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The Witch Wave

#140 - Lykanthea A.K.A. Lakshmi Ramgopal

The Witch Wave

Pam Grossman

Arts, Visual Arts, Spirituality, Other, Religion & Spirituality

4.91.6K Ratings

🗓️ 18 December 2024

⏱️ 81 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Lakshmi Ramgopal is a musician and dancer who performs under the name Lykanthea. Her electro-mythic debut EP, Migration, received much-deserved praise from such outlets as The Chicago Tribune, Noisey, and Public Radio International’s The World (and listeners will recognize its track “Hand and Eye” as The Witch Wave theme song). She’s collaborated with Savage Sister on their sundrowned EP, and she’s been creating and performing music via sound installations and performances for spaces such as The Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art and Chicago’s Lincoln Park Conservatory. Her new project, Some Viscera, marks a shift in instrumentation, drawing more heavily on her training in South Indian classical (or Carnatic) music, as well as organic sounds from analog instruments, bird song, and lullabies. It touches on atavistic questions of motherhood and personal legacy. When performed live it is an evening-length work of sound and movement that explores childhood, nostalgia, and kinship in the Indian-American diaspora in the wake of India’s independence, while questioning the boundaries of classical forms. Embracing the warmth of the sruti box, unprocessed vocals, and strings, Ramgopal’s ensemble draws on a wide range of influences to create a work that is as expansive as it is intimate. Some Viscera premiered at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago on September 26-27, 2024, and the music of Some Viscera is now available in a standalone album.

In addition to that, performing both solo and with her ensemble, Lakshmi has done site-specific, immersive shows in spaces like Chicago’s Edgar Miller’s Glasner Studio and Garfield Park Conservatory, and in the middle of a freshwater stream. In 2018 she showed A Half-Light Chorus, which a sound installation commissioned by Experimental Sound Studio, and In 2020 she and visual artist Nancy Davidson showed a site-specific sculpture and sound installation, at Krannert Art Museum. The museum acquired it in 2023.

Lakshmi received her PhD in Classics from the University of Chicago, and she is currently Assistant Professor of History at Columbia University, with a focus on the Roman Empire. 

On this episode, Lakshmi discusses her sonic shift from electronic to analog, music as ancestral offering, and the reincarnating power of love.

Pam also talks about the secret magic of lullabies, and responds to a listener’s comment about reconciling witchcraft with one’s religious upbringing.

Songs featured in the episode are all from Lykanthea’s new album, Some Viscera:

“Bird Song”

“Garuda”

“The Nightingale”

“Cremation”

Our sponsors for this episode are Ritual + Shelter, TU·ET·AL, UBU Skills, BetterHelp, Black Phoenix Alchemy Lab, Grimsby Hollow Meadery, and Open Sea Design Co.

We also have print-on-demand merch like Witch Wave shirts, sweatshirts, totes, stickers, and mugs available now here, and all sorts of other bewitching goodies available in the Witch Wave shop.

And if you want more Witch Wave, please consider supporting us on Patreon to get access to detailed show notes, bonus Witch Wave Plus episodes, Pam’s monthly online rituals, and more! That’s patreon.com/witchwave

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This episode of The Witch Wave is brought to you by Ritual and Shelter.

0:05.5

Looking for a magical place to shop and hold space.

0:09.7

Check out Ritual and Shelter in Homewood, Alabama.

0:13.8

Browse through their bookshelves covering topics of magical history, theory, and practice,

0:19.9

as well as tarot cards and oracle decks from well-known

0:23.6

artists and even decks created by local witches in Alabama.

0:28.2

From teas, tonics, and tinctures to toad skulls and turmaline towers, you can find all of these

0:36.2

and so much more on their witchy website, Ritualshelter.com, or in person.

0:43.6

So lather up that flying ointment and travel down to ritual and shelter in Homewood, Alabama, or check them out online at ritualshelter.com.

0:54.6

Did you run out of flying ointment?

0:56.9

Well, they have that too.

0:59.2

I've got a really special new offering for you all,

1:03.0

and that is new Witchwave Ceremonial Soap,

1:08.1

which has been made in collaboration with my favorite soap company, Two at All.

1:14.9

Two at All makes soap and skin care using traditional alchemical techniques to transform

1:20.1

pure water and plant-based ingredients into beautiful, handcrafted, cold-processed soaps, which are also magically charged. These soaps are

1:31.6

beyond bewitching and luxurious, and after being a hardcore fan of them for a while, I knew

1:38.7

I wanted to collaborate with them, and I am so thrilled that they agreed. I'm overjoyed to now offer

1:46.0

Witchwave soap by Two at All, available now exclusively in the Witchwave shop over at

1:53.5

at Witchwavepodcast.com slash shop. To It All founders, Matthew and Natalie and I put our heads together to come up with a special soap blend that is deeply magical just for you.

2:06.6

The Witchwave blend incorporates such intentional ingredients as black salt for cleansing and protection, Yarrow to aid in divination and love, and mugwort, also known as Artemisia,

2:21.7

for lunar connection and visionary insights. It's also blended with the most beautiful

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