Three Song Stories is an exploration of the power music has to connect us to times, places, people, and emotions from our lives. The show brings out the guests’ personalities, and personal histories, by mining the connections music has made during their lifetimes. It’s also a chance to sit back and listen to the eclectic mix of songs the guests have chosen for their ultimate musical memory short list.
Three Song Stories is an exploration of the power music has to connect us to times, places, people, and emotions from our lives. The show brings out the guests’ personalities, and personal histories, by mining the connections music has made during their lifetimes. It’s also a chance to sit back and listen to the eclectic mix of songs the guests have chosen for their ultimate musical memory short list.
Jameson Yingling is a filmmaker, philosopher, and social entrepreneur who's work focuses on existentialism, phenomenology of aging and death, postcolonialism, and ecological interdependence. He is an FGCU and Teach For America alum, and he was a founding partner of the Bonita Springs media company Sugarshack.
Right now Jameson is spending time as a guest lecturer at FGCU helping to lead what’s called the Rock of Ages initiative alongside Drs. Maria Roca and Tom Felke. He is the founder of the creative studio Existential Co.
SONG 1: How Lucky by Kurt Vile off his 2020 EP Speed, Sound, Lonely KV. (duet with John Prine) https://youtu.be/TNDmIrh1Cwo?si=E4IG_IDbUTtSeVAa
SONG 2: Bear Witness by Dawes released in 2013 on the album Stories Don't End. https://youtu.be/uhHS9zk_1HQ?si=bij96_8HX9M4TuOw
SONG 3: Cry for Me (live) by the California Honeydrops from their album Honeydrops live released in 2012. https://youtu.be/k-8O70Ba6_c?si=R8ASi2hF2jbymhbG
A conversation on Gulf Coast Life about the Rock of Ages program created by Florida Gulf Coast University’s Roots of Compassion and Kindness Center. https://www.wgcu.org/show/gulf-coast-life/2025-04-16/fgcu-rock-of-ages-initiative-builds-intergenerational-bridges-through-visual-storytelling