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Su primera actuación se remonta a enero de 1980, con lo que este 2025 Tennessee cumplen 45 años sobre los escenarios. Para celebrarlo han comenzado una gira aniversario que les llevará por más de 50 ciudades, van a publicar un disco de sus grandes éxitos interpretados por ellos mismos y por algunos de sus amigos de profesión. Entre ellos, Javier Ojeda (Danza invisible) canta en Te vi Correr, Jose Manuel Casañ (Seguridad Social) les acompaña en “Ramalama Ding Dong” , El Sevilla (Mojinos Escocios) nos sorprende en “Tu imagen de Rocker “. Y la última publicada “Un poco de tu amor” es un regalo en la voz de Carlos Goñi . Así Isi , Roberto y Amancio nos irán sorprendiendo cada mes con nuevas colaboraciones . Hay mucho donde elegir ya que Isi , Amancio y Roberto, han publicado 33 discos de los que han vendido más de 2 millones de copias y más de un millar de conciertos. Toda una hazaña que merece ser recordada en el perfil sonoro de Emiliano Rocky Monroe y por fans como Nacho García Vega que también se suma a este homenaje.Escuchar audio
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Doc, Carlos and Pete review IMDB's top rated movie of all time, Frank Darabont's 1994 feature-film directorial debut The Shawshank Redemption Follow us on IG! Doc Willis: https://www.instagram.com/docwilliscomedy Carlos Herrera: https://www.instagram.com/herreracarlos Produced by Pete Forthun: https://www.instagram.com/good4youpete More 7EQUIS Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/7equis TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@7equis Discord: https://discord.gg/954zkYtPv8 0:00 The Sisters, Morgan Freeman, Shawshank Prison Culture 7:12 Andy Dufresne, Captain Hadley, Fresh Fish 13:19 Maggots, Crawling Through Feces, Red's Role in Shawshank 18:38 Frank Darabont, Andy Dufresne's Persistence, Zihuatanejo 25:01 Shawshank Redemption Flopped in the Box Office 27:13 Boggs, Surviving Jail, Andy Dufresne's Value in Shawshank 37:31 Yeezys and Kanye 41:12 Katt Williams Helped Doc Early in His Career 48:40 Andy Dufresne's Crime, Brooks' Eyebrows 52:27 Shawshank Redemption Still Holds Up SOS VHS iTunes Audio Feed: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/sos-vhs/id1687694894 SOS VHS Spotify Audio Feed: https://open.spotify.com/show/3DXX0sBXwUZdUgo6lBciGS Created by Andres Rosende: https://www.instagram.com/fancyb.1 Created by George Kimmel: https://www.instagram.com/george_kimmel Catch Andres & Carlos every week on Bad Friends: https://www.youtube.com/@BadFriends Send us your 7EQUIS fan mail! c/o 7EQUIS LLC P.O. Box 5154 Glendale, CA 91221 BUY THE EQUIPMENT WE USE! MICROPHONE: https://amzn.to/3WcEZnA CAMERA: https://amzn.to/3ohqT7W HEADPHONES: https://amzn.to/3IqGY1P TRIPODS: https://amzn.to/3ohIigw SWITCHER: https://amzn.to/42eSyEs This is a 7EQUIS PRODUCTION https://www.7equis.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Las maravillas del mundo moderno con Isabel SanJuan, Notre Dame de París en el CentroCentro, Mitoterapia con Carlos Goñi y el proyecto Pallium.
Esa voz, esa bendita voz. Carlos Goñi ha acompañado con su música a más de una generación y sigue haciéndola de la misma manera que años atrás. ¿Qué mejor actividad para ofrecer que comer patatas picantes y acabar con su carrera? Un momento, que resulta que es un aficionado al picante. Esto va a ser divertido.
Esa voz, esa bendita voz. Carlos Goñi ha acompañado con su música a más de una generación y sigue haciéndola de la misma manera que años atrás. ¿Qué mejor actividad para ofrecer que comer patatas picantes y acabar con su carrera? Un momento, que resulta que es un aficionado al picante. Esto va a ser divertido.
Revolver nº1 Estación GNG con su versión de "La Vereda de la puerta de atrás". La plata para Lola Indigo y Omar Montes ... Que pasada de canción ya en manos de Extremoduro, pero esque Revolver opinamos viene a destrozar el mito de que los que versionan canciones vienen a destrozarlas literalmente, pues nooooooo.... En ésta ocasión Carlos Goñi viene a demostrar que puede hacer suya una canción y embeberla de un modo tan profundo que de la sensación que es el mismísimo padre de la misma. Sin más, nos encantaría romper una lanza en favor de los grandes canta autores que tenemos en nuestro país como Carlos Goñi con una banda que será eterna en el pop de nuestro país. Eternos Revolver ! LISTA MUSICAL GNG - Martes 4 Junio 2024: 1 REVOLVER LA VEREDA DE LA PUERTA DE ATRÁS 2 OMAR MONTES, LOLA INDIGO, LAS CHUCHES EL PANTALON 3 ANOTR, ERIK BANDT, LEVEN KALI HOW YOU FEEL 4 BIZARRAP, LISMAR SESSIONS VOL 60 5 HIGHT AND LOW HITS, DANNY OCEAN SI NO NO 6 RVFV , DAVID BISBAL RUEDA 7 CUE, JUAN MAGAN, TOÑO ROSARIO, JAVISH PRUEBA DE AMOR 8 FERNANDO MORENO, ISABEL AAIUN POTRA SALVAJE 9 NELLY FURTADO, TOVE LO, SG LEWIS LOVE BITES 10 BOMBAI, MIGUEL CAMPELLO REGALAME OTRO BESO 11 LOLA INDIGO, MANUEL TURIZO 1000COSAS 12 MARIA PELAE MI MUJER 13 VETUSTA MORLA AY MADRID ! 14 JOANA SANTOS, RASEL, SERGIO CONTRERAS, SARA LAS CHUCHES RONEA 15 POST MALONE, MORGAN WALLEN I HAD SOME HELP 16 MYKE TOWERS LA FALDA 17 MUPPET DJ, TOMY DJ LOQUITA COMO CANDY 18 INDARA LAS APARIENCIAS 19 KIKE VARELA MUÑEIRA DE CHANTADA 20 EL JHOTA VOLANDO BAJITO 21 GALVAN REAL MI CUADERNO 22 DARIO NUÑEZ, JAVI PALMERO THAT´S IT 23 EL BOMBO PARANOIA 24 RVFV, MAKA LUNA 25 LUIS CORTES AL ALBA 26 HOMBRES G, WALLS, FUNZO & BABY LOUD DEVUELVEME A MI CHICA 27 ROZALEN LLEVAME 28 JAXOMY, AGATINO ROMERO & RAFFAELA CARRA PEDRO 29 SEN SENRA, AITANA HERMOSA CASUALIDAD 30 MARINA GALAN TAN SALVAJE
Canciones de Pereza, La Quinta Estación, Amaral, Extremoduro , Elefantes, La Habitación Roja, Jaime Urrutia o Los Piratas, han pasado por el filtro de Carlos Goñi y, curiosamente, suenan más Revolver que nunca. Con 'Playlist' ha querido rendir homenaje a esas canciones que le inspiran y que le hubiera encantado escribir como 'La vereda de la puerta de Atrás', 'Mesa para dos' o 'Indestructibles' que interpreta a voz y guitarra acústica en nuestro escenario. Sin embargo, es un disco muy eléctrico y las guitarras "útiles", como las que le ha fabricado su luthier Toni Fayos, cobran protagonismo. Como protagonistas son, en todos sus conciertos, los fans como Rocío Gonlo, quien tras revolver entre sus recuerdos nos muestra su playlist particular sobre Goñi. De las once canciones que Carlos ha llevado a su terreno suenan, entre otras, 'Lady Madrid', 'Azul', 'El equilibrio es imposible' cuya versión ha encantado a su amigo Iván Ferreiro y Viento de Cara que lleva aparejado un emotivo mensaje de Juanca de Supersubmarina.Escuchar audio
Un día antes de su visita, conversamos con Carlos Goñi de Revolver sobre su último trabajo, “Playlist”, repleto de versiones de sus canciones favoritas. Arrancamos el programa con Bunbury (Una Décima De Segundo) para recordar su entrevista en Aragón TV. También suenan El Momo (De Barrio FEAT Estopa), Mario Funes (Desaparecer), Señoras y Bedeles (Crisis), Break The Senses (IJWL), Jorge Senar (Alondrica DIRECTO RADIO) y Gabriel Sopeña (Coartadas).
El grupo Revolver vuelve a Zaragoza con su nuevo disco, 'Playlist', un disco de versiones de los que hacen que siga mereciendo la pena dedicarse a la música como La Habitación Roja, La Quinta Estación o Extremoduro. De todo ello conversamos con su vocalista, Carlos Goñi.
Conversamos con Carlos Goñi, líder del grupo Revolver que recala en Zaragoza el próximo 24 de mayo. Conocemos la llegada al estrellato internacional de los Beatles a través de los ojos de Paul McCartney y, con Eloy Morera, recordamos un nuevo capítulo de la historia.
Revolver estrena "Playlist" un álbum de once canciones prestadas con las que pretende seguir disfrutando encima de un escenario
Magazine de Madrid, presentado por Pepa Gea en el que te contamos las noticias de la mañana con Oscar Plaza, la previsión del tiempo con Javier Hernández “El Borrascas” y la actualidad deportiva con Felix Jose Casillas. Viernes, donde hablaremos con Santiago Simón Vicente, secretario de la Asociacion nacional del taxi. Irene Calderón nos traerá un nuevo reportaje de actualidad. Comenzaremos el fin de semana disfrutando del paladar más fino de Madrid con Isabel Aires. Despediremos la semana con el nuevo disco de versiones de Carlos Goñi ( Revolver)
Carlos Goñi ha grabado un disco de homenaje a canciones de artistas y grupos españoles que le han llegado al alma. Canta a Extremoduro, Amaral, Supersubmarina, Lichis, Pereza, Elefantes, Piratas o La 5ª Estación. Y también queremos descubrir con nuestros oyentes el grupo Why Not! DISCO 1 SAM ROBERTS BAND bridge To Nowhere (2) DISCO 2 KEVIN MOTNGOMERY Another Long Story (TROUBADOURS - CD 1 - 8) + BRYAN ESTEPA Saved DISCO 3 REVÓLVER Cómo Hablar (8) DISCO 4 REVÓLVER Lady Madrid (1) DISCO 5 REVÓLVER La Vereda de la Puerta Atrás (4) DISCO 6 WHY NOT! Not My Day (4) DISCO 7 WHY NOT! Weirdo (2) DISCO 8 WHY NOT! Sky To The Moon (1)Escuchar audio
Carlos Goñi, líder de Revolver, visita 'El Programa de Ortega' para hablarnos de su nuevo álbum 'Playlist'.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Revolver presenta su último trabajo discográfico, titulado Playlist, un disco de versiones de artistas que actualmente inspiran a Carlos Goñi y que ha querido llevar a su terreno musical. Goñi, que arranca una gira que le traerá a Madrid, a La Riviera el 22 de junio, ha visitado Madrid Directo de Onda Madrid con Nieves Herrero. El cantante, que ha dicho que “se siguen escribiendo canciones maravillosas en estos tiempos”, ha destacado que “cuando quería hacerme cantante mis padres me dijeron que me cortase el pelo y me fuese a estudiar, y que “creo que he conseguido que estas versiones de canciones no suenen raro”.
Carlos Goñi, nos presenta “Playlist”, su nuevo disco compuesto por canciones que le inspiran y forman parte de la banda sonora de su vida. Paco Nadal nos lleva de viaje a Maldivas. Terminamos con "Dos en la cartelera" con músicos que han dado el salto a la gran pantalla.
¡Hablamos con Carlos Goñi sobre el nuevo trabajo de 'Revólver' y recordamos los éxitos del grupo y del cantante! ¡No te lo pierdas!
¿Por qué tan solo un 42% de las personas que deja su trabajo salta a uno nuevo pronto? Lo analizamos con Trías de Bes. Los hispanos destacaron dentro del Imperio Romano.¡Gente, Gente! Vamos con la segunda hora de 'La Tarde de COPE'... Tenemos muchos contenidos que seguro te van a gustar.Economía de Bolsillo, con Fernando Trías de Bes. De la gente que ha dejado su empleo solo un 42% salta a un nuevo trabajo pronto. A estas cifras se suma que el 36% acaba con un sueldo peor. ¿A qué se debe esto? Lo analizamos.¿Quiénes fueron los hispanos? ¿Qué supuso Hispania para Roma? ¿Por qué tantos hispanos desempeñaron un papel importante en el imperio? Respondemos a todas estas preguntas con Carlos Goñi y su último libro "Hispanos: Viriato, Trajano, Séneca, Quintiliano, Marcial, Juvenco... La vida de los hispanos más influyentes de la hisotria de Roma".Investigadores gallegos averiguan dónde cayó el bólido que cruzó el sur de Galicia. Hablaremos con Manuel Andrade, profesor e investigador del área de astronomía y astrofísica del campus de Lugo de la Universidad de Santiago de Compostela.Escucha ahora 'La Tarde', de 17 a 18 horas. 'La Tarde' es un programa presentado por Pilar Cisneros y Fernando de Haro que se emite en COPE, de lunes a viernes, de 16 a 19 horas, con 498.000 oyentes diarios, según el último EGM. A lo largo de sus tres...
Entrevista a Carlos Goñi, de Revolver en Hoy por Hoy Alicante.
Sacamos el Revólver más pacífico, la guitarra de Carlos Goñi. Ángel García Muñoz nos cuenta sus modos favoritos de encender un habano. Visitamos Valverde del Fresno, en Cáceres, para descubrir el remanso de paz Habitat Cigüeña Negra, donde sería un placer fumar un Bolívar Belicosos Finos, explicado por José Andrés Colmena. En los Planes nos dejamos seducir por el Festival de Jazz de San Sebastián y ponemos el broche final con la artista alemana Lotte.
En la música nos visita Carlos Goñi, Revólver, con su disco "Adictos a la euforia", un homenaje a la música de los 70 con la que creció. Paco Nadal nos lleva por el mundo en bicicleta. Pepe Blanes y Jose Romero nos llevan por las películas viajeras.
Aprovechando que anda de gira, Carlos Goñi, líder de Revólver, acude a la cita de LREM con Rubén Martínez. Miércoles en el que, por no perder las buenas costumbres, nos damos unos cuantos paseos: por la caleya informativa con Aitana Castaño, por la toponimia con Xulio Concepción, por la Asturias de los años 20 con Jorge Alonso y por la música, con el conciertazo protagonizado por la violinista Anne Sophie Mutter al que nos invita Marta Teijido. Nuevo libro recomendado por Javier García Rodríguez, un vistazo al trabajo que realiza desde Gijón la Fundación Eduardo Kocina y, con los oyentes, un repaso al teletexto y otras cosas pasadas de moda: ¿cuáles son tus hábitos viejunos favoritos? ¿Escuchar casetes, actualizar la cartilla del banco, llevar una agenda de papel...?
Aprovechando que anda de gira, Carlos Goñi, líder de Revólver, acude a la cita de LREM con Rubén Martínez. Miércoles en el que, por no perder las buenas costumbres, nos damos unos cuantos paseos: por la caleya informativa con Aitana Castaño, por la toponimia con Xulio Concepción, por la Asturias de los años 20 con Jorge Alonso y por la música, con el conciertazo protagonizado por la violinista Anne Sophie Mutter al que nos invita Marta Teijido. Nuevo libro recomendado por Javier García Rodríguez, un vistazo al trabajo que realiza desde Gijón la Fundación Eduardo Kocina y, con los oyentes, un repaso al teletexto y otras cosas pasadas de moda: ¿cuáles son tus hábitos viejunos favoritos? ¿Escuchar casetes, actualizar la cartilla del banco, llevar una agenda de papel...?
Aprovechando que anda de gira, Carlos Goñi, líder de Revólver, acude a la cita de LREM con Rubén Martínez. Miércoles en el que, por no perder las buenas costumbres, nos damos unos cuantos paseos: por la caleya informativa con Aitana Castaño, por la toponimia con Xulio Concepción, por la Asturias de los años 20 con Jorge Alonso y por la música, con el conciertazo protagonizado por la violinista Anne Sophie Mutter al que nos invita Marta Teijido. Nuevo libro recomendado por Javier García Rodríguez, un vistazo al trabajo que realiza desde Gijón la Fundación Eduardo Kocina y, con los oyentes, un repaso al teletexto y otras cosas pasadas de moda: ¿cuáles son tus hábitos viejunos favoritos? ¿Escuchar casetes, actualizar la cartilla del banco, llevar una agenda de papel...?
Hoy Pilar López charlaba con Carlos Goñi, que es lo mismo que decir ‘Revólver'. Estará presentando su nuevo disco Adictos a la Euforia el próximo sábado en Fuerteventura, dentro del festival Acontra Cultura que se celebra en la Plaza de la Paz de Puerto del Rosario. La entrada Entrevista en el programa ‘Suena Bien' a Carlos Goñi de ‘Revólver' se publicó primero en Radio Insular.
Llapis de memòria
Nuevo programa de Comunidad UFV que une a profesores y alumnos presentado por Alfredo Arense. El programa ha tenido de todo y ha contado con colaboradores como Javier Limeres, Jorge Pérez o Sandra Arnáiz que se han pasado por el estudio acristalado de Onda Universitaria para hablar de cine, viajes o incluso música, ya que el artista de la banda Revolver, Carlos Goñi atendió al programa para presentar su nuevo trabajo 'Adictos a la Euforia'.
Carlos Goñi es un músico y cantautor español. Pasó por grupos como Garage y Comité Cisne en la década de 1980. En 1988 formó el grupo Revólver, su actual banda. Empezó a ser más concido tras la publicación de “Básico”, el primer concierto acústico grabado por 40 Principales. Desde entonces no ha parado de dar conciertos y de sacar música. Su último disco de estudio fue "Capitol" aunque en 2019, presentó "Básico IV", grabado en directo en el Teatro Circo Price de Madrid. El 11 de noviembre de 2022 salió a la luz el primer single de su nuevo albúm: Adictos a la euforia que da nombre al disco y a la gira del mismo. Tras al infierno sin papeles y calor y tiempo, segundo y tercer singles del disco, el pasado 10 de febrero se lanzó al mercado el disco completo. Este consta de 9 canciones y con casi 275mil reproducciones en Spotify entre todas sus canciones.
Carlos Goñi nos regala en su 'Adictos a la euforia' todo el talento que viene derrochando después de llevar más de 3 décadas dedicándose a lo que más le gusta, la música.
Carlos Goñi nos regala en su 'Adictos a la euforia' todo el talento que viene derrochando después de llevar más de 3 décadas dedicándose a lo que más le gusta, la música.
Carlos Goñi con su libro Hispanos, Ice Festival en Madrid, ¿Quién es la Bicha de Balazote? con Pedro Pérez y el reportaje folclórico de Alicia Parente
Este domingo hacemos hincapié en la importancia que la música tiene para la salud. Esto es algo que sabemos desde hace tiempo, pero gracias “Electrocanciograma” tenemos la posibilidad de medir la actividad emocional de quien escucha este disco bajo la prescripción de Fran Fernández. El cantautor regresa a “Abierto hasta las 2” e interpreta en acústico “Vuelvo”, Recomendaciones para un mundo hostil y “Siempre quiero verte”. En total, 10 canciones nuevas en 4 estudios de grabación diferentes bajo la supervisión Oscar Herrador, productor que ha estado con él desde el principio y que aprovecha su intervención en el programa para preguntarle con quién le gustaría colaborar. El granadino residente en Madrid, suma ya 23 años de carrera en los que ha girado por España, Colombia, Argentina, Chile, Perú y México y colaboraciones con Ismael Serrano, Carlos Goñi o Marwan. Precisamente con Víctor Alfaro- locutor de Sol Radio Madrid y autor de la biografía de Marwan (“El hijo del refugiado”) - realizamos un viaje cronológico por la vida musical de Fran. Se suman a las sorpresas el grupo cubano Buena FE y dan testimonio de la buena conexión del cantautor con Latinoamérica. Y si en “Buen camino” hace una recreación íntima del paisaje interno del oficio del cantautor, éste es compartido por amigos como Diego Cantero, Funambulista, que muestra toda su admiración a la perseverancia del músico y poeta. “Cuando alguien se pregunte el porqué quiere ser músico, debería aparecer tu imagen”… Escuchar audio
Carlos Goñi, escritor y filósofo que acaba de publicar 'Hispanos', hablamos del concepto de lo hispano y su desarrollo en la Antigüedad
Junto con Freud, Jung es el padre de la psicología del siglo XX. Sin embargo, pocos conocen su lado más humano, inclinado a conocer desde un punto de vista quizá más antropológico que psicológico, la realidad de pueblos y culturas del mundo. A él le dedicamos el cronovisor junto a Jesús Callejo. Luego nos visita Javier Palomo del Rey, director de Guarrazar La película, para hablarnos de este fantástico proyecto en el que se pone en valor le descubrimiento arqueológico del tesoro visigodo de Guarrazar. Seguimos con José Francisco Sanz Requena, profesor de la Universidad de Valladolid en el departamento de Física Aplicada. En su sección el Blues de la ciencia iremos a la época del romanticismo y la figura de Faraday. Acabamos con Carlos Goñi, escritor y filósofo que acaba de publicar Hispanos (Arpa Editores 2022). Con él hablamos del concepto de lo hispano y su desarrollo en la Antigüedad
Historia con Rubén García, el teatro de A Vueltas con Lorca con Carmelo Gómez, Hispanos de Carlos Goñi y el cáncer de pulmón.
El filósofo Carlos Goñi presenta su último libro 'Hispanos'.
Muertes Regias con Manuel García Parody, conocemos al Mamut en Zaragoza y Virtudes mínimas para alcanzar la felicidad con su autor Carlos Goñi.
Carlos F. Gaitan Ospina is the Founder and CEO of Benchmark Labs, which provides IoT-based weather forecasting solutions for the agriculture, energy, and insurance sectors worldwide using proprietary machine-learning software. Chad talks with Carlos about creating the company, the hardware they're producing and what it is doing, and where the machine learning comes into play. Benchmark Labs (https://www.benchmarklabs.com/) Follow Benchmark Labs on Twitter (https://twitter.com/labsbenchmark), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/benchmarklabs/), or LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/benchmark-labs-inc/). Follow Carlos on Twitter (https://twitter.com/cfgaitan) or LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/carlos-felipe-gaitan-ospina-3765808/). Follow thoughtbot on Twitter (https://twitter.com/thoughtbot) or LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/150727/). Become a Sponsor (https://thoughtbot.com/sponsorship) of Giant Robots! Transcript: CHAD: This is the Giant Robots Smashing Into Other Giant Robots Podcast, where we explore the design, development, and business of great products. I'm your host, Chad Pytel. And with me today is Carlos Gaitan, the Founder and CEO of Benchmark Labs, which provides IoT-based weather forecasting solutions for the agriculture, energy, and insurance sectors worldwide using proprietary machine-learning software. Carlos, thank you very much for joining me. CARLOS: Thank you for the invitation, Chad. It's a pleasure to join you here. CHAD: You work in a variety of different industries with weather forecasting solutions using machine learning. I'm really curious, at a high level, how did you get to where you created Benchmark Labs today? CARLOS: Oh, thank you, Chad. That's a great question. I think that in many ways, it's a combination of life experiences and lots of user feedback. As a background, my mum worked for 28 years in the National Federation of Coffee Growers in my native Columbia. And we experience basically the effects of weather, La Niña, El Niño, local conditions, pests on the coffee growers. I remember growing up looking at the price in The New York Stock Exchange if the pound of coffee was going to be more than $1 or not [laughs] and so on. So, you know, we had a very severe drought in Colombia, and Colombia was heavily dependent in hydropower at that time. And I remember that we even had to study with candlelight and move to a spring savings time for the first time in the country. The country is in the equator, so you can imagine moving the clock was unheard of. So since then, I was always passionate about hydrology, the water cycle, why this happened, how weather can affect the economy at that level that people have to change their working habits. I did civil engineering hydrology, then studied these new applications of machine learning technologies, hydroinformatics, did my studies there in Columbia, my bachelor's, my master's. Then I was fortunate to go to The University of British Columbia to study my Ph.D. in Atmospheric Sciences. And then, after I finished, I moved to The United States to work at the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory in Princeton with close collaboration with the NOAA, the USGS. And that gave that perspective also of understanding how weather climate models were done at the Department of Commerce level but also to understand the users on how they interact with weather data or climate data and what were the needs that they were expecting from the National Weather Service and the Department of Commerce and NOAA that not necessarily were fulfilled with the current information. So then I moved to the private sector, joined a hardware company, and met my co-founder of Benchmark Labs there then moved to California to work on consultancy of climate change assessments. But since the time at the Department of Commerce, it became very clear that what farmers and what users wanted was weather information that was more actionable, that was tailored to their specific location, especially for specialty crops. Think about wineries, or coffee growers, orchids, stone fruits; they depend heavily on weather, and the information from the National Weather Services was just too coarse for them. And sometimes, there are huge errors in terms of temperatures that were recorded from their farm versus what the National Weather Service was doing. And that's why we decided to create Benchmark Labs to basically solve that problem, correct those errors, and give the information that the users needed when they needed it. CHAD: Did you ever just consider becoming a TV weather person? CARLOS: [laughs] CHAD: It seems it may be easier. CARLOS: [laughs] Nah. That's a very good point. CHAD: [laughs] CARLOS: And I have great respect with my colleagues that went into forecast meteorology and TV persons. I remember some of my lab mates practicing in front of a green screen when we were doing the Ph.D. CHAD: [laughs] CARLOS: That was an interesting scenario. [laughs] However, growing up in Colombia, the weather forecasts were not very, let's say, accurate to a certain extent, and we did the opposite than the weatherman suggested. CHAD: [laughs] CARLOS: So I guess that steered me towards following that path. [laughs] CHAD: So it totally resonates with me this idea that, you know, especially for...I've been on the West Coast before where you go over a hill and the weather it's like 20 degrees hotter and sunny and on one side of the hill, it was cold and foggy. We went on a great company trip many years ago to visit some Napa vineyards, and I was surprised by that. So I can imagine how that local information just doesn't match the global information that farmers might be getting. So what is the hardware that you're actually producing, and what is it doing? What does it look like? CARLOS: [laughs] Great question. So I will go back to your story about Napa and Sonoma, and the reality is that's exactly a problem that growers face; national weather agencies give averages over a big region. They divide the world in boxes, and everybody inside of a box receives exactly the same forecast. And if you are especially in the coast or you're in specialty agriculture, you understand that weather changes with elevation. Depending on which side of the mountain you are, you could receive all the rain or no rain at all. If you are near the shores, you could also get more wind, different types of clouds, all of those situations affect the conditions at the farm. And going back to the situation of Napa and Sonoma, Burgundy or the Mediterranean Basin, they all believe in the value of what they call the terroir, that is what makes also unique their products. They're indigenous, and they understand at a very fundamental point how the local conditions from the soil, from the vegetation, makes their farm unique. So what we do is we use IoT sensors, basically hardware sensors that monitor environmental variables. We refer to them in the atmospheric science world as weather stations. I had a talk with some users when I said the term weather station. They imagined a big construction or a building with a TV station on a radar or something. But in this case, there are IoT devices that are totally portable, the size of a Wi-Fi modem in some cases. And we use those sensors as ground truth that will basically tell us the local conditions. We use the information from the National Weather Services and the information from those IoT sensors and correct the forecast as they come. CHAD: And is that where the machine learning comes in because it's actually correcting the forecast being received? CARLOS: Exactly, our machine learning aspect of it is fully operational, non-linear correction of weather data as it comes in from the National Weather Services to correct it to the conditions that are experienced at the farm level, at the sensor level. And a farm could be also an agricultural farm, or it could be a solar farm, a wind farm. Or, as we talk with some users in ski resorts that actually they consider as snow farmers, it's also affected by microclimates. So at the end, it is about providing value to all these areas affected by microclimates that are not being resolved correctly by the current generation of forecast from the National Weather Services. CHAD: Are most customers able to get the coverage that they need with one weather station, or are they deploying multiple ones? CARLOS: So that's a great question, and the answer probably is it depends. Our customers, original customers, have thousands of stations over multiple fields under management. For specialty crops, it's common to have multiple IoT sensors in one acre. For other scenarios, they might have only one station or one sensor every 10 acres or so on, so it depends on the condition. It depends on how technologically inclined are the users if they already invested in these IoT sensors or if they are looking into buying IoT sensors and then scaling up the number of sensors in their farms. CHAD: How do all the sensors report their data back? CARLOS: That is a very interesting question because they are, let's say, tens of hardware manufacturers globally. We also created kind of a Rosetta Stone that puts all the sensors to communicate to our back-end systems. We integrate different languages of each hardware manufacturer. It has its own ways of naming the variables. So we do the translation in our end. We receive the data via an API. These IoT devices are Internet of Things in many ways because they transmit data via Wi-Fi, satellite internet, you know, cellular. CHAD: Cell, yeah. So different manufacturers might have different ways of actual communication, not just the protocol, but one box might be using Wi-Fi, and another one might be using a satellite. CARLOS: Exactly. And sometimes, many manufacturers give you the options of connecting even using Wi-Fi or Bluetooth for IoT sensors that are near, let's say, a farm that has internet connectivity. If they are on the field farther away, they might need to get access to a data plan from a cellular carrier, 3G usually or 5G. In some areas, there is limited coverage so far. And if it's a very remote area, there are options to get satellite coverage. CHAD: Now, I'm asking somewhat naive questions based on my understanding. And so if I start butting up against proprietary information, just tell me, "No." That's totally fine. CARLOS: [laughs] CHAD: So when we're thinking about the amount of data coming in from all of these different weather stations that your customers have, is it a lot of data? Is it a lot of data points? CARLOS: [laughs] It's a great question. So in many ways, yeah, each weather station communicates at different frequency. Sometimes what we are offering now is hourly transmission rates, but we also have access to government stations that sometimes only refresh once per day. So yes, it's a lot of data coming in, most of the data from the weather stations. Fortunately, it can be transmitted as a txt file, or it's only for one location. So the files are not big, but they are many per day. And so, we have probably done millions of operations already to assimilate data and provide the forecast. While on the other hand, The National Weather Service provides one forecast for the globe, let's say every...some models are every hour, other models are every six hours, and so on. So that is more, let's say, a bigger data set because it's a global data set that then you have to query to extract the information locally that is relevant for your servers, for your users. CHAD: Yeah. And I think it's neat how this is all happening centrally from all the data coming in, right? CARLOS: Yeah, exactly. We get data coming in for each specific location. We do the corrections, and we provide the forecasts. So there are lots of operations involved in the data handling activities, pre-processing, post-processing, but it's very rewarding at the end to provide the forecasts that are tailored to specific locations. And we had seen users that they basically told us, "Okay, we are using provider B or C; can you beat them? Show us that you can beat them, and the contract will be yours." So we showed them, and then they are like, "Yeah, that's fantastic. This is exactly what we have been looking for, information that is more accurate for our farms," so yeah. CHAD: Now, does your system correct itself based on what actually happened in an area after the modified forecast goes out? CARLOS: That's not a very relevant question because some of the models are static. I used my experience when I did an internship in Environment Canada, and I found that they were adjusting their models, let's say four times per, at least the operational models they had, four times per year. They kind of tweaked them to the local, let's say, spring, summer, fall, winter conditions. In our case, we make our models to correct themselves as more data comes in so they can adjust to weather events and have short-term memory, let's say, of what they will wait heavily on and forget the distant past. CHAD: I mean, it seems obvious, not necessarily easy but obvious, that you've made a prediction about what the weather is going to be, and you have all the data coming in from the stations to confirm whether your prediction was correct or not. So I'm sure it's not easy to adjust the model based on that. CARLOS: [laughs] CHAD: That seems obvious to me. CARLOS: Yeah, it's just a different approach in many ways. As you said, it's obvious because the users usually care about a specific location, at least our users. We understand that for national security or aviation, they require a model that provides coverage over a wider area, like sometimes continents. But for agricultural users, they care about their farms, and the farms will not move in space. So -- CHAD: Well, technically, they are moving in space; it's just the weather goes along with it. CARLOS: [laughs] So yeah, I guess that it's just a different way of tackling the problem. We focus on doing these forecasts to each specific location instead of having a forecast done for the whole globe that could be used in many different locations or for many different industries, but it's not necessarily tailored to any industry-specific or location-specific. CHAD: Yeah, that's great. Mid-Roll Ad I wanted to tell you all about something I've been working on quietly for the past year or so, and that's AgencyU. AgencyU is a membership-based program where I work one-on-one with a small group of agency founders and leaders toward their business goals. We do one-on-one coaching sessions and also monthly group meetings. We start with goal setting, advice, and problem-solving based on my experiences over the last 18 years of running thoughtbot. As we progress as a group, we all get to know each other more. And many of the AgencyU members are now working on client projects together and even referring work to each other. Whether you're struggling to grow an agency, taking it to the next level and having growing pains, or a solo founder who just needs someone to talk to, in my 18 years of leading and growing thoughtbot, I've seen and learned from a lot of different situations, and I'd be happy to work with you. Learn more and sign up today at thoughtbot.com/agencyu. That's A-G-E-N-C-Y, the letter U. CHAD: So have you managed to bring it full circle now, and are there coffee growers in Colombia that are using your solution? CARLOS: [laughs] I hope so. We have talked with coffee growers for sure. They care about temperature gradients. And I really think that going to Colombia as we scale will make the whole platform easier to use. I think that we can go full circle soon, sooner rather than later, into Colombia. We got support from the World Trade Center here in San Diego to do commercialization assistance to translate our solution from English to other languages. So we will be tackling Spanish, French, Italian in the very near future because it's important to offer the forecast also in a way that they could interact natively without having to have the limitation of using an English language platform into their day-to-day life. But yeah, full circle probably we'll be going full circle soon. CHAD: So language is one barrier to scaling and to adoption. Are there other ones that are typical barriers of adoption for your customers? CARLOS: We are very competitive here in the North American market, the European markets. Our prices are in dollars. But that by itself is a problem for emerging economies; for example, you know, $100 here is not the same thing as $100 in other countries. We have to take into consideration exchange rates or the amount of disposable income that they will have for their operations. CHAD: And I'm not super educated about it, but I know that there are certain industries in agriculture where the growers are particularly pressed for margins, and coffee is one of them, right? CARLOS: Exactly. So, fortunately, in many ways, for the bigger crops, specialty crops they are traded, and the prices are linked to U.S. dollars so that can be translated, our services can be absorbed, let's say. For the smaller crops that are not traded or that just stay locally, the price is not linked to the U.S. exchange; then it's definitely a bigger barrier for them. But hopefully, we will get to a point if we have a sufficiently large adoption in North America and the developed world; these technologies could be subsidized or made more accessible in other economies. CHAD: What are some of the concerns that growers have? Take the specialty crops, for example, is it a matter of are they doing this because they want to make the best product possible, or is it because they want to prevent crop loss? CARLOS: It is both, actually. The uses of weather information in agriculture varies, as you said. There are many different applications; one is to get more actionable alerts. For example, we saw what happened in Burgundy last year where a substantial part of their region lost their crops, close to 80% maybe. I don't remember the number, but it was definitely substantial. And so, having more accurate forecasts and alerts gives them an opportunity to adapt better, to get cover, protect their fields to a certain extent. Weather information affects also pests and disease models, so application of fertilizer with spraying is also affected by local conditions. In many ways, for the operations that are very, let's say, sophisticated, some of them even link the sugar content on the fruit to weather conditions. And understanding how these weather conditions affect sugars could tell them when is the optimal time for them to, let's say, harvest? And the difference in the sugar content might determine the difference between higher margins or so-so margins [laughs] for their yield. So yeah, it's a combination of quality of the product. It's a combination of preventing loss of the product. And it's also labor scheduling and activities, for example, that are regulated by OSHA that prevent farm operations to maybe don't, let's say if they are like temperatures above 95 Fahrenheit or 100 Fahrenheit. So having that extra information in alerts will also help them with farm management operations. CHAD: So can you give me a sense of the stage you're at or the scale you're at now with the business and where you see your next stages of growth being? CARLOS: Thank you. Yeah, great. So we are fortunate to have scaled this solution beyond California. We are now a global platform. We are providing forecast to Spain. Recently, we got contacted by some growers in South America, so we are testing for avocado growers in Brazil and Colombia, for example. So I'm not serving yet coffee growers in Colombia, but the avocado growers in Colombia, it seems that they got a hold on what we do, [laughs] so it is getting there. And now we have the resources, the ability to go global and offer this anywhere in the world that is connected with an IoT device. So it's fully operational. And we are now in the midst of fundraising to scale the team, provide the customer success operations, and to support growers in different geographies, to support growers of different crops. And I think that if we are going to be successful globally, it starts with customer support, customer success, and understanding your users' needs, so they don't feel that, again, they will receive a one size fits all vanilla-like solution and that we really care about why specialty crops are special. CHAD: So when you were just starting out, who was the first team member that you added to the team? CARLOS: Oh, it was great. So in many ways, I thank the Economic Development Council of San Diego for funding a set of interns in data science, weather analytics, and business development. So our first hires, in many ways, were supported thanks to the Economic Development Council. We were the two founders, and then we got support in business development to understand which, for example, specialty crops really care about weather. Then some data science interns, data scientists that helped us with grants that we did for the National Science Foundation, and NASA that we got...we supported one of the grants. During COVID times, we participated in a very interesting opportunity to know the effect of COVID on forest fires, for example, and that was in collaboration with NASA. So first hires were interns, entry-level positions in data science, in back-end engineering, and then front-end business development. Now we are very excited to be expanding the team. We recently hired a Chief Product Officer with ten years of experience in Bloomberg, experience with visualizations, and talking to customers and users. So I think that for us, it's very important to, again, I reiterate, to have the ability to provide a great user experience, to provide meaningful information for specialty crops so they feel that they are special. CHAD: You mentioned that you got some business development help using those grants. But right now, is the actual sales work being done by the founding team? CARLOS: Yeah, at the beginning, as a founding team in a small startup, you have to wear multiple hats. So yeah, it's very common, and in many ways, I appreciate that we didn't rush to hire in terms of sales too early because it's important that the founding team understands the user perspectives, their needs, what they call the pain points to understand how to steer product into that direction. And then sales will follow once you have a solution that is highly needed, that users really like and that it can be shown that it can be scaled globally. So we are working on scaling, on accuracy of the forecasts. And yeah, next hires will be to get somebody that will help us in sales and can bring us to the next level. CHAD: What does the sales cycle look like for the kinds of customers you have now? Do they tend to be smaller, or do they tend to be larger enterprise customers? CARLOS: So, in the beginning, we worked with smaller enterprises to understand how to use the data, for example, connect the data from one or five sensors transmitted online. So dealing with smaller enterprises, farmers was optimal at that point as a company. And now, we are focusing more on businesses, farm managers, or management companies that have hundreds, sometimes thousands of sensors on their management. So we deal with more like business to business instead of going direct to grower at this stage because, as we were mentioning earlier, we're a small company, and going direct to grower requires lots of support and dedication in terms of dedicated agents and sales teams. CHAD: Do those companies tend to have long sales cycles? CARLOS: The bigger ones, yes. If you are talking about publicly traded companies, they will want to start with pilots then validate them. And you can move at different timescales with them that are not necessarily aligned with the startups at this stage. But there are some farm managers that have a way higher frequency of decision making. So their sale cycle could be one month, two months instead of having to build a relationship for years. CHAD: You mentioned the pilots, and you mentioned earlier telling the story about a customer that said, you know, "If you can provide us with better data," but I think companies as they scale or as they talk to potential customers, you also don't want to take on too much work that you should be charging for to be able to do that pilot. How do you strike that balance? CARLOS: It's a fascinating question. And I think that from a founding member perspective, let's say, it goes as a function of the stage of the company and what other, not necessarily monetary, benefits you can get from these pilots. We have been even recommended to not have unpaid pilots anymore, for example. I think that it's important at the beginning to get access to the information that you need to validate the technology with users that really care about what you're building. And sometimes, there are different ways that these pilots can be structured in a way that the final user might give you a reference or might spend time with you doing the quality control, quality check, saying what kind of features they like, so that's also very important as a young startup. As you grow, probably once you have that validation, there is no need necessarily to take into endeavors that will lead to unpaid pilots that you don't know if there's a clear end to that. And you can move to a more structured pilot program that has clear deliverables, and at the end of window, a decision will be made depending on the set of topics that were agreed between the companies. CHAD: You might even be able to get away without pilots if you can make a strong case by showing other case studies that are relevant to that potential customer or where you explain, oh, you know, these people had a similar situation to you and here's how it's solved, and here's the success that they had. CARLOS: Totally. You nailed it. It's in many ways to sometimes build credibility, find analogues in the sector, or a use case that can be comparable to the pain point that another user might have. And it could be, let's start with the avocado growers in Brazil, and they have probably the same pain points that they have with avocado growers in Colombia. Once we have that sorted out, then we probably can go and talk with avocado growers here in California or Mexico, Central America and tell them, "Hey, this is the value that we've unlocked in Brazil. Do you have a similar problem?" CHAD: What I have found is that this is one of the important reasons why you have to have a good product which is part of what you've been saying all along, you know, you really wanted to focus on making sure the product was working and that it was good. Because when you do, then you can also use referrals, you know, not referrals, but like, hey, you want to talk to this avocado grower, and they'll be happy to talk with another potential customer because they're excited about what you've done for them and been able to do with them. CARLOS: Totally, totally. And agriculture is always open to new technologies, but they are traditional in many ways. And it's a small circle, and I think that it is very important to build products right and really care about what you're doing and your end-users. Build together. Don't come necessarily with assumptions saying, "Hey, here agricultural grower A, I have a solution that will change your life," without knowing necessarily where are they coming from and their life experiences, and how they interact with products before. So yeah, I totally see the benefit of referrals. Word of mouth is very big, going to conferences with agricultural growers. There are big networking events that could help us more than just going and doing a Google ad campaign, for example, at this stage. CHAD: I think that's probably an important lesson that not only applies in agriculture but in a lot of industries. And I really appreciate you stopping by to share with us. And I really wish you the best of luck as you progress in your journey at Benchmark. CARLOS: Oh, thank you very much. I really appreciate it, and I hope that we can continue the conversation here. Just count with us anytime that you need to talk about weather, agriculture, IoT sensors. Happy to help the audience too, and always discuss what's out there to help the Giant Robots community. [laughs] CHAD: Carlos, if people want to get in touch with you or find out more about the company, where are the best places for them to do that? CARLOS: Go to benchmarklabs.com and then fill out a form there. And we will definitely be in touch with all of you. I will personally answer all the queries. I'm very, very happy to share our technology, share what we are building. And we are so excited because by having this technology, you can help save water, energy, and even pesticide use, and that's a huge contribution to the environment as we move forward. So yeah, thank you very much again for the invitation, and I'm here; count with me as a future resource. CHAD: Wonderful. And you can subscribe to the show and find notes and links along with an entire transcript for this episode at giantrobots.fm. If you have questions or comments, email us at hosts@giantrobots.fm. And you can find me on Twitter at @cpytel. This podcast is brought to you by thoughtbot and produced and edited by Mandy Moore. Thanks for listening, and see you next time. ANNOUNCER: This podcast was brought to you by thoughtbot. thoughtbot is your expert design and development partner. Let's make your product and team a success. Special Guest: Carlos F. Gaitan Ospina.
Aprendemos juntos - BBVA --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jesus-romero-l/message
En el programa de hoy recorremos la carrera musical de Carlos Goñi aqui en en ESCUCHAME5G
¿Quién fue Giovanni Pico della Mirandola y por qué se le conoce como ‘El Príncipe de la Concordia’? ¿En qué consistió ‘La Disputa’, su gran proyecto de vida? ¿Qué sentido e importancia le da Pico a la libertad del ser humano dentro de la creación divina? En este capítulo de El Libro Rojo me acompaña Carlos Goñi, doctor en Filosofía por la Universidad de Barcelona y autor de numerosas obras sobre historia antigua, mitología o educación.
Incluye cafetin con Carlos Goñi
En el episodio 30 Alejandro Sanchez Acosta entrevista a Carlos Gónzalez de Product School sobre el crecimiento de una startup y educación para Product Managers en Silicon Valley. Alejandro Sanchez Acosta Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alejandrosanchezacosta/ Spotify Immersion School: https://open.spotify.com/show/1OmIU6dQOuGE011ICmhxbP Itunes Immersion School: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/immersion-school/id1480281766 Planifica una sesion de coaching: https://g8rpxrjtmaa.typeform.com/to/Js5KFTCM Apuntate a una Immersion Week para conocer a los expertos e innovacion de Silicion Valley: https://g8rpxrjtmaa.typeform.com/to/ZW28JkQZ
En Música de Contrabando, revista diaria de música en Onda Regional de Murcia(orm.es; 00,00h a 02,00h). El festival Cruïlla se realizará finalmente en unas condiciones cercanas a la normalidad prepandémica. Una iniciativa que llevan a cabo el festival barcelonés junto al Vida y el Canet Rock y que se puede considerar de carácter pionero a escala europea (Two Door Cinema Club, Muerdo), Triángulo, _juno, Delaporte, Ginebras y Alizzz, favoritos de los Premios MIN. Mientras preparan nuevas canciones (ya anticipadas por “Dual” en la que se hacían acompañar de Pimp Flaco) DORIAN reviven la presentación de "Justicia universal" con un documental que contiene momentos registrados durante aquel largo viaje. El nuevo album de La Habitación Roja, "Años Luz" , toma su título del libro homónimo de James Salter y es un disco que versa sobre la incomunicación y la distancia que nos separa, ya sea esta física o emocional. The Wombats regresan bajando las revoluciones pero no la intensidad en "method to the madness", su nuevo single. Sub pop reedita en formato deluxe Every good boy deserves fudge de Mudhoney, por su 30º aniversario. Wye Oak reflexionan delicadamente sobre el paso del tiempo en "tnt", nuevo single. Los australianos Children Collide anuncian Time itself, su nuevo disco, con los eléctricos y pegadizos riffs de "uh oh", primer adelanto. Maronda, el dúo formado por Pablo Maronda y Marc Greenwood publica Canciones de vino y siembra. Jordi Bastida, conocido por haber tocado en bandas como Carlos Sadness, Els Pets, Ramón Mirabet , se transforma en Chico Jorge para volar en solitario como cantautor con tendencias popnoise., y comparte 'amalgama de miedo y furia.', segundo adelanto del que será su EP de debut. Dicen MALVA que toda banda de rock debería tener una canción dedicada a sus groupies, y ellos han hecho la suya. Vuelven más Stones que nunca. Crudos lanzarán "Entre ola y ola" del que ya ha visto la luz su primer single, 'Old School Rock Bar', un homenaje a la sala en la que realizaron inolvidables jams. Superado el 30 aniversario, Revolver regresa a la carretera con nueva gira, esta vez en formato trío, y con el principal objetivo del reencuentro con el público y volver a sentir la emoción. Esta noche hablamos con Carlos Goñi. Esta noche entrevistamos a Viva Suecia. 2020 prometía ser el año de Viva Suecia con su tercer disco 'El Milagro' por todo lo alto, pero la pandemia lo frustró todo. Viva Suecia están de vuelta con una nueva etapa, y lo hacen con “La voz del presidente”.
Llamamos a Carlos Goñi, de la banda Revolver, que comienza en Zaragoza su gira 'Apolo Tour' el jueves 15 de Abril en la Sala Mozart del Auditorio de Zaragoza a las 20 horas.🤟
¿Qué diría Sócrates a los padres y madres de hoy? ¿Cómo resolverían los filósofos clásicos un conflicto cotidiano con nuestros hijos? Carlos Goñi lleva más de 25 años uniendo la filosofía a la educación, aportando claves útiles a los padres a la hora de educar a sus hijos. Todo ello junto a su mujer, la psicóloga y pedagoga Pilar Guembe. Filósofo, escritor y asesor educativo, Goñi nos explica: “Muchas veces el sentido común es el gran olvidado en educación, y la filosofía puede aportar ese conocimiento y fundamento”. Para él, las reflexiones de los grandes filósofos de la historia pueden convertirse en claves pedagógicas para enfrentar el reto que supone educar, tanto en casa como en la escuela: “Gestionar la libertad de un adolescente, ayudarle a entender sus emociones o explicarle la importancia de los valores para no perder el norte en la vida… todo esto ya lo explicaron los filósofos, y nosotros podemos aplicarlo”, resume. Para concluir, lanza una pregunta clave: ¿qué es lo más importante en la educación de los hijos? “La educación de los padres”, afirma. Y es que, añade: “En la época en la que estamos no vale con tirar de buena voluntad y afecto. Los padres de hoy debemos formarnos, informarnos y leer sobre educación para aprender, en definitiva, a ser padres”. Carlos Goñi y Pilar Guembe llevan más de 25 años dedicados a la enseñanza. Carlos es doctor en Filosofía y escritor. Pilar es pedagoga, profesora y orientadora. Ambos escriben habitualmente en medios de comunicación sobre educación y crianza. Son coautores, entre otros títulos, de ‘Educar con filosofía’ y ‘Educar sin castigar’.
Hoy nos dejamos guiar en LREM por el juez y escritor Luis Roda, ganador del XXVI Premio Internacional de Ensayo Jovellanos con su trabajo 'Cunas, tumbas y huellas', una búsqueda de la belleza en lo insólito y lo mágico. Nuestra periodista caleyera Ana Paz Paredes nos propone cinco lugares para contemplar el Urriellu. Carlos Goñi, líder de Revólver, actúa en Gijón celebrando los 30 años de su banda. En el tiempo de libros de Rafa Testón presentamos "La cárcel", de la escritora asturiana Alicia González García, novela ganadora del premio de narrativa Mont Marçal. Un poco de cine, un poco de historia, nuestra ración de música (hoy recordando a Lee Hazewood) completan nuestro viernes.
Hoy nos dejamos guiar en LREM por el juez y escritor Luis Roda, ganador del XXVI Premio Internacional de Ensayo Jovellanos con su trabajo 'Cunas, tumbas y huellas', una búsqueda de la belleza en lo insólito y lo mágico. Nuestra periodista caleyera Ana Paz Paredes nos propone cinco lugares para contemplar el Urriellu. Carlos Goñi, líder de Revólver, actúa en Gijón celebrando los 30 años de su banda. En el tiempo de libros de Rafa Testón presentamos "La cárcel", de la escritora asturiana Alicia González García, novela ganadora del premio de narrativa Mont Marçal. Un poco de cine, un poco de historia, nuestra ración de música (hoy recordando a Lee Hazewood) completan nuestro viernes.
Hoy nos dejamos guiar en LREM por el juez y escritor Luis Roda, ganador del XXVI Premio Internacional de Ensayo Jovellanos con su trabajo 'Cunas, tumbas y huellas', una búsqueda de la belleza en lo insólito y lo mágico. Nuestra periodista caleyera Ana Paz Paredes nos propone cinco lugares para contemplar el Urriellu. Carlos Goñi, líder de Revólver, actúa en Gijón celebrando los 30 años de su banda. En el tiempo de libros de Rafa Testón presentamos "La cárcel", de la escritora asturiana Alicia González García, novela ganadora del premio de narrativa Mont Marçal. Un poco de cine, un poco de historia, nuestra ración de música (hoy recordando a Lee Hazewood) completan nuestro viernes.
Hoy nos dejamos guiar en LREM por el juez y escritor Luis Roda, ganador del XXVI Premio Internacional de Ensayo Jovellanos con su trabajo 'Cunas, tumbas y huellas', una búsqueda de la belleza en lo insólito y lo mágico. Nuestra periodista caleyera Ana Paz Paredes nos propone cinco lugares para contemplar el Urriellu. Carlos Goñi, líder de Revólver, actúa en Gijón celebrando los 30 años de su banda. En el tiempo de libros de Rafa Testón presentamos "La cárcel", de la escritora asturiana Alicia González García, novela ganadora del premio de narrativa Mont Marçal. Un poco de cine, un poco de historia, nuestra ración de música (hoy recordando a Lee Hazewood) completan nuestro viernes.
Esta es la lista de las más de TREINTA CANCIONES que incluyen este programa y que TÚ nos has pedido, porque TE ponen contento y alegre. Disfrútalas, y si quieres que lo hagan los demás compártelas. Feliz semana. Y mucho ánimo. La próxima semana VOLVEMOS con el formato normal del programa. Cien mentiras Joaquín sabina petición Mercedes cuña Bvf Viva España Manolo Escobar Simone Sipard When I am a Kid Demis Roussos petición de Pilar Ramos Don`t worry be happy Bobby Mcferri petición de Lidia Esther Morales Niebla Felicitá Romina y Albano Katty Contino Muévete ni un pelo de tonto y Carlos Goñi Petición de Conchi Herrera Como una ola versión de Ni un pelo de tonto Vivir mi vida Marc Anthony petición de David Lágrimas de mármol Joaquín Sabina petición de Henry Pero a tu lado Los Secretos petición de Henry Baba ORiley the Who petición de Henry Estamos mal Stay homas El Kanka petición de Alicia Armas Aire ke respiro Erpeche petición de Elena Carnero Hoy puede ser un gran día Serrat petición de MariJose Molina Wake up everybody John legend petición de Gabriela Cabrera Quintero Heat of the moment Andrés Ruiz Ruyi Bridge over troubled water Simon And Garfunkel petición de Alida Padilla It`s raining men The weather girls Elena Hernández If you wanna be happy Jimmy soul Nacho Mariñas Cuando nos volvamos a encontrar Carlos Vives petición de Viviana Labarca González I would do anything for love, Meat loaf petición de Carolina Miranda Happy Pharrell Williams Sandra Martínez Tallo Must be talking to an angel playing with my heart Pilu Sevilla Cuando me siento bien Efecto pasillo Petición de Sonia Gómez Salta Tequila Sonia Gómez Hoy todo va a salir bien El Arrebato Sonia Gómez La aventura de vivir Manu Carrasco Samba pa ti Santana Petición de Marisa Fernández Endless love Lionel Richie petición de Moisés de la Rosa Over the rainbow Israel Kamakawiwoole Petición de Sandra Martínez Tallo Mi vida es ser un bambón Unalindaflor Asuntos serios El puchero del hortelano petición de Pilar Lago Madriñal Hold on Tom Waits petición de Victoria Molina Pastor Ultra violet u2 Santdra Martínez Tallo Dancing on the moonlight Toploader petición de Marta Calviche Himno de la Alegría petición de Simone y despedida.
Carlos Goñi está celebrando los 30 años de Revólver, aunque a él no le gusta eso de celebrar las cosas. Revolver ya suma tres décadas jugando contra los caprichos del tiempo, renovándose en cada disco y casi en cada concierto. Así lo hará los próximos 28 y 29 de marzo. Goñi se sienta ante los micrófonos de Conversaciones Culturplaza para hablar de su último disco, Básico IV, pero también de tres décadas de música y de intentar hacerse un hueco en el mundo en la València de los 80. El podcast Carlos Goñi, radicalmente músico desde hace más de 30 años ha sido publicado en Plaza Radio
A pesar de que nunca han querido ser referencia de nada y de que, dicen, nunca han tenido esa sensación ni la intención de considerarse alguien importante, lo cierto es que Revólver marcó un antes y un después con su Básico. Carlos Goñi comenta que: “Bastante me cuesta a mí encontrar referencias para seguir cada día como para yo ser referencia de nadie. Hago las cosas lo mejor que sé o lo mejor que puedo. Al final, considero que las propuestas artísticas deben ser lo más personales posible y es el público el que lo toma o lo deja pasar. Los músicos nos dedicamos a entretener y todo lo demás es una falacia.” Pues damos fe de que lo hacéis, Revólver, nos entretenéis y mucho, y lo demás….falacias.
313ª edición del programa ‘Lo Que Más Suena’, que repasa todos los éxitos del momento y una lista semanal formada por 20 canciones. Esta semana estrenamos los nuevos singles de Inna, Luis Fonsi en colaboración con Ozuna; Marshmello en colaboración con Bastille; Vicky Gastelo en colaboración con Carlos Goñi; Eros Ramazzotti y James Arthur. Este programa se emite en 71 radios FM de España, 8 de Venezuela, 1 de Uruguay, 1 de Argentina y 18 radios online. Web: http://www.loquemasuena.com Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/loqmassuena Twitter: @loquemassuena E-mail: info@loquemasuena.com
Carlos Gómez, Managers, Libros y Sonidos del Juego by Podcast Endorfinas
Programa "Hijos de la Luna" dirigido y presentado por José Luis Mateo acompañado por María Tortosa. Incluye una primera parte con la entrevista a Carlos Goñi "Revolver" presentando EnJoy. Emitido en directo el Miércoles, 25/09/2013 de 21:00 a 22:00 h. a través de esmiradio.es Lo puedes escuchar en directo de Lunes a Viernes de 21 a 22 h. a través de Internet en http://www.esmiradio.es o también en directo a través de Tune-In o iVoox. Consulta nuestra programación en www.esmiradio.es Contacto: programahijosdelaluna@gmail.com
Tercera edición del programa ‘Lo Que Más Suena', que repasa una lista semanal de diez éxitos y las últimas novedades del mercado musical. Incluye una entrevista a Carlos Goñi, líder de Revólver.
Manuel Comesaña habla de Revolver y Carlos Goñi.
In our episode of today we included the most usual and used spanish verbs when we want to express an adverse opinion against something o someone. In our last episodes we reviewed some kind and accommodating verbs to express our opinion, but in this episode we are going to review some more strong verbs in order to express that anything doesn´t like us at all. In order to better exemplify it we tried a song of a rocker spanish singer (Carlos Goñi, group Revólver): Odio (Hate) where he is reviewing many things he hate, he can´t stand, he does not like at all, he detest, can not bear,…You have the electronic address in our PDF (www.spanishpodcast.org) where you can hear the song and see the videoclip in Youtube. (We thought you can be interested in review, in spanish, some tradicions linked to Christmas. It´s because we put a new album of photographs in www.spanishpodcast.org about a nice christmas market placed at the Cathedral Square of Barcelona where you´ll can see the Christmas Crib with a special characters as a “caganer” that this year represents some very famous people: scoccer players as Ronaldinho, Eto´o, or politicians as Bush, etc. and you´ll can know the most very old christmas traditions). En nuestro episodio de hoy hemos incluido los verbos que más usamos en español para expresar una opinión desfavorable hacia algo o hacia alguien, una opinión radicalmente desfavorable. Si en los últimos episodios, veíamos verbos y expresiones amables, contemporizadores, para expresar nuestra opinión, en este episodio vamos a repasar los verbos más fuertes para expresar que algo no nos gusta en absoluto. Para ejemplificarlo mejor, hemos escogido una canción de Carlos Goñi, del grupo rockero español Revólver, que justamente se llama “Odio” y en la que el autor va repasando todo lo que le disgusta mediante verbos como “odiar”, “no soportar”, “detestar”, “aborrecer”, “no aguantar”,etc. a los que nosotros, además, añadiremos algunos sinónimos. La canción se sigue con el videoclip que hay en Youtube y del que os damos la dirección electrónica en el PDF. Esta semana, nuevo álbum en Fotografías Comentadas, en: www.spanispodcast.org, dedicado al Mercado Navideño de Santa Lucía, en Barcelona. Es un álbum con fotografías del mercado navideño de Santa Lucía. Este mercado se coloca en la plaza de la Catedral de Barcelona desde hace dos siglos. Allí podremos ver cómo es el típico pesebre (o belén) que se pone en muchas casas por esta época; podremos conocer la tradición catalana del “caga tió”; ir viendo todas las figuritas del pesebre, incluido el famoso “caganer” que, este año, ha incorporado personajes como Ronaldinho, Eto´o o Bush... En fin, no os lo perdáis; repasaréis todo lo referente a la Navidad, en español, pero sobre todo, ¡os lo pasaréis en grande!