Live Stream Online Free – Rolling Stone


2 Chainz is taking his talents online as the new host of Amazon Music Live, a new weekly live stream concert series premiering exclusively on Prime Video.

Airing each week after Thursday Night Football on Amazon, the show will see some of the biggest musical acts in the world hitting the stage to perform their most popular tracks and fan favorites. 2 Chainz will serve as host and MC, introducing each of the artists and interviewing them during the show.

Amazon Music Live premieres October 27 with musical guest Lil Baby, who will perform cuts off his recently released album, It’s Only Me. Meghan Thee Stallion hits the Amazon stage on November 3, ahead of her LA3C Festival performance, and country star Kane Brown will treat fans to songs from his new album Different Man on November 10. More artists are expected to be announced in the coming weeks.

Buy Amazon Prime 30-Day Free Trial

Filmed in front of a live audience, the concert is streaming exclusively for Amazon Prime Members, who will be able to watch it live or on-demand after each airing (an Amazon Prime membership costs $14.99/month but the site has a 30-day free trial offer that you can use to stream Amazon Music Live online free).

“Every Thursday night, I’m bringing the biggest and the brightest stars in music to the Amazon Music Live stage in Los Angeles,” 2 Chainz says, in a release. “We have the people that are influencing the culture and have carved their own unique path in music, like Lil Baby, Megan Thee Stallion, and Kane Brown. Amazon Music Live is the only place to be for the official Thursday turn up!”

Amazon says music and sports go hand in hand, and they’re betting on Amazon Music Live to find a big audience, especially when paired with Thursday Night Football.

“Whether you’re a sports fan waiting for the first football game of the week, or a music fan staying up late to hear the latest drop from your favorite artist, Thursday is the biggest night for entertainment,” says Kirdis Postelle, global head of artist marketing of Amazon Music. “With Amazon Music Live, we’ve created a new, can’t-miss series for fans to experience the most exciting new music together. For artists, this show represents a massive new stage to share their music with fans after Thursday Night Football—the biggest game of the week, airing live on Prime Video.”

This is the latest live music release from Amazon — the site is streaming Kendrick Lamar’s “Big Steppers Tour” show from Paris on-demand right now and Amazon is set to premiere Rihanna’s latest Savage x Fenty show next month.





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15 best gifts for music lovers


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Shopping for a music lover can be hard, especially if their tastes range from Beyoncé to Joni Mitchell to ACDC. If you have a music lover on your gifting list this holiday season, Select is here to help streamline the process with a list of great, year-round gifts including speakers, instruments and decór that should strike a chord.

Related: Buying a turntable can be intimidating given some hefty jargon. We asked experts what actually matters and what doesn’t — and which models they recommend.

Best gifts for music lovers

To help you find the best gifts for the music lover on your list this year, we revisited our previous expert guidance on headphones, speakers and other music-related gadgets that align with Select-reader interest. Additionally, we consulted our in-house shopping experts on staff — many of whom are music lovers themselves — for their favorite speakers and more. We also included some highly rated items we think Select readers (and their gift recipients) will love.

Favorite Song Lyrics Vinyl Print

If you know the song that means the most to your music lover, you can give them a print of those beloved lyrics in the shape of a vinyl record. You can further personalize the record by adding extra text like names and the date, making it a great gift for newlyweds or new parents celebrating their first holiday season together.

Favorite Song Vinyl Lyrics Print

Favorite Song Lyrics Vinyl Print (Print Frame Co. / Print Frame Co.)

Favorite Song Vinyl Lyrics Print $ at Print Frame Co.

Helvetiq Music IQ Party Game

If your giftee is a music history nerd, this game might make a good gift. The card-based trivia game, meant for players ages 15 and older, requires two teams and can accommodate up to 12 players. The first round tests knowledge, while the second round tests memory from the first round and players can take risks in each round to earn more points. Helvetiq says the game has an average playtime of 45 minutes.

Helvetiq Music IQ Party Game

Helvetiq Music IQ Party Game (Amazon / Amazon)

Pick-a-Palooza Make Your Own Guitar Pick Punch

This gadget allows the user to take any unwanted plastic — like expired credit cards or IDs — and punch it into a guitar pick, ready for plucking. A favorite from our guide to dad-approved gifts, this tool comes recommended by former Select editor Morgan Greenwald’s father, who has been using it for years.

Pick-a-Palooza Make Your Own Guitar Pick Punch

Pick-a-Palooza Make Your Own Guitar Pick Punch (Uncommon Goods / Uncommon Goods)

  • Pick-a-Palooza Make Your Own Guitar Pick Punch $ at Uncommon Goods

  • Pick-a-Palooza Make Your Own Guitar Pick Punch $ at Amazon

Victrola Suitcase Record Player

Select writer Mili Godio, who owns the Crosley Cruiser Deluxe record player, gave this affordable suitcase-style Victrola record player to her younger sister as a starter record player. It has a three-speed belt built-in and can also stream audio through the built-in Bluetooth speakers. The record player has an auto-stop switch that stops spinning records once the record is finished playing, according to the brand.

Victrola Suitcase Record Player

Victrola Suitcase Record Player (Amazon / Amazon)

  • Victrola Suitcase Record Player $ at Amazon

  • Victrola Suitcase Record Player $ at Kohl’s

  • Victrola Suitcase Record Player $ at Best Buy

GiftsCharm “You Are My Sunshine” Personalized Music Box

This hand-cranked style wooden music box plays “You Are My Sunshine” to your giftee. For no extra cost, you can include one of six engravings with sweet phrases like, “And suddenly all of the love songs are about you” or “You are always in my heart,” plus one personalized line at the bottom of it, like “Love, Gabriella.”

GiftsCharm “You Are My Sunshine” Personalized Music Box

GiftsCharm \

GiftsCharm “You Are My Sunshine” Personalized Music Box $ at Etsy

Loog Ukulele

This all-wood ukulele was designed for beginner players or budding musicians, according to Loog. The instrument comes with flashcards with ukulele chord diagrams or you can play along with the Loog Guitar app, which has a “Magic Mirror feature” that shows you how to form chords through augmented reality.

Loog Ukulele

Loog Ukulele (Loog Guitar / Loog Guitar)

Loog Ukulele $ at Loog Guitar

JBL Flip 5 Portable Speaker

The JBL Flip 5 is one of the best Bluetooth portable speakers, according to tech expert and former Select contributor Whitson Gordon. Gordon appreciated its “decently strong bass and clear midrange,” which produces crisp sounds for vocals and guitar. The Flip 5 can pair with other JBL products to create a multi-speaker setup, and is available in several colors like pink, forest green and more.

JBL Flip 5

Rarton Custom Album Cover Light

If you know your loved one’s absolute favorite song, this LED light-up plaque, which sits in a wooden base, can remind them of their favorite tune at their desk. This album cover light displays their favorite song the way it would appear while listening to it on your phone via a streaming service, plus you can add a personal message and photo to create a sentimental and personalized gift.

Rarton Custom Album Cover Light

Rarton Custom Album Cover Light $ at Etsy

Sony WH-1000XM4

Tech expert and Select contributor Terri Williams recommended the Sony WH-1000XM4 as the best overall over-ear headphones. The headphones have active noise cancellation, but also have an ambient sound mode, so you can hear some background songs. The headphones are Bluetooth compatible but come with a cable for wired listening, and according to the brand, the music intuitively pauses when you take the headphones off. They can also be paired with the Sony Headphones Connect App to control settings from your phone, and should last up to 30 hours on one charge.

Sony WH-1000XM4

The Holiday Candle Co. “All Too Well”-inspired Candle

If you’re a Swiftie like myself, this candle may be as big of a hit as “Shake it Off.” Inspired by pop star Taylor Swift’s “RED” album, the soy-blend candle has a strong cinnamon and earthy scent, and has a label on the front with some lyrics from the album. I received this specific candle as a gift and absolutely love it, but The Holiday Candle Co. also sells other candles inspired by other songs from Swift.

The Holiday Candle Co. “All Too Well”-inspired Candle

The Holiday Candle Co. “All Too Well”-inspired Candle $ at Etsy

Crosley Record Cleaning Kit

If you’re not sure what to get the picky vinyl lover in your life, give them a record cleaning kit. This cleaning kit comes with a felt record cleaning brush and a record-cleaning solution (that is stored inside the brush’s wood handle). Crosley recommends placing the solution on the edge of the brush and applying it gently as the record spins on your turntable. The brand also recommends allowing the album to dry completely before playing the record.

Crosley Record Cleaning Kit

Music Note Measuring Spoon Set

This musical-themed measuring spoon set, which hangs from a pewter bar that you can drill into the wall, comes with a ¼ teaspoon, ½ teaspoon, teaspoon and tablespoon. They are made from lead-free pewter, according to the brand, and are designed to look like eighth notes hanging from a musical staff.

Music Note Measuring Spoon Set

Music Note Measuring Spoon Set (Uncommon Goods / Uncommon Goods)

Music Note Measuring Spoon Set $ at Uncommon Goods

‘1000 Record Covers’

This book presents a selection of rock album covers from the 60s to the 90s, curated by music archivist, disc jockey, journalist and former record-publicity executive Michael Ochs. The hardcover book, which comes with an introduction from Ochs, can make a neat addition to any library or coffee table.

1000 Record Covers

1000 Record Covers (Amazon / Amazon)

LEGO Ideas Fender Stratocaster 213929 Set

This LEGO Ideas set, designed for adults, gives you all the bricks you need to build a 14-inch display model of a 1970s Fender Stratocaster guitar and a Fender 65 Princeton Reverb amplifier. It comes with enough bricks to build the guitar in red or black and includes a foldable display stand for the guitar.

LEGO Ideas Fender Stratocaster 213929 Set

LEGO Ideas Fender Stratocaster 213929 Set (Target / Target)

  • LEGO Ideas Fender Stratocaster 213929 Set $ at Target

  • LEGO Ideas Fender Stratocaster 213929 Set $ at Walmart

  • LEGO Ideas Fender Stratocaster 213929 Set $ at Fender

Harley Benton Mini Loop Pedal

This loop pedal — designed for electric guitar and bass — has a 6.3 millimeter jack input and output and can record up to 10 minutes of audio, so that an artist of any skill level can record and loop audio as they play. It has a volume adjuster and comes with a three-year warranty.

Harley Benton Mini Loop Pedal

Harley Benton Mini Loop Pedal $ at Thomann Music

Related: These gadgets make great gifts for anyone, whether your loved ones need new headphones, a VR headset or self-heating mug.

Catch up on Select’s in-depth coverage of personal finance, tech and tools, wellness and more, and follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter to stay up to date.





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The 10 Symphonies of Erkki-Sven Tüür – Part 3: Symphonies Nos. 6-9


This text is an expanded version of the article originally published (in Estonian translation) by Sirp, 16 September 2022.

Having featured them prominently in his Fourth and Fifth symphonies, Erkki-Sven Tüür does away with soloists in Symphony No. 6 (2007), but he continues the more nuanced approach to juxtaposition heard in those previous two symphonies. The work bears the subtitle ‘Strata’, and indeed there is the impression of moving through a series of different layers. In this context, the effect of the juxtapositions is less volatile and more organic, producing an episodic music where the orchestra acts as a single, sympathetic entity.

Erkki-Sven Tüür

However, if that suggests a lessening of intensity then what follows, if anything, does the complete opposite. After this measured opening, Tüür begins what will become the main sequence of the symphony (initiated by the strings) where, over the course of around 15 minutes, the orchestra continually pushes and pulls in multiple directions. The result is a stop-start motion in which the strings’ material keeps getting interrupted, causing them either to restart or just attempt to plough on regardless, all the time becoming increasingly surrounded by a relentless barrage of contrasting ideas, primarily in the form of pounding timpani (threatening to explode but always subsequently defused), heavyweight brass and percussion, and excitable xylophone clatter. Though the enormous length of this sequence to some extent reduces its power – eventually causing one to feel somewhat numb – it again testifies to Tüür’s fearlessness in channelling extreme juxtapositions into enormous slabs of sound.

Yet the most striking contrast of all comes in the symphony’s conclusion, Tüür pulling everything back and introducing an innocuous pivoting motif in the cellos. This motif persists, becoming the basis for an obsessive, rather mournful conclusion, evoking a wailing song of the indigenous Seto people. The contrasts continue until the end, Tüür moving back and forth between the outworking of this motif and small bursts of glitter.


Symphony No. 6 ‘Strata’ was released by ECM in 2010, in a recording by the Nordic Symphony Orchestra conducted by Anu Tali.

Symphony No. 7 (2009) is, to date, Tüür’s only symphony to include voices. Subtitled ‘Pietas’ and dedicated to the 14th Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso, the work’s text draws on short proverb-like quotations from, among others, Buddha, Gandhi, Augustine of Hippo and, unexpectedly, Jimi Hendrix. Perhaps due to the earnest nature of the work, addressing concepts of love and compassion, both the scope and the intensity of its juxtapositions are simplified. Throughout all four movements, Tüür’s musical language oscillates between floridity – once again taking the form of lively, individuated wind textures – and solemnity, the latter (performed by strings and brass) intended by Tüür to “seemingly halt the flow of musical time”. Throughout the symphony these behavioural opposites interpenetrate each other, leading to fascinating states of change and internal tension. In the third movement, in particular, the various forces at play create a kind of semi-immobile chugging, which only starts to find its way back to freedom when both elements let rip at once, resulting in a mesmerising combination of gravity and weightlessness.

However, it could be argued that the most prominent contrast in Symphony No. 7 is the relationship between choir and orchestra. Put simply: is there one? The voices are situated between these behavioural poles, articulating the words with a mixture of force and gentleness. Yet the choral passages tend to feel disconnected from the musical drama happening around them, a more neutral intrusion into an otherwise energised and engrossing instrumental environment. This sense is reinforced by the minimal use of the choir in the first three movements (indeed, they are completely absent in the third). They feature prominently in the symphony’s 20-minute final movement, the orchestra now channelling its twin identities to support and embellish the choir, though the litany of quotations sounds like a parallel world from what preceded it. Furthermore, when the music refocuses on the orchestra in the lengthy centre of this movement, it sounds like a natural continuation and conclusion of the polarities explored earlier. Perhaps it’s a controversial suggestion, but if the vocal sections were removed entirely, Symphony No. 7 would be largely unaffected, not merely representing a highly engaging next step in Tüür’s symphonic evolution but, crucially, one where his use of juxtaposition is demonstrably extended into rigorous development.


Symphony No. 7 is featured on another ECM release, from 2014, featuring the Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra and NDR Choir conducted by Paavo Järvi.

There are distinct echoes of the opening of the Sixth Symphony in Tüür’s Symphony No. 8 (2010). Again there’s the impression of an orchestra generally working together on a number of discrete ideas, here presented less as moving episodically through strata than halting attempts to ‘road-test’ a variety of possible options. (In my 2018 review i commented on this “chop-and-change approach” being “as if Tüür were playing with ideas on the fly, trying them out … in different configurations.”) Tüür’s fondness for textural clouds of wind activity makes its presence felt yet again, though as part of an overall tendency to floridity in all parts of the orchestra. Combined with the highly elastic way that the piece moves forward, this leads to a highly organic music that appears to be working out what to do in real time, ultimately shrugging off superficially jaunty ideas in favour of more serious melodic searching.

In the central movement this searching splits to form a number of interlinked lines that come together in a hugely impactful climax. The build-up to this is notable for being so focused, single-minded and united, lacking the conflicts that usually typify Tüür’s materials. The symphony ends with another split, negotiating between slow-moving, thoughtful string lines and woodwinds that seemingly just want to get the party started. Instead of picking a side, Tüür resolves this – after what sounds like a tutti shrug – by throwing both elements together, surprisingly proving them to be complementary, launching the symphony into a punchy finale where rhythms are positively festooned with wind cascades.


Symphony No. 8 was released in 2018 on the Ondine label, in a performance by the Tapiola Sinfonietta conducted by Olari Elts.

There then followed a symphonic hiatus of seven years, the biggest since the decade-long gap between the Second and Third, before Tüür’s next – and, at present, penultimate – symphony. In his Symphony No. 9 (2017), Tüür returned to the most basic types of contrasting materials heard in the earliest symphonies. The work is initially founded upon the simple juxtaposition of vagueness and clarity, the former heard in nebulous networks of rumbles, micro-gestures and superimposed trills, the latter in a string line that turns out (once other instruments provide support) to be the impetus for energy and rhythm.

As i discussed at length in my review of the symphony’s première in 2018, in keeping with the evolution of Tüür’s symphonic language, there is again a strong organic sensibility, one that draws directly on the work’s subtitle, ‘Mythos’, to suggest world-building, of a landscape being constructed from primordial elements. At times the music doesn’t even seem composed, but a spontaneous chain reaction of sonic elements, with new ideas and reactions continually bubbling to the surface, some going nowhere, others proving to be extremely significant. In this respect, Symphony No. 9 was Tüür’s most intricate, detailed symphonic score to date, focusing much less on the contrasts that typify so many of the earlier symphonies, and instead rethinking their extended sequences of overload (as in Symphony No. 6), here directed towards music in a constant, wildly creative state of flux.


The world première performance of Symphony No. 9 ‘Mythos’, by the Estonian Festival Orchestra conducted by Paavo Järvi, was released on the Alpha label in 2020.




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Outlaw Music Festival 2022 Lineup


The Outlaw Music Festival Tour is back on the road again with a lineup that includes Willie Nelson & Family, Chris Stapleton, The Avett Brothers, Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats, Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, Billy Strings, ZZ Top, Gov’t Mule, Brothers Osborne, Zach Bryan, Steve Earle & The Dukes, Allison Russell, Charley Crockett, Larkin Poe, The War and Treaty, Brittney Spencer, Particle Kid and more. (For artists performing in various cities, please refer to the specific market lineups listed below.)

Tickets for the general public go on sale Friday, March 25, at 10 AM (local for each venue). VIP packages including great seats and exclusive festival merchandise will be available. Citi is the official card of the Outlaw Music Festival. Citi is the official card of the Outlaw Music Festival. Citi cardmembers will have access to presale tickets beginning Tuesday, March 22, at 10 AM local until Thursday, March 24, at 10 PM local through the Citi Entertainment program. For complete presale details, visit www.citientertainment.com.

“The Outlaw Music Festival Tour has always been about family and friends coming together for a great day of music and fun, and with the amazing group of artists joining us, this year promises to be our most special Outlaw Tour to date. I just can’t wait to get back on the road again” says Willie Nelson.

“Our annual Outlaw Music Festival Tour has grown to become this incredible family of artists that deliver must-see performances every night”, said Keith Wortman (Co-Founder Outlaw Music Festival Tour), we are honored to present these once in a lifetime lineups all over the country.”

Mike’s Hard Lemonade Seltzer will also be joining the 2022 Outlaw Music Festival Tour as the “Official Hard Seltzer” hosting pop up experiences, giveaways and more at select dates.

The inaugural Outlaw Music Festival made its debut in 2016 in Scranton, PA. The sold-out show was so well received that Blackbird and Nelson have developed it into one of North America’s biggest annual touring franchises. Musicians such as Robert Plant, Neil Young, Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, Eric Church, Bonnie Raitt, Luke Combs, Chris Stapleton, Sheryl Crow, Sturgill Simpson, The Avett Brothers and many more have been a part of the Outlaw Tour, sharing unforgettable music memories and unique vendor villages with local food, drinks and shopping in Live Nation amphitheaters across the country.

OUTLAW MUSIC FESTIVAL TOUR DATES & LINEUPS:

Friday, June 24, 2022  – St. Louis, MO – Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre

Willie Nelson & Family
Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
Charley Crockett
Brittney Spencer

Saturday, June 25, 2022 – Grand Rapids, MI – Van Andel Arena

Willie Nelson & Family
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats
Charley Crockett
Brittney Spencer

Sunday, June 26, 2022 – Indianapolis, IN – Ruoff Music Center

Willie Nelson & Family

Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
Charley Crockett
Brittney Spencer

Friday, July 1, 2022 – Rogers, AR – Walmart AMP

Willie Nelson & Family
Brothers Osborne
Steve Earle & The Dukes
Allison Russell

Saturday, July 2, 2022 – Dallas, TX – Dos Equis Pavilion

Willie Nelson & Family
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
Brothers Osborne
Charley Crockett
Steve Earle & The Dukes
Allison Russell

Friday, July 29, 2022 – Cleveland, OH – Blossom Music Center

Willie Nelson & Family
ZZ Top
Gov’t Mule
Larkin Poe

Saturday, July 30, 2022 – Cincinnati, OH – Riverbend Music Center

Willie Nelson & Family
ZZ Top
Gov’t Mule
Larkin Poe

Sunday, July 31, 2022 – Pittsburgh, PA – The Pavilion at Star Lake

Willie Nelson & Family
ZZ Top
Gov’t Mule
Larkin Poe

Friday, August 12, 2022 – Gilford, NH – Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion

Willie Nelson & Family
ZZ Top
Zach Bryan
Charley Crockett
The War and Treaty

Saturday, August 13, 2022 – Bethel, NY – Bethel Woods Center

Willie Nelson & Family
ZZ Top
Zach Bryan
Charley Crockett
The War and Treaty

Sunday, August 14, 2022 – Darien, NY – Darien Lake Amphitheater

Willie Nelson & Family
ZZ Top
Zach Bryan
Charley Crockett
The War and Treaty

Friday, September 9, 2022 – Atlanta, GA – Ameris Bank Amphitheatre

Willie Nelson & Family
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
Billy Strings
Charley Crockett
Larkin Poe

Saturday, September 10, 2022 – Charlotte, NC – PNC Music Pavilion

Willie Nelson & Family
Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats
Billy Strings
Charley Crockett
Larkin Poe

Sunday, September 11, 2022 – Virginia Beach, VA – Veteran’s United Home Loans Amphitheater at Virginia Beach

Willie Nelson & Family
Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats
Billy Strings
Larkin Poe
Brittney Spencer

Tuesday, September 13, 2022 – Bridgeport, CT – Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater

Willie Nelson & Family
Billy Strings
Larkin Poe
Brittney Spencer

Friday, September 16, 2022 – Boston, MA – Xfinity Center

Willie Nelson & Family
The Avett Brothers
Billy Strings
Larkin Poe
Brittney Spencer

Saturday, September 17, 2022 – Columbia, MD – Merriweather Post Pavilion

Willie Nelson & Family
The Avett Brothers
Zach Bryan
Larkin Poe
Brittney Spencer

Sunday, September 18, 2022 – Saratoga Springs, NY – SPAC

Willie Nelson & Family
The Avett Brothers
Billy Strings
Larkin Poe
Brittney Spencer

Friday, September 23, 2022 – Philadelphia, PA – Waterfront Music Pavilion  

Willie Nelson & Family
Chris Stapleton
Zach Bryan
Larkin Poe
Brittney Spencer

For complete Outlaw Music Festival tour details, please visit: outlawmusicfestival.com





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Composing a classic life


THE North East of Victoria is home to a plethora of highly creative people who have showcased their art, stories or music locally, across Australia and all over the world.

Talented composer and classically trained pianist Emili Rackemann is one such artist who has nine albums and more than 140 compositions to her credit.

Emili grew up on a 25,000 acre cattle property in central Queensland, but has now called Bright home for a little over a decade.

“The cattle property was near Marlborough although I moved to South East Queensland upon being accepted into the Queensland Conservatorium of Music, Griffith University in Southbank (Brisbane),” Emili said.

“I studied a Bachelor of Music in classical performance at the Conservatorium after finishing my Australian Music Examinations Board (AMEB) grades in classical piano.”

Having grown up in a rural environment, Emili finds being surrounded by the natural world inspiring.

“It allows me the space to be creative and, given I am quite sensitive to energy, I enjoy a lot of solitude along with the natural surroundings that this valley offers.

“Nature always provides space for the imagination which I absolutely love.”

Emili’s musical career opportunities brought her (much) further south to Melbourne before she and her husband relocated to Bright in 2011 where she continues to compose her own music, study and teach.

“I teach piano and music composition privately to 32 students and in 2018 I decided to return to university to study Music Technology to expand my skills in music production,” Emili said.

“Once I have completed that course, I will continue on to study a PhD in Music Composition through the University of New England.”

Emili also has a strong interest in vibrational therapy and recently completed a Diploma in Sound Therapy.

“I find this modality is complimentary to composition and performance, in that it enables me to fulfil my interest in the wellness industry while also working with sound in a very unique and powerful way,” she said.

In 2021, Emili was a Top 10 Finalist in the Cum Laude Music Awards (Spain) for solo piano composition and received an Honourable mention out of 94 Australian composers for her original classical piano composition ‘Dance of Telestas’ in Composing the Future, which was part of the Sydney International Piano Competition.

In May this year, the world premiere of Emili’s harp solo composition ‘Solstice in Spain’ was performed during the International Composers Festival (UK) by Huw Boucher, a student at the Royal Academy of Music in London who also studied at the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama department.

Although Emili is classically trained as a pianist, she works with a vast selection of instruments and programs, particularly when composing film music.

“I am currently composing my new classical piano album although over the last 18 months I worked on the release of my recent album called Meraki.

“In addition to composition, I’ve also been working on producing an electronic music album under the name Persia Grey which has been a great outlet for songwriting.

“While I love classical, I equally love electronic and dance music.

“Musical genres are all interconnected in many ways, despite ‘sounding’ worlds apart.”

Emili said she doesn’t have a particular favourite piece she has written given that each composition tells its own story.

“I appreciate them all, but that said, perhaps the favourite of the month is ‘Dance Of Telestas’, given the time and creative energy it took to compose and record.”

“It’s very classical which I love.”

Dance Of Telestas is more than nine minutes long and is an excellent example of a classical piece starting off at a joyous pace with expertly quick finger work before slowing as though leading you into the calm before the storm; with melodic and gentle toning.

As the deep notes combine perfectly with higher ones, you will feel them squarely in your chest or stomach; a sense of sorrow or reflection making you stop and really listen, think and wonder at where your emotions will be taken next.

With the almost frantic return of pace, dancing up and down the scales, it is hard to catch your breath, although Emili brings you to the end of the journey with a wish that there was another nine minutes of wonder to enjoy.

While Emili’s focus over the next 18 months will be on her upcoming album releases and expanding her catalogues ready for when opportunities arise in film, she will be holding a number of recitals in the North East later in 2023.

“Given a lot of time goes into composition, teaching and studies, I will mainly be focused on those things, however I do plan to do another regional tour in 2024 after the recitals late next year.”

To keep up to date with the recitals, tour and what else Emili is up to, you can visit her website at www.emilirackemann.com or follow her on social media at @emilirackemann on Facebook, Instagram and Soundcloud.

Additionally, you can view the Solstice in Spain performance at youtube.com/watch?v=aGxGhVDNMvw, listen to Meraki on Spotify at open.spotify.com/album/5GnYlH9ZrIxaH6pFZTEHXO or listen to Dance Of Telestas at soundcloud.com/emilirackemann/dance–of–telestas.



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Expectation meets self-preservation in Aleandro Valente’s blissfully tropic indie pop hit, Not O.K. – Independent Music – New Music


The up-and-coming NYC-residing pop artist Aleandro Valente tore off his façade in spectacular fashion in his single, Not O.K. to expose the duality of his determination of being what others perceive him to be and staying true to himself.

The angular indie jangle pop guitars around the sun-bleached tropic RnB pop keys create the perfect platform for the high dynamic stretches of Aleandro Valente’s smooth vocal timbre that pulls you right into the battle of self-preservation and will.

It is Ariana Grande meets the 1975 in this vulnerable earworm that will see the Italian artist and his candour go far. It will undoubtedly be resonant for plenty of his listeners that feel the expectation to amplify their true nature to tick boxes that we never agreed to fill in the first place.

Not O.K. is now available to stream along with the debut album it was taken from, Bite on a Lemon, on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast





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NYC pop artist Tripping Jupiter releases “Torn America” music video — MP3s & NPCs


NYC pop artist Tripping Jupiter unveiled the music video for their latest single “Torn America” today.

The visual, which can be seen below, features footage from a slew of protests taking place during the past two years. The artist said this about the song, which features David Bowie collaborator Gail Ann Dorsey on bass:

“I wrote the entire album in the middle of the pandemic. Being at home there was a lot of time to think about what was going on in our country and how it was affecting us. The murder of George Floyd and the subsequent protests were still on my mind. The economic crash and how many workers across the nation were struggling stuck with me as well. And then more recently with the scapegoating of immigrants or members of the LGBTQ+ community – it all just reminded me how all our struggles are connected – and that it is only through a mass movement of people, collectively, that we can transform our nation and our world. All of this and the fast that climate change is happening before our eyes, made me realize that as an artist, I had to say something.”

“Torn America” stems from Tripping Jupiter’s forthcoming studio album Lipstick of the Brave, which will be released on November 4.





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Pitch music festival 2023 lineup led by Four Tet, Moderat and more


The 2023 Pitch music festival lineup has dropped and it offers huge quality, led by Four Tet, Moderat, Nightmares on Wax, Ben UFO, Mano Le Tough, Leon Vynehall, Fatima Yamaha and more.

The Pitch music festival 2023 lineup will return to the foothills of the Grampian Plains from March 10 – 14 for the sixth edition of one of Australia’s premier electronic festivals, and as usual, the lineup offers an excellent assortment of global production kings and queens.

Following a sold-out event in 2022, tickets for Pitch Music & Arts 2023 – as it’s officially known – will be secured through a balloting process. For the first time, those who enter the ballot are required to agree to a ‘Pitch Pledge’, whereby patrons must commit to positively contributing to the Pitch community, leave no trace and behave respectfully.

Pitch music festival 2023 lineup

  • ABSOLUTE.
  • AK Sports
  • Âme
  • Anetha
  • Ayebatonye
  • Ben UFO
  • Bertie
  • BIG WETT
  • Bradley Zero
  • C.FRIM X MIRASIA
  • Call Super
  • Cassie Raptor
  • Club Angel
  • Daria Kolosova
  • DAWS
  • Dax J
  • DJ EZ
  • DJ Heartstring
  • DJ Stingray 313
  • DJ Tennis
  • Effy
  • Ewan McVicar
  • Fatima Yamaha (Live)
  • FJAAK DJ
  • Four Tet
  • François X
  • HALFQUEEN
  • Héctor Oaks
  • Helena Hauff
  • I.JORDAN
  • IN2STELLAR
  • Interplanetary Criminal
  • Jaguar
  • Jennifer Cardini
  • Juicy Romance
  • Jyoty
  • Kalyani
  • KAS:ST
  • Kelly Lee Owens (Dj Set)
  • KETTAMA
  • Ki/Ki
  • Kim Ann Foxman
  • Leon Vynehall (LIVE)
  • LSDXOXO
  • m8riarchy
  • Major League Djz
  • Mano Le Tough
  • Marie Montexier
  • Mildlife
  • Miley Serious
  • Moderat (LIVE)
  • Nightmares On Wax
  • NLV
  • OVERMONO (Live)
  • Parfait
  • Paula Tape
  • Peach
  • Pretty Girl (LIVE)
  • Roi Perez
  • RONA.
  • Ryan Elliott
  • Sam Alfred x STÜM
    Soju Gang
  • Sophie McAlister
  • SWIM
  • Tama Sumo x Lakuti
  • Tinlicker (LIVE)
  • u.r.trax
  • Yarra
  • Yikes
  • Young Marco

Dates and location

  • Pitch Music & Arts
  • 10-14 March 2023
  • Moyston, VIC

Keep up with the latest Pitch music festival news here, or the latest general music news, features, festivals, interviews and reviews here.

To complement the Pitch music festival programme, there will be interactive arts and installations. The 2022 Pitch Arts Programme featured the likes of Clayton Blake, (Burning Man’s 2018 winner of best art) and Adnate (who painted the tallest-ever mural on a building in the Southern Hemisphere at the housing commissions in Collingwood). The arts programme will be announced at a later date.

Patrons will be able to relax at the Pitch Pavilion – a tranquil sanctuary where patrons can take part in yoga classes, sound baths & ambient meditation. The festival will also host an expansive variety of culinary delights, spanning all taste preferences and palates. There will also be markets where you can purchase souvenirs made by ethical creatives and designers, and a pride patrol with live drag performance.

Planning the perfect road trip to Pitch Festival

Pitch Music & Arts will bring together a community of like-minded people where curated art and sensational beats will be used to create a hub rich with creativity and self-expression. Enter the ballot now and avoid missing out as the ballot may be the only way to secure a ticket.

On the Road to Pitch Festival with Simona Castricum

You can check out our month-by-month festival calendar here, or our guide to decking out the perfect festival camping vehicle here.

Follow Pitch Music & Arts across their website here, and their social channels – Facebook here, Insta here. Ballet registrations close –  Wed 2nd Nov 3:00pm AEDT. Thu 10th Nov 12:00pm – General On Sale. Register for ballot: https://bit.ly/pitch23ballot.





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Winter Music and Met in HD coming to Wheeler


Pianist Joyce Yang
Courtesy photo

The Aspen Music Festival and School announces its winter music lineup of classical music and Live in HD productions.

Live in HD

In conjunction with the Wheeler Opera House, it brings a curated series of The Metropolitan’s Live in HD productions to Aspen’s historic opera house.



Cherubini’s Medea, 5:30 p.m. Feb. 14

Having triumphed at the Met in some of the repertory’s fiercest soprano roles, Sondra Radvanovsky stars as the mythic sorceress who will stop at nothing in her quest for vengeance, kicking off the 2022–23 Live in HD season. Joining Radvanovsky in the Met-premiere production of Cherubini’s rarely performed masterpiece is tenor Matthew Polenzani as Medea’s Argonaut husband, Giasone; soprano Janai Brugger as her rival for his love, Glauce; bass Michele Pertusi as Medea’s father, Creonte, the King of Corinth; and mezzo-soprano Ekaterina Gubanova as Medea’s confidante, Neris.



“Medea”
Courtesy photo

Verdi’s La Traviata, 5:30 p.m. Feb. 28

Soprano Nadine Sierra stars as the self-sacrificing courtesan Violetta — one of opera’s ultimate heroines — in Michael Mayer’s production of Verdi’s tragedy. Tenor Stephen Costello is her self-centered lover, Alfredo, alongside baritone Luca Salsi as his disapproving father, and Maestro Daniele Callegari on the podium.

“Traviata”
Courtesy photo

Kevin Puts’s The Hours, 5:30 p.m. March 7

Soprano Renée Fleming makes her return to the Met in the world-premiere production of Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Kevin Puts’ The Hours, adapted from Michael Cunningham’s acclaimed novel. Inspired by Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway and made a household name by the Oscar-winning 2002 film version starring Meryl Streep, Julianne Moore, and Nicole Kidman, the story follows three women from different eras who each grapple with their inner demons and their roles in society. The premiere radiates with star power, with soprano Kelli O’Hara and mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato joining Fleming as the opera’s trio of heroines. Phelim McDermott directs this drama, with Met music director Yannick Nézet-Séguin on the podium to conduct Puts’ score.

“The Hours”
Courtesy photo

Winter Music

Aspen Music Festival and School also presents Winter Music at Harris Concert Hall. All performances start at 6:30 p.m.

Pacifica Quartet, Feb. 16

Since its appointment to lead the AMFS’s Center for Advanced Quartet Studies in 2017, this multiple Grammy Award-winning quartet has been a fixture at the festival with performances and instruction. Pacifica Quartet kick offs its Aspen recital with Shostakovich’s Quartet No. 2. Next, the ensemble showcases its musicality with a work from its recent Grammy-winning album: Shulamit Ran’s Third String Quartet, “Glitter, Doom, Shards, Memory.” Ran pays tribute to the artwork of German-Jewish painter Felix Nussbaum in this four-movement work. The program concludes with Dvořák’s “American” Quartet.

Pacifica Quartet
Courtesy photo

Alexander Malofeev, Feb. 23

Since winning his first major international competition at age 13, pianist Alexander Malofeev has captured the world’s attention. Still only 20, he regularly performs with top orchestras around the world, garnering critical praise for his technical prowess and emotional maturity. Following his debut with the Aspen Festival Orchestra during the 2022 festival, the young star returns to Aspen for a solo recital of wide-ranging piano sonatas.

Beethoven’s “Moonlight” Sonata opens his winter program. A dynamic sonata from a lesser-known Polish composer and friend of Shostakovich, Mieczsław Weinberg, follows. Though his music was largely disregarded during his lifetime, many of Weinberg’s works have been rediscovered posthumously. The program closes with Rachmaninoff’s Piano Sonata No. 2.

Pianist Alexander Malofeev
Liudmila Malofeeva

Joyce Yang piano, March 16

AMFS alumna and pianist Joyce Yang takes audiences on a musical journey as she plays works by Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff, and Stravinsky.

In a number of selections from Tchaikovsky’s Les saisons, Yang musically represents the passage of time and the changing seasons over the course of a year. The program continues with a hand-picked assortment of works from Rachmaninoff’s Thirteen Preludes. Then comes three movements from Stravinsky’s first ballet, The Firebird. The “Danse infernale” kickstarts the work; “Berceuse” presents a hypnotic musical lullaby; and the “Finale” completes the journey.

Single tickets go on sale Jan. 17. For more information, visit aspenmusicfestival.com.





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Nebraska woman fulfilling lifelong dream of country music album


Nebraska woman Darcia Ann will have her lifelong dream come true this month with the release of her country music album.

Darcia Ann, who grew up in the Nebraska Sandhills, has lived all over the state and resides in and has family in the Northeast Nebraska area. She’s had a 30-year career in the music industry.

“I had always just wanted to sing since I was really little,” Darcia Ann said. “I got my first guitar, real guitar I should say, at 9 and I started singing right away for the Ainsworth country music festival.”

Darcia Ann, who’s in the Nebraska and Colorado halls of fame, has opened for quite a few famous acts in the early days of her career, including Reba McEntire, Keith Urban, Patty Loveless, Neal McCoy and Lonestar.

Approximately nine weeks ago, Darcia Ann had been visiting Nashville, Tennessee, when she got her big break.

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“I went to Nashville to be with my friends and we went to a local place. I got up and sang and jam with the band and he [a music producer at Red Ridge Entertainment] was filling in for a man that was sick,” Darcia Ann said.

Since then, it’s been a whirlwind and Darcia Ann recently recorded her album. She said she recorded at Studio 19 in Nashville and musicians that played with her on the album have played for such artists as Tim McGraw, Wynonna, Garth Brooks, Blake Shelton and other well-known names.

Darcia Ann said her album, which consists of six songs, can be described as a combination of country ballad and classic rock. The name of the album has yet to be officially decided, but she said it will most likely be titled “Cowboy Up.” Some of the tunes are what she called “good two-steppin’ country” songs.

Notably, some of the songs have nods to Nebraska.

“One of the songs is called ‘Mama’s Mockingbird’ and it actually talks about the Nebraska Sandhills,” Darcia Ann said.

The song is also a tribute to her mother, who has passed away.

“In my world of music I always hear her voice saying ‘sing, fly baby fly. Just go sing for me, fly baby fly.’ And that’s what I put in my mockingbird song, just fly baby fly,” she said.

Another song is what she calls a homage to the rodeo community.

The album is set to be released in October.

“It is now being mixed and mastered in Nashville as we speak. And hopefully it will be ready for downloads to all the [platforms] Spotify, Pandora, by Halloween,” Darcia Ann said.

With her album soon coming out, Darcia Ann is opening for T Graham Brown. She will also be performing a concert in November in Nashville that will also be streamed.

“I’ve had such good support from friends and family and people that I’ve known around here for years and years,” Darcia Ann said.

Max Davis is a close friend of Darcia Ann’s. He said his wife, Margaret, and Darcia Ann were childhood friends. Davis noted that Darcia Ann is talented.

“She’s been really putting her heart and soul into this music thing. And we are proud of her and we support her,” Davis said.

“We’re ecstatic. This is a big deal for her.”



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