Burt Bacharach, Legendary Pop Composer, Dies at 94







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Songwriter, composer, producer and arranger Burt Bacharach, a dominant force in American popular music for half a century, died of natural causes in Los Angeles on Wednesday. He was 94.

Bacharach’s publicist Tina Brausam revealed the news on Thursday.

As a tunesmith, the nonpareil melodist Bacharach found fame in every medium.

His songs — many of them written with lyricist Hal David — became chart-topping successes, particularly in the hands of vocalist Dionne Warwick. Among ’60s songwriting duos, only Lennon-McCartney rivaled Bacharach-David in terms of commercial and artistic achievement. Bacharach collected six Grammys as a writer, arranger and performer from 1967-2005.

His music was ubiquitous on screens both big and small in the ’60s and ’70s, and he was recognized by the Academy Awards and Golden Globes for his work on “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” (1969) and “Arthur” (1981). He collected a 1971 Emmy for a TV recital of his work.

On Broadway, the 1968 Bacharach-David tuner “Promises, Promises” rolled up 1,281 performances and garnered a Tony nomination as best musical.

Bacharach’s first notable gig in showbiz was as singer Vic Damone’s accompanist after Bacharach’s discharge from the Army in 1952; he went on to play behind the Ames Brothers, Imogene Coca, Polly Bergen, Georgia Gibbs and Steve Lawrence. He also backed singer Paula Stewart, to whom he was married from 1953-58.

In 1957, Eddie Wolpin of Famous Music partnered Bacharach with David. Laboring in the pubbery’s Brill Building song mill, the pair scored a No. 4 hit with Perry Como’s “Magic Moments”; less memorably, Bacharach reached No. 33 with the Five Blobs’ horror movie theme “The Blob.”

Bacharach worked as Marlene Dietrich’s musical director from 1958-61 and found time to craft hits like the Shirelles’ “Baby It’s You” (No. 8, 1961), Chuck Jackson’s “Any Day Now” (No. 23, 1962) and — with David — Gene Pitney’s “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance” and “Only Love Can Break a Heart,” No. 4 and No. 2, respectively, in 1962.

That same year, Bacharach and David began their fruitful writing and production collaboration with former backup singer Warwick, whom the composer had met at a Drifters session. Her first single with the cleffers, “Don’t Make Me Over” — with lyrics inspired by a heated remark by the vocalist, who had accused the writers of lying to her — launched a fabled series of hits that mated Warwick’s silken voice with Bacharach’s subtly shifting melodies and David’s poignant lyrics.

Their top-10 collaborations of the ’60s included “Anyone Who Had a Heart,” “Walk on By,” “I Say a Little Prayer,” “Message to Michael,” “Do You Know the Way to San Jose,” “This Girl’s in Love With You” (previously a gender-swapped No. 1 hit for Herb Alpert) and “I’ll Never Fall in Love Again.” Warwick also interpreted Bacharach and David’s theme song for the 1968 Michael Caine vehicle “Alfie.”

The writers were ubiquitous on the charts and onscreen during the ’60s. Their top 40 hits included Jackie DeShannon’s “What the World Needs Now,” the 5th Dimension’s “One Less Bell to Answer” and Bobby Vinton’s “Blue on Blue.”

A move into film, enabled by actress Angie Dickinson, to whom Bacharach was married from 1966-80, led to soundtrack work that spawned several pop smashes. The 1965 farce “What’s New Pussycat” included Tom Jones’ title track, Manfred Mann’s “My Little Red Book” and Warwick’s “Here I Am.” Dusty Springfield’s sultry “The Look of Love” was featured in 1967’s James Bond spoof “Casino Royale.” Most memorably, B.J. Thomas’ breezy “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head,” from George Roy Hill’s serio-comic Western “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” reached No. 1; Bacharach received Oscars for best original song and score.

A film supplied the plot for Bacharach and David’s hit first stage venture: Billy Wilder’s darkly comedic “The Apartment” became “Promises, Promises,” which opened on Broadway in December 1968 to strong reviews. “Mr. Bacharach gives the musical its slinky, fur-coated feel of modernity,” wrote Clive Barnes in the New York Times. The show, which collected a best score Grammy in 1969, was revived on Broadway in 2010, with the addition of a couple of previous Bacharach-David hits.

The songwriters’ storied partnership dissolved acrimoniously after their misbegotten 1973 film musical adaptation of Frank Capra’s 1937 feature “Lost Horizon.” In the wake of that flop, Bacharach and David sued each other; Dionne Warwick launched a suit of her own against the team. For a time, Bacharach retreated to TV work and solo recording projects.

His writing career returned to commercial form after he partnered with lyricist Carole Bayer Sager, to whom he was married from 1981-92. Their “Arthur’s Theme,” written with singer Christopher Cross and Peter Allen for the ’81 Dudley Moore comedy “Arthur,” vaulted to No. 1 and collected an original song Oscar. In 1985, the couple’s “That’s What Friends Are For,” originally written for the feature “Night Shift,” renewed Bacharach’s association with Warwick; her all-star single version was No. 1 nationally for four weeks, and the composition received a Grammy as song of the year.

Bacharach’s career was relatively becalmed until the mid-’90s. He briefly collaborated again with David on the song “Sunny Weather Love,” for a 1993 Warwick album. However, he received greater attention for work with another writing partner: “God Give Me Strength,” an emotion-wracked ballad penned with admirer Elvis Costello for “Grace of My Heart,” Allison Anders’ 1995 feature about ’60s cleffers, led to the full-blown 1998 collaboration “Painted From Memory.” A track from the album won a Grammy.

During the ’90s and ’00s, Bacharach appeared in front of the camera as well: He did cameos in Mike Myers’ 1997 spy takeoff “Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery” and its two sequels. The latter films included covers of Bacharach-David’s “I’ll Never Fall in Love Again” (by Costello and Bacharach) and “Alfie” (as “Austin,” by the Bangles’ Susannah Hoffs, wife of director Jay Roach).

Bacharach was born in Forest Hills, N.Y. His father was a nationally known authority on menswear, his mother a painter and singer. He attended the same high school as Mike Stoller of the Leiber and Stoller songwriting team.

A pianist from an early age, Bacharach studied music at several institutions, including New York’s Mannes School of Music, where he was instructed by composers Henry Cowell and Darius Milhaud. His influences ranged from the impressionism of Ravel and Debussy to the energy and harmonic invention of bebop.

In 1972, Bacharach and David were inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame. They received the Recording Academy’s Trustees Award for their contributions as writers in 1997 and became the first songwriting team to be honored with the Library of Congress’ George & Ira Gershwin Prize for Popular Song in 2011.

In 1998, Rhino Records issued a three-CD compendium of Bacharach’s work, “The Look of Love.” A like-titled revue comprising Bacharach-David songs had a short-lived Broadway run in 2003.

Bacharach released a duo album with the Isley Brothers’ Ronald Isley in 2003, and in 2005 he issued “At This Time,” his first solo album in 26 years (and a best pop instrumental album Grammy winner). He continued to make concert appearances internationally.

His theatrical work continued late in his life and career: “New York Animals,” with music by Bacharach and book by Steven Sater, opened Off Broadway at the New Ohio Theater in 2015.

He is survived by his wife Jane and three children.

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Chiiild Releases “Antidote” Single | 2DOPEBOYZ


With his forthcoming album Better Luck in the Next Life, arriving on March 3, talented musician Chiiild shares the project’s latest focus track “Antidote.”

“’Antidote’ is about being enamored by a person. It describes the infatuation of watching someone live life optimistically and simply wanting a piece of that because they symbolize the light for you,” Chiild says about the track. “It is a representation of the idea that this person could save me from any emotional or physical struggle.”

Chiiild Releases “Antidote” Single was last modified: February 8th, 2023 by Meka



‘Brian Eno left a note in my zither case’: how fate intervened for ambient music pioneer Laraaji | Music


Edward Larry Gordon wasn’t the only broke musician in New York City in 1974 who found himself at a pawn shop, hocking his guitar to pay rent. But who else followed a flash of divine inspiration and instead walked out carrying an obscure type of zither? It would prove a sliding doors moment that decided the course of Gordon’s life.

“This inner guidance within me – this beautiful, clear, loving guidance – said, ‘Don’t take the money, swap the guitar for the autoharp in the window’,” says Gordon from his apartment in Harlem. Now almost 80, he prefers to be called by his stage name, Laraaji. “I decided to follow that rabbit hole upward and left with the autoharp and five dollars – I did some bargaining,” he grins. “One thing led to another and soon I was playing it on the sidewalks of Brooklyn.”

It also changed the course of ambient music. Only a few years later, Gordon would find himself in the studio with Brian Eno, recording what would become the third volume of Eno’s hugely influential ambient series. In the subsequent decades, Gordon has toured the world many times, collaborated with, remixed and been remixed by artists from across the creative spectrum. He has spellbound generations with his spiritual, improvisational music, powerful early examples of which have just been unearthed and reissued on Segue to Infinity, a new box set from archival label Numero Group.

This miraculous plot twist in Gordon’s life was perhaps inevitable. “I was a churchgoer from an early age,” he says. “As a child, the choirs singing gospel and negro spirituals were very uplifting. Music helped me escape the world of adults and transported me into my imagination.”

While his first ambition had been to become a chemical engineer, another last-minute change of heart sent him to Howard University, where he studied piano and composition. “I’d grown up in the Baptist church, looking to Jesus and wanting to be like him, to help people. I wanted to compose beautiful music that was transportive, healing and uplifting, to liberate people from suffering.”

His days were spent studying Beethoven’s masses and requiems (“all western classical music – no Asian, no gamelan, no African”) while in the evenings he pursued his interests in jazz and R&B, with a sideline in comedy. He auditioned at New York nightclub the Bitter End, and relocated to the city, where he performed at the Apollo Theater and won a role in Robert Downey Sr’s Putney Swope, an infamous satire on race and advertising about a black ad-man whose avant garde campaigns drive viewers wild and win the ire of the government.

Laraaji performs All of a Sudden

A disparaging take on his performance from a local poet “sobered me up”, says Gordon. He had only detoured into comedy to earn enough cash “to buy a grand piano and get composing”, but the controversy stirred by Putney Swope had Gordon questioning his spiritual grounding. He attended seminars and read the works of Sri Chinmoy, Satchidananda, Krishnamurti, Baba Ram Dass and Osho. He “started exploring meditation to get a sense of my inner values and ambitions”. A month before his trip to the pawn shop, he heard “a brass choir in my musical imagination that turned me on to the experience of eternity and the simultaneity of everything in the universe”.

It was this mystical sound he aimed to recreate with his autoharp. In a trance-like state he would experiment for hours, developing “a vocabulary I could use in these extended improvisations. I explored different tunings, I added electric pick-ups, I hammered the strings”. He then took it to the streets, where he would sit in a lotus position and perform for hours at a time.

New York in the 1970s was a city in turmoil – grimy, violent and neglected – the ideal venue, it seems, for the kind of hypnotic enlightenment Gordon and his autoharp were offering. “The music – this wafting sea of harmonics – had a trance-inducing, spellbinding effect,” he remembers. “Yes, it went against the grain of the environment, the hustle and bustle. But it allowed people to just be, to chill and reflect.”

It proved unexpectedly lucrative, too. “In the early days I was making $6 an hour. Later, when I was also selling self-produced cassettes, I might make between $150 and $250 in an afternoon. I could sustain myself.” Performing among the people, he says, felt “like the opposite to how you feel when you think you’re getting in trouble. I always felt I was making a positive contribution”.

The sidewalk performances led to Gordon and his autoharp being booked to play meditation centres, yoga classes and spiritual conferences. At one holistic lecture, his performance lulled lawyer Stuart White into such a satisfying trance he paid for Gordon to enter the studio in 1978, cutting two 24-minute pieces that treated the autoharp’s shimmering tones with effects pedals. These meditative epics composed his debut album, Celestial Vibration, which is now being rereleased, accompanied by six further extended pieces recorded around that time.

A lack of distribution hampered the album’s reach, however. Time for fate to intervene once more. “A year later, a couple approached me after a performance and asked if I knew of Fripp and Eno, because they heard a connection,” he says. The duo of King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp and the former Roxy Music imp had recorded a pair of avant garde albums: No Pussyfooting and Evening Star paired tape-loops with Fripp’s innovative “Frippertronics” approach. Gordon made a vague note to investigate further.

‘It went against the grain’ … Laraaji. Photograph: PR

He still hadn’t got around to it when, a month later, he opened his eyes after a performance to find among the dollar bills in his zither case a note “ripped out of a pretty high-end journal”, signed by Eno, inviting Gordon to join a music project. “I went to see him the next day and we talked about ambient music, the first time I’d heard the term.”

Eno was obsessed with the concept, which he described as an exploration of “other ways of hearing music, and other ways of using music”. The same year Celestial Vibration was recorded, Eno had released Music for Airports, his first ambient album, and he also produced Harold Budd’s minimalist masterpiece, The Pavilion of Dreams. “Brian liked the trance-inducing, repetitive and minimalist aspect of my music,” he says. “We went to a studio and he made suggestions, but the music was still spontaneous.”

Released in 1980 as the third in Eno’s ambient series, the resulting album, Day of Radiance, refined the ideas of Celestial Vibrations and raised Gordon’s profile considerably. In the years since, he has built an eye-wateringly voluminous discography, performed for meditation groups, studied with gurus such as Swami Satchidananda and developed a lucrative sideline as a laughter therapist.

He has seen his early works anthologised by hip labels such as Stones Throw Records (and Numero Group), been the subject of remix projects that have recontextualised his sounds and collaborated with an eclectic mix of artists, including BadBadNotGood, Roger Eno, Mia Doi Todd, Merz and Sun Araw. All the while, he was still following his own path and finding new potential and new directions in the methods he pioneered almost 50 years ago. It’s the collaborations he particularly relishes now. “I did a lot of it via WeTransfer during the pandemic,” he says. “I love sitting in on any musical situation and making a meaningful contribution, adding a celestial, exotic support to it. I learn something new from every artist I work with.”

Almost 50 years on from that critical juncture in his career, Gordon has no regrets. “I chose the road less travelled,” he smiles. “I’d thought I’d become a jazz keyboardist, or a movie actor, or a chemical engineer. But this path has been deeply fulfilling.” Touring the world has, he says, enabled him to “see the noses and faces of the people who buy my albums. They tell me how they use the music. Some turn the lights out, play the records and smoke cannabis,” he laughs. “A teacher told me he plays it to quiet his class down. And some use it in the way I intended.”

He wears the mantle of new age pioneer lightly. “I can relate to people not being able to relate to new age music,” he says. “Call it what you like. Experimental music. Psychedelic experience integration music. I call it beautiful and groovy music.

“To hear people use it how they do lets me say hello to that child within me that wanted to be like Jesus and inspire people’s spirits to soar – I feel as if I’m still connecting with my childhood vision.”

Juan Diego Flórez | career | biography


Who is Juan Diego Flórez?

Juan Diego Flórez is a famous Peruvian operatic tenor. His breakthrough came in 1996 when, at the Rossini Festival in the Italian city of Pesaro, he performed the leading tenor role in Matilde di Shabran.

In June 2007, he was awarded his country’s highest decoration, the Knight Grand Cross in the Order of the Sun of Peru

How old is Juan Diego Flórez

Juan Diego Flórez was born on January 13, 1973 in Lima, Peru

Did he come from a musical family?

His father was singer Rubén Flórez

What makes Juan Diego Flórez so special?

He stole the show at the Last Night of the 2016 BBC Proms, inspiring the same rapture there as he has at opera houses worldwide. Marvellous purity of tone and breathtaking virtuosity make his singing irresistible, coupled with good looks and delight in performance.

His ability to stimulate even the most jaded opera palettes was demonstrated when, overturning an iron-clad tradition, the famously strict La Scala audience demanded an encore of ‘Oh, mes amis’ from Donizetti’s La fille du régiment, with its heroic sequence of nine top Cs. Since the piece was a speciality of Flórez’s hero, the late Luciano Pavarotti, the ovation gave an inevitable sense of the torch being passed.

Geoffrey Smith

In his own words: When you’re feeling relaxed and comfortable, you’re feeling what you’re singing. And then you just communicate. And that’s the most beautiful moment, because the audience can feel what you’re really feeling.’

We named Juan Diego Flórez one of the greatest tenors of all time

Is Juan Diego Flórez married?

Juan Diego Flórez married German-born Australian Julia Trappe in 2007 and they have two children

Juan Diego Flórez’s greatest recording

Juan Diego Flórez Decca 475 8418

Main image: © Franz Johann Morgenbesser from Vienna, Austria, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Dustin Lynch dreamed of being a golfer before Birds Nest debut


Lynch is headlining the opening night of performances at the Birds Nest on Wednesday alongside Lainey Wilson and Chris Lane.

PHOENIX — Did you know country music star Dustin Lynch had a scholarship to play golf in college?

His love for fairways and tee boxes is only matched by his appreciation of country music and this week he gets to experience both.

With his affinity for golf, there’s really no surprise performing at the Birds Nests in Scottsdale during the WM Phoenix Open is on his bucket list. And this week he’s checking that off his list!

Lynch is headlining the opening night of performances at the Birds Nest on Wednesday alongside Lainey Wilson and Chris Lane.

He talked with 12News, sharing that golf has been a passion in his family for years.

“I played like every day since I can remember walking, so my dad was pro at a country club believe it or not in Tullahoma, Tennessee, my hometown,” said Lynch.

The country music star said he had a scholarship to play at Lipscomb University in Nashville and was on the golf team there.

Lynch told 12News he considered taking a professional path with golf, but ultimately, he found music really speaks to him, but the sport is still offering some great analogies of life.

“Music is kind of like when you get on stage, it’s a guaranteed final pairing on Sunday. The adrenaline is there every time, and with golf, you kind of have to earn that juice, if you will,” said Lynch. “So on music, it just became a lot more fun and more consistent to feel that adrenaline and that kick.”

Lynch shared some of the guys he played with in college are now playing on the PGA Tour and he’s rooting for them through the tournament.

He said he feels lucky to be performing on the first night at the Birds Nest, so he can enjoy the rest of the week in Arizona.

“It’s that first night fever, right? They’re not going to be worn down from partying all day at 16, or on the course, or wherever they’re going so we kind of lucked out getting the first night there and I’ve got a lot of friends playing the rest of the week so we’re going to kick it off in style and do what we do,” said Lynch.

You can check out tickets to the Birds Nest online.

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Karmsavi’s New EP ‘Virgin Thought’ Earns Huge Appreciations …


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The Virgin Thought EP has 5 songs, which touches the hearts of the listeners because of their deep meanings and a cultural connect. Released in October 2022, the new Punjabi Song has already more than One million hits.

Language is not a barrier when it comes to enjoying the music. This fact is truly alive when one comes across the ‘Virgin Thought’ Punjabi Song by Karmsavi on music streaming networks as well as social media. Music lovers, across the geographies with distinct language and cultural affiliations, are showering their love on this melodious EP. Anyone can feel elated by listening to the melodious virgin thought on youtube .

Virgin Thought has emerged as one of the biggest hits of the Karmsavi Production. All songs of the EP have lyrics from Karmsavi himself. And he once again mesmerizes the audience with his melodious composition. The EP features music by Mastermind and Manveer Malhi is the Mix Master. Besides enjoying an immense love from the music lovers and fans, this Karmsavi hit has also earned substantial positive reviews from the music critics.

Today, Karmsavi boast of a crazy fan base on all social media channels. His fans adore this EP because it touches their hearts. Upon release, the heart touching song helps create a positive feel in the mind and psyche of the listeners. Many of them acclaim that the music is so refreshing that never loses its effect. While some of the fans that Karmsavi’s voice is so vibrating that it genuinely connects to one’s heart. The social media says immensely about this talented artist and his musical masterpieces.

With his meaningful lyrics and sweet voice, Karmsavi has always been an asset to the Indian music industry. He has so many brilliant songs to his credit and needs no introduction for all those who cherish good and meaningful music. Karmsavi primarily writes and sings in Punjabi and believes in bringing cultural stories to the fore for the listeners to feel treasured and elated at the same time.

When asked will ever think about signing in Hindi, he aptly states that he believes in entertaining the audience and language is just a way of expression. His songs are loved by the Hindi-speaking folks as well because the songs are easy to comprehend.

The artist has incredible future plans to engage the listeners with the music that can go deep into one’s soul. He has promised to the media to reveal the names of the future projects in times to come. And his fans are excited again with the expectations of being spellbound by the signature Karmsavi heart-touching music.

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Pop star Anne-Marie spotted filming new music video at Adventure Island in Southend


Essex-born pop star Anne-Marie has returned to her home county to film the music video for her new single ‘SAD B!TCH’. The 31-year-old Essex born and raised musician headed to Southend for the production.

Anne-Marie, who was born in East Tilbury, filmed the video for her new hit single entirely at popular seafront attraction Adventure Island in Southend. In the new video, she walks around the deserted destination, including rides on Rage and the Flying Jumbos.



On February 3, Adventure Island shared the music video from YouTube and said: “Have you seen us in Anne-Marie’s new video yet?” Philip Miller MBE, the owner of Adventure Island, said the Essex star was “a very welcomed guest”.

READ MORE: Missing aristocrat’s mum ‘open letter’ plea as couple disappeared with newborn baby

Anne-Marie tweeted: “We found an abandoned unused theme park and jumped the gates and turned on all the rides!!! Jk, it was shut for January so just hired it out but just believe the first thing I said – it’s way more fun.”

The music video, which was released on February 3, has received more than 850,000 views on YouTube. It is not the first time celebrities have come to Adventure Island in Essex to take part in filming activities.

In October 2019 popular YouTube group The Sidemen paid a visit to play hide and seek. Their video was watched more than 18 million times. Cast members from Eastenders and Celebs Go Dating have also previously been spotted filming at the tourist attraction.

Bandmates will share the spirit of Ron Miles’ music in tribute performance at TACAW


Jazz quartet “Rainbow Sign” will perform at The Arts Campus at Willits (TACAW) on Saturday, honoring the life and music of the band’s late cornet player Ron Miles.

The band will be playing Miles’ music from the “Rainbow Sign” album; drummer Brian Blade said the album is also the group’s namesake.

Blade said the group may also perform new songs Miles wrote before the horn player died of complications from a rare blood disorder in March of 2022. Blade joins guitarist Bill Frisell, pianist Jason Moran and bassist Thomas Morgan in the quartet performance this weekend.

“Ron had an amazingly creative mind, but through the thread of complexity, there was still this beauty and melodicism,” Blade said in a Zoom interview on Wednesday.

Blade recalled Miles’ love for music beyond genre, and the “unshakeable joy” he brought to performances even through the pain of illness.

Though the performance at TACAW this weekend will likely be a more “contemplative experience” than a raucous show, audiences may still find themselves moving to the music “if the spirit moves them that way,” Blade said with a laugh.

Blade said the band hopes to carry on Miles’ spirit by embracing the messages of the music that Miles championed.

“Ron was, I think, on a mission to speak to staying aware, staying vigilant, being present with each other,” Blade said.

There are other themes, too, paralleling the writing of James Baldwin — “thoughts on equality and inequality and man’s inhumanity to man, and how to remedy that,” Blade said.

The band, “Rainbow Sign,” and Baldwin’s 1963 book “The Fire Next Time,” both derive their names from the same spiritual, “God gave Noah the rainbow sign, no more water but fire next time.”

According to Blade, Miles used his compositions to explore the remedies of injustice.

“I think the music for Ron was a big part of that … to offer a sort of healing balm of harmony and rhythm and melody,” Blade said.  

In the wake of Miles’ death, Blade said the music has been a balm for him, too, as he navigates the grief and loss of his band’s leader.

“We hope to carry that same spirit, even in his absence, to embrace his voice,” Blade said.

As of Wednesday afternoon, tickets are still available for the “Rainbow Sign” performance as well as a combination “dinner and show” with a menu from Epicure Catering’s Julia and Allen Domingos.

The dinner begins at 6 p.m. and the show begins at 8 p.m. on Saturday.



EMPIRE Massage Chair Review: Stylish, Compact & Affordable Chair For The Singapore Home


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Aching back, sores and injuries after a long hard week at work? How does a 24-7 massage in your living room sound? We took a seat in a EMPIRE Massage Chair to see whether it meets the expectations of an exhausted parent.



Although EMPIRE is a new entrant to the massage chair industry long dominated by big players, it promises a compact massage chair that gives effective massages at a super accessible price point of $1,399 whereas industry prices are usually between $3,000 to $5,000.

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EMPIRE MASSAGE CHAIR


EMPIRE Massage Chair: Overview Of Features


READ: Enjoy Discounts on Omni-Theatre Shows from Now Till 26 Feb


This chair offers a full body massage – neck, back, arms, shoulder, hips, calves all the way to the soles of the feet.

It is also the market’s most compact massage chair measuring 70 cm by 150 cm, and can easily fit into any living space.


10 Hands Massage

Experience the 10 Hands sensation massage on the EMPIRE Chair – yes it does feel like ten hands massaging you at the same time!

Of course, everything is customisable so you can have massages on targeted areas by using the touchscreen control pad to manage all controls including speed and strength.

In addition to the 10 Hands massagers, there are compression airbags for shoulder, hands and calves. Compression therapy helps relieve fatigue, stress and pain and simulates the actual massage from a therapist.

For those who love foot massages, the leg and sole reflexology will be a balm to your soles! After standing for a long time or a busy time doing chores, the rollers relieve the aches from the legs and feet. To maximise the experience, there is also heat therapy at 45 degrees Celsius applied to the calf areas stimulating blood flow.


Zero Gravity

To get a top-notch massage experience, the Zero Gravity function is a must-do. EMPIRE’s massage chair can tilt up to 170 degrees which makes one feel like you are levitating. This also keeps the pressure off the spine as you float into a zero gravity world.

One will clearly doze off to sleep with a Bluetooth surround sound system that projects your favourite tracks and ambient music right into your ears.


Our EMPIRE Massage Chair Experience & Review

After a 20-minute session on it, I felt rejuvenated and really impressed on how the massages were soothing. As one who prefers lighter massages, I loved how I could customise the intensity of the strength for every massager.

My favourite function had to be the zero-gravity mode! It felt really relaxing just “suspended” and any tired parent would welcome the chance to just “float” in a massage chair. It’s easy to drift off to sleep while receiving a “knead-ful” massage.

Given the attractive pricing for such a powerful machine, I dare say the EMPIRE Massage Chair is a worthy addition to any household. Its sleek design shaped like a Business Class cabin gives it a futuristic look unlike the traditional massage chairs.

A stylish massage chair plus one that gives your sore muscles a good rub whenever you need it – it’s every parent’s dream!


For an even more Luxe Edition, try the EMPIRE PRO

To experience an even stronger massage, take a seat in the EMPIRE PRO. It mimics hand movements like a real masseur with techniques like tapping, kneading, deep tissue intrusion. It also scans the body to tailor the massage accordingly.

The wow factor comes in a form of a Thai Stretch Mode which is programmed to stretch the body muscles thoroughly. Through compression, intrusion and stretching, feel your aches relieved in a classic Thai-style massage.

To experience the EMPIRE & EMPIRE PRO, it out at their showroom at CT Hub, #09-19, 2 Kallang Avenue, S339407. 

You can also get more details about at the EMPIRE website.


EMPIRE MASSAGE CHAIR GIVEAWAY!

Stand a chance to win your very own EMPIRE Massage Chair in our Little Day Out giveaway. Do the following steps for a chance to win:

  1. Follow Little Day Out on Facebook and Instagram.
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Submit your entry by 11.59 pm, Sunday, 19 February 2023.



Nagavalli album release, J.I.D. and Smino, Death Cab for Cutie, more


On her latest album, “Numinosum,” Austin singer-songwriter Nagavalli meanders easily between Eastern and Western sounds, a unifying throughline provided by the power of her luminescent voice.

“Growing up in India, I formally trained in Indian classical music for several years. I didn’t train formally in any Western styles,” she says.

Before relocating to America as an adult, her exposure to Western music was limited to a few records her father had at home. As she made her home in Austin, she became immersed in the local singer-songwriter scene, learning to blend her music with folk, Americana and Latin sounds.

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“When you experience the styles blending seamlessly, when the music and the merging happens naturally without ever having to force the fusion, the beauty of those moments is the most rewarding part to me,” she says.

For the new album, she embellished a cover of Eliza Gilkyson’s “Midnight Oil” with classical Indian flute. She based the lilting English-language song “I See You” “on the beautiful Indian classical raga “Hamsadhwani” and included Indian instruments like sitar, tabla and surbahar throughout the album, she says.

One of the most buoyant tracks on the album is also one of the most traditional, “Damadam Mast Qalandar,” a joyous song that praises the Sufi saint of Sindh (Pakistan), Lal Shahbaaz Qalandar.

“Many Sindhis in India also sing Damadam Mast Qalandar in praise of Lord Jhulelal — considered an incarnation of God Varuna and the most revered deity (a water deity) in their culture. It’s an amazing amalgam of religions and cultures, inherently bringing a message of unity,” she says.

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For the release party, Nagavalli is bringing a host of talented friends. Her backing ensemble will include a full band with guest appearances from Carrie Rodriguez, Patrice Pike, Indrajit Banerjee and Oliver Rajamani. Singer-songwriter Betty Soo will open the show.

“It’s truly a testament to the fact that music, indeed, has no boundaries. Folks can expect an experience, an East-West sonic journey,” she says.

More information: 8 p.m. Saturday at Stateside at the Paramount Theatre. Tickets start at $25. austintheatre.org.

More concerts in Austin this week

Thursday-Friday: Death Cab for Cutie at ACL Live. Calling all millennials (and other fans of 2000s indie rock): if you failed to get your sob on during Austin City Limits Music Festival last year, Ben Gibbard and company are back with the tour for their latest, “Asphalt Meadows.” Technically sold out. 8 p.m. acllive.com.

Friday: Amy Ray at Stubb’s BBQ. The Georgia native best known as half of the iconic folk duo Indigo Girls brings the tour for her solo album, “If It All Goes South,” to Austin. $22 advance, $27 day of show. stubbsaustin.com.






© Suzanne Cordeiro / Special to American-Statesman
Amy Ray of The Indigo Girls plays this week at Stubb’s BBQ.

Saturday: Cécile McLorin Salvant at Bass Concert Hall. The brilliant singer has dominated the vocal jazz category at the Grammy Awards for most of the last decade. This is the tour for her 2022 album “Ghost Song,” but she has a new release, “Melusine,” coming in May. $10 and up. texasperformingarts.org.

Tuesday: J.I.D. and Smino at Stubb’s. As far as places to woo your boo on Valentine’s Day go, it doesn’t get much better than the co-headlined “Luv Is 4ever Tour” by the two ascendant rappers. Unfortunately, you’ll have to hit the secondary market for tickets, because it’s technically sold out. stubbsaustin.com






© David KA provided by umusic.com
Rapper J.I.D. co-headlines a bill with Smino at Stubb’s BBQ on Valentine’s Day.

This article has been updated to correct the date of Cécile McLorin Salvant’s show at Bass Concert Hall.

This article originally appeared on Austin American-Statesman: Austin music picks: Nagavalli album release, J.I.D. and Smino, Death Cab for Cutie, more