PopMatters

As Sessa, singer-songwriter Sergio Sayeg has a particular knack for making sounds that are both cosmic and pastoral, gentle and awesome. His lyricism follows in this same vein, engaging in deeply poetic explorations of nature and the quotidian. It is not surprising that on luminous new album Pequena Vertigem de Amor, dedicated in large part to the birth of his and his partner’s first child, he continues to find beauty in the world and bring it forth in his typically gorgeous brand of languid fun...

Yalla Miku Pack a Cosmopolitan Punch on '2' » PopMatters

Swiss label Bongo Joe has been an unstoppable force of cosmopolitan post-punk gems this year, and perhaps no single-artist release encapsulates their 2025 sound more cleanly than 2, the trilingual sophomore release from Yalla Miku. The lineup has shifted since their first album. However, the sonic scope remains very similar, as the group trace their roots to the Horn of Africa, the Middle East, and North Africa, as well as the Genevan scenes that the group’s members curate and populate regularly...

Los Cinco Cardones' Debut Shows Their Versatility » PopMatters

The title track of Los Cinco Cardones’ debut, El Quinto Cardón, sits just about at the album’s center. It’s a spellbinding ten minutes of desert-tinged jazz, keys lifting like a midnight wind, guitar echoing over open sand, bass rolling along on a high-speed night drive, sax soaring into a cloudless midnight. That is both the record’s heart and its pinnacle: the quartet performing not just a piece but a cohesive landscape, breathtaking and dreamlike. Here is where the band move with the tightest...

Coco Maria Curates in Full Color on New Compilation » PopMatters

As a musical curator, Coco Maria has an ear for color. The third compilation in her Club Coco series, Coco Maria Presents: New Dimensions in Latin Music, offers a broad and brightly-hued sonic palette of sounds from across the global Latin diaspora and beyond. Born in Saltillo, Mexico, and now based in Amsterdam after stints in Berlin and London, Coco María is well acquainted with the vastness of the scene, whose titular dimensions she explores here.She serves us a sampler that leans into the mo...

Mulatu Astatke Amplifies His Ethio-Jazz Legacy on Tremendous LP » PopMatters

If only one name comes to mind when you think of Ethio-jazz, it’s almost certainly that of Mulatu Astatke. A vibraphone and percussion virtuoso, Mulatu has also been prolific on the keys, releasing records under this stylistic nomenclature since the 1970s. Inspired by Ethiopian melodic modes and the rhythms and instrumentation of Latin and other American jazz traditions, Mulatu studied at Berklee College of Music. Ethio-jazz is as cool now as it was then, if not cooler for the vintage air that s...

Bongo Joe Celebrates 10 Years of Eclectic Releases » PopMatters

To listen to a new release from Geneva-based label Bongo Joe is to have a twofold reaction. On the one hand, the Bongo Joe catalog is so eclectic that each new direction it takes is a surprise. On the other hand, the albums that come out of it tend to be so good that it seems only logical for the latest interesting release to be a Bongo Joe production. An inarticulate harmony and a tasteful eclecticism hold their discography together.


Now, the imprint celebrates its first full decade with a...

Guedra Guedra's 'Mutant' Is Breathtaking and Scintillating » PopMatters

Guedra Guedra, the moniker under which producer Abdellah M. Hassak crafts energetic electronic landscapes, invokes a specific scene in and of itself. Among Amazigh groups indigenous to Hassak’s native Morocco and other parts of North Africa, the guedra is a dance and a cooking pot that can be converted into a drum, embodying music, movement, and life.


It suits Hassak’s music on the new Guedra Guedra album Mutant, a breathtaking record filled with thoughtful assemblages of field recordings, d...
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Business

Music tech publicity pieces, blog posts, and other public-facing private sector work.

Rock Paper Scissors - JackTrip Labs - JackTrip Labs’ Latest Feature Uses AI for Lossless Online Concerts

Recent upgrades to the remote collaboration platform help to build infinitely customizable virtual venues with Soundscapes and an AI-powered loss concealment feature

Each new innovation from JackTrip Labs makes virtual space feel and sound more like a real place. The company’s Soundscapes platform and AI-powered loss concealment feature give JackTrip’s remote collaboration technology new levels of intimacy. They enable more immersive and high-definition sessions for JackTrip Virtual Studio us...

Rock Paper Scissors - JackTrip Labs - JackTrip Labs new video integration enhances Virtual Studio music collaboration experience

JackTrip Labs’ Virtual Studio real-time music collaboration platform has already won over an impressive range of creative performers. Fans like “father of the virtual choir” Eric Whitacre, the world-renowned San Francisco Girls Chorus, funk-punk icons Royal Crescent Mob, and Earth, Wind & Fire keyboardist Larry Dunn are just a few of the major artists and groups who have made good use of the JackTrip Virtual Studio. High-speed, low-latency cloud computing technology allows musicians to play toge...

Rock Paper Scissors - JackTrip Labs - The Royal Crescent Mob returns, with help from JackTrip

Funk-punk icons use JackTrip’s cutting-edge remote collaboration technology to prepare for a long-awaited reunion this December.

Icons of the 80s-90s indie scene, funk rock group the Royal Crescent Mob returns to the stages of their home state of Ohio for two shows this winter. Set to play Dec 16 in Columbus and Dec 17 in Cincinnati, the RC Mob’s reunion concerts will benefit the Tri-State Research Fund of the American Cancer Society. Making it possible is a partnership with JackTrip Labs, wh...

Rock Paper Scissors - JackTrip Labs - San Francisco Girls Chorus Partners with JackTrip Labs to Build Revolutionary New Virtual Statewide Curriculum, SFGConnect

The cutting edge of music meets the cutting edge of tech in SFGConnect, an upcoming San Francisco Girls Chorus program powered by Silicon Valley-developed JackTrip Labs. SFGConnect is an innovative pilot program that offers SFGC’s full choral and music theory curriculum to singers exclusively over the internet. SFGConnect will allow girls and gender expansive youth ages 7-10 to participate in SFGC’s accredited music training, even if they live hundreds of miles away, a first for the storied chor...

Rock Paper Scissors - JackTrip Labs - A virtual supergroup: Music legends collaborate in real time from multiple locations thanks to JackTrip and EnterTalk

Master musicians who’ve played with ABBA, Elton John, and Earth, Wind & Fire keep it tight with JackTrip virtual collaboration technology in an upcoming live show co-sponsored by industry insider outlet EnterTalk

On July 27 at 2:00 PM PDT, JackTrip Labs and EnterTalk will partner to host a one-of-a-kind musical showcase jam-packed with industry legends and powered by JackTrip’s revolutionary Virtual Studio. Streaming on JackTrip Radio, it features seasoned Southern California players who’ve w...

Rock Paper Scissors - JackTrip Labs - Virtual collaborations in real time: JackTrip sends sound at the speed of light

A whole new world of musical collaboration is taking shape at JackTrip Labs. Run by musicians, JackTrip focuses on innovations for musicians, especially in a time of increasing demand for ways to make music online just as effectively as in person. The JackTrip Virtual Studio does just that, linking musicians at high speeds and making it possible for them to truly play together again. 

Based on technology created by engineers at Stanford University, JackTrip transports uncompressed audio at th...

Rock Paper Scissors - BeatConnect - BeatConnect makes remote collaboration easy and accessible for producers and musicians everywhere

In Nick Laroche’s experience, there’s always been a need for accessible tools in the music realm. “We’ve had the idea of doing remote collaboration for years, but the music industry hasn’t ever offered a solution for most musicians,” he says. “When COVID hit, I said, you know what, I’m going to see if I can actually do something.”

With the present surge in virtual collaboration and long-term sustainability in mind, Laroche co-founded BeatConnect, which lets musicians work together online from...

Rock Paper Scissors - Bandzoogle - Bandzoogle celebrates 17th anniversary with custom merch to benefit music charity, matching donations up to $5000

Musician website and direct-to-fan platform Bandzoogle is celebrating their 17th anniversary by giving back to artists in need. Using their newly launched integration with print-on-demand provider Printful, the company has created exclusive merch for sale, donating all proceeds to the Unison Benevolent Fund, Canada’s leading music industry charity.

T-shirts, hoodies, and more are now available through a Bandzoogle-powered store. Profits from all sales of this 17th anniversary merchandise will...

Rock Paper Scissors - Bandzoogle - Bandzoogle adds integration with Printful’s print-on-demand drop shipping services

Musician website platform Bandzoogle has launched an integration with print-on-demand drop shipping service Printful to make it easier for musicians to create and sell custom merchandise directly to their fans on their websites, commission-free.

Artists can now seamlessly connect their Bandzoogle website account to Printful, simplifying access to the popular print-on-demand drop shipping service. Bands can choose from over 200 custom merch items available through Printful to display on their...

Rock Paper Scissors - Bandzoogle - Bandzoogle’s new pay-what-you-want fan subscription model expands options to support musicians

As musicians look for ways to engage their fans and earn a living beyond the traditional touring model, musician web services provider Bandzoogle continues to expand their direct-to-fan offerings accordingly. The platform’s most recent development sees an important update to their popular fan subscriptions feature as the company implements a pay-what-you-want option alongside standard pricing tiers.

In addition to offering set premiums per month, artists can offer specific rewards to listener...

Rock Paper Scissors - Bandzoogle - Musicians have earned over $5 million through Bandzoogle since the pandemic began

Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, musicians have earned over $5 million in commission-free sales of digital music, merch, livestream tickets, fan subscriptions, digital multimedia, and tip donations through their websites powered by Bandzoogle.

Nearly half a million of that revenue came from digital music sales alone, from over 33,000 albums and over over 37,000 singles. Through the recently rolled-out Tip Jar feature, fans have donated almost $200,000 to their favorite artists, leaving an a...

Rock Paper Scissors - Bandzoogle - Bandzoogle helps maximize the impact of live streaming for independent artists with expanded online video features, including Twitch and Crowdcast integrations

In response to the proliferation of virtual performances and hot on the heels of their recently-launched Tip Jar feature, Bandzoogle has launched new integrated options for videos and live streams that help maximize musician control and revenue.

While the Bandzoogle platform has long provided tools for easy embedding of pre-recorded YouTube and Vimeo videos, live streaming creates new opportunities for real-time fan engagement. Bandzoogle now makes it easy to embed live and pre-recorded video...

Rock Paper Scissors - Bandzoogle - On the cusp of its 17th birthday, Bandzoogle's artist-first philosophy continues to show up and pay off for musicians’ digital presence

Long-lasting success and ethical approaches can go hand-in-hand in the music industry: just look at Bandzoogle. Founded by Chris Vinson, formerly a prominent bassist in Montreal’s alt-rock scene, the company has spent nearly 17 years helping a total of over 100,000 musicians build and manage their online presence. With tools for professional website building, promotion, and commission-free music and merch sales, Bandzoogle’s direct-to-fan model offers valuable resources for artists to thrive in...

Rock Paper Scissors - AmplifyX - AmplifyX bridges the financial gap between musicians and fans by letting supporters invest in artists like startups

AmplifyX provides a platform that enables people to invest in artists, funding their music and empowering them to retain their independence and control of their creative journey. The investors then have an alternative asset that returns royalty payments over the lifetime of the contract. AmplifyX is painting over a traditional ...

AmplifyX provides a platform that enables people to invest in artists, funding their music and empowering them to retain their independence and control of their crea...

Are You Being Too Direct? - Speakeasy Inc.

When you interact with your co-workers, you probably find yourself wishing that some people would just get to the point. You might also feel that some people give you the point and nothing but the point. Sure, you get the information you need, but sometimes that’s not enough.
In a situation where you must influence something or someone, as in selling a product or a point of view, being too direct can be a problem.
Most speakers don’t win over their audiences with just the cold, hard facts. Truly...

Facilitating Effective Communication Between Baby Boomers and Millennials - Speakeasy Inc.

Today's workforce encompasses a broader age range than any before it. Baby boomers are retiring later than previous groups, largely because of financial concerns, and their newest colleagues will soon comprise nearly half of the U.S. labor force. It's an unprecedented dynamic, and the first time that so many decades' worth of people have been, effectively, at the same stage of life.

The Rise of Video Interviewing - Expert Tips

There’s nothing like a digital twist to make job interviews a little more stressful. All of a sudden, you’re reduced from a full person to head and shoulders on a screen. When the stable, sterile environment of a conference room is gone, professionalism threatens to fly out the window. What should you do in this high stress situation?
Luckily, the answer is simple: everything you’d be doing anyway.
For the most part, the keys to video interviews and in-person interviews are about the same; it’s...

About Me

I am a freelance writer, radio programmer, and PhD candidate at Indiana University, Bloomington. I have experience in writing music criticism, features, and publicity; writing corporate guides and white papers; and academic writing/editing and copy editing.

My radio work includes audio production, session hosting, and feature writing for public and community radio stations. I have also worked with radio- and music-related archives.

On this site, you'll find links to my available online work. Contact me for more!

Photo by Jar Turner