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TitreDateDurée
Introducing Freedom Needs a Soundtrack05 Jun 202600:01:52

Coming June 15, 2026, Freedom Needs a Soundtrack is a six-part audio documentary about the Tibetan Freedom Concerts, one of the largest concert series of the 1990s. The series traces how Erin Potts, who co-founded the concerts with Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys, and a small team of twenty-somethings helped bring together artists including U2, Rage Against the Machine, Björk, Radiohead, Pearl Jam, A Tribe Called Quest, and others for Tibet. With friends, artists, and organizers who were part of the story, Erin looks back at how the concerts began, what they changed, and what their legacy offers today. Learn more at https://www.freedomneedsasoundtrack.com/. This series is a Rangzen production, produced by Adonde Media and distributed in partnership with KALW Public Media in San Francisco.

The Power of Music15 Jun 202600:31:39

Episode 1: Before the Tibetan Freedom Concerts became one of the biggest shows of the 1990s, teenage Erin Potts dreamt of a concert for Tibet featuring her favorite band. Meanwhile, imprisoned Tibetan nun Nawang Sangdrol reveals what it meant to resist from inside Tibet. Their stories meet in the same place: the power of music.

Note: This episode includes discussion of political imprisonment and torture, and a cuss word or two.


In This Episode

  • The Tibetan Freedom Concerts begin with a bold idea: a young activist, a musician, and a belief that music could move people to act.
  • As a teenager, Erin discovers U2, Live Aid, and Amnesty International, and begins to see music as a force for justice.
  • Through Amnesty, Erin learns about Tibetan nuns imprisoned for nonviolent protest and begins the path that will eventually lead her to co-found the Tibetan Freedom Concerts.
  • Ngawang Sangdrol shares how she became a nun, was arrested as a teenager, and sang freedom songs with other nuns inside Drapchi Prison.
  • The episode ends with the power of freedom songs, and the idea that movements need courage, action, and joy.


Voices in This Episode

In order of appearance: 

  • Erin Potts — co-founder of the Tibetan Freedom Concerts and the Milarepa Fund, expert on music and activism, and executive producer of Freedom Needs a Soundtrack.
  • Adam Yauch — Beastie Boys member and co-founder of the Milarepa Fund, heard through archival audio.
  • Flea — Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist and performer at the Tibetan Freedom Concerts, heard through archival audio.
  • Thom Yorke — Radiohead singer and performer at the Tibetan Freedom Concerts, heard through archival audio.
  • Björk — Artist and performer at the Tibetan Freedom Concerts, heard through archival audio.
  • Tom Morello — Musician and activist, best known as the guitarist for Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave. 
  • Biz Markie — Artist and performer at the Tibetan Freedom Concerts, heard through archival concert audio.
  • Deyden Tethong — Tibetan activist, producer, and executive producer of Freedom Needs a Soundtrack.
  • Dave Grohl / Foo Fighters — Artist and performers at the Tibetan Freedom Concerts, heard through archival concert audio.
  • Bono / U2 — Artist and performer heard through archival concert audio.
  • Ngawang Sangdrol — Former Tibetan Buddhist nun and political prisoner, first imprisoned at age 13 for peacefully calling for Tibetan independence. While in prison, she and other nuns secretly recorded songs of freedom that helped carry Tibet’s struggle to the outside world.


Learn More

https://www.freedomneedsasoundtrack.com/ 

https://www.youtube.com/@freedomneedsasoundtrack

https://www.facebook.com/FreedomNeedsASoundtrack

https://www.instagram.com/freedomneedsasoundtrack


This series is a Rangzen production produced by Adonde Media and distributed in partnership with KALW Public Media in San Francisco.

Inside Tibet22 Jun 202600:31:47

Episode 2: After studying Tibetan in Nepal and meeting Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys in Kathmandu, Erin Potts travels inside Tibet for the first time. In Lhasa, she and Sam Chapin leave their government-assigned tour, move into the Tibetan part of the city, and come face to face with life under Chinese occupation. When they witness a protest, tear gas, gunfire, and a violent police crackdown, they are left holding proof the world needs to see.

Note: This episode includes discussion of a violent response to a peaceful protest, plus a cuss word or two.


In This Episode

  • The night Erin met MCA, Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys, at a party in Kathmandu, why she almost refused to talk to him, and how they ultimately became friends
  • What it was like to travel inside Tibet under Chinese occupation in 1993, and how Erin and Sam ditched their government-assigned tour to make their way into the Tibetan part of Lhasa
  • How Tibetans in Lhasa risked everything to speak with Westerners about freedom
  • Witnessing a protest in Lhasa, then tear gas, gunfire, and a violent police crackdown
  • How Erin and Sam secretly photographed the protest, evaded arrest, and hid the film
  • The race to get the photos out of Tibet so the world could see what happened


Voices in This Episode

In order of appearance: 

  • Erin Potts — co-founder of the Tibetan Freedom Concerts and the Milarepa Fund, expert on music and activism, and executive producer of Freedom Needs a Soundtrack.
  • Sam Chapin — Erin’s longtime friend and early collaborator, who was with her in Nepal and Tibet, and when she first met Adam Yauch. Sam was involved in the first Tibet work with Adam and the Beastie Boys, including all of the Tibetan Freedom Concerts.
  • Adam Yauch — co-founder of the Tibetan Freedom Concerts and Milarepa Fund, member of the Beastie Boys, heard through archival audio.


Learn more

https://www.freedomneedsasoundtrack.com/ 

https://www.youtube.com/@freedomneedsasoundtrack

https://www.facebook.com/FreedomNeedsASoundtrack

https://www.instagram.com/freedomneedsasoundtrack

This series is a Rangzen production produced by Adonde Media and distributed in partnership with KALW Public Media in San Francisco.

"Standing up for Freedom"29 Jun 202600:28:50

Episode 3: After protest photos and freedom songs are smuggled out of Tibet, Erin returns home, where a dinner with Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys transforms what she witnessed into a new kind of action. Together, they begin imagining what music, culture, and activism could do for Tibet, leading Erin to attend Lollapalooza with the Beastie Boys and a group of Tibetan monks.

Note: This episode includes discussion of torture, plus a cuss word or two.


In this episode:

  • Erin and Sam race to get the photos they took during the protests in Lhasa out of Tibet and into the hands of the international press.
  • Ngawang Sangdrol describes life inside Drapchi Prison and how she and other Tibetan nuns secretly recorded songs of freedom on a smuggled cassette tape.
  • Erin reflects on hearing the voices of imprisoned Tibetan women singing for freedom, and why those recordings carried a different kind of power.
  • Adam Yauch receives Erin and Sam’s letter about what they witnessed in Tibet, opening a new path for his own activism.
  • Erin and Adam begin imagining how music, culture, and action could come together for Tibet.
  • The Milarepa Fund is born from Beastie Boys royalties and a shared belief in compassion, nonviolence, and the power of music.
  • Tibetan monks join the Beastie Boys on Lollapalooza, bringing Tibetan culture and the message of freedom to thousands of young concertgoers.
  • A dollar added to every Beastie Boys ticket becomes the seed money for the first Tibetan Freedom Concert.


Voices in this episode:

In order of appearance: 

  • Erin Potts — co-founder of the Tibetan Freedom Concerts and the Milarepa Fund, expert on music and activism, and executive producer of Freedom Needs a Soundtrack.
  • Adam Yauch — member of the Beastie Boys and co-founder of the Tibetan Freedom Concerts and the Milarepa Fund, heard through archival audio.
  • Ngawang Sangdrol — Former Tibetan Buddhist nun and political prisoner, first imprisoned at age 13 for peacefully calling for Tibetan independence. While in prison, she and other nuns secretly recorded songs of freedom that helped carry Tibet’s struggle to the outside world.


Learn more

https://www.freedomneedsasoundtrack.com/ 

https://www.youtube.com/@freedomneedsasoundtrack

https://www.facebook.com/FreedomNeedsASoundtrack

https://www.instagram.com/freedomneedsasoundtrack


Freedom Needs a Soundtrack is a Rangzen production, produced by Adonde Media and distributed in partnership with KALW Public Media in San Francisco.

The First Concert06 Jul 202600:27:47

Episode 4: After two years of near misses, Erin, Adam, and a young team of organizers finally bring the first Tibetan Freedom Concert to life, with one of the most talked-about lineups of the 1990s and a bold new model for turning music into action.

Note: This episode includes discussion of torture, plus a cuss word or two.


IN THIS EPISODE

  • After years of failed attempts, Erin, Adam Yauch, the Milarepa Fund, Tibetan organizers, and volunteers bring the first Tibetan Freedom Concert to life.
  • A tiny San Francisco office becomes the nerve center for one of the biggest benefit concerts of the 1990s.
  • Adam announces the concert in D.C. — and suddenly it has to become real.
  • Golden Gate Park fills with prayer flags, stupas, Tibetan musicians, monks, nuns, and 50,000 people a day.
  • Beastie Boys, Rage Against the Machine, Björk, Foo Fighters, Smashing Pumpkins, A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, Sonic Youth, Beck, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Yoko Ono, and more come together for Tibet.
  • Deyden Tethong remembers seeing Tibetan culture and 1990s music culture come together in a new way.
  • Palden Gyatso speaks after escaping Tibet with the torture devices used against him.
  • The next day, Erin, Adam, and others take the energy to a protest at the Chinese Consulate.
  • The first Tibetan Freedom Concert becomes the biggest U.S. benefit concert since Live Aid — and proves this was only the beginning.


VOICES IN THIS EPISODE

In order of appearance: 

  • Erin Potts — co-founder of the Tibetan Freedom Concerts and the Milarepa Fund, expert on music and activism, and executive producer of Freedom Needs a Soundtrack.
  • Adam Yauch — co-founder of the Tibetan Freedom Concerts and Milarepa Fund, member of the Beastie Boys, heard through archival audio.
  • Serena Altschul — Journalist and longtime MTV News correspondent, heard through archival audio. 
  • Kurt Loder — Journalist, author, and longtime MTV News anchor who helped define music news coverage in the 1990s, heard through archival audio. 
  • Rebecca Rankin — Music journalist and television host/correspondent associated with MuchMusic, heard through archival audio. 
  • Björk — Artist who performed at the Tibetan Freedom Concerts, heard through archival audio.
  • Yoko Ono — Artist, musician, peace activist, and longtime cultural figure known for her avant-garde work and activism, heard through archival audio. 
  • Tom Morello — Guitarist with Rage Against the Machine, who performed at the Tibetan Freedom Concerts, and activist.
  • Deyden Tethong — Tibetan activist, producer, and executive producer of Freedom Needs a Soundtrack.
  • John Norris — Music journalist and longtime MTV News correspondent, heard through archival audio. 
  • Palden Gyatso — Buddhist monk who escaped imprisonment in China and spoke at the concert.
  • Dave Grohl — Singer and guitarist with Foo Fighters, who performed at the Tibetan Freedom Concerts, heard through archival concert audio.
  • Biz Markie — Hip-hop artist who performed at the Tibetan Freedom Concerts, heard through archival concert audio.


LEARN MORE

https://www.freedomneedsasoundtrack.com/

https://www.youtube.com/@freedomneedsasoundtrack

https://www.facebook.com/FreedomNeedsASoundtrack

https://www.instagram.com/freedomneedsasoundtrack


This series is a Rangzen production, produced by Adonde Media and distributed in partnership with KALW Public Media in San Francisco.

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