Hear Korn’s Jonathan Davis & Mary Roach Talk Embalming Techniques, Autopsies & More on Sing For Science

Sing For Science Puts Korn’s Jonathan Davis In Conversation with Science Writer Mary Roach to Discuss Human Corpse Decomposition, Anal Suturing, Elvis’ Autopsy & Other Embalming Techniques 

Listen to “Dead Bodies Everywhere: Postmortem Biology and The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers,” New Episode Out Now via Talkhouse Podcast Network:

HERE

Hear Korn’s Jonathan Davis & Mary Roach Talk Embalming Techniques, Autopsies & More on Sing For Science
On the latest installment of Sing For Science, out today via the Talkhouse Podcast Network, the podcast shows it is ready to entertain and answer the most morbid of curiosities. In an episode entitled “Dead Bodies Everywhere: Postmortem Biology and The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers,” Sing For Science host, creator and musician Matt Whyte puts legendary metalhead and Korn frontman Jonathan Davis in conversation with best-selling pop science writer Mary Roach (Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers), to discuss mortuary science and demystify the macabre. The interview is centered around Korn’s song “Dead Bodies Everywhere,” off of their 1998 album Follow the Leader – which sold over 14 million copies and was partly based on Davis’ own experience working in a morgue prior to forming Korn. Just a junior in high school when he began doing post-mortems out of the coroner’s office in his hometown of Bakersfield, CA, Davis went on to study at San Francisco’s College of Mortuary Science, where coincidentally, Mary Roach also attended. Driven by a need to shed light on the darker parts of life, Davis and Roach share a deep interest in America’s death-denying culture, using Sing For Science as a platform to launch into these subjects without fear, and instead with a sharp focus on the realities of death, and music as a means of reckoning with some life’s biggest questions.

Subscribe to Sing For Science to hear Korn’s Jonathan Davis, Mary Roach and other conversations from the series’ current third season, plus past episodes with members of Lamb of God, Living Colour and more:

https://pod.link/singforscience

At the beginning of the episode, Jonathan Davis describes living in an apartment attached to the mortuary where he worked, and shares that the inspiration for the song “Dead Bodies Everywhere” was the need for more workspace causing an overflow of body parts right into the singer’s kitchen. Similarly, Mary Roach walks through the fieldwork that went into writing her best-selling nonfiction work Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers, with stories from visiting morgues, to crash tests with cadavers, to body farms and beyond. As Sing For Science comes face-to-face with death, it dares to look more closely at the lived experience and expertise behind mortuary practices, and those who specialize in the subjects our culture leaves unacknowledged or ignored. Like any episode of the Sing For Science podcast, this morbidly fascinating conversation doubles as a life-affirming call to action, challenging us all to decipher our relationships with death to better understand what it is to be alive. 

As Sing For Science nears the end of its third season, the next episode will feature Rhiannon Giddens alongside ethnomusicologist and educator Portia Maultsby as they map the African Diaspora, exploring sound as social science and the humanity of history. With the hope that a more science-literate society can contribute towards greater support for evidence-based policy in government, Sing For Science is “podcasting for a better planet” (UPROXX), and has recently brought together actor and comedian Nick Kroll with endocrinologist Emily Breidbart to tackle puberty and hormone monsters, singer/songwriter Margo Price with reproductive healthcare specialist Monica McLemore, and Modest Mouse’s Isacc Brock for a conversation with mycology expert Paul Stamets about the relationships between mushrooms and mankind. The show has also launched a new collaboration with The MIT Museum for a series of live-tapings bringing the podcast directly to the people. Earlier this month, the inaugural event featured Grammy-winner Ani DiFranco in conversation with Harvard University experimental particle physicist Melissa Franklin.

Hear Korn’s Jonathan Davis & Mary Roach Talk Embalming Techniques, Autopsies & More on Sing For Science

Matt Whyte

About Sing For Science

Sing For Science is a science and music podcast produced with Talkhouse where musicians talk to scientists about science as it connects to their most famous songs. Created and hosted by New York musician Matt Whyte, the podcast’s goal is to increase science literacy for as many people as possible by reaching a variety of different musicians’ fan bases. Listeners come to the show through their love of music and leave with a new piece of knowledge about science and the scientific process. Science literacy and respect for expertise are perhaps more vital now more than ever before. The show’s chief tenet is that a more science and scientific process literate society can only contribute towards greater support for more fair, evidence-based policy in government. Follow Sing For Science on InstagramTwitter and Facebook

About Talkhouse

Talkhouse is a Webby-Award-winning first-person media company and outlet for musicians, actors, filmmakers, and others in their respective fields. Artists write essays and criticism from firsthand perspectives, speak one-on-one with their peers via the Talkhouse Podcast and Talkhouse Live events, and offer readers and listeners unique insight into creative work of all genres and generations. Talkhouse is writing and conversations about music and film, from the people who make them. Recently launched series include Santigold’s Noble Champions and Kimbra’s Playing With Fire, as well as Listening, an unprecedented new program featuring Jeff Tweedy, Neko Case and more that The Guardian describes as “part podcast, part album,” and Björk: Sonic Symbolism, which GQ praises as “a road map to the creative life,” delivering what The New Yorker calls “a rare chance to listen in as one of the most mysterious and mystical artists working today explains herself.”

 

Our audience has come to understand and cherish the fact that we serve as a platform for getting them inside the minds of their favorite artists and filmmakers. As one of the only “first-person” media outlets, Talkhouse allows musicians, actors and filmmakers to reach fans directly, in their own words. By working directly with creators from the worlds of music and film, Talkhouse has built a media brand that is firmly rooted in authenticity, credibility, and creativity – and, through branded content initiatives and special projects, we aim to bring those values to life together with like-minded partners. Follow Talkhouse at InstagramTwitter and Facebook.

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