Oklahoma country singer dies just hours after wedding night aged 37







© Screengrab/Jake FlintMusic/YouTube
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Country music artist Jake Flint died in his sleep just hours after his wedding on Saturday 26 November, it has emerged.

His wife Brenda Flint posted a video clip from their wedding and captioned the post: “I don’t understand.”

Flint, 37, was based in Tulsa, and grew up in Holdenville.

The cause of his death has not yet been determined.

His long-time publicist Clif Doyal said to The Oklahoman: “He was not only a client, he was a dear friend and just a super nice guy. As you can see from the outpouring on social media, he was loved by everybody. I think a lot of it was just that he was a people person, and he had an amazing sense of humour.”

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He added: “He made everybody laugh, and he made everybody feel welcome. He was an ambassador for Oklahoma Red Dirt music.”

Flint’s first music album 2016’s “I’m Not Okay” and subsequently released three more albums-2018’s “Live and Not OK at Cain’s Ballroom,” 2020’s “Jake Flint” and 2021’s “Live and Socially Distanced at Mercury Lounge”.

He was a featured performer on the Future Faces Show at the 2018 Texas Regional Radio Music Awards.

Brenda Cline, Flint’s business adviser said that he was loved by fans as a new artist.

“I have never met a new artist that was so loved and had so many fans. It takes you years to build that — and that’s what Jake had. Oh my gosh, he was adored and loved by everybody. Jake didn’t have an enemy in the world. He was willing to do anything for anybody… and he had a very good business mind. There’s only one Jake Flint,” she was quoted as saying.

Tributes also poured in from other musicians.

“If there’s a heaven and they let me in, I know it’ll be because you went to bat for me, Jake,” wrote Blake Lankford, who is part of the VIIDR – Seventh Day Rebellion songwriter group that counted Flint among its members.

“The world has a dimmer sparkle without you in it,” wrote Buffalo Rogers.

Travis Kidd said Flint “a true legend that will never be forgotten.”

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Twenty Two – a deep journey into the Asia Minor migrant experience


Twenty Two. A number imprinted on our collective memory. No other moment in history has been connected in our ethnic consciousness with such harsh words: uprooting, catastrophe, refugee.

In spite of their losses, Asia Minor Greeks managed to turn them into hope bringing their abilities and talent to their new homeland through hard work and humility.

With them they also brought their wealth of soul, the customs, the music, the food, the way of life and centuries of civilisation.

Their stories have inspired the play Twenty Two (22), going up on stage on Sunday, 4 December at the St Dimitrios Church Hall in Prahran with the support of the Creative Drama and Arts Centre (CDAC) of the Greek Community of Melbourne.

Twenty Two, performed in Greek language, is a composition of songs, personal accounts of migration and a scene from Iakovos Kambanellis’ book ‘The Courtyard of Wonders’, directed by Jeremy Artis. Elli Papadimitriou’s iconic novel ‘The Common Reason’ and Dido Sotiriou’s ‘The Dead Are Waiting’ are also loaning the performance some strong, evocative themes.

All photos: Jeremy Artis

“This is an ode to the Asia Minor Catastrophe, the immigration drama and the memories that must remain alive,” Artis tells Neos Kosmos.

“100 years on the stories are still relevant and contain lessons we need to draw from. At the time the Smyrna refugee crisis was the biggest one and it seems that the world is going through a similar phase. 22 is a symbolic number connected to an integral part of our collective history. Reality from 1922 to 2022 is not as far as we think it is,” Artis says.

Performers Ioanna Kothroula, Maria-Stella Papageorgiou, Giannis Lyris, Jeremy Artis, Maria Bakalidou, Syrmo Kapoutsi, Pam Pollaki, Panos Apostolou and Ioanna Gagani give voice to the migrant stories and the parts of novels used to bring the play to life. All immigrants themselves.

“This is a three novel part performance. We have a part from the novels setting the tone at the time of the Asia Minor Disaster; actual testimonies of refugees and another storyline set in the 1960s in Athens, where migrants have to move from where they have settled, all supported with music and songs that bring those stories to life,” Artis explains. The performance will be followed by a Q&A session with the audience.

Artis, is the child of Greeks who emigrated to Australia, he was born here 34 years ago and was raised in Greece after his parents chose to return to their homeland. Four years ago, he himself took the plunge and moved to Melbourne to pursue different dreams and start over.

His connection to the Creative Drama and Arts Centre (CDAC) of the Greek Community of Melbourne began during lockdown, when in 2020 as part of a project for his film studies he started looking for Greek speaking actors. He got in contact with the Greek Centre’s Adult Group Drama class coordinator Katerina Poutachidou and the rest is history.

“I spent two days shooting with the group for my short film project at the time, and we formed a connection,” he says.

“Not long after I was informed that their facilitator was moving to Greece and they invited me to join the group. It has been an amazing journey. However, this performance, to me, has made this bond even stronger given that it is the first time we get to rehearse face-to-face since Covid. It’s a completely different experience.”

Indeed, the actors are giving a performance so deep that pulls not just their own, but everyone’s heart strings.

All photos: Jeremy Artis

Even though for this play there is little room for improvisation as their main purpose is to be as true to the original novels and personal accounts as possible, their interpretation of the scenes comes from their soul. Hours upon hours of rehearsals, pulling on their ancestral immigration experiences has created a new dialogue on stage that animates each memory.

“Everyone has to be extremely present and alert on stage to create the moments that are meant to blow up with the essence of each story, the moments that will trigger emotion and make the audience relate. That requires deep connection with each other and in a way it’s a non-acting way of acting. It’s more experiential and personal; telling someone’s story through feeling it like it’s your own story,” Artis says. “It’s dynamic and intimate and the live music by Giorgos, Thodoris and Christina Athanasopoulos makes it even more potent.”

The St Dimitrios Church Hall adds to the experience, too. For Artis, the enclosed space has the power to amplify the experience and make the emotions shared in the Hall be felt on a deeper level. It makes relating to the characters’ stories almost inescapable.

“For this performance we decided to not perform at Fairfield and stick to the space where we had all of our rehearsals, the place that has connected with us already. It is not an open space, it is darker, like a box containing memories and moments and in it, we are all together. The Church Hall felt like the right container for this show.”

“The experience is part classic,” Jeremy adds. “We delve into the past and we have traditional period costumes. And part contemporary bringing us from the 60s all the way to today. It’s a good way for our community to connect to our nation’s past and somehow find themselves in the present.”

Artis and the cast all want the audience to be active in this performance. They want every spectator, every observer to also be part of the unfolding of the experience.

“We are being a bit romantic about it. The audience can sing along, they can exclaim and laugh and cry and feel like we are all part of a big community gathering together, paying our respects to those who struggled for us to enjoy the privileges we enjoy today.”

“All the profits from the ticket sales will be offered to Greek Australian families that have been hit by the recent floods. It’s a different kind of uprooting and loss but a catastrophe nonetheless. What our ancestors taught us is that we stand stronger together as a community and that what comes around goes around.”

The performance’s poster. Photo: Supplied

Creative Drama and Arts, GCM, Adult Group presents ‘Twenty Two’

When: Sunday 4th of December | 7.30pm

Where: St Demetrius Hall Prahran, 380 High St., WindsorAdmission: $25

Tickets: www.trybooking.com/events/landing/990835

Live at Fingerprints / Live at Park Ave.’ E.P. – Album Review – 2 Loud 2 Old Music


Matt Nathanson is one of my favorite artist and songwriters, if you haven’t noticed by all the stuff I post on here about him. I am not officially doing a series on him, but merely posting all the cool Singles and E.P,’s I have of his. One of those is called ‘Left & Right: Live at Fingerprints. Live at Park Ave’ and it is an E.P. that was released back on August 5, 2008. It was recorded at two separate solo acoustic in store appearances along his 2007-2008 tour for his ‘Some Mad Hope’ album. The shows were the ones at Fingerprints in Long Beach, California (Tracks 1-3 & 7-8) and the other was at Park Ave CDs which I believe is in Orlando, Florida (Tracks 4-6).

What is great about this release is how intimate the shows are. How casual the whole thing is. It is basically Matt and a guitar and the crowd. His banter is pretty hilarious at times like when he curses and then he sees a little kid the crowd and apologizes to the little person, but still goes on with his totally inappropriate banter. He opens with an acoustic performance of the song “Car Crash” which is already an amazing song, but here, it feels so personal and emotional as Matt really digs deep and gives it his all. Quite stunning.

Then back to the unusual crowd banter that goes off on so many tangents like talking about Bret Michaels ‘Rock of Love’ and phone sex. It is so weird, random and so freaking funny. He then goes in to “Come on Get Higher” and this song shines acoustically. This might be one of his biggest songs (which isn’t saying much as he got very little airplay). One of the most beautifully, well-crafted pop songs with such great melodies. Quite stunning…wait, I’ve said that already. Well, it is true.

Then his next crowd interaction they totally misses his joke about how he wrote the song first and then knew what it was about later. I thought that was pretty funny. Then he goes on about Dog the Bounty Hunter and mullets…I mean seriously, who talks about this stuff, but without it, this disc wouldn’t be as cool and as special. Then he sings “Gone” and it is another emotionally driven song that is sad and haunting yet sounds so incredibly heartfelt. It will move you, at least it does me.

He goes in to “All We Are” next which is raw and so intimate you can’t help but be swallowed up by the power of the song. Another amazingly brilliant delivery. Now, one of the coolest things on here is his aching cover of Bruce Springsteen’s “No Surrender”. I wasn’t familiar with the song previously, but I feel it is Matt’s song now. His vocals soar and the song feels so personal to him and only great singers can do that when it isn’t their song.

There is nothing better than these intimate settings with an artist. It is fly by the seat of your pants, off-the-cuff moments that make it so unique and enticing. An exciting release and a must have for any Matt Nathanson fan. These type of releases aren’t on Matt’s Wikipedia page and can only be found if you look at Discogs and that is how I found it. It was a hard one to find, but finally got a hold of it and I couldn’t be happier. My Overall Score is a 5.0 out of 5.0 Stars and that is not being biased. It is that cool of a piece to have!!



How a Marine Biologist Remixed Whalesong


In 1971, in the journal Science, two scientists, Roger S. Payne and Scott McVay, published a paper titled “Songs of Humpback Whales.” They began by noting how “during the quiet age of sail, under conditions of exceptional calm and proximity, whalers were occasionally able to hear the sounds of whales transmitted faintly through a wooden hull.” In the modern era, we could listen in new ways: Payne and McVay worked with underwater recordings of humpback-whale vocalizations from a naval researcher who, as the story goes, was listening for Soviet submarines off Bermuda. They analyzed the recordings, and Payne’s own, and found structure and repetition in the sounds, documenting a sonic hierarchy: units, phrases, and themes, which combined into what they called song.

They chose the term advisedly, drawing, they said, on a 1963 book titled “Acoustic Behavior of Animals,” which identified a song as “a series of notes, generally of more than one type, uttered in succession and so related as to form a recognizable sequence or pattern in time.” And there was an intuitive sense in which the whales’ vocalizations sounded songlike. The previous year, Payne had published an album of whale recordings called “Songs of the Humpback Whale”; it sold more than a hundred thousand copies, and became a soundtrack for the conservation movement. Artists, including Kate Bush, Judy Collins, and the cast of “The Partridge Family,” integrated whalesong into their work; in 1970, the composer Alan Hovhaness combined whale and orchestra for a piece called “And God Created Great Whales.” In 2014, a group of ambient composers and artists released a compilation album called “POD TUNE.” Whales’ otherworldly emissions are now literally otherworldly: in 1977, NASA included whalesong recordings on records it attached to its Voyager spacecraft.

Sara Niksic, a biologist and musician from Croatia, is a recent participant in the genre. In 2019, she self-released an album of electronic music titled “Canticum Megapterae – Song of the Humpback Whale.” (Humpback whales belong to the genus Megaptera.) The album contains a track she produced, alongside songs by seven other artists, and combines psychedelic trance and ambient tones—the building blocks of a genre called psybient—with whalesong. Niksic’s record evokes nineteen-nineties classics such as “The Orb’s Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld”; its synthesized clicks, sweeps, and throbs would sound good in the chill-out room at a rave. But the whales add another dimension. Integrated into the tracks, the vocalizations sound at times soothing or playful, and occasionally experimental—sound for sound’s sake. Listening, you wonder about the minds behind them.

Earlier this year, Niksic released “Canticum Megapterae II – The Evolution,” a remix album on which a new group of electronic musicians interprets the track she made for the first volume. The new album, she told me, connects to her own research, which focusses on how whale songs shift from year to year. “Basically, whales remix each other’s songs,” she said. “So I thought this concept of remixes in our music would be perfect to communicate this research about the evolution of whalesong.”

Niksic was born in Split, Croatia, on the country’s coast, across the Adriatic Sea from Italy. She could see the water from her window, and learned to swim before she could walk. “I was always curious about the ocean and all the creatures living down there,” she told me. “The more I learned about animal behavior, the more I got interested in marine mammals, because there is social learning, vocal communication, and culture.” She earned a bachelor’s degree in biology and a master’s degree in marine biology at the University of Zagreb, and went on to work with groups that study whales and dolphins in Australia, New Zealand, and elsewhere; eventually she returned to Split to work at the Mediterranean Institute for Life Sciences, as part of a team called ARTScience, finding ways to creatively communicate the institute’s research.

Humpback whales seem to produce sound largely with their vocal folds. Songs typically range in length from ten minutes to half an hour. All humpbacks make vocalizations, but only males sing; the songs are most commonly thought to act as mating displays, possibly like the bowers constructed by male bowerbirds or the dances performed by male peacock jumping spiders. Maybe, among humpbacks, “the best singer gets the ladies,” Niksic told me. Songs evolve over time, and differ across populations. This slow evolution can be occasionally interrupted by a kind of revolution, in which one population completely adopts the songs of another in a period of just a couple of years or less. “It’s like a new hit song,” Niksic said—a wide and rapid spread of creative content that’s “unparalleled in the animal kingdom, excepting humans.” She went on, “There’s so many similarities between their culture and ours.”

Niksic started working at music festivals after graduate school. When she wasn’t in the field, she was bartending and building stages. She grew curious about producing her own electronic music. As a kid, she’d studied piano and music theory, but she didn’t know how to use software and synthesizers. After spending some time in 2016 helping to map the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, she took courses on electronic-music production. “Most of the time, I was dealing with sound, whether through bioacoustics or music festivals,” she recalled. “So then I thought, I want to try to combine these two things.”

At first, Niksic planned to produce the entire album herself. This proved too ambitious a goal, so she enlisted musicians she’d met on the festival circuit, sending them a high-quality, twenty-minute whalesong recording that she’d analyzed for her master’s thesis. (Her adviser had gathered the recording in the Caribbean.) When Niksic put “Canticum Megapterae” online, under the stage name Inner Child, it quickly earned recognition from both music and science communities. Readers of the Web site psybient.org—a “daily source of chillout, psychill, psybient, ambient, psydub, dub, psystep, downtempo, world, ethnic, idm, meditative and other mind expanding music and events”—voted it compilation of the year. She won an Innovation Award from the University of St. Andrews, in Scotland, spoke at the World Marine Mammal Science Conference, in Barcelona, and appeared at the Boom Festival, in Portugal. Her own track, “Theme 7,” built a downtempo pattern around a long excerpt from the whale recording. Weaving around the snares, kicks, and low, grinding bass line, the whale sounds mournful, almost plaintive, and never strays far from the center of attention.

I asked Niksic if she thinks about what a whale might be thinking when she listens to or composes with whalesong. “That’s a tricky one,” she said. “Who knows what the whale might be thinking? I’m focussing on sound. Their songs are really so musical. And the frequency range they use is crazy. And the richness of the sounds—it’s so intense. And it’s immersive—when I listen to it, I kind of transport into the ocean.”

For the new remix album, Niksic sent “Theme 7” to different artists. One was particularly determined to accurately represent the whale songs. “He didn’t want any whales to think, What the hell is? What the hell did he do with our song?” Niksic said. Perhaps making an electronic whalesong album would be a kind of interspecies cultural appropriation. She was thrilled when Electrypnose, one of her favorite musicians, remixed her track; when she played the remix for the first time, it was “just the most magical night ever,” Niksic said. She was lying on her terrace by the sea, listening to the song, when dolphins swam near. “I’m not kidding you—I think they heard it,” she said. “They were hanging there for the entire night. I didn’t go to sleep. There was a full moon. I was staring at the sky, listening to dolphins breathing, and to this remix, and whales. So even, like, dolphins loved it, not only humans.”

Making the albums has increased Niksic’s own curiosity about whalesong. “I started thinking of more and more questions,” she told me. “I probably wouldn’t think of all of them if I were only doing research.” Are there more innovative or creative whales, just as there are more innovative or creative humans? Are some whales eager to introduce changes into the songs they learn, whereas others happily stick with the originals? (“In our own culture, some artists are pioneers of new musical genres, and then others follow them,” she noted.) Do whales collaborate creatively? Does age play a role in innovation?

Whale songs have become a familiar part of our own culture. But there’s still much that’s mysterious about them, including what drives change and imitation, and how various features influence potential mates and competitors. “There’s a whole other world below the waves that we don’t know anything about,” Niksic said. “There are other cultures that are much more ancient than our human culture. Whales were here long before humans, and they were singing long before we came. I think they are way more developed than us in some ways.” The music on her albums teaches us, among other things, just how much we have to learn. 

The New York Philharmonic Reaches a Gender Milestone


For the first time in its 180-year history, the orchestra sees women outnumber their male counterparts, with 45 women to 44 men

 

Founded in 1842, the New York Philharmonic is the oldest symphony orchestra in the U.S.

In a recent piece by The New York Times, it has been reported that when the orchestra moved to Lincoln Center in 1962, its new hall had no women’s dressing rooms, as there were no women in the orchestra.

Now, women comprise a little over 50% of NY Phil, but dominate some orchestral sections more than others, for instance, 27 of the ensemble’s 30 violinists are women (in contrast, the percussion section is all-male). Additionally, of NY Phil’s recently held auditions, 10 of the 12 latest musician hires have been women.

“This certainly shows tremendous strides,” said NY Phil’s CEO and president, Deborah Borda. “Women are winning these positions fair and square…All we seek is equity, because society is 50-50.”

Despite possibilities that the balance between women and men might sway due to NY Phil having 16 player vacancies to fill — from delays in auditioning caused by the COVID-19 pandemic — the change is still impactful, considering NY Phil only had five women in the early 1970s. It was during that decade that blind auditions were implemented, creating a fairer selection process and preventing gender bias.

The Philharmonic hired its first female member in 1922 — Stephanie Goldner, a 26-year-old harpist from Vienna. However, the orchestra became all-male again for decades after Goldner left in 1932.

In 1966, double bassist Orin O’Brien became NY Phil’s first female section player. As The NY Times explained, O’Brien was really the first woman to become a permanent member of the orchestra and was considered the beacon of a pioneering group of female artists who created opportunities for other women to join. By 1992, NY Phil included 29 female musicians.

“It’s a sea change,” said NY Phil principal violist Cynthia Phelps, who joined the orchestra in 1992. “This has been a hard-won, long battle, and it continues to be.”

 

From left to right: NY Phil principal associate concertmaster Sheryl Staples, principal second violinist Qianqian Li, and associate principal second violinist Lisa Eunsoo Kim (Photo credit: Calla Kessler/NY Times)

 

Even though representation gradually increased, female musicians often faced discrimination and sexism in the industry. In 2019, the Boston Symphony settled a lawsuit with its principal flutist Elizabeth Rowe, who was being paid $70,000 per year less than the orchestra’s male principal oboist, John Ferrillo, despite their same workload.

For Judith LeClair, who joined NY Phil as principal bassoon in 1981 at age 23, it took 20 years before pay parity was reached. “I did feel I was taken advantage of in the very beginning because I was a woman, and young and naïve,” she told NY Times. “It felt humiliating and demeaning.”

The NY Phil has women in about a third of its leadership positions, including its principal positions, plus assistant or associate principal roles, which are the best-paid for orchestral musicians. The orchestra, like many around the world, has never had a female music director and has a noticeable absence of Black and Latino members.

Additionally, women make up around half of the players in orchestras across the U.S. but are still highly outnumbered by men in most ensembles, including those in Boston, Philadelphia, and Los Angeles.

Internationally, women are still the “firsts” in various positions in the classical music industry, including Ukrainian conductor Oksana Lyniv who became the first female music director of an Italian opera house, and Mélisse Brunet who became the Lexington Philharmonic Orchestra’s first female music director in its 61-year history.

For the Vienna Philharmonic — which is now around 17 percent female — they did not allow women to audition until 1997

In the last few years, as more women have become leaders in the orchestra, it has become a more inclusive environment. This is also helped through dress code considerations. NY Phil updated their dress code in 2018 to allow women to wear pants on stage, while the Philadelphia Orchestra followed in 2021.

In promoting change, NY Phil has aimed to hire more women as guest conductors and commission female composers’ works. Additionally, some of its players have urged the organization to select a woman for the music director role, currently held by Jaap van Zweden, who will step down in 2024.

“It’s more of a family now,” said Sherry Sylar, associate principal oboe, who joined NY Phil in 1984. “I’m not saying I want this to be an all-women orchestra either…It’s just nice to see that women are being recognized for their talent.”

Gender parity is not the only milestone of the orchestra — this fall, NY Phil Philharmonic also performs in its newly renovated David Geffen Hall for their upcoming season.

ABC News’ ‘Superstar’ Series Profiles Actress and Country Music Legend Reba McEntire


She is the “Queen of Country.” Known for her red hair and sassy style, Reba McEntire is one of the most successful female recording artists in country music history. From her humble beginnings on an Oklahoma cattle ranch to her rise as one of country music’s most influential stars, this one-hour special explores the experiences, triumphs and losses that made Reba McEntire a household name. Reba broke barriers and built an entertainment empire by expanding her career to movies, the Broadway stage and television. Rare childhood photos and intimate behind-the-scenes videos reveal her story of grit and determination in a male-dominated industry. The program also sheds light on her marriages, her current relationship with “Big Sky” co-star Rex Linn, and new details of how she dealt with the tragic plane crash that ended the lives of her tour manager and seven members of her band.

The star-studded TV event features interviews with artists that know and admire Reba, including Carrie Underwood, Wynonna Judd, Vince Gill, Lainey Wilson, Luke Combs, Miranda Lambert, Nick Jonas, Darius Rucker, Luke Bryan, Dierks Bentley, Dolly Parton and Kristin Chenoweth. “Superstar: Reba McEntire” airs Thursday, Dec. 8 (10:01-11:00 p.m. EST), on ABC, available next day on Hulu.

“Superstar” is produced by ABC News. David Sloan is senior executive producer. Muriel Pearson is executive producer.



apple music: 2022 Popular Music: Bad Bunny tops Pandora And Apple Music Charts; Know details here


Streaming giants Apple Music and Pandora have released their top music lists for 2022, and bad Bunny tops both lists. The lists include artists like Drake, Justin Bieber, Future, The Kid Laroi, and Tems. Bad Bunny owned many Pandora’s spots for 2022, and the list included “Wait for you” from 2021. Apple Music believes that Un Verano Sin Ti was from November 1, 2021, to October 21, 2022’s significant album on Apple Music.

Ramsay Hunt Syndrome: Disorder affecting Justin Bieber

​Rare neurological disorder

What is Ramsay Hunt syndrome (RHS) which has forced singer Justin Bieber to cancel his world tour? RHS is a rare neurological disorder that can inflame and then paralyse the facial nerve and cause a painful rash around the ear or mouth.

​Paralysed on one side of face

RHS is named after the neurologist who discovered it in 1907. Symptoms vary from person to person but can cause severe discomfort or pain. Most sufferers become paralysed on one side of the face and develop a characteristic ear rash.

​Affects smile, slurs speech

The affected facial muscles may become weak or stiff, preventing the patient from smiling, frowning or shutting the eye on that side of the face. Speech may become slurred in some cases. Blisters can spread to the mouth area. Hearing loss or ringing in the ear could be other symptoms.

​Virus which causes chickenpox

The virus which causes RHS is the varicella zoster, which also causes chickenpox in children and shingles in adults. A person who has had chickenpox as a child can carry the virus in a dormant form for decades. When the virus gets reactivated – for unknown reasons – the person develops shingles, and in some cases RHS.

​How it’s treated

RHS is generally treated with antiviral drugs such as acyclovir and famciclovir. Corticosteroids like prednisone are also provided. Physiotherapy, if started on time, enables a full recovery. But about a third affected experience after-effects.

These Songs Made It

It makes the Latin artist the first to be on the top. Justin Bieber’s and The Kid Laroi’s “Stay: was Apple music’s top song for that time. Spotify, Apple Music, Billboard, and other music giants said Cardi B’s “Up,” BTS’ “Dynamite,” Olivia Rodrigo’s “driver’s license,” and Dua Lipa’s “Levitating” were the top songs. We expect “As it Was” by Harry Styles to dominate 2022’s charts as it has already spent more time on top than any other song.

FAQs:

  1. According to Spotify, Apple Music, Billboard, and other music giants, which were the top songs?
    Spotify, Apple Music, Billboard, and other music giants said Cardi B’s “Up,” BTS’ “Dynamite,” Olivia Rodrigo’s “driver’s license,” and Dua Lipa’s “Levitating” were the top songs.
  2. Which song will top the spot, according to many?
    We expect “As it Was” by Harry Styles to dominate 2022’s charts as it has already spent more time on top than any other song.
  3. Which is the top artist according to Pandora and Apple Music?
    Bad Bunny

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Creating music is easy but dealing with human beings is difficult


National award recipient, Amit Trivedi recently dropped his first solo album Jadu Salona. In an exclusive conversation, Amit revealed to Hindustan Times how he first came up with one song which eventually transformed into a whole album which consists of different shades of love, namely–Jadu Salona, Nirmohi, Shehnaiyan, Rahiyo Na, Jaan Leke Gayi and Dil Na Tod.

“I first composed the song-Jadu Salona. I had already composed the first song. I thought ‘let’s build an album around this thought of Jadu Salona. The idea was based on the beautiful magic of love-theme of my composition,” he said. Jadu Salona was released on November 21 by Amit Trivedi’s independent music label AT Azaad, distributed by Believe.

But how did the singer come up with the unique word with such an intense meaning? He credited lyricist Shellee and pointed out, “We were jamming in the car and driving somewhere. I told Shellee what I wanted to convey in my next song. Immediately he threw the word ‘Jadu Salona’ at me and that was it. It was initially a song and now it’s an entire album.”

Amit believes music streaming platforms have helped to boost independent music all across the globe. Based on his great experience with Spatial Audio which enables dynamic head-tracking sound range, he shared, “These platforms have a kickass algorithm. It’s a new world. We were listening to cassettes and CDs, and now you are only a click away from listening to any music. You get recommendations and explore new artists. Even my old film songs which I thought got buried somewhere, showed up out of nowhere. People are making reels out of it now.”

Amit is among the ones who keep dabbling between independent music and film music. When asked to pick his preference between the two, he replied, “Both are my choices. They are beautiful. I enjoy doing both, genuinely. Nothing is easy. Whether film or non-film or music or anything, everything has ups and downs. Creating music in any format is easy but dealing with human beings is difficult and complicated.”

In his career in Bollywood, Amit had films which became sleeper hits while some underperformed. Is anything he has picked up with time? “Honestly, I am blank right now. What lesson can you learn when you are doing your hard work, putting your effort, and working with determination but things don’t work out? Do you learn to not put your best next time? This is subjective, there’s no answer. Because, in both cases, hard work is involved at the same level. Now the difference is one can be successful, other might not. There’s only one lesson I think-keep doing, keep going and keep working.”

Amit next work will b Babil Khan, Tripti Dimri and Swastika Mukherjee’s upcoming Netflix film, Qala.

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Watch the horror-inspired video for Bury Tomorrow’s new…


Following the release of last month’s Abandon Us, Bury Tomorrow
have just shared another single from their upcoming album The Seventh Sun.

This one goes by the very metal name of Boltcutter, with guitarist
Kristan Dawson enthusing that, “From the second we put the finishing touches to
Boltcutter, we knew it had to be a single. Whilst it is a fundamental Bury
Tomorrow track, being both loud and heavy, it also emphasises the new era of
our band.

“Specifically, it highlights influences we haven’t necessarily
channelled through Bury Tomorrow before, and it’s a pleasure to continue to
expand the possibilities of our music. It began its existence through Tom
crafting the foundations, with an ambient and electronic soundscape, before the
rest of the band provided their usual expertise.”

Of the Matt Sears-directed video, Kristan adds: “Continuing the
visual narrative with Matt was an absolute joy, and thanks to his knowledge of
horror and unique filmmaking skills, Boltcutter delivers the perfect sequel.
It’s another video with a visceral and confronting nature, and we feel it
perfectly represents the song and its themes.”

Check it out:

Remembering George Harrison’s Tryst with Indian Classical Music


It was 1966 when four young lads from Liverpool found themselves in a small music shop in a bustling bylane of Old Delhi’s Daryaganj. As the owners were talking to these four young charismatic foreigners, a crowd had gathered to get a glimpse of them from outside, recalls Jaspal Singh Sachdeva, the current proprietor of the shop.

“They had a mop-top haircut, perhaps a tad too much for the localities to understand, and an undying inquisition for the Indian classical music,” said Sachdeva, whose father and uncle managed the shop at the time.

The local music shop’s chance encounter with the Beatlemania is not found in any photographs but is survived through tales told by Sachdeva, who was a schoolboy at that time.

This might be another inconsequential story of famous artists exploring a local market for leisure, but at the heart of it lies George Harrison’s tryst with Indian classical music, his quest for spiritual upliftment, and an unlikely friendship he forged with Indian maestro Pandit Ravi Shankar.