Music to their ears: Give the gift of song this Christmas


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Finding the perfect Christmas gifts for friends or family can be a complicated and time-consuming endeavour. The good news is if you have a music fan on your list, there are plenty of unique items to choose from. You can easily impress your cousin who plays 11 instruments or your favourite co-worker with the impeccable record collection.

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Be mindful of tastes, however. A ukulele might not go over well with someone who wants to be the next DJ Tiesto, and your Black Sabbath-loving brother probably won’t appreciate a Taylor Swift-branded vanilla-lavender candle. (On the other hand, he might love it. People are complex creatures.)

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Here are a few gifts that should hit the right note with music lovers.

A music fan could spend hours trolling through racks at Calgary’s Recordland. Postmedia files Photo by Gavin Young Gavin Young /Gavin Young

Gift certificates for independent record stores

Whether it’s obscure vintage vinyl, new CD releases or cassette tapes by local bands, you can find it all at Calgary’s independent record stores.

Turn It Up Records & Hi-Fi also sells record players and speakers, while Heritage Posters & Music has an excellent selection of framed and unframed posters, signed memorabilia, magazines and other unique musical mementos.

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For fans of more underground and independent music, Sloth Records, Melodiya and Blackbyrd Myoozik have the best selection. Or, if spending hours digging through stacks of wax is a favourite pastime, some cash to spend at Recordland and Hot Wax would most likely be appreciated.

Would the heavy metal rocker in your life like a ticket to see guitarist Jonathan Donais and Anthrax play at the Grey Eagle Event Centre in January? Tom Bateman, Postmedia files Photo by Tom Bateman /Tom Bateman/Daily Herald-Tribune

Concert tickets for local venues

Did your best friend mention a good show coming up? Why not buy a pair of tickets? Musicians and venues (small and mid-sized rooms, in particular) could use the support these days. Purchasing tickets in advance helps ensure bars, clubs and theatres won’t have to cancel due to poor ticket sales. Or, buy merchandise straight from the artist’s website. A true fan will always appreciate a new T-shirt, hoodie or toque.

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TONTO (The Original New Timbral Orchestra) modular synthesizer is featured at Studio Beell in the National Music Centre. Dean Piling/Postmedia

Annual membership to Studio Bell/ National Music Centre

The iconic building in East Village opened its doors to the public seven years ago and since then has hosted numerous exhibitions, concerts and special events. Canada’s musical history is told over five floors in Studio Bell. Highlights include stage costumes worn by Avril Lavigne, k.d. lang, Deborah Cox, Shania Twain and more, as well as interactive displays, fascinating vintage instruments, memorabilia from Canadian Songwriting Hall of Fame and Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame inductees and an ambient audio art installation.

If a year-long pass wouldn’t go to good use, you can also gift a ‘Backstage Pass’ tour, which includes a close-up look at TONTO, a massive analog synthesizer famously utilized by soul great Stevie Wonder in the early ’70s; and the Rolling Stones Mobile Studio, which was used to record seminal albums by the Stones, Led Zeppelin, Bob Marley and The Who.

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For stocking stuffers, the NMC gift shop sells an array of music-inspired knickknacks. (NMC.ca)

Cadence Weapon performed at Block Heater. A music lover would appreciate a festival pass as a Christmas gift. Photo by David Kenney /jpg

Festival passes

The summer festival season may seem like some far-off dream when snow covers the ground, but Calgary is blessed with many amazing music festivals – Sled Island, The Calgary Folk Music, Calgary International Blues Festival and JazzYYC to name a few. And the lineups are always stellar.

For more immediate festival fun, Big Winter Classic kicks off Jan. 26 and the Calgary Folk Fest-backed Block Heater festival is set for Feb. 9-12.

A music cruise is a great gift for a very close friend or significant other. Here Sister Hazel played on the pool deck on The Rock Boat 2016. Sixthman and Norwegian Cruise Line is one of several companies to offer concerts at sea. Courtesy, Sixthman Photo by Will Byington /jpg

Music cruises

For the most special music fan in your life, consider the unforgettable gift of a music cruise.

During the past decade, music cruises have taken off in popularity. For one, it’s a relatively easy way for artists to make a good chunk of change and for fans, they can watch their favourite acts (sometimes multiple times) and enjoy a vacation at the same time.

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No matter the musical taste, be it ‘80s pop, modern country, metal, blues or 2000s emo-punk, there’s mostly like a cruise. For example, Cayamo’s 15th Annual Journey Through Song with Andrew Bird, Neko Case, Allison Russell, Jeff Tweedy of Wilco, award-winning bluegrass-inspired band Trampled By Turtles and more sails from Miami to St. Maarten in February.

Also in February, the Rock Legends Tour sets off from Fort Lauderdale with Roger Daltrey, Deep Purple, The Marshall Tucker Band, Randy Bachman and more; or the Broadway Cruise with Tony-winning stars Kristin Chenoweth, Alan Cumming and Laura Benanti brings musical theatre favourites to the high seas in March. (Cayamo.com; Rocklegendscruise.com; Thebroadwaycruise.com)

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Donate to community radio

Full disclosure, I host a program on Alberta radio station CKUA. But long before I was ever involved with CKUA, I donated to community radio.

Stations such as CKUA and Calgary’s campus station, CJSW are an important part of the cultural fabric of the province.

You can support curated radio and give a very cool gift in a couple of ways. Donate to CJSW and receive branded swag and a Friends Card, which offers discounts at a variety of local businesses. Or, donate an hour of programming in someone’s name on CKUA and that person can choose a handful of songs to play on the show and hear their name on air. (CJSW.com/donate; CKUA.com/support)

Soak it up

If big-ticket gifts like music cruises are out of the question, but you still want to make an impression, a showerhead with an attached Bluetooth speaker might do the trick.

The speaker can connect to phone or computer playlists, allowing the most music mad on your Christmas gift list to shower with a soundtrack. (Kohler.ca)

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A fittingly sublime musical feast for St Cecilia at Wigmore Hall, plus the best of November’s classical and jazz concerts







© Provided by The Telegraph
The Freiburg Baroque Orchestra at the Wigmore Hall

Freiburg Baroque Orchestra, Wigmore Hall ★★★★★

You may have missed it, but Tuesday just past was St Cecilia’s Day, named after the Roman noblewoman who refused to marry a pagan because she preferred to “sing to God in her heart”, was martyred for her pains, and became the patron saint of music. During the revival of musical life that followed the ending of Puritanism in England, there was a brief but glorious flurry of pieces composed in her honour.

We too have suffered our own form of puritanism in recent years thanks to lockdowns, which reduced musical culture to a thin gruel of online and “socially distanced” concerts. Perhaps that’s why Tuesday night’s concert in St Cecilia’s honour from the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra at the Wigmore Hall was greeted with such fervour by the packed audience. It felt like a symbolic act of reconnection to music, enacted through stunning performances of music by Handel and Purcell.

It began with one of those pieces composed in honour of the saint, Purcell’s Ode to St Cecilia’s Day. The orchestra’s director, Australian pianist Kristian Bezuidenhout, launched the overture with just solo strings and bass, bringing in the luxurious sound of the full orchestra only for the repeat. It was one of innumerable subtle touches of colouration he encouraged from the orchestral players, who are truly a bunch of heroes. To pick out any names seems invidious, but I can’t resist mentioning oboists Ann-Kathrin Brüggemann and Josep Domènech, entwined in a delicious pastoral trio with bassoonist Eyal Streett at the beginning of Handel’s anthem “As pants the heart”.  

The six singers all from the UK were no less fine, and if I had to pick out one sublime moment it would be tenor Hugo Hymas’s rendition of Beauty thou Scene of Love in Purcell’s Ode. The different emotional worlds of the two great composers – enchanted, mysterious, rhythmically quirky in Purcell, stately; apparently grander, but with its own dusky magic in the case of Handel – shone out beautifully.

This feast of music closed with Purcell’s Birthday Ode for the Duke of Gloucester, a shameless bit of toadying that nevertheless drew forth some inspired music. At the end, when Jaroslav Rouček’s beautifully moulded trumpet duetted triumphantly with soprano Grace Davidson, it really did seem as if the saint – to quote the poet Auden’s Hymn to Saint Cecilia – had come down to us here on earth, to “startle composing mortals with immortal fire”. IH

Hear this concert for 30 days via the BBC iPlayer

Chucho Valdés, London Jazz Festival, Royal Festival Hall ★★★★★






© Tatiana Gorilovsky
Chucho Valdés at the 2022 London Jazz Festival, at the Royal Festival Hall – Tatiana Gorilovsky

Cuban pianist, composer and band leader Chucho Valdés has undoubtedly earned his legendary status (along with numerous Grammys and other major awards) over several decades. As a teenage prodigy, he took over the famed Tropicana Club house band previously led by his father; in the 1970s, he founded the highly influential Latin jazz fusion outfit Irakere; as an elder statesman of the scene, he has continued to build on his prolific catalogue. On Sunday night, the 81-year-old star’s headline date formed part of the London Jazz Festival’s “Icons” strand, and the enthusiastic multi-generational audience reflected the expansive reach of his work. 

As this tall gentleman ambled onstage without airs, carrying a book of sheet music under his arm, the crowd responded with thrilled whoops – though once he began playing, this excitable buzz became a warmly reverential hush. Within a few notes of his opening pieces, you were struck by Valdés’s extraordinary dexterity and flair for original melody at the keys, as well as his ability to elevate even the most familiar Gershwin standards into something fresh and beautifully unconstrained, deftly accompanied on bass, drums and percussion.

While this was enthralling, it was also really the warm-up to Valdés’s main event: a performance of his new big-band opus, La Creación, conceived in the midst of lockdown. Valdés has previously described this ambitious four-movement suite as “the accumulation of all my experiences and everything I’ve learned in music”, though at the Southbank his intro comprised a few genial words in Spanish – he gave full focus to the material and his supremely talented ensemble (including vocalists, brass, sax, further keys, and traditional double-headed bata drum). 

La Creación’s multi-layered material digs deep and hits hard, taking inspiration from Santería spiritual rituals, West African roots, funk and blues. This wasn’t the first time that Valdés has explored his Yoruban heritage and faith through his work (there were distinct bonds with earlier work such as Irakere’s Misa Negra), but it did exude an exceptional presence and vivacity. Positioned to one side, Valdés fluidly underpinned the mesmerising grooves, while lively co-conductor Hilario Luis Durán Torres leapt up from his own keyboard to guide the players weaving through the animated rhythms and refrains. 

In the hands of a less assured and affable artist, the concept might have felt portentous, but this experience proved both immensely sophisticated and joyously playful. It didn’t seem to matter that we were in a seated auditorium on a chilly London night, rather than at an altar or on a heaving Havana dancefloor; Valdés’s life-affirming Creation genuinely captivated you, and carried you beyond the here and now. AH

Chornobyldorf, Huddersfield Festival of Contemporary Music ★★★★★






© Artem Galkin/Artem Galkin
Chornobyldorf – Artem Galkin/Artem Galkin

Don’t allow the title of the Ukrainian work Chornobyldorf – the self-styled “archaeological opera” that opened the 45th Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival – to mislead you. This extraordinary cross-disciplinary show (which combines such elements as opera, folk music, heavy rock, contemporary dance, experimental film, performance art and religious ritual) is not, as its programme notes might imply, a piece of conventional storytelling about a group of human beings trying to salvage their civilisation after a cataclysmic nuclear disaster.

Rather, this highly original opera – the work of composers and librettists Roman Grygoriv and Illia Razumeiko – stands in an eastern European avant-garde tradition that eschews straightforward narrative. Like the pioneering “laboratory theatre” of the great Polish dramatist Jerzy Grotowski in the 1960s and the experimental genius of Russian companies Derevo and Akhe in the 21st century, this bold and imaginative production is concerned primarily with the emotional and psychological impact of the images and sounds that it makes.

The show’s initial imagery – of blackened trees and naked humans engaged in meaningful ceremony – points towards post-apocalyptic dystopia. The music – which is uncompromisingly discordant, like Bartók colliding with heavy metal band Metallica – increases the sense of humanity at a particularly precarious juncture.

What we are witnessing here is a human culture that has been violently broken from its moorings. As these people make their archaeological investigations of the religious, cultural and industrial remnants of their forebears, they mangle paganism with Christianity, ancient Greek mythology with the sacred music of Bach.

Grygoriv and Razumeiko are concerned, not with the grim realities of material survival in a post-apocalyptic world, but with the quest to survive in spiritual and cultural terms. Consequently, everything the characters do is imbued with a remarkable significance.

A male singer in black robes leads worshippers who carry metronomes as if they were religious artefacts. A group of naked figures sing from the kind of pagan shrine one imagines to have been erected by the Aztecs.

This excellently designed piece is constructed entirely of such images. Every scene – whether delivered from atop a large scaffold or in promenade – looks like an exquisite, animated Renaissance painting.

The song itself – from gorgeous vocal polyphony in the Ukrainian folk tradition to great operatic interjections – is beautifully executed throughout.

It might be tempting – given the current conflict – to connect this opera to Putin’s outrageous invasion of Ukraine (and, indeed, the performers bring out the flags of Ukraine and the Ukrainian Army as they take their bows). However, Chornobyldorf predates the invasion by more than a year.

In truth, so universal is its contemplation of human catastrophe that the piece speaks as powerfully to the dreadful conflicts in Syria and Yemen, and indeed to the frightening realities of climate change, as it does to the war in Ukraine itself.

The epitome of the eastern European avant-garde, the show is unlikely to be every British opera lover’s cup of tea. Nevertheless, its UK premiere was a formidable way to begin the Huddersfield festival. Mark Brown

The Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival continues until November 27; tickets: hcmf.co.uk

Henry Threadgill’s Zooid and Anthony Braxton, Barbican Centre






© Mark Allen/Mark Allen
Anthony Braxton and Carl Testa at the Barbican Centre – Mark Allen/Mark Allen

More than fifty years ago a group of black jazz musicians in Chicago defied the riots and racism around them to form the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians. They dreamed of a new music, utterly free yet purposeful, soaring way beyond the confines of jazz, and they drew on everything from Arnold Schoenberg to John Coltrane. Two of the era’s leading lights brought their latest ensembles to the Barbican stage on Sunday evening, as part of the EFG London Jazz Festival.

Being young at heart, both Braxton and Threadgill like to surround themselves with younger players, and one of the pleasures of the evening was the reverence that could be felt emanating from each group for the gently guiding, white-haired figure at its centre. Beyond that they were very different. Braxton’s guiding influence on his Fusion Quartet was evident in his eager hand signals, which would send the music off in a new direction. His 70-minute uninterrupted set felt like a slow journey through a constantly varying landscape. At one moment Braxton’s high saxophone keening would be so closely intertwined with Susana Santos Silva’s high trumpet that it felt almost like one melody.

Meanwhile drummer Mariá Portugal would explore metallic sounds on cymbals, while bassist Carl Testa tested the possibilities of a tiny handful of notes. This might be followed by a moment of humour, or a luminous interlude of near-emptiness marked by single notes, like a desert in which a bird is the only moving thing. The only jarring element was the electronics, a crude element in a collective sound which was otherwise so enormously subtle.

Like Braxton’s musicians, the members of Henry Threadgill’s quintet Zooid (the name refers to a ‘colonial’ organism made of parts with different forms) had sheet music in front of them, and their music was also poised fascinatingly between fluid improvisation and purposeful form. But whereas Braxton’s set was a string of interconnected miniatures, Threadgill’s unfolded in long burgeoning waves. It was hard to work out how just how Christopher Hoffman’s urgent cello phrases related to the guitarist Liberty Ellman’s lyrical flourishes, and why these fused together so well with tuba player Jose Davila’s agile bass and drummer Elliot Humberto Kavee’s quietly urgent patter. The compelling coherence of both sets, even while being totally unpredictable, was mysteriously appealing. The compelling coherence of both sets, even while being totally unpredictable, was mysteriously appealing. They proved that the ethos that fired these great musicians 50 years ago is as compelling and necessary as ever.

The EFG London Jazz Festival continues until 20 November. efglondonjazzfestival.org.uk

Florian Boesch, Wigmore Hall ★★★★★






© Andreas Weiss
Austrian baritone Florian Boesch – Andreas Weiss

Some works of genius remain a puzzle no matter how many times you hear them. Schubert’s tremendous and much-loved set of songs Winterreise (A Winter’s Journey) is one of them. The singer has to impersonate some nameless man, about whom we learn absolutely nothing except that he’s been jilted. Instead of drowning his sorrows with his mates, or finding another woman who actually appreciates him, he decides to walk to his death in the snow, across twenty-four songs of increasingly deranged despair.

It’s actually a deeply implausible scenario, but in this riveting performance from the Austrian baritone Florian Boesch and Scottish pianist Malcolm Martineau it became an all-too-believable portrayal of male anger leading to mental breakdown. The woman had spurned him, so he was now going to take revenge not on her but on the universe, by spurning life and trudging stubbornly to his death.

By aestheticising the man, most performers make him sympathetic, someone who strikes fetchingly poetic attitudes of suffering. There was absolutely nothing fetching about Boesch’s traveller – in fact, he was distinctly unpleasant. There was a self-pitying curl to his lip in the opening song, and a suggestion of rubbing salt in his wounds just to sharpen the pain. And many of the songs rose to a fury of frustration and embitterment that was truly frightening.

Boesch displayed an astounding range of vocal colour, from an insinuating near-whisper to an agonised near shout that pressed on one’s ear-drums, and he pulled Schubert’s rhythms around mercilessly in his determination to express the traveller’s crazed state. Martineau was as daring as Boesch in disrupting the even tread of Schubert’s rhythms, so as to screw truly expressionist levels of emotional intensity from the music.

Just when the procession of despairing songs threatened to become just too relentless, Boesch would grant us a moment of beautiful vocal softness, as the traveller had a memory of happier times, or dreamed of how peaceful death would be. Finally, as the journey reached its end with the traveller listening to the organ-grinder grinding out his sad song, Boesch and Martineau achieved an unexpected and extraordinary other-worldly lightness. One got the sense that the traveller had at last thrown off anger and despair, because he’d finally found some empathy for another human being. The sense of enlightenment through suffering was palpable, and it made the harrowing emotional journey we’d just been through all the more meaningful. IH

Hear Florian Boesch at Dulwich College, London SE21, on Dec 13; songeasel.co.uk

Nobuyuki Tsujii, Queen Elizabeth Hall ★★★★☆






© Robert Ghement/Shutterstock
Pianist Nobuyuki Tsujii – Robert Ghement/Shutterstock

When he burst on to the musical scene 14 years ago, blind pianist Nobuyuki Tsujii was a media sensation, mobbed by teenage groupies after every concert. His playing was praised as “a miracle” and “a healing power” by critics not noted for going into raptures.

On Sunday night, the groupies were again out in force at Tsujii’s recital, though they’re probably nudging 30 now. The once-slender Tsujii is quite stocky these days, but in every other respect he’s still the smiling, somewhat gauche youth who captivates everyone. When you watch him take his seat at the piano and take the measure of the keyboard with his questing, intelligent hands, head flung back, and then without warning plunge into a virtuoso showpiece, it really does feel as if this grubby, tired world has been illuminated by something extraordinary.

Sceptics might suggest that both Tsujii’s adoring fans and those usually hardened critics have been seduced by the overall “miracle” and aren’t really listening to the music-making. But they would be wrong, because Tsujii’s playing is remarkable by any standards. He played an unashamedly popular programme, with Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata alongside three of the lighter numbers from Liszt’s musical record of his journeys through Italy, followed by Ravel’s much-loved but very hackneyed Pavane pour une infante defunte and the almost as hackneyed Jeux d’eau.

Every piece showed an astounding delicacy and variety of touch, and real musical insight, apart from the opener. The first movement of Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata emerged with immaculate perfection, the undulating accompaniment nicely balanced against the melody – but that was all. The astonishing, visionary strangeness of Beethoven’s masterpiece passed Tsujii by.

The contrast between that and Liszt’s tenderly intimate Consolation no 2 and the pieces evoking Venice and Naples was striking. Here, the soul of the music really was drawn out, suggesting that Tsujii needs the stimulus of properly virtuoso piano music to set his imagination alight. The Gondolier’s Song had a lovely nostalgic swaying quality, and the final whirling tarantella built to an irresistibly wild as well as note-perfect finale.

After Jeux d’eau, which was poetically suggestive as well as vividly pictorial, Tsujii dazzled us with the jazz-flavoured fireworks of Russian composer Nikolai Kapustin’s Eight Concert Etudes. What with those and the very predictable encores including Debussy’s Clair de lune and Liszt’s La Campanella, the programme might, on paper, have looked too hackneyed to be taken seriously. But the seductive feeling Tsujii creates of utter immersion in an inner world meant that even these tired warhorses took on a power to charm. IH

LSO/André J Thomas, Barbican Hall, London EC2 ★★☆☆☆






© Provided by The Telegraph
André J Thomas conducts the LSO at the Barbican Hall – Mark Allan

It’s hard to think of a less likely leading man than a tuba, a musical monster of the deep, most at home when sad-clowning at the back of a brass band. So it was a sight to behold the principal tuba player of the London Symphony Orchestra, Ben Thomson, sat centre-stage, his body almost completely obscured by the instrument’s chaotic tangle of tubing, only his fingers visible skittering across the keys, bebopping feverishly up and down the vast range of this soulful beast. We were approaching the climax of the UK premiere of Wynton Marsalis’s Tuba Concerto – hand on heart, the finest tuba concerto I’ve ever heard. 

Loud, faintly sarcastic applause welcomed Thomson at the start, in the expectation that we were about to witness the musical equivalent of a fat man attempting a pirouette. More fool us. For this leviathan could not only sing as sweetly as any songbird, it could flirt and fly, fluttering its hippo eyelids, gliding through its melodies as gracefully and airily as Fred Astaire.

Thomson could even duet with himself, floating multiphonics over the top of his bass sound by humming while playing. Around him, Marsalis – noted jazzer and chief mobiliser of the bebop revival – set the orchestra off on a jaunty, jerky, heavily syncopated path. Expertly balanced by conductor William Long, the dissonant crunch and percussive funk of the Latin-inflected LSO acted as the perfect foil to the warm flow of the tuba. 

How much you enjoyed the concerto would have depended on your tolerance for the inevitable cringe of watching an orchestra jazz things up. Next to the night’s other UK premieres, however, the work almost felt sophisticated.

Joel Thompson’s To Awaken a Sleeper and Carlos Simon’s Portrait of a Queen were stock musical evocations of tart, overly on-the-nose texts about black suffering narrated in high theatrical style by Willard White and Eska, respectively. Had the composers come out on stage and shouted “Feel sad!”, “Now angry!”, “Now hopeful!’, it would have been hardly less subtle. That said, conductor André J Thomas got a big, generous sound from the LSO (someone needs to book him to conduct Berlioz or Puccini). And it was hard to resist the cumulative force of the sultry, slow-striding second movement of Simon’s infectious AMEN!. 

But it was a night in which you would never have known the past 80 years of classical composition had ever happened. The idiom of all three composers lay barely a few inches from George Gershwin’s. There was a time when the LSO understood why you might want to diversify your composer pool. Engaging composers from alternative traditions and cultures was about carving out space for new sonic possibilities, about aesthetic diversity. Listen, for example, to the extraordinary, brooding Skies of America by free-jazz pioneer Ornette Coleman, commissioned by the orchestra 50 years ago and shamefully never revived. It’s a far cry from Sunday night.

Marsalis, Thompson and Simon may all be African-American, but they all engage in numbingly regressive aesthetics. Today diversity is no longer about finding visionary new ways of making art, but about frit organisations reviving and entrenching safe old ones. The irony is that Scrutonite conservatives have nothing to fear from all this. Those who care about the avant-garde and the need to nurture original voices should be much more concerned. Igor Toronyi-Lalic

Concertgebouw/Daniel Harding, Barbican ★★★★★






© Yannis Bournias
Leonidas Kavakos – Yannis Bournias

Increasing diversity may be the long-term strategy to win new audiences for classical music, but in the meantime hard-pressed managers know there’s nothing like the “dream ticket” of a top-rank international orchestra and top-rank soloist to pull in the punters. It certainly worked its magic on Friday night, when the orchestra many judge to be the world’s finest, the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra from Amsterdam, was joined by Leonidas Kavakos, probably the most bankable violinist alive. Before the concert the packed foyers had that fever of excitement I haven’t felt since those far-off pre-Covid days.

The punters’ sky-high expectations were well rewarded, with a programme that admittedly scored zero for adventurousness: Brahms’ Violin Concerto and Beethoven’s Pastoral Symphony. For that very reason it was greeted with special rapture, as it felt like a defiant assertion of the value of sustaining a great tradition – something the Arts Council of England no longer believes in, judging by the funding decisions it made on Friday. When the orchestra under Daniel Harding eased almost diffidently into the gentle opening of Brahms’s concerto, you could already feel the power slumbering in the orchestra, which soon burst out. This mighty build-up led to Kavakos’s explosive entry, which had exactly the magnificent, tragically heroic quality one hopes for.

This reminded us of Kavakos’s superhuman strength of tone, but would he be equally responsive to the tender and intimate side of this many-sided work? Yes, came the answer, but in that regard he shared honours with the orchestra. Even when Kavakos was in full flight my attention was often seized by an expressive phrase in a bassoon or in the violas. Not even Kavakos can put the Concertgebouw in the shade. The fruity richness of the playing and Harding’s sensitive moulding of the tempos meant that details I’d never noticed – such as the moment when the music slips into the sensuously swaying world of Brahms’s Liebeslieder (Love Song) Waltzes – suddenly shone out.

As for Beethoven’s Pastoral Symphony, Harding led a performance of rich, easy-going amplitude that with a lesser orchestra could have seemed sluggish, but with this vintage Rolls-Royce seemed magnificently spacious. It meant that in the moments of peasant rumbustiousness, when the horns whooped and the violins romped, the contrast really made one sit up. My only caveat is that the innocently swaying final movement became so very relaxed towards the end I thought it might actually stop. But really, this was a magnificent evening. If you’re free tonight and can attend the Concertgebouw’s second concert, drop everything and go. IH

The Royal Concertgebouw is at the Barbican tonight at 7.30pm; barbican.org.uk

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HARDY, Tracy Lawrence added to 2023 Carolina Country Music Fest lineup


MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (WBTW) — Two more top names in country music have been added to the lineup for June’s Carolina Country Music Fest in Myrtle Beach, organizers announced on Wednesday.

HARDY and Tracy Lawrence will join headliners Morgan Wallen, Miranda Lambert, and Brooks and Dunn for the event, which is set for June 8-11.

HARDY will headline the McDonald’s Thursday Night Kick-Off Concert, according to organizers, who said more than 40 national, regional and local artists are scheduled to perform throughout the weekend.

Others scheduled to perform include Travis Tritt, Whiskey Myers, Scotty McCreery, Lainey Wilson, Ernest and Bret Micheals.

HARDY, the 2022 ACM Songwriter of the Year, has gained a reputation throughout the country music industry earning 12 No. 1 singles. He has written songs for top artists like Florida Georgia Line, Chris Lane, Blake Shelton, Dallas Smith, Thomas Rhett, Morgan Wallen, and more. 

Tracy Lawrence is a country music veteran with more than 30 years in the industry. He has sold more than 13 million albums and recorded 18 No. 1 songs.  

The 2023 festival in sold out, but organizers plan to release a limited number of tickets for the McDonald’s Thursday Night Kick-Off Concert, which is set for June 8. Tickets for the one-night- only event went on sale Wednesday morning.

Local discount tickets are available at The Bowery located at 110 9th Ave N. in Myrtle Beach, and at Riptydz Oceanfront Grille and Rooftop Bar located at 1210 North Ocean Boulevard in Myrtle Beach. A local ID is required.



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Waltair Veerayya song Boss Party: Chiranjeevi gives his fans a new party anthem


Telugu superstar Chiranjeevi will be next seen in Waltair Veerayya. As the release date of the film draws closer, the makers have launched promotions, starting with the release of a party number. The first song titled “Boss Party” was released on Wednesday.

Besides composing “Boss Party”, Devi Sri Prasad has also written and sung the party anthem. The song is dedicated to the cult of Chiranjeevi as the “boss of the masses.” And it seems Chiranjeevi has also let his hair down shaking the leg to the folk beats, which kind of reminds us of his older films. “Boss Party” is also crooned by Nakash Aziz and Haripriya.

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“On eve of the release of Boss Party, besides VJ Sekhar’s choreography, Devi Sri Prasad’s foot-tapping music, and Artur Wilson’s great cinematography, I would need to mention the production design by AS Prakash which fulfilled the vision of director Bobby. The artwork by him for the film, especially for this song made us very happy. I wish the audience would also feel the same,” Chiranjeevi said in a statement on Tuesday.

Chiranjeevi’s brother Pawan Kalayan also joined the promotions of Waltair Veerayya. The film’s director Bobby posted pictures of Pawan enjoying “Boss Party” on Tuesday. “A Huge moment to be Cherished forever My 2 Most favorite persons Megastar @KChiruTweets garu & Power Star @PawanKalyan garu by my side Kalyan garu has seen #BossParty song & he loved it.,Such a Positive person with same love even after all these years. #WaltairVeerayya,” Bobby tweeted.

Waltair Veerayya is getting ready to hit screens during the Sankranti holiday in January next year. The film will clash at the box office with Nandamuri Balakrishna’s Veera Simha Reddy.

Waltair Veerayya also stars Ravi Teja, Shruti Haasan and Catherine Tresa.





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Hallyu high! Best K-pop moments in 2022 you might have missed


The global Korean wave is creating ripples in the entertainment world lately. And, undoubtedly 2022 appears as a year belonging to K-pop. Be it BTS showering us with solo projects before their military enlistment, PSY making a comeback after five years, TWICE becoming the first K-pop girl group to play at a US stadium, or BLACKPINK beginning their Born Pink world tour — this year has given us some of the best K-pop moments, and honestly, iconic ones. 

While the memories of the best K-pop moments in 2022 might get blurred, there are some that deserve all our attention. And, even though everyone’s best K-pop moments of this year may vary depending on what they like or follow, we have created an unbiased list. 

Here are some of the best K-pop moments of 2022 you should know about

BTS: Concerts, fests and a new album

Image: Courtesy bts_bighit/Twitter

One of the biggest bands in the world, BTS has always soared high in the cultural accelerator and this year is no different. In 2022, BTS gave the world some of the best K-pop moments. Coming back with their new album Proof, the fulfilling ‘Permission to Dance on Stage’ Seoul concert, Festa, and the very recent Busan concert, BTS made 2022 extremely memorable, especially for ARMY. 

BTS’ military enlistment

Image credit: bts_bighit/Twitter

One of the most significant and shocking K-pop moments is BTS’ military enlistment news, without a doubt. There were speculations about the same for years, but the K-pop group’s agency Big Hit Music announced on 17 October that all members of the group will serve in the military. 

In an official statement, Big Hit Music said that “after the phenomenal concert to support Busan’s bid for the World Expo 2030, and as each individual embarks on solo endeavours, it’s a perfect time and the members of BTS are honoured to serve.”

BTS member Jin is the first one to initiate the enlistment process. Big Hit Music also announced that BTS will reconvene as a group again around 2025 following their service commitment. 

Grammys and solo works 

Image credit: bts_bighit/Twitter

Although BTS didn’t take home a golden gramophone at the 2022 Grammys, they surely made an impact worldwide with their iconic “Butter” performance live. So much so that they got a standing ovation from the audience. 

On 15 November, Recording Academy also released the nominee list for the 2023 Grammys and it’s a moment of pride for K-pop fans and Korea as BTS is nominated in three important categories — Best Duo/Group Performance with “My Universe”, Album of the Year as featured artists on Coldplay’s Music of the Spheres, and Best Music Video with “Yet To Come.”

Now that the world awaits to bid goodbye to each BTS member until 2025, the group, which is now focusing on solo projects, is making sure they leave behind enough content for ARMY. And, their individual activities undoubtedly make for some of the best K-pop moments in 2022.

A few standouts include JHope’s debut studio album Jack In The Box and his Lollapalooza concert, Jungkook’s “Dreamers” — the official soundtrack for the FIFA World Cup 2022 and his performance in Qatar for the same, Kim Taehyung aka V’s presence at Hedi Slimane’s closing Celine show in Paris Fashion Week, Jin’s debut solo single “The Astronaut” and RM’s upcoming debut studio album INDIGO

Legendary K-pop star PSY’s comeback after five years 

Image credit: PSY/Twitter

Who doesn’t remember the viral “Gangnam Style”? Everyone, right? Well, the K-pop star PSY who gifted the world with the iconic track, made a comeback in 2022 after a five-year hiatus. The announcement of the artist’s ninth full-length album was one of the most significant moments in K-pop this year and immediately created a buzz on social media and elsewhere.

Besides being one of the best K-pop moments, PSY’s comeback also served as a pleasant surprise for the BTS ARMY. The album, titled Psy 9th, with a total of 12 tracks, was led by “That That”, which was co-produced by BTS’ Suga.  The South Korean rapper also features in the music video of “That That” and even participated in composing, arranging and writing the lyrics for the song. The music video has over 360 million views on YouTube. 

TXT’s first concert, AMA debut and more 

Image credit: AMAs/Twitter

Formed by Big Hit Music, popular South Korean boyband TXT made their debut on 4 March 2019 and has never looked back since then. Also known as Tomorrow X Together, the group’s first concert tour, Act:Lovesick, for their second full album The Chaos Chapter: Freeze, and fourth extended play (EP) Minisode 2: Thursday’s Child, served as one of the best K-pop moments of 2022. 

Apart from their tour that began on 2 July in Seoul, South Korea, TXT also had the 2022 Weverse Con [New Era] and an incredible show later at Lollapalooza 2022. 

However, TXT doesn’t seem to be over with giving us the best moments from K-pop yet. The group made their first appearance at the annual American Music Awards (AMAs) 2022 that took place on 20 November in Los Angeles.

Group members Yeonjun, Soobin, Beomgyu, Taehyun and Huening Kai also competed in the Best K-Pop Artist category alongside BTS, BLACKPINK and others. They also teased their fans, the MOAs, with the probability of a new album in 2023. 

(G)I-DLE adds charm to 2022 with Tomboy

Image credit: G_I_DLE/Twitter

(G)I-DLE has turned out as one of the most successful fourth-generation K-pop girl groups this year. Their 2022 release, Tomboy has become one of the biggest hits in South Korea, so much so that (G)I-DLE is owning the music charts and breaking records repeatedly. The group also earned their first real time All-Kill with the song.

And now with the release of their recent song, “Nxde”, and their first world tour ‘Just Me ( )I-dle’, (G)I-DLE truly gave us some of the best K-pop moments in 2022. 

When BLACKPINK gave us Born Pink 

Image credit: BLACKPINK/Twitter

The best K-pop moments of 2022 is incomplete without mentioning BLACKPINK. The South Korean girl group is currently one of the biggest in the world and their 2022 activities speak of the same. 

BLACKPINK marked six years of togetherness this year and what better gift for Blinks than a comeback and a world tour, right? The group dropped their hit single “Pink Venom” at midnight on 19 August and this was followed by the release of their comeback album Born Pink on 16 September. 

BLACKPINK is currently having the time of their lives touring 16 cities globally. The Born Pink world tour began in October 2022 and will continue till June 2023. 

With such significant feats, BLACKPINK is finally back in your area and how. 

TWICE shines with Twice 4th World Tour III, comeback and Nayeon’s solo debut 

Image credit: JYPETWICE/Twitter

2022 made TWICE shine brighter than ever. The K-pop girl group concluded their Twice 4th World Tour III on 15 May  2022, at the Banc of California Stadium in Los Angeles. The tour comprising 14 shows created quite the noise globally, making for one of the best K-pop moments in 2022. 

On 26 August, the K-pop superstars surprised fans with their comeback. The 11th mini-album Between 1&2 became the first K-Pop girl group album of 2022 to chart for seven weeks on Billboard 200.

2022 also had TWICE member Nayeon making a powerful solo debut with the release of her mini album IM NAYEON. Its title track “POP” surpassed 100 million YouTube views and garnered multiple music show wins. 

K-pop sensation Girls’ Generation’s comeback after five years

Image credit: GirlsGeneration/Twitter

The return of the legendary Girls’ Generation has to be one of the best K-pop moments of 2022. After the five-year hiatus, the girl group made a full-group comeback on their 15th anniversary. Their 7th album FOREVER 1 topped the streaming charts in Korea, Japan and China, and iTunes charts in 31 countries. Fans around the world were hit by nostalgia after their much-awaited comeback. 

(Main and Featured Image: Courtesy bts_bighit/Twitter)





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Emotional Oranges Announce ‘The Juice Vol. 3’ + Drop “On My Way” Single


It’s been a minute since we’ve heard from Emotional Oranges, but the duo are back at it.

After setting things in “Motion” back in 2018, EO made their official debut with the release of The Juice a year later. Following it up with The Juice Vol. II a few months after that, they then took a pandemic-induced hiatus before resurfacing with The Juicebox – a collaborative effort with the likes of Vince Staples, Channel Tres, Chiiild, Kiana Ledé, and others.

Now, with the produce section fully stocked, Emotional Oranges are gearing up with release The Juice Vol. III on December 9th. And today, they’ve shared the project’s latest single, “On My Way.”

Emotional Oranges Announce ‘The Juice Vol. 3’ + Drop “On My Way” Single was last modified: November 22nd, 2022 by Shake





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The Late Ambient Music Pioneer Ernest Hood Is Going “Back to the Woodlands”


In 2019, one of Portland’s great cult-classic albums was the subject of a much-needed reissue and remaster.

Ernest Hood’s 1975 Neighborhoods has long been cherished in the experimental music world as one of the best early albums of ambient music (beatless, atmospheric music designed to reward both background listening and close attention). A onetime Portland jazz guitarist and KBOO co-founder, Hood lost his ability to play guitar after being struck by polio and made Neighborhoods with a unique palette of zithers and early synths.

Hood pressed only 1,000 copies of the record, and for years, the only way most people could listen to it without shelling out triple digits on a vinyl copy was through a muddy YouTube rip that obscured the album’s sonic richness and tactile detail. Russ Gorsline’s remaster and Freedom to Spend’s reissue deserve all the Grammys in the world for bringing an almost-lost classic back to vivid life.

On Nov. 11, Freedom to Spend and the Brooklyn label RVNG Intl. released Back to the Woodlands, the second album from Hood (who died in 1995). Comprising archival recordings cut between 1972 and 1982, Woodlands is a much more immediate album, one I suspect newcomers will enjoy even more than Neighborhoods.

Neighborhoods devoted long stretches to field recordings Hood made around West Linn and other Portland suburbs. Replete with mundane conversations and distant natural and animal noises, the recordings opened up a portal into Portland’s past.

Woodlands also makes use of field recordings, including idyllic birds on “Noonday Yellows” and a familiar Northwestern shower on “Rain,” but they’re worked into the fabric of the music itself. While only about 60% of Neighborhoods actually consisted of music, Woodlands is a total immersion into Hood’s idiosyncratic sound. For just over 30 minutes, zithers arc across the stereo field like a bird unfurling its wings as rushing water and crickets murmur gently in the distance.

These field recordings are a little less specific than the ones on Neighborhoods. On one track on that album, you could hear an old-timer talk about the wreck of a boat still sitting at the bottom of the Columbia River. The old man’s memories were interwoven in the fabric of the album along with Hood’s, and it was hard not to wonder if the wreck was still there—and who the old man was and what his childhood was like.

Meanwhile, the rain on “Rain” could’ve just as easily been recorded in Wisconsin. The dark mystery of the Cascadian forest has been an inspiration to artists, from bands like Agalloch and Wolves in the Throne Room to indie-rockers like Phil Elverum to filmmakers like Kelly Reichardt (Old Joy), Rob Reiner (Stand By Me), and Scott Cooper (Antlers). These creators capture the primeval, pagan, threatening quality of the Northwestern woods, whereas Woodlands evokes a pleasant walk in the park.

The whole thing has a Bambi-ish, Thomas Kinkade-style quality that offers a harmless and tame vision of nature. The music doesn’t suggest any vastness, danger, awe or mystery. It simply exhales with appreciation at how beautiful everything is, as if perpetually in the midst of sniffing a flower.

Few artists can combine such unconventional instrumentation into something so natural and consonant-sounding, and the arcing zithers and primitive synths make it sound a lot wonkier than your average New Age healing shop tape. It just sounds plain great, and it’s hard to imagine anyone enthralled by synth curiosities (like Mort Garson’s recently reissued Mother Earth’s Plantasia) won’t fall in love with it.

Woodlands is a doozy of an archival find, and it works great if you’re trying to simply bliss out. But a true evocation of the Oregon woodlands it is not.





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A classical rhythm for the contemporary, the Sushma Soma way


By Sukant Deepak

New Delhi, Nov 23 (IANS): The setting could not have been better. The aesthetic Guleria Kothi on the ghat in Varanasi. The balmy afternoon sun… Just before the performance, there was a buzz among those who had come to attend the recent Mahindra Kabira Festival presented by Teamwork — ‘Did you get a chance to listen to her album ‘Home’?’

Even for those who were googling, Carnatic vocalist Sushma Soma’s performance did complete justice to expectations, her vocals carrying everyone smoothly to an otherworldly space in the city of twisted labyrinths lost in the ambiguity of time.

Soma, born in India, who grew up in Singapore was four-years-old when she started learning music at the insistence of her parents who wanted her ‘connected’ to her roots. She may not have been very enthusiastic at that point in time but things changed — slowly but surely — especially after she spent half a year in Chennai, under the tutorage of Lalitha Shivakumar and now RK Shriramkumar.

For her, the classical space can amplify contemporary issues and concerns — like the piece ‘The Elephant’s Funeral’ which emerged after a pregnant elephant was fed a fruit packed with firecrackers.

Although admitting that it is not easy for a youngster not from a family of musicians to mark in the classical music world, the vocalist says her journey has taught her it is not just about classes but also about being in an environment that nurtures that side of an individual.

“That kind of home is extremely important. While that was not there, my parents enjoyed music. Yes, the nurturing part of it is tough, you need ‘that’ push. And I acknowledge the privilege that I grew up with,” Soma tells IANS.

“All for collaborations, she feels the same help people like her to witness music from multiple lenses — what purpose is it serving and the connection it creates. And I want to explore the values of different music. It has been an interesting experience. Mostly, I have only worked with classical musicians and now it is with other genres too. It is important to ask — what is it doing to the music, what flavour is it creating? It can be fascinating for me to observe how I have created different narratives with different musicians and styles and conversations about this as well,” says the artiste, who was awarded the ‘Young Artist Award’, the highest honour for young art practitioners by The National Arts Council, Singapore, in December 2020.

Considering the fact government supports for arts in Singapore is “fantastic”, she attributes her growth to that fact. “The initial funding came from the council that supported the album. I think they recognise artists and that art needs to grow. While I am not in a position to comment on the government support in India as I did not grow up here, it is important that every government extends support to the arts. Not everyone grows up in privileged households. You also start thinking about music as a career only if can support the family. Of course, money is not the only thing, but let us acknowledge that the same gives you the freedom to follow your passion. The state must recognise talent and how they can help the person grow.”

Stressing that corporates have a major role to play too, the vocalist adds that there needs to be an evolved ecosystem where private players, as they do abroad, also contribute.

“Spending on art and culture is a way of giving back to society.”

When she was in Singapore, Shoma saw her gurus once or twice a week but things changed in 2005 when she came to India to learn.

“I would even eat lunch with her, it was not an hourly contract, and we were a part of each other’s lives. My current mentor welcomes me in the same way and it’s very sacred, we disagree and agree. There has always been a space for those conversations, to grow and learn and as well. Yes, I have read accounts of harassment. I hope there’s a space for people to get out when it is not healthy,” she concludes.

 





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Eurovision Song Contest voting to be opened up to non-participating countries


The new ‘Rest of the World’ vote is made to strengthen the audience’s power to influence the results and to recognize the global reach of the competition

LONDON, United Kingdom – Viewers from countries not participating in the Eurovision Song Contest will be able to cast a vote for their favorite act next year for the first time in the competition’s history, the organizer said on Tuesday, November 22.

It said the new “Rest of the World” vote was to strengthen the audience’s power to influence the results and to recognize the global reach of the competition, which last year drew a television audience of more than 160 million.

Viewers will be able to vote via a secure online platform, and a full list of eligible countries will be published nearer the time of the event, usually held in May. 

“Votes from countries not participating will be combined to create a set of points with the same weight as one participating country in both of the Semi-Finals and the Grand Final,” the contest’s organisers said on their website.

The 2023 Eurovision Song Contest will be held in the northern English city of Liverpool on behalf of this year’s winners Ukraine. 

Decades-long tradition usually dictates that the winner of the contest gets to host it the following year, but the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) said safety and security reasons due to the ongoing conflict there meant runners-up the United Kingdom would host it instead.

The contest’s organizers said they were also making changes to the voting system for the semi-finals, which would now be decided by viewers alone rather than a combination of votes from viewers and national juries of musical experts as previously.

The grand final results will still be decided by a combination of votes by viewers and juries.

It said the changes were designed to protect the event’s integrity after irregular voting patterns in the results of six countries in the 2022 contest. – Rappler.com 



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Kapono, Hawaiian music icons fundraise for music scholarships at Windward CC


Henry Kapono, Jeff Peterson, Raiatea Helm and Kamuela Kimokeo will share the gift of music—and music education—in a concert at Windward Community College’s Palikū Theatre on December 5, 6–8:30 p.m. The concert will be hosted by Davey D and Mele Apana.

Proceeds from the concert will support the Henry Kapono Music scholarships at Windward CC.

Poster for Makana Mele on December 5 at Palikū Theatre

“The Henry Kapono Foundation is committed to making music education accessible, whether it is for teachers who want to use music in their classrooms, parents who want to teach their families music, or those who are seeking a career in music performance,” said Kimokeo, Hawaiʻi Music Institute director. “What better way to demonstrate this commitment than with music!”

Kapono and Kimokeo would often discuss the idea of holding a fundraiser concert for scholarships while backstage at various performances. Kapono finally said, “Enough talking, let’s get to work and make it happen.”

Tickets for the concert are $15 (students), $30 (general) $75 (VIP—special seating, pre-show meet and greet, and photo opportunity with the artist). Tickets for live streaming are also available ($15). A portion of general and VIP tickets are tax-deductible.

Tickets are limited and available at palikutheatre.com.

Hawaiian music studies at Windward CC

Helm and Peterson are among the lineup of professional musicians teaching Hawaiian music at Windward CC. The groundbreaking Kaʻohekani Hawaiian music one-year certificate is taught in a series of eight-week online classes by Kimokeo (Hawaiian music), Kawaikapuokalani Frank Hewett (Hawaiian language, hula/composition), Helm (Hawaiian singing) and Kapena DeLima (digital music production). The academic offering from Windward CC is immersive, accelerated and cohort based.

The Kaʻohekani Hawaiian music online certificate can be applied to an associate of arts degree in liberal arts. For information about Kaʻohekani, visit https://windward.hawaii.edu/programs-of-study/kaohekani/.

Kimokeo teaches ʻukulele and slack key guitar. He also performs with Jerry Santos and his own Nā Hōkū Hanohano award-winning group Hiʻikua. Hewett is a legendary kumu hula, songwriter and recent judge in the Merrie Monarch hula competition. Peterson is a grammy award-winning slack key guitar master. Nā Hōkū Hanohano award-winning and grammy nominated Helm is known for her powerful vocals. DeLima is part of the group Kapena and is an award-winning sound engineer and producer.

“This scholarship from the Henry Kapono Foundation will really help students have access to a formal music education while connecting them to our own excellent local talent, many who are legendary Hawaiian music artists,” said Kimokeo.

For more information about music programs at Windward CC, contact Kimokeo at kamuelam@hawaii.edu.



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