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In this episode we get a primer on mail order pharmacies. Dave Randall has been a pharmacist for 30+ years and gives us the ins and outs, benefits and drawbacks to receiving your medications from a mail order pharmacy.Have questions for us or for Dave? Contact the Parkinson's Association of San Diego here: https://parkinsonsassociation.org/contact-pasd/
Wes and Nick watch this 50s Sci-Fi Doomsday Classic with a lot of scienciy babble building and transatlantic talking spells involving Planets coming out of nowhere. Plot:South African pilot Dave Randall serves as courier - transporting a briefcase to American scientist, Dr Hendron. Inside the case are documents which state the star Bellus will collide with Earth, destroying it. A plan is developed to build a spaceship to carry a select few to the planet Zyra, a planet orbiting Bellus.Support the show:
John and Eugene look at George Pal's 1951 end-of-the-world film When Worlds Collide and ask, “They really wouldn't blow up the Earth, would they?” Synopsis Dr. Bronson, an astronomer at the Mount Kenna, South Africa Observatory, has made an unsettling discovery. He calls in reliable freelance pilot and courier, Dave Randall, to delivery photographic observations ... Read more
Dave Randall, Future's commercial director, discusses with Omar Oakes why using first-party data well is so important to the publisher and how its audience data platform Aperture has developed. Dave and Omar also discuss how 'specialist interest websites' and TV stand out in a Future survey about trust in media, and how a modern publisher establishes 'church v state' lines between editorial and commercial when journalists are asked to write sponsored content.Our own 'church v state' disclaimer: this episode is sponsored by Future. The conversation topics were agreed in advance but the conversation was recorded and edited by The Media Leader's editorial team without intervention.Visit The Media Leader for the most authoritative news analysis and comment on what's happening in commercial media. LinkedIn - The Media LeaderTwitter @TheMediaLeader YouTube - The Media Leader
Derek talks to Dave about his time in Faithless, Sinead O'Connor, his trips to Palestine, politics in music, his group Slovo, the power of the collective and how the Jerry Dammers song 'Nelson Mandela' opened his eyes!
On this week's episode of TheMadTech Podcast, Dave Randall, commercial director at Future plc, joins ExchangeWire's Rachel Smith and Mat Broughton to discuss the CMA's latest investigation into Google's ad tech, the effectiveness of GDPR, and social media stocks' sharp decline.
In the second episode of Season 2, I'm delighted that we have Dave Randall with us as our special guest where we're talking about the mindset aspects of curiosity, identity, collaboration, the power of our instinct. For me, my chat with Dave highlights why living our life that aligns with what we value most is one of the most important paths we can take. Dave is a guitarist, producer, composer, author and social activist. Musically, he has worked with artists like Faithless, Sinead O'Connor, Dido, Emilíana Torrini, and Roland Gift and contributed to the 1 Giant Leap Project, featuring musicians from all around the world including Neneh Cherry and Michael Stipe.His current collective is called Slovo with singer Barbarella and their latest album is called Bread & Butterflies. It expands previous collaborations with hip hop innovator Mike Ladd. And Barbarella is a truly remarkable vocalist, switching between loose Gwen Stefani like vocals and on Call Me, powerful, soaring opera. You can't put a genre on it and that's a good thing to my mind. We've been taught to compartmentalise too many things for too long.Dave is also the author of the excellent “Sound System: The Political Power of Music” – a fascinating read on the power of music for both protesters and agitators and for the ruling corporate and governmental classes. The paradox of protest and pacification.I Wanna Jump Like Dee Dee is a music podcast that does music interviews differently. I'm Giles Sibbald and I'm talking to extraordinary musicians, DJ's and producers about how they use an experimental mindset in their lives to amplify their own creativity, pursue new challenges, overcome fears and bounce back from mistakes.- brought to you by Hey Sunday, the mothership of the experimental mindset™.Podcast logo and art by Tide Adesanya, Coppie and Paste
Dave Randall is a guitarist and founder of Slovo, and has previously toured with Faithless, Sinead O’Connor and Dido. As an activist, he has campaigned for Love Music Hate Racism, Freedom for Palestine and the People’s Assembly Against Austerity. This year, he released the third album under his band Slovo titled Bread and Butterflies, which he finished under lockdown. In 2017, he authored a book, Sound System, the Political Power of Music. We discussed his ongoing fascination with the way politics and music are intimately connected, from the anti-establishment raves of the Thatcher years in Britain to Beyonce’s engagement with the Black Lives Matter conversation. Follow Dave Randall on Twitter @davidrrandall and learn more at randallmusic.net. Buy his music at slovo.bandcamp.com Follow Future Heist on Instagram and Twitter @future_heist for episode updates, news and giveaways. Produced and recorded by Rena Niamh Smith Theme music by Benjamin Tassie Artwork by Fleur Beck Sound engineering by Gibran Farrah Consultation by Ben Weaver-Hincks Original illustrations and social media editing by Charlotte Rose Watts Special thanks to Chloe Vasseghi
Dave Randall is a brilliant mind. This interview was recorded in St Giles churchyard in Camberwell, London, 3 July 2020.Dave Randall is the author of Sound System – The Political Power of Music (Pluto Press 2017) and guitarist, producer and composer. His own critically acclaimed albums released under the name Slovo feature international collaborations with artists including Iceland's Emiliana Torrini, West Africa's Maezah and US jazz legend Max Roach. He has contributed to Grammy Award winning albums by Dido and has toured the world performing with UK dance act Faithless, for more click here.Notably, as part of the 1 Giant Leap project, Dave appeared alongside Baaba Maal, Michael Stipe, the Mahotella Queens, Neneh Cherry and others. Recently he has toured with Sinead O'Connor, and teamed up with Big Dada artist Mike Ladd, clarinet player Carol Robinson and drummer Dirk Rothbrust to create the Paris based improvising quartet Sleeping In Vilna. He's currently performing live with Roland Gift (Fine Young Cannibals).He has also produced music for the feature length documentaries Rebuilding Hope (set in the US and Sudan), Witness Bahrain and There Is A Field (set in the USA and Palestine). He has also composed music for the contemporary dance/juggling company Feeding The Fish, the acclaimed Palestinian dance company Al Zaytouna and the Robert Swinston dance company. He lives in Brixton, South London.https://twitter.com/davidrrandallDave is in conversation with Cold Lips' editor, Kirsty Allison. https://twitter.com/kirstyallisonhttps://www.instagram.com/kirstyallison_/https://kirstyallison.substack.comThe podcast is edited by Sebastian Bowden. To hear more, visit kirstyallison.substack.com
This interview was recorded in St Giles churchyard in Camberwell, London, 3 July 2020. Dave Randall is the author of Sound System – The Political Power of Music (Pluto Press 2017) and guitarist, producer and composer. His own critically acclaimed albums released under the name Slovo feature international collaborations with artists including Iceland's Emiliana Torrini, West Africa's Maezah and US jazz legend Max Roach. He has contributed to Grammy Award winning albums by Dido and has toured the world performing with UK dance act Faithless, for more click here. Notably, as part of the 1 Giant Leap project, Dave appeared alongside Baaba Maal, Michael Stipe, the Mahotella Queens, Neneh Cherry and others. Recently he has toured with Sinead O'Connor, and teamed up with Big Dada artist Mike Ladd, clarinet player Carol Robinson and drummer Dirk Rothbrust to create the Paris based improvising quartet 'Sleeping In Vilna'. He's currently performing live with Roland Gift (Fine Young Cannibals). He has also produced music for the feature length documentaries 'Rebuilding Hope' (set in the US and Sudan), 'Witness Bahrain' and 'There Is A Field' (set in the USA and Palestine). He has also composed music for the contemporary dance/juggling company 'Feeding The Fish', the acclaimed Palestinian dance company Al Zaytouna and the Robert Swinston dance company. He lives in Brixton, South London. https://twitter.com/davidrrandall Dave is in conversation with Cold Lips' editor, Kirsty Allison. https://twitter.com/kirstyallison https://www.instagram.com/kirstyallison_/ https://kirstyallison.substack.com The podcast is edited by Sebastian Bowden.
We chat to producer, songwriter, and ex-Faithless guitarist, Dave Randall, about his career so far, and new project, Slovo - a musical collective with a real creative twist. Dave finalised the third Slovo album, Bread & Butterflies, during lockdown - and it's out later this month. It's a phenomenal listen, produced by Dave himself, and featuring Barbarella on vocals, a highly gifted artist in her own right, who certainly puts her sonic stamp on this excellent record.
a cura di Alessandro Achilli. Musiche di Robert Wyatt, Golden Diskó Ship, Kris Davis & Ingrid Laubrock, Andrzej Karpiński, Chris Cutler, Slovo, Pietro Verardo (seconda parte)
a cura di Alessandro Achilli. Musiche di Robert Wyatt, Golden Diskó Ship, Kris Davis & Ingrid Laubrock, Andrzej Karpiński, Chris Cutler, Slovo, Pietro Verardo (seconda parte)
Episode 023: Simone GiulianiGood morning! This is Play It like It's Music, I'm Trevor. Thanks for listening.We are back. On Wednesday, January the 22nd of 2020, music is not content, it's connection.**and if you like the show, please tell a friend!My friend Simone Giuliani is an Italian musician, film composer, arranger, record producer and music director based in Los Angeles and Manhattan, New York. He is also a keyboard player and a pianist. He's collaborated with Miho Hatori from Cibo Matto and Gorillaz and he's worked on remixes for Beyoncé, Maxwell and Sia...He also won the Best Music Award at the 8th China Academy Awards for Documentary Film in Beijing for his soundtrack "Deep into Shambhala", and in general his bio is packed with both producer and musician credits with Andrea Bocelli, London Symphony Orchestra, Groove Collective… he's recorded at Abbey Road, etc… !*Besides his work as a musician, producer and composer he is also the Artistic Director of YANGCHENMA ARTS & MUSIC, an organization preserving and promoting human cultures around the world through their artistic musical traditions:https://www.yangchenma.org/Yangchenma organizes live concerts, and as luck would have it I am working with him this very week! He produces a stellar season of inspiring talks and cultural immersions at Pure Land Farms, the Center for Tibetan Medicine situated in the beautiful canyon of Topanga, California. OK, but WHY talk to Simone? Aside from having a soothing voice and a beautiful selection of work which we will be sampling underneath the conversation, I wanted to get a sense of how he keeps his career vital, always moving forward. He and I are the same age and I've done a bit of travel myself. I know how hard it is. But Simone has a way of landing in new places: concert halls and studios all over europe, Asia, New York, LA... and he somehow makes himself at home. We get into a lot of that and more, so THANKS to Simone for opening up his mind and his space with us. I hope you get as much out of it as I did. You can find him on social at "simone giuliani" with two underscores at either end. EDGY: @__simonegiuliani__Music Credits:Bossamore (from Monday Michiru's album "Brasilified") Innocent Crime (from the soundtrack of "Unseen") Monday michiru moments (from Terron Darby's "Moments" feat. Monday Michiru) The Scale of things (from the soundtrack of "Deep Into Shambhala")Levity ending credits (voice: Bisan Toron from the soundtrack of "NYSFERATU") Keepin' On (from Lazybatusu's album "00.03")Arise (from the soundtrack of "Deep Into Shambhala") Il Vento (from the soundtrack of "Reject") Canto de Zinha (from "The Handmaid's Tale")Way down (from the Happening's album "Miles Away from America") Arrival (from the soundtrack of "Unseen") Lacrime di un pirata italiano (from the Happening's album "These are My Diamonds")Musicians: Simone Giuliani, Monday Michiru, DJ Terron Darby, Trevor Exter, Robbie Angelucci, Masa Shimizu, Eleanor Norton, Hamilton Berry, Piero Perelli, Bisan Toron, Bill Dobrow, Guilherme Monteiro, DJ Corrado Bay, Jamie Catto, Alex Forster, Dave Randall, Renaud Gabriel Pion, Jonathan Kotler, Mauricio Zottarelli, Itaiguara Brandao As I mentioned, besides his work as a musician, producer and composer he is also putting on concerts! I am fortunate to be working with him this very week, playing the cello. So if you are in the Los Angeles area, go to www.purelandfarms.org and get directions and tickets for two concerts in Los Angeles:Friday January 24th and Sunday January 26th He's got a new album Migrant Songs concert with Bisan Toron (voice), Piero Perelli (drums) and guest musicians including myself on Sunday. They call it a Sound Alignment Concert: a journey through sound and color. Come out.OK, That's it for today.Thanks for listening to Play It Like It's Music. If you liked the show, PLEASE tell a friend. Let's grow this thing.Follow me on social @trevorexter and talk to me on there if you have thoughts.We're all contending with a mutating professional landscape, jacked revenue streams and a lot of noise out there in the culture. But you gotta keep playing.We don't draw any lines here between scenes or styles.As always, thank you for listening and remember to play it like its music.Big love to your ears.Trevor(Did you press play yet?)...If you like my stuff, help it spread by sharing it!Hear songs: the “Trevor Exter Playlist” on SpotifySign the mailing list!Consider hiring me to score your piece.I can also produce your podcast.Follow me on IG TW FBMore @trevorexter.compsst… sign up for emails: This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit playitlikeitsmusic.substack.com
My guest today is Dave Randall who is a guitarist, producer, and composer. He has contributed to multi-million selling albums by Grammy Award-winning artist Dido and has toured the world a number of times performing with UK dance act Faithless. His own critically acclaimed albums released under the name Slovo feature international collaborations with artists including Iceland’s Emiliana Torrini, West Africa’s Maezah and US jazz legend Max Roach.Dave was invited to appear alongside Baaba Maal, Michael Stipe, the Mahotella Queens, Neneh Cherry, and others, in the studio and on stage, as part of the 1 Giant Leap project. Recently he has toured with Sinead O’Connor, teamed up with Big Dada artist Mike Ladd, clarinet player Carol Robinson, and drummer Dirk Rothbrust to create the Paris based improvising quartet ‘Sleeping In Vilna’, and contributed guitars to the stunning debut album from Nessi Gomes. He’s currently performing live with Roland Gift from the Fine Young Cannibals.As well as making music Dave has published numerous articles and given talks on the history of music and its role in society. His debut book Sound System – The Political Power of Music was published on Pluto Press in 2017.He was in Toronto for Canadian Music Week conference this past spring and I had a chance to sit down with him for a fascinating chat about music and politics. I hope you enjoy it.For links and transcript visit http://singdanceactthrive.com/024
Chair: Annie McGann. Panel: Melissa Chemam, Dave Randall, Viki Browne, Soweto Kinch Arts and culture are the lifeblood of a healthy society. How can we not only ensure their survival during austerity, but organise to build for the future? This panel will bring a wide variety of artists, educators, practitioners and venue operators together to discuss the past, present and future in Bristol and beyond.
Dave Randall is fun, has loads of stories, and he's smart. Listen to this one, have a laugh on your commute or lunchbreak or something. This convo is a total bright spot on the day.
Dave Randall, Eliane Correa, Lowkey, Lois Browne, Shingai Shoniwa How can we use the power of culture against the culture of power? Throughout history and across the world, music has been used as a political weapon. Looking at examples from Love Music Hate Racism to Justice4Grenfell, this session asks how we can use music to promote justice, solidarity and socialism. Organised by Left Book Club. https://www.leftbookclub.com/
Brand new and good for you! This episode is brought to you by Dave Randall, whose best know for playing guitar from Brixton to afar, performing as he has alongside the likes of Sinnead O'Connor, Faithless, Dido and Max Roach. Dave is also a political activist, and in 2017 he released his debut book, entitled Sound System: The Political Power of Music. It's a fascinating read - full of raves, riots and revolution - as Dave explores the ways in which music can affect significant change in the world. In his Mixtape Assembly, Dave expands on some of the experiences that inspired him to write the book, reflecting on one tune in particular that gave him something of an epiphany. Dave also talks about about some of the songs that have fuelled him creatively as a musician, and the result is a wicked collage of tunes from all over the world. For more info on Dave, check his website: http://www.randallmusic.net/ TRACKLIST: 1) Bertolt Brecht: Motto 2) Muhammad Ali: Untitled Poem 3) Hound Dog Taylor: Give Me Back My Wig 4) Stormzy X Jeremy Corbyn: Shut Up (J.O.E Remix) 5) Destra: Lucy 6) Johnny Cash: San Quentin 7) Special AKA: Nelson Mandela 8) Yami Bolo: Free Mandela 9) Radio International: Bella Ciao 10)Ani DiFranco: Untouchable Face 11) Nat King Cole: Let There Be Love 12) Sinnead O'Connor: Nothing Compares 2 U
Sound System: The Political Power of Music looks into the history of musical movements that have inspired political and social change and urges us all to "get stuck into that struggle.”
Dave Randall has played guitar for some huge acts, including Faithless, Dido and Sinead O'Connor. As he's reflected on his career and the industry he's been a part of, he has begun to see the huge potential of music to change society. This prompted him to write the excellent book Sound System: The Political Power of Music. So if you're interested in pondering how the songs we sing might help us not just love God, but also love our neighbour, then tune in! This episode ends with Ibrahim Qashoush performing the protest song "Yalla Erhal Ya Bashar", or "Come on, Bashar, leave", during the 2011 Syrian up-rising. Qashoush's song is mocking president Bashar al-Assad. Qashoush was later found dead in the Orontes River, his throat cut and his vocal cords ripped out. You can watch the video of the performance with subtitled lyrics on YouTube. Interview start at 12m 36s If you want more from Nomad, check out our website, and follow us on Facebook and twitter If you're looking for other people to share this journey with, then register on our Listener Map, and see if any other nomads are in your area. Nomad can only keep going because a small group of faithful listeners help us pay the bills. If you want to join them, you can make regular donations at Patreon or a one-off or regular donation through PayPal, the links to which you can find on our support page. As a thank you, you'll have access to Nomad Book Club, our online community The Beloved Listener Lounge, and Nomad Devotionals, where we're attempting to reconstruct worship through a creative mix of songs, music, readings, prayers and guest reflections.
Raves, riots, revolutions. Music has often been used to unsettle the most fundamental political and social conventions, to challenge the status-quo, but also as a tool for manipulation and propaganda. What makes music so powerful? Musician Dave Randall is a former guitarist with Faithless. His debut book, Sound System: The Political Power of Music makes the case for music and social change. See him at Full Circle in Brussels on Tuesday evening. http://fullcircle.eu/events/dave-randall/ http://www.randallmusic.net/
We’re joined by guitarist, producer, composer and author Dave Randall. His book, Sound System, newly out from Pluto Press, is an insider’s view of the music industry, shedding light on the secrets of celebrity, commodification, and culture, and the system of music serving them. And yet music can be a force for social change, sounds …
Author & musician, Dave Randall stopped by our Podcast room to chat with Ben about his excellent novel, "Sound System: The Political Power of Music " (Rough Trade Book of the Month March 2017). You can buy signed copies here - whilst stocks last: https://roughtrade.com/books/sound-system-the-political-power-of-music
Dave Randall is the founder and owner of Costa de Cocos in Xcalak, Mexico. He started the small resort and fly fishing operation nearly thirty years ago. In the last 18 months he's begun distilling whiskey and brewing beer out of his home and is one of only three whiskey distilling operations in Mexico.