Taken from her splendidly authentic debut 5-track EP Songs from the Heart, the kind Welsh angel Alli Gemini helps us to stay young forever on the exquisite new single to heal all sad souls with on Wings.
Alli Gemini is a Crickhowell, Wales-based indie pop singer-songwriter/actor who has the kind of mesmerizing beauty intertwined into her spirit which will heal all gloomy eyes.
”This track was inspired about a dancer that is unable to dance finally dances again. It is about anyone that has a dream.” ~ Alli Gemini
Showing us the inner power of a dream possible if believed in enough, Alli Gemini projects our thoughts towards a happier perspective on this ear-opening soundtrack to never giving up. Sung so elegantly and showered with so much to ponder, this is a rather important single which is so relatable.
Wingsfrom Crickhowell, Wales-based indie pop singer-songwriter Alli Gemini is a truly glorious song from an incredibly kind heart who has reminded us what pure intentions sound like. Her vocals seem to ease the pain and soothe the soul from the harshness of current-day reality.
Listen up to this lovely new single on Bandcamp. See more news on IG.
Passing the Royal Irish Academy of Music, on Westland Row in Dublin, nothing much seems to have changed apart from the freshly painted front door and potted bamboos. One would never guess the fine Georgian building, the academy’s home since 1848, has been reimagined over the past seven years at a cost of €25 million, transforming the facilities and nearly doubling the number of music rooms available for students.
For weeks, students and teachers at the national conservatoire have been moving into the enlarged, 6,500sq m campus, designed by Todd Architects, which will officially open on Thursday morning. Minister for Higher Education Simon Harris and Minister for Culture Catherine Martin will join the academy’s director, Deborah Kelleher, at the launch.
Kelleher says she is delighted with how the new build “packs a lot into a city-centre site and gears us up for the future”.
A new six-storey facility and recital hall are positioned behind the original Georgian building, an impressive expansion invisible from the street. It is home to a flexible opera and orchestra rehearsal space; 75 teaching rooms with adjustable acoustics; a state-of-the-art library; a sonic-arts hub for electronic-music composition; a 60-seat lecture hall and a music therapy space.
Riam, a familiar name all over Ireland for its music exams, has 2,000 school-age students and 200 undergraduates and postgraduates. Generations will recall the Georgian building, which now houses the keyboard faculty and administration, and connects to the new build via a glazed bridge.
Also connecting them, in the old “red carpet” area where students waited before lessons in the warren of music rooms, is a fresh, open concourse. There’s artwork on the walls and deep steps that are perfect for pop-up fanfares or hanging out.
The sound of a piano leaks out of somewhere. Through an internal upstairs window, the rising arms of a singer working through scales can be seen.
“We wanted it to be, and feel like, a performing-arts school,” says Kelleher.
In the lesson and practice rooms, the walls are adorned with acoustic panels, colour-coded by floor.
While planning permission was only granted for a building the same height as the street’s four storeys, the site is lower at the back, allowing for the neat accommodation of six floors in a smart design that is contemporary and sympathetic to its Georgian surrounds.
Connected to the new block, the 300-seat concert hall is almost finished. Entering via the stage/service door from Cumberland Street, its soaring ceiling and wooden acoustic boards are visible behind the scaffolding.
A “proto-professional” hall for solo and chamber performance, and for small orchestras, will open in May. Kelleher is charmed by the architect’s “cute optical tricks” connecting it with music rooms via glass panels. She says “it will be used a lot”, including for more than 100 public performances a year.
Planning for the redevelopment began in 2016. Builders moved onto the site in May 2020, at which point lessons scattered around the building and or moved off site. Covid shutdowns and building inflation have affected the timescale and cost but not severely. Funding is a mix of public and private, made up of €10 million from the Department of Higher Education and Department of Culture and €11 million from donors. The remainder came from a loan.
The private donations amount to the largest philanthropic support for an Irish arts capital project to date. Kelleher says the support for an institution without a project track record shows “incredible belief and courage” by the donors. “I pay tribute to the Irish Government and the transformational people and institutions who came on board early on when we had nothing more than a dream – albeit a compelling one.”
Family dinner frightened the saxophonist Patrick Shiroishi.
It was late August 2022, and Shiroishi was due in Europe in exactly a month to open for the experimental metal trio Sumac, not only his first tour there but also one of his first tours ever. He had so many shows and sessions booked for the rest of the year, in fact, he would rarely be in Rosemead, the Los Angeles County town where he’s lived his entire life, for much of the year. Now, at a family dinner to celebrate his aunt’s birthday, Shiroishi, 35, just had to tell his parents.
“For the longest time, my parents fought me on music — ‘When are you not going to go to shows or play shows? When are you just going to come home after work and relax?’ ” Shiroishi remembers, flashing a toothy grin. He folds his legs beneath himself on a park bench outside of his favorite Rosemead ramen spot.
“I definitely yelled at them about it,” he continues with an uncomfortable sigh. “I said I’d quit when I was 30. Until then, don’t bother me.”
His parents, Allen and Uzuko, had indeed asked about that vow the month he turned 30. Shiroishi, however, had not quit. Instead, he doubled down on his own music during the next five years, releasing several dozen albums of roaring free jazz, warped instrumental metal and feather-light bop so luxurious it feels like a West Coast sunset. He became, in turn, a linchpin in an international network of young composers and improvisers, mining deep vulnerability in an expansive repertoire. The thread through much of that work was Shiroishi’s excavation of his Japanese American heritage, how his family’s complicated past in the United States shaped his present.
And now, as he prepared to make a major leap in his life — leaving his job of a decade as an instructor and manager at a nearby music school to pursue his music full-time — he felt that story again. As Japanese Americans, his parents had often sacrificed desire for stability, for the ability to provide for their family. As he prepared to tell his parents about his decision, he actually workshopped disaster scenarios with his therapist, trying to imagine what he’d say if his parents told him he was making a mistake.
He warned his brother, Andrew, that the news was coming at dinner and to prepare accordingly. He also found motivation from his wife, fellow saxophonist and Moonchild bandleader Amber Navran. No matter the consequences, it was a move he had to make.
“I need to play, to work through these emotions, to have an outlet for being angry about whatever’s happening to people or a death in the family or anything,” he says slowly, as if still processing that notion. “Playing is a core thing for me, necessary.”
Shiroishi was born into a bifurcated identity, into the tension between understanding his ancestral roots and his compulsion to assimilate. While Uzuko’s parents remained in Japan, Allen’s family had already been in California for several generations. She would dispatch photos and videos of their firstborn home every week, eventually enough to fill 10 scrapbooks.
There were after-school classes in calligraphy and the abacus. Every Saturday, he dutifully attended the Japanese language school where his mother still works, bribed with McDonald’s and taped cartoons for successful participation. Every Sunday, they would visit the family plot at Evergreen Cemetery, a 150-year-old sprawl known for its ethnic and racial diversity. They tended the family garden — the longtime pride of Allen’s mother, Dorothy — as a group activity, and still do. Shiroishi relished the biennial trips to Japan, where they would feast and explore the forested countryside and absorb manga.
Still, for decades, Shiroishi wasn’t sure what all this had to do with his real life. He resented the cemetery visits and the language lessons. Unending expectations from a family of doctors, pharmacists and corporate lifers like his father made him uneasy. “I don’t think I wanted to be Japanese,” Shiroishi says, staring at the sidewalk, index finger resting on the frame of his black-framed round glasses. “I was very much into, like, being ‘normal’ or Americanized or American.”
So Shiroishi became a Boy Scout, joining his troop’s Drum and Bugle Corps on trumpet. He dutifully studied the piano under his mother’s attentive gaze (“Five times for the new piece, three times for the old,” went a common command.) He became an Eagle Scout and immersed himself in the school band so much that, when he graduated, his peers pooled their money to buy him a cheap guitar rather than give the actual instructor a year-end gift. “I was very committed,” he says, laughing, “to being a good boy.”
Just as it’s done for teenagers around the world for the better part of a century, though, rock and roll became the cornerstone of Shiroishi’s modest rebellion. After squirreling away a week of lunch money, he would walk to a record store while his mom took his brother to basketball practice on Tuesdays to buy a single CD in secret. He played in a string of rock bands through high school and college, singing and drumming in the obviously irreverent Japanties and enlisting in the underground prog iconoclasts Upsilon Acrux on keyboards.
“I felt so much joy from the environment of just making music together, of community,” he says, beaming. “That’s really all I wanted to do.”
His parents, however, wanted their sons to have the same stability they enjoyed; they doubted music could predictably provide it. When Shiroishi headed north to Chapman University, he majored in music therapy, not performance or composition, adding a second degree in classical guitar only after an instructor recruited him. Out of college, he helmed a therapeutic arts program for autistic children before leading the music school where he still worked when his family met for that fateful dinner in August 2022.
Something changed, though, in those years since he turned 30: He had begun studying his family’s history in the United States and funneling it into his albums, pushing back against what he saw as the Japanese notion of “not talking about yourself, of keeping your cards to yourself.” He wanted to work through his feelings about his family’s struggles and resilience on tape. There was, after all, plenty to consider.
When Shiroishi was in eighth grade, Allen took a rare day off work to take his sons to the Japanese American National Museum in downtown LA. He wanted them to see one of the spartan shacks that housed Japanese natives and their descendants in the United States during World War II. The sight barely fazed Shiroishi then. But two years later, Shiroishi spotted a one-paragraph reference to those very internment camps in a history textbook. The story now surprised him — he badly wanted to be an American kid, so how had Americans wanted to do this to his predecessors?
When he asked his grandmother, Dorothy, what she knew about the saga, she went silent and stern. “She was this really bright human, but she just shut down when I mentioned it,” he says, frowning. “You’re like, ‘Oh, no, I made my grandmother feel this way?’ I never asked her about it again.”
Dorothy died in 2012, at the age of 93. Shiroishi soon began questioning his aunt, Jo Ann, about their family’s history, especially why Dorothy had gone cold when he asked about the camps. He learned she had met his grandfather, Patrick Hidemi Shiroishi, at California’s Tule Lake, the largest of the United States’ 10 so-called War Relocation Authority camps, just south of the Oregon border. He had been transferred to the notoriously harsh Tule Lake after writing to the government to renounce his citizenship out of frustration with the camps, their conditions and recent riots. Shiroishi recognized he wouldn’t exist without this traumatic bit of serendipity, his entire origin story reduced to a mere blip in his schoolbook.
Shiroishi now had something personal to reckon with through his music. He had dedicated early albums to his grandparents, but he began to consider their story in bold new ways. Named for the newspaper at Tule Lake, 2017’s tulean dispatch used extended technique and circular breathing to express confusion and exasperation through pieces with titles like “the screams of a father’s tears.”
Four years later, on Hidemi, the namesake grandson imagined the life of the grandfather he had never met after he left Tule Lake. In a dizzying series of multi-tracked trios, quartets and quintets for saxophone, Shiroishi wrestles with the terror of returning to a society that wanted to punish you for merely existing, but then exudes the absolute joy of survival. It was a breakthrough for Shiroishi and his first masterstroke, a realization not only of how much he had to say, but also his ability to execute complicated music about difficult topics.
“Part of me has this whole impostor syndrome, because I was never trained in the saxophone in some serious way,” he says. “On the other hand, I realized I have my own story to tell, things I want to express.”
He has since made a solemn ambient record about violence against Asian Americans, repurposed the sounds of the cemetery, and slipped Japanese samples into the gorgeous songs of the band Fuubutsushi. He released 19 albums in 2022; at least three were standouts in their respective fields, in part because of the questions of identity they examine.
Recorded in the reverberant parking garage beneath a local hot pot restaurant, for instance, his improvisational duet with saxophonist Marta Tiesenga, empty vessels, sounds like a jazz combo sprayed through an atomizer. His debut for transformative electronic label Touch, Evergreen, suspends field recordings from the cemetery where six Shiroishis are buried in a ruminative haze, saxophone glinting through the drone like sunshine through a storm. And the madcap second LP from his distorted sax-and-drums duo Oort Smog, Every Motherf***** Is Your Brother, arcs triumphantly from spiritual jazz to ecstatic metal across a single 29-minute track.
“Almost from the start, Patrick’s music has been like a plant sprouting from the ground with one central stem. There’s always been something emotionally intense about the way he plays, an outlet,” says drummer Mark Kimbrell, who worked with Shiroishi for nearly a decade before they hatched Oort Smog. “And now, he’s just blooming in multiple directions.”
His work hinges on family history and identity in less explicit ways, too. He is fiercely collaborative, open to improvise or work with most anyone who asks. He loves the way musicians with experiences and perspectives distinct from his own might spark a novel idea. He tapes everything he plays, listening back for moments when he stumbled into something unforeseen.
But he especially relishes the way such connections foster community, building networks that often extend globally. It is, at least in part, an attempt to live up to stories he’s heard about Hidemi, who spent his days in a Little Tokyo furniture store and his nights as a deacon in a nearby Buddhist temple.
“After work, he would go to families’ homes to offer prayer with them, get home super late and restart that cycle. I don’t know that many people would do that,” he says. “When my parents would be like, ‘Why are you going to a show after work?’, that’s the community I wanted to be in. When I was at work, I was only thinking about playing a show.”
The moment Shiroishi broke the news at dinner about quitting his job, his brother Andrew began clapping, and any potential tension vanished. Sure, his parents wanted to know why this was the right decision, but they listened sympathetically. Their daughter-in-law’s success with Moonchild helped, too, as a model of the work such a career entailed.
“I thought it was a good age to try. And if it doesn’t work, he can go back to teaching music or whatever,” his mother, Uzuko, says, Allen agreeing by her side. “I don’t want him to be 50, thinking, ‘I should have done that.’ “
They had already taken pride, after all, in Shiroishi’s attempts to share their family saga in such a public and provocative way, to express not only the anguish of their past but also the progress their journey documented. They keep a copy of everything he’s released on a series of living room shelves, LPs tucked behind old school photos and even hanging on walls like family portraits. “It’s amazing to me that he’s taken our story and moved forward with it,” Allen says. “He’s not just doing music, but mastering the history behind it.”
It’s not just history that interests Shiroishi; it’s future possibilities for kids who look like him and need to see themselves represented in experimental music. To wit, in March 2020, just before pandemic lockdowns began, Shiroishi met koto master and teacher Kozue Matsumoto and sculptor and shakuhachi player Shoshi Watanabe for lunch near downtown LA. They intended to discuss the possibility of a trio, employing traditional Japanese instruments within experimental idioms.
Shiroishi brought along recording gear just in case; by the end of the day, they had made a record, the emotionally volatile Yellow. It is, Matsumoto says, a perfect encapsulation of Patrick’s approach — taking advantage of an unexpected situation to build a relationship and to say something surprising about the experiences and possibilities of Japanese Americans.
“We all struggle with stereotypes of who we are as Japanese Americans, as Asian Americans, but we want to define who we are,” Matsumoto says. She stuns her students at the California Institute of the Arts when she plays them Yellow, where the koto and winds commingle in surreal dioramas, like light refracted by a series of cracked prisms. “Being Japanese American doesn’t mean we all need to work in a sushi restaurant. This music can contribute to that idea of who we can be.”
When Shiroishi was a kid, his parents would take the obliging pianist to see the orchestra at the Hollywood Bowl. On that stage, and most others, he spotted mostly white men, few if any fellow Asian Americans to convince him or his parents that making music might just be a way to live.
But during an East Coast tour late in 2022, just a month after he’d returned from that first trek to Europe, he looked into the audience and saw more Asian American faces than he’d even imagined. That message of change, he hopes, is central to his music, no matter how loud or loaded with trauma it becomes.
“It’s really easy to feel like there’s no hope, that things aren’t going to get better, to stop fighting. Then it’s all for sure going to get worse,” says Shiroishi a few days after another family dinner sandwiched between tours, the first such gathering since his big August announcement. “That’s hope, you know? And that’s my core emotion — to not give up.”
Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.
I love a good spy thriller, and if there’s one thing I’ve learned from John LeCarre’s Smiley series (or more recently Mick Herron’s Slough House books), it’s this: there are two sets of rules.
Under Moscow rules, you watch your back or find yourself dead. With its bureaucracy and red tape, though, London rules require you to cover your butt, or risk career-related death.
Despite the rumors of lute-playing composer John Dowland spying for Queen Elizabeth, it seems to me he was more interested in covering his butt.
But maybe I got some bad intel… What do you think? Drop me a note behind that park bench. Then wait for the signal.
With the success of her latest single,“Firecracker,” Taylor Sanders is putting the lyrics into a visual with the release of the official music video. Described as a“powerhouse anthem is an attention grabber from the jump (The Nash News),” the singer-songwriter has been riding the success of this single.
Watch“Firecracker” here .
The single was written by Taylor Sanders, Terran“T-RAN” Gilbert, Maria Ann Abraham and Scott Anthony Cash Callaway.
Ahead of the impact of country radio today,“Firecracker” has been aired on radio stations all across the world including Hawaii, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the United Kingdom.
In addition to her sassy twang, spunky vibe, and bouncy beat, she combines her unique southern fashion with her dance-driven stage shows. She gained recognition for her covers of well-known artists’ songs, including“Jolene” by Dolly Parton and“Walkin’ After Midnight” by Patsy Cline.
You can learn more about Taylor Sanders by visiting taylorsandersworld.com .
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Latto is back in the studio and has teased another “pop” anthem on the heels of the massive commercial success of her Mariah Carey-sampling “Big Energy.”
On Tuesday (January 31), the Georgia-bred rapper took to Twitter to post a clip of her in the studio twerking and making it rain dollar bills with a couple of friends while her next single boomed through the speakers.
Latto’s new music comes on the heels of the madness surrounding her used panties eBay auction earlier this week.
The Grammy-nominated rapper’s underwear came under scrutiny over the weekend when an eagle-eyed Twitter user called her out for wearing the same cheetah print thong in two separate photos — to which Latto clapped back with: “Oh no, it’s the panty police.”
The “Big Energy” hitmaker took her response one step further on Monday (January 30) by giving her fans an “inside look” at her panty drawer and revealing her plans to “wear a pair today and sell em tomorrow.”
Staying true to her word, Latto later posted a link to an eBay auction of her cheetah print panties, with bidding starting at $0.99.
“Latto’s everyday cheetah print panties,” the item’s description read. “Used. As seen on Latto multiple times.”
Within hours, social media had been buzzing with Latto’s antics as bidding had reached tens of thousands of dollars, at one point climbing to a whopping $95,650 after more than 100 bids.
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Although, Latto won’t be celebrating a five-figure payday from her panties, as eBay removed the auction due to it violating their policies.
“Used underwear is not allowed on site please report any listings you see in breach of policy,” eBay’s Customer Service page, @AskeBay, wrote on Twitter in response to a fan who flagged the listing.
Meanwhile, Latto could see her star power reach new heights this weekend as she remains the betting favorite to win Best New Artist at the 2023 Grammy Awards.
A medley of artists from Newfoundland and Labrador have landed five nominations for the 2023 Juno Awards.
St. John’s band Fortunate Ones are nominated for contemporary roots album of the year for That Was You and Me.
The Florian Hoefner Trio, led by a Memorial University professor, has been nominated for jazz album of the year for Desert Bloom.
Comedian Matt Wright is nominated for comedy album of the year for Here Live, Not a Cat.
Graphic designer Jud Haynes is nominated in the album artwork of the year category for his design for Kubasongs by Kubasonics.
And Susan Evoy, a teacher at St. Teresa’s Elementary and Waterford Valley High in St. John’s, is nominated for the teacher of the year award.
For the sake of art
Evoy said she was thrilled to hear about the nomination.
“It was pretty unexpected. I was very surprised and pretty excited.”
Korona Brophy, a member of the Celtic Fiddlers and a retired music educator, nominated Evoy for the award.
To be nominated for this award, a teacher must have received at least one grant from music education charity MusiCounts, which provides schools with financial support to get new equipment and instruments.
“It was nice for Korona to reach out and think of me, to think that I was worthy, I guess, of my nomination,” said Evoy.
Evoy said she sees it as an opportunity to represent music teachers in Newfoundland and Labrador who are trying to make the best of their programs under challenging circumstances.
“I know a lot of teachers are having their time cut and they don’t have a lot of money for resources,” she said.
“So I think it is just good that the Newfoundland music teachers are getting the recognition.”
Evoy said the recognition means learning music is important.
“I know people say like learning music helps math, learning music helps everything — I am a firm believer in just learning the arts for the sake of art.”
In addition to being a music educator, she has a long list of credits within the arts community of Newfoundland and Labrador.
She’s a member of both St. John’s band Ouroboros and a covers band called 709, she does contract work, she works with Corner Brook artist Mark Bragg, and she’s on the board of both the Strong Harbour Strings and the Rotary Music Festival.
Another nominee, Bekah Simms, grew up in Newfoundland and studied at Memorial University. Now based in Toronto, she received a nod in the classical composition of the year category for Bestiary I & II.
The Juno Awards take place on March 13 in Edmonton.
Since signing to OVO Sound a few years ago, Popcaan has dropped two projects on the label: 2019’s Vanquish and 2020’s Fixtape. He’s now back with his third project with the label, Great Is He.
A 17-song drop the project, is anchored by the focus tracks “We Caa Done,” “Skeleton Cartier,” “Set It,” and “Next To Me.” Meanwhile the likes of Drake, Burna Boy, Toni-Ann Singh, and Chronic Law guest throughout. Poppy has also shared a video for his Burna-featured track, “Aboboyaa,” as well.
Stream Great Is He, below.
Popcaan Returns With ‘Great Is He’ Album was last modified: January 30th, 2023 by Meka
Nearly three years after the global pandemic led to independent artists going virtual to monetize their music, Bandcamp Fridays are still going strong. For Black artists, the community-based move on the music discovery platform — which finds 100 percent of sales going directly to artists once a month — is appreciated, allowing them to focus on other aspects of marketing their catalogs, from visuals to touring.
Furthering their impact in music, Black artists on Bandcamp are proudly representing their culture across a kaleidoscopic range of genres. So to kick off Black History Month — and in anticipation of the next Bandcamp Friday on February 3rd — AltPress is rounding up a handful of Black artists from a variety of genres, from punk to hip-hop, whose music is a must-listen and very much worth supporting. (And for even more recommendations and ways to support Black artists this month and always, be sure to check out Black Artist Database, a community-based platform that launched in 2020 in response to racial injustices, police brutality, and music business inequities that similarly provides access to consumer-to-artist support.)
Big Joanie
After spending 10 years as a punk-rock trio, British group Big Joanie comes to the States this year for their first-ever North American tour. Members Stephanie Phillips, Chardine Taylor-Stone and Estella Adeyeri, Big Joanie – also founders of UK punk festival Decolonise Fest – rage with leonine spunk. Infusing ‘90s riot grrrl with feminist, post-punk sensibilities, the group has been a Bandcamp favorite, recently garnering acclaim for their long-awaited sophomore album Back Home.
Cities Aviv
Memphis-bred rapper-producer Cities Aviv has been a frontman of the lo-fi and underground rap movement over the last decade, connecting with avid listeners through complex bars and deep ‘70s soul and jazz samples. Now residing in Queens, New York, Aviv, legal name Gavin Mays, released dual projects MAN PLAYS THE HORN and Working Title For The Album Secret Waters in 2022, where he lyrically grapples with the social media age, inauthentic rappers and other topics that he conjures through his stream-of-consciousness flow.
Dreamer Isioma
Nonbinary bedroom pop-oriented singer-songwriter Dreamer Isioma traverses through outer worlds in their explorative discography. A product of the early aughts, the Chicago-based artist imbues themselves in lush and ambient soundscapes, their artistry rapt with dreamy vocals and spirited charm. Prior to dropping alternative-rock-tinged single “Fuck Tha World,” Isioma released sophomore album Goodnight Dreamer in 2022, giving context to the 20-something’s wanderlust imagination.
Dua Saleh
Minnesota artist and Sex Education actor Dua Saleh pushes the boundaries of pop music with their bona fide valor. Last year, the nonbinary Sudanese-American re-released their 2021 EP CROSSOVER, featuring three additional tracks that meld futurism, electro-pop, and experimental ambition. On Bandcamp and other music platforms, the artist has become highly-praised for their dance floor appeal, leading a movement of contemporary Black artists in pop.
Fly Anakin
Virginia rhymesayer Fly Anakin bares his soul even more with each passing musical project. The 28-year-old boasts a full Bandcamp catalog as a masterclass in soul-centric hip-hop, including efforts with fellow rapper Pink Siifu and Mutant Academy co-members ohbliv, TUAMIE, and Koncept Jack$on. Last March, Anakin delivered his critically-acclaimed autobiographical debut studio album Frank, preceding his suggestive forthcoming LP Skinemaxxx (Side A), which arrives in April.
GrandAce
Cincinnati-raised rapper, vocalist, and producer GrandAce is a manifestation of internet culture. Keeping fans and Bandcamp subscribers (cleverly called “the Grandcouncil”) updated through candid vlogs and occasional merch, the artist, legal name Jody Jones II, releases a constant stream of music, including last year’s planetary oasis EP Orbit City. Over the last eight years, GrandAce has been a testament to artist progression through his resounding delight in creating music.
Jean Grae
Veteran lyricist and producer Jean Grae evokes truth in her pen. Wife of fellow emcee and producer Quelle Chris, the artist formerly known as What? What? has been a hip-hop mainstay since the ‘90s, both in her origins of Brooklyn and the independent music scene. To conclude 2022, Grae released spoken word album You F**king Got This Sh!t: Affirmations For The Modern Persons, her soothing tone imparting humorous anecdotes on self-worth, patriarchal oppression and setting boundaries.
MIKE
Brooklyn wordsmith MIKE sells back-to-back albums like hotcakes. The 24-year-old rapper born Michael Bonema has evolved in pensive bars since his teenage years of releasing early projects MAY GOD BLESS YOUR HUSTLE and BY THE WATER. Now a spearhead for the free annual Broolyn music festival Young World, the hip-hop savant dropped his latest album Beware of the Monkey in December, reintroducing dancehall legend Sister Nancy (“Stop Worry!”) and his DIY creativity.
Psalm One
Quick-witted in her lyricism, Chicago-raised emcee Psalm One, aka Hologram Kizzie, brings the heat. Legal name Cristalle Bowen, the rapper (also one-half of BIG $ILKY with partner Angel Davanport) had two triumphs last year — releasing memoir Her Word Is Bond followed by LP Bigg Perrm. An independent artist who’s openly navigated music industry woes, Psalm One remains an essential in Midwest hip-hop.
SAULT
Since 2019, clandestine recording sessions with producer Inflo have assembled R&B, funk, and neo-soul collective Sault. While the members are unknown, the band has been celebrated for lyrically tackling racial tensions, political unrest, spirituality, and holism. Last year, a set of six EPs arrived from the UK group; AIIR, 10, 11, UNTITLED (God), Earth, and Today & Tomorrow.
Sunny War
Nashville-born blues, folk, and punk musician Sunny War is a modern troubadour. The singer-songwriter and guitarist’s rich timbre is a tribute to Black music revolutionaries, notably Nina Simone, who Sunny pays homage to on “Like Nina,” off her 2021 album Simple Syrup. Prepping forthcoming album Anarchist Gospel for March, which has been described as a “powerful statement of survival,” Sunny also hits the road for a nationwide tour beginning this month.
Jonathan Douglas presented classical music programmes for Hong Kong public broadcaster RTHK for decades, but he was also a composer and pianist
Months before his death from cancer, he recorded 13 of his piano compositions, which his family have now released on Spotify as an album, Time and Again
Jonathan Douglas was a man of many talents. Best-known as the voice behind RTHK’s classical music programmes for 30 years, Douglas was also a theatre director and accomplished actor. But his first love was music.
In early 2022, months before he died at the age of 65 after a long battle with cancer, Douglas recorded 13 of his favourite piano pieces among those he composed over the years, with some dating from his twenties and thirties.
Now these have been released on Spotify by his family as an album, titled Time and Again.
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There is a theory that each musical key provokes different emotions. Out of the 13 pieces, nine were written in the keys of D major and E major.
The former is the key of triumph, and often used to symbolise the overcoming of hardship – think of Beethoven’s Ode to Joy – while E major is a joyful, boisterous key (Rossini’s William Tell Overture). The result is that Time and Again is a portrait of a man who loved life and who stood defiantly in the face of death.
The album starts with “E Major Echo”. The opening section is played at a walking pace. It expresses a sense of hesitancy, as if someone were wandering around, not quite sure which way to go. It is the start of a journey, an apt beginning to the album to pull you in.
Time to stop the taming of Hong Kong public art
The following three pieces are jazzy and free-spirited. Yet the manner of his playing is contained and avoids the build-up of tension and climax, creating a sense of gentlemanly elegance and calm.
“Bitter Counterpoint” is in classic ABA form, but variations in tempo and the deliberately abrupt phrasing of the independent melodic lines gives it an interesting character. I didn’t sense any bitterness. Instead, the rewinds and repeats reminded me of piano practice and the learning of a new piece of music.
The seventh track on the album, called “Untitled”, is the longest at nearly seven minutes. It echoes the first track in its wandering nature, but stands out by venturing into a minor key in its middle section that darkens the mood and creates an ominous feeling.
Yet it ends with a peaceful ascending passage that suggests an ethereal eternity.
The title of “Sad Waltz in E” is a little bit misleading. It’s not a waltz, except for the beginning and the ending. And the mood overall is not as poignant as the title suggests. Conversely, the simple melody is reminiscent of the childlike innocence of the music of Joe Hisaishi.
The album closes, touchingly, with “Rebirth”. It is a tranquil piece, full of hope. The change in key (not surprisingly, from D to E) towards the end enhances the joyous mood and leaves the listener feeling positive.
Douglas can be heard speaking in two of the pieces, a nostalgic touch for those who recall his soothing radio voice.
It is worth noting, too, that throughout the album, you can hear the distinct clicking sound of the piano hammers, which suggests that he recorded the music (in a London studio) with the piano cover removed and the microphones placed close to the action.
It is a popular way of creating an ambience of intimacy, used by pianists such as Olafur Arnalds (in “We Contain Multitudes”), VIkingur Olafsson (“Ave Maria”) and Joep Beving (“Last Dance”).
Time and Again is not about groundbreaking compositions or ambitious piano techniques. It is a perfect gift left to us by a man who deeply loved music.
Time and Again by Jonathan Douglas was released in January 2023. It can be listened to, free of charge, onSpotify.
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This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (www.scmp.com), the leading news media reporting on China and Asia.
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