GREAT GRIEF

WITH NNENNA FREELON

A podcast about loving greatly through grief.

Great Grief for the Holidays

"The holidays and grief often arrive holding each other's hands."

Nnenna Freelon

To say that this past year has been a rough one would be a massive understatement, and yet, we can hardly put it into words. Grief has been and continues to be abundant as we witness the escalation of some of the most gruesome evils begat by the oppressive systems of this world. The brutality and dehumanization, the structural violence, the destruction of communities—it has all been heartbreaking to watch and experience. 

The holiday season is supposed to be a festive time, we're told. Gatherings, celebrations, and kind offerings abound. But this year—and every year—it's important to hold space for those whose holiday season is also tinged with, or completely enveloped by, grief. That quintessential "holiday cheer" everyone is expected to feel and display during this time of the year seems so far away for many of us. Whether our grief is personal or collective, anticipatory or ambiguous, socially acknowledged or disenfranchised, we deserve the space to feel it and the time to sit with it. This is what Great Grief invites us to do. 

With her podcast, celebrated jazz vocalist Nnenna Freelon uses story and song to lull us into an intimate exploration of Black women's personal and structural grief—and how Black women are always expected to swallow their grief rather than allowing it to bloom, rather than tending to their grief in the loving company of other Black women. 

Scalawag is proud to offer this duology of bonus episodes in partnership with Nnenna Freelon this holiday season. So, come sit, take a moment to breathe, and join us on this journey through grief. This is Great Grief for the holidays.

Subscribe and listen to all available episodes of Great Grief with Nnenna Freelon, wherever you listen to podcasts.


From the mind and lived experience of celebrated jazz artist Nnenna Freelon, Great Grief is a life-honoring outpouring of word, story, and song that plumbs the depths of her own sorrow after the death of her beloved husband, Philip and her sister, Debbie Irene.

The award-winning podcast Great Grief re-emerged in the summer of 2023 at Scalawag as a dynamic space through podcasts and live events for Black women to indulge our griefs, savor our loves, and mourn in community. Each four-episode season is organized around topics that intertwine our grief experiences, topics like sisterhood, the inevitability of change, and Black love.

We also invite you to explore more stories from Scalawag's ongoing commitment with grief.

SEASON 2: SEASONS OF CHANGE

In the latest series of Great Grief, Nnenna looks to nature and the cyclical movement of time to delve deeper into loss, creating rituals and making discoveries that help us reconnect with ourselves, each other, and the ones we've lost. For many people, holidays are a time of celebration marked by family, faith, and food. This time of year can also be a period of remembrance. Yes, grief has a seat at the table. But grieving in the holiday season doesn't have to be a solo or solemn affair.


SEASON 1: WAILING WOMEN

In the first four-episode first season, "Wailing Women," Nnenna Freelon uses music and story to focus on the intimate beauty and irreparable sorrow we know as Black women, with episodes touching on the shock of widowhood, the bittersweet of sisterhood, and the love-hate journeys many of us have with our hair. As we give voice to the wailing women within, we find more than tears. We also find new songs. 

IN CONVERSATION:

More press for Great Grief:

Nnenna and Pierce Freelon's individual albums were inspired by a common thread: family grief. The first mother and son to be individually nominated in different categories in the same year call their double Grammy nods a "beautiful coincidence."

— TODAY

"When [Freelon] started putting the podcast together last winter—with the help of an all-Black women team—she realized that of the podcasts that deal with loss, Black women's voices weren't present enough."

— Essence

"Neither the spectre of annihilation that threatened to consume Freelon after her husband's death, nor the gentrification of Durham, nor the ongoing death-dealing effects of the Middle Passage, will keep her from singing these new changes."

— Scalawag

Nnenna Freelon (host/creator) is a Grammy-nominated jazz vocalist, music educator, arts advocate, producer and arranger who has achieved international acclaim in both recording and live performance. Follow her latest updates at: nnenna.com

Andrew Berinson (musical accompanist) is a pianist, composer and educator born and based in Raleigh, North Carolina. Andrew's debut album as a leader, Of Love, was released in April 2019. He performs with his own trio (THRIO) and as a musical accompanist on various projects.

Great Grief is produced for Scalawag by OnlyUs Media, with the support of Scalawag Magazine. From the heart of Downtown Durham, OnlyUs is a media company that seeks to shake up the music industry and what it means to build a legacy by producing revolutionary media, events, and workshops that bring power to the artist. Great Grief was originally produced by Lindsay Foster Thomas, Stacia Brown, and Sean Roux for WUNC 91.5, North Carolina Public Radio.