Country music star Cole Swindell celebrates his record-setting year


Oct. 29—NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Warner Music Nashville surprised star recording artist Cole Swindell recently with three plaques commemorating his record-setting year.

Swindell’s multiweek No. 1 single “Never Say Never” (with Lainey Wilson) has officially earned RIAA platinum certification. Celebrating its fourth week atop the Billboard country airplay chart, Swindell’s “She Had Me At Heads Carolina” has been certified gold — and has already surpassed 1 million track equivalents.

“Heads Carolina” made Swindell the only artist in 2022 to spend four consecutive weeks at No. 1 on country radio, also amassing the largest airplay audience of any country single this year. The third plaque celebrates Swindell’s incredible 12 chart-topping hits.

The decorated singer/songwriter and entertainer from Bronwood in Terrell County is nominated for Musical Event of the Year and Music Video of the Year at the 56th annual CMA Awards for “Never Say Never.” He is currently on the road on his headlining “Back Down To The Bar Tour” with Ashley Cooke and Dylan Marlowe.



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A Composer’s Diary: FFF week 11: Reduce food waste


I would like to contribute to FFF (Fridays for Future) in my own way: by sharing one concrete action per week that YOU can do, and which I have done, for combating climate change. 


FFF week 11: Reduce food waste

WHY: An estimated 1.3 billion tonnes of food is wasted globally each year, one third of all food produced for human consumption, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations. The amount of food lost or wasted costs 2.6 trillion USD annually and is more than enough to feed all the 815 million hungry people in the world – four times over. About 8% of all greenhouse gas emissions each year are due to food loss and waste

Food waste has also always been a big issue for me personally, which I’m constantly fighting. With a hectic life style, I often don’t plan my meals well enough, which results again in food going bad before I have had time to use it. This is of course not okay, in any way, and I’m really struggling to get better on this point.

WHAT CAN I DO: Shop smartly, don’t buy more food than you can eat. Store correctly. Don’t be a perfectionist (looking for the perfect apple in the store or throwing away food when it doesn’t look perfect anymore). You can forinstance use “not so pretty fruit” for smoothies. If you eat eggs: eat the yolk. You can both save money by looking for food that is “soon going off” in shops, and help reduce food waste at the same time. Link to a list of tips to reduce food waste is in my bio. Moreover you can inform yourself and participate in the online events organised by “Stop food waste day” on Wednesday the 28th of April. (Link below)

Cecilia Damström in Bamberg 2021

P.S. Vegan dark chocolate gelato!

Links:
https://en.reset.org/knowledge/global-food-waste-and-its-environmental-impact-09122018
https://www.ekopaasto.fi/suurin-ymparistoteko-on-havikin-pienentaminen/
https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/reduce-food-waste#TOC_TITLE_HDR_4
https://www.stopfoodwasteday.com/en/events.html





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Book Review: ‘Surrender,’ by Bono


Of course, Bono has three other life partners, with whom he has truly pulled off the impossible. The lineup of U2 has remained intact for more than 45 years, and every single day that Bono, the Edge, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen Jr. wake up and are still the members of this band, they are in uncharted waters. “Surrender” makes no real attempt to explicate fully how they execute this magic trick — Bono writes respectfully if a bit distantly about his bandmates, and maybe that discretion is critical to maintaining the sense that U2 endures as an experiment rather than an oldies act.

“If we kept going,” he says, “we could do that thing that no one else has done. But only if we kept moving, kept together and kept a kind of humility. Only if we kept breaking up the band. And putting it together again.”

It’s telling, though, that the third and final section of “Surrender” is much more devoted to Bono’s activism than to his music. His bold efforts on behalf of causes like international debt relief and AIDS prevention take us inside rooms and meetings with Steve Jobs, Barack Obama, Bill Gates and numerous committees and commissions. U2 feels like less of a priority (“Meanwhile, the band — the other one, remember them? — had put out two albums. And done two tours,” he tosses off at one point), which is how many fans have responded to their recordings for the last 15 years or so.

But like U2, “Surrender” soars whenever the spotlight comes on. Bono is never more powerful, on the page or the stage, than when he strives for the transcendence that only music can offer. “I had to create that fusion, to make a chemistry set of the crowd,” he says, “finding some moment that none of us had occupied before, or would ever again.”


Alan Light is the author of “The Holy or the Broken: Leonard Cohen, Jeff Buckley, and the Unlikely Ascent of ‘Hallelujah,’” which inspired the recent documentary “Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, a Journey, a Song.”


SURRENDER: 40 Songs, One Story | By Bono | Illustrated | 564 pp. | Alfred A. Knopf | $34



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Christian Corsi pulsates a mysterious web of intrigue onto our shaken hearts with Dark Magic – Independent Music – New Music


Showering a beaming light of hair-raising and sinister tunes to awaken our senses alive again, Christian Corsi leads us into those secretive alleyways which might cause paralyzed pulses to vibrate frantically on Dark Magic.

Christian Corsi is a Colombian house music producer and DJ who now lives in the much-loved party capital Miami and makes those sweltering beats you fall in love with.

Taking us far inside a wild night that could change everything previously intended, Christian Corsi is fearless on Dark Magic and will send a lightning bolt of electricity into the veins of many who love songs with lots of intrigue.

Mood-altering to the core and layered with a breathtaking atmosphere that may put ice in the souls of many hidden spirits, this is a turn-me-up-now or miss out kinda track.

Dark Magic from the Miami-based Colombian house music producer and DJ Christian Corsi shall send a shiver down the spine and reignite our party boots. Baked in a high-pressure chamber that will startle the sleepy awake, this is that 4am anthem which shall stir the consciences of everyone on that drenched dance floor tonight.

Hear this action-packed single on Spotify and check out the IG page.

Reviewed by Llewelyn Screen





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Tame Impala ‘Lonerism’ 10th Anniversary Interview


For Kevin Parker — the man behind musical project Tame Impala — revisiting his second studio album Lonerism has been, “for lack of a better word, cringe.” Following his debut Inner Speaker, Parker’s ambient and exploratory follow-up LP was released in 2012 to industry-wide acclaim. For all the splash it made with critics and fans alike, listening to the LP a decade later, the artist can’t help but consider the changes he might make to some songs if given the chance. As the headlining act at California’s Desert Days music festival earlier this month, Parker celebrated the decennial of Lonerism with a live rendition of the entire album, where, despite artistic impulse, he remained faithful to its primordial version.

Between stops on his cross-country tour, Parker linked with Celine creative director Hedi Slimane to take part in the fashion photographer’s Portrait of Musician series.

Unveiling the exclusive images, HYPEBEAST caught up with Parker to talk about his highly-anticipated collaboration with Slimane and the 10th anniversary of Lonerism.

What drew you to take part in the Portrait of a Musician series?

I’m always into doing something I haven’t done before. never really got into the fashion world before and I don’t, I still don’t really consider myself in the fashion world, but he reached out and I have great respect for Hedi. He shot me a few years ago.

I know that he’s always liked me as an artist, so it’s obviously like a huge honor. At first, I was like… me? I’ve always been surprised when people want to take photos of me.

Walk me through the process of shooting together.

We both went in with an open mind. I think the way he works is that he kind of just sort of feels it out at the time. Neither had been to the location before, which was this old French kind of villa on the water. It was a beautiful place. And it was f*cking hot. It was about 105°F (40°C).

This month marks the 10th anniversary of Lonerism, and in celebration, you recently performed the LP in full at Desert Days. What was it like to revisit the album a decade after its creation?

I listen to my albums every so often, just for whatever reason — because I need to check something or a song might be getting used for an ad or something. It usually takes me down some kind of memory lane, a wormhole. This is the second of my albums that have turned 10 years old, so it’s more of an emotional experience than I expected it to be.

With putting together a performance, I’m trying to be kind of faithful to the album, which always requires going back and revisiting how I’ve made sounds or lyrics that I haven’t revisited in a long time. Or just [considering] the music and the ways I make it. Holding objects again that have been in a box for 10 years is a special thing. All those things added together make it a really contemplative time in my life.

When returning to an older album, particularly with the intent of performing it live, do you find yourself wanting to perform it differently this time around? I’m wondering if it’s difficult at all to stay faithful to like the original version of the album or if you feel compelled to tweak it.

There are so many I hate to say it — but like, for lack of a better word — cringe moments. And not cringe because of what I’m singing about. In fact, the lyrics are the thing that I’m the most content with because it was me 10 years ago, you know? Whatever I cared about 10 years ago is what I’m singing about. And when I sing the lyrics, I’m like, it doesn’t even feel like it’s, it feels like it was a completely different version of me that wrote them. So it’s like I’m singing someone else’s lyrics.

It’s more so the nitty-gritty of production and you know. We’ll be playing a song and come up to a section and I’m like, ‘Oh, in this section it would’ve been so nice to hear this guitar part on its own instead of absolutely cramming it with sounds and drum sounds and distorting everything.’ There’s definitely been a lot of those moments, but at the end of the day, I have to accept that that’s the way the album was and that’s the way people know it.

Compared to your first LP Inner Speaker, Lonerism sees you experiment more with different synths and samples. In tandem with the evolution of your musical style, how was your approach to making an album different the second time around?

With Lonerism, I believed in myself more than ever before. I was dedicated to getting my own studio set up in my house. Before, I just recorded in my bedroom. I realized that this was gonna be my life. It sounds silly, but up until then, I didn’t think that my music deserved its own recording studio. I fully leaned into that and it became my world.

A room in my house was turned into a studio. That’s still where I spend most of my life, except for touring. I also found Ableton, which I still use now, as a way to make music on tour. That completely changed the way I record music, so that kind of blew everything open as well.



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Classical music with a light touch


Pandemics and peak experiences aren’t usually mentioned in the same breath. But I had something resembling one in May 2021 when I attended a concert at The Mount, Edith Wharton’s stately home in Lenox, Massachusetts. The performers were Soprano Sonja Tengblad and contralto Emily Marvosh, with Joseph Turvessi on the piano.

All three were returning to the live stage after a Covid-forced hiatus of many months. They called their show a “climate cabaret” and offered an audience of no more than a couple of dozen people — outdoors and face-masked, of course — an early evening celebration of the natural world, as well as musical warnings about the perils of a warming planet.

This “gratitude” concert was the brainchild of cellist Yehuda Hanani, the artistic director and founder of Close Encounters with Music, a long-running eclectic Berkshires chamber music series.

As Yehuda said on that limpid May evening, introducing the performers and treating the coronavirus as a pothole to be skirted around, “I can not think of a more inviting and celebratory way to start the summer together.” Then he broke into song in passable German, identifying the piece as by Robert Schumann based on a poem by Heinrich Heine. “In the lovely month of May,” Yehuda sang, “when all the buds opened, love unfolded in my heart.”

Close Encounters with Music kicks off its 31st season, its indoor season that is, on November 6th with one of its more ambitious concerts yet: the thrice Covid-delayed world premiere of Tamar Muscal’s “One Earth”. The performers include Christylez Bacon, a rapper/beatbox artist, a tabla player, a string quartet – with Yehuda on the cello, as he typically is – and, oh, the Mount Holyoke College Chamber Singers.

If you’re anything like me (and for your own sake I pray you’re not) your kneejerk reaction to modern music is probably something like: “Sounds interesting but I’ve got to feed the cat.”

Yehuda admitted: “The question always comes up, what are we going to do about the graying of the audience?” The answer was supplied by Paul Cohen, the son of Stanley Cohen, a Close Encounters supporter and a mutual friend. “Get some rappers,” Paul suggested. “So I thought,’” Yehuda went on, “‘What if we engage a wonderful composition to include a part for a rapper?”

“One Earth” is the result.

Yehuda Hanani’s musical talent was recognized by Leonard Bernstein and violinist Isaac Stern. At nineteen they brought him to the United States from Israel where was born and grew up. “I was ready to go to the army,” Yehuda remembers. “Bernstein said, “Don’t draft him. Let this boy go and achieve his potential.’” So the teenager moved to New York and studied at Juilliard with the likes of Pablo Casals.

Yehuda’s musical skills may be eclipsed only by his understanding of his audience, and its tolerance for novelty. One 2013 show featured a conversation between the cellist and former Yankees pitcher, bestselling “Ball Four” author, and Berkshires resident Jim Bouton. The subject was the similarities between playing a classical concert and pitching a major league ball game. The November 6th show concludes, not with something challenging and atonal, but with Schubert’s splendid String Quintet in C Major.

Perhaps it’s no surprise that Bernstein recognized showmanship in the teenager. Close Encounters’ performances reminds me of the Leonard Bernstein Young People’s Concerts that I attended as a child. I didn’t much enjoy having to wear a tie and jacket on a Saturday morning and walk down the West Side to Lincoln Center. But Bernstein had a genius for bringing classical music to life for children – Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos, Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition, Copland’s Billy the Kid – by sharing his visceral delight in sound and never talking down to his highly distractible audience.

I’ve only come to Close Encounters in the last several years and attended a handful of concerts. But the format goes something like this: Yehuda introduces the program with a cogent sketch of the work, including tangents that often involve the life and times, triumphs and disappointments, loves, maladies and occasional lapses into madness of the composer we’re about to hear.

In the same way that I harbor skepticism about contemporary music, I’d normally be reluctant to sit through a lecture on the subject. But Yehuda transmits a passion for his subject leavened by a comic’s sense of timing.

And something else that aligns nicely with the average, enlightened audience members that fill the seats at the Mahaiwe Theater in Great Barrington: a commitment to social justice that Yehuda shares with his wife Hannah, the vice president of Close Encounters’ board.

On the 100th anniversary of the Suffrage Movement in 2017 and women getting the right to vote, Close Encounters threw a concert featuring women composers and called “Fanfare for the Uncommon Woman”. And back in the late 1990’s they joined the successful fight against a multinational’s plan to build a huge cement plant in Hudson, NY with “Revolutionary Etudes, the Music of Political Protest.”

The pandemic concert I attended was both musical and gently militant. It included teenage climate activist’s Greta Thunberg emotional 2019 address to the United Nations set to music and a sly nod to a sweating planet with Cole Porter’s “Too Darn Hot.”

Through next June, Close Encounters hosts six concerts at the Mahaiwe following “One Earth” on November 6th, with works by some of the composers I came to know and appreciate under the tutelage of maestro Bernstein. In the coming months you can take a metaphorical gallery stroll with Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition. And the 13-member Manhattan Chamber Orchestra makes its Close Encounters debut with the Brandenburg Concerto No.3 and Copeland’s Appalachian Spring.

The season culminates with Schubert’s joyous “Trout” Quintet. Knowing Yehuda, he’ll find some way to connect the work and trout fishing season in the Berkshires.

Ralph Gardner, Jr. is a journalist who divides his time between New York City and Columbia County. More of his work can be found at ralphgardner.com

The views expressed by commentators are solely those of the authors. They do not necessarily reflect the views of this station or its management.





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Hank Williams Jr.’s Son, Sam Williams, Comes Out as Gay


Hank Williams Jr.’s son, country singer Sam Williams, has come out as gay in the music video for his new song, “Tilted Crown,” and a subsequent interview.

Williams’ new video loosely documents his growing up, and it shows him kissing his boyfriend on camera for the first time.

As People reports, Williams spoke to Hunter Kelly on Apple Music’s Proud Radio With Hunter Kelly podcast, where he revealed that he had previously planned to address his sexuality in a video for another song that did not come to pass. The directors of his new video felt strongly that including the kiss would help tell the authentic story of his life.

“At first I kind of thought that, ‘I’m tackling something else with this.’ And I thought that maybe that’s for another project,” Williams states. “But again, I felt like I was promoting invisibility, like I wasn’t being visible and wasn’t being myself. And I just thought it was the perfect opportunity to just show who I was.”

Williams tells Kelly that his pronouns are he/him and that he identifies as gay.

“And I’ve never said that to anybody else,” he admits. “I mean, people at my label know and people in my personal life know, but this is the first time that I’ve ever been, besides a show or two, that I’ve ever been this public about it. And it is scary, but it feels good.”

Williams grew up in the rural town of Paris, Tenn., and he says that he struggled to hide his sexuality and fit in with the crowd growing up. He’s hoping that his coming out openly can help another child who might be struggling with the same issues right now.

“So I think at the end of the day, that’s one of the most important reasons why I’m being so open,” the 25-year-old singer shares.

The “Tilted Crown” music video also touches on his relationship with his sister, Katie, who died in a car crash in 2020. Williams tells Kelly that he came out to his sister while they were four-wheeling in Alabama just months before her death. Her reaction was “so emotional,” he recalls.

“I think that she could see pain that I was in from hiding that and just had no idea. And I was like, ‘There’s been some situations that have made me uncomfortable, and I just want you to know.’ And I could just see that there was such a pain there of not knowing,”

Williams’ “Tilted Crown” video also depicts an older man who actively tries to push the young boy character to act more “manly.” He’s received feedback from fans who believe that’s a depiction of his own relationship with his famous father, which he says isn’t entirely accurate.

“That’s not necessarily playing my dad, that’s playing society as a whole,” he explains, adding that society expects and encourages certain behaviors in young girls, and a separate set of behaviors for young boys, regardless of whether or not they fit those children’s individual interests.

“My relationship with my dad wasn’t really like that at all,” he adds. “He didn’t push me to be in music. He pushed me go to hunting, I do have to give him that. He did push me to go hunting. I just wanted to clear that up just in case… It’s a little bit hard for me to watch because it’s just so honest, and it just brings back so much, and it’s all there on the surface.”

Williams released his latest project, Glasshouse Children: Tilted Crown, on Oct. 14. His interview on Apple Music’s Proud Radio With Hunter Kelly airs on Sunday (Oct. 30) at 5PM ET.

11 Country Singers Who’ve Come Out as Gay:





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Mblaqque determined to conquer the world of music with astounding vibes


Sports News of Saturday, 29 October 2022

Source: GNA

2022-10-29

Ghanaian musician Emmanuel Akwesi Boateng

Ghanaian musician Emmanuel Akwesi Boateng, known by his stage name “Mblaqque”, is poised to make a difference in Ghana’s music industry and the world at large with his unique musical craft.

According to the budding music artiste, the old and current crop of Ghanaian musicians have paved the way for an upcoming artiste to achieve global stardom.

Signed to Imperial Avenue Records and managed by Fimenz Multimedia, Mblaqque seeks to showcase his musical prowess with his newly released single titled “Fallen”.

The song, which reflects the theme of partying and love celebration, has received commendations from music lovers considering its magical composition.

When asked about the inspiration behind his new single “Fallen,” Mblaqque said: “I am always inspired by things I see and hear, but real love ignited the composition of the song and I know people will relate to the lyrics in the song.”

His magical composition of “Smile For Peace” in 2021 has landed him a performing deal at the 2022 International Peaceful Coexistence Summit in the United Kingdom.

Mblaqque added that this golden opportunity will broaden his reach and popularity across the African continent and the world at large.



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Matt Nathanson – “Room @ the End of the World” – CD Promotional Single – 2 Loud 2 Old Music


In my further quest for owning all Matt Nathanson items listed on Discogs, I found another gem. This Promo CD is for “Room at the End of the World” by Matt Nathanson which is off his stellar 2011 album, ‘Modern Love’ and it was the 2nd single off the album. Although I don’t think the song charted, the album did debut at #17 on the Billboard charts. The fact that it didn’t chart is no surprise as Matt has never been a darling of public radio. His songs are way too good for radio as they are well crafted masterpieces and lyrical poems about life and he is pure talent unlike the bozos on radio. No, I am not biased…okay…yes I am. You got me!

The song was written by Matt Nathanson and Mark Weinberg. I believe the song is talking about being with the one you love and nothing can stop you. Even if the world was ending, you two would get a room and make the best of what was to come. I love how the song talks about how he was lost and had given up on love until he found “The One”. The One that makes him whole, The One that he will be with until the end of time, The One true love. There is line that says “one heart is never enough alone” and I don’t think it is saying you have to be with someone to be whole, I think it is saying that he never felt complete until he found her (or him). His lyrical phrasing is always so eloquent and so beautiful. He doesn’t sing a love song in the same cliched way other songs do.

Musically, the song is an upbeat, feel-good song that dances along with its ups and downs the same way we go through life. The drum beats towards the end are your heart beating as the love builds and the song keeps promising to deliver more and does just that as the final choruses are sung with all his heart and the music is full of life and love.

Give the song a listen and let me know what you think. Thanks for stopping by and have a wonderful day.





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WizKid Announces ‘More Love, Less Ego Due Date, Shares “Money & Love” Single


It’s official: WizKid will return this holiday season.

The Naija superstar announced that his fifth studio album (and third major label release), More Love, Less Ego, will arrive November 3. The album will follow up his 2020 release Made In Lagos, which nabbed a GRAMMY nomination for and is the home of “Essence,” the first Nigerian song in history to chart on the Billboard Hot 100 and the Billboard Global 200 and the highest-charting single on the Hot 100 by an African act (peaking at number nine).

Following the first focus track, “Bad To Me,” the OG Starboy shares the project’s second offering “Money & Love.”

WizKid Announces ‘More Love, Less Ego Due Date, Shares “Money & Love” Single was last modified: October 29th, 2022 by Meka





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