David Rovics - Interviews

Interviews

  • The Progressive - Interview with Matthew Rothschild, editor of Progressive Magazine and host of Progressive Radio, October 2006
  • The Jason Crane Show (mp3 file) - September 2006
  • ZNet - The Soundtrack to Protest: An interview with David Rovics by Matt Dineen, September 2006
  • Alternate Music Press - June, 2006
  • Port Townsend, Washington - Me and Attila the Stockbroker from early March, 2006
  • Climate Change Rally in London, England - December 2005
  • Toward Freedom - Radical Folk Music: An Interview with David Rovics by Matt Dineen, August 2005
  • Infoshop News - April 2005
  • Lone Star Iconoclast - Beyond the Mall, March 2005
  • Free Speech Radio News - by Stefan Christoff that was broadcast on CKUT in Montreal, September 2003
  • CHRY Toronto - by Tom, September 2003
  • Baltimore IMC - "Inspiring the Troops" Through Music, November 2002
  • Boston Indymedia - Willimantic, Connecticut, August 2002
  • KUNM - New Mexico public radio, very well done, January 2002
  • Free Radio Burlington - Me and Jim Page, December 2001
  • DC Indymedia - During the IMF/anti-war protests at that time (unedited, sound quality varies), September 2001
  • Robots and Electronic Brains - March 1999
  • Free Radio Burlington - Me and Jim Page, December 2001
  • "'Flat-Picking Rabble-Rouser' David Rovics" on Rag Radio by Thorne Webb Dreyer, The Rag Blog, June 6, 2012. Includes video and podcast of Dreyer's June 1, 2012, Rag Radio interview with David Rovics. (57:01)

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Famous quotes containing the word interviews:

    What a perpetual disappointment is actual society, even of the virtuous and gifted! After interviews have been compassed with long foresight, we must be tormented presently by baffled blows, by sudden, unseasonable apathies, by epilepsies of wit and of animal spirits, in the heyday of friendship and thought. Our faculties do not play us true, and both parties are relieved by solitude.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    If the justices would only retire when they have become burdens to the court itself, or when they recognize themselves that their faculties have become impaired, I would grieve sincerely when they passed away, and you would not feel like such a hypocrite as you do when you are going through the formality of sending telegrams of condolence and giving out interviews for propriety’s sake.
    William Howard Taft (1857–1930)