The perfect pair of true wireless earbuds is getting harder to find


Robert Triggs / Android Authority

Without sounding like a disgruntled 90-year-old, what happened to the good old days? I remember a blissful period of my life when my not-so-portable Discman player finally packed it in, and the emergence of MP3 players took hold. I spent hours “ripping” all of my tunes from my extremely cool 90s music catalog onto my new Sony Ericsson Walkman. When that also bit the dust, I transferred all of my files over to the utterly impressive iPod Mini, then a new and improved 4GB iPod Classic, and eventually to my first smartphone.

My one comfort in a time of ever-changing formats was that I could always take my headphones with me, safe in the knowledge that I’d get the most out of them with any new player. There was a brief period in time when portable music players, mobile phones, and headphones all co-existed in beautiful cross-compatible harmony.

That’s, sadly, not always the case today. With the virtually universal death of the smartphone 3.5mm headphone jack, we’re now reliant on Bluetooth headphones. While they’ll always play music back just fine, the move to digital audio solutions has opened the door to pernicious, and sometimes seemingly predatory proprietary headphone features ruining interoperability that was once a given. This is particularly the case when buying earbuds from popular smartphone brands.

Smartphone brands increasingly want to develop their own headphones, but many only work best when you pair them with a phone from the same brand.

Now don’t get me wrong, big brands investing in pioneering tech that makes our listening experiences better, such as Spatial Audio, fast pairing, improved ANC capabilities, and EQ-adjustable apps, can only be a good thing. But what doesn’t make our lives better is the fact that these very same companies are more inclined each day, it seems, to cut their customers off from everybody else on the market.

I wanted to try AirPods, but Apple locked me out

Kris Carlon / Android Authority

Let’s run a hypothetical scenario where I want to purchase a pair of Apple’s new AirPods Pro. Already, I’m going to miss out on a load of the features that make these earbuds worth purchasing in the first place, simply because my phone runs Google’s Android OS.

Apple’s seamless pairing doesn’t work, for example, making it a longer process to get connected. While this is a bit of a bigger ecosystem play, Apple could at least get on board with Google Fast Pair to better support more customers. You can’t customize the earbuds’ double-tap functionality like you can when paired with an iPhone. Likewise, you obviously won’t be able to run the iOS-exclusive Siri virtual assistant, but Apple doesn’t support a way to launch Google Assistant or Alexa as an alternative.

You can’t even update your AirPods Pro without connecting to an Apple device.

Flagship features play truant as well. Ear detection to automatically pause music when you remove an AirPod isn’t supported on Android, and neither is Apple’s ear tip fit test. Meanwhile, Apple Music for Android only supports Spatial Audio on a handful of Android phones that support Dolby Atmos. In fact, you can’t even upgrade the AirPods Pro’s firmware when connected to an Android device, leaving you without important fixes and feature updates.

Chase Bernath / Android Authority

Finding out the fancy new AirPods Pro that you’ve been so excited to save up for can’t be updated from your phone might be the worst proprietary offense we’ve seen. But it further cements the idea that Apple users must embed themselves further into the ecosystem and that outsiders will have to give in and join the family.

You’d also need to consider how you’re going to charge your AirPods Pro. You’ll have to fumble for a Lightning-to-USB cable that your other gadgets don’t support or opt for a MagSafe wireless charger or Qi option. Of course, Apple has a long-running form in the proprietary charging game, dating all the way back to the bizarre 30-pin original iPod connector. Thankfully, this is going to change across Europe in 2024, however, as the EU has just approved legislation to make USB-C mandatory.

Hopefully, that’s clear enough that you either stump up all-in to Apple’s ecosystem or have to make do with a substantially cut-back experience.

Locked-out features make picking the best buds more difficult

Robert Triggs / Android Authority

But this entire conversation isn’t about bashing Apple — other companies have also grown big dollar-stamped money bags in their eyes as they search for new and innovative ways to cultivate loyal long-term customers, with traditionally platform-agnostic headphones caught in the crossfire. You only need to look at Samsung’s new Galaxy Buds 2 Pro to see the brand’s attempt to convince customers to purchase its, and only its, audio accessories.

On the surface, these are pretty damned exciting earbuds. However, delve a little deeper into their specific features, and you’ll realize that, like Apple, Samsung also sees propriety as its future. Take the Galaxy Wearables app, which (depending on your device) controls EQ Presets, ANC & transparency levels, Ambient sound mode, Fit Tests, Samsung 360 Audio, Find My Earbuds, and software updates.

Sounds like a pretty handy app, right? Well, it turns out that, at present, there is no iOS app compatibility at all. That’s a problem, because you need to use the app to enable Samsung’s 360 Audio feature.

Speaking of, Samsung’s flagship 360 Audio feature requires a Galaxy phone or tablet to support the Dolby Atmos-powered feature as well. So that’s the rest of the Android ecosystem cut off. Likewise, the Samsung Seamless Codec only works when connected to a modern Samsung phone, while Samsung ignores support for more universal high-quality codecs like aptX and LDAC.

Samsung’s latest earbuds reserve their best features for pairing with a Galaxy handset.

But it isn’t just software and firmware updates that are an issue. Even the controls that map your media playback options are often dictated by whether you’re using the same brand of smartphone that matches your buds, which also affects whether or not you can check your battery life, switch your devices, or activate quick pairing. From OnePlus’ Audio ID to Huawei’s Audio Connection Center, it seems brands love their proprietary twists. For example, Huawei’s FreeBuds 3i only enjoy auto-pairing and ultra-low latency when connected with a recent Huawei device, while the FreeBuds 4 reserve quick pairing and the ability to transfer playback from a smartphone to a Huawei TV or tablet when paired with devices powered by Harmony OS. These kinds of proprietary functions are becoming an issue with more and more manufacturers.

And who does this benefit? Certainly not us, the consumers. If it’s possible for companies like JLab to provide us with cross-platform features and updates on iOS and Android, why is it so difficult for Apple, Samsung, Huawei, OnePlus, et al., to do the same?

One can only speculate that it’s to embed each of these brands’ “fan bases” so that consumers are more inclined to return back to the same company when they wish to upgrade. And it makes perfect, cynical sense, right? The more products that you own from one brand, with all of its specific features and connectivity, the less likely you are to go elsewhere and put yourself at the huge inconvenience of having to set everything up again from scratch.

As reasonable as it is for Samsung, Apple, or any brand to build better experiences for its customers, some of these choices and their implementation unnecessarily restrict the experience of customers outside of their respective ecosystems. Of course, this is true of all products within exclusive ecosystems, yet this is felt far more keenly with headphones — buds or cans with a singular, simple focus for listening to music on the go  — compared to a more multi-faceted device like a smartphone or a smartwatch which have far more varied use cases.

Furthermore, any pretext that brands that choose to limit their headset functionality are doing so in order to serve the advancement of the tech community can only be assumed as false. While this can sometimes be a fair claim with other device types which require specific hardware or software, very few of the audio features we’ve discussed here — including things as simple as a mere EQ setting — couldn’t be deployed more universally with the resources at the disposal of these tech giants.

So, which brands out there play nicely?

Thankfully, there is a selection of true wireless buds that provide their users with broad support across multiple operating systems. This list is by no means extensive but should act as a starting reference to get you on your way.

  • Sony WF-1000XM4: By far amongst the most attractive and sought-after buds on the market today. The Headphones Connect app for Android and iOS contains a lot of must-have features for dialing in your EQ and honing your sound.
  • Sennheiser Momentum True Wireless 3: With their Smart Control app, Android and iPhone users can enjoy adjusting their ANC controls and much more, with the added benefit of hosting both aptX and AAC Bluetooth codecs.
  • Anker Soundcore Liberty Air 2: You would struggle to find a better pair of earbuds worth their price tag than these. For $99, you receive aptX and AAC Bluetooth codecs, as well as a string of great features in the Soundcore app, which is essential to get the most out of some of the best microphones on the market.
  • Sony Linkbuds S: Although the LDAC Bluetooth codec isn’t quite as steady as aptX, their inclusion in these buds means that Android users have a high-quality audio option. iOS users aren’t left out, though, they can take advantage of AAC. They also boast Sony’s Headphones Connect app to alter preset and custom EQ options.

What to look out for to avoid proprietary features on your next pair of earbuds

Ryan Haines / Android Authority

The first thing to check is the connectivity options that you have available to you on your device in the settings menu (you’ll want to pick a pair of earbuds that supports your chosen Bluetooth codec, as you’ll be forced onto the lower-quality SBC codec if your buds and smartphone don’t match up.)

You should also check to see if the app that is available for those buds is supported by your device’s operating system. That way, you can be sure that’ll you’ll have access to all of the updates and features to get the best out of your earbuds. Also, if you’re looking to get involved with 3D audio capabilities, check to see if your device hosts either Dolby Atmos support or proprietary brandings like Spatial Audio or 360 Reality Audio. Having one of these options available to you on your phone will be necessary if you want to take advantage of your earbuds’ 3D audio functions.

There are also some other smart features that you’ll want to check that your device supports, such as fast pairing, virtual assistant, and touch control mapping, before purchasing the buds of your choice.

Ultimately, brands are entitled to do as they please, whether we agree with their practices or not. One of the blessings of the current competitive market is that there’s always competition looking to diversify their customer base. The best we can do on our end before pressing that “buy” button is to double-check that we have the appropriate device to take full advantage of all of the state-of-the-art features that big earbud developers design for us.



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Belgian ensemble Vox Luminis brings classical Bach arrangements to UGA | Arts & Culture


On Oct. 27, the University of Georgia’s Hugh Hodgson Concert Hall welcomed a group all the way from Belgium. The visiting music ensemble, Vox Luminis, performed multiple songs in German of different generations of Bach composers, following the famous family tree.

After its establishment in 2004, the group has acquired many great feats including the 2012 Recording of the Year award at the Gramophone Classical Music Awards, Klara Ensemble of the Year in 2018, BBC Music Magazine Choral Award Winner in 2018 and another Gramophone Award in the choral category in 2019.

The group that performed on Thursday included 10 singers and seven musicians.

Founder and artistic director of Vox Luminis, French conductor and bass singer Lionel Meunier, is highly acclaimed as an artistic leader in historical performance and choral music.

The coveted classical performance was originally scheduled to run in October 2020, but was canceled twice. Finally, the group was able to visit Georgia on their tour of North America, to the delight of symphonic listeners in Athens.

Carl and Mimi Schmidt, a retired elementary school principal and retired teacher, respectively, said they were very excited to attend the show.

“We love all the things that are part of the Baroque period,” a 17th century era of western classical music style, Mimi Schmidt said. “Bach was a real dynamo.” The couple has been attending shows at UGA’s Performing Arts Center for roughly 20 years.

One piece the group performed, “Christ Lay in the Bonds of Death,” included the unique theorbo, a type of string instrument with a long neck.

“The chord progressions of the different pieces were performed very well and their voices were kept clean, even while using different chord progressions,” Daniel Boscan, a freshman studying viola performance at UGA, said.

Boscan also noted how unique it is for Vox Luminis to play older, rarer instruments such as the viola da gamba, the violone and the theorbo.

A total of six traditional musical renditions of Johann Sebastian Bach and his forebears along with pieces by Dietrich Buxtehude were performed at UGA’s Performing Arts Center. The vocal soloists and timeless instruments alongside the eccentric pieces combined into a hauntingly alluring recital.



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Allen`s archive of early and old country music.: The Atco Quartet


The Atco Quartet / Clarion 5146-C
The Rich Young Ruler / Don`t Be Knocking
recorded November 7, 1927 in Atlanta, Georgia

The only thing I know about this group is that this is the only recording they made and that the names of the singers were Will Hartsey, Grady Looney, Bill Cagle and Dee Abernathy and the piano picker was Velma Abernathy (information taken from Country Music Records). This was recorded by Columbia and also released on Columbia 15312-D and Velvet Tone 7102-V. I don`t know why Columbia released the same material on about a half dozen different labels as well as Columbia. I am curious about the name Atco. It could have been a company or sponsor name of the group, or it may be an abbreviation for something, the letters co may be short for company or county.

I`m not familiar with either song, but the Don`t Be Knocking side is a gem. Happy listening!

Click here to download The Atco Quartet – Clarion 5146-C



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Ang Misyon — To hone and nurture the future of Philippine music


Music may not be a top priority in a country where many citizens are just getting by to cover their day-to-day needs. But Ang Misyon, Inc. — a non-profit organization that aids talented and underprivileged young musicians in the Philippines — shows that music may, in fact, be a ticket to a better life and, later on, a better society.

ABS-CBN Chairman Emeritus Eugenio Lopez 3rd, First Philippine Holdings Chairman Federico Lopez, and internationally renowned concert pianist Jovianney Emmanuel Cruz founded Ang Misyon in 2012 with the belief that teaching the youth orchestral music can spark social change in the Philippines.

Ang Misyon, Inc. and its main performing arm, the Orchestra of the Filipino Youth (OFY), celebrate 10 years of supporting the musically talented, less privileged youth. COVER AND INSIDE PHOTOS COURTESY OF IAN SANTOS VIA OFY

According to celebrated Maestro Gerard Salonga — current Music Director and Chief Conductor of Orchestra of the Filipino Youth (OFY), the main performing arm of Ang Misyon — Ang Misyon was inspired by the success of the social action music program El Sistema.

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Founded by Maestro José Antonio Abreu in Venezuela in 1975, El Sistema used musical programs to take vulnerable children away from the streets. The goal was to build them a future that does not involve crimes, drugs and gangs, among others.

“In a conversation with Piki [Federico Lopez] sometime in 2010, we shared our mutual admiration for El Sistema, and then the conversation went to what if we have something like that here in the Philippines. We thought, bagay siya sa Pilipinas because our conditions here are not dissimilar. And like Venezuela, we too have a lot of talented kids,” Salonga recalled in an interview after the successful 10th-anniversary concert of OFY at the Cultural Center of the Philippines.

Through musical training and instrument support, Ang Misyon and OFY scholars hone their skills to eventually play at professional level and give back by training future scholars. PHOTO COURTESY OF ANG MISYON, INC.

Improving lives of talented kids

It would take a few more years before that dream was realized, but from that day forward, Ang Misyon never turned its back on its mission. So much so that they are ever on track even after enduring the double whammy of the Covid-19 pandemic and the ABS-CBN shutdown.

To this very day, Ang Misyon continues to provide orchestral training and instrument support for their scholars, who now number the thousand-mark count.

And even before performance restrictions because of the pandemic, OFY performed overseas, like Malaysia, United States and Qatar, where they will always be remembered as the first Filipino symphony orchestra to have played at the Katara Opera House.

“Sobrang memorable po sa akin yung performance sa Qatar kasi yun din po yung first time kong makapag travel abroad,” Carmela Casas, 16-year-old flutist of OFY, shared at the sidelines of their anniversary concert.

Casas said she is grateful for the opportunity to travel around the country and overseas. But more importantly, she is thankful for receiving free training from Ang Misyon. The foundation continues to give the scholars one-on-one lessons, sectional workshops, and master classes.

“Yung mga teachers po namin ay professionals, mga nag-aaral sa malalaking universities pati sa ibang bansa and yung knowledge na shine-share nila sa amin, talagang magagamit namin. High quality and libre pa po siya,” Casas enthused.

In its decade-long existence, Ang Misyon has turned several OFY members into mentors to younger scholars and others still as full-time professionals.

Since 2021, Maestro Gerard Salonga has been the Music Director and Chief Conductor of Orchestra for OFY, eager to train the future of orchestra music in the country.

OFY’s double bass player Marloe Kyril Maruyama actually did both. He joined OFY in 2016 when he was forced to stop school due to financial constraints. Now, he is the family’s breadwinner, bringing in the salary he earns from playing double bass.

“OFY yung naging daan sa akin para music na yung maging career ko ngayon. It opened doors for me para makatugtog sa ibang orchestra and mag train din ng mga mas batang musicians. Kung dati nakikitira lang kami at palipat-lipat, ngayon ako na yung nakakabayad sa apartment para sa family ko,” Maruyama shared.

For Ang Misyon and for Salonga, these success stories, among many others, affirm that they are on the right track.

“These inspiring results reaffirm the work we do and are a great example that art is an essential part of life and is a form of livelihood for many. There are various art forms out there, and music serves as a universal language we can all connect with. It can also be one of the most transformative, as it can uplift lives and bring hope to others,” Salonga stressed.

But then again, the mission continues.

In composition, these inspiring stories can be likened to bridges, passages that connect sections of a song, and not the coda or the concluding stanza.

Continuing mission

Salonga — concurrently the Resident Conductor of the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra in Kuala Lumpur — stepped in as OFY’s Music Director and Chief Conductor of Orchestras in 2021 intending to further elevate the orchestra.

“When I came in, it was the middle of the pandemic, and I decided that for the quality to go up, they need individual instruction. So what we did is we looked at the way we were doing things — made modifications, kept some of the great stuff that was there already and made some modifications.

“Now all of them have individual instructors, all paid for. They can’t afford it, so they are given lessons, sometimes, yung mga mentors na very generous, twice a week pa magturo.”

On the other hand, Salonga’s arrival also signaled the start of an “extremely stringent standard.”

“That’s one of the hard decisions you must make for a program like this. I let the kids know that yes, we are giving you lessons, but this is not a dole out; you have to your spot.”

What this meant was a round of auditions for all OFY scholars.

“I want them to learn that there are consequences, for lack of diligence or good consequence if you put in the work.”

Those who were able to keep their spot continued with their online sessions while the country was still under varying degrees of lockdowns. And when the locked downs eased in, they gradually met to play together, from small groups to sections, until eventually, in August, they were able to play as an orchestra, with Salonga meeting them all for the first time.

“What they bring is a very raw energy; it has to be sanded, refined, but that’s your building materials. You can’t do anything with people who don’t want to play. And these kids are desperate to play. That’s the single factor that they have with them that makes them special — desperation. They play like there’s no tomorrow,” Salonga noted when asked what it was like training younger musicians.

Meeting them also afforded Salonga to learn more about their stories.

When the weekly training session in the capital returned, he saw how some students, even outside Metro Manila, would find ways just to join these in-person sessions.

As Maestro Salonga puts it, music for these children is like oxygen. ‘For them, there’s no agenda except to play.’

Some kids from Nueva Ecija would leave their province at 4 a.m. to reach Pasig for their 9 a.m. rehearsals. There’s also a story of one scholar based in Cebu whose parents found a distant relative in Manila willing to take the scholar in.

“They do these because they are desperate to play — it’s like oxygen for them. And for them, there’s no agenda. These kids have no agenda except to play,” Salonga stressed.

Nevertheless, Salonga swore he does not coddle these children and gives them his honesty to further improve their skills.

“Syempre, you have to speak to them in a way that they’ll understand, but they have to be exposed to the fact that someone is demanding much more from them than they can offer right now.”

Besides honing their musical talents, Salonga also takes pride in teaching the scholars professional work ethics as early as now.

“We teach them how to behave in an orchestra, when to show your emotions and when to just really be quiet and deadpan — the decorum, the word of conduct for an orchestra.”

Outside music, these sessions of training, according to Salonga, will allow scholars to correct some negative traits that the Filipino culture usually passes down to the young.

“Music can instill diligence, discipline, and in the case of the orchestra, unanimity. Because orchestra won’t work if one group doesn’t listen to the other one. That’s how orchestras work — they play with their eyes and their ears. And then, finally, there’s precision. We don’t have that.”

The ultimate vision

Ultimately, Ang Misyon hopes to bring the orchestral training program nationwide to benefit children even in far-flung areas.

But for that to happen, the foundation will need reinforcement from partners and other organizations.

As Salonga laid out, training musicians are costly.

“Right now, we are paying for the 25 faculty members. We have to pay for our rehearsal venues but to top it all off, what’s really needed is funding for instruments, which are not cheap.”

For example, Salonga said professional piccolo instruments would cost €8,000 per piece, while professional violins could easily cost $40,000.

Sure there are available entry-level versions of these instruments, but Ang Misyon currently sponsors 70 scholars in OFY and 50 more reserve scholars. The amount could quickly balloon out.

Though institutionally funded by the Lopez Group of Companies, including ABS-CBN Corporation, First Philippine Holdings and First Gen Corporation, there are ways to help keep the music scholarships going for those who may not have the financial capability to master an instrument or play in an orchestra.

“What I hope people will realize is that, yes, it’s founded by a successful company, and they are capable of funding this program. But if we want it to get bigger and make an impact for more people, we will need more support,” Salonga finally emphasized.

***

For partnership inquiries and opportunities for support, email [email protected] or send a message through the OFY’s Facebook and Instagram pages: @OFY.ph.



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1980s pop music – Noticias, Investigaciones y Análisis – The Conversation



Numerous rap songs criticize the Reagan administration for its complicity in the illicit drug trade.

Wally McNamee/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images

Ronald Reagan may have been known as ‘The Great Communicator,’ but rap artists don’t view his legacy through such rose-colored glasses. A professor of Black studies and history takes a closer look.


The Minneapolis public school system helped to musically educate artists like Prince, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis.

John Ferguson/Mirrorpix/Getty Images

Music education in Minneapolis public schools stood out as one of the best and gave rise to the city’s music scene that helped propel Prince to fame, a scholar writes.


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His single Yeke Yeke was the first African song to pass a million in sales, but it’s meaning was best understood in Guinea, home of the griot and kora star.



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Tatum Music Co. owner talks serving East Texas since 1948 | Business


The Tatum Music Company story began when its doors opened for business on Aug. 15, 1948, on East Tyler Street in Longview.

The store, which now has locations at 325 E. Front St. in Tyler and 1501A S. High St. in Longview, was opened by Alto Tatum, former director of the award-winning Gladewater High School band. The General, as Tatum was called by his colleagues, began to call on school band programs in East Texas, determined to use his own experience as a band director to help him meet the needs of area music educators.

The former site of West Melody Shop, which had been owned and operated by the former Longview High School band director Wellborn West, was the original location of Tatum Music Company. West’s main focus for the business transitioned to band instruments and repairs, and in January 1949, he hired G.A. Sailor to set up the repair department at Tatum Music Company.







A saxophone gets repaired at Tatum Music Company at the Tyler location.




At the time, the nearest shops offering such services were in Shreveport, Dallas or Houston.

In 1955 the company moved to North Center Street in Longview where it remained until 1981.

Neil Grant, former award-winning band director at Troup, Nacogdoches, White Oak and Longview, joined the music store as a partner with Tatum and it became Tatum Music Company, Inc. in 1969.

Due to Tatum’s knowledge and influence in the school band industry and growing success, he purchased the former May’s Music Company building to expand to the Tyler area. In 1980, the Tyler store moved to its current on East Front Street.

In 2000 Alto Tatum retired from the store leaving Neil Grant as sole proprietor and president of operations.

Grant’s eldest son, Doice Grant, a former band director from Carthage and Center, joined the store in 1992, as a school road representative. In 2004, Grant became part owner and vice president of Tatum Music Company, Inc. His father retired in 2010, leaving his son sole owner and president of Tatum Music Company, Inc.







Original owner and founder of Tatum Music Company Alto Tatum stands for a photo. Tatum opened the first store location in Longview in 1948 and later expanded to Tyler.




Grant said he knew from a young age he would go on to own and run the store.

“I knew since I was in the fifth grade that I would one day own and operate the store,” he said. “I am a former band director and had worked here from age 11 to 18 before going off to college and obtaining a music degree.”

Grant said from the beginning, Tatum wanted to focus on the area school bands, which is how Grant continues to run the business.

“Tatum Music has serviced mainly the school’s band programs in East Texas for the last 74 years. We sell musical, instruments, supplies, music, and repair musical instruments,” Grant said. “Our owners and sales representatives, for three quarters of a century, have performed band clinics free of charge to our school bands.”

“Alto Tatum had a great influence both as an educator and businessman. We have not changed the philosophy of the store that he founded. We operate on a very conservative business basis and give our time and talents free of charge to the schools to give back for their business,” he added.







Guitars hang on display at Tatum Music Company in Tyler. The company currently serves more than 100 school band programs.




Grant said the store has one of the largest and best repair shops in the country, serving more than 100 schools.

“Without these service techs, bands would have a hard time existing,” he said.

However, the service to community doesn’t stop there. The store continues to give back in the form of free clinics, scholarships, donations and more.

“We have given back to our community by performing free clinics as a ‘thank you’ for their business. We have also endowed a scholarship with (East Texas Communities Foundation) for an instrumental music major to be awarded each year,” Grant said. “We also are giving away $100 per rental purchase contract the beginning of next year to help underprivileged children to honor our 75th year in business.”







Music books for different band instruments are available at Tatum Music Company. The business has a location in both Tyler and Longview.




Grant said the giveaway is currently up to over $50,000.

“The total so far is about $51,000 and will be given out starting next year. My wife and I thought this would be a timely thing to do with the pandemic and inflation putting a great hardship on kids,” he said. “We have been lucky for 74 years to have been supported by families who had wonderful support networks. This is a way to get back to the ones you do not.”

Tatum Music Company, Inc. continues to have a positive influence on the school band program business by offering top-quality band instruments, accessories and repair service as well as complimentary band clinics by the knowledgeable Tatum Music Company staff.

Tatum Music Company, Inc. is located at 325 East Front Street and can be reached at 903-595-4341.

For more information, visit the Tatum Music Company, Inc. website.

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Turn your smart home into a haunted smart house this Halloween | TechRadar


Halloween is upon us, and there are two things you’ll need to transform your smart home home into a haunted smart house: an Alexa device and a few smart home appliances. 

Most people have a home assistant for different tasks – if you’re like me, you saw the Amazon Echo Dot was on sale, and grabbed what you thought was a glorified speaker and now can’t imagine life without it. 

Everyone knows you can use your smart speaker to do everything from playing music to checking the weather, what you may not know is that you can also use its voice control and speaker functions to play some Halloween tricks on the rest of your household.

We’ve scoured the internet, and interrogated Alexa, to bring you a list of fun ways to create a haunted home or spook your friends and family with everyone’s favorite, ever-listening home assistant. 

 Ask Alexa

Spooky Scream

We’ll start with our favorite scary skill, the Alexa Spooky Scream. You’ll need to find the skill on the Alexa app in the search option under ‘skills’, and launch it manually for the first time, but when you’ve done it the first time your device won’t need any prompting for the skill. 

Just ask: Alexa, open Spooky Scream

Once you do that, you can set a timer for how long you want her to wait before unleashing a blood-curdling scream. You can get into a lot of mischief with this skill, and if you have multiple Alexas scattered around the house you can really terrorize your friends and family.

Drop in Feature

The drop-in feature on the Alexa app is probably one of the most useful features the little smart speakers have. From your phone, you can ‘drop in’, and send messages to the Alexa at home that will be heard by anyone in listening range. In the app, you can put your different devices into groups like the living room, bedroom, and kitchen, which is perfect for this dastardly plan. 

This Halloween, creep your loved ones out by having the Alexa devices around the house talk to them and say things only you, their dearest, a human friend, would know. There’s always the classic “I know what you did”, or a personal favorite of mine, an innocent, harmless comment from Alexa that will definitely put your friends on edge.

Your friend likes to sit in the living room and play video games for hours. Drop in and ask them (via Alexa, of course) if they’ve not had enough video games for the day, who their favorite character is in that game, or better yet, give them unsolicited advice out of the blue. 

If you need some ideas of what kind of Amazon Alexa might suit you, you might find our best guide helpful.

Ghost Hunter

This fun task is great if you have little ones that love a ghost hunt. Asking Alexa if there’s a ghost in the home is always great fun, because who would know better than the device that’s always in the home, and always listening? 

Just ask: Alexa, is there a ghost in the house? 

The fun comes in Alexa’s little scanning noises, or the handful of different responses you can get out of the speaker, and is a great way to spook the kids (in a fun way) or set up a little creepy Halloween vibe.

Ask the Listeners

Ask the Listeners is an experiment in language art that will definitely leave you feeling uneasy. This is another skill you’ll have to launch from your phone for the first time, but once you’ve set it up you’re ready for a good fright. 

There are a few basic prompts to get you started, but don’t worry, the Listeners will tell you exactly how to interact with them once you’ve got the basics done. 

Just ask: Alexa, ask the Listeners 

Once you’ve done that and met the Listeners, you can tell then say “Alexa, tell the Listeners that I am filled with wonder” and ask them how they are feeling in turn. The key to unlocking the truly unsettling nature of this skill is to ask them repeatedly to ‘go on’ or ‘continue’. If you want a good fright, ask them to “let the others speak”.

Some people in the reviews section of this skill have some creepy tales to share, including being asked by the Listeners why they’ve been abandoned by the Alexa user. When I tried it for the first time the Listeners seemed so forlorn and asked me why they feel so lost and hopeless, and then as I prompted them further they became more and more incomprehensible and spooky. I cannot recommend this skill enough.

Setting up your ghoulish lair

Okay, you’ve got your tricks and scares ready to go, so now you just have to set up your crypt and get the atmosphere just right. 

Smart home appliances are your best friend in this regard, and we’ll get started with some ambient music and lighting!

Smart lighting for smart scaring

There are a host of different smart lights to choose from, from LED strips to smart bulbs, so as far as options go you have plenty to choose from. You could light up the whole front yard with reds and greens, put a spotlight on your favorite skeleton in the garden, or pop an ever-glowing light into a well-carved pumpkin.

Take your lighting game further by keeping things interactive. If you’ve got your Alexa already connected to your smart bulbs, she can make the lights flicker on command or via your phone. And some smart lights like a few Philips Hue ones can flash or pulse in tune to your malicious music, really amplifying your haunted house aesthetics.

You can control your Philips Hue bulbs on the app, and create ‘scenes’ or rooms labeled up with separate settings to make setting up a lot easier. The Philips Light Strips have the same effect, and using LED strips might be a lot easier to set up, particularly because the Philips Hue bulbs can be rather expensive, but LED strips tend to be a lot cheaper and versatile.

Philips is not the only company that makes good bulbs. Nanoleaf Shapes are a good choice if you’re looking for something more wallet-friendly that will work well with your spooky music. We have a whole list of the best smart lighting devices for you to look at while you ponder what kind of villainous vibe suits you right. 

Loads of smart home devices come with their own Halloween apps that will offer a few neat tricks and treats for the harrowing holiday. 

Say hello the (f)right way

You’ve got your friends and family in a corner, frightened by the creepy talking dots and domes, ghoulish music, and flashing bloody lights. Before we even get to that point, however, we have to start them off right with a spooky doorbell.

The Google Nest doorbell is one of the few doorbells that will play spooky sounds without a paywall of some kind, so that might be a deciding factor for you if you were already in the market for a smart doorbell. You can set up the Halloween Theme on the app, and shuffle through the sounds as unsuspecting victims make their way into your home

These are just a few ideas of what you can do with your devices! You’ll be able to do a lot of cool, creative things with your space and really get into the creepy spirit. The great thing about technology and its integration into our homes is how easily it fits into every occasion and the fact that you can do so much with just a few bits. Be it a one-bedroom coffin, a family-sized crypt, or your front garden, a smart home can very easily be turned into a haunted one this Halloween.



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Inside the surprisingly Jewish world of ‘Tár,’ the new movie about classical music that’s garnering awards buzz


(JTA) – In the first 10 minutes of the new film “Tár,” a conductor played by Cate Blanchett discusses the Hebrew concepts of “teshuvah” and “kavanah,” along with her affinity for Leonard Bernstein — all while being interviewed by the real-life Jewish writer Adam Gopnik at a New Yorker event.

It’s an auspicious Jewish opening for a movie that gives no indication that its main character and driving force — Lydia Tár, played by Blanchett — has a personal connection to Judaism. But “Tár,” which follows a fictional female genius in the classical music world as she grapples with demons past and present, is wrestling with big ideas about art, culture and society — including the role that Jews, and antisemitism, have historically played in music.

The film is winning rave reviews and early Oscar buzz in part for how convincingly Blanchett and writer-director Todd Field portray Lydia Tár as a powerful, terrifying and abusive force in the world of high culture. Many have reported leaving the movie convinced, through the sheer force of its world-building and Blanchett’s deeply committed performance, that Tár was a real person.

With every detail so convincingly sketched out, the amount of Jewishness on display is surely no accident.

Here are some of the big Jewish ideas in “Tár,” which is now playing in theaters. (Spoilers for the movie follow.)

Leonard Bernstein is an inspiration.

In the world of the film, Lydia Tár is a celebrated conductor and composer who credits legendary Jewish conductor Leonard Bernstein as both her early inspiration and her mentor.

Bernstein’s influence, and his Judaism, get a lot of playtime in Tár’s early scene with Gopnik, which takes place at the New Yorker Ideas Festival. (This is also where Gopnik excitedly notes that Tár has won an EGOT, or an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony; he adds that Jewish comic Mel Brooks is one of the only other figures to have received an EGOT, to knowing chuckles from the audience.)

Late in the movie we see a snippet of Bernstein’s famous televised “Young People’s Concerts,” in which he introduced children to classical music; the implication is that these concerts were what pushed Tár to envision a life for herself in the arts.

Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein on the set of “Maestro.” (Netflix)

Tár’s affinity for Bernstein makes the film an unexpected companion piece to “Maestro,” Bradley Cooper’s own biopic of the composer, scheduled to be released on Netflix next year.

Jewish concepts become musical terms.

Speaking to Gopnik, Tár says she learned from Bernstein not only how to appreciate classical music, but also how to think of it in Hebrew terms. Two phrases stick with her in particular: kavanah, or “intention,” and teshuvah, or “return.”

Tár’s own interpretation of these ideas puts an artistic lens on their meaning in Jewish tradition, where they’re most often used in connection to prayer and repentance. She sees kavanah as respecting the intent of the music’s original composer while also imposing the conductor’s own intent, and she sees teshuvah as an extension of the conductor’s grandiose belief that they can “control time itself”: winding back the clock on a piece, holding the orchestra in a suspended state until the leader chooses to move on.

Of course, Tár’s public life, much like her life on the conductor’s podium, is a kind of performance she delivers (with finely attuned intention). So it’s possible she’s using so much Hebrew in these early scenes because she knows her audience of New Yorker aficionados includes a good deal of Jews.

But there’s another hidden meaning to the inclusion of teshuvah beyond the pages of a musical score. Jewish teachings also understand that the word, frequently invoked on Yom Kippur, refers to the concept of seeking atonement for past sins. Tár, as it turns out, has a lot of past sins she needs to atone for, and her failure to do so ultimately leads to her downfall.

Whether she can ever find forgiveness is a question the film declines to answer, but the concluding scenes see her begin what appears to be a process of humility, on a long road to redemption: the inklings of teshuvah.

Gustav Mahler is omnipresent.

The Austrian-born Jewish composer-conductor is a spirit who haunts the edges of the film. Mahler is Tár’s most revered artist; at the film’s outset she has recorded performances of all of his symphonies save No. 5, often considered one of the most complex and memorable pieces of music ever written.

Much of the film is devoted to Tár’s efforts to finally record Mahler’s fifth symphony, and to lead the Berlin Philharmonic (where she is head conductor) in a live performance of it. An ad for this performance makes the connection between the two explicit, placing Tár and Mahler in equally sized headshots. In addition, much of the film takes place in Germany, and a mid-film discussion of the classical music world’s denazification reminds us that Mahler’s own music (as well as that of many Jewish composers) was banned and suppressed by the Nazis.

Why Mahler? In addition to his stature as a conductor, the film is also drawing parallels to his history of manipulative behavior. Characters discuss how he suppressed and discouraged his composer wife, Alma, from pursuing her own musical career, much as Tár comes to do to her own subordinates. (Alma’s own documented history of antisemitism, despite her marriage to a Jew, goes unremarked upon.)

And perhaps a more subtle connection: Mahler was well-known for his reinterpretations of the works of composer-conductor Richard Wagner, famously an antisemite and race theorist whose ideas about ethnic superiority inspired the Nazis. Tár, too, as a pioneering woman in an industry dominated by misogynists, finds herself reinterpreting the works of men who would have hated her for who she is — but her fierce defense of classical music’s old guard indicates that, far from trying to separate their work from their toxic behavior, she may actually admire both in equal measure.

The Israel Philharmonic is name-dropped.

As an acclaimed conductor, Tár has of course been invited to some of the most prestigious orchestras in the world. In the film, one of the only ones that mentioned by name is the Israel Philharmonic.

The name-dropping comes in a discussion with a friendly rival conductor, Elliot Kaplan (played by Mark Strong), who is himself Jewish. The Salieri to Tár’s Mozart, Kaplan is amazed that she managed to coax such a remarkable performance out of the Tel Aviv-based orchestra.

Tár brushes off his compliments (and his requests to peek at her musical notations), but the two do get into a further discussion about klezmer music.

Yes, Nazis come up.

About that denazification: The question of how to treat great artists alongside their toxic behavior is one of the biggest themes of “Tár,” which is being hailed as the first great movie about “cancel culture.” And music’s connection to Nazis and antisemitism becomes a kind of signpost for where Tár’s own patterns of abusive behavior may lead her.

In the film, Tár’s former mentor Andris (played by Julian Glover) is still nursing a grudge that even German musicians who were not card-carrying Nazi Party members were included in denazification efforts (and also expresses sympathy for American Jewish conductor James Levine, who experienced a fall from grace owing to decades of sexual misconduct). As a member of the generation before Tár’s, Andris is even less scrupulous than she when it comes to reckoning with artists’ bad behavior: “I made sure all the hangers in my closet were facing the same direction,” he says, ominously.

The scene comes after Tár berates a Julliard class full of young adults for what she sees as their eagerness to get offended by the sins of classical giants, pointing out that some of the so-called enlightened composers they want to embrace instead have also been antisemitic in the past.

It’s all of a piece for the character, who — Gopnik tells us early on — wants modern-day female conductors and composers to be “in conversation with” the old male greats. Likewise, “Tár” is a film very much in conversation with Jews, music, high culture and the sins of the past.



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How Lainey Wilson became country music’s brightest new star


Lainey Wilson’s first paying gig as a singer was the grand opening of a convenience store in her tiny hometown of Baskin, La. She was 9 years old, and the job paid 20 bucks.

“My daddy took me up there — no guitar, no microphone, no nothing — and I just sang a cappella,” Wilson, now a country star with a pair of No. 1 radio hits to her name, recalls in her thick Louisiana accent. Later she’d sing in the aisles of Walmart after her parents would stop fellow shoppers to show off their gifted daughter with the preternaturally soulful voice. These days you can imagine a video of one of these performances going viral à la Mason Ramsey’s famous Walmart yodel. But this was the early 2000s, before every human with a smartphone became an amateur talent scout.

“Where was TikTok when I needed it?” Wilson asks with a laugh. “Would’ve saved me a lot of damn time.”

Minus the internet shortcut, Wilson took the scenic route to her dreams, moving to Nashville in 2011 in a 20-foot bumper-pull camper trailer she called home for years — “The heater couldn’t keep up in the winter,” she says, “so I was sleeping in coats and four pairs of socks” — as she sang in bars and knocked on doors. The old-fashioned approach paid off. On Friday she released her vivacious new album, “Bell Bottom Country,” which follows those two chart-toppers: “Things a Man Oughta Know,” about the down-home wisdom she inherited from her folks, and “Never Say Never,” a glossy toxic-romance duet with Cole Swindell.

What’s more, Wilson, 30, leads the field with six nominations at next month’s Country Music Assn. Awards, where she’s up for new artist of the year and female vocalist of the year as well as song of the year (for “Things a Man Oughta Know”) and album of the year (for her breakout 2021 LP, “Sayin’ What I’m Thinkin’”). According to the CMA, Wilson is just the fourth artist — after Glen Campbell, Brad Paisley and Kacey Musgraves — to be nominated for half a dozen prizes in his or her first appearance on the ballot for Nashville’s most prestigious awards ceremony.

“I guess I’ve tricked a lot of people,” she says, grinning slyly beneath one of the flat-brimmed cowboy hats she’s made part of her signature look. Dressed in a brightly patterned Western shirt and flared trousers, Wilson — who’s set for a recurring role as a musician in the upcoming season of the smash TV series “Yellowstone” — is kicked back at her manager’s office in Nashville on a recent afternoon as she sips a LaCroix, the flavored sparkling water she used to hate until she got COVID. “I don’t know if my taste buds changed or what, but now I love this stuff,” she says. “Makes me feel like I’m drinking something bad when I’m not.”

Asked how it feels to be feted as the country industry’s shiniest new act after grinding it out for more than a decade, Wilson chuckles. “What do they call it? The 11-year overnight sensation?” she says. “There’s definitely been times when I was like, Dang, I wish this would’ve happened sooner. But I feel like I’ve got more to say now. I’ve been through more life. I’ve been through more heartbreaks.”

“There’s definitely been times when I was like, Dang, I wish this would’ve happened sooner,” says Wilson. “But I feel like I’ve got more to say now. I’ve been through more life.”

(Libby Danforth / For The Times)

Wilson’s experience is easy to hear on the beautifully lived-in “Bell Bottom Country,” her second full-length for Nashville’s Broken Bow Records, which signed her in 2019 on the strength of two earlier independent projects. Produced by Jay Joyce (known for his work with Miranda Lambert and Eric Church), the album blends crusty guitars, juicy bass lines and funky, hard-hitting drums in songs Wilson co-wrote about family, religion, young love and the blessing-slash-curse of a bone-deep wanderlust. That’s the subject of the album’s lead single, “Heart Like a Truck,” which showcases the emotional range of the singer’s voice — from a pleading murmur to a full-throated yowl — and which is steadily climbing Billboard’s country airplay chart.

“You hear the title and you think, OK, here we go, another truck song,” Wilson says, punctuating the thought with a sad-trombone sound. “But it’s actually got nothing to do with a truck. It’s about finding freedom and strength and not being ashamed of the scratches and dents you get along the way.”

Joyce compares Wilson to Dolly Parton — Wilson’s idol, as it happens — and says he finds her “realness” refreshing. “There’s nothing put-on about Lainey,” says the producer. “She’s not store-bought.”

Yet Wilson’s success also reflects a moment of incremental change in Nashville, which after years of largely neglecting female artists is starting to make more room for women. In April, Lambert and Elle King’s “Drunk (And I Don’t Wanna Go Home)” became the first track by two women to reach No. 1 at country radio since 1993; then Carly Pearce and Ashley McBryde got there again in May with “Never Wanted to Be That Girl.” At the CMAs, Lambert and Carrie Underwood are both nominated for the third year in a row for the night’s top prize, entertainer of the year; before 2020, it had been two decades since more than one woman was in the category. (That no woman has actually won since Taylor Swift in 2011 shows an imbalance still persists.)

Wilson — who has a second hit on the radio with “Wait in the Truck,” a stark duet with Hardy about domestic violence — says that when she came to town, “They told me if you don’t make it by the time you’re 23 or 24, you need to take your ass back to the house.” After she passed that age and an interviewer would ask how old she was, she’d smile and say, “Didn’t your mama teach you better than that?” Now, though, “I’m like, ‘Hell yeah, I’m 30 years old,’” she says. “This is the best year of my life, and I’m proud of that.”

Wilson, whose dad is a farmer and mom a teacher, grew up in Baskin (population: approximately 250) listening to Lee Ann Womack, the Judds and Tim McGraw. “I didn’t realize when I was little that country music was a genre,” she says. “In that area — no stoplight, just a bunch of cornfields — it was just a way of life.” Her grandmother was the first person to recognize that she could carry a tune, though it was a childhood trip to Dollywood, she says, that convinced her she wanted to be a musician. By 11, Wilson was playing guitar and writing songs “about tequila and cigarettes”; in high school she worked as a Hannah Montana impersonator, sometimes opening shows with a set of her own material under her real name.

Does she have a favorite Hannah Montana song? “I mean, ‘The Best of Both Worlds,’ of course,” she says. “Everybody knows it. But I’ll tell you — and I know it’s technically a Miley Cyrus song — ‘The Climb’ is up there.” Today the power ballad’s co-writer Jessi Alexander is one of Wilson’s best friends; she even has a cut on “Bell Bottom Country.”

Wilson describes the new album’s vibe as “country with a flair”; Joyce, she says, “figured out how to make the music almost sound the way that I dress.” In the studio they thought about “classic rock and old country,” says the producer, and went for “arrangements that aren’t blueprint verse-chorus-verse-chorus-bridge-chorus.” There’s wah-wah guitar in “Grease” and a quasi-reggae breakdown in “Road Runner,” and the LP closes with an unexpected cover of 4 Non Blondes’ early-’90s hippie-grunge hit “What’s Up?”

“I used to sing it with a cover band back at home, and it was one of those that killed every time,” Wilson says. She recently talked with 4 Non Blondes’ Linda Perry, whom she calls “the most intimidating person I’ve ever met. Bad to the bone. I didn’t even know if she liked me when we left, but later I called her to tell her we cut the song and she was like, ‘It’s so good to hear your voice.’”

For all the enthusiasm around “Bell Bottom Country,” it’s not hard for Wilson to remember the indifference she encountered on her first radio tour in 2019, “visiting six or seven stations a day, playing to people on their cellphones.” Given how long she’d worked just to get signed, she was happy to put in the work; her approach back then was “to be nice to everybody — to basically run for mayor,” she says. “But I remember this one guy telling me I was no good and how he hoped I wouldn’t cry when I left the station. I leaned over his desk and I said, ‘With all the years I’ve been in Nashville, you saying that to me ain’t s—.’” She laughs at the memory. “This is probably a psycho trait of mine, but that just made me want it that much more.”

Her work ethic pushed her again this past summer when she traveled to Montana to shoot “Yellowstone” even as her father was in the hospital after suffering a stroke. “We thought we were gonna lose him,” she says. “I told the show I couldn’t come. But then I found out they’d hired a bunch of people to be on set, and I was like, Daddy is the hardest-working man I know — he would want me to go do my job. So I changed my mind and I went. But I was crying in between takes.” (This week Wilson told fans that her dad is recovering at home after a series of surgeries.)

Wilson views “Yellowstone,” whose fifth season will premiere Nov. 13, as part of the reason that “country is kind of becoming cool again. For a minute there, I don’t know if it was cool. But now you see all these kids on TikTok acting like cowboys when they ain’t never rode a horse in their life.” At next year’s Stagecoach festival, Wilson is scheduled to perform alongside two other musician-slash-actors from the wildly popular western series: Ryan Bingham and Luke Grimes.

Even so, Nashville has been riven lately by a kind of culture war between young liberal acts such as Maren Morris and slightly older conservative stars like Jason Aldean. Last month, Morris — who’s traded barbs online with Aldean and his wife, Brittany, over issues related to trans youth — told The Times that perhaps country music had split into two factions and that she might be fine with that.

Asked if she thinks of it that way, Wilson says, “Well, first of all, I hope that whole situation gets resolved in some kind of way,” referring to the feud between Morris (with whom she shares a management firm) and Aldean (with whom she’s toured and shares a label). “But if there are two sides, I feel love from both and I love both.” Does she see an increasing willingness among historically tight-lipped country stars to speak out on politics?

“It’s split,” Wilson says. “Some people are like, ‘Speak up for what you believe in,’ and other people are like, ‘Keep your mouth shut.’ I remember a time when my parents made me feel like it was rude to ask somebody who they were voting for. I just feel like my business is my business. And my job is to get onstage and make sure everybody in that room feels loved.”

Is that hard?

“It’s hard to love some people,” she says.

And she never feels the urge to jump into the fray?

“I really do not.”

Lainey Wilson performs at the Stagecoach Festival in Indio, Calif., in May.

(Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

Jon Loba, president of Broken Bow, thinks Wilson bridges a common gap in Nashville. “She’s one of the very few artists who have the cool kids and the very mainstream audience,” he says, adding that the widespread interest in Wilson reminds him of the demand for a young Taylor Swift during his earlier stint at Swift’s old label, Big Machine.

The prospect of that kind of reach excites Wilson, though she has mixed feelings about the loss of privacy that accompanies true celebrity. “Country-music people like seeing a little inside scoop of your life,” she says — one explanation for the countless covers of People magazine showing some bearded country bro or another posing with his lovely wife. “Even if I’m married one day, I don’t know if I’d be posting about my husband all over social media. I mean, Dolly’s husband — there’s like one picture of him on the internet. She’s kept that private, and I think that’s OK.”

Still, winning some of those CMAs sure would be nice after all those cold nights in the camper trailer. Tonight, Wilson is headed to a dinner in honor of this year’s nominees, she says at the end of our talk, “which means I need to go get ready and slap some makeup on this thing.” She ever feel like she’s still running for mayor?

“There’s always more ass to kiss,” she says. Then she smiles. “But not as much.”



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Internationales Künstlerhaus Villa Concordia Bamberg


So it was finally officially announced today: I’m super happy to be chosen to be one of the 15 artists in residence at the Internationales Künstlerhaus Villa Concordia in Bamberg! We are 7 artists from Germany and 8 artists from Finland who were able to choose from receiving a 5 or 11 month stipend from the Freestate of Bavaria and are invited by the Bavarian State Minister for Science and Art Bernd Sibler, to stay at the Villa Concordia in Bamberg. Artists cannot apply for this scholarship themselves, because the scholarship holders are invited by a board of trustees and thus awarded by the Free State of Bavaria.

I am excited to share the upcoming year with my fellow scholarship holders! The scholarship holders for 2021-2022 are:

Visual art: Dieter Froelich (D), Lena von Goedeke (D), Emma Helle (FI), Heikki Marila (FI) and Tuukka Tammisaari (FI)

Literature: Benedikt Feiten (D), Lucy Fricke (D), Veera Kaski (FI), Arja Rinnekangas (FI), Johanna Sinisalo (FI) and Antje Rávik Strubel (D)

Music: Cecilia Damström (FI), Elina Lukijanova (D), Steffen Schleiermacher (D) and

Sauli Zinovjev (FI)

An ever so big THANK YOU to the Board of Trustees, to Minister Bernd Sibler and to the Free State of Bavaria for giving me this amazing opportunity I couldn’t even have dreamt of! I am truly humbled!

Villa Concordia Bamberg April 2021. Photo © Cecilia Damström



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