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Today, we're talking about awe and wonder and all the incredible benefits that these simple and accessible emotions can have in terms of learning and child development. And I have the perfect guest here to talk about it — Deborah Farmer Kris, a child development expert, longtime educator, and author of the wonderful new book Raising Awe-Seekers: How the Science of Wonder Helps Our Kids Thrive. In this conversation, we talk about how and why awe is such a powerful tool for emotional regulation, learning, and resilience for our kids. Deborah shares some of the neuroscience behind wonder and walks us through how simple moments of awe, like listening to music, walking outside, or witnessing a small act of kindness, can lower stress, spark curiosity, and build deeper connections for our kids. She also offered strategies for cultivating awe with your child, even during the most challenging seasons of parenting. This episode is a beautiful reminder that we don't have to add one more thing to our to-do lists to make a meaningful shift. Sometimes, it's about slowing down, noticing what's already here, and inviting our kids into that sense of wonder with us. And I think what I love about this so much is that awe is something that's available to all of us, and experiencing it, even for little moments, not only feels wonderful (pun intended), but it has very real, positive benefits. About Deborah Deborah Farmer Kris is a child development expert and the author of "Raising Awe-Seekers: How the Science of Wonder Helps Our Kids Thrive,” the I See You board book series, and the All the Time picture book series. Her bylines include CNN, PBS KIDS, NPR's Mindshift, The Washington Post, the Boston Globe Magazine, and Oprah Daily. Deborah is currently an expert advisor for the PBS KIDS show, “Carl the Collector,” and spent 20+ years as a K-12 educator. Mostly, she loves sharing nuggets of practical wisdom that can make the parenting journey a little easier. You'll learn: How the powerful emotion of awe builds resilience and supports well-being Why curiosity and wonder spark internal motivation and deeper learning How to tap into nature, art, music, and kindness as everyday sources of awe for children Why experiencing awe can lower stress, improve memory, and support emotional regulation How parents can nurture awe by modeling curiosity and slowing down with their kids Ideas for creating small, shared moments of wonder strengthen connection and support family wellness Resources: Deborah Farmer Kris' website Parenthood 365 Raising Awe-Seekers: How the Science of Wonder Helps Our Kids Thrive by Deborah Farmer Kris Raising Awe-Seekers Podcast Deborah on Instagram Deborah on LinkedIn You Wonder All the Time by Deborah Farmer Kris You Are Growing All the Time by Deborah Farmer Kris I Love You All the Time by Deborah Farmer Kirs You Have Feelings All the Time by Deborah Farmer Kris Dr. Dacher Kelter Dr. Michele Borba Mindshift (KQED / PBS) Pub Choir Robert Waldinger Hope for Cynics: The Surprising Science of Human Goodness by Jamil Zaki The Happiness Study at Harvard Challenge Success I Love N.Y.E. (Badly Drawn Boy song) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Analizamos la política económica del presidente de EEUU. ¿Por qué ha iniciado este conflicto? ¿Es todo tan incoherente como parece desde Europa? Esta semana, en Economía Para Quedarte Sin Amigos, analizamos la política económica del presidente de EEUU. ¿Por qué ha iniciado este conflicto? ¿Es todo tan incoherente como parece desde Europa?Música Esta semana, el protagonista de nuestra selección musical es el cantautor británico Badly Drawn Boy. Y estos son los temas que hemos escuchado: "Once Around The Block" "Something to Talk About" "Everybody's Stalking" "The Shining"
What twelve songs would sustain you if you were stranded on a desert island for the rest of your life? Matt Sidhom finally reveals his carefully curated Desert Island Mix—a musical journey that offers surprising insights into his life, memories, and what matters most.The mix opens with deeply personal selections: his wedding dance song Dave Matthews' "So Damn Lucky" and George Strait's touching "Love Without End" representing Matt's love for his children. From there, the musical landscape expands dramatically to include Bruce Springsteen's inspiring live rendition of "Growing Up," Billy Joel's cinematic "Scenes from an Italian Restaurant," and Kool Moe Dee's lyrically brilliant "I Go to Work."Each song serves a specific purpose for island survival: Badly Drawn Boy's subtle Christmas track "Donna and Blitzen" to mark the passage of time, Weezer's defiant "Pork and Beans" as a soundtrack for learning survival skills, and Emerson, Lake & Palmer's experimental "Carnival 9" for when isolation hallucinations might set in. The philosophical questions posed in The Killers' "Human" ("Are we human or are we dancer?") take on new meaning in extended solitude.What makes this episode fascinating isn't just the diverse musical selections spanning rock, country, rap, and prog—it's the window these choices open into Matt's values, memories, and what brings comfort in isolation. The perfectly chosen closing track, The Rolling Stones' "Waiting on a Friend," captures the ultimate desert island emotion.As you listen, you'll inevitably wonder: what songs would make your own Desert Island Mix? What music would you choose to represent your life if everything else was stripped away? Visit superawesomemix.com to explore our curated playlists and create your own musical time capsule for life's most important moments.You can listen to the mix on Spotify here:https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0um2qIBcUrg5EVrnvuCvbt?si=de3168ca291f4ef4You can listen to the mix on YouTube here:https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpQYsbkgm3L7AObF8lHhYAarE3FOhI9g2&feature=share1. So Damn Lucky - Dave Matthews2. Love Without End - George Strait3. Growin' Up - Bruce Springsteen4. Scenes from an Italian Restaurant - Billy Joel5. I Go To Work - Kool Moe Dee6. Donna and Blitzen - Badly Drawn Boy7. Pork and Beans - Weezer8. Karn Evil 9 - 2nd Impression - Emerson, Lake and Palmer9. Under Pressure - Queen and David Bowie10. Thank the Lord for the Night Time - Neil Diamond11. Human - The Killers12. Waiting on a Friend - The Rolling Stones Support the showVisit us at https://www.superawesomemix.com to learn more about our app, our merchandise, our cards, and more!
Egg Disguises - Protesting, an Audio Diary - Coup the Coup!!! - Dua Lipa Down Under - Adam Driver, the Badly Drawn Boy.
In our most perfect episode yet, we're joined by the fabulous Sam Fitch. Dad, husband, player, gentleman and Badly Drawn Boy lookalike. With regular guest Olly, Steve and Craig discuss the crucial issues, such as how many times one can cry while watching Channel 4's The Dog House, the benefits of heavy metal and why Fitchy is going to Spain in 2026. Get in touch at creasemeup@hotmail.com and find us on socials. Enjoy the show!
Send us a textLee and Simon go on a typically chaotic ride that is tricky to summarise other than they catch up. Just read below.Things covered: Lee takes up knitting, the latest on Mark Zuckerberg, Badly Drawn Boy's Pissing in the Wind, Lee's knitting sticks, reducing screen time, finding a hobby that isn't reading, Lee's year of not buying anything, Simon's recording mishap, screentime by proxy, finger knitting, Lee travelling the globe (Portugal) in a mini-van, taking knitting needles on a plane, Hannibal Lecter, dog muzzles, Simon saw two films with John Lithgow (Footloose, Conclave) and Lee guesses the first very quickly, The World According to Garp, The Adventures of Buckaroo Bonzai, the overlap in Simon and Lee's taste, Conclave (no spoilers), David Lynch's death and his films, Lee remembers Victoria Wood's death, Eraserhead, The Elephant Man, Ecosia (search engine), changing which side of the bed you sleep on, lying on top of Bob, body temperature, people with English as a second language, true facts, no content at the 23min mark, Lil's Permesso di soggiorno, three suitcases full of cash in Sardegna, there's many a slip between cup and lip, not gifting the suitcases, man with a van, how best to get stuff from Coventry to Sassari (and the emotional implications), paying customs, Brexit, not having two of everything and doing it all in one fell swoop, one's forever home, second-hand things, number of phone pickups a day, not even real bodies, Tim Cook paying $1m to Donald Trump's inauguration, Elon (doesn't get a mention), knitting for weeks, touching dough too much when you are learning.Get in touch with Lee and Simon at info@midlifing.net. ---The Midlifing logo is adapted from an original image by H.L.I.T: https://www.flickr.com/photos/29311691@N05/8571921679 (CC BY 2.0)
In de Daily KINK hoor je elke avond om 20:20 het belangrijkste muzieknieuws en de nieuwste releases in KINK IN TOUCH. Ook als podcast. Met vandaag nieuws over: 📌Porno For Pyros📌Green Day📌The Cure📌Oasis📌Badly Drawn Boy
It's the Indie Disco show Música Eelectrónica from my travels around the Mediterranean featuring Spanish MegaBeat Records from Valencia / the closest I've found to Big Beat label Skint out of Brighton Warp. Music from David Holmes, Stereolab, RRUCCULLA, Elbis Rever, Kid Loco, and soundtrack music from Bobby Gillespie and Badly Drawn Boy. For more info and tracklisting, visit: https://thefaceradio.com/category/golazo/Tune into new broadcasts of ¡Golazo! with Matt Pape LIVE, Thursdays from 12 - 2 PM EST / 5-7 PM GMT.//Dig this show? Please consider supporting The Face Radio: http://support.thefaceradio.com Support The Face Radio with PatreonSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/thefaceradio. Join the family at https://plus.acast.com/s/thefaceradio. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Damon Gough is Badly Drawn Boy, an English singer songwriter who has released nine studio albums, including the popular About A Boy soundtrack, his Mercury Music Prize winning debut The Hour of Bewilderbeast, and his most recent release, 2020's Banana Skin Shoes.
This mixtape looks back - mostly, at punk consciousness music from the 80's and sees how little has changed and why it is always necessary to keep this music close to your heart. They say if you are not liberal at University you don't have a feart, if you are not conservative at middle age you don't have a brain. Here is to those who follow their heart and stay young to kick against the pricks. They keep making pricks. Featured artists; The Dear Boys, Billy Bragg, Badly Drawn Boy, Violent Femmes, James, R.E.M., David Holmes, Raven Violet, Primal Scream and loads more!For more info and tracklisting, visit: https://thefaceradio.com/matt-pape-mixtape/Tune into new broadcasts of Matt Pape Mixtape, Fridays from 12 - 1 AM EST / 5 - 6 AM GMT.//Dig this show? Please consider supporting The Face Radio: http://support.thefaceradio.com Support The Face Radio with PatreonSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/thefaceradio. Join the family at https://plus.acast.com/s/thefaceradio. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Салют! Radio Valera вяртаецца на касмічную арбіту
I love cover songs. On last week's mixtape I did all Joy Division - New Order Covers to celebrate the release of the double A 7” release from Numero Group featuring Bedhead and Codeine delivering personal favorite Joy Division covers. You can check it out at the Face Radio Archives page, or at my MattPapeWorldy Mixcloud page. Covers are so much fun, discovering favorite songs reimagined, or favorite artists taking on other people's work, whether it be faithful renditions or complete shifts. So I'm thrilled to start a new series in the Matt Pape Mixtape collection - Pull The Covers Off The Lovers. For the first edition of this I'm featuring the exclusive broadcast of Hudson Palace's Tattoo - a cover of the Who song. You heard it first folks!Hudson Palace started out as a Covid dating survival tactic: date nights between Tony Fletcher and Paula Lucas, a new couple with nowhere to go. Figuring that one of them could play guitar and the other could sing, they started working their way through the many songbooks they owned and beyond, seeking uncommon musical ground. When Tony found himself rewriting Buzzcocks' power pop punk classic "Love You More" as an acoustic ballad in 3/4, a project was properly born, the arrangement was recorded, released in early 2023, and followed by a second acoustic Buzzcocks cover, "Love Is Lies."Now, a year down the line, Paula and Tony are about to unveil another themed pair of cover versions, these of mid-60s Who songs. The Who Sell Out's "Tattoo" from 1967 comes first, on Feb 29, followed around a month later by the previous year's 45 "I'm A Boy." The songs sit together thematically in that they deal with the gender confusion Pete Townshend articulated with such wit during this period - wit that takes on new meaning when sung by a woman. Both Hudson Palace interpretations have a somewhat "baroque" feeling to them, and though there are still no drums, they each have considerably more parts than the Buzzcocks covers. All instruments by Tony, recorded in Kingston, NY, and mixed by Noel Fletcher.Oh yeah, also featuring Nico, Badly Drawn Boy, Angel Olsen, Galaxie 500, The Jam, Billy Bragg, Cat Power and loads more. Enjoy. Tune into new broadcasts of Matt Pape Mixtape, Friday from 12 - 1 AM EST / 5 - 6 AM GMTFor more info visit: https://thefaceradio.com/matt-pape-mixtape///Dig this show? Please consider supporting The Face Radio: http://support.thefaceradio.com Support The Face Radio with PatreonSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/thefaceradio. Join the family at https://plus.acast.com/s/thefaceradio. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This episodes special guest is composer Paul SaundersonI met with Paul and we had a wonderful chat, talking about growing up, school, creativity, clubbing and so much morePaul Saunderson is a British film composer with with over 80 credits in Film & TV to his name. His work includes 3 seasons of Apple TV's comedy drama TRYING starring Rafe Spall + Esther Smith, Mike Bartlett's follow up series to Doctor Foster LIFE airing on BBC ONE, RAW'S award winning documentary THREE IDENTICAL STRANGERS (Tim Wardle dir.) and Sister Pictures CLEANING UP starring Sheridan Smith. Other works include Camelot Films PRIZEFIGHTER starring Russell Crowe and Ray Winston and collaborating on hit SKY One action series STRIKE BACK, SKY Atlantic's mystery thriller RIVIERA (Julia Styles) and MTV's action adventure series THE SHANNARA CHRONICLES. Saunderson also wrote the music for Keith English's adaptation of the Jo Brand Novel THE MORE YOU IGNORE ME (Sheridan Smith and Mark Addy) and Tom Edmunds DEAD IN A WEEK or your money back (Tom Wilkinson and Aneurin Barnard), collaborating with ELBOW'S front man Guy Garvey and I AM KLOOT'S bass player Peter Jobson. A multi-instrumentalist, Paul is as equally at home with orchestras as he is with contemporary music, known for his diversity and emotion within his writing. Often performing on his scores, Paul is accomplished at a range of instrument, piano, guitar, bass, ukulele, mandolin, drums and various percussion and is know to take found sounds and manipulate them within his scores making ever project he does completely bespoke and also different from one to the next.Saunderson has worked with many recording artists; writing arrangements for Elbow, Badly Drawn Boy, Coldplay, Kasabian, KT Tunstall, Tom Odell, The Cinematic Orchestra, Ash, and Andy Burrows and Guy Garvey. Paul has recently completed work on Balloon Entertainment's musical drama CHAMPION alongside grime producer SWINDLE coming to BBC ONE and NETFLIX this July as well as a brand new BBC STUDIOS landmark documentary series called EARTH that tells the 4.5 billion year story of our Earth spread across 5 episodes. Hope you enjoy this chat and if you do please feel free to support the podcast herehttps://www.buymeacoffee.com/stuwhiffenorhttps://supporter.acast.com/offthebeatandtrack orwww.patreon.com/offthebeatandtrackPlease also subscribe and follow the podcast on the social media links belowOff The Beat & Trackwww.offthebeatandtrackpodcast.comhttps://twitter.com/beatandtrackpodhttps://www.facebook.com/offthebeatandtrackpodcast/Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/offthebeatandtrack. Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/offthebeatandtrack. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Doug McBride is a multi-talented individual who wears many hats—Founder and Chief Engineer at Gravity Studios, mastering engineer, multi-instrumentalist, songwriter, as well as a family man. Located in Chicago's Wicker Park, Gravity Studios has been a launchpad for various artists. Doug's career took off at the Chicago Recording Company, where he climbed the ranks from 1990 to 1993. He has worked with a plethora of artists, including Izzy Stradlin, Veruca Salt, Smashing Pumpkins, and Fall Out Boy. His initial success came when he produced the hit song "Seether" for Veruca Salt, which set the stage for Gravity Studios to become a go-to place for both local bands and major label artists. In the late '90s and 2000s, Doug's reputation began to attract artists from around the country and even Europe. Names like Ben Kweller, Johnny Rzenik, Badly Drawn Boy, and Tahiti 80 made their way to Chicago specifically to work with him. Over the years, he has also produced tracks for Racheal Yamagata, Jack's Mannequin, and Buddy Guy. In 2005, he expanded his business by opening Gravity Mastering, focusing on mastering services for other producers and engineers. Committed to supporting independent artists, Doug has adapted to the evolving recording industry while maintaining his straightforward approach. IN THIS EPISODE, YOU'LL LEARN ABOUT: Working with Steve Albini Creating natural sounding recordings Surviving the music industry on no sleep How the height of your room impacts your sounds Leaning into room mics Getting the most of a small room Following musical trends Using compression on drums Background vocals: How to get them to sound wide and clear Tuning vocals for clarity How to prevent overcooking your mixes Being prepared to capitalize on opportunities To learn more about Doug McBride and Gravity Studios, visit: http://www.gravitystudios.com/ For tips on how to improve your mixes, visit https://masteryourmix.com/ Looking for 1-on-1 feedback and training to help you create pro-quality mixes? Check out my new coaching program Amplitude and apply to join: https://masteryourmix.com/amplitude/ Download your FREE copy of the Ultimate Mixing Blueprint: https://masteryourmix.com/blueprint/ Get your copy of the #1 Amazon bestselling book, The Mixing Mindset – The Step-By-Step Formula For Creating Professional Rock Mixes From Your Home Studio: https://masteryourmix.com/mixingmindsetbook/ Join the FREE MasterYourMix Facebook community: https://links.masteryourmix.com/community To make sure that you don't miss an episode, make sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes or on Android. Have your questions answered on the show. Send them to questions@masteryourmix.com Thanks for listening! Please leave a rating and review on iTunes!
Clive Anderson and Kiri Pritchard-McLean are joined by John Whaite, Henry Normal, Bronté Barbé and Cath Staincliffe for an eclectic mix of conversation, music and comedy. With music from Swing Out Sister and Badly Drawn Boy.
“Andy Rourke Remembered” Well, he may have been in a band with the greats, but let's face it, Andy Rourke was one of them as well. The Manchester born Rourke joined his childhood pal Johnny Marr's band The Smiths in 1982 and he played with them until their demise in 1987. That's Rourke you hear on every Smiths record, including The Queen Is Dead, Strangeways Here We Come and Louder Than Bombs. After the legendary band broke up, Rourke played with Sinead O'Connor, The Pretenders, Killing Joke, Badly Drawn Boy, Ian Brown of the Stone Roses and Morrissey. Rourke also teamed up with New Order's Peter Hook and Mani of the Stone Roses and formed the band Freebass. He also played with Dolores O'Riordan of the Cranberries in the band D.A.R.K. and around the time I chatted with him, he had formed Blitz Vega with Kav Sandhu, a band that also featured Johnny Marr as a special guest. Rourke's life was busy and exciting and this list doesn't cover all he did, but it does serve as a reminder of how brilliant he was. A prowling blend of rockabilly, funk and post-punk, Rourke's baselines were intricate, inventive and artful. Rourke died in Mid-May and the tributes that poured in were testament after testament that this man was loved. Perhaps it was Moz's, however, that was the most on-point: "He will never die as long as his music is heard. He didn't ever know his own power, and nothing that he played had been played by someone else. His distinction was so terrific and unconventional and he proved it could be done. He was also very, very funny and very happy, and post-Smiths, he kept a steady identity - never any manufactured moves. I suppose, at the end of it all, we hope to feel that we were valued. Andy need not worry about that.” www.bombshellradio.com www.stereoembersmagazine.com www.embersarts.com Stereo Embers The Podcast Twitter: @emberseditor IG: @emberspodcast EMAIL: editor@stereoembersmagazine.com
Dom Richmond of Eiger Studios catches up with Ken Nelson to talk all things music production and the process behind working with some of worlds biggest acts.Ken Nelson is a triple Grammy Award winning record producer best known for his work with Coldplay, most notably for producing their first two records. He has achieved commercial success with Gomez and Badly Drawn Boy who have both won the Mercury Music Prize and in 2003 was voted “Producer of the year” by Music Week magazine. He has also produced albums for Paolo Nutini, Kings of Convenience, The Charlatans, Howling Bells and Portugal's The Gift and Whitecliff.
Simple Kid - aka Kieran MacFeely - discusses his two albums from the early 00s – simply titled 1 and 2. Sometimes they're referred to as SK1 and SK2. MacFeely first came to prominence in the late 1990s when The Young Offenders, the Cork glam-infused band he fronted released a couple of memorable singles, but their big break never materialised. Kieran took some time out after The Young Offenders and reemerged in 2002 as Simple Kid, he bought a microphone, a laptop and an 8-track tape machine and released two singles on Fierce Panda Records. Two acclaimed albums followed. He was compared to Badly Drawn Boy and Beck and memorably the NME called him “the post-modern Bob Dylan”. After supporting Kings of Leon on a US tour in 2007 he disappeared. Last year Simple Kid returned with his third album, SK3: Health & Safety. In April 2023 he played his first gig in 15 years.
Feel Good IncHung UpGood MorningFallin'The GreatestOliver JamesHurtJigsaw Falling Into PlaceLose YourselfEmpire State Of MindCrazySteady As She GoesClint EastwoodI TryWaltz #2ChicagoThe ShiningPoker FaceComfortably Numb
Albums discussed are Badly Drawn Boy's 'About A Boy' (12:37) and Alvvays' 'Blue Rev' (41:20). We also discuss the single 'Until I Found You' from Stephen Sanchez (33:25). To suggest an album for CLRC do any of the following: * Leave a review on Apple Podcasts with the artist and title (five stars always helps). * Use the Spotify form right underneath the podcast in your app. * Visit https://linktr.ee/thecarl The intro music is "I Should Let You Know" by Marian Hill. For playlists and podcasts, visit us on the web at https://linktr.ee/thecarl and on Twitter at @CLRCPod. This is Carl Landry Record Club episode #108. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/brett-eskin/message
In this special kid's POV edition, I share a short conversation with my 11-year-old child Asher about the new morning routine we began doing in January 2016.The routine is based on author and speaker Hal Elrod's book The Miracle Morning: The Not-So-Obvious Secret Guaranteed to Transform Your Life (Before 8AM). Because I'm always looking for ways to support Asher in developing more self-awareness, we agreed to start off the New Year trying out a new routine. In this episode, Asher walks listeners through what the new 6-step morning routine—consisting of meditation, affirmations, visualization, exercise, reading, and journaling—looks like, and explains its impact, as well as why Asher thinks other kids would benefit. Debbie Reber is the founder of Tilt and the host of the Tilt Parenting Podcast. 11-year-old Asher is Debbie's child and is regularly featured on the podcast. Things you'll learn from the episode: How implementing a purposeful morning routine such as the one highlighted in Hal Elrod's book The Miracle Morning has the potential to positively impact a child's dayThe benefits for children on beginning each day by focusing on presence, positivity, and intentionAsher's thoughts on whether other kids could benefit from a new morning routine like the one he's doingHow meaningful a change can be when a child is self-motivated by their own personal discoveries about the benefits of a new habitResources mentioned:The Miracle Morning: The Not-So-Obvious Secret Guaranteed to Transform Your Life (Before 8AM) by Hal ElrodPat Flynn's podcast, Smart Passive IncomeKerbal Space Program, Asher's favorite online game (at the moment)Asher and Debbie's visualization soundtrack: Enya's Caribbean Blue, Charles Atlas' The Snow Before Us, and Badly Drawn Boy's I Love NYESupport the showConnect with Tilt Parenting Visit Tilt Parenting Take the free 7-Day Challenge Read a chapter of Differently Wired Follow Tilt on Twitter & Instagram
Here's Strange Brew #329 - Last To Leave - with gugai on 8radio.com - The Bug Club tell me about a song they love plus music from ARXX, Meltybrains?, Anna B Savage, Lisa O'Neill, Tracy Bruen, The Golden Dregs, Daughter, M(h)aol, David Kitt, Arborist, Ailbhe Reddy & Badly Drawn Boy #strangebrew #8radio #gugai #try8radio Every Friday at 9pm & Saturday at 7pm on 8radio.com. https://linktr.ee/gugai
In this episode of the Artmatcher podcast, Sasha Krivtsov speaks with Michael Goodman about his process of creating art and music.About Sasha KrivtsovSasha Krivtsov, born (Alexander Krivtsov) June 6, 1967 in St. Petersburg, Russia, is probably best known as the bass player for the House Band on the TV reality shows Rock Star: INXS, Rock Star: Supernova and The Voice. He has played with singer-songwriter Vanessa Carlton. He toured and recorded as bassist with Cher, Tina Turner, James Blunt, Shakira, Christina Aguilera, Billy Idol, Badly Drawn Boy and multi-platinum pop band The New Radicals. Sasha and the House Band (Rafael Moreira (lead guitar), Paul Mirkovich (keyboards), Jim McGorman (rhythm guitar) and Nate Morton (drums) toured the United States with Paul Stanley (from KISS) in October/November 2006 as well as Australia in April 2007.Before immigrating to the United States, Sasha was a band member of the No. 1 rock band in the Soviet Union, Zemlyane, with whom he frequently performed before crowds of more than 10,000 fans and sold 20 million records. Now living in Los Angeles with his wife, Deon, and his two boys, Jazz and Tyler, Sasha is also an accomplished visual artist and sculptor.Sasha is currently the bass player on NBC's The Voice (USA) and has held that position since the show's first season. He is seasoned on the electric bass, upright bass, acoustic bass, and bass synthesizer.Recommended LinksSasha Krivtsov's on WikipediaSasha Krivtsov on InstagramSasha Krivtsov on LinkedIn
Join the Spoookstak! So, you know that Embrace interview I uploaded the other day? The one I'd done a month or so back, in the stifling heat of a vicious, ice cap melting UK summer? The one I'd left the window at Spoook Towers open during – not something I normally do, but I was genuinely fearful that I would melt and become more puddle than man if I didn't. Well, this episode – with Badly Drawn Boy, aka Damon Gough - should come with the same proviso. It's not the best audio. It is, however, an excellent conversation. Total transparency. Damon is co-managed by my wife. He's kind of family, really. But I've loved his music as long as I remember. I think he's a truly unique songwriter, but if I've got one criticism of his work, it's that it's slowed down to such a crawl, that 2020's ninth album, Banana Skin Shoes, was his first set of new songs in almost a decade. Not long before this episode was recorded, I went to see him play at the Rhythmtree Festival on the Isle of Wight. It was a remarkable performance, a reminder of what a special talent he is and why I just can't wait another ten years for an album. I thought then, that it might be nice to have a chat for this episode of the podcast, and see how he's getting on with that follow up record. Because we all need a little nudge from time to time…
I denne uges udsendelse har vi iklædt os de royale gevandter og lavet en special om Queen Elizabeth II, eller måske mere præcist musik der er skrevet om den nu afdøde dronning. En kvinde som på mange måder har delt vandene siden hun i 1952 blev briternes royale overhoved i en alder af bare 25 år. Det afspejler sig i den grad også i musikkens verden, og i dette afsnit handler alle sangene om Dronning Elizabeth på både godt og ondt. Det bliver til et kig på sange fra nogle af musikhistoriens største kunstnere som The Beatles, Sex Pistols, Blur og The Smiths, men også nogle måske mindre kendte som f.eks. Young Tiger, Leon Rosselson og Badly Drawn Boy kigger forbi med numre om Dronning Elizabeth. Numre der byder på både royale forelskelser, minder fra hendes kroning men også flere numre fra 70'erne og 80'erne der ønsker det engelske monarki meget langt væk. Det bliver desuden til små lyriske gæsteroller til hendes mand Prins Phillip og den nye konge Charles III, og minsandten om vi ikke også kommer ind i drømmeverdenen, hvor Elizabeth har fået selskab af både Prinsesse Diana og Madonna. Playliste: Young Tiger – I was there (at The Coronation) The Beatles – Her Majesty Sex Pistols – God save The Queen Leon Rosselson – On her Silver Jubilee The Housemartins – Flag day The Smiths – The Queen is dead The Stone Roses – Elizabeth my dear Pet Shop Boys – Dreaming of The Queen Blur – This is a low Badly Drawn Boy – You were right
It's been a few years since we last brought you ANNIVERSARY MONTH but we're back to return to one of our favourite traditions as we go over four films in the next month that are celebrating their anniversary in 2022! And given we are so in love with the films of 2002, we're bringing you four films from that year, starting off today with the incredibly underrated gem that is About A Boy. How amazing is this film and why does it need more love? Is Hugh Grant one of our favourite actors that we just don't talk about enough? How amazing is Nicholas Hoult and why is it obvious he was always set to be a star? Is Toni Collette one of the best and most underrated Australian actors? Why is this movie just so relatable, particularly for men? Why is this movie basically a biopic for Ben? Do we find dead ducks that funny? Do we want to listen to more Badly Drawn Boy? Are we completely silenced by Rachel Weisz? Was this movie ahead of its time? And is any man actually an island? Get your bread ready and begin to strum your song with your fingers for an amazing episode on an amazing movie!★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
With Lee away on holiday for a week, and Andy still busy in Banbury, we take a little break this week with another recap episode of some Deep Dives from our early years of the podcast, episodes 31 to 35. This episode hear our thoughts on Silent Running, Spinal Tap, Inception, Chaplin, and The Usual Suspects. Meanwhile, over on No Barriers Radio this week, why not check out another exclusive bonus episode of the show where Lee picked out some choice examples of music in film - from Soundgarden to Badly Drawn Boy, with a touch of John Williams in the mix. head over to nobarriersradio.com and listen in on Thursday evening, or wait until it lands in the archive over there - and why not check out the previous bonus episodes over there too. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/filmfileuk/message
https://apoia.se/clubeheatwave Heatwave! número 297 na webradio antenAZero. Uma edição com muitas músicas do Wilco, incluindo o single recém lançado, e raridades e covers gravados pela banda. Novidades também da Phoebe Bridgers, Beach House, Father John Misty, Warpaint, The Regrettes e King Gizzard. No bloco do Groover tivemos Lucy Kruger & The Lost Boys, Fabien Bouef e The Masterminds. E ainda Badly Drawn Boy, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club e Doves.
There's gold in them there hills around Orange in NSW this week, people are finding bodies in the Thames over in the UK and we send nudes via one of the most successful space probes of all time.We dissect Oasis's the Hindu Times, get all indie with Badly Drawn Boy and then add a touch of glam with the latest release from Dokken. The Rock takes his first steps into becoming a Hollywood heavyweight with an absolute stinker of a movie, find out who The Mole is and say 'goodbye' to The Weakest link.But wait, there's more! We celebrate the brith of Jason Lee and mourn Lisa Left eye Lopez.We also head to Coachella for only $75 a ticket.Don't go chasing waterfalls, stick the podcasts that you're used to!Hang with us on socials to chat more noughties nostalgia - Facebook (@tminus20) or Instagram (tminus20podcast). You can also contact us there if you want to be a part of the show.
In this episode we welcome the excellent Devon Powers — beamed in from Philadelphia — and ask her to talk about The Village Voice, Red Hot Chili Peppers, the White Stripes… and music journalism since the turn of the century.Devon begins by talking about the music she loved when growing up in her native Michigan — and her first awareness of "rock critics". We hear about her move to New York City in 1999, her early pieces for the PopMatters site, and the Anglophilia that led to umpteen pieces about the likes of Clinic, Starsailor, Badly Drawn Boy and, yes, even Ocean Colour Scene. Citing a great 2003 piece she wrote about Red Hot Chili Peppers, who released a new album the week of this recording, we ask Devon what those punk-funk Californicators meant to her in the '90s and noughties.After a brief discussion of Devon's 2004 thinkpiece 'Is Music Journalism Dead?', we turn our attention to Writing the Record: The Village Voice and the Birth of Rock Criticism, the 2013 book which came out of her doctoral dissertation at NYU. She talks about the vital New York weekly paper, and the "rock critics" who were such a key part of its arts coverage — particularly Richard Goldstein, several of whose '60s Voice pieces we have on RBP. We then pay tribute to another Voice contributor, John Swenson, lost to us a few days before this recording, as well as to Foo Fighter Taylor Hawkins and Mighty Diamonds frontman "Tabby" Shaw.Two clips from Ira Robbins' 2001 audio interview with the White Stripes prompt a general chinwag about Jack, Meg, blues etc., after which Mark zips through the most notable of the interviews & reviews he's just added to the RBP library, including pieces about the Kingston Trio, Paul Revere & the Raiders, Canned Heat and Teddy Pendergrass. Barney then rounds things off by flagging up pieces on Marc Bolan, the Prodigy, Tony Hatch, Jack Good and the Descendents.Many thanks to special guest Devon Powers; visit her website at devonpowers.com and find Writing the Record in all good bookshops.The Rock's Backpages podcast is proud to be part of the Pantheon podcast network.Pieces discussed: The Village Voice and the Birth of Rock Criticism, PJ Harvey, Is Music Journalism Dead?, Red Hot Chili Peppers audio, Blood Sugar Sex Magik, Rick Rubin, The White Stripes audio, Taylor Hawkins audio, Foo Fighters, Crawdaddy, The Mighty Diamonds, Alexis Korner, Paul Revere, Disco, Teddy Pendergrass, Little Richard, Steve Paul, Canned Heat, Curtis Mayfield, Oasis, Marc Bolan audio, The Prodigy, Tony Hatch, Jack Good and the Descendents.
In this episode we welcome the excellent Devon Powers — beamed in from Philadelphia — and ask her to talk about The Village Voice, Red Hot Chili Peppers, the White Stripes… and music journalism since the turn of the century. Devon begins by talking about the music she loved when growing up in her native Michigan — and her first awareness of "rock critics". We hear about her move to New York City in 1999, her early pieces for the PopMatters site, and the Anglophilia that led to umpteen pieces about the likes of Clinic, Starsailor, Badly Drawn Boy and, yes, even Ocean Colour Scene. Citing a great 2003 piece she wrote about Red Hot Chili Peppers, who released a new album the week of this recording, we ask Devon what those punk-funk Californicators meant to her in the '90s and noughties. After a brief discussion of Devon's 2004 thinkpiece 'Is Music Journalism Dead?', we turn our attention to Writing the Record: The Village Voice and the Birth of Rock Criticism, the 2013 book which came out of her doctoral dissertation at NYU. She talks about the vital New York weekly paper, and the "rock critics" who were such a key part of its arts coverage — particularly Richard Goldstein, several of whose '60s Voice pieces we have on RBP. We then pay tribute to another Voice contributor, John Swenson, lost to us a few days before this recording, as well as to Foo Fighter Taylor Hawkins and Mighty Diamonds frontman "Tabby" Shaw. Two clips from Ira Robbins' 2001 audio interview with the White Stripes prompt a general chinwag about Jack, Meg, blues etc., after which Mark zips through the most notable of the interviews & reviews he's just added to the RBP library, including pieces about the Kingston Trio, Paul Revere & the Raiders, Canned Heat and Teddy Pendergrass. Barney then rounds things off by flagging up pieces on Marc Bolan, the Prodigy, Tony Hatch, Jack Good and the Descendents. Many thanks to special guest Devon Powers; visit her website at devonpowers.com and find Writing the Record in all good bookshops. The Rock's Backpages podcast is proud to be part of the Pantheon podcast network. Pieces discussed: The Village Voice and the Birth of Rock Criticism, PJ Harvey, Is Music Journalism Dead?, Red Hot Chili Peppers audio, Blood Sugar Sex Magik, Rick Rubin, The White Stripes audio, Taylor Hawkins audio, Foo Fighters, Crawdaddy, The Mighty Diamonds, Alexis Korner, Paul Revere, Disco, Teddy Pendergrass, Little Richard, Steve Paul, Canned Heat, Curtis Mayfield, Oasis, Marc Bolan audio, The Prodigy, Tony Hatch, Jack Good and the Descendents. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode we welcome the excellent Devon Powers — beamed in from Philadelphia — and ask her to talk about The Village Voice, Red Hot Chili Peppers, the White Stripes… and music journalism since the turn of the century. Devon begins by talking about the music she loved when growing up in her native Michigan — and her first awareness of "rock critics". We hear about her move to New York City in 1999, her early pieces for the PopMatters site, and the Anglophilia that led to umpteen pieces about the likes of Clinic, Starsailor, Badly Drawn Boy and, yes, even Ocean Colour Scene. Citing a great 2003 piece she wrote about Red Hot Chili Peppers, who released a new album the week of this recording, we ask Devon what those punk-funk Californicators meant to her in the '90s and noughties. After a brief discussion of Devon's 2004 thinkpiece 'Is Music Journalism Dead?', we turn our attention to Writing the Record: The Village Voice and the Birth of Rock Criticism, the 2013 book which came out of her doctoral dissertation at NYU. She talks about the vital New York weekly paper, and the "rock critics" who were such a key part of its arts coverage — particularly Richard Goldstein, several of whose '60s Voice pieces we have on RBP. We then pay tribute to another Voice contributor, John Swenson, lost to us a few days before this recording, as well as to Foo Fighter Taylor Hawkins and Mighty Diamonds frontman "Tabby" Shaw. Two clips from Ira Robbins' 2001 audio interview with the White Stripes prompt a general chinwag about Jack, Meg, blues etc., after which Mark zips through the most notable of the interviews & reviews he's just added to the RBP library, including pieces about the Kingston Trio, Paul Revere & the Raiders, Canned Heat and Teddy Pendergrass. Barney then rounds things off by flagging up pieces on Marc Bolan, the Prodigy, Tony Hatch, Jack Good and the Descendents. Many thanks to special guest Devon Powers; visit her website at devonpowers.com and find Writing the Record in all good bookshops. The Rock's Backpages podcast is proud to be part of the Pantheon podcast network. Pieces discussed: The Village Voice and the Birth of Rock Criticism, PJ Harvey, Is Music Journalism Dead?, Red Hot Chili Peppers audio, Blood Sugar Sex Magik, Rick Rubin, The White Stripes audio, Taylor Hawkins audio, Foo Fighters, Crawdaddy, The Mighty Diamonds, Alexis Korner, Paul Revere, Disco, Teddy Pendergrass, Little Richard, Steve Paul, Canned Heat, Curtis Mayfield, Oasis, Marc Bolan audio, The Prodigy, Tony Hatch, Jack Good and the Descendents.
In this episode we welcome the excellent Devon Powers — beamed in from Philadelphia — and ask her to talk about The Village Voice, Red Hot Chili Peppers, the White Stripes… and music journalism since the turn of the century.Devon begins by talking about the music she loved when growing up in her native Michigan — and her first awareness of "rock critics". We hear about her move to New York City in 1999, her early pieces for the PopMatters site, and the Anglophilia that led to umpteen pieces about the likes of Clinic, Starsailor, Badly Drawn Boy and, yes, even Ocean Colour Scene. Citing a great 2003 piece she wrote about Red Hot Chili Peppers, who released a new album the week of this recording, we ask Devon what those punk-funk Californicators meant to her in the '90s and noughties.After a brief discussion of Devon's 2004 thinkpiece 'Is Music Journalism Dead?', we turn our attention to Writing the Record: The Village Voice and the Birth of Rock Criticism, the 2013 book which came out of her doctoral dissertation at NYU. She talks about the vital New York weekly paper, and the "rock critics" who were such a key part of its arts coverage — particularly Richard Goldstein, several of whose '60s Voice pieces we have on RBP. We then pay tribute to another Voice contributor, John Swenson, lost to us a few days before this recording, as well as to Foo Fighter Taylor Hawkins and Mighty Diamonds frontman "Tabby" Shaw.Two clips from Ira Robbins' 2001 audio interview with the White Stripes prompt a general chinwag about Jack, Meg, blues etc., after which Mark zips through the most notable of the interviews & reviews he's just added to the RBP library, including pieces about the Kingston Trio, Paul Revere & the Raiders, Canned Heat and Teddy Pendergrass. Barney then rounds things off by flagging up pieces on Marc Bolan, the Prodigy, Tony Hatch, Jack Good and the Descendents.Many thanks to special guest Devon Powers; visit her website at devonpowers.com and find Writing the Record in all good bookshops.The Rock's Backpages podcast is proud to be part of the Pantheon podcast network.Pieces discussed: The Village Voice and the Birth of Rock Criticism, PJ Harvey, Is Music Journalism Dead?, Red Hot Chili Peppers audio, Blood Sugar Sex Magik, Rick Rubin, The White Stripes audio, Taylor Hawkins audio, Foo Fighters, Crawdaddy, The Mighty Diamonds, Alexis Korner, Paul Revere, Disco, Teddy Pendergrass, Little Richard, Steve Paul, Canned Heat, Curtis Mayfield, Oasis, Marc Bolan audio, The Prodigy, Tony Hatch, Jack Good and the Descendents.
The Bad Day Blues Band was our guest back on episode 52. The group has since dropped Blues Band from the name. They are back for Top Hill Recording Podcast's "5 from......" series. The Bad Day exploded onto the scene in 2017, playing Times Square in New York City with double Grammy Award winner Delbert McClinton. This was followed by two critically acclaimed performances at The Isle Of Wight Festival in 2018 and 2019. The Bad Day Blues Band has wowed audiences at many of the UK's major festivals and has garnered glowing reviews from BBC Radio 2, Bassplayer Magazine, Planet Rock, Record Box Reviews, London Live TV, and many more. Winner of the Digital Blues Awards Best New Blues Band 2019, they have played alongside artists such as The Killers, Kirk Fletcher, Ben Poole, The Manic Street Preachers, Starsailor, Badly Drawn Boy, Delbert McClinton, George Ezra, Sheryl Crow and many, many others. The Bad Day Blues Band has amassed a dedicated fanbase and are in the process of releasing a new concept album. The featured 5 songs: 1. Table by the Wall 2. The Hustler 3. Hurricane 4. Luna Rooms 5. Devil's Lullaby --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tophillrecording/support
This month we're all meeting up in the year 2000 to hang out in the Millenium dome, play Timesplitters on the PS2, & try to avoid getting sued by Metallica for downloading Master Of Puppets on Napster. We'll also be talking about wind instruments fashioned from root vegetables, uttery brilliant but thoroughly depressing movies, & we speculate whether Thom Yorke was turning up at every recording studio in the world in 2000. We've each chosen our 10 favourite songs of the year and sent them over to Ian's wife Lydia, who put the playlists together and distributed them so we were each given a playlist of the 20 songs from the other two hosts, along with our own 10. We then ranked the playlists in order of preference and sent them to Colin's wife Helen, who totalled up the points and worked out the order. Helen also joined us on the episode to read out the countdown, which we found out as we recorded so all reactions are genuine. Now, admittedly, in parts we're a little bit brutal to some of the songs in the list as we're three separate people with differing music tastes, but please remember that to be in this episode at all the songs have to have been in one of our top 10's of that year. Bands featured in this episode include (In alphabetical order, no spoilers here!) - A Perfect Circle, AFI, Antony & The Johnsons, At The Drive In, Badly Drawn Boy, Belle & Sebastian, Bjork Ft. Thom Yorke, Bright Eyes, Cave In, Cinerama, The Cure, Darude, Deftones, earthtone9, Electric Wizard, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, PJ Harvey ft Thom Yorke, Isis, Merzbow, Misery Loves Co., Shellac, The Smashing Pumpkins, Snapcase, Radiohead, Sugababes, Teenage Fanclub, Ulver, VNV Nation, The White Stripes, & Yo La Tengo. Find all songs in alphabetical order here - https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4urz0OMSmN8DZVToTaVKAx?si=5923b29122764198 Find our We Dig Music Pollwinners Party playlist (featuring all of the winning songs up until now) here - https://open.spotify.com/playlist/45zfDHo8zm6VqrvoEQSt3z?si=Ivt0oMj6SmitimvumYfFrQ If you want to listen to megalength playlists of all the songs we've individually picked since we started doing best of the year episodes, you can listen to Colin's here – https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5x3Vy5Jry2IxG9JNOtabRT?si=HhcVKRCtRhWCK1KucyrDdg Ian's here - https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2H0hnxe6WX50QNQdlfRH5T?si=XmEjnRqISNqDwi30p1uLqA and Tracey's here - https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2p3K0n8dKhjHb2nKBSYnKi?si=7a-cyDvSSuugdV1m5md9Nw The playlist of 20 songs from the other two hosts was scored as usual, our favourite song got 20 points, counting down incrementally to our least favourite which got 1 point. The scoring of our own list of 10 is now slightly more complicated in order to give a truer level of points to our own favourites. So rather than them only being able to score as many points as our 10th favourite in the other list, the points in our own list were distributed as follows - 1st place - 20 points 2nd place - 18 points 3rd place – 16 points 4th place – 14 points 5th place – 12 points 6th place – 9 points 7th place – 7 points 8th place – 5 points 9th place – 3 points 10th place -1 point Hosts - Ian Clarke, Colin Jackson-Brown & Tracey B Guest starring Helen Jackson-Brown. Playlist compiling/distributing – Lydia Clarke Recorded/Edited/Mixed/Original Music by Colin Jackson-Brown for We Dig Podcasts Thanks to Peter Latimer for help with the scoring system. Say hello at www.facebook.com/wedigmusicpcast or tweet us at http://twitter.com/wedigmusicpcast or look at shiny pictures on Instagram at http://instagram.com/wedigmusicpcast Part of the We Made This podcast network. https://twitter.com/wmt_network You can also find all the We Dig Music & Free With This Months Issue episodes at www.wedigpodcasts.com
This month we're all meeting up in the year 2000 to hang out in the Millenium dome, play Timesplitters on the PS2, & try to avoid getting sued by Metallica for downloading Master Of Puppets on Napster. We'll also be talking about wind instruments fashioned from root vegetables, uttery brilliant but thoroughly depressing movies, & we speculate whether Thom Yorke was turning up at every recording studio in the world in 2000.We've each chosen our 10 favourite songs of the year and sent them over to Ian's wife Lydia, who put the playlists together and distributed them so we were each given a playlist of the 20 songs from the other two hosts, along with our own 10. We then ranked the playlists in order of preference and sent them to Colin's wife Helen, who totalled up the points and worked out the order. Helen also joined us on the episode to read out the countdown, which we found out as we recorded so all reactions are genuine.Now, admittedly, in parts we're a little bit brutal to some of the songs in the list as we're three separate people with differing music tastes, but please remember that to be in this episode at all the songs have to have been in one of our top 10's of that year. Bands featured in this episode include (In alphabetical order, no spoilers here!) - A Perfect Circle, AFI, Antony & The Johnsons, At The Drive In, Badly Drawn Boy, Belle & Sebastian, Bjork Ft. Thom Yorke, Bright Eyes, Cave In, Cinerama, The Cure, Darude, Deftones, earthtone9, Electric Wizard, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, PJ Harvey ft Thom Yorke, Isis, Merzbow, Misery Loves Co., Shellac, The Smashing Pumpkins, Snapcase, Radiohead, Sugababes, Teenage Fanclub, Ulver, VNV Nation, The White Stripes, & Yo La Tengo.Find all songs in alphabetical order here - https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4urz0OMSmN8DZVToTaVKAx?si=5923b29122764198Find our We Dig Music Pollwinners Party playlist (featuring all of the winning songs up until now) here - https://open.spotify.com/playlist/45zfDHo8zm6VqrvoEQSt3z?si=Ivt0oMj6SmitimvumYfFrQ If you want to listen to megalength playlists of all the songs we've individually picked since we started doing best of the year episodes, you can listen to Colin's here – https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5x3Vy5Jry2IxG9JNOtabRT?si=HhcVKRCtRhWCK1KucyrDdg Ian's here - https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2H0hnxe6WX50QNQdlfRH5T?si=XmEjnRqISNqDwi30p1uLqA and Tracey's here - https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2p3K0n8dKhjHb2nKBSYnKi?si=7a-cyDvSSuugdV1m5md9Nw The playlist of 20 songs from the other two hosts was scored as usual, our favourite song got 20 points, counting down incrementally to our least favourite which got 1 point. The scoring of our own list of 10 is now slightly more complicated in order to give a truer level of points to our own favourites. So rather than them only being able to score as many points as our 10th favourite in the other list, the points in our own list were distributed as follows -1st place - 20 points2nd place - 18 points3rd place – 16 points4th place – 14 points5th place – 12 points6th place – 9 points7th place – 7 points8th place – 5 points9th place – 3 points10th place -1 pointHosts - Ian Clarke, Colin Jackson-Brown & Tracey BGuest starring Helen Jackson-Brown.Playlist compiling/distributing – Lydia ClarkeRecorded/Edited/Mixed/Original Music by Colin Jackson-Brown for We Dig PodcastsThanks to Peter Latimer for help with the scoring system.Say hello at www.facebook.com/wedigmusicpcast or tweet us at http://twitter.com/wedigmusicpcast or look at shiny pictures on Instagram at http://instagram.com/wedigmusicpcast Part of the We Made This podcast network. https://twitter.com/wmt_network You can also find all the We Dig Music & Free With This Months Issue episodes at www.wedigpodcasts.com
Rich Nelson and Catrin Lowe from Don‘t You Want Me? podcast return to Flixwatcher remotely to review Rich's choice About A Boy. About A Boy is a 2002 comedy-drama starring Hugh Grant, Toni Collette and Nicholas Hoult, directed by Paul Weitz and Chris Weitz it is based on the Nick Hornby novel of the same name. Grant stars as Will, a man child living without responsibilities, commitments or having to work living off royalties from a song his father wrote. He meets Marcus (Hoult) on the day his mother Fiona (Collette) attempts suicide. The two strike up an unlikely friendship and teach each other life lessons. Knowing and winking at the audience (references to everyone's favourite film mum Collette being in The Sixth Sense) with an excellent Badly Drawn Boy film soundtrack About A Boy manages the delicate balance of comedy and seriousness to leave you all warm and fuzzy inside. Scores for recommendability were solid if not sensational and a high small screen score gives About A Boy a decent overall rating of 3.82. [supsystic-tables id=253] Episode #241 Crew LinksThanks to Episode #241 Crew of Rich Nelson (@BetamaxPod) and Catrin Lowe (@KittyCostanza) from Don't You Want Me? podcast Find their Websites online at https://twitter.com/dywmpodcast And at https://twitter.com/paperworkt And at https://www.instagram.com/kittycostanza/ And at https://twitter.com/fantana275 And at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZ2UvEmZu7Ju9TM6ipPTGtg And at https://dywm.podbean.com/ And at https://twitter.com/Fantana275 Please make sure you give them some love More about About A BoyFor more info on About A Boy, you can visit About A Boy IMDb page here or About A Boy Rotten Tomatoes page here. Final Plug! Subscribe, Share and Review us on iTunes If you enjoyed this episode of Flixwatcher Podcast you probably know other people who will like it too! Please share it with your friends and family, review us, and join us across ALL of the Social Media links below. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Fellow podcasters Scroobius Pip and Stu Whiffen join us for a Partridge appreciation chat this week. We talk most used quotes, favourite moments, DVD menus and meeting the cast. Plus: Pip's DMs with the Gibbons Brothers revealed, an unexpected appearance from Badly Drawn Boy, and Stu's Alan Eurovision dream. Send us your best Partridge GIFs now! *insert ‘Partridge Shrug'*Scroobius Pip on Twitter • Scroobius Pip on Instagram • Distraction Pieces Podcast with Scroobius PipStu on Twitter • Stu on Instagram • Off The Beat & Track with Stu Whiffen • Pod Bible PodcastGet 8 FREE craft beers for just £5.95 postage - beer52.com/monkeytennisCONTACT THE POD: twitter.com/ThePartridgePod • facebook.com/ThePartridgePod • instagram.com/MonkeyTennisPod • thepartridgepod@gmail.com • MT Hotline: 07923 600 017Liked what you heard? Don't forget to FOLLOW so you don't miss an episode, and please RATE & REVIEW us on Apple Podcasts. You can support the podcast by sending us the price of a coffee here: ko-fi.com/monkeytennis - back of the net! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode of Three Track Therapy, Damon Gough AKA Badly Drawn Boy talks about his new album and openly shares the influence music had when it came to forgiving his younger self, dealing with fame and the limelight, a tough breakup, dealing with giving up alcohol, what his life is like now and moving on from the past. He tells us how he stumbled upon song writing by accident, which lead to him teaching himself to play the piano and guitar. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Scott is a composer, guitarist and music editor for film and television. He has worked closely with many composers including Christophe Beck, Patrice Rushen, Joseph LoDuca, Michael Penn, Matthew Margeson, and Charles Sydnor. His compositions have appeared in numerous short films, advertisements, music libraries, and network television shows including Wrecked, Girls, The Librarians, Malcolm In The Middle, Help Me Help You, and Leverage. Scott has also had the privilege of working on many notable films such as Academy Award nominated “A Mother's Promise” 2008, “Geostorm” 2017, "Hacker" 2016, “Pay The Ghost” 2015, "Fame" 2009 as well as composing the original scores for “Crypsis” 2019, “Smile The Musical” 2017, and "Hitting on Destiny" 2011.In addition to film and television, Scott has over two decades of experience in record production. He has contributed to albums by artists such as Mick Jagger, Puddle Of Mudd, Badly Drawn Boy, Goo Goo Dolls, Blues Traveler, Dokken, Liz Phair, Ron Brown, and The Urban Jazz Network among many others. He was nominated for a Latin Grammy in 2000 for his work on Jaguares "Bajo el Azul de Tu Misterio."https://scottfranciscomusic.com/@thecareermusician@nomadsplace
Scott is a composer, guitarist and music editor for film and television. He has worked closely with many composers including Christophe Beck, Patrice Rushen, Joseph LoDuca, Michael Penn, Matthew Margeson, and Charles Sydnor. His compositions have appeared in numerous short films, advertisements, music libraries, and network television shows including Wrecked, Girls, The Librarians, Malcolm In The Middle, Help Me Help You, and Leverage. Scott has also had the privilege of working on many notable films such as Academy Award nominated “A Mother's Promise” 2008, “Geostorm” 2017, "Hacker" 2016, “Pay The Ghost” 2015, "Fame" 2009 as well as composing the original scores for “Crypsis” 2019, “Smile The Musical” 2017, and "Hitting on Destiny" 2011. In addition to film and television, Scott has over two decades of experience in record production. He has contributed to albums by artists such as Mick Jagger, Puddle Of Mudd, Badly Drawn Boy, Goo Goo Dolls, Blues Traveler, Dokken, Liz Phair, Ron Brown, and The Urban Jazz Network among many others. He was nominated for a Latin Grammy in 2000 for his work on Jaguares "Bajo el Azul de Tu Misterio." https://scottfranciscomusic.com/ @thecareermusician @nomadsplace
What was the original title of Running Up That Hill? Train In Vain is not about locomotives, so why it "train" in the title? What car did Janis Joplin drive (hint: it's not a Merc). Join Stevie Nix as he answers all of these questions and more on this episode that deals with songs that cover all modes of transport - from walking to flying.WARNING: This episode contains traces of The Partridge Family.Featured songs [in chronological order]:Running Up That Hill [Rosalie James, Placebo]Band On The Run [Richie Havens]Walk This Way [Scary Pockets ft Judith Hill]Walk Like An Egyptian [Puppini Sisters]Little Red Corvette [Jeanne Added]Mercedes Benz [G-Eazy]Thunder Road [Badly Drawn Boy]We Gotta Get Out Of This Place [The Partridge Family, Dan Auerbach]Big Yellow Taxi [Amanda Palmer]Magic Bus [The Pudding, Paul Weller]Train In Vain [Annie Lennox, Garbage]Back In The USSR [Liz Green]Big Jet Plane [Daniela Andrade, Tuka]America [First Aid Kit, David Bowie]I Ran [Mama Ghost]20 Songs That Have Things Covered #14Join Stevie on Spotifywww.songsungnew.com
"UNKLE" is a British musical outfit founded in 1992 by James Lavelle.James was the founder of iconic UK record label "MoWax". A label known for championing underground hip-hop in the 90's and bringing artists like DJ Shadow to prominence in the UK. The "UNKLE" was project was something James had been trying to work on for over a decade before he decided to ask Shadow for help in producing the material. What resulted was the cult classic "Psyence Fiction" which dropped in 1998.Since those early days, "MoWax" as a functioning label is no longer, and DJ Shadow has moved on to his own illustrious career. But James has stuck it out with "UNKLE", producing multiple albums with new producers and collaborating with artists such as Josh Homme from Queens of The Stoneage and singer/songwriter Mark Lanegan.In this episode Jay and Jesse explore the origins of UNKLE and James Lavelle.To listen to the full episode, including the featured music, visit... signlradio.com"Roots to Grooves" is a production of SIGNL.https://www.signlradio.comhttps://www.instagram.com/signlradiohttps://www.twitter.com/signlradiohttps://www.facebook.com/signlradiohttps://www.mixcloud.com/signlhttps://open.spotify.com/user/96mhz6qfjoztxbl2dpm0uj903?si=aAZpsoEnRAKdx85kr1QWhg
After hearing “Roll with it” by Oasis, Dan Raza was struck with the musical bug. It started a journey delving into the classics of the 60s and 70s, and then the roots of those artists all the way back to the pre-war blues. Since then, Dan Raza has become one of the mainstays of the London singer-songwriter and folk roots scene. His distinctive approach has won him a following across the UK and abroad as he has taken his songs on the road performing solo and opening for Joan Armatrading, Badly Drawn Boy, and Alejandro Escovedo, amongst others. And he has been praised by artists such as Slaid Cleaves and Mary Gauthier, and even had a song included on Neil Young's ‘Living With War' website.Reminiscent of the Waterboys, Nick Drake, and Bob Dylan, Dan Raza's intimate guitar playing and poetic yet personal lyrics will pull you directly into the scenes he scripts and the portraits he paints.Dave sat down with Dan to talk about his normal songwriting process, his days in a rock band, finding inspiration while traveling abroad, and how walking may help you write more songs. It's another raw and riveting discussion about song craft!For more music, check out http://www.danraza.com/
Un avance de nuestra despedida a Franco Battiato, además de Abba, Yo la Tengo, Neil Diamond, Sandy Denny, Badly Drawn Boy, Carole King, Textones, Go-Go´s, Del Amitri, Counting Crows, J. D. Souther y The Eagles
This episodes Classic Indie Album is the debut album from Badly Drawn Boy 'Hour of the Bewilderbeast'. Jim talks to the albums creator and all-around musical genius Damon Gough (aka. Badly Drawn Boy) about the albums inception, critical acclaim and how it fitted into the Manchester musical landscape of the time.Listen to the album: https://open.spotify.com/album/7y0QwysyQgSf9fyBFr6Q3x?si=GS5lEjA9Qci_nG09EdKWfAThe XS Longplayer Podcast is taken from the XS Longplayer radio show on XS Manchester: A classic album played in full every Thursday night ay 8pm (GMT) listen live via www.xsmanchester.co.uk Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Það hefur verið talsvert um það undanfarið að þekktir tónlistarmenn séu að falla frá af ýmsum ástæðum. Það var sagt frá John Prine í Rokklandi núna um daginn, Covid 19 tók hann, eins og Dave Greenfield hljómborðsleikara Stranglers sem var fjallað um í síðasta þætti. Little Richard sem er sannarlega einn af frumkvöðlum Rokksins lést laugardaginn fyrir viku úr krabbameini 87 ára að aldri. Hans saga verður sögð í Rokklandi vikunnar og lögin hans spiluð. Í seinni hlutanum heyrum við svo nokkur lög af splunkunýrri plötu frá bandaríska tónlistarmanninum Jason Isbell sem hann var að gera með hljómsveitinni sinni The 400 Unit. Platan heitir Reunions. Paul Weller, Bob Dylan, Badly Drawn Boy, David Bowie og Kristín Sesselja koma líka við sögu.
Það hefur verið talsvert um það undanfarið að þekktir tónlistarmenn séu að falla frá af ýmsum ástæðum. Það var sagt frá John Prine í Rokklandi núna um daginn, Covid 19 tók hann, eins og Dave Greenfield hljómborðsleikara Stranglers sem var fjallað um í síðasta þætti. Little Richard sem er sannarlega einn af frumkvöðlum Rokksins lést laugardaginn fyrir viku úr krabbameini 87 ára að aldri. Hans saga verður sögð í Rokklandi vikunnar og lögin hans spiluð. Í seinni hlutanum heyrum við svo nokkur lög af splunkunýrri plötu frá bandaríska tónlistarmanninum Jason Isbell sem hann var að gera með hljómsveitinni sinni The 400 Unit. Platan heitir Reunions. Paul Weller, Bob Dylan, Badly Drawn Boy, David Bowie og Kristín Sesselja koma líka við sögu.
New York four-piece Deadbeat Darling is spending time on both sides of the pond. After selling out some of NYC's most prestigious venues over the course of the last 3 years, the band was signed by UK label Spearhavoc Records in March 2011, and promptly whisked away from Brooklyn to record in Wales with Grammy award winning producer Ken Nelson (Coldplay, Badly Drawn Boy). The album, titled "THE ANGEL'S SHARE", was mixed by another Grammy award winner, Adrian Bushby (Muse, Foo Fighters), and is due out in ea