‘Shanghai Sonatas’ at China Institute Nov. 3


Music and songs from “Shanghai Sonatas,” with concept and music by Sean X. Gao, will be performed at the China Institute on Nov. 3. Credit: Shanghai Sonatas

Among the Jews who escaped Nazi Germany in the 1930s and 40s were more than 200 of Europe’s leading classical musicians. During their time in China, part of it spent living under Japanese occupation, they taught classical music to the locals, and their influence is said to live on today among the millions of Chinese and people of Chinese descent who carry on the tradition of Western classical music. Selected music and songs from “Shanghai Sonatas,” a musical based on the memoirs of the Jewish musicians, comes to the China Institute, 40 Rector St., on Thursday, Nov. 3 at 6:30 p.m. Go here for more information on “Shanghai Sonatas” and here to purchase tickets.  

 



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Despite illness, Rodney Crowell shines in hometown show at Heights Theater


By Paul T. Mueller –

Sometimes seeing what a performer is overcoming to deliver a performance is as impressive as the performance itself. Early in his Oct. 18 show at Houston’s Heights Theater, singer-songwriter Rodney Crowell announced that he was battling “the mother of all colds.” But despite a voice that often sounded hoarse and strained, and taking an occasional break to cough (“It’s not COVID!”) or swig from a water bottle, he pushed on for nearly two hours, delighting the capacity crowd with signature songs from his long career and readings from his recent book, Word for Word.

Crowell is the closest thing to royalty in country and Americana music, and he looks the part – still slim at 72, with white hair and a vintage black Gibson acoustic. Without a band to back him up, he played and sang with a confidence born of decades onstage, clearly basking in the love of the hometown crowd.

Rodney Crowell in concert at the Heights Theater

He led off with “Highway 17,” the tale of a career criminal who buries his ill-gotten gains and spends years in prison dreaming of what he’ll do when he gets out and recovers it – only to find that it’s been forever lost under a newly built interstate highway. Afterward he explained that the song is based on a true story involving a family he knew as a child. “Grandma Loved That Old Man,” about his beloved grandfather and the wife who put up with his faults and flaws, got a similar treatment. And so it went, with fine renditions of instantly recognizable songs interspersed with funny stories about how they came to be, and about how their author became a top-tier songwriter and performer.

The show, something of a career retrospective, included songs from Crowell’s days as a hotshot mainstream Nashville artist (“I Ain’t Living Long Like This,” “She’s Crazy for Leaving,” “ ‘Til I Gain Control Again”) as well as several from his more recent phase as an independent, more introspective artist (“East Houston Blues,” “Anything But Tame,” “Telephone Road,” “I Don’t Care Anymore”).

Crowell won enthusiastic responses for some songs he wrote with or about the late Guy Clark, a good friend of his for decades – “Stuff That Works,” co-written in the wake of his divorce from Rosanne Cash, and “It Ain’t Over Yet,” an imagined conversation between Crowell, Clark and Clark’s wife, Susanna.

After wrapping up the main set with “Please Remember Me,” Crowell acknowledged the standing ovation, put in one final plug for his book (“Christmas is coming, just saying,” he had noted earlier) and finished with “The Flyboy & the Kid” from his Tarpaper Sky album, a song he’d dedicated to Clark.

Health issues notwithstanding, Crowell headed quickly for the venue’s lobby, where he spent quite a while posing for pictures with fans and writing personalized inscriptions in the books they’d bought – and apparently loving every minute of it.



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The premiere of "De vita nätterna"



What a day! Hearing 1300 singers premiere my “De vita nätterna” conducted by the fantastic Elisa Huovinen at this years Sång- och Musikfesten! Awesome singers, awesome location (in front of Helsinki Main Library Oodi) and awesome weather! And an amazing recording that can be found here. What more could you ask for? THANK YOU!


Composer Cecilia Damström and Artistic Director Kari Turunen at Sång och Musikfesten 2022.

Kari used to teach choral conducting in Tampere and I sang three years in the chamber choir Näsi that he conducted then. Through Kari I got to know so much fantastic contemporary choir repertoire that then inspired me to write my first works for choir, that the chamber choir Näsi premiered. By now I have already composed 19 works for choir (of which five have won prizes and the last eight have been commissioned), so what can I say other than THANK YOU Kari for showing me what a fantastic musical world the choir is!



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Listen to “It’s Been A While” by producer AZËE – Aipate


AZËE is an up-and-coming DJ/producer in the Canadian dance music scene. Get a taste of his music style by listening to “It’s Been A While”.

A pop-inflected EDM banger, “It’s Been A While” is the title-track of a newly released three-track EP. The other songs on the project are “Won’t Let Go” and “Me & You” feat. DAEVO.

With “It’s Been A While”, AZËE weaves a personal story alluding to his decision to finally pursue his music dream. “I wrote this song as a letter to myself,” he says. “It’s my way of giving advice to my younger self – to never give up and always follow your dreams.

Listen to the three songs and keep up with AZËE on Instagram.





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Matt Nathanson – “Faster” – Promotional CD – 2 Loud 2 Old Music


“Faster” is the first single off Matt Nathanson’s 2011 album ‘Modern Love’. The single in the U.S. came out on March 29, 2011 and it broke the Top 100 landing at #74…so not getting close to the Top 40 countdown. However, on the Adult Top 40 Billboard Chart, it reached #11 so the adults dug, kids…I guess not so much.

The promotional copy I found is from the U.K. and according to the note on the front, it was to be released on August, 6th, 2011. It was talking him up and the fact he was opening for Kelly Clarkson’s tour in America and Train in the U.K. Matt was heading to the U.K. to do his own set of shows. That Kelly Clarkson show was the one my oldest daughter and I caught at their Fox Theater, Atlanta stop. My brother-in-law, Ryan, worked with both Kelly and Matt in that year so we got free tickets to the show and ended up meeting Matt that evening and getting autographs and pictures. He was a truly stand-up guy with the way he treated my daughter. He made her feel that she was the most important girl in the room when he talked to her. Really cool.

The song was written by Matt Nathanson and Mark Weinberg and is about a guy that is so in love with this woman. She drives him crazy. His heart beats faster when he is around her, he will do anything for her and can’t stopping thinking about how she makes him feel. There are a couple lines that make think it is also about giving oral sex to her as well with the lines…

It’s the way you swell, slow
Pushing right out of your seams
It’s the way you smile, baby
When you’ve got me on my knees

Whatever it is, it is a fun energetic track. There is a strange hand clap sounding piece and it is strange in the fact it is on a different beat than you’d expect. I have a hard time doing it myself because I have no rhythm. The song is bouncy, light and pure pop bliss. Sugary sweet, but done in a way that only Matt can do and keep it from sounding too generic pop non-sense.

Give the song a listen and let me know what you think. See if you enjoy it as much as I do. It might be too poppy for some, but I don’t care…everyone needs to have some good fun every now and again.

Thanks for stopping by and we will see you again real soon.





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Rigenerazioni – the hypnotic electronic sutras of Davide Tonini


Italian electronic artist Davide Tonini has produced a thoroughly engrossing new album. Rigenereazioni (Regeneration) reflects Tonini’s love of modular synthesis and his “incredible ways of interpreting it.”

The nine tracks here are the first nine I’ve ever heard from Tonini, and maybe the first ever released (Discogs and digital stores didn’t turn up much under this name, and Google showed me a video by a Davide Tonini called “Life cycle costing of waste management systems,” which sounded techno as fuck but unfortunately was not.)

Walking into it with no expectations, I’m walking away from Rigenerazioni with the impression that any credible music academy hawking “master classes” (they’re always “master classes”) on the art of production needs to hire Tonini, STAT. While I love sloppy basslines and the mechanical swing of imperfectly played machines, there is a deep mental pleasure that comes from listening to exquisitely well-produced and ordered electronic tracks like these.

Made entirely from his eurorack system (“without overdub”), Rigenerazioni has a coherent sound, flexible enough to hold the listener’s attention while still resembling each other, like nine pieces of a solid whole. The title track leads off and introduces some of the main musical themes: icy electronics, frozen and then melting and passing into steam, marking musical fragments of a character’s journey through an urban underworld. The cover art by Beeple shows that character standing on the precipice of a chasm, captured just before making the decision between walking away and diving in.

It’s not ambient, though, or not as you’d think of ambient. “Level” is just one of several tracks with a seriously funky bite, a fat bassline and glassy percussion. Tonini has his eurorack performing like an orchestra on “B88-2,” drowning in hypnotic electronics.

On multiple tracks Tonini has filmed himself recording — a pair of disembodied hands reaching into a trunk of patch wires and knobs. It’s an odd contrast to the sound of Rigenereazioni, which gives the impression of music transmitted directly from his mind.

Davide Tonini: Rigenerazioni (Detroit Underground / Digital)
1. Davide Tonini: Rigenerazioni (04:51)
2. Davide Tonini: Memorie (05:42)
3. Davide Tonini: Level (05:12)
4. Davide Tonini: Gomma (05:04)
5. Davide Tonini: Dipanare (05:37)
6. Davide Tonini: B88-2 (04:59)
7. Davide Tonini: B1-39 (05:49)
8. Davide Tonini: Artefatti (06:02)
9. Davide Tonini: Algebrico (05:33)

Disclosure Statement: This record was not submitted as a promo.


 

#JACKED: This was originally published in 5 Mag Issue #196 featuring Demuir, Ralphi Rosario, London Vibes and more. Support 5 Mag by becoming a member for as little as $1 per issue and get every issue in your inbox right away!

 

 



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José Elizondo: MIT Engineer. Prolific Composer.



Over 20 years ago I was asked to do a huge recording project at a pretty low-key but prestigious studio in downtown Boston. It took several days of recording over several months. There were a number of engineers who came and went on the project over that time, but I enjoyed chatting with one in particular.

I learned that José Elizondo was an MIT graduate, very serious and very professional. But he also had eyes that lit up when we could take a break and talk about classical music. It took a while for the information to come out, but in addition to being an electrical engineer, I learned he was a composer.

Over these 20+ years, I have had the pleasure of hearing Mr. Elizondo’s music in many different settings, and playing some of his recordings on WCRB. I’ve also attended magical concerts not knowing ahead of time that his music was included on the program. Imagine how delighted I was to attend a spur-of-the-moment concert when on a family vacation in California five years ago and Mr. Elizondo’s music was the highlight!
I interviewed him on the phone last week.

Laura Carlo: Let’s start at the beginning. You were born in Mexico, which I think of as a land of music. Did you come from a particularly musical family?

José Elizondo: My father’s business was as a potato farmer and my mother came from a family of coal mine workers in rural Mexico. Neither of them finished elementary school nor did either have any interest in “classical” music, per se. However, my mother encouraged me and my sister Adriana to take music lessons. Throughout her life, Mom did everything possible to support our music interests. She thought music was important for a well-rounded education.

When planning my path for university, I made a very pragmatic decision to study engineering and was fortunate to be accepted at MIT. In addition to electrical engineering, I pursued music education at MIT as well as at Harvard (in a co-registration program). But my desire to be a pianist was short lived, due to a hand injury. I ended up taking classes mostly in music history and conducting. Fortuitously, I ended up taking a couple of courses in composition. My teachers were so nurturing and encouraging, that this opened opportunities I hadn’t considered.

LC: So what was your music education and training?

JE: I started studying piano when I was approximately 5 years old, and organ a year or two after. I credit my organ teacher, maestro Arturo Ochoa, with transforming my life, by being a musical father figure, an inspiration, and by instilling in me a musical “intuition” that I’ve relied upon through my music career. Another major influence was my piano teacher Socorro Soto Ponce. Prior to university I participated in many national competitions and recitals.

It wasn’t easy to study engineering at MIT and also study music at the same time, so I didn’t have a lot of time to devote to my music. Towards the end of my time at MIT, I was fortunate to take a couple of composition classes with the wonderful composer Peter Child. He inspired me and gave me confidence to write music exploring the musical tradition of my homeland.

LC: In addition to Peter Child’s tutelage, who were your other music  mentors?

JE: I’ve been very lucky to have many amazing musicians in my life that, in addition to making my life better through their kindness and friendship, have been very generous with their advice, such as maestros Wayne Toews, Orlando Cela, Sergio Buslje, and the wonderful Şefika Kutluer.

I should also mention Carlos Prieto, the legendary Mexican cellist, author, entrepreneur and philanthropist (and MIT alum) who in a matter of minutes changed my life forever. I met him after one of his concerts at MIT. He listened to my first (and only) composition at the time, saw something in me, and right there and then commissioned me to write a cello duet, which he eventually performed in a concert together with maestro Yo-Yo Ma! That experience changed my idea of what was possible and inspired me in a way that had profound impacts in my life.

In recent years other notable influences include maestros Augusto Carrión, Gustavo Martín, Sébastien Hurtaud, Benedict Klöckner, and Kevin Sütterlin.

LC: Wow – that’s an amazing line-up of mentors and influences. I’ve met composers who only write songs, others who only write orchestral works, for example. Do you specialize in one type of output?

JE: I’m best known for my compositions for cello. I even go by the name “Cellizondo” on Instagram.

LC: Has your musical style changed with the years?

JE: I wrote my two best-known compositions, inspired by Mexican and Latin American music, in the ‘90s. Then I didn’t write almost anything for 15+ years due to health challenges and other life circumstances. Only recently, in the past 6 years, have I written a more significant number of compositions. Because of the nature of the events for which most of my recent music has been commissioned, I have explored a more lyrical and contemplative style. But I still cherish the opportunity to include Latin American elements in my compositions. I did that recently in a composition called Despapaye, which I wrote for maestro Orlando Cela and the Lowell Chamber Orchestra.

LC: How do you describe your own composing style?

JE: The one constant in all my compositions is my love for lyrical melodies. Most of my music is somehow related to dance. My compositions are either inspired by elements of folk dance music, or they consist of flowing melodies that are imagined in terms of ballet or contemporary dance. I can’t dance to save my life, but dance happens to be the way that I imagine music when composing, and I find it very helpful as a tool for understanding the prosody and proportion of a new composition.

Many of my compositions lately have had a contemplative aspect to them. Most of them incorporate a reference to the Gregorian chant Dies irae and at least one reference to music by Bach. It sounds like a collection of disparate elements, but I invite people to listen to my compositions like The Dawn of Hope to see how these elements work together in my music.

Regarding a routine for composing, I work full-time in a company that specializes in speech technology, artificial intelligence, and other technologies. The work we do is very exciting and interesting, but it can be very intense and time-consuming. It doesn’t leave a lot of free time for composition. It’s always at night or on weekends that I do most my music work, whether it is writing a new composition, or, most frequently, creating a new transcription of my existing works for some new combination of instruments.

LC: What is the actual composing process like for you?

JE: I wish I could say that it is a very systematic, predictable process, but the reality is that it takes me months of preparation to be able to get started. During that period, I try to fill my brain with ideas related to the concepts that will form part of my composition. This could be listening to music in a particular genre, reading poems on a specific topic or by a specific author, trying to understand the key points of an event that are meaningful to the performer I’m writing for or that are emotionally compatible with something I can relate to.

There is a lot of trying out melodies on the keyboard and shaping them into meaningful units that seem to be compatible with the original intention for the composition. Then there’s a long process of refining that material and producing the final piece. There have only been a couple of times when I wrote a piece in a single “compositional outburst”.

LC: Most of your compositions have been written for specific performers or for specific events.

JE: Yes, and because of that, I have had a very specific starting point or seed for the creative process. However, my best compositions have had multi-layered sources of inspiration.

For example, I was asked by the extraordinary French cellist Sébastien Hurtaud to write a piece that would be appropriate for two events: a concert in Paris commemorating the 100th anniversary of the World War I Armistice, and a concert in Panama celebrating a gathering of young people with the hope of making a difference in the world (World Youth Days). I had found great inspiration in a poem by an Australian World War I Veteran who described the moment when he, still in the trenches, was informed that the war was over. He recalled seeing the clouds of smoke dissipate and give way to the light of the sun.

Shortly after I started writing, a very important person in my life passed away. The piece instantly became more personal and I decided to embrace a more universal theme of the journey through darkness to light, whether it’s at a macro level (people going through war and longing for peace) or at a personal level (people grieving or going through a challenging situation). And the result of this process is my composition The Dawn of Hope. I decided to focus on how love and compassion can transform someone, even when dealing with great challenges or loss, and help him see life again with hope.

LC: I know that it’s like asking a mother to choose her favorite child, but do you have a favorite piece among all those you’ve written?

JE: My most performed piece is the tango Otoño en Buenos Aires, and I love it very much.This is a performance with Sheku Kanneh-Mason and Ashok Klouda:

I also have two that are particularly close to my heart for reasons related to the life circumstances in which they were created: The Dawn of Hope, which I mentioned earlier, and Under the Starry Sky of the Rhine.

LC: How does your cultural heritage inform your compositional style? 

JE: Without a doubt, my cultural heritage has been a very important part of my compositional style. Some of my pieces are very explicitly Mexican or Latin American. But in general, I think that my cultural heritage has strengthened my love for melody, my preference for writing music that connects with the audience at an emotional level, and my love for dance forms.

LC: As a Hispanic composer, do you see any issues or roadblocks for Hispanic composers today?

JE: We are blessed to live in a period with wonderful tools and opportunities that didn’t exist even a couple of decades ago. Composers these days don’t have to rely on publishers, record labels, et cetera, to make their music known. And we don’t have to be limited by geography to make musical connections, collaborate on projects or get performances of our works. The availability of extraordinary learning resources online and the easy access to scores for study is something unprecedented as well. So, more than speaking about roadblocks, I prefer to think about it in terms of blessings and opportunities.

Of course, I’m quite aware of the many challenges that remain, in terms of support for music education, budgets for music institutions, availability of affordable instruments, grants for concerts, et cetera. But I’m grateful for the many things that are a lot better and more possible now that they were not so long ago. I’m encouraged by the many efforts that are in progress to make more music by Latin American composers available to everyone, with notable projects like the Sphynx Catalog, the amazing projects by artists like Gustavo Martín (“El violonchelo en Mexico”), Evangelina Reyes and her colleagues (Latin American flute catalogue) and many others.

LC: I got to hear your music unexpectedly at a California concert. I think in that concert program book I read your works have been played by orchestras all around the world, not just in the U.S. Tell me about your music’s reception in those other countries.

JE: It’s been a blessing to hear my compositions performed by more than 180 orchestras around the world. I never expected anything like this to happen! There have been many beautiful, memorable moments. For example, the very first professional performance of my music by an orchestra. It was in the context of an outdoor festival. To hear my composition, which I had written as a homework for a university class, performed by professional musicians, and to receive a standing ovation by an audience of nearly 25,000 people was absolutely incredible and that still motivates me when writing new music.

Another wonderful experience was when I visited a dear conductor friend in England, maestro Andrew Sherwood. He invited me to meet him at what he described as a “rehearsal” of his youth orchestra. He had actually invited current and former orchestra members who had performed my music in 40+ concerts during the past 5 years under his direction. They played my compositions for me and we had a wonderful conversation. At the time, I had just recovered from a very traumatic surgery and was very moved and encouraged to hear the stories from all those kids that had grown up playing my music.

LC: Wonderful story! Looking ahead now, what are projects you are working on?

JE: I’ve been writing a cello concerto for the extraordinary cellist Benedict Klöckner, who is also a very dear friend of mine. The piece is called The Legend of the Noble Knight. I’m particularly excited to collaborate with my dear friend, maestro Kevin Sütterlin to bring this concerto to life. I’ve also been asked to write a celebratory piece for the opening ceremony of a beautiful new church that is being built in northern Mexico. And not too long ago, I was asked by maestro Carlos Prieto to write another cello duet for him and maestro Yo-Yo Ma. The piece is called Cantabrigian Reflections. Having two of my all-time music heroes associated with that piece is a dream.

LC: And as if that weren’t thrill enough, what else would you consider the greatest thing that could happen to you as a composer?

JE: Hearing that I have touched the heart of the listener and facilitated a moment in which they can forget their troubles, or feel connected to an emotion that provides serenity, joy or healing. It’s not something one can “plan for,” but it’s incredibly special when people tell you they’ve had such an experience while listening to your music. It has happened to me a with my composition, The Dawn of Hope, and I feel incredibly blessed and fortunate.

CODA: As you read, Mr. Elizondo has great affection for two of his pieces in particular. Let’s hear them now, starting with The Dawn of Hope. This version is performed by cellist Sébastien Hurtaud and pianist Pamela Hurtado.

Another piece near-and-dear to his heart is Under the Starry Sky of the Rhine. You’ll hear the Bach references he mentioned.





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Allen`s archive of early and old country music.: Onie Wheeler/The Lonesome Ozark Cowboys


I had someone ask me if I had this disc a few times. Apparently it`s a pretty rare disc. I think this may be the first disc issued of Onie Wheeler and his wife Jean before he started recording for Columbia. There are some Onie Wheeler LP`s here in the Archive so I`m not going to go into any particulars on him here. I will say his daughter, Karen Wheeler, has a website at www.karenwheelermusic.com that has some nice information.
I`m guessing this was recorded about 1951 or 1952, but I couldn`t really find any information about Agana and this is the only disc I`ve ever saw on the label.

Track list—
Shackles And Chains (the great Jimmie Davis song)
What`s Wrong With My Daddy (a sad number about the typical drunk daddy)

Click here to download Onie Wheeler/The Lonesome Ozark Cowboys – Agana 1352



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George Harrison Couldn’t Read or Write Music, but He Liked It That Way


George Harrison and his bandmates in The Beatles couldn’t read or write music. That might surprise some, considering the group is famous for musical masterpieces like “A Day In The Life” and “Something.” However, they just didn’t learn how to play their instruments by reading and writing notes. John Lennon, whose first instrument was the banjo, didn’t even know that a guitar had six strings when he first met George.

George didn’t think he needed to know music composition. When a tune popped into his head, he had to record it quickly, and he didn’t mind that process.

George Harrison | Max Scheler – K & K/Redferns

Paul McCartney on why The Beatles didn’t know how to read or write music

During a 2018 interview on 60 Minutes (per Global News), Paul McCartney explained that he didn’t know how to read or write music.

“I don’t see music as dots on a page,” Paul said. “It’s something in my head that goes on. None of us did in the Beatles. We did some good stuff though. But none of it was written down by us. It’s basically notation. That’s the bit I can’t do.”

The Beatles only had to worry about their lyrics. They wrote a song anywhere, any time. Then they brought their songs into the studio, where the band was ready to put some music behind the lyrics. So, it makes sense that George, Paul, John, and Ringo didn’t need to know how to write or read music.

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RELATED: George Harrison Said His Ego Would Rather Have Eric Clapton Play on ‘While My Guitar Gently Weeps’

George Harrison said he had to keep music in his head because he couldn’t write it down

George had a simple songwriting process. If he came up with a melody or lyrics for a song, he stored it all in his head until he got to a recording studio.

During a 1971 interview on The Dick Cavett Show (per George Harrison on George Harrison: Interviews and Encounters), Dick Cavett asked George if he could read and write music. He said he didn’t.

The host asked, “Then, when you say write, if you have a tune that hits you how do you get it down?” George replied, “Just keep it in your head, you know. Just work it out on the piano or on the guitar.”

Cavett asked, “But then do you tape it, or what preserves it?” George explained, “Sometimes, sometimes put it on tape but usually you can remember it in your head, if you don’t. I wrote the words down and remember the tune in my head.”

George was OK with waiting until he could record or play something on an instrument.

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RELATED: George Harrison Released ‘My Sweet Lord’ Because He Was Sick of ‘Young People Just Boogying Around, Wasting Their Lives’

George didn’t wish he’d studied music composition

For George, reading and writing music wasn’t necessary. Cavett asked the “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” singer, “Do you wish you had studied composition?” He replied, “No.”

Then, he admitted it might be cheaper. “Well, maybe, maybe it would help somewhere,” he said. “I probably wouldn’t have to pay a copyist.” Cavett asked if George missed it. He replied no again.

“Because it’s not really sort of music you know,” George explained. “It’s like, uh—I mean, there’s a difference between people who write music, and classical things, and big arrangements, to the sort of thing I do. It’s just really, it’s very simple.”

Whatever George’s process was, we still got hit after hit.

RELATED: George Harrison Thought Eric Clapton Looked Lonely When They Met at a Lovin’ Spoonful Show, but Clapton Thinks George Envied Him



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Photo Gallery: Magi Merlin, Yaya Bey at Purgatory


Magi Merlin and Yaya Bey deliver enticing performances at an intimate venue.

This past Wednesday 3/9 Montreal-based artist Magi Merlin and Brooklyn-based artist Yaya Bey played an intimate set at Purgatory in Bushwick. Bey played solo with a SP 404 accompanied with angel-like vocals; Merlin was accompanied by a full band and delivered a high energy, crowd exciting performance. Last month, Magi Merlin self-released a dynamo new single “Free Grillz” and based on what we’ve heard so far, we are eager to see what her project has in store in the future.

Photos were taken by AdHoc’s own Steph Rinzler, check them out below.

Yaya Bey
Magi Merlin





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