

Cut and Paste
St. Louis Public Radio
Cut & Paste brings you in-depth conversations with artists and cultural drivers, hosted by Jeremy D. Goodwin. Listeners will hear from artists about their work and why it matters, and also about who they are and how their own personal experiences shape their art-making.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 5, 2020 • 19min
Cut & Paste — Ken Haller on arts and healing
As a pediatrician who is also an accomplished cabaret artist, Ken Haller says he may play several roles over the course of a day: teacher, doctor, friend, singer. He says those roles are all different aspects of his chief pursuit: being a healer.
He explores the link between arts and healing in an improvisational acting course he leads at St. Louis University School of Medicine and in his latest cabaret show, “The Medicine Show,” which he’ll perform at Blue Strawberry in St. Louis on March 14. It’s also the subject of a five-year effort recently launched by the Arts & Education Council with help from an $825,000 grant from the Missouri Foundation for Health, called the Arts and Healing Initiative.

Dec 30, 2019 • 24min
Cut & Paste — Foam
Examining the legacy of the late, great St. Louis multi-purpose venue Foam.

Nov 29, 2019 • 21min
Cut & Paste — Early Music
When some music lovers cue up the oldies, they go way back —sometimes 1,000 years or so.
Definitions vary as to what exactly counts as early music, but the wide-ranging category goes back at least to the beginning of European music notation, around the 10th century. Early music ensembles may perform music from the medieval era, the Renaissance, the Baroque period and even some music written as late as the 19th century.
In this episode of Cut & Paste, we talk with two early-music experts who help keep early music alive in and around St. Louis.

Oct 30, 2019 • 19min
Cut & Paste — Black Tulip Chorale
The Black Tulip Chorale is notable as an "all-identity" choir, in an artistic world where people presenting as male are often sent to one creative corner and people presenting as female are sent to another.

Sep 27, 2019 • 26min
Cut & Paste — St. Louis Symphony Orchestra Music Director Stéphane Denève
When Stéphane Denève was a 10-year-old child growing up in a small town in the north of France, he heard something he liked.
A nun liked to play the pipe organ in the chapel at his Catholic school, and Deneve would hide there to listen.
“I thought the sound of the organ was extraordinary,” he said in an interview at his new office in Powell Hall. “I was enchanted.”
Fortunately for classical music lovers in St. Louis, the nun found little Denève hiding there and suggested he take piano lessons.

Aug 30, 2019 • 21min
Cut & Paste — Yingxue Zuo
Visual artist Yingxue Zuo grew up amid persecution by the Chinese government during Mao's Cultural Revolution, and discovered art as a way to propel himself from a potential life of manual labor. His latest work incorporates figures from contemporary American politics.

Jul 12, 2019 • 31min
Cut & Paste — Writer Paul Thiel
Thiel sought his literary fortunes in San Francisco in 1963, where he moved into the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood and discovered the burgeoning scene of Beat poets centered around Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s City Lights bookstore. Allen Ginsberg was a familiar face in the neighborhood, and, for a time, an unknown singer named Janis Joplin rehearsed beneath his poet’s loft.
He later relocated to New York City, where he sold poems on the streets of Greenwich Village for a quarter apiece; saw W. H. Auden hanging out in the back at poetry readings; and encountered Andy Wharhol as a “white ghost” always hovering silently around the literary and artistic scene. He also witnessed the Stonewall Uprising, the acts of protest and civil disobedience that launched the Gay Liberation movement

May 31, 2019 • 22min
Cut & Paste — UrbArts and the Rustbelt Poetry Slam
St. Louis Youth Poet Laureate Camryn Howe and UrbArts founder MK Stallings reveal the electrifying power of the spoken word.

Apr 30, 2019 • 21min
Cut & Paste — Saj Issa and Kiki Salem
Palestinian-American artists Saj ISsa and Kiki Salem talk about their collaborative exhibition "Back Home In Your New Home" at Kranzberg Arts Center in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.

Mar 28, 2019 • 15min
Cut & Paste — "St. Louis Sound"
Authors Amanda E. Doyle and Steve Pick discuss their book "St. Louis Sound: An Illustrated Timeline." They talk about key figures from St. Louis music history, from Chuck Berry to Nelly. They also explain the legendary origins of songs "St. Louis Blues" and "Stagger Lee."