• racism, justice, why even care (with mátre)?
    Apr 15 2026

    why should anyone care about racial justice? in this episode matré reflects on growing up near a racial divide and the emotional truth that something in our society simply does not feel right. we explore the idea that injustice harms everyone and why that realization can become a call toward healing and liberation.

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    13 mins
  • what is the right way to relate to being white and loving black music? (with matré)
    Apr 1 2026

    in this episode, erich continues his conversation with hip hop artist and cultural worker matré, exploring a central tension many white and white passing people encounter: how to relate ethically, honestly, and responsibly to being white and playing black music.

    matré reflects on his lifelong relationship with hip hop, the questions that arose as he navigated identity and belonging, and how conversations with trusted people, including his brother, helped clarify the real impact of race and access.

    this episode is not about arriving at a single answer, but about staying in relationship with the question. it’s an invitation into vulnerability, humility, and ongoing learning, grounded in love for the music and commitment to liberation.

    to hear more from matré, including reflections on music, healing, and courageous conversation, check out his podcast love bravely: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/the-love-bravely-podcast/id1783210134

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    9 mins
  • why is race so hard to talk about? (with matré)
    Mar 18 2026

    in this episode, erich is joined by hip hop artist and cultural worker matre for a candid conversation about why conversations around race can feel so charged, vulnerable, and difficult, even among people committed to justice and growth.

    together, they explore fear, in group dynamics, overlapping identities, and the tension between saying the “right” thing and speaking from love. the conversation touches on race as a collective wound, the vulnerability of being witnessed, and what becomes possible when we choose growth over performance.

    this episode is the first in a short series with matre, and opens space for honest reflection at the growing edge of race, music, spirituality, and liberation.

    to hear more from matre, including reflections on music, vulnerability, and healing, check out his podcast love bravely: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/the-love-bravely-podcast/id1783210134

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    13 mins
  • is drawing attention to cultural appropriation causing harm?
    Mar 4 2026

    in this episode, erich responds to a question that arises often in conversations about cultural appropriation: is the narrative itself harmful, or is it naming harm that already exists?

    this conversation is especially oriented toward white and white passing listeners engaging with black, indigenous, and diasporic music and traditions, and who sense that responsibility, reciprocity, and liberation are part of the work.

    through personal reflection, lived experience, and spiritual framing, this transmission explores cultural appropriation as a product of deeper systems that center whiteness and make extraction invisible.

    rather than avoiding discomfort, this episode invites listeners to examine cause and effect, power dynamics, and the role of guilt and shame as signals of imbalance rather than moral failure.

    if you want to be a more deeply involved in this journey, sign up at: http://whitepeopleblackmusic.com/

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    9 mins
  • beyond anti-racism, into liberation
    Feb 18 2026

    in this episode, erich reflects on why the language of liberation feels more accurate than anti racism to his lived experience.

    drawing from personal reflection, spiritual frameworks, and liberatory thinkers, this transmission explores the difference between opposition and wholeness, between reacting to injustice and moving toward collective healing.

    rather than framing the work as something we fight against, this episode invites a reorientation toward what we are moving into. more self knowledge. more ease. more relational honesty. more humanity.

    liberation, as explored here, is not a denial of racism or injustice. it is an invitation to work at a different frequency. one rooted in wholeness rather than fragmentation, and in possibility rather than shame or domination.

    this conversation is especially oriented toward white and white passing folk doing racial work who sense there may be something deeper, more expansive, and more life giving available. http://whitepeopleblackmusic.com/

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    8 mins
  • why do i want to be the only white guy in the room?
    Feb 4 2026

    why do some white or white-passing people feel a desire to be the only white person in the room? in this episode, i reflect on my own longing for belonging in black spaces, the cultural void created by assimilation into whiteness, and how love for black music can slide into extraction without reciprocity. this is an invitation to examine power, privilege, and what giving back really requires if liberation is to be shared. http://whitepeopleblackmusic.com/

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    11 mins
  • is my anger blocking your liberation?
    Jan 21 2026

    what happens when anger is both justified and disruptive? in this personal vignette, erich reflects on a moment at a gym, family tensions, and the challenge of working with anger in anti racism and liberation work. rather than offering solutions, this episode sits in the messiness of anger as a valid response to injustice, while exploring how unheld anger can quietly block connection, dialogue, and collective liberation. http://whitepeopleblackmusic.com/

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    17 mins
  • am i doing cultural appropriation?
    Jan 7 2026

    this episode asks a hard question: am i doing cultural appropriation? drawing from personal experience, spiritual community conversations, and the work of shelly tochluk, i explore why defensiveness often blocks discernment, how harm can exist even with good intentions, and why the more important question may be whether harm is being caused at all. from there, the conversation turns toward accountability, repair, and liberation as a way forward. http://whitepeopleblackmusic.com/

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    14 mins