Exquis musical composing keyboard app and instrument


Musicians, songwriters or those looking to learn more about composing and music, might be interested in a new composing keyboard created by the team at Dualo by Intuitive Instruments. A French company consisting of technology and music enthusiasts who have been creating products over the last 15 years for playing and composing music. “After the successes of the dualo du-touch in 2012 and the dualo du-touch S in 2016, our signature keyboard is back with Exquis“.

“Explore, have fun, surprise yourself, find inspiration. Above all, composing music is about emotion. Exquis provides an intuitive way to lead you to the right path, still allowing you to play out of it. No need to think: just choose a scale and follow its illuminated path. Thanks to our patented layout, making chords is easy; Exquis puts notes that sound well together right next to one another. You’ll be amazed how harmony falls under your fingers.”

With the assumption that the Exquis crowd funding campaign successfully raises its required pledge goal and production progresses smoothly, worldwide shipping is expected to take place sometime around July 2023. To learn more about the Exquis music composing keyboard project play the promotional video below. Early bird pledges are now available for the inventive project from roughly $178 or £155 (depending on current exchange rates), offering a considerable discount of approximately 22 % off the final retail price, while the Kickstarter crowd funding is under way.

“Beginner, amateur or professional musicians, we all want to shorten the time between an idea and its execution. Exquis gives you the fastest access to the rules of harmony, so you can improvise with or without any theoretical background. Then, thanks to Exquis’s unique and spontaneous creative workflow, just pick a sound, play, record your own loops and create a full song in minutes!”

“There is no need to play lots of notes when you can bring them to life. Exquis’s expressive keys are designed to be mastered in minutes while offering a huge potential for expert gestures. Inspired by the finesse of acoustic instruments, Exquis keys are both firm enough to play percussion and short notes with precision, and soft enough to modulate long notes with sensibility.”

For a complete list of all available special pledges, stretch goals, extra media and specifications for the music composing keyboard, jump over to the official Exquis crowd funding campaign page by following the link below.

Source : Kickstarter

Filed Under: Gadgets News, Top News




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A Composer’s Diary: FFF week 9: Invest in energy-efficient appliances.


 FFF week 9: Invest in energy-efficient appliances.

I would like to contribute to FFF (Fridays for Future) in my own way: by sharing one concrete action per week that YOU can do, and which I have done, for combating climate change. 

Invest in energy-efficient appliances.

WHY: Since energy-efficient appliances were first implemented nationally in the US in 1987, efficiency standards for dozens of appliances and products have kept 2.3 billion tons of carbon dioxide out of the air. That’s about the same amount as the annual carbon pollution coughed up by nearly 440 million cars.

WHAT CAN I DO: “Energy efficiency is the lowest-cost way to reduce emissions. Change only happens when individuals take action,” Aliya Haq, deputy director of NRDC’s Clean Power Plan initiative, says.. When shopping for refrigerators, washing machines, and other appliances, look for the Energy Star label. It will tell you which are the most efficient.

Composer Cecilia Damström



Links:
https://www.nrdc.org/stories/how-you-can-stop-global-warming
https://www.saveonenergy.com/learning-center/post/energy-efficiency-appliances/



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Lakota Music Project and SD Symphony Orchestra’s first commercial recording


SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) — The South Dakota Symphony Orchestra is a staple of the state’s music scene, and it has reached a milestone. For the first time, it has a commercial recording: five songs forming an album titled “Lakota Music Project.”

“Music is almost like a language in a way,” flutist Bryan Akipa said.

You can hear Akipa’s red cedar flute on the song “Wind on a Clear Lake,” a composition from Jeffrey Paul, the South Dakota Symphony Orchestra’s principal oboist. Akipa once played for Paul at a cabin in northeastern South Dakota.

“He could hear the wind making the melody, and so he started writing it down, and that’s how he wrote the ‘Wind on Clear Lake,” Akipa said.

Paul says it’s “thrilling” to be a part of the recording.

“I don’t want to say culmination because this is an ongoing project that we’re definitely going to be continuing in more and better capacities but it’s a culmination of the work so far that has been done,” Paul said.

The Lakota Music Project, which features members of the South Dakota Symphony Orchestra performing alongside Native musicians, is not new.

“We started conceptualizing it in 2005, but it took about four years to build it, so by the time we toured it in 2009, we’d been at it for a long time,” said Delta David Gier, music director of the South Dakota Symphony Orchestra. “And again the secret to it is that we built it together with tribal elders, with cultural leaders and with musicians both Lakota and Dakota.”

Gier conducted all compositions on the album.

“I can pretty much guarantee you’ve never heard anything like it before,” he said.

The album’s reverent rendition of “Amazing Grace” is a prime example of how it only follows the beat of its own drum. For Akipa, who’s a member of the Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate Sioux Tribe, this album puts a spotlight on his instrument.

“When you put it in a symphony with the South Dakota Symphony Orchestra, it kind of raises the importance of the way people feel about the flute,” Akipa said.

There’s a sense of pride, too.

“The biggest feeling of pride is actually when I’m sitting in with the symphony, and you can see the musicians right next to me, and you’re right in the middle of all that sound and all that energy and all that talent and all these people, and that’s when I really feel the most proud,” Akipa said.

You can listen to the album here or here.



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Composer Richard Shephard’s paintings auctioned for charity


A COLLECTION of paintings belonging to the composer and former Minster School headmaster Dr Richard Shephard, who died last year, will go under the auctioneer’s hammer next week – with the proceeds going to a music charity set up in Dr Shephard’s memory.

During his life, the composer was a keen collector of paintings – and when he passed away early last year, he left them to the charity set up in his name, the Richard Shephard Music Foundation.

“The collection includes paintings of York and York Minster by many well-known York artists – including W J Boddy, George Fall, Tom Dudley, Fred Taylor and John Langton,” said Sir Ron Cooke, the former Vice Chancellor of the University of York who was a friend of Dr Shephard and is a Trustee of the Foundation.

“The collection also includes many images of cathedrals, including Salisbury and Wells (some by Sheppard Dale); and there are plenty of cats and animals.

“Some of the pictures were included in the exhibitions of York Minster Revealed, and The Streets of York book and exhibition.”

College Street, York, watercolour by Charles Rousse, c1900 (Image: Richard Shephard Music Foundation)

The paintings will be sold at auction at Wombwells auctioneers, based at the Northminster Business Park near Poppleton, at 10am on Friday November 11.

There will be a preview at 7pm on Wednesday November 9.

Sir Ron said the money raised from sale of the pictures would go to a good cause.

“In recent years, music teaching in primary schools has declined dramatically,” he said.

“The Richard Shephard Music Foundation was established in memory of Richard, and follows his wishes to reintroduce weekly one-hour music lessons in primary schools in North Yorkshire and Middlesborough.

“Since starting in September, we have established weekly music lessons for over 2,400 children in 12 schools in the region. And the number is rising!

“In addition to the lessons, the Richard Shephard Music Foundation arranges out-of-school events, most recently a combined school singing in the Chapter House of the Minster, and in the Ryedale Festival.”

Dr Shephard, who died at the age of 71 in February last year after being ill for some time, was made an MBE in 2012 for services to music and education.

He was an internationally-renowned composer of church music, as well as a teacher, conductor and chair of both the Leeds Piano Festival and of the Ryedale Festival.

After a private funeral service in March last year, more than 700 people attended a public memorial service for the composer and former Minster School headmaster at York Minster in September 2021.

A catalogue for the auction sale of Dr Shephard’s paintings can be found at www.wombells.co.uk/





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A Composer’s Diary: FFF week 10: Consume less


I would like to contribute to FFF (Fridays for Future) in my own way: by sharing one concrete action per week that YOU can do, and which I am trying to do, for combating climate change. 

FFF week 10: Consume less

WHY: Earth Overshoot Day marks the date when, according to calculations, people’s consumption exceeds the Earth’s biocapacity, or the capacity to generate renewable resources and process the carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels. Finland already passed its own Overshoot Day last Saturday on 10th of April, which means if all people in the world would consume like people in Finland, we would need about four planet earths. It is estimated that when the corona crisis eases people will spend all the money they have saved while being at home, on shopping, which might be “great for the economy” but is terrible for our planet!

WHAT CAN I DO: Consume as little as possible. Buy second hand as often as possible, and things you need seldom you can rent or borrow. Take care of your possessions and electronics and prolong their life. If all Europeans for instance would use their phone one year longer than they do now, we would reduce our CO2 emissions by 2 million tons! (The same amount of emissions that 2 million cars make!).

Any personal tips on how to consume less? Please share!

Cecilia Damström Helsinki 2021. Photo by Tuuli Solhagen


 

Links:
https://wwf.fi/uutiset/2021/04/nakokulma-ilman-koronapandemiaa-suomen-ylikulutuspaiva-olisi-tanaan-kulutamme-edelleen-yli-maapallon-kestokyvyn/
https://wwf.fi/uutiset/2019/07/nailla-teoilla-voit-vahentaa-ylikulutustasi/
https://yle.fi/uutiset/3-11141662
https://www.hs.fi/paakirjoitukset/art-2000007871246.html
https://www.tekniikkatalous.fi/uutiset/kayta-puhelintasi-vuosi-pidempaan-vahennat-roimasti-paastoja-tutkimus-euroopan-tasolla-paastovahennys-vastaisi-kahden-miljoonan-henkiloauton-vuotuisia-paastoja/8bdb71cd-ad20-4cf9-b28e-d51f008dbdf6
https://www.aamulehti.fi/uutiset/art-2000007244909.html



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LIVE! A Music Calendar featuring the final shows at Roots HQ


The Northwest Arkansas Jazz Society presents a Centennial Tribute Concert celebrating the music of Toots Thielemans at 7 p.m. Nov. 4 at Roots HQ on the Fayetteville square, one of the last shows before the venue closes up shop. Pianist Kenny Werner and harmonica master Grégoire Maret will perform a tribute to the jazz legend, who would have turned 100 this year.

Werner has been a world-class pianist and composer for over 40 years, earning a Grammy nomination in 2003 in the Best Instrumental Composition category. In 2010, Werner was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship, and in 1995 he was commissioned to compose a piano concerto dedicated to Duke Ellington. He performed as pianist for Thielemans for over 20 years.

Swiss-born Grammy-winner Maret has a resume that includes Prince, Marcus Miller, Kurt Elling, Pete Seeger, Cassandra Wilson and more. For this tribute performance to his mentor and inspiration, Maret says the duo will “find new places where his spirit is truly honored, but his music is being played through a new prism.”

Werner and Maret will honor Thielemans, who passed away in 2016 at 94 with songs written by or associated with him, like “Bluesette,”http://www.bing.com/news/”Midnight Sun,”http://www.bing.com/news/”Theme from Midnight Cowboy,”http://www.bing.com/news/”I Do It For Your Love,” and “What a Wonderful World.” One of the most recognizable sounds in jazz history, Thielemans made the harmonica into a legitimate jazz instrument, recording more than 30 albums and working with artists including Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Bill Evans, Ella Fitzgerald and Pat Metheny.

Tickets start at $30 for general admission and are available at digjazz.com/events. The NAJS also hosts Jazz at the University at the University of Arkansas Global Campus at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 4 with the Vocal Jazz Ensemble.

BENTONVILLE

• Simply Seger (Bob Segar Tribute) happens at 8 p.m. Nov. 11 ($12.50-$20); at Meteor Guitar Gallery, 128 W. Central Ave.

• Tigran Hamasyan performs at 8 p.m. Nov. 11 ($20-$48) at The Momentary, 507 S.E. E St., themomentary.org.

• Trillium Salon Presents Eve Maret at 6 p.m. Nov. 3 (free) in the Contemporary Art Gallery (trilliumsalonseries.com); Terrance Wilson performs at 7 p.m. Nov. 4 ($10 students, $36 members and $45 nonmembers) at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. crystalbridges.org/

EUREKA SPRINGS

• Dirty 30! with Jackie Beat and Sherry Vine starts at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 5 ($30-$40); the 75th annual Original Folk Festival features Willi Carlisle and Chucky Waggs & The Company of Raggs on Nov. 10 ($15), Shinyribs and Rachel Ammons on Nov. 11 ($30) and Pokey Lafarge and Hot Club of Cowtown on Nov. 12 ($29-$59); and free music in the basement from Skye Pollard & Family Holler, Sprungbilly, Willi Carlisle, Danny Spain and the Hedgehoppers on Nov. 10; Jesse Dean, Front Porch and Shannon Wurst on Nov. 11; and Dandelion Heart, Brian Martin and Ozark Mountain Rhombus on Nov. 12, during the Folk Faire at The Aud at 36 S. Main St. theaud.org

• Sprungbilly plays at 6 p.m Oct. 31; Los Roscoes play at 5 p.m Nov. 3; Bob Wayne performs at 7 p.m. Nov. 4; Fall Diversity Weekend Drag Brunch starts at noon and Magnolia Brown performs at 7 p.m. Nov. 5 at Wanderoo Lodge and Gravel Bar, 216 W. Van Buren. 363-6755.

• Front Porch play at 9:30 p.m. Oct. 31; Danny Spain Gang plays at 8 p.m. Nov. 11; Shilah Molina and the Honkey Tonk Flame, Gary Lawrence and Chucky Waggs and the Company of Raggs perform at 8 p.m Nov. 12 at Chelesa’s Corner Bar, 10 Mountain St. facebook.com/chelseaseureka.

FAYETTEVILLE

• Figure presents Terrorvision at 8:30 p.m. Oct. 30; Jordy Searcy performs at 8 p.m Nov. 1 ($15 and up); Twiddle plays at 8:30 p.m Nov. 2 ($22 and up); Wakaan presents the ‘Time Warp” tour featuring Champagne Drip at 8:30 p.m. Nov. 3 ($20 and up); happy hour with the Bel Airs starts at 6 p.m. ($8) followed by Ozark Riviera at 9:30 p.m. Nov. 4 ($10); Borgore plays at 8:30 p.m Nov. 5 ($15 and up); Brother & The Hayes perform at 8 p.m. Nov. 9 ($10) at George’s Majestic Lounge, 519 W. Dickson St. Fayetteville. georgesmajesticlounge.com/shows.

• Pepe Rivero with Adi Meyerson, Fernando Valencia and Ivanna Cuesta will perform a jazz jam session at 6 p.m. Oct. 31; a Toots Thielmemans Centennial Tribute featuring Grégoire Maret and Kenny Werner starts at 7 p.m. Nov. 4 ($30-$40); and Dar Williams plays at 7 p.m. Nov. 6 ($30 and up) at Roots HQ, 1 E. Mountain St. fayettevilleroots.org.

• Here Come the Mummies and Saxsquatch perform at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 30 ($20 and up); Mt. Joy performs at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 31 ($35 and up) The Taylor Party starts at 9 p.m Nov. 4 ($15 and up); Cole Swindell performs at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 5 ($40 and up); Waka Flocka Flame performs at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 11 ($25 and up); Trombone Shorty performs at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 17 ($29.50 and up) Mike Ryan performs at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 18 ($20 and up); Noche De Verano Sin Ti (Bad Bunny Night) happens at 9:30 p.m. Dec. 3 and Trampled by Turtles plays at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 8 ($29.50 and up) at JJ’s Live, 3615 N. Steele Blvd. jjslive.com.

• Woven will perform from 1-4 p.m. Nov. 6 at Terra Studios, 12103 Hazel Valley Road. instagram.com/songswoven

FORT SMITH

• Smile Empty Soul, Sun Volume and Saint Tragedy perform at 7 p.m Nov. 3 ($15-$20); Chris Webby, Ekoh and Justin Clancy play at 8 p.m. Nov. 6 ($19-$39); The Cadillac Three and Ben Chapman play at 8 p.m. Nov. 12 ($20-$30); Tracy Lawrence plays at 8 p.m. Nov. 17 ($39-$59); Little Feat plays at 7 p.m. Dec. 1 ($59-$79); William Clark Green plays at 7 p.m. Dec. 2 ($15-$29) at TempleLive, 200 N. 11th St. 222-6186; fortsmith.templelive.com.

• 49 Winchester & Kendall Marvell play at 8 p.m. Nov. 11 ($20-$25); Slade Coulter and Parker Ryan perform at 8 p.m Nov. 18 ($10-$12); Paul Cauthen plays at 7 p.m. Nov. 19 ($35-$130); the Thanksgiving Eve Special with JD Clayton happens at 7 p.m. Nov. 23 ($10-$15); Kody West plays at 7 p.m. Nov. 26 ($10-$15); and Austin Meade plays at 8 p.m. Dec. 9 ($15-$20) at Majestic Fort Smith, 817 Garrison Ave. majesticfortsmith.com.

• Hoppy Hour Comedy Show with Edrick Jorge, Kyle Rill, Isaac Martin, Harrison Broadstreet and LG Grey starts at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 12 at Fort Smith Brewing Company, 7500 Fort Chaffee Blvd. facebook.com/rivervalleycomics

LOWELL

• JJ Whitehead performs at 6:30 p.m. Nov. 4 & 5; Andy Hendrickson performs at 6 p.m. Nov. 11 & 12; Kevin Nealon, Bruce Barth and Bobcat Goldthwait perform in December at The Grove Comedy Club, 808 S. Bloomington St. grovecomedy.com.

SILOAM SPRINGS

• A Song’s Embrace featuring Dr. Deborah Caldwell, Christopher Barnett, Siloam Jazz Band, Siloam Adult Community Choir, NWA Chamber Orchestra, Siloam Children’s Community Choir and soloists Rose Sparrow and Donna Rollene will begin at 2:45 p.m. Nov. 13 during the Siloam Music Festival Series at Camp Siloam Auditorium, 3600 S. Lincoln St. siloammusicfestival.com.

SPRINGDALE

• Charley McMullen performs comedy at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 3; Andrew Deacon starts telling jokes at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 10; a comedy album recording for Cammy starts at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 17 at Black Apple Hard Cider, 321 E. Emma Ave., facebook.com/NaturalStateComedy.

• Dance Chance NWA with Arlynda Jonas, Sarah Webb and Blake Worthey happens at 7 p.m. Nov. 2 ($5, tickets at Eventbrite); Marketing for Musicians with Maximiliano Dominguez and Dazz “King Honey” Murry starts at 6 p.m. Nov. 15; SoNA presents Latin Traces at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 19 (free); Victor Charlie & Vraii + 64velour perform at 7 p.m. Nov. 30 at 214 By CACHE, 214 S. Main St. cachecreate.org.

WEST SILOAM SPRINGS

• The Lacs perform at 8 p.m. followed by Casey Twist on Nov. 3 at Seven in Cherokee Casino, 2416 U.S. 412. cherokeecasino.com/west-siloam-springs/entertainment.

UP IN THE HILLS

• Strings and Friends with Arkansauce, Kyle Tuttle, Eureka Strings, Hillbenders, Willi Carlisle, Chucky Waggs & the Company of Raggs, Flintwick, Lusid, Country Jesus, Syke Pollard, Front Porch, Cory Simmons, Garry Lawrence, Fleet Wood and Family, Sister Lucille, Earth Boan, Kiltwithfire, Blues N Grass, Arkansas Brothers, Traveling Squirrels, Danny Spain Gang, New Kentucky Colonials, Hipbillies, Blayd Law, Jordan Jensen, Jeremy Stewart and Ziggy Brown will be Nov. 18-20 at Blue Clouds Resort, 17170 Arkansas 281 in Lead Hill.

Send info about your upcoming concerts and events to Monica Hooper, music editor, at mhooper@nwaonline.com.





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After a summer return of live music, Hamilton artists thank the venues that ‘stuck around’


When psychobilly and horror rock bands The House of Haunt, The Brains and Gallows Bound took the stage at This Ain’t Hollywood on March 12, 2020, little did music fans in Hamilton know It would be one of the city’s last live shows for some time.

The show would in fact be the final one for the venue. The iconic Hamilton bar was sold that spring, just as the pandemic started hitting the city’s arts and culture sector hard with closures.

“This Ain’t Hollywood was on the verge of closing for quite a while,” House of Haunt vocalist and guitarist Matthew ‘Fang Binite’ Vörös said, looking back. 

“The strength of the scene and the strength of the people kept it alive.”

The venue’s closure ushered in a difficult time for the industry, but more than two years later, COVID restrictions on live music venues are fully lifted. Hamilton artists are emerging from a summer nearly back on track, after navigating a music scene deeply impacted by the pandemic.

Well-known venues in the city — The Casbah, Mills Hardware, Doors Taco Joint and Metal Bar, and Corktown Pub, to name a few — are back to near-regular programming.

Thousands of music fans caught many a live act on stage, as Supercrawl returned to James Street North in September.

The city has also seen new venues enter the scene, such as the Sonic Unyon Records-owned Bridgeworks, which opened last year. Underground DJ venue Sous Bas was sold to new owners, who relaunched it as Andthenyou in June.

But the industry which relies on live performances for revenue also saw many losses over the past few years.  This Ain’t Hollywood and the Cat N’ Fiddle closed permanently. Absinthe also closed, although it hinted on Oct. 7 on Facebook that it was ready to re-open.

“I am very grateful for those venue owners that stuck around,” musician Andrew Adu Amoah said in an interview earlier this year. Amoah is the lead singer and composer of the Hamilton post-apocalyptic funk band Papa Skin Freak.

“Hats off to those who didn’t just quit. But who believed in musicians and artists and are architects of hope really,” he said.

The band went back to playing live throughout the spring and summer. This return included shows at Hamilton’s Corktown Pub and Toronto’s Supermarket. Looking back on the band’s performance at Corktown, Amoah said the show’s atmosphere reminded him of the magic of live performance.

“That interplay between the artist with the band members and the artist with the audience was beautiful to watch,” Amoah said. “It felt really good, especially because [the band played] original music. [The crowd] hadn’t heard [those] songs before and yet, we got people dancing.”

‘The world missed going out’

Performing allows artists to build relationships and connections within the music scene. The pandemic put a dent in that ability, as several Ontario artists told CBC Hamilton.

Kingston-based singer-songwriter and Hinterwood vocalist Sadie McFadden said the uncertainty of the pandemic made booking shows difficult.

“I remember when we were trying to book a show and the people who I once knew were no longer doing booking,” she said. “There’s a loss of connections that are really important to the music industry there, but there’s also the loss of money at the physical venues. With these things together, there’s financial hardship on the venues that also gets passed down to musicians.”

Hats off to those who didn’t just quit. But who believed in musicians and artists and are architects of hope really.

Not only did the pandemic take a financial toll on venues and artists but McFadden, who has played Hamilton in the past, said the loss of longstanding venues has been emotional for artists like her.

Places like This Ain’t Hollywood are often “like home base for a lot of different musicians,” she said. “There’s a lot of places that, even if they didn’t close down, they might not be offering live music anymore. So, it’s a loss of community as well.”

Hinterwood vocalist Sadie McFadden says the pandemic cost her important connections in Hamilton’s music scene. (Kate Pichora/submitted by Sadie McFadden)

For Kitchener singer-songwriter Alyssa Mikuljan, who also goes by Alyssa DVM, venues like Corktown offer the space to bring a passion project to life. Over the last few months, Mikuljan has been teaming up with artists from across genres to put on a series of shows celebrating women in music.

“Unless you’re in the music industry, [the presence of women in music is] not something that’s really talked about,” Mikuljan said. “Everyone [who attended the first shows at Corktown] loved it, to my knowledge.”

McFadden, Mikuljan and Vörös all said they’ve noticed revitalized enthusiasm toward live music among audiences, even as some feel unsure of being in a crowd and interacting with performers.

“The world missed going out,” Vörös said. “They missed live music. I find shows are attended more post-pandemic than they were pre pandemic.”

Mikuljan says artists are more thoughtful about what they are offering an audience and are careful not to overbook a venue or city, so people still come out. 

“You don’t want super close performance days at the same place,” Mikuljan said, adding it had been harder to draw in crowds as pandemic restrictions lessened. “People want new and unique experiences.”

As the winter months draw near, musicians like Mikuljan, McFadden and Vörös look to focus on writing and recording new songs. Amoah is also shifting focus towards developing Papa Skin Freak’s social media presence and, by extension, their audience.

“We will do a couple shows in the region,” Amoah said. “But as far as I’m concerned, we’re all full speed torpedoes, spreading the gospel and trying to get in the pockets of people from around the world who love that little bit of funk soul hybrid the way we do it.”

Mikuljan said she’s optimistic, despite the uncertainty the winter months may bring.

“I hope people will continue to support live music,” Mikuljan said, “because I’m glad that it’s back.”



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A Composer’s Diary: FFF week 11: Reduce food waste


I would like to contribute to FFF (Fridays for Future) in my own way: by sharing one concrete action per week that YOU can do, and which I have done, for combating climate change. 


FFF week 11: Reduce food waste

WHY: An estimated 1.3 billion tonnes of food is wasted globally each year, one third of all food produced for human consumption, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations. The amount of food lost or wasted costs 2.6 trillion USD annually and is more than enough to feed all the 815 million hungry people in the world – four times over. About 8% of all greenhouse gas emissions each year are due to food loss and waste

Food waste has also always been a big issue for me personally, which I’m constantly fighting. With a hectic life style, I often don’t plan my meals well enough, which results again in food going bad before I have had time to use it. This is of course not okay, in any way, and I’m really struggling to get better on this point.

WHAT CAN I DO: Shop smartly, don’t buy more food than you can eat. Store correctly. Don’t be a perfectionist (looking for the perfect apple in the store or throwing away food when it doesn’t look perfect anymore). You can forinstance use “not so pretty fruit” for smoothies. If you eat eggs: eat the yolk. You can both save money by looking for food that is “soon going off” in shops, and help reduce food waste at the same time. Link to a list of tips to reduce food waste is in my bio. Moreover you can inform yourself and participate in the online events organised by “Stop food waste day” on Wednesday the 28th of April. (Link below)

Cecilia Damström in Bamberg 2021

P.S. Vegan dark chocolate gelato!

Links:
https://en.reset.org/knowledge/global-food-waste-and-its-environmental-impact-09122018
https://www.ekopaasto.fi/suurin-ymparistoteko-on-havikin-pienentaminen/
https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/reduce-food-waste#TOC_TITLE_HDR_4
https://www.stopfoodwasteday.com/en/events.html





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Mblaqque determined to conquer the world of music with astounding vibes


Sports News of Saturday, 29 October 2022

Source: GNA

2022-10-29

Ghanaian musician Emmanuel Akwesi Boateng

Ghanaian musician Emmanuel Akwesi Boateng, known by his stage name “Mblaqque”, is poised to make a difference in Ghana’s music industry and the world at large with his unique musical craft.

According to the budding music artiste, the old and current crop of Ghanaian musicians have paved the way for an upcoming artiste to achieve global stardom.

Signed to Imperial Avenue Records and managed by Fimenz Multimedia, Mblaqque seeks to showcase his musical prowess with his newly released single titled “Fallen”.

The song, which reflects the theme of partying and love celebration, has received commendations from music lovers considering its magical composition.

When asked about the inspiration behind his new single “Fallen,” Mblaqque said: “I am always inspired by things I see and hear, but real love ignited the composition of the song and I know people will relate to the lyrics in the song.”

His magical composition of “Smile For Peace” in 2021 has landed him a performing deal at the 2022 International Peaceful Coexistence Summit in the United Kingdom.

Mblaqque added that this golden opportunity will broaden his reach and popularity across the African continent and the world at large.



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Ang Misyon — To hone and nurture the future of Philippine music


Music may not be a top priority in a country where many citizens are just getting by to cover their day-to-day needs. But Ang Misyon, Inc. — a non-profit organization that aids talented and underprivileged young musicians in the Philippines — shows that music may, in fact, be a ticket to a better life and, later on, a better society.

ABS-CBN Chairman Emeritus Eugenio Lopez 3rd, First Philippine Holdings Chairman Federico Lopez, and internationally renowned concert pianist Jovianney Emmanuel Cruz founded Ang Misyon in 2012 with the belief that teaching the youth orchestral music can spark social change in the Philippines.

Ang Misyon, Inc. and its main performing arm, the Orchestra of the Filipino Youth (OFY), celebrate 10 years of supporting the musically talented, less privileged youth. COVER AND INSIDE PHOTOS COURTESY OF IAN SANTOS VIA OFY

According to celebrated Maestro Gerard Salonga — current Music Director and Chief Conductor of Orchestra of the Filipino Youth (OFY), the main performing arm of Ang Misyon — Ang Misyon was inspired by the success of the social action music program El Sistema.

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Founded by Maestro José Antonio Abreu in Venezuela in 1975, El Sistema used musical programs to take vulnerable children away from the streets. The goal was to build them a future that does not involve crimes, drugs and gangs, among others.

“In a conversation with Piki [Federico Lopez] sometime in 2010, we shared our mutual admiration for El Sistema, and then the conversation went to what if we have something like that here in the Philippines. We thought, bagay siya sa Pilipinas because our conditions here are not dissimilar. And like Venezuela, we too have a lot of talented kids,” Salonga recalled in an interview after the successful 10th-anniversary concert of OFY at the Cultural Center of the Philippines.

Through musical training and instrument support, Ang Misyon and OFY scholars hone their skills to eventually play at professional level and give back by training future scholars. PHOTO COURTESY OF ANG MISYON, INC.

Improving lives of talented kids

It would take a few more years before that dream was realized, but from that day forward, Ang Misyon never turned its back on its mission. So much so that they are ever on track even after enduring the double whammy of the Covid-19 pandemic and the ABS-CBN shutdown.

To this very day, Ang Misyon continues to provide orchestral training and instrument support for their scholars, who now number the thousand-mark count.

And even before performance restrictions because of the pandemic, OFY performed overseas, like Malaysia, United States and Qatar, where they will always be remembered as the first Filipino symphony orchestra to have played at the Katara Opera House.

“Sobrang memorable po sa akin yung performance sa Qatar kasi yun din po yung first time kong makapag travel abroad,” Carmela Casas, 16-year-old flutist of OFY, shared at the sidelines of their anniversary concert.

Casas said she is grateful for the opportunity to travel around the country and overseas. But more importantly, she is thankful for receiving free training from Ang Misyon. The foundation continues to give the scholars one-on-one lessons, sectional workshops, and master classes.

“Yung mga teachers po namin ay professionals, mga nag-aaral sa malalaking universities pati sa ibang bansa and yung knowledge na shine-share nila sa amin, talagang magagamit namin. High quality and libre pa po siya,” Casas enthused.

In its decade-long existence, Ang Misyon has turned several OFY members into mentors to younger scholars and others still as full-time professionals.

Since 2021, Maestro Gerard Salonga has been the Music Director and Chief Conductor of Orchestra for OFY, eager to train the future of orchestra music in the country.

OFY’s double bass player Marloe Kyril Maruyama actually did both. He joined OFY in 2016 when he was forced to stop school due to financial constraints. Now, he is the family’s breadwinner, bringing in the salary he earns from playing double bass.

“OFY yung naging daan sa akin para music na yung maging career ko ngayon. It opened doors for me para makatugtog sa ibang orchestra and mag train din ng mga mas batang musicians. Kung dati nakikitira lang kami at palipat-lipat, ngayon ako na yung nakakabayad sa apartment para sa family ko,” Maruyama shared.

For Ang Misyon and for Salonga, these success stories, among many others, affirm that they are on the right track.

“These inspiring results reaffirm the work we do and are a great example that art is an essential part of life and is a form of livelihood for many. There are various art forms out there, and music serves as a universal language we can all connect with. It can also be one of the most transformative, as it can uplift lives and bring hope to others,” Salonga stressed.

But then again, the mission continues.

In composition, these inspiring stories can be likened to bridges, passages that connect sections of a song, and not the coda or the concluding stanza.

Continuing mission

Salonga — concurrently the Resident Conductor of the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra in Kuala Lumpur — stepped in as OFY’s Music Director and Chief Conductor of Orchestras in 2021 intending to further elevate the orchestra.

“When I came in, it was the middle of the pandemic, and I decided that for the quality to go up, they need individual instruction. So what we did is we looked at the way we were doing things — made modifications, kept some of the great stuff that was there already and made some modifications.

“Now all of them have individual instructors, all paid for. They can’t afford it, so they are given lessons, sometimes, yung mga mentors na very generous, twice a week pa magturo.”

On the other hand, Salonga’s arrival also signaled the start of an “extremely stringent standard.”

“That’s one of the hard decisions you must make for a program like this. I let the kids know that yes, we are giving you lessons, but this is not a dole out; you have to your spot.”

What this meant was a round of auditions for all OFY scholars.

“I want them to learn that there are consequences, for lack of diligence or good consequence if you put in the work.”

Those who were able to keep their spot continued with their online sessions while the country was still under varying degrees of lockdowns. And when the locked downs eased in, they gradually met to play together, from small groups to sections, until eventually, in August, they were able to play as an orchestra, with Salonga meeting them all for the first time.

“What they bring is a very raw energy; it has to be sanded, refined, but that’s your building materials. You can’t do anything with people who don’t want to play. And these kids are desperate to play. That’s the single factor that they have with them that makes them special — desperation. They play like there’s no tomorrow,” Salonga noted when asked what it was like training younger musicians.

Meeting them also afforded Salonga to learn more about their stories.

When the weekly training session in the capital returned, he saw how some students, even outside Metro Manila, would find ways just to join these in-person sessions.

As Maestro Salonga puts it, music for these children is like oxygen. ‘For them, there’s no agenda except to play.’

Some kids from Nueva Ecija would leave their province at 4 a.m. to reach Pasig for their 9 a.m. rehearsals. There’s also a story of one scholar based in Cebu whose parents found a distant relative in Manila willing to take the scholar in.

“They do these because they are desperate to play — it’s like oxygen for them. And for them, there’s no agenda. These kids have no agenda except to play,” Salonga stressed.

Nevertheless, Salonga swore he does not coddle these children and gives them his honesty to further improve their skills.

“Syempre, you have to speak to them in a way that they’ll understand, but they have to be exposed to the fact that someone is demanding much more from them than they can offer right now.”

Besides honing their musical talents, Salonga also takes pride in teaching the scholars professional work ethics as early as now.

“We teach them how to behave in an orchestra, when to show your emotions and when to just really be quiet and deadpan — the decorum, the word of conduct for an orchestra.”

Outside music, these sessions of training, according to Salonga, will allow scholars to correct some negative traits that the Filipino culture usually passes down to the young.

“Music can instill diligence, discipline, and in the case of the orchestra, unanimity. Because orchestra won’t work if one group doesn’t listen to the other one. That’s how orchestras work — they play with their eyes and their ears. And then, finally, there’s precision. We don’t have that.”

The ultimate vision

Ultimately, Ang Misyon hopes to bring the orchestral training program nationwide to benefit children even in far-flung areas.

But for that to happen, the foundation will need reinforcement from partners and other organizations.

As Salonga laid out, training musicians are costly.

“Right now, we are paying for the 25 faculty members. We have to pay for our rehearsal venues but to top it all off, what’s really needed is funding for instruments, which are not cheap.”

For example, Salonga said professional piccolo instruments would cost €8,000 per piece, while professional violins could easily cost $40,000.

Sure there are available entry-level versions of these instruments, but Ang Misyon currently sponsors 70 scholars in OFY and 50 more reserve scholars. The amount could quickly balloon out.

Though institutionally funded by the Lopez Group of Companies, including ABS-CBN Corporation, First Philippine Holdings and First Gen Corporation, there are ways to help keep the music scholarships going for those who may not have the financial capability to master an instrument or play in an orchestra.

“What I hope people will realize is that, yes, it’s founded by a successful company, and they are capable of funding this program. But if we want it to get bigger and make an impact for more people, we will need more support,” Salonga finally emphasized.

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For partnership inquiries and opportunities for support, email [email protected] or send a message through the OFY’s Facebook and Instagram pages: @OFY.ph.



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