expatriarch radio show - May 2018
This month in Berlin, Admina (pictured) is smashing the patriarchy with techno, Big Freedia is here to make you shake, Oshun showcase their bittersweet debut album, The Guilt want you to dance to the revolution, and Chicks on Speed are celebrating 20 years of making music. Tune in for all that plus tunes by Elysia Crampton, Nakhane, Rebeca Lane, Bitpart, Clara Luzia, Better off Dead, Auth, Aurora, Nkisi and Exploded View.
This is the final episode of Expatriarch Radio.
A HUGE thanks to Joey Hansom of Godmother who started this thing back in 2010, to Gizem aka 6zm who recently joined as co-host and co-producer, to all our friends at reboot.fm, coloRadio, Radio BLAU, radio t, and FSK, to Sky for lending her microphone, to Kiesia for building our shiny website, to all the people we interviewed, our guest DJs and everyone whose music we played, and of course YOU our listeners!
Our archive of past shows will remain accessible via Soundcloud and Mixcloud.
Expatriarch Radio is broadcast on reboot.fm (88.4 in Berlin, 90.7 in Potsdam), coloRadio (99.3 and 99.4FM in Dresden), Radio BLAU (99.2FM in Leipzig), radio t (102.7FM in Chemnitz), FSK (93.0FM in Hamburg), and online all the time at www.expatriarch.com.
You can also subscribe and download episodes via iTunes podcasts.
Best, Jen
Englischsprachige Sendung über queere Themen (Sendungsübernahme aus Berlin)
Expatriarch expatriates from the patriarchy, abandoning our toxic macho society and envisioning what comes beyond – with a killer soundtrack to for the long road trip ahead.
Expatriarch is a multifaceted platform for music and other exploits emanating from planet Earth’s current queer creative capital, encompassing a monthly transgenre radio show (broadcast in six cities), blog, and event production. Life is a cabaret, and in Berlin, you don’t need a license for dancing.
Expatriarch operates not simply by empowering women, but by dismantling the gender binary myth altogether. Moving beyond linear thought processes (e.g. masculine/feminine, natural/artificial), Expatriarch maneuvers queer and feminist theory into 4-D experiences from a post-whatever perspective, serving as a muse, a midwife and a mass murderer of culture.