Ricky Reed Breaks Down the Creation of Lizzo’s ‘About Damn Time’


High on a terrifyingly steep and narrow street in the Echo Park neighborhood of Los Angeles, inside an unassuming house that turns out to be much larger than it looks from the street, lies a hit factory.

Vintage keyboards, guitars and exotic percussion instruments festoon the walls and lie in corners; microphones, amplifiers, wires and other pieces of daunting equipment are in nearly every room, but it’s a surprisingly homey and comfortable house.

“It’s kind of a metaphor for our whole operation: It looks small at first,” says the proprietor of this hit factory — Ricky Reed, Grammy-winning songwriter and producer of songs by Lizzo, Camila Cabello, Halsey, Jon Batiste, Twenty One Pilots, Maren Morris and Bomba Estereo; head of the Nice Life label and Variety’s Hitmakers Producer of the Year. “But then you realize that a big community of people have run in and out of here.”

Downstairs, the main studio is centered around a giant Harrison 4032 solid-state recording console (the same brand, although not the same one, used to record Michael Jackson’s “Off the Wall” and “Thriller”), while off in a different room is the battered black Steinway grand piano that Reed purchased from the legendary L.A. studio Sound City. “All kinds of people supposedly played this piano — Fleetwood Mac, Elton John, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers,” he says. “I think there was a Heartbreakers sticker on the bottom side, but I’m not sure it’s still there.” (Journalistic duty compels us to get down on all fours and look — yep, it’s there.)

The underside of the historic Sound City grand piano, with Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers sticker intact.

Yet the album and song that have brought us here are Lizzo’s “Special” and “About Damn Time,” which racked up five 2023 Grammy nominations — including three of the top awards, Album, Song and Record of the Year — and was released on Reed’s Nice Life label through Atlantic Records.

Reed (real name: Eric Frederic) began working with Lizzo (real name: Melissa Jefferson) in 2016. His touch was immediately evident on her debut EP “Coconut Oil,” several songs from which appeared on her Grammy-winning “Cuz I Love You” full-length three years later. He brought an effervescent pop touch that was not in evidence on her earlier releases, and although many songs on the album sound positive and empowering, there’s a lot more to conveying that than first meets the ear. (For more on Reed’s career, listen to the podcast below or see Variety‘s interview from earlier this year.) Reed sits behind the console and cues up some tracks.

This is such a cozy and livable environment — do you find it’s better to be comfortable, or somewhere grittier to kind of keep you on edge?

I like newness. If I can both be comfortable and feel some sense of newness, then that’s it for me — I’ve been here since 2015, so the newness is wearing off. But when we go to other spaces, I have my engineers set us up in what I call the “living room setup.” If I’m going to be writing songs or playing with people, we’ll kind of get into this kumbaya circle, as opposed to someone playing bass over here and the songwriter is 15 feet away. Some artists like to go in the booth to sing, but others, like Leon Bridges, whose record we did here, sits right in that chair [he gestures to a seat near the mixing desk] and cut all of his vocals here. A lot of times he wouldn’t even wear headphones. We do a lot of recording in this room.

How did “About Damn Time” came together?

We had been working on this album for a couple of years, and we knew we needed one more record that could be sort of a thesis statement for the album. Lizzo wanted a declaration, so to speak — she wanted to give everybody a warm hug, and say that things are maybe not as easy as they felt a couple of years ago, but to still give people some joy and hope. So in the first or second week of January of this year, I went in with [cowriter] Blake Slatkin and jammed on a couple of ideas. I believe it started with him playing the piano chords that would end up being our pre-chorus. [He plays the song’s isolated piano track, which you can hear on the podcast below.]

And as soon as he did that, I then heard this chord — an E flat minor ninth. What’s really interesting about that chord, for the music-theory nerds out there, is it doesn’t have a third in it. Now, usually the third in a chord is what determines if it sounds major or it sounds minor. If you omit that third entirely, you get a chord that you’re not quite sure how to feel about — “Is this a happy feeling or a sad feeling?” It doesn’t spell that out for you. And building the song around a chord like that, to me, was gonna be the vehicle for Lizzo to give us this kind of message.

Why would an ambiguous chord like that result in such a happy and positive and confident song?

Great question. I think the song is happy and positive and confident, but it also says, “Look, we’ve been going through it, and we’re still going through it, there’s a lot of challenges out here right now.” And having the song based around an instrumental that just felt happy or just felt dark wouldn’t be doing it justice. So once we got that chord, that’s when I sat down and laid in the bass groove, and as soon as it hit, Blake and I yelled — we knew we had a record. Lizzo came into the studio and brought her magic and made the song what it is today.

Did you already have the chorus and the bridge?

We had a pretty good idea of what this would sound like — we didn’t have the bridge, but had that verse groove, we had the pre-chorus, and [another bit]. But as always, Lizzo is the only one who can write Lizzo-isms, and to be honest, getting the lyric and melody right was the longest part. It was probably a couple months of day-in, day-out, talking about the message that she wanted to convey and getting it just right.

It seems like a simple message, but simplicity can sometimes be the hardest and most laborious thing to get across.

Exactly. But in the end, after all the hard work, we’re really proud that we landed it right where we wanted it to be without getting overcomplicated, considering everything that went into it. There are so many alternate versions — I tried countless things, there’s at least a handful of different, fully produced bridges that I made. “Cut it, it’s not good enough.” I worked on a bridge for five full days in the studio, with a whole different chord progression and melody, and something with a vocoder solo on it, or a little bass lick. Blake and Lizzo were like, “Not good enough.”

How do you keep perspective when you’re working on something for that long with that many different possibilities?

That’s probably the greatest unspoken challenge of all this, how to keep track of what’s fundamentally good and exciting when you’re so close to it. I think the way you know is to really, really to stay in touch with your body and what feels genuinely good. I have to do a lot of stepping back and listening to it from the top — does this feel good? Does it make me want to move? That feeling is the ultimate decider. You can cook up a lot of things with your brain and your intentions, but it has to go through the body.

How do you get distance? Do you just listen to something else?

There was a point where I was waking up in the middle of the night and the song was playing in my head — like a verse or lyric we had been working on was literally looping. And I was laying in bed one night like, “What’s a kind of a palate cleanser I could do just to get this out of my head?” And the most far-off thing that I could imagine was the opening guitar riff to “My Own Worst Enemy” by Lit. (Laughter) “Not-not-not-not-not-not, ba-ba…” That did it.

You’ve said that Lizzo recorded a hundred or 120 songs for this album? What’s going to happen to them?

I didn’t produce the entire album, but she and I probably did 20 or 30, all total. And when I think a song has potential, I’m going to take it as far as I can towards completion, even if nobody’s heard it yet. But she is the hardest-working musician I’ve ever seen in the studio, the countless days and hours of experimentation, going back in and being like, “Let me see if I can beat that verse, let me see if we can beat that melody in the chorus.” It’s just so admirable and so impressive to watch. So yes, there are many, many more songs that didn’t make the album. Will they be heard someday? I don’t know. Maybe she’ll put out some kind of “Lizzo From the Vault” or something. But for right now, this was the statement that made sense to her.

The messages in all of the songs on the album are very positive and self-helpful in a lot of ways — was that something she was going for?

Oh, 100%. She’s very aware of the impact the power that her words have, even before she had a massive podium like she does now. I think she thinks of her music in large part like a service to fans, especially on this album with so many people listening. We’d have a great song and she would say, “Yeah, this is great, but the negativity in this is not something I think the world needs right now. It’s off.” Simple as that. Those kinds of small decisions, day by day, lead up to an album, and that’s why it feels cohesive and why the messaging feels so strong.

How did you end up working with her?

I’d had some success with Twenty One Pilots and Icona Pop — Atlantic artists — and first Brandon Davis [now Atlantic EVP] introduced me to [president of A&R] Pete Ganbarg and then both of them introduced me to [co-chairman/CEO] Craig Kallman and they essentially said, “Have you ever thought about doing a joint venture deal with a label?”  I had seen producers take label jobs and they didn’t seem as happy in the office as they were in the studio, so I was pretty hesitant. And as he had many times before, my great manager, Larry Wade, said, “Give it a shot. All this means is that if we find something great, we have to bring it to them and no other major label. It’s going to last a couple of years, and if we don’t find anything, no big deal.” Okay, fine.

Probably four or five months after we signed the deal, my booking agent, Matt Morgan, who’s now at UTA, told Larry, “You guys should check out this artist that I’m booking, she’s selling out small clubs and she’s amazing live — her name’s Lizzo.” Larry flew out to see her at Terminal Five in New York, opening for Sleater-Kinney, and was blown away: “You gotta meet this girl.” So she flew from Minneapolis out here for a couple days, she sat where you’re sitting right now, we got familiar and our first day, we made a song called “Worship.” I took the song home to my now-wife and one of my best friends, Bradley Heron, who’s now the president of Nice Life, and I played it for them and said, “We can’t not sign this artist, right?”

What’s happening with the other artists on the label?

Along with Lizzo, we have another partnership with Atlantic Records for an amazing band from L.A. called the Marias. You could call them an indie band, but they play more akin to an R&B group, and their singer, María Zardoya, sings in English and Spanish.

We also have a partnership with Warner Records for an incredible young artist named John Robert. I met him when he was 16 and the first time he played and sang for me, I was blown away. My first question for him was, “Who introduced you to Jeff Buckley? It’s just uncanny.” And he was like, “I don’t know who that is.” I said, “I’m in!”

We also have artists that were signed to us independently, with no major label involved. Junior Mesa, another sort-of-indie act that blurs the lines between psychedelia and soul, based out of Bakersfield. We have an artist from Orange County named Saint Panther, who is a songwriter-producer-singer — I don’t even know had to describe her, she touches on hip-hop, soul R&B, even dabbles in reggaeton. We also have our latest signing to the label, an artist named Stevie. She is from East L.A. County, she plays cumbia woven in with bits of Mexican regional reggaeton. She’s one of the most creative and strange kids I’ve ever met.

And now we are full speed ahead: It’s my job to give them as much time and energy as a superstar, because that’s the promise I make to them when we sign a deal together. We’re all ready for a big, bright, exciting 2023.



Iconic London sued by Warner Music over unlicensed social media videos


By Amanda Pauley
1-Dec-2022

The British make-up brand has been accused of using 165 of the record label’s songs in videos on Instagram and TikTok without a music licence

The lawsuit claims the brand used Warner Music songs on its Instagram and TikTok posts without a licence

Iconic London is being sued by Warner Music for using unlicensed songs in its social media marketing.

The British make-up brand has been accused of using more than 165 of the music label’s “most popular and valuable works” without permission.

The lawsuit claims the brand used songs by singers Dua Lipa, Selena Gomez and Ariana Grande on its Instagram and TikTok posts without a licence.

Filed in the Californian federal courts, Warner Music said in the suit: “While Iconic’s social media ‘commercials’ have been instrumental to Iconic’s success, neither defendants nor their influencer partners have sought permission.

“Or paid for the privilege to use the sound recordings and musical compositions that are featured in them.”

The music company has also raised issues with the cosmetics company using songs to soundtrack videos created in partnership with influencers.

In the claim, the label said these typically feature “individuals showcasing or demonstrating one or more of Iconic’s cosmetics and skin care products”.

“And that music “is typically played[s] the entire duration of the… video”. 

Instagram and TikTok’s music licences only cover the use of songs in user-generated content on the platform, not branded videos.

Instagram’s terms of use state that the “use of music for commercial or non-personal purposes in particular is prohibited unless you have obtained appropriate licences”.

TikTok’s Terms of Service claims that “no rights are licenced with respect to sound recordings”.

Cosmetics Business has reached out to Iconic London for comment. 

The licence issue 

Iconic London is not the first company to assume that music used in videos posted on Instagram and TikTok is covered by the platforms’ own music licences. 

UK fitness apparel brand Gymshark received a copyright infringement lawsuit from Sony Music Entertainment last year.

The record label claimed Gymshark had “achieved its success by infringing sound recordings and musical compositions belonging to a number of different content owners”. 

The legal document claimed videos posted to Facebook, Instagram and TikTok “featured popular sound recordings as an integral part of the presentation”. 

Energy drink company Bang has also received a lawsuit from Sony over music in its online videos. 

It allegedly used at least 132 unlicensed Sony-controlled sound recordings in posts on TikTok, Instagram, YouTube and Facebook.

Companies

Art Beat: Performing animals, movies, music and more


Popovich Comedy Pet Theatre

Friday, Dec. 9, 7 p.m.
Edmonds Center for the Arts
410 4th Ave. N., Edmonds

If your kids are anything like mine, this is something they would love! Picture the cutest pet trick you can imagine. You’ll see it here! From dogs jumping rope to cats pushing strollers, this show is ideal for kids and kids-at-heart. Scoop up your tickets here.

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Art Movie Nite at Graphite: A double feature

Friday, Dec. 9, 7 p.m.
Graphite
202a Main St., Edmonds

Graphite is hosting a double feature for its December Movie Nite. The 1952 classic, Moulin Rouge, stands out as a truly artistic production flawlessly directed by John Huston. Technicolor photography of a beauty rarely achieved on the screen. Hold on to your popcorn, because the next film, The Horse’s Mouth, is a portrayal of artistic genius and madness.

The movies are free, but donations to the nonprofit Art Start Northwest are appreciated. A donation of $5 for students, children and seniors, and $10 for adults, is suggested. No reservations or tickets necessary.

Save the date for the next Graphite Movie Nite: Jan. 13

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Cascade Symphony Orchestra: Holiday Pops Concert

Sunday and Monday, Dec. 11 and 12, 7:30 p.m.
Edmonds Center for the Arts
410 4th Ave. N., Edmonds

The musical works of Johann Strauss II, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, George Gershwin and other legendary composers will be featured when the Cascade Symphony Orchestra (CSO) — under the direction of maestro Michael Miropolsky — presents its two annual Holiday Pops concerts on Sunday, Dec. 11 and Monday, Dec. 12. A pre-concert lecture by KING-FM’s Dave Beck at 6:30 p.m. will preview the musical highlights each evening.

Composer Steven Richards

A highlight of both concerts will be the debut of a musical work composed by lifelong Edmonds resident Steven Richards. “We are honored to present a world premiere of ‘Cascade Christmas Card’ by local composer Steven Richards, who dedicated this piece to our orchestra,” Miropolsky said.

Richards, also an accomplished trombonist, had his composition, “Tribute,” performed by the Cascade Symphony during its October 2021 concert. He is a graduate of Meadowdale High School in Edmonds and Seattle Pacific University.

The concert will begin with what Miropolsky describes as “the energetic March of the Gladiators’” by composer Julius Fucik, and be followed by a Christmas favorite, Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker. Later in the concert, composer Eduardo di Capua’s Bersaglieri March will be performed, followed by the mellow beauty of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s Song of the Indian Guest. The orchestra will also play Strauss’ The Blue Danube Waltz and Gershwin’s An American in Paris.

“Twas the Night Before Christmas,” a holiday favorite poem written by Clement Clark Moore, will be narrated by former longtime Seattle radio and TV personality Dave Dolacky as the orchestra provides musical accompaniment. Dolacky has been a resident of Edmonds for about 40 years.

Ticket prices for each concert are: $27 for adults; $22 for seniors (60-plus); and $10 for youth (12 and younger).

Tickets can be purchased online through the ECA website and by telephone (425-275-9595).

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Dandylyon Drama and Shoreline Community College Present “Scrooge’s Christmas”

Friday, Dec. 16, 7 p.m., Saturday, Dec. 17, 3 p.m., Saturday, Dec. 17, 7 p.m., and Sunday, Dec. 18, 3 p.m.
Shoreline Community College Theater
16101 Greenwood Ave. N., Theater Building (#1600), Shoreline

Dandylyon Drama’s new show, Scrooge’s Christmas, features local actors ages 10 to 70 years old. Founded in 2009 by Artistic Director (and local), Melani Lyons, Dandylyon Drama has grown into a sought-after source for bringing quality performing arts into area schools through after school enrichment programs and school musicals.

In Ken Jones’ family-friendly adaptation of Charles Dickens’ classic tale, A Christmas Carol, all the beloved characters of this Christmas tradition are supported by music from Dickens Carolers. Will Scrooge cling to his miserly ways or will he choose compassion and community? Please be advised there are spooky elements to the show that may not be appropriate for very young children.

“Adults have seen how we’ve empowered their children and have begged for years to get onstage, too!” says Lyons, “We’re so excited and grateful to share this play that sparks courage, compassion, and creativity. Thanks to the generosity of our community and the hard work of our board and staff securing recovery grants, we’re still here!” Scrooge’s Christmas will be directed by Lyons, assistant directed and stage managed by Anna Bundy with costume design by Amy Hockman. Opening Show is AAPI Appreciation Night! Before each performance a special reception will feature hot drinks from Black Coffee NW, a photo booth featuring Santa or Olaf, and live music from one of the following: Ukulele206, Magic Key, Northside Step Team, Dickens Carolers, and a brass quartet from The Salvation Army Band.

For tickets or more information about Dandylyon Drama’s Community Theatre Productions, visit here.

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ECA Presents Red Sky Performance, Miigis

Red Sky Performance
Thursday, Feb. 9, 7:30 p.m.
Edmonds Center for the Arts
410 4th Ave. N., Edmonds

This one is a couple months away, but the tickets are going quickly. Red Sky Performance is a leading company of contemporary Indigenous performance in Canada and worldwide. Now in its 22nd year of performance, Red Sky continues to be guided by its mission to create inspiring experiences of contemporary Indigenous arts and culture that transform society in meaningful ways. Fusing contemporary Indigenous dance with athleticism in an extraordinary form, Miigis: Underwater Panther is about their journey from the Atlantic Ocean to the Great Lakes as they explore catalysts for movement, water trade routes, Anishinaabe archetypes, and mystery beings on their journey from salt to fresh water. Get tickets here.

Sponsored by Barclay Shelton Dance Centre and Steve and Leanne Shelton.

— By Elizabeth Murray

(Photo by Brittany Gross)

Elizabeth Murray is a freelance writer thankful to call Edmonds home. When she’s not busy wrangling her two kids (and husband), you can find her playing ukulele and singing with The Band LeLe.



Music concert – From Baroque to Beatles: A concert by the Abraham Mazumder Academy of Music, at Kala Mandir, ended on a high with stunning performances by musicians


‘Baroque to Beatles’ was the theme of the evening at Kala Mandir on November 26, at a concert by the Abraham Mazumder Academy of Music. There are some things you can always expect at Abraham Mazumder’s concerts. Firstly, even if Calcutta traffic is letting you down, you know he’s going to lift his baton right on time and you run the risk of missing Rondeau by Henry Purcell – which is the second thing you can be sure of at his concerts. The programme is nearly always likely to begin with this English composer’s famous second movement, from the music he wrote for a play by Aphra Behn, penned in 1676: Abdelazer: The Moor’s Revenge. Composed in the era which came to be known as Baroque, it was a fitting start to the evening. 

This was followed by a grand marker of the Baroque era: Music for the Royal Fireworks by Georg Friedrich Handel, who held the position of Composer to the Royal Chapel. King George II, eager to celebrate the end of the War of the Austrian Succession in 1748, expressed a preference for martial instruments over fiddles for the occasion. Handel, however, did include strings to balance out the wind instruments. Now in Kolkata, almost three centuries later, we find maestro Abraham Mazumder arranging the original score of La Rejouissance (the fourth movement, in Allegro) to be string-heavy. The effect is marvellous. Handel appeared again, in the orchestra’s stormy rendition of the Rabindrasangeet, Kharobayu boy bege, where Tagore’s melody was juxtaposed with a portion of Messiah.

From the classical period, we had the sprightly first movement of Eine kleine Nachtmusik, (‘A Little Night Music’) — one of the most well-known pieces by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The piece, originally written for a string quartet, was published posthumously and attained great fame. Although formally titled Serenade No. 13 in G, Mozart’s own short description for it in German, jotted next to the composition, is what has prevailed over the centuries.

The young cellists and double bassists

From the Baroque period, we also had Summer by Antonio Vivaldi, where the orchestra accompanied Mazumder’s son Anirban, who displayed great skill with this difficult and fast-paced allegro. An unexpected addition for the audience was the cadenza he introduced in his solo – his own composition. The Four Seasons was inspired by landscape paintings, which explains the evocative nature of the music. The four concerti (Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter) all comprise three movements and it is believed that Vivaldi himself composed sonnets to go with all the movements. Listen carefully for the call of the cuckoo, the turtledove and the goldfinch in the gentle summer breeze before the erratic north wind comes storming in.

Anirban Mazumder

Anirban Mazumder, along with Dwaipayan Dasgupta, performed the solos for Vivaldi’s Concerto for Two Violins in A minor. The two boys were as animated as the tempo of the first movement, their enthusiasm momentarily stemmed by a torn string – possibly every soloist’s nightmare but once the string had been restored, the violins resumed their spirited dialogue. Vivaldi is known to have developed the structure of the then-emerging concerto, paving the way for Bach, who was deeply influenced by the work of the ‘red priest’. 

Russian composer, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky represented the Romantics, with the orchestra playing the theme song – Dance Of The Swans – from the Swan Lake ballet – its haunting melody and ominous buildup of the underlying strings portending the destinies of the cursed swans Odette and Odile.


Glimpses from the concert

Soumyajit Dey and Arijit Sen

The second half of the concert, which was cut short because of time constraints, comprised popular music ranging from Beatles to Mohiner Ghoraguli. Calcuttans who have closely followed Mazumder’s career, will know that both bands have always featured prominently in his concerts. After Imagine and Bhalobashi, the concert wrapped up with violinists and cellists swapping their classical instruments for guitars during Hotel California, the drums ending the evening with quite literally a big bang.

Musicians playing at the concert

Versatility has always been the hallmark of Mazumder’s orchestra; he has turned many a musically-inclined child into a multi-instrumentalist, guiding young violinists to becoming cellists, violists, bassists and of course, guitarists. What’s more, it’s evident that the young members of this orchestra are enjoying themselves as much as their audience.



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


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

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

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

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

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

All photos: Jeremy Artis

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

All photos: Jeremy Artis

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The performance’s poster. Photo: Supplied

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

When: Sunday 4th of December | 7.30pm

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

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

Creating music is easy but dealing with human beings is difficult


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Gallery: Estonian composer Tõnu Kõrvits wins in PÖFF main competition | News


“Driving Mum” is a co-production between Iceland and Estonia, directed by Hilmar Oddsso and scored by Estonian composer Tõnu Kõrvits, who receives the PÖFF award for best cinema music.

“I’m not a film composer and don’t want to be one, but the film director Hilmar Oddsson gave me a lot of creative flexibility. He had heard my music and trusted me. I also found the story-line and plot quite intriguing and interesting,” Kõrvits said.

Icelandic director Hilmar Oddsson’s dark comedy also won the festival’s grand prix for best film. “Driving Mum” is about an old boy who has lived his entire life under the thumb of his mother and who, after her death, embarks on a long journey with her corpse along bumpy Icelandic roads to bury her in her home village.

“This film captured us with its transparent, basic and yet audacious cinematic language and and subtly humorous treatment of sensitive personal issues. It is a film that conveys the message that it’s never too late,” the jury chaired by renowned Hungarian filmmaker Ildikó Enyedi said.

The grand prize comes with €20,000 from the City of Tallinn.

“It is a travelogue filled with sorrow, sadness and regret, as well as with lots of black humor. It is visually captivating and artistically well-crafted, but it also has a warm humanity that makes it accessible to a wide audience,” Andrei Liimets, a film critic, said, adding that this year’s PÖFF jury picks lay a greater emphasis on formal competence and visually arresting cinematic language and less on the social and political relevance of the content.

“Driving Mum” will be released in Estonia next year.

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Recent Library Music Additions | James Kelly – Music Composer and Music Producer


In between working on projects such as BBC Super Movers over the past year I’ve also added to my music library quite considerably. This music has already been placed on various shows across the world including WWE Smackdown, Panorama, Grand Designs, Countryfile, Come Dine With Me, Dispatches, The One Show and many more.

High Impact Brass

The brief for the album was to create 9 tracks of high impact brass music following the success of the first Brass Hip Hop album produced in 2015. The previous album had some high profile placements including Top Gear, Inside the NFL, the BBC Wimbledon coverage, Bargain Hunt (BBC1), The One Show (BBC1). CBBC, Fern Britton(BBC1) and many others.
The markets for these tracks were promos, adverts, sports montages and action sequences so the music had to be energetic, loud and lively so that it jumps out of the speakers.
The music is available to license from Reliable Source Music here: https://www.reliable-source.co.uk/#!explorer?b=4909443

Brass Recording Session

Walking Like you Mean it! Folk with a Beat….

The brief behind this album was create some scene setting through simple beats and guitars to inject some pace and momentum to productions. It’s proved to be a great combination with placements across the UK and beyond. Based on the success of the first album last year I’ve recently created a second album progressing with a similar theme. . The music is available to license from Reliable Source Music here: https://www.reliable-source.co.uk/#!explorer?b=6640343



Influencer composes Tony Kakkar’s song in two minutes in viral clip


Photo: Instagram/sanatanroyy

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

  • An Instagram influencer posted a clip showing how to make a Tony Kakkar song in 2 minutes.
  • The video was viewed 8 million times.
Music composition for those who are not in the field appears to be quite complex. Well, it can be complex and not everyone’s cup of tea. One influencer took to social media to break out a song composition. He was taking a jibe at one of India’s loved singers Tony Kakkar. You will not believe it, but the influencer made Kakkar’s songs in just minutes.

In the clip, the Instagrammer named Sanatan shared a step-wise break guide on how to compose Kakkar’s songs. He started off with a random guitar tune. He then went on to add a lead on the same pattern. The video was captioned, “Thik ha na aise hi karta ha wo (Ok, that’s how he (Tony Kakkar makes music).”

The video immediately went viral on social media. The clip garnered over 8 million views and 1 million likes.

Many users also commented on it. ” actually like this song, Drop it on all platforms,” wrote one. Another stated, “But yours is better than Tony bhaiya.”

A third person stated, “You made an anthem for “papa ki pari” bro . Now this will be used in every papa ki pari video,” the third user wrote. “Lyrics is better than that of tony kakkar (sic).”

Meanwhile, the influencer’s video also reached Kakkar. He responded to it by saying,”Zor zor se bolke sabko schemein bata rahe ho btw loved it,” (You are telling everyone the schemes out loud, btw loved it.)

Kakkar has been very vocal about the criticisms he receives on social media.



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The Sound of the Cinema | Constructing atmosphere with timbre and instrumentation


The Sound of the Cinema is a biweekly blog about music and sound design in films.

One of film music’s primary functions is creating an auditory atmosphere and expanding a film’s world beyond what is visually shown. In order to create the atmosphere that the director intends, composers can turn to timbre and instrumentation.

Timbre, or tone color, is the description of how the music sounds — not what the music is conveying, but how the instruments themselves sound in isolation or combination. Words like “dusty” and “sharp” are terms that can define a timbre well. Composers utilize timbre to construct atmospheres that support the diegeses, or fictional worlds, of films.

Take a moment to think of yourself as the composer for “The King” (2019), a Netflix film about Henry V which takes place in the 15th century. The director describes the film as dark and somber, and they want the music you write to heavily contribute to those two tones. Where would you start? If you were Nicholas Britell, you would decide to use low register strings, a low synthetic bass and an all-boys choir.

The score for “The King” is not like the classical orchestra scores composers such as John Williams popularized. The score is the perfect companion to the dark world of Henry V, the young man that finds himself becoming the King of England through battle and bloodshed. It maintains a dark moodiness for the duration of the film up until the end credits, when the orchestra finally blossoms with the beautiful final cue “Song of Hal: Conclusio in C Minor.” When I listen to the soundtrack, the world of the show comes back into my mind.

Not all scores affect the mood so vividly. The cue “Ballade in F# Minor: Trebuchets” brings back memories of fiery stones hitting castle walls and of the slow, repetitive nature of 15th-century warfare.

Other scores take a more classical approach to timbre. Nathan Johnson’s score for “Knives Out” (2019) takes a piano and a string quartet and creates a wonderful atmosphere representative of the whodunit film’s character. Out of the gate, Johnson’s score brings us into the world of Harlan Thrombey, an old man famous for his murder mystery novels. Johnson’s cue “Knives Out! (String Quartet in G Minor)” introduces us to the fast-paced, twisty-turny life of Harlan and his family after his mysterious death. The use of the string quartet sound gives a personal and slightly unsettling gesture to the film. The timbre of the music is raw and unpredictable, similar to the film’s narrative.

The scores for “The King” and “Knives Out” are drastically different, but both function brilliantly with their respective narratives. Neither of these scores could be considered classical, but both tap into the traditional string sound so deeply engraved in Hollywood’s history. This is an important observation to make because scores have changed dramatically since the classical Hollywood era. Contemporary scores strive to create atmospheres with any and all sounds, not just the orchestra. Of course, some scores still rely on the orchestra to design atmospheres, including BBC dramas like “Sherlock” (2010-2017).

David Arnold and Michael Price’s score for the four seasons of “Sherlock” use the orchestra to great effect. Blended with synthesizers, the orchestra helps set both the dramatic and intimate feelings in the show. Arnold’s cue “Final Act” exemplifies how large swathes of orchestral percussion can create tension. On the other hand, the orchestra can swell at moments of clarity and romance. In Series 2’s episode “A Scandal in Belgravia,” the cue “SHERlocked” rises into the forefront as Sherlock finally uncovers the password to a phone containing sensitive information. Once again, the orchestra creates the atmosphere the show sets from the off. Because of the music, we know that Sherlock has cracked the case and is about to unveil the truth about the antagonist and the phone’s password to us.

Across some of my previous articles, I’ve repeatedly come to the conclusion that film music is never definite. There are no right instruments, no right or wrong notes, no rhythm that is incorrect. What matters most in film music is whether or not it functions correctly with what is being visually portrayed. Tone color and instrumentation play a major role in this concept. What makes a certain score work is whether or not the timbre is correct. “The King,” “Knives Out” and “Sherlock” all have scores that have instrumentation and timbres that match the environments and diegeses that their creators set out to make.

Designing how the timbre should sound is a difficult problem to solve, but solving it correctly can allow the music to act as another character contributing to the story. Viewers can interpret and understand media more effectively with music that elevates the visuals. Look out for timbre and instrumentation in the media you watch and take note of how it works, or perhaps doesn’t work. Timbre is a key element in film music, and it’s a tool that’s necessary in order to unlock the auditory story a film is telling.

Alec Cassidy is a film production and music composition double major who writes about film scores. You can reach them at [email protected]



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