22 episodes

The Opening Life Podcast is a conversation between jazz musician J Kyle Gregory, spoken word poet Brittany Williams, and special guests from around the world, exploring what wondrous stories, poems, songs and sights of today and yesterday say to our lives.

In 2024, our new Season 3 episodes will drop on the first Friday of every month, from March to December.

Opening Life Podcast Nexus

    • Arts

The Opening Life Podcast is a conversation between jazz musician J Kyle Gregory, spoken word poet Brittany Williams, and special guests from around the world, exploring what wondrous stories, poems, songs and sights of today and yesterday say to our lives.

In 2024, our new Season 3 episodes will drop on the first Friday of every month, from March to December.

    The Meaning in Metal

    The Meaning in Metal

    Opening Life Season 3, Episode 3



    The Meaning in Metal



    Dear friends, we hope this conversation between Kyle, Brittany and musician Tim Yearsley opens new avenues of understanding for you. In Nexus we believe every human story expands and deepens our sense of reality. The music you’ll hear says what is has to say with enormous conviction and feeling, and we think that’s a good thing! 



    As always, we’d love to hear your thoughts about our conversation, and what it stirred inside of you. 



    JKG



    The Beyond Grace website is at:

    https://www.beyond-grace.co.uk/



    Beyond Grace is:



    Andy Walmsley - vocals/bass

    Tim Yearsley - guitar/vocals

    Chris Morley - guitar

    Ed Gorrod - drums



    *****



    The Burning Season (words and music by Beyond Grace)



    On YouTube:

    https://youtu.be/-4QvLXFIDWU?si=Th8ip-i8B4YMCzO6



    Lyrics:



    Welcome to the new dark ages!



    Where cowards live like kings, while children rot in cages

    Condemned to suffer for the crime of being born

    And politicians preach, that only they can save us

    From their mistakes and all the consequences of their failures



    Wielding words like weapons in an endless culture war

    Every accusation a confession of their true intentions



    Banning books and burning pages

    A little knowledge is a dangerous thing

    Something to be feared, and something to be hated

    This is how the new dark age begins



    And when the lights go out, we shall not see them lit again



    A new age of darkness has now descended on us

    Like a swarm of locusts, bringing famine and disease



    A vicious cycle we seem doomed to repeat



    Banning books and burning pages

    A little knowledge is a dangerous thing

    Something to be feared, and something to be hated

    This is how the new dark age begins



    And in our darkest hour, we'll turn against each other

    We'd rather set the world on fire, than ever face the truth



    So beware the death of reason

    Herald of the burning season



    Banning books and burning pages

    A little knowledge is a dangerous thing

    Something to be feared, and something to be hated

    This is how the new dark age begins



    *****



    Here Comes the Flood (words and music by Peter Gabriel)



    On YouTube:

    https://youtu.be/W7D4kinS_p8?si=gGUG_D0sa4aZvsWj



    Lyrics:



    When the night shows

    The signals grow on radios

    All the strange things

    They come and go as early warnings

    Stranded starfish have no place to hide

    Still waiting for the swollen Easter tide

    There's no point in direction

    We cannot even choose a side



    I took the old track

    The hollow shoulder across the waters

    On the tall cliffs

    They were getting older, sons and daughters

    The jaded underworld was riding high

    Waves of steel hurled metal at the sky

    And as the nail sunk in the cloud

    The rain was warm and soaked the crowd



    Lord, here comes the flood

    We'll say goodbye to flesh and blood

    If again the seas are silent, in any still alive

    It'll be those who gave their island to survive

    Drink up, dreamers, you’re running dry



    When the flood calls

    You have no home, you have no walls

    In the thunder crash

    You’re a thousand miles within a flash



    Don't be afraid to cry at what you see

    The actors gone, there’s only you and me

    And if we break before the dawn

    They'll use up what we used to be



    Lord, here comes the flood

    We'll say goodbye to flesh and blood

    If again the seas are silent, in any still alive

    It'll be those who gave their island to survive

    Drink up dreamers, you’re running dry



    Lord, here comes the flood

    We'll say goodbye to flesh and blood

    If again the seas are silent, in any still alive

    It'll be those who gave their island to survive

    Drink up dreamers, you’re running dry

    Drink up dreamers, you’re running dry



    *****

    Another helpful resource for understanding the meaning of metal, mentioned by Tim in our conversation:



    Metal: A Headbangers Journey



    On YouTube:



    https://youtu.be/chIeyxbVf_4?si=b8HzFX5XO_5MDswJ



    Peace!

    • 55 min
    Pathmaking

    Pathmaking

    Season 3, Episode 2 - Pathmaking



    In today’s conversation, Brittany, Kyle, and Nexus co-conspirators Craig and Mary Charnley explore what really happens in life as we search for our path forward, inspired by Spanish poet Antonio Machado’s paradigm-shifting poem, Caminante, No Hay Cammino (Pathmaker, There Is No Path).





    The Spanish poem in it’s entirety (followed by an english translation):



    Caminante, son tus huellasel camino y nada más;Caminante, no hay camino,se hace camino al andar.Al andar se hace el camino,y al volver la vista atrásse ve la senda que nuncase ha de volver a pisar.Caminante, no hay caminosino estelas en la mar.

    Traveler, your footprintsare the only road, nothing else.Traveler, there is no road;you make your own path as you walk.As you walk, you make your own road,and when you look backyou see the pathyou will never travel again.Traveler, there is no road;only a ship's wake on the sea.



    Antonio Machado 

    Legendary Spanish singer Joan Manuel Serrat created his own song from Machado’s poem, and through it shaped the perspective of entire generation of Spanish listeners. 

    We open and close the episode with Serrat’s song, beginning with the  original 1969 recording and closing with a live concert version recorded 50 years later in collaboration with Joaquin Sabina, joined by an enthusiastic crowd celebrating the poem and life with their singing. 

    Serrat’s 1969 version is here:



    https://youtu.be/8tHLw8FHlCE?si=HfYD2oMT81k8qlKl

    A video of the 2019 performance is here:



    https://youtu.be/7dT5ojKvcZk?si=_mc0f_5xuybq0cIy

    You can find other life opening articles, on our website at:

    https://nexusonline.org

    Peace!

    • 41 min
    Body Language

    Body Language

    Welcome to Season 3, Episode 1 of Opening Life Podcast!



    In today’s conversation, poet/playwright/comedian extraordinaire Phil Ginsburg joins Brittany and Kyle for a fun and (we hope, for you) profound exploration of Phil’s poem “Body Language.”



    What do the various parts of our bodies have to say to one another and to us about how to be in the world? That’s our big question.



    Phil’s latest collection In Pursuit of the Almost is available here:

    ⁠https://www.endeavorliterary.com/ginsburg⁠



    The music in today’s episode is from the album “Sometimes I Wonder: the Music of Hoagy Carmichael, is available here:

    https://caligolarecords.bandcamp.com/album/sometimes-i-wonder-the-music-of-hoagy-carmichael



    You can find other life opening articles on our website at:

    https://nexusonline.org/



    Peace!



    Your friends at Nexus



    PS. If you would like our help in starting your own Nexus group with your friends, where you live, please contact us at:



    nexusartsonline@gmail.com

    • 43 min
    A Seeming Stillness

    A Seeming Stillness

    Poetry Bob joins Kyle and Brittany to explore David Whyte's foundational poem, A Seeming Stillness. Once again we open the question of how we want to be in this world, with ourselves, and with everyone and everything else. Why do we seem so determined to deny our own vulnerability? We don't have all the answers, but we hope you are helped by our questions. 



    A Seeming Stillness - by David Whyte

    We love the movement in a seeming stillness, 

    the breath in the body of the loved one sleeping,

    the highest leaves in the silent wood, 

    a great migration in the sky above: the waters of the earth, 

    the blood in the body, the first, soft, stir in the silence beneath a strident voice, 

    the internal hands of our mind,

    always searching for touch, thoughts seeking other thoughts, 

    seeking other minds, the great arrival of form

    through all our hidden themes.

    And this breath, in this body, able just for a moment to give and to take, 

    to ask and be told, to find and be found, 

    to bless and be blessed, to hold and be held.

    We are all a sun-lit moment come from a long darkness, 

    what moves us always comes from what is hidden, 

    what seems to be said so suddenly has lived in the body for a long, long time.

    Our life like a breath, then, a give and a take, a bridge, a central movement, 

    between singing a separate self and learning to be selfless.

    Breathe then, as if breathing for the first time, 

    as if remembering with what difficulty you came into the world, 

    what strength it took to make that first impossible in-breath, 

    into a cry to be heard by the world.

    Your essence has always been that first vulnerability of being found, 

    of being heard and of being seen, and from the beginning

    the one who has always needed, 

    and been given, so much invisible help.

    This is how you were when you first came into the world, 

    this is how you were when you took your first breath in that world, 

    this is how you are now, 

    all unawares, in your new body and your new life, 

    this is the raw vulnerability of your every day, 

    and this is how you will want to be, and be remembered, 

    when you leave the world. 

    • 40 min
    Field of Dreams

    Field of Dreams

    Kyle, Brittany and aspiring screen writer, Donte Slocum, explore connections between their life stories and the film Field of Dreams, 1989's nostalgic ode to life and baseball, starring Kevin Costner, Ray Liotta, and James Earl Jones. Along the way we explore the soul of sports and the meaning of dreams, unfulfilled and fulfilled, in our winding journeys. Composer James Horner's sweeping film score accompanies us into new horizons. 

    • 51 min
    Are You Ready?

    Are You Ready?

    Brittany and Kyle have drummer Greg Errico, from the legendary band, Sly and the Family Stone, join the podcast. Together they open two classic tunes, listening for what they said to the people that first heard them in the in the late Sixties, and what they say to our lives and world today. Join us for a marvelous musical journey, through the power of melody, lyrics and groove, into the heart of our common experiences as human beings. 

    • 43 min

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