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The Sum of All Wisdom

Podcast by Scott Catey

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The Sum of All Wisdom features conversations exploring music, creativity, memory, and meaning as forms of wisdom. We serve reflective creatives, musicians, thinkers, and culturally curious listeners seeking deeper conversations about art, memory, identity, meaning, and the wisdom embedded in creative lives. In other words, people just like you. Our collaboration s bring a fresh approach to talking about, discovering, and listening to music and musicians. Every artist --not just the legends--deserves a safe space to tell the stories behind their music , talk about their lives in their own creative way s, and touch listeners with their warmth, intelligence, and wisdom that's been hard-earned as a creative in sometimes chaotic world. The Sum of All Wisdom team is thrilled to partner with the incredible musical talent that is all around us, and bring inspiring and little-known stories to our growing, passionate, dedicated, thoughtful audience around the world. The Sum of All Wisdom is a home for people who still believe music, conversation, and creative life can teach us how to live.

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8 jaksot

jakson Architecting Atmosphere & the Luminous Darkness of Sound: A Conversation with Matthijs Kouw kansikuva

Architecting Atmosphere & the Luminous Darkness of Sound: A Conversation with Matthijs Kouw

“How would you like to spend some time with music that can reconfigure what you think about yourself, about music, and about space and time?”  In this episode of The Sum of All Wisdom, Scott reconnects with Dutch experimental composer and sound artist Matthijs Kouw for a deep conversation about sound, space, philosophy, and the spiritual possibilities of composing, experiencing, and listening to music.  Together, they explore what “experimental music” really means—not as a genre, but as a position: an openness to uncertainty, emergence, and the unknown. Matthijs reflects on the role of indeterminacy in composition, the architecture of sound, and the idea that music can create spaces for listeners to inhabit rather than narratives to consume.  The conversation ranges widely across: * Experimental music as process and experiment  * Drone music, atmosphere, and “dwelling” in sound  * The influence of thinkers like Jacques Derrida, Gilles Deleuze, and Gilbert Simondon  * Time, emergence, and metastability in musical composition  * Negative theology and the limits of language  * Field recordings, contact microphones, and environmental sound  * Why cassettes still matter  * The politics of music distribution and alternatives to Spotify  * Music as communion, meditation, and philosophical inquiry  A central thread throughout the discussion is the idea that music can carry us beyond language—toward experiences that resist direct explanation yet remain deeply human and emotionally real.  Matthijs also discusses several of his recent works, including: * Transversal  * Meta-Stabilities  * Obscurum per Obscurius  * The collaborative project Irradiance with Gagi Petrovic  Memorable Moments “Maybe the orchestra is not a set of instruments, but the entire world.”  “It’s more like creating spaces for people to dwell in.”  “Maybe the soundscape is populated by beautiful birdsong and leaf blowers simultaneously.” About Matthijs Kouw Matthijs Kouw is an experimental musician based in The Netherlands exploring the relationship between movement and stasis. Using analog synthesis, software, field recordings, and recordings of various objects, Matthijs combines long-form drone with elements from acousmatic music, noise, and microsound. Links: * Website: https://clinamen.nl/about/ [https://clinamen.nl/about/] * Bandcamp: https://clinamen.bandcamp.com/ [https://clinamen.bandcamp.com/] * Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mvkouw/ [https://www.instagram.com/mvkouw/] Explore Related Music and Sound Compositions  Links to musicians, labels, and record stores mentioned in the episode: ·      Alan Lamb: https://room40.bandcamp.com/ [https://room40.bandcamp.com/]  ·      Gagi Petrovic: https://gagipetrovic.com/ [https://gagipetrovic.com/]  ·      Groupe de Recherche Musical (GRM): https://inagrm.com/fr [https://inagrm.com/fr]  ·      Important Drone Records: https://importantdronerecords.bandcamp.com/music [https://importantdronerecords.bandcamp.com/music]  ·      Important Records: https://importantrecords.com/ [https://importantrecords.com/]  ·      Marc Namblard: https://marcnamblard.bandcamp.com/ [https://marcnamblard.bandcamp.com/]  ·      Masami Akita/Merzbow: https://www.instagram.com/merzbowofficial/ [https://www.instagram.com/merzbowofficial/]  ·      Moving Furniture Records: https://movingfurniturerecords.com/ [https://movingfurniturerecords.com/]  ·      Phil Maguire: https://philmaguire.bandcamp.com/ [https://philmaguire.bandcamp.com/]  ·      Radboud Mens: https://radboudmens.bandcamp.com/ [https://radboudmens.bandcamp.com/]  ·      Sietse van Erve: https://orphax.com/about/ [https://orphax.com/about/]  ·      Staalplaat: https://staalplaat.bandcamp.com/ [https://staalplaat.bandcamp.com/]  ·      Tashiya Tsunoda: https://toshiyatsunoda.bandcamp.com/ [https://toshiyatsunoda.bandcamp.com/]  ·      Waaghals Records Store: https://www.waaghals.com/ [https://www.waaghals.com/]  Featured Music  This episode includes excerpts from: * “Irradiance”  * “Metastability 3,” from Meta-Stabilities * “Asymptotic,” from Transversal All music by Matthijs Kouw and used with permission. About the Show The Sum of All Wisdom: Conversations on Musicians, Makers, and Meaning is a long-form, reflective podcast centered on working musicians and music-adjacent professionals whose work creates meaning, community, and cultural impact. The show prioritizes listening, craft, and lived experience over promotion. Written, produced, and hosted by Scott Catey. If this conversation resonated, consider sharing it—or carrying something from it into your own listening and creative life. ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ [https://www.patreon.com/c/ScottCatey]

27. touko 2026 - 1 h 32 min
jakson Bigfoot and Terraformers and Stage Fright... Oh My! Part 2 of a Conversation with Andrew Hunt kansikuva

Bigfoot and Terraformers and Stage Fright... Oh My! Part 2 of a Conversation with Andrew Hunt

Episode Summary What does it mean to make music—and to keep making it—over a lifetime? In this episode, part 2 of Scott’s conversation with musician Andrew Hunt on songwriting, performance, and the lived realities of creative life. From the discipline of editing to the risks of artistic honesty, they explore how musicians navigate the tension between expression and expectation. Along the way, they dive into: * The difference between commercial success and artistic integrity  * Why some songs last—and others disappear within days  * The hidden labor behind “simple” music  * The emotional realities behind story songs, including violence, jealousy, and longing  * The role of live performance in creating connection and meaning  At its core, this is a conversation about music as a form of knowledge—and about what artists learn, feel, and risk in the act of creating.   In This Conversation Topics explored include: ·      Music as Knowledge Creative practice as a way of understanding emotion, identity, and the world.  ·      Art vs. Commerce Navigating authenticity in a system driven by audience and algorithm.  ·      Editing as Craft (and Survival) Knowing what to keep, what to discard, and when to stop.  ·      The Emotional Core of Songwriting Exploring difficult themes—jealousy, violence, longing—through narrative.  ·      Time, Aging, and Creative Drive The evolving risks and rewards of making art over a lifetime.   Notable Moments * Infinite variation within constraint  * The “three-day rule” for whether a song survives  * The Bob Qualters analogy: iteration, obsession, and knowing when to stop  * The concept of “stewing” as the emotional center of certain songs  * The paradox of simplicity in recording: minimal sound, maximal infrastructure  * “I still want to be Johnny Cash” — creative ambition beyond age   About the Guest Andrew Hunt is an accomplished musician, voice actor, and member of the Recording Academy. His life is an altered country western song... Looking for Peace in all the right places.  Links: * Website: https://cowboyandy.com/ [https://cowboyandy.com/]  * YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@cowboyandyandthesalamander3925 [https://www.youtube.com/@cowboyandyandthesalamander3925] * Spotify: * Flask [https://open.spotify.com/artist/37W9XUWSOILXIqWmawP2eD?si=u0qedIBfRT-PS-zx2ZpROQ]  * Cowboy Andy & the Salamanders [https://open.spotify.com/artist/6TqDAeHJThDhlK3lOdFb08?si=iRq3to-VTCyytBaPDResMA] * Facebook * Flask [https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61577598384029&mibextid=wwXIfr&rdid=HtZat4YlfWVOMpiH&share_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fshare%2F1AJSqnAHnL%2F%3Fmibextid%3DwwXIfr]  * Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/flaskisaband/ [https://www.instagram.com/flaskisaband/]    Music featured in this episode: “Pirate Cowboy,” written by Andrew Hunt, performed by Flask Used with permission. “Brady Bill,” written by Andrew Hunt, demo performed by Andrew Hunt Used with permission. “Tappin' at the Glass,” written by Andrew Hunt, performed by Flask Used with permission.   Production Notes Host, producer, editor: Scott Catey Publisher: Ravenna Studios Distributed by Transistor Recording & Editing: Riverside.com, Audacity.org     About the Show The Sum of All Wisdom: Conversations on Music, Makers, and Meaning is a long-form, reflective podcast centered on working musicians and music-adjacent professionals whose work creates meaning, community, and cultural impact. The show prioritizes listening, craft, and lived experience over promotion. If this conversation resonated, consider sharing it—or carrying something from it into your own listening and creative life. If the conversation provoked you, please let us know that, too. Don’t forget to like, comment, subscribe.  ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ [https://www.patreon.com/c/ScottCatey]

13. touko 2026 - 1 h 17 min
jakson The Three-Day Rule: Songs We Keep (and Why We Kill the Rest): A Conversation with Andrew Hunt kansikuva

The Three-Day Rule: Songs We Keep (and Why We Kill the Rest): A Conversation with Andrew Hunt

Episode Summary What does it mean to make music—and to keep making it—over a lifetime? In this episode, Scott sits down with musician Andrew Hunt for a wide-ranging conversation on songwriting, performance, and the lived realities of creative life. From the discipline of editing to the risks of artistic honesty, they explore how musicians navigate the tension between expression and expectation. Along the way, they dive into: * The difference between commercial success and artistic integrity  * Why some songs last—and others disappear within days  * The hidden labor behind “simple” music  * The emotional realities behind story songs, including violence, jealousy, and longing  * The role of live performance in creating connection and meaning  At its core, this is a conversation about music as a form of knowledge—and about what artists learn, feel, and risk in the act of creating.   In This Conversation Topics explored include: ·      Music as Knowledge Creative practice as a way of understanding emotion, identity, and the world.  ·      Art vs. Commerce Navigating authenticity in a system driven by audience and algorithm.  ·      Editing as Craft (and Survival) Knowing what to keep, what to discard, and when to stop.  ·      The Emotional Core of Songwriting Exploring difficult themes—jealousy, violence, longing—through narrative.  ·      Time, Aging, and Creative Drive The evolving risks and rewards of making art over a lifetime.Keep bullets short and conceptual.   Notable Moments * Infinite variation within constraint  * The “three-day rule” for whether a song survives  * The Bob Qualters analogy: iteration, obsession, and knowing when to stop  * The concept of “stewing” as the emotional center of certain songs  * The paradox of simplicity in recording: minimal sound, maximal infrastructure  * “I still want to be Johnny Cash” — creative ambition beyond age   About the Guest Andrew Hunt is an accomplished musician, voice actor, and member of the Recording Academy. His life is an altered country western song... Looking for Peace in all the right places.  Links: * Website: https://cowboyandy.com/ [https://cowboyandy.com/] * Spotify: * Flask [https://open.spotify.com/artist/37W9XUWSOILXIqWmawP2eD?si=u0qedIBfRT-PS-zx2ZpROQ]  * Cowboy Andy & the Salamanders [https://open.spotify.com/artist/6TqDAeHJThDhlK3lOdFb08?si=iRq3to-VTCyytBaPDResMA] * Facebook * Flask [https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61577598384029&mibextid=wwXIfr&rdid=HtZat4YlfWVOMpiH&share_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fshare%2F1AJSqnAHnL%2F%3Fmibextid%3DwwXIfr] * Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/flaskisaband/ [https://www.instagram.com/flaskisaband/] Music featured in this episode: “Shady Grove” (Rough Mix) by Flask Used with permission. “Christians” by Flask Used with permission. Production Notes Host, producer, editor: Scott Catey Publisher: Ravenna Studios Distributed by Transistor Recording & Editing: Riverside.com, Audacity.org   About the Show The Sum of All Wisdom: Conversations on Music, Makers, and Meaning is a long-form, reflective podcast centered on working musicians and music-adjacent professionals whose work creates meaning, community, and cultural impact. The show prioritizes listening, craft, and lived experience over promotion. If this conversation resonated, consider sharing it—or carrying something from it into your own listening and creative life. If the conversation provoked you, please let us know that, too. ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ [https://www.patreon.com/c/ScottCatey]

6. touko 2026 - 1 h 16 min
jakson Music: Community, Rhythm & the Wisdom of Tradition: A Conversation with Eric Wolferman of the Celtic Dragon Pipe Band kansikuva

Music: Community, Rhythm & the Wisdom of Tradition: A Conversation with Eric Wolferman of the Celtic Dragon Pipe Band

Title: Music: Community, Rhythm & the Wisdom of Tradition: A Conversation with Eric Wolferman of the Celtic Dragon Pipe Band  Episode Summary What does it mean to devote your life to music as a passionate avocation? In this episode, Scott sits down with drummer and instructor Eric Wolferman of the Celtic Dragon Pipe Band to explore the rich, communal, and deeply human world of pipe bands. From the thunder of snare drums to the visual poetry of tenor flourishes, Eric opens a window into a musical tradition that is at once ancient, evolving, and profoundly alive. What emerges is not just a conversation about music—but about community, discipline, teaching, and the quiet power of tradition and shared cultural practice. What You’ll Hear * What a pipe band really is Beyond the stereotype: four musical “voices” working as one ensemble—pipes, snare, tenor, and bass  * The role of the drummer How rhythm becomes both sound and spectacle, especially through tenor drumming and choreographed flourishes  * A musician’s unlikely path From radio broadcaster → roadie → tenor drummer, and finding the right instrument by accident, and with a little nudge from a friend  * Music as marriage & partnership Playing in a band alongside his wife—who also leads the drum corps  * Competition at the highest level The long road to the World Pipe Band Championships in Glasgow—years of travel, practice, and commitment  * What judges actually listen for Precision, unity, ensemble cohesion—and why mistakes in rhythm matter more than visual flair  * Teaching the next generation How Eric trains young drummers—from first stick control to creative expression  * The philosophy of mastery Why everything begins with simple fundamentals—and how creativity grows from control  * A global musical community Pipe bands as a tight-knit, international network of shared tradition  * The future of tradition Why pipe band music persists—and what it takes to bring new generations into it  Key Themes 1. Music as Community Pipe bands aren’t just ensembles—they’re families. Built over decades, sustained by volunteerism, and rooted in shared identity. 2. Discipline → Freedom Mastery of basics (timing, grip, control) unlocks creativity—especially in expressive forms like tenor drumming. 3. Tradition as Living Practice These are centuries-old forms—but they evolve through teaching, performance, and community participation. 4. Access to Excellence At the highest levels, music becomes radically human—where even the “best in the world” are approachable, collaborative, and generous. Memorable Moments * Eric describing pipe bands as “a community of people who love the music and culture” * The reality of competing: 9-hour drives to play 5 minutes of music  * Practicing for years to earn a place at the Worlds  * The image of drummers waiting patiently while pipers spend long stretches tuning  * A kid from Montana standing feet away from the world’s best musicians—and realizing access is possible  Why This Episode Matters This conversation embodies a core idea here at The Sum of All Wisdom: Music is not just expression—it is a system of knowledge and a means of transmitting that knowledge. Pipe band culture shows how: * Knowledge is transmitted across generations  * Discipline shapes identity  * Community sustains art  * And tradition becomes a living archive of human meaning About the Guest Eric Wolferman is tenor drummer and drum instructor with the Celtic Dragon Pipe Band, based in Missoula, Montana.  Websites & other links Celtic Dragon Pipe Band ·       https://www.celticdragonpipeband.com/index.html [https://www.celticdragonpipeband.com/index.html] Music featured in this episode: Scotland the Brave Traditional, performed by Celtic Dragon Pipe Band Used with permission. Mingulay Boat Song Performed by Gaelic Storm with Celtic Dragon Pipe Band Used with permission. About the Show & Production Notes Written, produced, and hosted by Dr. Scott Catey, The Sum of All Wisdom: Conversations on Music, Makers, and Meaning is a long-form, reflective podcast centered on working musicians and adjacent professionals whose craft creates meaning, community, and cultural impact. The show prioritizes listening, craft, and the lived experience of making, sharing, and loving all things music. If this conversation resonated, consider sharing it—or carrying something from it into your own listening and creative life. And most of all, thank you for listening! Host Links Website [https://scottcatey.com/pod] The Sum of All Wisdom Newsletter [https://thesumofallwisdomnewsletter.substack.com/] on Substack LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/scottcatey/] Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/drscottcatey/] Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/scott_catey/?hl=en]  ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ [https://www.patreon.com/c/ScottCatey]

22. huhti 2026 - 1 h 4 min
jakson Risk, Transformation & Ecstatic Freedom: A Conversation with Daria Vasileva kansikuva

Risk, Transformation & Ecstatic Freedom: A Conversation with Daria Vasileva

In this episode of The Sum of All Wisdom, Scott Catey speaks with internationally performing concert pianist Daria Vasileva for a wide-ranging conversation on musical transformation, artistic freedom, and the power of storytelling in performance. From her early training in Russia’s rigorous conservatory system to her artistic awakening in Switzerland, Daria reflects on how different cultural approaches to music shaped her voice as an artist. At the center of the discussion is the music of Alexander Scriabin—its mysticism, emotional intensity, and transformative potential for both performer and audience. They explore what it means to play from memory, why risk is essential to live performance, how to build a concert program as a narrative journey, and how classical musicians can reach new audiences in a digital age. Daria also shares insights from her Feminine Power Project, her work championing overlooked composers, and her upcoming debut album Elements. Some highlights from the conversation: * Music as Transformation A formative moment hearing Tchaikovsky shifted Daria from passive talent to intentional artistry  * Freedom vs. Discipline How do technical precision, individuality, expression, and exploration meet in classical training and performance? * Scriabin’s Philosophy of Sound Music as “ecstatic freedom,” the will of power, and spiritual blossoming  * Memory vs. Safety in Performance Playing from memory creates risk and deepens immersion and intensity  * Concert Programming as Storytelling Programs should follow emotional logic, not chronology or genre sequence; how can the program help to guide an audience through the performer’s vision? * Reaching New Audiences Social media as a powerful tool to bring younger listeners into classical music  * Expanding the Canon The Feminine Power Project highlights overlooked women composers and forgotten voices  * Art in Uncertain Times The role of the artist as a source of light, hope, joy  Throughout the conversation, Daria situates her artistry within a lineage of composers and performers who push the boundaries of musical language and expression. Central, of course, is Alexander Scriabin, whose evolution from late-Romantic lyricism into mysticism and near-atonality becomes a kind of philosophical anchor for her work. We also hear echoes of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, whose symphonic power first awakened her artistic seriousness as a teenager, and Robert Schumann, whose deeply subjective musical voice raises questions about individuality and interpretation. Daria also references lesser-known but compelling figures like Varvara Gaigerova, whose rediscovery reflects her commitment to expanding the canon, as well as pianistic traditions shaped by figures like Anton Rubinstein. Even iconic interpreters such as Vladimir Ashkenazy appear in the background, reminding us that performance itself is a living, evolving conversation across generations, and how new interpretations of familiar music can reawaken a fire within us.  Several unexpected moments stand out in the conversation, from Daria’s candid relationship with inspiration to finding transformation in performance. Equally striking is her view that technical imperfection may sometimes be worth the trade if it allows for deeper expressive truth. Perhaps most surprising of all is her framing of classical performance as an act of risk: by choosing to play from memory, she deliberately removes safety nets in order to heighten presence, vulnerability, and connection with the audience. Names, Locations, and Organizations, Mentioned in this Episode Composers, Pianists, Performers ·       Alexander Scriabin ·       Varvara Gaigerova ·       Anton Rubenstein ·       Vladimir Ashkenazy    Organizations ·       Kazan State Conservatory https://kazanconservatoire.ru/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=21&Itemid=286 [https://kazanconservatoire.ru/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=21&Itemid=286]  ·       Union Square Soiree, Baltimore, Maryland: https://www.unionsquaresoiree.com/ [https://www.unionsquaresoiree.com/]  About the Guest Daria Vasileva is an internationally performing concert pianist known for her expressive depth, intellectual rigor, and commitment to musical storytelling. Originally from Kazan, Russia, she trained in the Russian conservatory tradition before continuing her studies in Switzerland. Her work centers on the music of Alexander Scriabin and includes the Feminine Power Project, an initiative dedicated to amplifying women composers.  Websites & other links ·       https://dariapianist.com/ [https://dariapianist.com/]  ·       https://www.youtube.com/@pianistdariavasileva [https://www.youtube.com/@pianistdariavasileva]  ·       https://www.instagram.com/daria.pianist/ [https://www.instagram.com/daria.pianist/]  Music featured in this episode: Sonata Op. 30 No. 4 by Alexander Scriabin Performed by Daria Vasileva Used with permission. Skizzen by Varvara Gaigerova  Performed by Daria Vasileva Used with permission. About the Show & Production Notes Written, produced, and hosted by Dr. Scott Catey, The Sum of All Wisdom: Conversations on Music, Makers, and Meaning is a long-form, reflective podcast centered on working musicians and adjacent professionals whose craft creates meaning, community, and cultural impact. The show prioritizes listening, craft, and the lived experience of making, sharing, and loving all things music. If this conversation resonated, consider sharing it—or carrying something from it into your own listening and creative life. And most of all, thank you for listening! Host Links Website [https://scottcatey.com/pod]The Sum of All Wisdom Newsletter [https://thesumofallwisdomnewsletter.substack.com/] on Substack LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/scottcatey/]Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/drscottcatey/]Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/scott_catey/?hl=en]  ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ [https://www.patreon.com/c/ScottCatey]

8. huhti 2026 - 57 min
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