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Post by the Scribe on Mar 28, 2019 20:05:35 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on May 9, 2019 18:20:47 GMT -5
Bernie died last week. RIP.
Bernie And The Believers Feat. Essence: Tiny Desk Concert
NPR Music Published on Nov 19, 2018 Nov. 12, 2018 | Bob Boilen -- The story of Bernie and the Believers is the most powerful I've ever come across at the Tiny Desk. It's about a beautiful act of compassion that ultimately led to this performance, and left me and my coworkers in tears.
I discovered the music of Bernie Dalton among the thousands of Tiny Desk Contest entries we received earlier this year. The band's singer, Essence Goldman, had submitted the entry and shared Bernie's story. You should hear her tell it in her own words at the Tiny Desk (and I choke up every time I hear it). In summary she said that a few years ago, Bernie — a father, a songwriter and a musician in his mid-forties, and an avid surfer with a day job as a pool cleaner — answered an ad she had posted offering voice lessons. Essence was a performer trying to manage her own career as a single mom, and Bernie was trying to improve his talents.
Bernie drove 90-minutes from Santa Cruz to San Francisco, eagerly showing up early to his voice lessons with Essence. But not long after they started working together, Bernie lost his voice. They didn't think much of a it at first, but then things got worse. He had trouble swallowing and eating. Essence encouraged Bernie to see a doctor and after some tests Bernie Dalton was diagnosed with bulbar-onset ALS, or Lou Gehrig's disease. He began to lose the use of his hands and, along with it, the ability to play guitar.
With a prognosis of only one-to-three years left to live, Essence offered to raise money so that Bernie and his daughter could travel together. But what Bernie wanted more than anything was to make a record. So he asked Essence to not just be his voice teacher, but his voice. From there, they got to business. Essence pulled together a team of producers, engineers and musicians, while Bernie guided the creative direction through gestures and a dry-erase board. They wrote and recorded a new song every day. Their first single, "Unusual Boy," was the one they included in their 2018 Tiny Desk Contest entry.
Now Bernie's friends have gathered here in Washington, D.C. to perform his songs. All the while, Bernie watched and listened from his hospital bed on the West coast, communicating with us in a live video feed through his eye-gaze device. What you are about to witness is the ultimate act of love: Essence sacrificing her own musical ambitions to fulfill the dreams of Bernie Dalton. Through tragedy there was beauty.
Set List "Unusual Boy" "In Your Shoes" "Simon's Hero"
Credits Producers: Bob Boilen, Morgan Noelle Smith; Creative Director: Bob Boilen; Audio Engineer: Josh Rogosin; Videographers: Morgan Noelle Smith, Kaylee Domzalski, Beck Harlan; Editor: Production Assistant: Brie Martin; Photo: Cameron Pollack/NPR
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Post by the Scribe on May 10, 2019 2:32:25 GMT -5
Kingfish plays Jimi Hendrix's "Hey Joe" @ The Blue Canoe in Tupelo, MS
Christone "Kingfish" Ingram - Fresh Out (featuring Buddy Guy)
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Post by the Scribe on May 16, 2019 1:34:24 GMT -5
[OFFICIAL VIDEO] The Sound of Silence - Pentatonix
[OFFICIAL VIDEO] Hallelujah - Pentatonix
Pentatonix & Dolly Parton - Jolene
Evolution Of Ariana Grande - Pentatonix
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Post by the Scribe on Jun 16, 2019 12:35:36 GMT -5
2013 Tony Cicoria is performing his "Lightning-Sonata" at Mozart House in ViennaThe Lightning SonataA man struck by lightning is moved to write a piece of music. Was it divine inspiration?
by Tony Cicoria - Posted on Sep 25, 2014
The concert hall is dark and still, all eyes on the lone figure at the center of the stage. The piano player. I creep up behind him, careful not to disturb the soft plink-plink of the keys. This melody he’s playing...it’s beautiful. Unlike anything I’ve ever heard before.
The closer I get, the more familiar the man becomes. I recognize him. The piano player is me. The music? It’s mine.
The same melody echoed in my head nearly 15 years later as I took my seat at the grand piano in front of hundreds at the Goodrich Theater in Oneonta, New York, my hometown. I could remember the notes as if I’d dreamed them up yesterday.
I had dreamed them up, in the dream that haunted me to this day. As did the literal bolt from the blue that started it all.
It was just an ordinary summer day. Not a cloud in the sky. I’d driven up to a lake in Athens, New York, that morning for my wife’s family reunion. The kids were splashing in the lake and I was grilling up burgers and hot dogs. What could be better?
My medical practice was booming, the family was happy. Life was good.
I slipped away to make a call to my mom on a pay phone by a lakeside pavilion, oblivious of the storm clouds on the horizon. The phone rang six, eight times. The wind kicked up. A woman and her daughter waited behind me.
I was about to hang up when boom! A bolt of lightning struck the pavilion, coursed through the receiver and shocked me square in the face with terrifying force, sending me flying 15 feet.
What happened next is a blur. It sounds nuts, but I was submerged in this hazy blue-white light. Like I’d fallen into a peaceful river. I could sense something overwhelming, powerful but loving. God? I wasn’t sure, but I never wanted to leave.
Fifteen minutes later, though, I awoke to a woman pumping my chest, jolting me back to life. The same woman who’d been standing behind me at the pay phone. She was an ICU nurse.
Three weeks later, I was back at work. My doctors had conducted all the routine neurological exams and concluded I was fine. Only something was off—way off.
I had this strange compulsion to listen to classical piano music. The kind that had put me to sleep as a kid the year my mom forced me to take piano lessons.
“I can’t explain it,” I confided to a doctor friend. “It’s like I crave it.”
This from a guy who’d spent the previous two decades roaring around on a Harley and blasting out the Rolling Stones. I bought a Chopin CD just to test the waters, feeling like an imposter in the classical section of the music store. But as soon as I played it, I was hooked.
I hummed to Chopin in the car, at work, even at the dinner table. When I wasn’t listening to the music, I was thinking about it. Obsessively. I was a practical guy, a doctor, not some New Age hippie who spent his time chasing ooey-ooey feelings from the great unknown.
Was I going crazy? Is that what the bolt of lightning had done?
It only got weirder. A week later, our babysitter stopped by. She was moving and needed a favor. “Dr. Cicoria, I have this old piano,” she said. “I can’t take it with me. Can you keep it for a while? A year, tops?”
As soon as we moved the piano into our house, the dream came—me in a concert hall, performing a sonata I’d somehow composed. Me, who had virtually no musical training.
It jolted me awake, the music still ringing in my head. I could hear whole chunks of it, like someone had downloaded a file directly into my brain. This was getting ridiculous. I buried my head in my pillow, but the notes begged and pleaded to come out.
Enough was enough. I tiptoed downstairs, sat at the creaky piano bench and tried to mimic the melody. The moment I plucked out a few soft notes it hit me. That same powerful sense of love and peace.
The lightning bolt had coursed through my body with a force that should have killed me, but instead, it had left something beautiful behind. That beauty wasn’t meant to stay inside my head. I knew nothing about composing, but I knew exactly what I had to do—follow that music.
That’s how I’d ended up in a real concert hall, after years of piano lessons and practicing into the wee hours of the night to release the music within.
A hush fell over the crowd. I couldn’t stop trembling—until my fingers finally found the keys and the music took over.
When I finished, I took a bow as the audience erupted into thunderous applause. All in response to the piece I’d composed—“The Lightning Sonata.”
Listen to Tony performing his music!
www.guideposts.org/better-living/entertainment/music/the-lightning-sonata
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Post by the Scribe on Jun 17, 2019 13:57:22 GMT -5
Amazing artwork put to the amazing music of Phillip Glass. Songs From Liquid Days is one of my favorite albums of ALL TIME. Changing Opinion - the journeyArt Undone by Eabha Rose Published on May 19, 2013 celebrating the art of Philip Glass, Paul Simon and Brooke Shaden and some artists I have been unable to identify...seascape pictures by Eabha Rose lyrics by Paul Simon, from "Songs from liquid days" purchase the album "Songs from liquid days" here: www.amazon.com/Philip-Glass-So...
~Gradually We became aware Of a hum in the room An electrical hum in the room It went mmmmmm
We followed it from Corner to corner We pressed our ears Against the walls We crossed diagonals And put our hands on the floor It went mmmmmm
Sometimes it was A murmur Sometimes it was A pulse Sometimes it seemed To disappear But then with a quarter-turn Of the head It would roll around the sofa A nimbus humming cloud Mmmmmm
Maybe it's the hum Of a calm refrigerator Cooling on a big night Maybe it's the hum Of our parents' voices Long ago in a soft light Mmmmmm
Maybe it's the hum Of changing opinion Or a foreign language In prayer Maybe it's the mantra Of the walls and wiring Deep breathing In soft air Mmmmmm~
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Post by the Scribe on Jun 22, 2019 21:18:34 GMT -5
Hannah Hunt - I'm With Her - 6/23/2018 Live from Here Published on Jun 27, 2018
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Post by the Scribe on Jul 17, 2019 2:55:53 GMT -5
This is one of Linda Ronstadt's favorites.
First Aid Kit - Live from the Palace Theater 1/30/2018
The Current Published on Mar 8, 2018 With head-banging, strobe lights, and electric guitar solos, First Aid Kit brought a new energy to the Palace Theatre in January.
Sisters Johanna and Klara Söderberg just released their fourth album, 'Ruins.' The album features songs that fit the texture we’ve come to expect from First Aid Kit — folksy sounds with beautiful harmonies — as well as expanding the group’s palette to include a harder-rocking sound.
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Post by the Scribe on Jul 17, 2019 2:59:15 GMT -5
another of Linda Ronstadt's favorites (SIA) ... also one of my favorite songs
Sia - Chandelier (Official Music Video)
Sia Published on May 6, 2014
"Chandelier" - Von Smith and BWAT cast - DWTS - SYTYCD - American Idol - Sia
Von Smith Published on Oct 5, 2014
Sia Carpool Karaoke
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Post by the Scribe on Jul 17, 2019 3:36:10 GMT -5
Brian Justin Crum Creep America's Got Talent July 19, 2016 AMAZING
Randomstuffchannel301 Published on Jul 20, 2016 Singer - Judge Cuts 3 - Season 11 - 2016
When you were here before Couldn't look you in the eye You look like an angel Your skin makes me cry You float like a feather In a beautiful world You're so very special I wish I was special
But I'm a creep, I'm a weirdo, What the hell am I doing ? I don't belong here Oh, oh
He's running out He's run He's running out He's run run run run Run... But I'm a creep, I'm a weirdo What the hell am I doing here? I don't belong here I don't belong here...
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Post by the Scribe on Jul 18, 2019 0:12:02 GMT -5
some familiar faces in one of the best videos honoring one of the best pop songs ever written and its songwriter Brian Wilson....The Beach Boys’ songwriter Brian Wilson delighted the Glastonbury crowds in 2005 with a sun-drenched setlist of the California band's greatest hits, and more recently joined Jools Holland to perform God Only Knows live in the studio.God Only Knows - BBC MusicBBC Music Published on Oct 7, 2014 Find out more at www.bbc.co.uk/music The Beach Boys' masterpiece God Only Knows remade with the help of a few friends to celebrate the launch of BBC Music. See who’s who in the video: bbc.in/1vUMGLp
1. Dave Grohl / 2. Alison Balsom / 3. Lorde / 4. Pharrell Williams / 5. Zane Lowe / 6. Sam Smith / 7. Paloma Faith / 8. Eliza Carthy / 9. Nicola Benedetti / 10. Chris Martin / 11. Jaz Dhami / 12. Martin James Bartlett / 13. Danielle de Niese / 14. Stevie Wonder / 15. Florence Welch / 16. Lauren Laverne / 17. Brian Wilson / 18. Jake Bugg / 19. Katie Derham / 20. Gareth Malone / 21. Kylie Minogue / 22. Chrissie Hynde / 23. One Direction / 24. Emeli Sandé / 25. Elton John / 26. Baaba Maal / 27. Ethan Johns / 28. Jools Holland / 29. Jamie Cullum / 30. Brian May / 31. Tees Valley Youth Choir / 32. BBC Concert Orchestra
individual photos and synopsis on each artist: bbc.in/1vUMGLp
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Post by the Scribe on Jul 23, 2019 18:32:56 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on Aug 2, 2019 18:37:33 GMT -5
The Teskey Brothers - So Caught Up (Official Video)
TheTeskeyBrothers Published on Jul 3, 2019 So Caught Up is taken from The Teskey Brothers’ new album Run Home Slow – out Friday August 2 Listen to So Caught Up or pre-order Run Home Slow: smarturl.it/runhomeslow
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Post by the Scribe on Aug 2, 2019 19:31:08 GMT -5
Yuna - "Blank Marquee" Live Performance | Vevo
Yuna Published on Jul 25, 2019 Yuna – Blank Marquee (Live Performance)
Yuna’s smoldering vocals have powered her through nine projects across her career, including her latest album, ‘Rouge’, which saw the light of day earlier this month. More collaborative than her past works, ‘Rouge’ features a bevy of guest artists. Tyler, The Creator makes his presence known on the opener “Castaway” and Jay Park brings an international flare to “Does She.” The break out hit, “Blank Marquee,” pulls in G-Eazy for a 16-bar interlude. But Yuna, as always, carries the track with her smooth singing. The Malaysian singer/songwriter recently visited Vevo for a live session of “Blank Marquee.” The official music video already has over 2 million views. But this live alternate take, a slower groove that tugs at the heart different, is sure to be a fan favorite too.
Executive Producer: Micah Bickham Director: Blaine Dunkley Producer: Maddy Schmidt, Hailey Rovner Music & Talent: Parul Chokshi, David McTiernan
Watch the official video for “Black Marquee”: bit.ly/2KjlNT6
Watch YUNA music videos: bit.ly/2Ynrc21
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Post by the Scribe on Aug 10, 2019 20:09:16 GMT -5
JULIE FOWLIS - O Noble Youth Who Has Left Me (En directo/Live)
A Short Film About Julie Fowlis
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Post by the Scribe on Aug 10, 2019 20:09:43 GMT -5
Awesome Scottish street music - Clanadonia
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Post by the Scribe on Aug 10, 2019 20:13:14 GMT -5
MOST UNIQUE INSTRUMENT AUDITIONS On Got Talent! | Top Talent
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Post by the Scribe on Aug 11, 2019 0:37:05 GMT -5
I awoke from a dream hearing this song that was new to me but evidently has millions of fans. The video is great. Then I found a second song from the same group. Equally great video. They are very "beatlesque" from their psychedelic period. The group is Tame Impala. Where the hell I have been? The group has been around for years. Psychedelic has been a favorite genre of mine since the 60's.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tame_Impala Tame Impala - Feels Like We Only Go Backwards
Tame Impala - Elephant
Tame Impala performing "Feels Like We Only Go Backwards" Live on KCRW
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Post by the Scribe on Aug 11, 2019 2:30:45 GMT -5
Appalachia is in my blood. After my ancestors arrived from Germany in 1717 many migrated into the Appalachian Mountains where they settled. A town in Bloody Harlan County Kentucky sports my family name and like my family is full of characters. So when Linda, Dolly and Emmy got together to sing, they created a magic that was channeled from this special area of the USA. You won't find finer people anywhere else in the world than in these hills.mountain "old timey" music and dancingThe Story Behind The Best Bluegrass Clog Dancing VideoDavid Hoffman Published on Aug 3, 2019 1965. I was a 23-year-old filmmaker making my first documentary for television. I have never been to the Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina but I knew that the music was great from hearing it on the radio. Old man Bascom Lamar Lunsford took me around those mountains and introduced me to fantastic musicians, storytellers, singers, and dancers. This scene was filmed at his home in South Turkey Creek, North Carolina. Today it is one of my most popular video clips and subscribers have asked me to tell the background story. I still feel fortunate to have met these wonderful people and had the opportunity to record just a bit of their lives. You can see more clips from this documentary by searching "Bascom" on my YouTube channel. You can get the entire film at www.amazon.com/dp/B0001LQL5G. #bluegrass #clog dance #Appalachia #North Carolina #mountain music #country music #old time music # Bascom lunsford #folk dancingAppalachian People, Culture, and History - ROBERT SEPEHRRobert Sepehr Published on Apr 15, 2019 While the Appalachian Mountains stretch from parts of Canada to Alabama, the cultural region of Appalachia typically refers only to the central and southern portions ranging from the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, south-westerly to the Great Smoky Mountains, and is called home by approximately 25 million people. atlanteangardens.blogspot.com...
Appalachian people are considered a separate culture, made up of many unique backgrounds—Native Americans, Irish, English and Scotch, and then a third descendants of German and Polish immigrants—all blended together across the region. how the TRIO paid tribute to this culture
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Post by the Scribe on Sept 9, 2019 20:05:35 GMT -5
BLACK BELT EAGLE SCOUTwww.blackbelteaglescout.com/Black Belt Eagle Scout - Run It to Ya
Saddle Creek Published on Aug 26, 2019 from the album At the Party With My Brown FriendsMy name is Katherine Paul and I am Black Belt Eagle Scout.
I grew up on the Swinomish Indian Reservation in NW Washington state, learning to play piano, guitar and drums in my adolescent years. The very first form of music that I can remember experiencing was the sound of my dad singing native chants to coo me to sleep as a baby. I grew up around powwows and the songs my grandfather and grandmother sang with my family in their drum group. This is what shapes how I create music: with passion and from the heart.
After the release of Mother of My Children, I felt awake and desperately wanted to put new music out into the world. I had no real intent behind At the Party With My Brown Friends except creating songs around what was going on in my life. In the past few years, the reciprocal love I experienced within friendships is what has been keeping me going. A lot of what is in this album deals with love, desire and friendship.
The lead single, “At the Party,” starts off with a quintessential BBES guitar lick, heading into booming and abundant drums and vocals. The lines ‘How is it real? We will always sing’ came out of me one evening when I was crafting the song in my bedroom. Within my conscious self, there is always a sense of questioning the legitimacy of the world when you grow up on an Indian reservation. We are all at the party (the world), trying to navigate ourselves within a good or bad situation. I happen to be at the party with my brown friends- Indigenous, Black, POC who always have my back while we walk throughout this event called life.
I started writing “My Heart Dreams” the summer after I initially put out MOMC, writing the guitar chords in a friend’s apartment on Ohlone land. I had been in a transitional part of my life, leaving one love and wanting to find another so much so that I felt like my heart was dreaming about it along with my brain at night. I have an obsession with dreams, mainly because I cannot remember most of mine and often times that leaves me frustrated not knowing that part of myself. I would wake up and be overcome with anxiety about not knowing what had gone down in my brain so much so that I started feeling like my heart dreamt more than my mind, thus becoming the line, my heart dreams.
I wrote “Going To The Beach With Haley” one day when I was out on a coastal trip with my friend Haley Heynderickx. We loaded up her car with our blankets and instruments and drove straight to a beach where we sat and listened to the waves and young families with their babies on the beach. I had brought my mini casio keyboard that had an array of beats I used when writing songs. The beat that’s on the song just stuck there along with the main guitar part. Initially written on an old acoustic guitar my mom bought me, the song really transformed in the studio where I added drums and other melodies to create the song.
Throughout the course of my writing and playing around this record, most of these songs deal with relationships I have either with loved ones or friends. I think it low key has to do with my anthropology degree, but also the fact that writing and playing guitar in my bedroom just makes everything feel better for me. For the longest time, I wanted to convey my feelings around coming out to my family. It had been a good experience for me and while I know it is not always that way when kids decide to tell their family, I think that we can open our hearts more for that. I would watch youtube videos of moms being proud of their kids surrounding their sexuality and gender identity and I really wanted to raise my voice to say, ‘my family too!’ What started with trying to sound so literal in this song ended up turning into a song about how much I love my mom and how our connection is eternal. “You’re Me and I’m You” is about being one with your mother, since we all were a part of their bodies at one point. It’s me trying to explore who she is and who I am with my love for people.
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Post by the Scribe on Sept 12, 2019 13:13:15 GMT -5
The Quebe Sisters "Roly Poly"
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Post by the Scribe on Sept 13, 2019 19:54:45 GMT -5
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Post by the Scribe on Nov 3, 2019 3:11:31 GMT -5
Wonderful interview with Renée. She has echoed Linda in that she said most singer's voices don't develop or reach their peak until their 30's.Bullseye with Jesse Thorn Soprano Renée Fleming listen: www.wbez.org/shows/bullseye-with-jesse-thorn/soprano-rene-fleming/94c6cf30-3498-4b70-aaa0-b6499c69e236#
November 1, 2019 42 MINADD TO QUEUE Known as "America's Diva," Renée Fleming has performed in venues all over the world, singing in acclaimed productions of operas composed by Mozart, Puccini, Verdi, Dvorak and more. She's tackled the world of opera, jazz, country and just about every other music genre. Lately, she's been working on stage in musicals. Her latest, "The Light in the Piazza" just wrapped up in Los Angeles, with productions in Chicago and Sydney on the horizon. Renée talks to Bullseye about managing acoustics, growing up in a musical home and not only cultivating her talent but her image, too. We talk to her about the mental preparation that goes into singing the National Anthem while 50 million people watch from home as Black Hawk helicopters fly overhead.singing my favorite song of all time:
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Post by bernstein on Nov 10, 2019 3:48:10 GMT -5
Lovely young girl from my home state of Vermont, Grace Potter
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Post by the Scribe on Nov 10, 2019 9:05:37 GMT -5
La Doña - Le Lo Lai
La Doña, "Le Lo Lai" San Francisco's Cecilia Peña-Govea has woven Latin American folk genres like cumbia and son into a her distinct brand of mujer-powered "femmeton." With her latest, "Le Lo Lai," Peña-Govea announces her debut EP, Algo Nuevo, out Feb. 12. The song is a playful stoop chisme session about a summer of men over a hip-hop piano loop intertwined with its bolero-style chorus. La Hyphy Maravilla sets the record straight like only she can: "I'm here for vacation, I'm here for a week / And I'm never getting married, what the f*** did you think?" — Stefanie Fernández
Nicola Cruz - Siete
Nicola Cruz's creativity knows no bounds. His ambient influenced releases reflect a sonic aesthetic not only from his native Ecuador but also encompasses sounds from around the globe. He sets himself apart by infusing his adventurous spirit into the electronics behind the palette; it feels like I get to know a little more about him with every listen.
"Siete" is from an upcoming album called Siku Reworks in which he creates his last album, Siku, with either live versions or remixes, or live remixes. The result is like uncovering a new layer to a long standing friendship. I can't wait to hear the rest of the reworks. — Felix Contreras
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Post by the Scribe on Nov 14, 2019 20:32:05 GMT -5
Really like this girl! Some parts of her voice remind me of the late Phoebe Snow...
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Post by the Scribe on Dec 8, 2019 2:14:36 GMT -5
from Canada
Laura Cole - You Always Hurt The Ones You Love (OFFICIAL VIDEO) 4kVcardTV 271 subscribers epicReel video by DMNikas © 2016 lauracolemusic.com - 4k HD
This song and video were created out of our love for Amy Winehouse and our sincere hope that if you or anyone you love is battling addiction that you please help them get treatment.
The Amy Winehouse Foundation's mission is to support and empower children and young adults in need through music therapy and music education to prevent the effects of drug and alcohol misuse in young people. I highly encourage you to visit www.amywinehousefoundation.org to learn more about the important work they are doing and if you feel inclined to please make a donation to help them provide these much needed services.Laura Cole - Guilty - Live from the Pool House
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Post by the Scribe on Dec 9, 2019 10:52:17 GMT -5
In case anyone's interested, yes, Linda's Mexican-American heritage was celebrated, by the all-female mariachi group Flor de Toloache. www.youtube.com/user/mariachiny
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Post by Dianna on Dec 12, 2019 23:35:22 GMT -5
Old Movie Stars Dance to Uptown Funk
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Post by the Scribe on Dec 29, 2019 0:40:47 GMT -5
Incredible soundtrack. Lopatin is using brain entrainment science to create his music.www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_k-UKfMe7ESDlBfvL4IrFEUWmSwcutCQ00 In his second collaboration with the Safdie Brothers after their work in Good Time, Daniel Lopatin (a.k.a Oneohtrix Point Never) provides a synth-soaked, hypnotic, and textured score that brings you in the morally corrupt and nerve-wracking world of Howard Ratner. Lopatin utilizes flutes and oboes during its more stressful moments, soft sax in at its most sleaziest, and wordless chants along with snippets of dialogue from the film. The soundtrack was released digitally, along with a CD and Vinyl release on December 13th, 2019 by Warp Records. The film has won multiple awards, including the Oklahoma Film Critics Circle for best original score.
The film features a mix of hip-hop, pop, classic rock and dance music by Rich Homie Quan, The Weeknd, Billy Joel, Drake, Meek Mill, Kendrick Lamar, Madonna, and Gigi D'Agostino.www.what-song.com/Movies/Soundtrack/103136/Uncut-Gems Daniel Lopatin - Topic 60 subscribers
Provided to YouTube by Warp Records
The Ballad Of Howie Bling · Daniel Lopatin
Uncut Gems - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
℗ Warp Records
Released on: 2019-12-13
Producer: Daniel Lopatin
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