Rock And Roles With Danny Goldberg

Informações:

Synopsis

Ram Dass has suggested that we should think of ourselves in terms of “souls, not roles.” Out of this concept came a new podcast "Rock and Roles" hosted by Danny Goldberg. Danny has made his living in the rock and roll business as a journalist, PR guy, record company President and manager since the late 1960's when he was still a teenager. "Rock and Roles" explores how music has both drawn Danny closer to spirituality—and also helped snare him in an obsession with his “role” in the business including concerns about money, status, or seeing his name in print.

Episodes

  • Ep. 17 - Robert Greenwald

    27/07/2016 Duration: 47min

    In this latest episode, Danny sits down with director and documentarian, Robert Greenwald. He founded Brave New Films twelve years ago during which time Robert has produced and directed nine documentaries. The subjects of his films range from Fox News to Wal-Mart to Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and most recently “Making A Killing: Guns, Greed and the NRA” as well as dozens of short documentary pieces on progressive themes. Prior to that Robert was a major force in as a Director of TV films for which he personally received three Emmy nominations including for The Burning Bed and 21 Hours at Munich. He also directed several feature films including Xanadu and the Abbie Hoffman bio-pic Steal This Movie. Danny and Robert start off their discussion looking Robert’s relationship with the external vs. internal components of his life. From his external film career, success, and financial abundance paired with the internal development he experienced emotionally and psychologically. Especially, coming from a family of t

  • Ep. 16 - Steve Earle

    22/06/2016 Duration: 54min

    Steve Earle bio        Since 1986 Steve Earle has recorded fifteen studio albums three of which have won the Grammy Award. He has just released a duets album with Shawn Colvin entitled Colvin and Earle.  His songs have  been recorded by Emmy Lou Harris, Johnny Cash, and Joan Baez among others.  He is also an TV and film actor including his recurring roles in the HBO series The Wire and Treme . He is the author of the short story collection Doghouse Roses and the novel I’ll Never Get Out Of This World Alive.  

  • Ep. 15 - 1967

    02/06/2016 Duration: 56min

      As listeners to this podcast know, one of my recurring themes is an attempt to unravel the “sixties” , to figure out what aspects of the so-called counter-culture were the contributions to consciousness I felt they were as a teenager, and which were  and counter-productive. It’s occurred to me recently that the year 1967 was pivotal. It had the “Summer of Love,” and also several race riots. It was the year that Muhammad Ali refused to be inducted into the Army and the year that the Beatles released Sargent Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club and All You Need Is Love. It was the year of the first albums by Jimi Hendrix, The Doors, The Velvet Underground and The Grateful Dead . It was the last full year of Martin Luther King’s life and the first full year when LSD was illegal in most of the United States. I cold not think of anyone better to ponder the significance and insignificance of that year than my friend and Mind Pod icon David Silver who in 1967 was hosting the counter-culture PBS TV show in Boston called Wha

  • Ep. 14 - Tom Hayden

    25/04/2016 Duration: 52min

    Tom Hayden, currently Director of the Peace and Justice Resource Center is one of my heroes, a unique example of deep commitment to justice ,a great work ethic and an inspiring life of inner growth while continuing as an indefatigable activist. In 1962 Tom wrote “The Port Huron Statement” one of the founding documents of Students For a Democratic Society (SDS). He was a “freedom rider” in the early sixties, going to the American south to protest racial segregation and then worked for the Newark Community Union Project from 1964-68. As one of the most effective leaders against the War in Viet Nam he was one of the “Chicago Eight” indicted (and ultimately acquitted) for the anti-war protests in front of the 1968 Democratic Convention. Tom spent eighteen years in the California State Legislature as a State Senator and an Assemblyman passing over one hundred bills related to the environment and social justice. He is the author of twenty-one books most recently Listen Yanqui—Why Cuba Matters, Inspiring Participato

  • Ep. 13 - Ben Lee

    03/04/2016 Duration: 47min

    Ben Lee is a singer and songwriter, originally from Australia who now lives in Los Angeles with his wife Ione Skye and their two daughters. Ben first recorded in Sydney with his group Noise Addict when he was 16. The Beastie Boys liked his early work and signed him to their label Grand Royal. In 2005 he shifted is lyrical focus into a spiritual frame with the album Awake Is The New Sleep which included the song Catch My Disease. That album was several ARIA Awards (The Australian equivalent of the Grammys) including Best Song and Best Album. Catch My Disease was also a hit in the United States and elsewhere. Ben has continued to explore spiritual concepts in his work most notably on his last two albums Ayahuasca: Welcome To The Work, and Love Is The Great Rebellion. Ben also appeared as an actor in the Australian film The Rage In Placid Lake that co-starred Rose Byrne. Full disclosure: I have been Ben’s manager for almost a decade. When I started the podcast I knew I wanted him as an early guest because most o

  • Ep. 12 - It's All Happening with Zach Leary

    13/03/2016 Duration: 57min

    Zach is the host of the “It’s All Happening” podcast, an infrequent blogger/writer and a seasoned digital marketer and brand strategist. Zach is also a practitioner of bhakti yoga as taught through many of the vedantic systems of Northern India. Through the practice of bhakti he has found keys that unlock doorways that allow the soul to experience it’s true nature of being eternal, full of knowledge and full of bliss. In addition to bhakti yoga, Zach has been influenced by many different methods and traditions of consciousness exploration and heart opening ranging from trans-humanism and hatha yoga to buddhism and clinical psychology. But above all he believes first and foremost in his gurus, Neem Karoli Baba, teaching that “love is the strongest medicine.”

  • Ep. 11 - Ione Skye

    22/02/2016 Duration: 47min

    Ione Skye embodies my definition of a renaissance person with many intellectual, artistic, and personal sides to her personality. However many people who were teenagers in the late nineteen-eighties will always know Ione best for her portrayal of John Cusack’s love object “Diane” in the film Say Anything. In the intervening years Ione has been in more than sixty films and TV episodes.  Daughter of sixties icon Donovan, Ione is a great lover of music and is married to one of my clients, the Australian singer-songwriter Ben Lee. They live with their two daughters in Los Angeles. Ione has also directed several films and is the author of the children’s book My Yiddish Vacation which was published in 2014. She is also a painter. She painted a stunning Krishna which in in my office facing me every day I’m there. Many of her paintings can be seen at  http://www.ioneskyepaintings.com/  

  • Ep. 10 - Eric Alterman

    31/01/2016 Duration: 49min

    I had fun talking to my favorite intellectual, my friend Eric Alterman (who claims that he doesn't believe in God) about his Torah studies and the meaning of life and liberalism. Eric is The Liberal Media columnist for The Nation and the author of ten books, including most recently Inequality and One City: Bill de Blasio and the New York Experiment, Year One), and The Cause: The Fight for American Liberalism from Franklin Roosevelt to Barack Obama. I first met him a decade ago after reading his still relevant What Liberal Media? and we soon developed the start of friendship which revolved a lot around talking about the meaning of life but I still learned a lot via the alchemy and formality of doing a podcast with him. Eric is also a music freak who wrote the book Ain't No Sin to be Glad You're Alive: The Promise of Bruce Springsteen and is a Distinguished Professor of English and Journalism at Brooklyn College and CUNY Graduate School of Journalism, He has also been the winner of the George Orwell Award, the

  • Ep. 9 - Rosanna Arquette

    11/01/2016 Duration: 55min

    Rosanna Arquette has functioned at a very high level in many aspects of the entertainment business for many decades while staying faithful to her hippie roots (she grew up in a commune). Rosanna has been in more than seventy films and dozens of TV shows working with such legendary directors as Martin Scorsese and Quentin Tarantino and featured in contemporary cable drama in roles on “Girls” and Ray Donovan.” She has been on the cover of Rolling Stone and hosted Saturday Night Live and has directed documentaries and music videos. She is also an activist and a mystic and a passionate champion of music. I have long marveled at how she can keep one part of herself firmly planted in the ever changing zeitgeist of Hollywood and others in the beautiful mist of art and transcendence.

  • Ep. 8 - Nicholas Roerich: Mystic and Painter

    20/12/2015 Duration: 56min

    This podcast is a conversation between David Silver and myself about the Russian mystic and painter Nicholas Roerich. Roerich, who died in 1947 also lived in the United States for many years during the nineteen thirties and died in India.  He and his wife Helena Roerich were deeply connected to the Masters of the Great White Lodge, best known in writings about Theosophy and they created a path called Agni Yoga. Roerich’s paintings, his greatest legacy were vivid colorful renditions of saints from all religions as well as many sites in nature, particularly the Himalayas. Several hundred of Roerich’s paintings are on permanent exhibit at the Roerich Museum on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. (Details and examples of dozens of the paintings at Roerich.org). Though large forgotten in modern culture, Roerich had a huge influence on culture and politics of the first half of the twentieth century. In the U.S. he became close to both Henry Wallace and Franklin Roosevelt (in mid thirties went on an expedition to Chin

  • Ep. 7 - Sara Davidson

    29/11/2015 Duration: 58min

    I asked David Silver to join me in this podcast as he, Sara Davidson and I have been friends for many decades yet we have rarely all been in a room at the same time. Since the nineteen seventies, Sara has provided a unique journalistic bridge between various kinds of new age and traditional spirituality and the worlds of American literature of journalism. Sara did one of the first in depth articles on Ram Dass for Ramparts Magazine in 1971. (“Baba Ram Dass: The Metamorphic Journey of Richard Alpert”) Her most recent book is “The December Project” based on two years of conversations with Reb Zalman-Schacter Shalomi the founder of the Jewish Renewal Movement contemplating and leading up to his death. Sara is also the author of the novel “Loose Change” which was later turned into a TV mini-series and “Joan: Forty Years of Life, Loss, and Friendship with Joan Didion,” as well as a half dozen other books and dozens of articles for magazines such as The Atlantic Monthly, The New York Times Magazine, Harper’s, Newsw

  • Ep. 6 - Rick Jarow

    08/11/2015 Duration: 47min

    Rick Jarow, Ph.D. is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Vasser College and is the author of the books “Creating the Work You Love, and“The Alchemy of Abundance.”He is a pioneer of the “anti-career movement,” who integrates an awareness of many spiritual traditions with the pressures of day to day Western life. At age 19, Rick left Harvard University and traveled for seven years throughout Europe and India. This pilgrimage is partially recounted in his first book, “In Search of the Sacred. At age 26, he returned to the West to complete a doctoral program at Columbia University, where he received a Ph.D. in Indian Languages and Literatures and in New York he became also a student of Hilda Charlton for many of the years when I also attended Hilda’s meetings and mediations.

  • Ep. 5 - Ben Cohen

    18/10/2015 Duration: 57min

    Ben Cohen , along with his long time friend Jerry Greenfield, was a founder of Ben and Jerry’s Ice Cream who ran it for its first twenty-two years of existence as it grew form a single ice cream shop in Burlington, Vermont to an internationally known and loved brand of gourmet ice cream. Ben is a role model for hundreds of independent business owners who emulate the Ben and Jerry’s model of a socially conscious corporation. From the outset, Ben and Jerry’s gave a percentage of their profits to charity, gave employees generous benefits, used only environmentally sound ingredients, and supported many humanitarian causes directly including Farm Aid, and the Children’s Defense Fund.    Inspired by many aspects of sixties counter-culture (two of Ben and Jerry’s most popular flavors were Cherry Garcia and Wavy Gravy, ) Ben has dedicated his post corporate life to activism in service of his ideas: peace and love. He also has the gift of making work and activism feel like fun. His current project, Stamp Stampede is a

  • Ep. 4 - Wavy Gravy

    27/09/2015 Duration: 48min

    The Grateful Dead’s Bob Weir once called Wavy Gravy “a saint in a clown suit.” Wavy started his career as Hugh Romney, a poet and avant- garde comedian in the Beatnik era of the late nineteen fifties. A friend and protégé of Lenny Bruce and Allen Ginsberg, Wavy had the idea to combine poetry readings with folk and jazz in Greenwich Village in the early sixties, and was Bob Dylan’s roommate when Dylan wrote “A Hard Rain A Gonna Fall” He was then a pioneer of the purest aspect of hippie culture, a protégé of Ken Kesey. Wavy and others then formed the commune The Hog Farm which toured America in the sixties bringing psychedelic notions of peace and love to the heartland and was famously in charge of security, food, and chilling out people with bad trips at the Woodstock Festival. Soon thereafter he was given the name Wavy Gravy by BB King. Wavy was also deeply involved in the movement to stop the War in Viet Nam. I recently went to a Graham Nash show where he told the audience that he wrote the song “Chicago” ab

  • Ep. 3 - Bobby Miller: From Studio 54 to the Divine Mother

    02/09/2015 Duration: 56min

    Like me, Bobby Miller co-exists in different worlds. He is a vibrant and pragmatic success in the worlds of art, entertainment and fashion and is also a mystic and a bhakti. Bobby has published  eighteen books of his photos  including the recently re-issued  “Fabulous! A Photographic Diary of Studio 54: REDUX”. His work has been exhibited in NYC, Palm Springs and Provincetown at AMP Gallery, where currently he has an exhibit called “Superstarz” which includes photos of Grace Jones, Elton John, John Belushi, Donna Summer, Gloria Swanson, Andy Warhol, Muhammed Ali, and Truman Capote among others. He is also the author of four books of poetry and is included in The 1995 American Book Award – winning "Aloud: Voices From The Nuyorican Poets Café." Bobby is also a teacher of mediation and yoga. He was and is a student of my spiritual teacher Hilda Charlton who I met in the early nineteen seventies via Ram Dass . Hilda passed away in 1988 although to many of us she is still an extremely vivid presence in our daily l

  • Ep. 2 - Paul Krassner and the hippie idea

    13/08/2015 Duration: 57min

    Paul Krassner is was one of the central figures of the counter-culture of the late nineteen sixties. He was one of the founders of the Yippies . He was a member of the Merry Pranksters. He first took LSD in 1965 at Millbrook when Tim Leary and Richard Alpert (now known,of course as Ram Dass) lived there. He was the Editor of Lenny Bruce’s autobiography ,”How To Talk Dirty And Influence People,” Most notably he was the Editor and The Realist an indispensable magazine for hippies and those who try to understand us. He was a contemporary and friend of Allen Ginsberg, Wavy Gravy, The Grateful Dead, Bob Dylan, Phil Ochs ,and Abbie Hoffman among others. In the decades since, Paul has written a couple of dozen books, recorded six albums (for labels I ran) and remained an important satirist and social commentator. At various times he has referred to his spiritual beliefs as a “radical atheist,” , “zen bastard,” and “free thinker.” Referring to his first LSD trip he says . “I realized I had to play with the mystery. A

  • Ep. 1 - Music is the Bridge

    20/07/2015 Duration: 53min

    Danny Goldberg introduces his Rock and Roles podcast with Raghu - Danny’s history in the music business with the likes of Led Zeppelin and Kurt Cobain is counterbalanced by his 40 odd year relationship to the path of Bhakti Yoga. Music of course is the bridge: “We were blessed with this moment in time when pop and mass appeal culture and music that could make you feel sexy and alive coincided with a certain level of spirituality”. Raghu brings up another moment in time where mindfulness seemed to transmute anger roles and Danny counters with the his idea of mindful triggers.

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