Object of Sound is a podcast that explores what music means to the people who make it, hear it, and identify with it. Host Hanif Abdurraqib interviews musicians, from Björk to Carly Rae Jepsen, about composing songs.
Hanif asks listeners how music reflects their birthplace. He says he's always thinking about songs. Rather than keeping songs to himself, he makes playlists for this podcast. As the youngest in his family, Hanif didn't get to choose the music they listened to at home. Listening to everyone's favorite songs expanded his music appreciation. He shares that wisdom with his listeners.
Podcast host Hanif is a culture critic and an acclaimed author. He wrote the poetry collection A Little Devil in America: Notes in Praise of Black Performance. He also wrote the book Go Ahead in the Rain: Notes on A Tribe Called Quest.
The Object of Sound podcast reveres original radio. Before listeners could choose what to play, each song surprised them. Hanif plays listeners new songs and provides insight into old favorites.
Jenna Wortham, Kimberly Drew, and Sudan Archives discuss Afrofuturism on the podcast. Wortham and Drew published the anthology Black Futures. Archives is a violinist and singer-songwriter. They each offer definitions of Afrofuturism. One calls it a "wild aspiration." One envisions a future where Black people have central roles. Another says Object of Sound is the definition of Afrofuturism. It uses technology to advance music and communication.
The podcast educates as much as it resonates. In one episode, Hanif asks which sounds remind people of home. His friend remembers trains, funk music, noisy card players, and kids running for ice cream. Hanif asks composer and multi-instrumentalist Angélica Negrón the same question. She recalls Coquí birds, the sound of loud TV, and a toy music box. The music box has a sad origin. But it shaped Negrón's career in extraordinary ways.
Sadness brought Hanif to music at times, too. It gave him a sense of belonging when he needed it. But it also gave him uncontainable joy. He spreads that joy through the Object of Sound podcast.
Episodes