2 former American Idol contestants, ‘rising’ country music artists to perform at Grange Fair


Feb. 10—Two former American Idol contestants, billed as “rising country artists,” are now slated to perform at the Centre County Grange Encampment and Fair.

Grange Fair organizers announced Friday morning that taking the grandstand on the night of Aug. 19 will be Season 19 (2021) third-place finisher Alex Miller and HunterGirl, who was the Season 20 (2022) runner-up.

Grandstand shows are free, but admission to the fair is required.

Miller released a post-Idol record just last year, titled “Miller Time,” and he’s since performed at Nashville’s Grand Ole Opry and opened for acts such as Hank Williams Jr. Country star Luke Bryan, who boasts 27 No. 1 hits, once exclaimed, “Boy, you can sing!” Bryan, an American Idol judge, likewise complimented HunterGirl and referred to her as the “new age Miranda Lambert.”

HunterGirl grew up in Tennessee has performed at some of Nashville’s most famous venues, from Tootsies Orchid Lounge to Rippy’s Honky Tonk. According to her website bio, she’s shared the stage with superstars such as Charlie Daniels and Trace Adkins. And her single “Red Bird” was a top-10 hit on the iTunes overall chart.

Grange Fair organizers plan to announce a different grandstand act at 10 a.m. every Friday. This was organizers’ first such announcement.

HunterGirl has performed on “Good Morning America” and “Live with Kelly & Ryan.” She released a five-song EP last year that one critic said was a “true testament to what modern country music is all about.” She’s often been praised for her songwriting, which she’s been doing since the age of 9.

Miller’s sound has been referred to as “fiercely traditional” with an “up-tempo swing approach.” He was born in 2003 and is recognized for his baby-face and 6-foot-5 frame.

The 2023 Grange Fair is set for Aug. 18-26. It is the only remaining tenting fair in the nation, according to its website.

(c)2023 the Centre Daily Times (State College, Pa.) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Harry Styles, Playboi Carti, Dua Lipa, Doja Cat – Rolling Stone


Harry Styles has been the subject of countless headlines in the wake of the 2023 Grammys — and for all the stories thinking over his unexpected win for Album of the Year, there have been nearly as many celebrating the rainbow, sequinned, harlequin-style onesie that he wore on the red carpet. “Best dressed,” they rave. “King of jumpsuits!” 

It’s a far cry from the more mixed reception that Playboi Carti received when he took the stage at Kanye West’s Donda 2 event a year ago. It wasn’t Carti’s unhinged performance of “Off the Grid,” or his appearance alongside an already-scandal plagued Ye, that sent shockwaves through his fandom: It was his bold new look, which included a face full of gothic-clown makeup, marrying the metal tradition of corpse paint with the Joker’s demonic, up-turned smile. “Carti has officially taken it 2 steps too far,” one Twitter user wrote. “Seriously…what in the insane clown posse was Carti doing man?” asked another. 

While it was likely both artists’ intention to stand out from the crowd, in fact both Harry and Carti were jumping on the bandwagon of a growing trend: A staggering amount of pop stars are “down with the clown” lately, and they’re part of a much larger, clown-crazed phenomenon. 

To the great dismay of coulrophobics, clowns have become increasingly inescapable figures in popular culture within the past five years. The “Great Clown Panic” of 2016 was followed by a slew of big-budget productions starring scary clowns, jesters, and harlequins, including Suicide Squad, American Horror Story: Cult, It, and Joker. On TikTok, #Clowncore content now has more than 435 million views, and it’s helped spawn a number of more mainstream trends, filters, and beauty tutorials. Clown-like patterns and silhouettes have also materialized in the fashion world, influencing recent collections by designers like the neo-Victorian Batsheva Hay, the award-winning and rainbow-loving Christopher John Rogers, the punk-inspired troublemaker Matty Bovan, and the Scottish club kid Charles Jeffrey. Clowns have even permeated our everyday vernacular and correspondence. “Clown” has become a more popular insult, thanks in part to President Biden, and clownery has entered the online vernacular through emojis and memes (the putting on clown make-up template is a verifiable classic). 

In music, clowncore has reached peak visibility. Styles and Carti are two of pop’s most committed clowns: Styles starred as a clown in a spoof music video created for The Late Show with James Corden last spring, and made headlines all the way back in 2021 for wearing a Pierrot costume at Madison Square Garden. Carti set social media ablaze with a series of since-deleted Instagram posts of him in various iterations of clown makeup, which he also wore to the Balenciaga fashion show last July. But these two jokers are far from alone.

Last year, Dua Lipa, Future, and the 1975 all used clown makeup in music videos for songs about the absurdity of love. Future appears as a heartbroken clown in the video for his melodramatic, confessional track, “Love You Better,” with a toned-down clown look that signals his culpability in allowing the woman he loves to get away. Dua Lipa rides both a mechanical bull and the wave of her own bewilderment in the video for “Love Again,” where she and her backup dancers are dressed as rodeo clowns, highlighting the known precarity of falling in love. The 1975’s video for “I’m in Love with You” also features a cast full of clowns that includes guest vocalist Phoebe Bridgers. In the Buster Keaton-inspired clip, a clown-faced Matthew Healy pursues a love interest, but is ultimately shocked and disappointed once she removes her clown makeup and reveals her true self. Words written on the set’s brick walls form a hidden message: “Everyone is disappointing once you get to know them.” The video’s reveal speaks to the nonsensical — yet almost universal — experience of desiring someone that is ultimately wrong for you. Whether you’ve felt clowned around by a person you care about, or feel like a clown for caring about them at all, matters of the heart all too often make us act a fool.  

Doja Cat teamed up with Taco Bell to create a bizarre, clown-themed Superbowl commercial, soundtracked by her cover of “Celebrity Skin” (she later revealed in an Instagram live that the clown part was Taco Bell’s idea). Gerard Way and Yung Lean both inexplicably donned clown makeup at select stops on their tours last year. 2022 also proved eventful for two frequently clown-faced artists in more underground circles: Horrorcore artist Dana Dentata, who toured with Korn and Evanescence and performed at the annual Gathering of the Juggalos, and California art-rock band the Garden, who released a new album, Horseshit on Route 66, in September. On the cover of the record, the Garden are sporting their signature jester-inspired face paint, which they have worn off and on since their formation in 2010. 

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Proto-clown stage makeup in rock goes back to the late 1960s and early 1970s, when artists like Arthur Brown and Alice Cooper found that a little greasepaint went a long way. What’s new is the utilization of clown-inspired looks from so many musicians, across genres, simultaneously. The author, academic, and former circus clown David Carlyon describes musicians’ use of clown makeup as a tool for transgression. “Visually, [musicians] want to make a strong impact by highlighting facial features,” he says. “Emotionally, they want to send a message that this performance will not be normal.” As artists face increasing pressure to command attention on oversaturated feeds and manufacture viral moments, the use of head-turning clown makeup may be a matter of pragmatism in the digital era. A face full of black, white, and red paint is the beauty world’s equivalent of an exclamation mark — and by drawing on the strong reactions that clowns elicit, artists are able to express their own emotions in hyperbole. 

Still, the presence of all these clowns in the musical zeitgeist cannot be explained by algorithmic attention-seeking alone. In the same era that led to widespread romantic notions of “villain eras” and “goblin modes,” the popularity of clowns in music may be an extension of our decision to embrace depravity. Feeling like a fool in love is a tale as old as time, but a global pandemic, war, economic disaster, and a climate catastrophe have made clowns out of all of us. Musicians may simply be holding up a mirror to an anarchic world, or acknowledging the humor of our own insignificance. When faced with the absurdity of so many converging crises, life itself can feel like a joke. And when resolve is wearing thin and hope feels futile, sometimes the only thing left to do is laugh.



Composer Chanda Dancy Is Breaking Boundaries in Hollywood


It’s 1999 at Houston Baptist University, a religious college nestled in southwest Houston. The constant whistle of tires on pavement from the neighboring Southwest Freeway is no match for a row of nondescript practice rooms where two violinists—teacher and student—face a Manhasset music stand. The teacher’s black hair is pulled back into a rubber band; her mane is so thick that the elastic need not be looped twice. Clad in relaxed denim bell-bottom jeans and a soft, electric blue cotton T-shirt, Chanda Dancy, the teacher, is thrilled to be in the presence of music. The teenage musician, me, is desperate to show Dancy that she practiced the Kreutzer études assigned the week before.

Dancy was not like other classical-violin instructors. Her violin was always within reach to convey direction when words failed to capture the essence of how she wanted her student to feel the music. Unrestrained by the classical genre’s preoccupation with precision, Dancy possessed a musical fearlessness, which has informed her career from HBU to Hollywood. In her current work as a film composer, she aims to create music that sonically illustrates characters’ emotional journeys. She has scored documentaries, including Aftershock, a doc about two women who died during childbirth; television shows, including The Defeated, a post–World War II crime-fighting Netflix series; and films, including the Whitney Houston biopic I Wanna Dance with Somebody. Last year she released her most critically acclaimed score yet, for J. D. Dillard’s Devotion

Devotion is a heart-wrenching film about Jesse Brown (Jonathan Majors), the first Black Naval aviator, during the Korean War. Dancy’s score is an emotional excavation of what it means to be Jesse, a highly skilled pilot who hypes himself up for missions by reciting racist remarks to himself in the mirror. Listeners hear these internal tug-of-wars paired with lush orchestral phrasing that gains and loses altitude along with the story line. Thanks to the rich layers of harp, strings, and even synthesizers, you can actually hear the expansiveness of the seas the pilots fly over.  

Both the story of Devotion and its production are meditations on talented Black Americans in predominantly white spaces. The film has a Black director, J. D. Dillard; a Black orchestra conductor, Anthony Parnther; and Dancy, a Black film composer. There are very few Black film composers, a minuscule number of which are women. “I’m a Black woman composer. And yeah, I do have a slightly different point of view when it comes to my artistic approach,” Dancy told me over the phone. “That’s to my advantage because I don’t sound like anyone else.” The historical significance of being one of relatively few Black people in classical music is not lost on Dancy, and she doesn’t deflect from it. “I embrace it. I am who I am, and this goes back to being from southwest Houston, Texas. I was always allowed to be comfortable in my own skin.”

Dancy’s path to success began in the 1980s, when more and more Black Houstonians were moving beyond historically Black neighborhoods such as the Third Ward and Sunnyside and into the southwest neighborhoods of Alief, Sharpstown, and Westchase. With multiple integrated racial and ethnic communities, southwest Houston was fertile ground for Black girls like Dancy to chart their own pathways. Dancy didn’t think twice about teaching herself how to play guitar, harp, and keyboard while cultivating the deep devotion to anime that shows up in her music. (“The [Macross Plus] score by Yoko Kanno has always stuck with me.”) “I’m definitely influenced by jazz and thick textural chords, as well as minimalism,” said Dancy. “Then there’s a little bit of blues and what my publicist calls my ‘anime influence,’ ” she said, laughing. “It’s the sound of nostalgia.”

Dancy first learned the violin in third grade—relatively late for violinists, who can start as early as three years old—at Houston’s T. H. Rogers School. Within a few years, she was composing. “Officially, the first [time] that I wrote to have other people play [I] was around twelve years old.” From intonation to posture to breath itself, the allowance for error for young classical musicians is nearly nonexistent. Classical musicians are trained to replicate, not deviate. At least, that’s how most classical musicians are trained. “I saw instruments as a fun way to create your own stuff,” said Dancy, reflecting on her years as a young violinist. “My violin was not just to play Beethoven. I didn’t look at a piano to play Rachmaninoff. I looked at a piano and thought, Ooh, what if I do this? And what if I do that?’ ”

While Dancy eventually graduated from prestigious composition academies, it was her undergraduate study at HBU (recently renamed Houston Christian University)—a Christian college with about 2,500 students—that transformed composition from an intuitive passion into a career. “The school was so tiny that the dean of the school of music was also my composition professor,” said Dancy. Her dean and teacher saw Dancy’s enthusiasm and created a composition curriculum specifically for her. Dancy directed and scored her own short films at HBU, the University of Southern California’s Screen Scoring program, and the Sundance Composers Lab, experiences that fueled her past two decades as a film and television composer.

These days Dancy is happily settled in Los Angeles, but she still misses Texas. Well, specific aspects of Texas. “I miss the cost of housing and Tex-Mex,” she told me. She also misses Houston’s Vietnamese food. “There’s something about Bellaire Boulevard, like it just can’t be beat for good Vietnamese food.” After Devotion, she scored the Whitney Houston biopic I Wanna Dance With Somebody. She told me that both scores are rooted in recognizable character themes, approached with the utmost care and consideration for the real-life people the films honor. “The biggest difference is the sheer scale of the Devotion score, which was recorded with 109 musicians, including a choir,” she said. (I Wanna Dance With Somebody had about half of that.)

She remains booked and busy with a plethora of other projects she’s legally unable to discuss yet. Plenty of composers would be content with Dancy’s current success, but Dancy is already aspiring to accomplish more. “I would love to work on a big Marvel or Disney film,” she said. “The bigger the canvas, the better.”

Despite the early anticipation that Dancy might make history as the first Black woman nominated for an Oscar for Best Original Score, Dancy wasn’t recognized for Devotion. Nor was she dismayed. “When I set out to do this score, I wanted to do something really big and really amazing and spread my wings. And it was shocking to get that Oscar buzz when it was just literally me just being myself,” said Dancy. “I’m having so much fun. And even though I didn’t get the nomination, it feels as if I did, because the doors have opened.”

Why Universal Music Group’s Grammy Events Were Eco Friendly And How This Will Hopefully Catch On In The Music Industry


Guests who attended the Universal Music Group Grammy events this past weekend not only got to see amazing performances and attend the same parties as the likes of Sir Elton John, who was at the Saturday afternoon showcase, and Stevie Wonder, who was at the Sunday Grammy after party, they got to feel good about giving back.

Both events were environmentally friendly, from superb meatless menus (including full vegan tables) and no single use water bottles to use of live plants that will be donated to a nursery for future use and “scenic stage and audio panel elements on the stage fascia and audience surround – made from specialty Sonostop material.” Those panels are also being donated.

Saturday afternoon at the showcase Billie Eilish was presented an award by Universal and REVERB for her tireless work for sustainability and supporting the award. I spoke with Universal Music Group’s Susan Mazo, UMG’s EVP of Corporate Social Responsibility, and Lara Seaver, REVERB Director of Sustainable Touring, about the socially conscious parties and why the industry will hopefully catch up soon with artists, from Eilish to Coldplay, who have been pushing for a more eco-friendly way of touring.

Steve Baltin: Was there one thing that sort of set into motion this idea of Universal doing these more environmentally friendly events? And by the way, Sage the writer who’s coming with me is 100 percent vegan. So it’s amazing to come to an event where the events are meatless because you go to everything here in LA and it’s like you can’t find anything.

Susan Mazo: Yeah, I’m a vegetarian also. So maybe that helps with my choice of menu. But I agree with you. I feel like people don’t necessarily think about going meatless. So when you can do an event that’s meatless and they try things for the first time, it helps change their mind about the way that they think about food. But back to your original question, which I think is a great one, my answer is not as sexy what made you write this song. At Universal, we’ve been talking about doing this for a long time. And slowly we’ve been bringing sustainability into all of our practices and everything that we do. And it’s been our conversation. But I think that the pandemic really was the catalyst for us and we were able to take that time since there were no events to think about. “When events would come back, how would we want to change things? What could we do to make people feel more comfortable and be more conscious about their choices?” And that’s really what this was born from. So when we’ve been on hiatus with events for a while, and when we found out that we were going to try to do events again this year, we thought, “Why not do this. Go in and do it right for our flagship event during Grammy weekend?” So I think that the pandemic was the catalyst.

Baltin: So for Universal as a company, once you started to realize this, how quickly and easily were you able to implement this?

Mazo: So I think that we set our goals quickly. I don’t know that any of this works quickly, unfortunately. I think that we’ve been working on our goals and our process probably for about six months. And we were using these events as a blueprint and we were trying to write our goals. We knew we weren’t going to reach all of them this year. But that we wanted to make sure that we touched on everything for these events. So we worked with partners of ours, Three Squares, who are consultants with UMG and they work in this space as well as REVERB who are partners of ours. Because they’re the experts, we’re not. So we wanted to meet with them and I think we started meeting with them maybe in September to talk about how we could make these events more sustainable. And the first answer to that question was, let’s have the events in the same space two days in a row so that we were less wasteful right from the start. We weren’t moving things around. We were going to be able to reuse things in the same space. And we needed to get a venue that was on board with us and that would have the conversation about using solar-charged batteries and be okay with us coming in and changing all of their garbage patterns. So we spoke to Milk, we laid out the plan for them, and they were interested. Which was great. It wasn’t something that they have been thinking about doing. But now I do believe they will change some of their patterns and potentially work with some of our partners to make events in their space more sustainable in the future.

Baltin: Talk about the things that you’ve learned from artists and REVERB that you’re really excited to implement long term that you think can make a difference.

Mazo: Some of the things that we did implement I feel like will just become muscle memory and we’ll be able to use that at every event and hopefully we will also have this blueprint. So other labels and other companies in the music space will learn from this and see that it’s actually easy to do the right thing. I think for us, something that I would love to be able to do in the future, and we weren’t there yet, I don’t think that the technology is there yet is, it would be amazing to do 100 percent solar-powered event. But I don’t think we’re there yet. ‘Cause that’s something that we would love to do in the future.

Baltin: Were there any things that you implemented yesterday that you were very pleasantly surprised to see how the guests responded to them?

Mazo: I think, and we touched upon it a little bit, was the menu. The menu being 100 percent meatless and locally sourced. I think that people were surprised by that and then pleasantly surprised by how everything tasted. We’ll see again tonight. Again, the menu is 100 percent plant-based. We’ll see what people’s reactions are. I didn’t have one complaint and typically I have complaints about the food. And so I think that people were satisfied, so that was exciting. Also, the excitement and energy around recycling. We had compost bins and people asking questions. What goes where? And we had a sustainability officer answering questions and helping people navigate. So there was a level of interest that I didn’t know that there would be. We asked people to carpool. All of the staff and crew were in a hotel that they could walk to the venue so they didn’t need to drive. And it was interesting. We didn’t know what the feedback would be and it was so positive. And I think people felt good about the fact that they were making a difference and it wasn’t that heavy of a lift. I also loved seeing no water bottles. No single-use water bottles. We gave out REVERB water bottles and we had filling stations all around.

Baltin: Talk about the importance of being able to honor Billie and what that meant and going forward, what this award will mean.

Mazo: Absolutely. So I think our goal was to take chances without compromising the integrity of the event. And we had been working, like I said, with Three Squares and REVERB, just taking in what they had to say and the changes that they’ve been able to make and REVERB’s partnership with Billie. We also have worked with Support and Feed, which is Billie’s mom’s charity that is 100 percent plant-based. And she started during the pandemic and we were just talking to Billie’s team about all that she has done and how her voice matters so much not only to the generation that she’s talking to on Instagram and TikTok and at her shows, but also to other artists. And we felt like the new artist showcased, that Sir Lucian puts together, it was the perfect spot to amplify her message which was why we called it the Amplifier Award. And that she could speak to some of those artists in the room. Some that, like you just said, Elton John was in the room as well as Ice Spice who’s just starting out and hearing from Billie and seeing her receive the award and it really meant a lot to her. She cared so much about the environment as well as her family. So all of them were there and it was just so nice to see it all come together. Her voice is so important on this issue.

Baltin: Talk about what it meant to work with Universal and to be able to sort of start to make these inroads in the industry because artists have been working so much on this for a long time. It’s nice for the agencies to finally catch up.

Lara Seaver: True. And it so different too, as you pointed out. At festivals we make sure that the events are as sustainable as possible and that we consider all the aspects. And then we also look at changing the hearts and minds of the fans at the show, or engaging the hearts and minds. A lot of them are already very much on board but need a little push or inspiration or just connection with their community that we can provide at the show in a super positive way. And I think when you look at this, it’s the same thing, we’re looking at both the events and event logistics. A lot of things really did translate and we had the ability to make some things happen that you could never make happen on concert tours and all real glassware, for example, can’t happen on the road. But the audience was, for the showcase and for the after-party, some of the most key figures in the music industry. When they can see it being done so well, so seamlessly, we hope that is the fan engagement part of the event. So there really is a great parallel between the two things.

Baltin: How has the response been so far within the industry?

Seaver; I think it’s a little early to tell. But I think, in general, the media and other conversations that we’ve had here in LA, the response has been incredibly positive. Some people are like, “Great, hopefully the other large leaders of the industry will follow this lead.” Some of it was a proof of concept. Could you go this deep on sustainability without affecting the guest experience at such a high level event? So proving that was a super point of pride. And then when you add in the spotlight shown on Billie Eilish’s work, which we’re super proud to be a part of both the work and the presenting of that award in recognition, I think that moves the needle with people, both people watching the industry and people within the industry realizing that there’s so much to be done. But there’s so much that can be done and learned from and shared. And that’s one of the wonderful things about being part of a nonprofit like Reverb is that we’re really mission focused. So the more people who join and do this, whether they work for us or not, it’s better. It’s not about necessarily staking our claim, it’s just like let’s move the industry in the right direction.

Baltin: How did this first come up?

Seaver: I believe my director of partnerships has been working with folks at UMG for years and years talking about potentially doing something and where would it fit. There’s a lot of enthusiasm on both sides. We’ve worked with many of the artists on the label, so knowing that there was some overlap and for example, when Billie’s last albums came out, we worked with Interscope to make sure that the packaging was as sustainable as possible. But looking at actually making this tangible, this partnership in a real way was something many years in the making. And then I think it really, we officially decided to do it late summer, early fall, which gave us the runway we needed to put things in place because the only way to do something like this is to really consider sustainability as one of the core facets of the event. In every decision you make planning it, it’s not something you can sort of put a blanket on top. At the end, it won’t come out the same, it won’t be the same impact.

Baltin: As you saw it executed, what were some of your favorite moments?

Seaver: I don’t want to put words or feelings onto her, but Billie’s reaction and the industry’s reaction to her work and there was an amazing video piece that really told the story of why she’s inspired and why she cares and why she does this. And then seeing the reaction and standing ovation, people on their feet just appreciating that work. It wasn’t about her music and the things that have been celebrated before, but like really seeing a room of appreciation for an artist taking a stand. And we’ve been able to do things with venues we’ve never done before. So just seeing that moment of appreciation and her recognition for that. But also at the after-party last night, seeing the incredibly well prepared sustainable design that you would not notice. I don’t think anyone walked in and said, oh, this is that green event. And that is also a source of pride, the fact that everything had a plan for before where it came from and where it was sourced and where it was going after. And knowing that in my mind and walking around and seeing all of these incredibly intelligent touches, whether it was high end vegan hors d’oeuvres being passed. I didn’t hear the word vegan once out of the crowd at the party. It was just done so well. And I think that’s what I’d like all event centers to consider is the things that you can change that actually improve the guest experience and have us making a smaller impact on the planet. So those two moments stick out to me, for sure.

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Southwest Atlanta’s Ambient + Studio combines history with vision







© Provided by Rough Draft Atlanta
Ambien + Studio.

In Studio One at Ambient + Studio, nestled up against one wall there sits a giant scale big enough for a person – or two – to step on. 

During the plethora of weddings hosted in the space, the occasional, perhaps slightly inebriated guest will find their way to the scale. Maybe thinking it’s a replica, they’ll step onto it briefly before jumping back when the ground beneath them begins to shift, eyes widening as they realize the scale is in fact, authentic, left over from the building’s cotton mill days. 






© Provided by Rough Draft Atlanta
The scale that sits in Studio One.

Ambient + Studio – which serves as a photography and film studio as well as an event space – has more hidden knick knacks than just that scale. Located on Wells Street in Southwest Atlanta, the building that houses the studio is a former cotton mill and is 113 years old. In the 1920s, it served as home to the Dixie Lumber Company. In the 1940s, it became Southern Mills, a large specialty textile manufacturer. 

When Jason Ivany, owner of the studio, came to the building in 2007, it had fallen into disrepair. Since then, what started as one studio has transformed into four, and the space hosts everything from weddings to corporate events to magazine photoshoots. 

Ivany, originally from the Toronto area, moved to Atlanta from Los Angeles in 2003. He was a photographer at the time, and on the west coast he had been mostly using daylight studios, or studio spaces with a lot of natural light, but couldn’t find much of a market for those in Atlanta. There must be a need, he thought. 

“I wrote a business plan to open such a business,” Ivany said. “I couldn’t get it funded and put it on the shelf.” 

Four years later, he found himself walking through what is now Ambient + Studio. “They walked me through this room,” he told me. We were standing in Studio One – a cavernous, warehouse style space with a row of giant windows facing west. “At sunset, this thing glows like an industrial cathedral.” 






© Provided by Rough Draft Atlanta
A wall of windows in Studio One.

The building was perfect for Ivany’s needs, but required a lot of work. 

“Before we came along, the building was derelict,” Ivany said. “It wasn’t like we took over a factory. It was like we took over a junkyard.” 

But in that rubble came some of the aspects of Ambient + Studio that make it so unique. In addition to the scale in Studio One, multiple original aspects of the building are leftover. There’s original brickwork, flooring, and windows throughout. Some of the giant, barn-style doors are original, while others were made by Jonathan Hanson, a local artisan. 

In one of the smaller studios, the floor was originally covered in concrete and asphalt, but Ivany has it removed to reveal hardwood floors. They saved an embroidery machine that was too heavy to move, as well as an old 1974 AM General Mail Truck that sits in the garage space. But the biggest find – literally – was a huge cotton baler saved from the mill. 






© Provided by Rough Draft Atlanta
A cotton baler in Ambient+Studio.

“As much as it looks like I was preserving something, there was just no way I was going to try to make this thing leave,” Ivany joked as he showed off the huge machine. “Inside it goes down six feet, so that you can compress that much cotton into one cube.” 

Ivany said while it’s easy for weddings to dominate Ambient’s calendar, the schedule is usually split 50/50 with film or photography shoots. Musicians in particular like to use their garage space for gritty, industrial-style music videos. On the day I visited, Fugo Studios was set up for a small shoot in Studio One.  It’s hard to remember everything over a 16-year period, but Ivany said over the years, they’ve had everything from one of the “Step Up” movies to the Netflix show “Raising Dion” grace the stage. Zaxby’s has filmed part of a commercial in the space, and magazines like Rolling Stone, Marie Claire, and Details have all held photoshoots there. Brands like Carter’s and Spanx have also used the space for photoshoots. 






© Provided by Rough Draft Atlanta
The garage space at Ambient + Studio.

Last year, Lauren Liz Hubbard of Lauren Liz Photo served as the chair for a portrait project for the Atlanta chapter of American Photographic Artists (APA). The holiday portrait project was a full day photoshoot at Ambient taking family portraits for families of patients with the Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation. 

Hubbard said Ambient’s spaciousness was crucial to the photoshoot. 

“One of the most important things for this particular shoot was accessibility for people with any kind of physical challenges,” she said. “The space was a really important part. They have a large amount. The studio spaces are just very open floor plan, so it was really ideal for our needs.”

Photoshoots are how Ivany originally envisioned Ambient would get the most use. It didn’t dawn on him that his huge hall, with its sunset facing windows and copious amounts of room, could be used for weddings until a set designer asked him about it in 2009. 

“I thought of [the space] as a photo studio,” he said. “I never imagined it for events or anything like that.” 

In retrospect, he said, opening the space up for weddings definitely helped financially. Ambient has also been open to other events, such as an artist forum that the space hosts regularly. 

“The promoters … will select 10 artists and each artist puts up a booth, so it’s a marketplace to sell their own work,” Ivany said. “But it is sort of cross-pollination, in that anybody that’s following one artist now gets ten that are kind of like them.”  

That’s really what’s special about Ambient + Studio, said Ivany. Its age and style definitely, but it’s the versatility that works best in its favor. Ivany didn’t try to decorate the space in any specific way, not wanting anyone to feel locked into a certain look – a blank canvas, if you will. 

“For some, it can be intimidating, because it’s a lot of space to fill with vision,” Ivany said. “But mostly, I think – I hope – it allows folks to create their own world.”

The post Southwest Atlanta’s Ambient + Studio combines history with vision appeared first on Rough Draft Atlanta.



Sarah Willis Dances across Cuba in “Mozart y Mambo”



The streets of Havana are bursting with music. Salsa, cha-cha, mambo, danzón — Cuba’s capital city pulses with familiar rhythms and free-flowing melodies made for dancing. But Cuba’s music and its musicians have an unlikely ally: classical icon Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

Mozart never knew how to salsa, cha-cha, or mambo. And yet, musicians in Havana insist that he would fit right in.

Several years ago, Berlin Philharmonic French horn player Sarah Willis visited Havana for a masterclass, and stumbled into a project that has changed the direction of her life: recording Mozart’s music for horn — and traditional Cuban dances in new arrangements — with the Havana Lyceum Orchestra, in a series of albums she called “Mozart y Mambo.”

The most recent recording, Cuban Dances, is like a musical roadmap of Cuba, with the first-ever Cuban classical horn concerto as its centerpiece. Willis commissioned a different composer for each of its six movements, and what emerged is a vibrant suite of traditional Cuban dances written in classical terms. Mozart sparkles here as well: his Horn Concertos Nos. 1 and 2 open the album, and the last piece, “Pa Pa Pa,” is an arrangement of the Papageno/Papagena duet from The Magic Flute.

Willis recently visited Symphony Hall with the Berlin Philharmonic, for a concert with the Celebrity Series of Boston. She spoke with CRB’s Kendall Todd about the genesis of “Mozart y Mambo,” the Cuban music and musicians she loves, and her battle with the elements — and no small amount of wildlife — to get these albums recorded. Hear the interview in the audio player above, and read the transcript below.

For more about “Mozart y Mambo,” including a link to donate to Instruments for Cuba, visit Sarah Willis’s website.

INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT:

Kendall Todd I’m Kendall Todd from WCRB, and I’m here at Symphony Hall with Sarah Willis, who has just released an album called Cuban Dances, and it’s the second part of her “Mozart y Mambo” project. Sarah, thank you so much for your time today.

Sarah Willis Hi, Kendall. It’s great to be here. Especially great to be back in Boston after so long.

Kendall Todd Well, welcome back. We’re glad to have you here. So the first thing that I would love to hear from you is how did the “Mozart y Mambo” project come to be?

Sarah Willis Well, it’s turned into much more than just an album. It’s turned into this huge project, and it’s truly been the adventure of my life. It’s just been an incredible journey. And it basically started because I wanted to dance salsa [laughs]. And salsa was something I learned in Berlin with a Cuban dance teacher after I’d fallen in love with the Buena Vista Social Club album. Of course, that’s how most of us discovered Cuban music. And I didn’t really, musicians are not really great dancers, I must say, at least classical musicians. Classical musicians at a disco after a concert is usually quite a sad affair. You know, we prefer to express our rhythm through our instruments.

But someone persuaded me to go along to this class, and Cuban music just did something with my body. It was something that I just felt I had to move to. And I learned to dance, and I carried on in Berlin, and then when I was teaching at New World Symphony in Florida, I decided that I would fly to Havana. I heard it was only 30 minutes. Little did I know it was like 3 hours’ check in Miami and then 2 hours waiting for your luggage in Havana. But I decided I wanted to go and it was all organized.

And the horn grapevine is such that even the horn players in Cuba heard that I was coming and got in touch with me and said, would I give them a masterclass? And I was quite surprised there were even French horn players in Cuba because we know there’s trumpet players and trombones in the salsa bands. But I wasn’t sure if there were any French horn players at all, but I said “Yes, okay, I’ll do a masterclass,” and not really expecting much. And on the first day I arrived, I went, I met the conductor of the Havana Lyceum Orchestra. He picked me up at the airport and we went for a walk. And I saw these bands outside on the street in Havana, and I said to him, “Can we dance?” And I could see in his face like, “Oh, no, I have to dance with this foreigner.” So we danced and and he realized, “Oh,” you know, “she can move.” And I was very, very touched that he said that I dance like a Cuban. That was the best compliment anyone has ever give me.

And the next day, he took me to meet the horns of the Havana Lyceum Orchestra. Not only the horns of the orchestra, but they’d come from all over Cuba. There were about 35 of them, and nobody even, no one knew there were so many horn players in Cuba, but they’d come and I literally fell in love with them from the very first notes they played. They were playing on terrible instruments, but they were playing with a passion and with beautiful sound and musical phrasing. And you could tell that they’d been taught musically very well, but they were being held back by their instruments. We had a fantastic time and I just loved this spontaneous way of making music. And really that was the moment I decided I have to do something. I’m going to get them better instruments, I’m going to do something for them.

And that evening I went to a concert by the Havana Lyceum Orchestra, which is a chamber orchestra, a young chamber orchestra that have been together for about 12 years. They’re not state funded. They are an independent orchestra. And they played Mozart. And I was blown away once again. You could tell they weren’t playing on great instruments, but they had, they brought a real lightness to Mozart, a dance-like feeling. It was really incredible. And that’s how this idea came, first of all, to help them, to do something, and to bring awareness to the fact that this classical music-making was going on in Cuba. Did you know there was such great classical music-making going on?

Kendall Todd I can’t say that I did.

Sarah Willis No. No one did. So I went back and filmed a few episodes of, I was doing a TV show at the time called “Sarah’s Music,” and people were like, “Wow, this orchestra’s really good.” And out of that, the idea of recording the Mozart horn concertos with them was born, and it’s turned into this crazy project, “Mozart y Mambo.”

Kendall Todd That’s a fantastic answer, and I love these albums so much. They’re so beautiful.

Sarah Willis Thank you.

Kendall Todd So you play with the Berlin Philharmonic and you also spend a lot of time in Cuba with this project. And so I’m curious to know how you would characterize, like, what it’s like splitting time between these two places.

Sarah Willis “Split” is not a good word, at least for horn players [laughs]. For maybe the listeners that don’t know what I mean, when horn players miss a note, we call it “splitting a note.” We do everything we can to avoid that, but the French horn is really a very specific instrument. What you blow in the mouthpiece is not necessarily what comes out the other end, but we do our best not to split notes.

But how do I how do I divide my time? Well, first and foremost, the Berlin Philharmonic is my job, and I am happy and proud to play in that orchestra. And everything I do additionally to that is because I’m a horn player in the Berlin Philharmonic. I mean, we’re very lucky that many doors are open to us. The Berlin Philharmonic horn section consists of eight players, so we’re not all used at the same time. If there’s not a piece that needs eight horns, like if there’s Mahler or Bruckner or Strauss or something, we’ll all be there. But if there’s only four horns on, then some of us get time off. So I hamster-save my time off and then fit it all together and then disappear for a month off to Cuba to get this project done. So I’m very lucky that I have very flexible colleagues and flexible working hours. But for example, a tour like now when we’re in Boston playing here at Symphony Hall, all of us have to come on the tour. And so we can see at the beginning of the season, okay, I have to be there then, then, then, then, and the rest of the time I’m teaching or traveling around the world with my horn and spending a lot of time in Cuba.

Kendall Todd Sounds very busy.

Sarah Willis It’s very busy. I’ve been asked if I have been cloned because I pop up all over the place. But I love what I do and I love communicating about what I do. And yes, who was it that said “if you rest, you rust?” So I keep busy.

Kendall Todd That’s fantastic. One thing that I also would love to know is what sort of a role Mozart’s music has played in your life up until now.

Sarah Willis Well, we horn players are very lucky that Mozart wrote four amazing concertos. Also a Concert Rondo, a quintet for strings, and a little piece called a Concert Movement that I adore that we recorded on the first album. So Mozart, these pieces have been like a true staple for us horn players. We learn them right at the very beginning. We play them all through our career. For every audition, we just play Mozart all the time. And now that I teach, I hear Mozart all the time. Everybody brings Mozart to masterclasses, to private lessons. So basically, Mozart surrounds us, these pieces. And I think it’s a dream of most horn players to be able to record these horn concertos. And most people put them together on one album. They record all four, and then if they’re lucky, they can put the Concert Rondo on there too, squeeze it in there at the end, and then that’s the recording.

There are many, many great recordings of the Mozart horn concertos. So when I decided to record them myself and mix them a little bit with Cuban music, that was my way of showing that I like to do things a little bit differently. And mixed it up with Cuban music, not only with pure Cuban music, but also we transposed Mozart a little bit into how it would sound if he had been in Havana. So Mozart has been, Mozart is very important for every musician. Mozart was a true genius. And the Cubans say, though, that Mozart would have been a good Cuban because of all this dance music and the improvising that he did and his just, his love of life, which is exactly how the Cubans make music.

Kendall Todd That’s beautiful. I was going to ask you about what that phrase, “Mozart would have been a good Cuban,” meant to you.

Sarah Willis Ah, you did your homework. Mozart would have been a good Cuban. You know, when we were planning this project, we were in some bar in Havana one night after a concert of the Havana Lyceum Orchestra. And we got to talking, you know, Cuba Libres and mojitos were flowing, and I asked some of the musicians, you know, “What is it about Mozart? Do people here actually know him? The musicians, yes, but do people on the street know him?” And the answer was yes. Most people would recognize his music. And then one of them came out with this statement, “Mozart would have been a good Cuban.” And when I asked him why, he said these answers, you know, that the improvising that Mozart did, you know, Mozart never played the same thing twice. He would sit down at the keyboard and he wouldn’t play what he wrote down, either. He would just, you know, improvise away. And that’s what Cuban music is all about. It is never the same thing twice. The dance element, the romantic part.

And funnily enough, our conductor said that Mozart was very good with the ladies, and the Cubans think they are too. So that’s another thing they have in common. When we were recording the Third Horn Concerto, the Romanza, the second movement, is actually quite slow. And I was playing it at a tempo I thought was good. And the conductor, we call him Pepe, his full name is José Antonio Méndez Padrón, which is quite hard to say on the radio. So we call him Pepe [laughs]. And he turned around, and he said, “Sarah, romances in Cuba are not that slow. Speed it up a bit.” And he was right. We found a nice tempo for a nice fast romance.

Kendall Todd I would like to ask you about him as well, because in your liner notes for the album, you said you’ve called him your “musical soulmate.” And I wanted to know what it’s like to work with him and what makes you click.

Sarah Willis It’s very special to find another musician who you never really have to talk about musical phrasing and dynamics and the way of making music, performing, rehearsals . . . It just clicks. And this is what I found in Pepe and vice versa. You know, he found that he could conduct me, he could breathe with me as a horn player. And he knew what I wanted in concerts. If I’m struggling a little bit, he’ll just look at me and he’ll know, okay, let’s speed up this bit or slow this down. It’s been very special working with him.

But what I love the most about him is his passion for what he does. He is such a fantastic conductor. He could have made a career outside of Cuba, no problem. He could have, he could be conducting an orchestra, making an awful lot more money, traveling around the world. But he has decided to stay in Cuba to look after the next generation of classical musicians there. And he does an amazing job, really, against all the odds, it’s not easy. The Havana Lyceum Orchestra didn’t get any funding for a long time, and this project has finally made people sit up and take notice of how fantastically they play. And Pepe is really a champion of classical music in Cuba, and I admire him and love him very, very much.

Kendall Todd That’s fantastic. We spoke about how you can hear some Cuban things in Mozart’s music. And I’m wondering if you hear anything of Mozart in Cuban music.

Sarah Willis Well, when we started the “Mozart y Mambo” project, the idea was originally just to play Mozart’s horn concertos and some Cuban music. But then we started discussing, how would Mozart have sounded if he’d lived in Havana, for example, or if he’d just come and visited. We knew that he’d had these influences like “Rondo alla Turca” [ed.: the third movement of Mozart’s Piano Sonata No. 11], we knew he’d had some Turkish music influences. And he, all sorts, I mean, composers are always influenced by everything and that’s fantastic. They bring it then into their music.

But he’d never been to Cuba, obviously. And so we decided to try out how he would have sounded by putting his music to a beat. It mustn’t sound cheesy. That’s what I really wanted. It had to be very well done. It’s very easy just to take a well-known tune and put a beat underneath it. But I asked some Cuban arrangers, really fantastic arrangers, to create some unique, very original things from well-known pieces like Eine Kleine Nachtmusik, that everybody knows. Everyone’s heard it in a million versions and it plays in every elevator, in every hotel in the whole world. And also the Mozart Horn Concerto Rondos, because they are really so well-known and they are perfect.

I don’t know whether I hear Cuban– now, I hear Cuban music in Mozart because I’ve been playing it for the last two years. But original Mozart, I hear dance elements in it, and the other way around, now, when I hear Cuban music, I hear structure in the Cuban music that I didn’t know was there before. I had to learn a lot of dances to do this project. The first album was just “Mambo,” and the second album, Cuban Dances, is exactly what it says in the title. It’s quite a few new Cuban dances that I, some of them I knew, like the bolero or the cha-cha-chá, others I had no idea about, the guaguancó, which is an Afro-Cuban rumba, and the changüí, that nobody had really ever heard of. It’s like dancing salsa with hiccups. It’s all on the off beat. So it’s [sings]. And so I had to find out about these. And I don’t hear Mozart in them, but I hear what Mozart did. I hear a structure, I hear love of life. I hear the improvisation element, obviously, which is something, it’s a big challenge for me as a classical musician to even attempt improvising. The people who can improvise say, “Hey, it’s really easy, just try it.” And the people who can’t, it’s a nightmare. And I unfortunately am one of the people that really found it very difficult. So for me, the two, I can’t separate the two anymore. And that’s a wonderful thing.

Kendall Todd That’s great. I’m so curious about the dance element in the Cuban music, because I know you’ve spoken about this before and the phrase that you’ve used in your website and in your liner notes is, “if you can’t dance it, you can’t play it.” And being a salsa dancer and having all of these dance experiences, I’m wondering how you’ve been able to tap into that for this project.

Sarah Willis Well, for album two, Cuban Dances, I had commissioned a Horn Concerto, it was the first horn concerto ever to appear out of Cuba. Nobody had composed like that for the horn before, and I commissioned six young, incredibly talented Cuban composers to write me an original work for horn. And there have been six Cuban dances that have come together in a suite. And these dances were traditional rhythms, like I said, the cha-cha and the mambo and the changüí, but to original music. So original themes, melodies for the horns, original orchestration, and also the fact that they’d written it for horn, because there was never a horn in any popular music in Cuba. That was just not an instrument. You know, we point backwards. That’s not really great in a salsa band. No one would hear you.

Kendall Todd [Laughs]

Sarah Willis So when the piece was finally ready, to make a very long story short, this was our COVID lockdown project. I actually visited Cuba twice during lockdown and spent quarantine, I twice did quarantine in a Cuban hotel and then was there where there was nothing on the streets, no music, no cars, no nothing. It was really, there was a curfew. It was really hard, but we got this piece written. And I’d taken it back to Berlin and I was practicing it, and a few months before the recording, I realized I could play the notes, but I really, it wasn’t sounding, it was sounding like a gringa. It was sounding like someone who was really trying to do her best but was just not getting it.

And I called up Yuniet Lombida, who was one of the composers and a fantastic saxophone player from Cuba. He was living in Germany at the time, and I said, “Please, can you help me? Something’s wrong. I’m not getting it.” And he came to the Philharmonie in Berlin to help. And we went into a practice room and he said, “Chica, you’ve got a dance them!” and I said, “But there’s six dances.” He said, “Let’s start now.”

And that was the afternoon that the whole thing changed for me. You cannot play a Cuban, Afro-Cuban rumba if you don’t know where it comes from and where it is in your body, because the clave, the beat, is different and the emphasis of where this beat comes, you do it with your body. And it was the same with the danzón, the national dance of Cuba. It was the same with the son, the guaguancó, the changüí, and the “Sarah-cha,” the “cha-cha for Sarah.”

And I literally learned how to dance them. I could do the mambo already, thanks to “Mozart y Mambo” part one. But I learned all these dances and I’m not a particularly amazing dancer, but I really felt that I had it in my body, and that really helped the horn playing. There were still technical challenges on the horn as well. I mean, you’ve got to translate all that into a very small mouthpiece. And there were lots of fast notes to learn as well, but to be able to dance this music was very important.

Kendall Todd That’s great.

Sarah Willis I’m a bit worried that I’m going to put off all the horn players listening who are going to think, “Oh, I can’t play this if I’m not going to turn into a fantastic dancer.” It’s not that at all. It’s basically just understanding where these rhythms come from and feeling them in your body. You don’t have to dance them in public. But, uh . . . [laughs]

Kendall Todd [Laughs] That’s great. I know as a classical musician, it is hard sometimes to make things, you know, make them swing.

Sarah Willis Yes. We’re not, we see the music and this was the challenge of Cuban Dances because it’s a bit like the Buena Vista Social Club part two, but in a younger version, because in the film, there are these amazing old musicians, Ibrahim Ferrer and Omara Portuondo and all these amazing musicians that were just playing what they know and love. They weren’t reading from music. And on my Cuban Dances, we actually have two members of the Buena Vista Social Club, the original Social Club, as soloists.

Kendall Todd Oh, wow.

Sarah Willis And it’s sort of, like, made a full circle. And they were telling us about making the film and making the recording. They were like, “Well, we had to play these pieces,” and Cuban songs can go on for about 15 minutes, you know, everyone has a turn and they make up the text as they go along. But they always come back and then the percussionist will just change the clave and then they’ll be in a completely different dance. And to film that, he said, was really difficult because they’d play a great song, and then Wim Wenders would say, “Okay, again, please.” And they were like, “We can’t do it again!” You could never do it the same twice.

So what we’ve done is we’ve taken it a step further and we’ve written down these rhythms for people like me, for classical musicians to understand how to play this music. And it’s especially important for the percussion because in Cuba you just write mambo, cha-cha, whatever, and they just know what to do. But here in the west, you have no idea. So they’ve written it all down. Something like changüí I don’t think was ever written down before in classical terms. And for me to have my horn part, I said, “If you write it, I’ll play it. Even if it’s a squashed fly on the page. If I see it, I’ll play it.”

So they had to think of ways to write the articulation, to put the accent, to put the slur. And even then you still have to bring your own interpretation to it. But you know, you can’t just see, if you see notes, you go “ta-ta-ta-ta-ta,” but actually you’re meant [sings]. You know? And so these Cuban composers had to find a way. They had to find the key, the legend, or I don’t know quite what you, what even the technical term is, to write it down. And so we have all that now. So it’s going to be an amazing databank for Cuban composers in the future.

Kendall Todd That’s amazing. I love hearing about all of this process.

Sarah Willis Thank you. I love talking about it. I’ve probably gone on far too long.

Kendall Todd Oh, no. I’m wondering as well how you would characterize recording all of these pieces, like with the Havana Lyceum Orchestra and with the Sarahbanda, which is a name that I love, first of all.

Sarah Willis It’s cool, isn’t it? A lot of people never realize what it meant. They just hear “sarabande.” It’s like the Bach suites.

Kendall Todd [Laughs] Well, seeing it written out like that. . .

Sarah Willis A “banda”. . . Sarah’s banda. Yeah.

Kendall Todd But, yeah, how was that recording process? It looks like a lot of fun based on the videos and things that you’ve posted.

Sarah Willis It was a lot of fun and we still have a lot of videos to come of the “making of.” We’re releasing them slowly, to just show people what it was like. I was very lucky. I brought Christoph Franke with me, who’s the Audio Director of the Digital Concert Hall in Berlin, so I know him very well and he’s recorded my other horn albums, and he’s done both Mozart y Mambo and the Cuban Dances. So I brought him to Havana. With his assistant, they brought all the equipment with them as well, so it was a huge undertaking. I brought a film crew from Germany. I mean, now that looking back on it, I’m thinking, how on earth did I manage this in COVID times as well? It was really, we did the impossible. But he came and instead of a beautiful studio, he had a dressing room where cockroaches ran around and the toilets didn’t work. There was no water. The air conditioning couldn’t work because it made a very loud noise. So the working conditions were very difficult.

Also for me, because we had to start recording about 11:00 at night because outside in Havana, there was no soundproofing in the church that we were recording in, and Havana is not a particularly quiet city. Cubans are not a particularly quiet people. They they like to celebrate life. And especially at night, they shout on the streets. The kids play ’til very late. The dogs and cats are equally as vocal. So we had to record quite late at night and it was literally like having a permanent jet lag, the week of the recording.

We would be there by 9:30, have some dinner, do the sound check, record from about 11:00 and finish about 2:00 or 3:00 a.m. And once again, against all odds, especially the animal odds, because the dogs would fight on the street. A cat came in and decided to meow during my best take of the cadenza in the Mozart concerto. A bird was in there one night, couldn’t get out, but then finally went to sleep. The worst was a little cricket that would not be quiet. From about midnight, this cricket decided to make a lot of noise. Now, we were in a church with very high arches and we didn’t know where he was. We just knew the corner he was in. We worked out if we banged on one part of the wall, he would be quiet for about 20 minutes. So we had to have someone on cricket duty every night.

Kendall Todd [Laughs] Oh man.

Sarah Willis And there’s even a bit on the new album where you can still hear him. I’ll let your listeners work out where that is. If anyone can find that, find the cricket, then I will be very impressed.

Kendall Todd Oh, my goodness. I’ll have to go back and listen very carefully to hear it. Oh, that’s amazing. I was wondering, you know, do you have any favorite stories from your recording?

Sarah Willis Oh, there’s one of them. [Laughs] It was also very hot in there because we couldn’t, there was no air conditioning. And Havana’s a very hot place. And when you play the French horn, you have a metal mouthpiece, you know, on your face for most of the time. If you’re hot and sweaty and the sweat starts running down, that metal mouthpiece starts to slide. Also, your hand gets sweaty. I mean, it was really quite a challenge.

But we did it. And I love my musicians so much. And they have a very hard time in Cuba right now. There’s a lot of difficulties, a lot of shortages of every basic need that they have. But when they play music, you would never know that because they play with all their heart. They never complain. It’s really a very special time. So one of my favorite memories would be when we finished recording the guaguancó, the Afro-Cuban rumba, part of the Cuban Dances Concerto, it was their favorite movement. It’s movement number three in the suite, because it’s like the top of the mountain. It’s a very special rhythm that you don’t quite get it, our ears don’t understand it at first, so we didn’t want to put it right at the end. We put a more popular one right at the end, but it’s in the middle of the suite and it’s brilliantly composed by Wilma Alba Cal, a wonderful young lady who actually composes for choirs in Havana, but did a great job with the horn. And it was their favorite number, this Afro-Cuban music.

And so we finished recording it and the percussion went absolutely bananas. They just would not stop. And so, everyone started doing a conga around the church. And it was three in the morning. And the conductor, Pepe, went crazy and everyone just stood up and the percussion went crazy. And I’ll never forget that moment. It was really wonderful. I think we have a video of it coming soon. But yeah, there were so many wonderful moments recording “Veinte Años,” which is a beautiful Cuban song with Carlos Calunga from the Buena Vista Social Club. He was a backing singer back then.

Kendall Todd Wow.

Sarah Willis So he was quite young and he came. We only did two run throughs of it, two takes.

Kendall Todd Oh my goodness.

Sarah Willis And I had such goosebumps and literally we were all crying at the end of it. And you can hear that. I think we took it practically the whole take as it was.

Kendall Todd Wow.

Sarah Willis That was an amazing moment. And then the very final moment of recording, the very last minute of Mozart, and then just that hug that Pepe and I gave each other because we were just so happy and proud and couldn’t believe that we’d done it.

Kendall Todd Those sound like all amazing moments. And I have loved watching the videos that you’ve put out about this project as well. I think they’re really wonderful.

Sarah Willis Thank you. It’s an important part of this. It’s not just, these days it can’t just be an album. It can’t just be music you listen to on Spotify, Apple Music, or wherever. You need the visual to go with it. And I was very aware of that from album one, and we were very lucky that for album one I made a film for Deutsche Welle, which is a German news channel, and they commissioned the film to be made about the project. And the video we made to it, “Rondo Alla Mambo,” the very first video, it went totally viral. It had like eight and a half million views on Facebook within a few weeks.

Kendall Todd Wow.

Sarah Willis And that was incredible. And for this second one, I really wanted to do a different type of film. So we brought a film crew with us again. And on German TV there’ll be a movie about it soon and hopefully it’ll come out in English at some point as well. But this visual aspect is very important. It has to be a whole product. Can’t just be a music thing. It’s hard work these days, you know, [you] used to be able to just go into a recording studio and then just get it out there. But now it’s all these things. And then interviews for the radio! Oh, my goodness.

Kendall Todd [Laughs] Oh, sorry.

Sarah Willis [Laughs] No, it’s a total pleasure.

Kendall Todd I would love to know more about the documentary that’s coming out.

Sarah Willis It’s called Cuban Dances and it’s a road trip. And we took the whole orchestra on a road trip of Cuba. Cuban Dances, the concerto, is like a musical road map of Cuba because each dance originated in a different part of Cuba. So we got on a bus in Havana and went 17 and a half hours across the whole country to Santiago de Cuba. Just saying “17 hours on a bus” is bad enough. But you haven’t been on the streets in Cuba. I tell you, every bone in your body is shaken and stirred.

And we got there and we recorded, we filmed each dance where it came from. So Santiago de Cuba, then we went to Guantánamo. And to get filming permission in Guantánamo was really not so easy. We filmed in a banana plantation in the middle of the country near Guantánamo. We went to Matanzas, which is not far from Havana, and filmed the the danzón, the national dance of Cuba. And then we went to the poorest part of Matanzas to record the guaguancó, because that’s where the music originated from. The African slaves would come into the port of Matanzas and sing of their homesickness, and then they would mingle with the Cuban culture. And that’s how this rhythm was born. And then we did the cha-cha and the bolero in Havana.

So that’s what we made a film about, a real road trip, a map of Cuba. And it was a lot of fun, but it was also quite a huge challenge to move us all across the country and in these days in Cuba, just to find hotels and to find enough to eat. And those were quite cool bus rides. The Havana Lyceum Orchestra knows how to have a really good time. And we, when the film comes out, I’ll be releasing some videos of what goes on on that bus. They literally dance on the bus.

Kendall Todd [Laughs] It’s like a, like a rock band on tour almost.

Sarah Willis Totally. Except at night, late at night, and in the mornings. They can sleep then through anything.

Kendall Todd Well, that sounds really wonderful. I’m excited to see it when it comes out, and I hope they release an English version as well.

Sarah Willis I will do my very best.

Kendall Todd [Laughs] Thank you. That’s great. One last thing that I have to ask, because I love these videos as well. And I’ve watched every one that’s on YouTube. The “Sarah’s Music Horn Challenge.” I would love to hear you talk about it.

Sarah Willis Oh, yes. Well, I was doing a TV show for Deutsche Welle called “Sarah’s Music.” They were 12 minute segments every other week, which was a lot of work next to my job in the Berlin Philharmonic. 12 minutes of TV is a lot, but they gave me free rein. I could do it on whatever I wanted, whether it was John Williams or Wynton Marsalis or Baroque music or house music or rap. I could choose what I wanted to do, and I loved it. But I decided it needed a running gag. So I would present whoever I was interviewing my horn at the very end, and they had to see if they could get a note out of it. The “Sarah’s Music Horn Challenge.”

Now, of course, that all had to stop in Corona times because nobody wanted to play anybody else’s French horn. But before that, we did an awful lot of horn challenges. And I think the most popular one was Wynton Marsalis, and John Williams came pretty close after that. He was great. He used to play the trumpet, so he just took the horn and played a few notes. I said, “Is that Star Wars?” He said, “No, it was Beethoven.” But he got a few notes out of it. So I was very impressed. But we’ll have to see when hygiene allows. We will start it up again. But I don’t think the world’s quite ready for the Horn Challenge just yet. Otherwise, I would have brought it and you could have done it live on the radio.

Kendall Todd [Laughs] Oh boy! I’m a violinist. I don’t know what I’d do.

Sarah Willis Yeah, that’s the whole point. The worse you are, the more we love you.

Kendall Todd That’s true. Those make the best videos. Is there anything that you’ve taken from that experience of doing “Sarah’s Music,” or more specifically, the Horn Challenge?

Sarah Willis It’s just a bit of fun and I think these days it’s very important to communicate about what you do and what you have a passion for. In my case, classical music. But of course, then to surprise people who think maybe classical music is a little bit too serious for them, might even be a bit too boring. You have to sit in a concert hall, turn your phone off. Ugh, terrible. You don’t know where to clap. And I feel it’s somehow my mission to get out there and show people how amazing classical music can be. It’s all about the live experience as well, because nothing replaces a live concert hall experience, as we saw here in Symphony Hall when we performed the Korngold. It was, it’s just incredible. You can’t have that experience— It’s great we have radio and streaming and all things digital, but the whole point of all that is to get people to go and experience it live.

And I feel like that’s, you know, you take on the sort of evangelist role of communicating that. And I feel very lucky in my career. I’ve had a lot of fantastic things happen and why not share them with other people? And the “Sarah’s Music Horn Challenge” was just a little way to make people smile and to have the unusual happen. And when you can surprise people and make them laugh, you know, maybe they’ll think we classical musicians aren’t as serious as they thought we were. So I think it’s learning with a bit of laughter as well. If you can give people information, but also make them smile, I think that’s the best combination. That’s what I try and do with all the things that I do, especially with the Cuban project.

Kendall Todd I love that. Thank you so much. Sarah Willis, It has been so great to talk to you today. Thank you so much for your time.

Sarah Willis Thank you for your great questions, Kendall. And next time we’re going to get you mambo-ing, okay?

Kendall Todd Oh, boy. I’ll look forward to it.

Sarah Willis Thanks so much.

Kendall Todd Thank you.



Country Music Hall Of Fame And Museum Promotes Nina Burghard And Lisa Purcell To EVP …





Burghard and Purcell



The COUNTRY MUSIC HALL OF FAME AND MUSEUM has promoted SVPs NINA BURGHARD and LISA PURCELL to EVP roles. BURGHARD will serve as EVP/Finances and Operations, and PURCELL as EVP/External Affairs. Both will continue to report to CEO KYLE YOUNG.

YOUNG said, “Both LISA and NINA have moved into expanded roles, taking on the supervision of additional departments and scopes of work, helping to strengthen the institution. Their talents and leadership have been essential to the success of the museum and its growth over the past decade.”

While previously serving as SVP/Financial Services & Operations, BURGHARD added the museum’s information and technology department to her responsibilities, as well as the management of the museum’s COVID-19 safety processes during the pandemic. Prior to joining the museum in 1998, she spent a decade with ARTHUR ANDERSON LLP.

PURCELL, who previously served as SVP/External Affairs, added supervision of the marketing and public relations departments to her work, which supports the museum’s development, education and community engagement efforts. Her leadership areas encompass contributed income, including individual giving, planned giving, membership and corporate partnerships; educational programming; public relations; public affairs; and marketing. Prior to joining the museum in 2014, PURCELL served as VP/External affairs for HANDS ON NASHVILLE and worked in the program and administrative departments of diverse nonprofit organizations, ranging from the FRIST ART MUSEUM to the music business charity T.J. MARTELL FOUNDATION.




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Burt Bacharach, prolific composer of pop hits, dies at 94







© Anonymous/AP
Burt Bacharach in 1965 with his then-wife, actress Angie Dickinson.

Burt Bacharach, a colossally successful pop composer — with more than 70 Top-40 hits — who provided the cocktail party playlist for the swinging ’60s and early ’70s with songs including “I Say a Little Prayer,” “Alfie,” “Do You Know the Way to San Jose,” “Close to You,” “Promises, Promises” and the Oscar-winning “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head,” died Feb. 8 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 94.

His publicist, Tina Brausam, confirmed the death but did not provide a specific cause.

Often teaming with lyricist Hal David, Mr. Bacharach wrote a succession of hits performed by musical torchbearers of the shag carpet era — Aretha Franklin, Tom Jones, Dusty Springfield, Herb Alpert, Sergio Mendes, the Carpenters, the 5th Dimension and especially singer Dionne Warwick.

Mr. Bacharach’s music ebbed and flowed from vogue, but his canon of songs brought him his industry’s highest honors. Much of his most enduring work featured majestic harmonies with abrupt key changes and ornate time signatures drawn from his grounding in classical music and his fervor for bebop jazz. Frank Sinatra once quipped that Mr. Bacharach “writes in hat sizes. Seven and three-fourths.”

Yet the songs remained accessible — “maybe not too sophisticated,” the composer once told the London Daily Telegraph, “but sophisticated enough to have some durability. And not too sophisticated to have you just hear it by some piano-player in a bar.”

More than 1,000 artists have recorded his music, a record placing him squarely in the Great American Songbook tradition alongside Cole Porter, Irving Berlin and the Gershwins.






© AP/AP
Mr. Bacharach accepts the Oscar for Best Original Score for “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” in 1970.

“His harmonic sophistication goes far beyond what record labels or audiences demanded in the 1960s and 1970s,” said Ted Gioia, author of “Love Songs: The Hidden History.” “He had higher standards than almost any of his peers on AM radio. It was a kind of hippie veneer imposed on solidly crafted melodies and rhythms from another era. There was a paradox here, but Bacharach made it work — in fact, he turned it into art.”

“What the World Needs Now Is Love” and “This Guy’s in Love With You” sent the listener floating down a martini river, a gentle current of violins dappled with muted trumpets, where the only occasional brine was a lyric by David.

“What do you get when you fall in love? You only get lies and pain and sorrow,” Warwick sang playfully over an up-tempo rhythm in “I’ll Never Fall in Love Again,” the 1969 hit that summited Billboard’s Easy Listening chart. When he and David wrote the song, Mr. Bacharach was in the hospital — a setting that inspired the cheeky line, “What do you get when you kiss a guy? You get enough germs to catch pneumonia.”

“I always tried to create songs that were like mini movies,” Mr. Bacharach once said. One of his finest examples was “One Less Bell to Answer,” a massive hit for the 5th Dimension in 1970 in which the singer appears blasé about “one less egg to fry” and “one less man to pick up after” but ultimately reveals her pain — “all I do is cry.”

Mr. Bacharach hit a pop culture peak with “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” a rakish 1969 western starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford as bank robbers on the run. It was one of Mr. Bacharach’s few film scores and won him Oscars for both the score and the instant hit “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head.”

B.J. Thomas sang David’s colloquial poetry (“cryin’s not for me / ’cause I’m never gonna stop the rain by complaining”) over idly strummed ukulele and guitar. The song accompanied Newman’s carefree bike ride with Katharine Ross on his handlebars, an iconic snapshot of Mr. Bacharach’s heyday and good-times ethos.

B.J. Thomas, who sang ‘Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head,’ dies at 78

The hits kept coming. “What’s New Pussycat?,” “Walk on By,” “Don’t Go Breaking My Heart,” “A House Is Not a Home” all entered the cultural bloodstream — as did “(There’s) Always Something There to Remind Me,” which received a Top 10 new wave cover by Naked Eyes in 1983.

Mr. Bacharach shared an Oscar for his theme song for “Arthur” (1981) with lyricist Carole Bayer Sager, his future wife, and singer Christopher Cross. Mr. Bacharach and Sager also wrote “That’s What Friends Are For” for the 1982 film “Night Shift,” a number that became an anthem of the AIDS-awareness movement.

Mr. Bacharach’s musical reputation faded before a renaissance in the 1990s that was sparked by praise from unexpected sources such as the band Oasis, which included a photo of the composer on the cover of its 1994 debut album “Definitely Maybe.”

The jazz pianist McCoy Tyner recorded an entire album of Mr. Bacharach’s music in 1997. The next year, Mr. Bacharach shared with Elvis Costello a Grammy for best pop vocal collaboration for the song “I Still Have That Other Girl”; Costello had previously partnered with Mr. Bacharach on the ballad “God Give Me Strength,” used in the 1996 film “Grace of My Heart.”

The composer was cool again — even if some of his newfound appreciation was laced with irony. He played along, making a winking cameo in the Mike Myers spy spoof “Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery” (1997), playing the piano and singing “What the World Needs Now Is Love” atop a double-decker bus.

When President Barack Obama awarded Mr. Bacharach and David the Library of Congress’s Gershwin Prize for Popular Song in 2012 — the year David died — Myers gave an arch rendition of “What’s New Pussycat?” in a blue sequined jumpsuit.






© Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images
Mr. Bacharach performs during the Glastonbury Festival of Music and Performing Arts in Somerset, England in 2015.

Classical to jazz

Burt Freeman Bacharach was born in Kansas City, Mo., on May 12, 1928, and grew up in New York City. His father wrote a syndicated newspaper column about men’s grooming. His mother was an amateur songwriter and piano teacher and directed his classical musical studies.

He was in his teens when he heard trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie and saxophonist Charlie Parker wafting over the airwaves. It was “like somebody opened a window,” he told the BBC. He forged an ID card and started frequenting bebop clubs on 52nd Street, a main artery of Manhattan jazz clubs.

After a stint in the Army, he resumed his classes at the Mannes School of Music and the New School for Social Research in New York, where he was mentored by French composer Darius Milhaud.

He also began working as an accompanist to singer Vic Damone, who fired him for allegedly upstaging him by flirting with women in the audience; to singer Paula Stewart (whom he married despite her mother’s advice that he was “really not marriage material”); and to Marlene Dietrich, the German-born Hollywood entertainer who was 30 years his senior and doted on him in a distinctly unmotherly way.

He met David in 1956 when both were working in the Brill Building, New York’s famed songwriting factory. They joined forces after a misfire by the composer and David’s older brother, Mack — a goofy title song for the 1958 B-movie “The Blob” starring Steve McQueen.

The first few Hal David-Burt Bacharach collaborations included “Magic Moments” and “The Story of My Life,” smash hits for singers Perry Como and Marty Robbins, respectively, in 1957.

Mr. Bacharach described meeting songwriter and producer Jerry Leiber, a Brill Building stalwart, as a seminal moment in his growth as a tunesmith. Like Leiber (and his partner Mike Stoller), Mr. Bacharach found an outlet for greater emotional scope when writing for R&B entertainers. He provided Jerry Butler with “Make It Easy On Yourself” and “Baby It’s You” for the Shirelles.

“You start working with non-White singers and it’s a different tone, there’s a soulful thing about it,” he told the Daily Telegraph. “And that influences what I’m composing and the way I’m working.”

The composer compared his relationship with David to an unlikely marriage — with Mr. Bacharach the cosmopolitan sybarite to his partner’s committed family man. A serial romancer, Mr. Bacharach was married four times — including once to the glamorous actress Angie Dickinson.

The composer’s dark good looks and taste in clothes put him in a vaunted social orbit. He was “the only songwriter who didn’t look like a dentist,” lyricist Sammy Cahn once observed.

His aggressive pursuit of celebrity — including the hiring of a publicist, as well as appearances in a vermouth commercial and on TV specials — reportedly gnawed at David. With playwright Neil Simon, they helped create the musical “Promises, Promises,” which ran on Broadway from 1968 to 1972.

Neil Simon, Broadway’s long-reigning king of comedy, dies at 91





© Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
Mr. Bacharach reacts to applause after receiving the 2012 Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song from President Barack Obama.

The songwriters split bitterly the next year after working on “Lost Horizon,” a musical remake of the Frank Capra-directed classic about Shangri-La. The duo reportedly clashed over the division of anticipated profits, but the movie was a legendary commercial fiasco.

Around the same time, Mr. Bacharach became mired in a legal dispute over an album he was producing for Warwick, rupturing that relationship as well.

His 2013 memoir “Anyone Who Had a Heart,” a title borrowed from one of his hits, revealed his shortcomings as a husband and father. An admittedly “selfish” man much of his life, he invited his ex-wives — Stewart, Dickinson and Sager — to contribute to provide their perspective.

In 1993, he wed Jane Hansen, a former ski instructor. In addition to his wife, survivors include their two children, Oliver and Raleigh; and a son from Sager, Cristopher. A daughter from his second marriage, Nikki, died by suicide in 2007.

Mr. Bacharach, who received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008, expressed the deepest parts of himself in his music, which he continued to perform through recent years. Even as his voice thinned, he felt impelled to connect with an audience, to be plugged into life.

“I’m not a good New Year’s Eve act, you know what I mean?” he told the Daily Telegraph. “It’s about being able to have contact playing this kind of music. The pain that people go through — or the boredom, or the broken relationships, or the illnesses — music can be a powerful antidote sometimes. And you don’t get to see that just sitting in a room writing by yourself.”

Composer and Union College music professor Hilary Tann has died


SCHUYLERVILLE — Hilary Tann, a Welsh-born composer known for the lyricism and spirituality of her music and for her devotion to students over four decades of teaching at Union College in Schenectady, died suddenly Wednesday at home, according to her husband, David Bullard. She was believed to be 74 or 75. A cause of death was not immediately available.

“It’s a terrible loss for our Capital Region music community,” said David Alan Miller, artistic director of the Albany Symphony Orchestra.

A prolific composer whose work is represented on more than 60 CDs, including three solo discs of vocal, chamber and orchestral music, Tann wrote music that was performed worldwide, from Bangkok and Beijing to Cardiff in her native Wales and across the United States as well as locally. She was commissioned by festivals, ensembles and artists as varied as the North American Welsh Choir, the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, North Carolina Symphony, Empire State Youth Orchestra and pianist Max Lifchitz, a University at Albany professor and fellow composer.

“Her music has such honesty and passion to it, just like Hilary as a person,” said Ann-Marie Barker Schwartz, a local violinist who knew and worked with Tann for more than 30 years. Schwartz played Tann’s compositions in the former St. Cecilia Orchestra, which Schwartz co-founded in the early 1990s, and several times with her current ensemble, the Musicians of Ma’alwyck, of which Schwartz is the director.

For more than 15 years the Musicians of Ma’alwyck collaborated with students in Tann’s composing class at Union, with the ensemble rehearsing the students’ pieces and then playing them for a live recording before an audience.

“It was very special to see their delight at hearing their pieces played live instead of on a synthesizer,” said Schwartz. “Hilary always made them all feel like they had valid musical ideas and a musical voice. That was a a real gift.”   

Reviewing a 2020 recording by the Sirius Quartet of Tann’s 2014 quartet “And the Snow Did Lie,” Times Union classical critic Joseph Dalton wrote, “Tann’s music is shimmering and weightless, effective and moving.” He continued, “The central portions of the piece are rich with tunes that spill out in a flow more generous than deliberate, still sweet and rapturous … (reinforcing) the grounded spiritual ecstasy that is Tann’s distinctive musical outlook.”

Tann’s most frequent source of inspiration was nature and its scenery. “I can’t write if I don’t have the image. That’s the seed,” she told the Times Union in 2005. Her large catalog of works includes orchestra pieces with titles such as “Adirondack Light,” “The Open Field” and “Through the Echoing Timber.” 

A 2005 piece titled “From the Feather to the Mountain,” commissioned and premiered by ESYO, was inspired by pen-and-ink drawings by the late local artist Arnold Bittleman; that same year, Lifchitz premiered her piano work “Light from the Cliffs.” Reviewing a 2010 concert in Manhattan by the Lifchitz-led North/South Chamber Orchestra that featured Tann’s “The Walls of Morlais Castle,” Steve Smith of The New York Times called it “a handsome piece for string orchestra, with dusky melodies and bracing, rustic rhythms.” 

Born in a coal-mining village in South Wales after the end of World War II, Tann received her undergraduate degree in musical composition from the University of Wales at Cardiff and went on to earn master’s and doctoral degrees at Princeton University. She started at Union College in 1980, bringing a compositional bent to a department she would later chair for 15 years. She retired in 2019, retaining the title of an endowed chair, the John Howard Payne Professor of Music Emerita.

The college credits Tann with being an important part of the creation of its Taylor Music Center, a 14,000-square-foot project that included a 120-seat recital hall, Emerson Auditorium. It opened in 2006.

In addition to nature, Tann was inspired by Japanese culture and the traditional music of Japan, leading her to taking seven years of lessons on the shakuhachi, an ancient Japanese vertical bamboo flute. She traveled to Japan to study with a shakuhachi master.

“She knows more about it than most Japanese, and that’s no hyperbole,” Bullard, also a longtime student of Japanese language and culture, told the Times Union in 2005. A professional organist, Bullard married Tann in 2002. She, after many years of living solo in the Adirondacks, moved to the Marshall House, a Schuylerville home of historic significance that dates to the Revolutionary War and has been in the Bullard family for about a century.

Tann was also an aficionado and practitioner of haiku. She was for many years a member of a Saratoga County haiku group, whose monthly meetings lasted five or six hours, with members reading aloud a dozen or more new haiku that were then discussed. She coordinated Union’s 2015 hosting of the Haiku North America, the largest and oldest gathering of haiku poets. More than 100 people attended from around the world. 

“Haiku keeps me in the moment,” Tann told the Times Union in 2005. “With composing, one is always projecting ahead. (Haiku) pulls me back to the ‘A-ha!’ of the day.”

Funeral arrangements were unclear Thursday. Schwartz said she hopes to include a Tann composition in the Musicians of Ma’alwyck’s concert in June. A scholarship named after Tann and her predecessor as Union’s music department chair, called the Hugh Allen Wilson & Hilary Tann Annual Music Fund, was established by a 1990 Union graduate. It provides four to five students per year with scholarships to cover instrumental or voice lessons.

 

 

Ni/Co share the “blueprint” on new track – Aipate


Partners both in life and their music journey, Ni/Co are a fantastic duo. You just need to listen to their heartwarming latest single “blueprint” to appreciate them.

“blueprint” is an R&B-influenced pop song that offers listeners a template on how to keep the flame of love burning, even when everything is not going well.

The two singers’ magnificent vocals and delightful harmonies are complemented by the warmth in the beautiful guitar melodies as Dani and Colton deliver beautiful lyrics.

“blueprint” was released independently by Ni/Co. Find the duo on Instagram.