POPULARITY
Avec Bob Marley and The Wailers, Blondie et Soundgarden. "Sun Is Shining" est un classique de Bob Marley enregistré à deux reprises par l'artiste, tout d'abord en 1971 produite par un autre grand nom du Reggae, Lee Perry. 7 ans plus tard, pour l'album "Kaya" Bob Marley et ses Wailers, en enregistrent une version "modernisée". En 1971, le groupe de rock progressif Yes est au sommet de son art avec l'album "Fragile" et "Heart of the Sunrise" qui nous emmène au cœur d'un rayon de soleil avec des rythmes complexes et des influences musicales très variées allant du jazz-rock fusion à Stravinsky. En 76, c'est la chanteuse Debbie Harry et son groupe Blondie qui nous transporte au soleil sur “In The Sun ", extrait du tout premier album intitulé “Blondie”. Seattle avec un soleil inquiétant "Black Hole Sun" de Soundgarden, trou noir/ce soleil noir évoque des pensées moroses qui n'empêcheront pas ce titre de devenir le plus grand tube du groupe en 1994. --- Du lundi au vendredi, Fanny Gillard et Laurent Rieppi vous dévoilent l'univers rock, au travers de thèmes comme ceux de l'éducation, des rockers en prison, les objets de la culture rock, les groupes familiaux et leurs déboires, et bien d'autres, chaque matin dans Coffee on the Rocks à 6h30 et rediffusion à 13h30 dans Lunch Around The Clock. Merci pour votre écoute Pour écouter Classic 21 à tout moment : www.rtbf.be/classic21 Retrouvez tous les contenus de la RTBF sur notre plateforme Auvio.be Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
Avec les Beach Boys, Xavier Rudd, Arctic Monkeys et les Beatles "The Warmth of The Sun" est un titre des Beach Boys sorti en 1964, enregistré peu après le 22 novembre 1963, date de l'assassinat de JFK, le groupe était encore sous le choc. "Follow The Sun" en 2012, signé Xavier Rudd, surfeur, musicien et activiste australien nous invite à prendre la route du soleil. En 1964, sur "Beatles For Sale", leur 4e album, les Beatles publient "I'll Follow The Sun", Paul McCartney l'a écrit bien avant de devenir un des 4 garçons dans le vent, en 1959. En 2006, sur son premier album, le groupe britannique, Arctic Monkeys propose "When The Sun Goes Down", qui est le second single à se hisser à la première place des charts en Grande-Bretagne. MARDI 180624 Avec Muse, Neil Diamond, Norah Jones et Police. Sur son premier album, Muse dévoile "Sunburn", cette brûlure du soleil qui imprègne l'atmosphère de leur première production intitulée "Showbiz", sortie en 1999. En 1968, Neil Diamond nous convie à savourer le soleil dominical avec "Sunday Sun". En 2004 sur son deuxième album "Feels Like Home", Norah Jones publie "Sunrise" hymne au lever du soleil. C'est un soleil bien moins doux et beaucoup plus menaçant qu'on retrouve avec Police et "Invisible Sun" en 1981, climat de violence et de tourmente qui règne en Irlande du Nord. Frances Tomelty, une des épouses de Sting, est originaire de Belfast et on sent cette influence sur le groupe. MERCREDI 190624 Avec George Harrison, les Beatles, The Animals et Paul McCartney. On peut dire que George Harrison, le plus mystique des Beatles, avait un rapport particulier avec le soleil, sur son album "Brainwashed" sorti après sa disparition, en 2002, on retrouve "Rising Sun" le soleil levant. Et puis, un des plus grands titres qu'il a écrit pour les Beatles est "Here Comes The Sun"écrit dans le jardin du guitariste Eric Clapton. En 1964, The Animals cartonnent avec la reprise d'un traditionnel : “The House of The Rising Sun”, la maison du soleil levant, ils vont conquérir le monde et mettre en avant le talent du claviériste Alan Price et la voix d'Eric Burdon. En bonus sur la version CD (et K7) de l'album "Flowers in the Dirt" de Paul McCartney de 1989, "Où est le soleil ?" est une bizarrerie de sa carrière produite par Trevor Horn, un des "Buggles". JEUDI 200624 Avec Sheryl Crow, The Rivieras, Bill Withers et Katrina and the Waves. En 2002, Shery Crow nous propose "Soak Up The Sun", ce qui veut dire "profiter du soleil", l'artiste pointe du doigt notre réaction attentiste par rapport aux changements climatiques. 1964 avec ce titre du groupe américain The Rivieras "California Sun", formation à l'existence assez courte, de 62 à 66 mais qui se reformera en 2000 jusqu'à 2010. "Ain't No Sunshine When She's Gone" de Bill Withers en 1971, titre mélancolique a pour origine un film qui a particulièrement touché Bill Withers : "Le jour du vin et des roses" de 1962. Composé par le guitariste Kimberly Rew, fondateur de Katrina and The Waves, ce "Walking On Sunshine" sort en 1985. VENDREDI 210624 Avec Bob Marley and The Wailers, Blondie et Soundgarden. "Sun Is Shining" est un classique de Bob Marley enregistré à deux reprises par l'artiste, tout d'abord en 1971 produite par un autre grand nom du Reggae, Lee Perry. 7 ans plus tard, pour l'album "Kaya" Bob Marley et ses Wailers, en enregistrent une version "modernisée". En 1971, le groupe de rock progressif Yes est au sommet de son art avec l'album "Fragile" et "Heart of the Sunrise" qui nous emmène au cœur d'un rayon de soleil avec des rythmes complexes et des influences musicales très variées allant du jazz-rock fusion à Stravinsky. En 76, c'est la chanteuse Debbie Harry et son groupe Blondie qui nous transporte au soleil sur “In The Sun ", extrait du tout premier album intitulé “Blondie”. Seattle avec un soleil inquiétant "Black Hole Sun" de Soundgarden, trou noir/ce soleil noir évoque des pensées moroses qui n'empêcheront pas ce titre de devenir le plus grand tube du groupe en 1994. --- Du lundi au vendredi, Fanny Gillard et Laurent Rieppi vous dévoilent l'univers rock, au travers de thèmes comme ceux de l'éducation, des rockers en prison, les objets de la culture rock, les groupes familiaux et leurs déboires, et bien d'autres, chaque matin dans Coffee on the Rocks à 6h30 et rediffusion à 13h30 dans Lunch Around The Clock. Merci pour votre écoute Pour écouter Classic 21 à tout moment : www.rtbf.be/classic21 Retrouvez tous les contenus de la RTBF sur notre plateforme Auvio.be Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
Meghan and Harry are protecting their privacy through a recent photoshoot at their Montecito home. The Mirror reports that the couple. who have kept Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet largely out of the public eye, participated in the photoshoot conducted by renowned New York photographer Jake Rosenberg.Rosenberg, celebrated for his ability to reveal the genuine essence of his subjects, has previously worked with Meghan. His portfolio boasts photographing notable personalities, including Oprah Winfrey, Priyanka Chopra, and David Beckham, showcasing his skill in capturing vibrant and authentic images.This photoshoot coincides with Meghan's introduction of her lifestyle brand, American Riviera Orchard, highlighting her ventures beyond royal duties. A source close to Meghan hinted to the Daily Mail that these were personal family portraits, suggesting they were not directly tied to her new business initiative.Meghan's venture into lifestyle branding with American Riviera Orchard promises to explore realms of cooking, gardening, and home decor, aimed at embodying her vision of home and family life. In The Sun, Piers Morgan writes:“They're saying that video isn't Kate,” read the text from a very intelligent, media-savvy friend of mine in America. “Is she dead? Be honest!”I didn't know whether to laugh, cry or bang my head against a concrete wall
On today's show, Five Times August's Brad Skistimas shares his newest song - a collaboration with Joseph Arthur! Namely, a hauntingly beautiful, re-imagined version of Joseph's classic IN THE SUN. Later in the show, Joseph is joined by legal and governance advisor Libby Klein - who is speaking at the ASF's Inaugural "Progress through Science & Freedom" Conference in Sydney - to discuss the World Health Organization's power grab. GUEST 1 OVERVIEW: Five Times August is the solo act of singer/songwriter Brad Skistimas. Skistimas has appeared on the FOX Business channel as an expert "Do-It-Yourself" indie artist and featured in Billboard Magazine, Performing Songwriter, Guitar Player, PeopleMagazine, and USA Today. In early 2021 Five Times August began releasing a series of protest songs taking aim at Covid-era regulations, the Biden administration, Justin Trudeau, as well as Anthony Fauci - the hit track SAD LITTLE MAN soared to the top of multiple charts, captivating the attention of millions. In November 2022 Five Times August released the full length album SILENT WAR a compilation featuring all of the recent protest singles - the album reached #1 on Amazon and Apple Music's singer/songwriter and alternative charts. In 2023 Five Times August signed with new record label Baste Records to release the brand new single AIN'T NO ROCK AND ROLL, calling out all the mainstream musicians and bands that didn't speak out against government tyranny in recent years. Despite encountering suppression on platforms such as YouTube and Facebook, the music videos been viewed millions of times and prominently featured on Glenn Beck, Chad Prather, Del Bigtree's The HighWire, The Federalist, The Post Millennial, RebelNews, and many more. https://www.fivetimesaugust.com/ GUEST 2 OVERVIEW: Libby Klein is a lawyer, company secretary and governance advisor, working mostly with Not-for-profits and charities. In 2021, Libby was incredulous – and then incensed – to learn that doctors in Australia were being gagged from talking about early treatments and risks/benefits of vaccines. This led her on a path of discovery, and she now spends most of her spare time researching the World Health Organisation, having figured out that the proposed new powers for the W.H.O., combined with Australia's emergency laws, will mean the end of functioning democracy in Australia: the W.H.O. will tell us what we need to do in the case of a public health emergency, and we will be legally obliged to comply, with little or no role for our parliaments let alone individual citizens wishing to make their own medical choices. Her conclusion: we must Exit the W.H.O. immediately. Libby has honours degrees in Agricultural Science and Law, and a background in financial services. She is a fellow of the Governance Institute of Australia, a Graduate member of the Australian Institute of Company Directors, a member of the Law Council of Australia Charities and Not-for-profits Committee, and honorary legal adviser to the Australian Medical Network. She is the founding principal of Social Impact Legal and a director of Brightlight Impact Holdings, a global leader in impact investing. Libby has also previously served as a director of Christian Super, and of Churches of Christ Financial Services. She writes at her substack Reclaiming Ethical Medicine. https://libbyklein.substack.com/ https://australiaexitsthewho.com/ https://australianmedicalnetwork.com/
When making mokuhanga and producing The Unfinished Print, I have looked towards various online tools for research and inspiration. One of these tools is ukiyo-e.org. A Japanese woodblock print database which collects and archives woodblock print collections from around the world. John Resig is the chief software architect at the Khan Academy who, in 2013, for his love of mokuhanga and the Japanese woodblock print, and through his own collection, developed ukiyo-e.org. Those researching, collecting, and making mokuhanga can explore some of the best Japanese print collections at the click of a button. In this episode of The Unfinished Print, I speak with ukiyo-e.org developer John Resig about why he decided to create the website and how his collecting of mokuhanga and making mokuhanga affected that decision. We also discuss the evolution of the humanities in mokuhanga, archiving prints, tradition, and the copywriting of images, as well as John's work with the Japanese Art Society of America. Please follow The Unfinished Print and my own mokuhanga work on Instagram @andrezadoroznyprints or email me at theunfinishedprint@gmail.com Notes: may contain a hyperlink. Simply click on the highlighted word or phrase. Artists works follow after the note. Pieces are mokuhanga unless otherwise noted. Dimensions are given if known. John Resig - Ukiyo-e.org, Digital Humanities Research, John's personal mokuhanga collection on Airtable, Sky Above Clouds IV: After Georgia O'Keefe (2019) Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1798-1861) - is considered one of the last “masters” of the ukiyo-e genre of Japanese woodblock printmaking. His designs range from landscapes, samurai and Chinese military heroes, as well as using various formats for his designs such as diptychs and triptychs. Five portraits of the actor Ichikawa Danjuro VIII (1823-1854) in various roles (1849) yakusha-e - (役者絵) is the Japanese term for actor prints in mokuhanga. Utagawa Kunisada (1786-1865) Tsukioka Yoshitoshi 1839-1892 (月岡 芳年) was a mokuhanga designer who is famous for his prints depicting violence and gore. His work is powerful, colourful, and one of the last vibrant moments of the ukiyo-e genre of woodblock prints. More information about Yoshitoshi's life and his copious amount of work can be found, here. Iga no Tsubone and the Ghost of Fujiwara Nakanari, from the series One Hundred Ghost Stories from China and Japan (1865) Annie Bissett - is an American mokuhanga printmaker and graphic designer based in Rhode Island, USA. Her work touches on politics, and beauty. Her interview with The Unfinished Print can be found, here. Annie's work can be found, here. Irene (2023) Onchi Kōshirō (1891-1955) - originally designing poetry and books Onchi became on of the most I important sōsaku hanga artists and promotor of the medium. His works are saught after today. More info, here. Portrait of a Poet: Hagiwara Sakutarō (1886-1942) Meiji Era Prints - The Meiji Era of Japan was between 1868-1912 CE. This was a period of immense modernization and industrialization in Japan, where the Japanese economy was booming. New ideas within mokuhanga was occurring as well. Perspective, colour, through new pigments (gamboge, certain yellows), the advancement of photography, and new topics and themes (war, industry, architecture), the Meiji era print designer and publisher had a lot of choice when producing their prints. Shigeru Kuriyama (1912-2010) - was a sōsaku hanga printmaker who worked with Onchi Kōshirō (1891-1956), and U'nichi Hiratsuka (1895-1997). He founded the print magazine Yukari and Kasuri. His prints were focused on folk arts. Fragrance of Lavender (1996) sōsaku-hanga - or creative prints, is a style of printmaking which is predominantly, although not exclusively, prints made by one person. It started in the early twentieth century in Japan, in the same period as the shin-hanga movement. The artist designs, carves, and prints their own works. The designs, especially in the early days, may seem rudimentary but the creation of self-made prints was a breakthrough for printmakers moving away from where only a select group of carvers, printers and publishers created woodblock prints. Your First Print: David Bull - this was the first DVD I ever purchased on how to make mokuhanga. This was in and around 2007. While I look back at that time thinking about why I didn't take it up as seriously as I do now, I sometime wonder, "Where would I be now in my Mokuhanga journey?" I realize that that is a redundant way of thinking. I am where I am now today, and to be happy with just that. You can still find this product on Dave's website. Takuji Hamanaka - printmaker based in Brookly, NY. Uses bokashi, a printmaking technique, predominately in his works. Unique and powerful. website Instagram Collapse (2016) April Vollmer - is an established artist who works predominantly in mokuhanga. Her book Japanese Woodblock Print Workshop is one of the most authoritative books on the subject and has influenced many mokuhanga artists. April's interview with The Unfinished Print can be found, here. Wood Like Matsumura - is an online and brick and mortar store, for woodblock printmaking, located in Nerima City, Tōkyō. Yoshida Hiroshi (1876-1950) - a watercolorist, oil painter, and woodblock printmaker. Is associated with the resurgence of the woodblock print in Japan, and in the West. It was his early relationship with Watanabe Shōzaburō, having his first seven prints printed by the Shōzaburō atelier. This experience made Hiroshi believe that he could hire his own carvers and printers and produce woodblock prints, which he did in 1925. Kiso River (1927) kabuki - is a traditional form of Japanese theatre which started in Kyoto on the banks of the Kamo River in the 17th Century. Today it is a multi million dollar business and is almost exclusively run, professionally, by The Shochiku Company. Kabuki, the word, is separated into three different sounds; ka - meaning to sing, bu - meaning to dance, and ki- meaning skill. There are various families in kabuki which generate actors, passing down tradition throughout the lineage. For more information please read this fine article from Nippon.com. There are many books written on the subject of kabuki, but in my opinion, to begin, one needs to read Leonard Pronko's work Theatre East & West, Kawatake Toshio's Kabuki, and Earl Ernst's The Kabuki Theatre. Online, please visit Kabuki21.com, who's site is unparalleled. On YouTube there is the new(ish) Kabuki In-Depth which is updated regularly on kabuki information and history, and is very well done. Georgia O'Keeffe (1887 – 1986) was a renowned American artist, known for her pioneering contributions to modern American art, particularly in the realm of abstract and contemporary art. Lake George Reflection (1921) bokashi - is a mokuhanga technique, where the pigment fades from a heavy colour to a softer, broad colour. Made famous by prints designed by Hokusai and Hiroshige, this technique is, for me, the most popular technique utilized by mokuhanga printmakers. There are various types: Ichimoji-bokashi or straight line graduation, used in the above mentioned Hiroshige and Hokusai prints. Ichimoji-mura-bokashi or straight line gradation with uneven edge. Ō-bokashi or wide gradation, Ate-nashi-bokashi or gradation without definition. Futa-iro-bokashi or two tone gradation, and ita-bokashi or softer-edge gradation, where the block is cut in a specific way to achieve this style of gradation. All of these styles of bokashi technique take practice and skill but are very much doable. Bertha Lum (1869-1954) - was born in Iowa. Having begun travelling to Japan in 1903, Bertha Lum noticed the decline of the Japanese woodblock print in Japan in the early 20th Century, deciding to take up the medium. Lum began making woodblock prints after learning in Japan from an unknown teacher during her first trip to Japan. Japan, Lafcadio Hearn (1850-1904), and China influenced Bertha Lum's prints. Lum's work focused on these themes through an American lens. Winter (1909) Frances Gearhart (1869-1958) - Born in Illinois, Gearhart was a self-taught artist who spent most of her life in California. Originally a watercolorist, Frances Gearhart began experimenting with Japanese woodblock and linoleum in and around 1913. The themes of her work are predominately landscapes of the Pacific Coast and other areas of California. Her work is associated with the Arts and Crafts movement in California. A fine article on Frances Gearhart's life can be found, here. In The Sun (1930) Fujio Yoshida (1887-1997) - the wife of Hiroshi Yoshida and the mother of Tōshi Yoshida (1911-1995) and Hodaka Yoshida (1926-1995). Fujio was so much more than a mother and wife. She had a long and storied career as a painter and printmaker. Fujio's work used her travels and personal experiences to make her work. Subjects such as Japan during The Pacific War, abstraction, portraits, landscapes, still life, and nature were some of her themes. Her painting mediums were watercolour and oil. Her print work was designed by her and carved by Fujio. Roses (1925) TinEye - is an image search and recognition company. They use technology which allows the user to search an image creating a reverse image match. More information can be found, here. The Metropolitan Museum of Art - is the largest art museum in North and South America. It began to be assembled by John Jay (1817-1894) in the late 19th century. Incorporated in 1870, the museum has collected many essential pieces, such as the works of Henri Matisse (1869-1954) and Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919). For more information about the MET, you can find it here. Waseda University - is a private research university located in Tōkyō, Japan. It was established in 1882. Waseda has one of the largest woodblock print databases in the world, and are free to use. More information can be found, here. Ristumeikan - is a university founded in 1869, and located in Kyoto and Ōsaka. Like Waseda it holds one of the largest collection of Japanese woodblock prints. You can search their database, here. Mike Lyon - is an American artist. His medium has been varied throughout his career such as "square tiles," or "pixels," through to making mokuhanga, monoprinting, and machine-assisted etching, drawing and mezzotint. Mike Lyon also has a large woodblock print collection which he has curated for the public, here. More information about his work can be found, here. Linda In Black (2019) Frick Reference Library - is a reference library in the Frick Museum in New York City. The museum was once the mansion of wealthy American industrialist Henry Clay Frick (1849-1919). The museum houses some of the finest pieces of sculpture, paintings, and art in the United States. There is also the public Frick Reference Library located on 10E 71st Street in New York City. More information can be found, here. Hokusai: Inspiration and Influence - was an exhibition held from March 26 - July 16, 2023 at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston. More information can be found, here. Japanese Art Society of America (JASA) - Starting in 1973 by a small group of collectors of ukiyo-e in New York City, JASA has expanded to cover many Japanese arts. Their magazine Impressions is a biannual magazine that discusses in a scholarly way various Japanese arts. More information can be found, here. Utagawa Hiroshige (1797-1858) - born in Edo, Hiroshige is famous for his landscape series of that burgeoning city. The most famous series being, One Hundred Famous Views of Edo (1856-1859), and the landcape series, Fifty-Three Stations of the Tōkaidō (1833-1834). His work highlights bokashi, and bright colours. More info about his work can be found, here. Below is, Coastal Landscape In Moonlight (1857) Kingfisher and Iris Scholten Japanese Art - is a mokuhanga-focused art gallery in midtown Manhattan. René Scholten, an avid collector of the Japanese print, founded it. You can find more info here. Katherine Martin is the managing director of Scholten Japanese Art. Katherine has written extensively for the gallery and conducted lectures about Japanese prints. Her interview with The Unfinished Print can be found, here. International Mokuhanga Conference - is a bi-yearly conference dedicated to mokuhanga which started in 2011 by the International Mokuhanga Association. Each conference is themed. The latest conference was in 2021, delayed a year because of the pandemic. More information can be found, here. Cameron Bailey - is a mokuhanga woodblock printmaker based in Queens, New York. His work is predominantly reduction woodblock. Camerons work has shown around the world. You can listen to one of his earliest interviews on The Unfinished Print, here. His work can be found, here. Reflection (2020) sumo - while sumo wrestling has been known to Western audiences for quite some time, it is only in the past several years that the Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK) has created content for Western audiences to watch tournaments and engage with wrestlers through videos, such as YouTube. Sumo prints were being produced in the Edo Period (1603-1868), with the Kastukawa school of artists beginning to create prints in the vein of actor prints of the day (yakusha-e). Utagawa Kunisada (1786-1865) A portrait of Inoyama Moriemon (1846) Acolytes of The Baren - is the Facebook group dedicated to Dave Bull and Mokuhankan. It can be found, here. Emerging Hanga - is a Facebook group dedicated to new mokuhanga, and sharing information. It can be found, here. Brush & Baren - is a Facebook group dedicated to sharing the history of mokuhanga of the late 19th and early 20th Century. It can be found, here. Friends of Baren Forum - is a Facebook group dedicated to those interested in mokuhanga and woodblock printing in general. it can be found, here. © Popular Wheat Productions opening and closing musical credit - Flowers & Fire by BLITZ. From the album Second Empire Justice (1983), first released on Future Records. logo designed and produced by Douglas Batchelor and André Zadorozny Disclaimer: Please do not reproduce or use anything from this podcast without shooting me an email and getting my express written or verbal consent. I'm friendly :) Слава Українi If you find any issue with something in the show notes please let me know. ***The opinions expressed by guests in The Unfinished Print podcast are not necessarily those of André Zadorozny and of Popular Wheat Productions.***
In The Sun and the Star, co-authors Rick Riordan and Mark Oshiro present an action-packed story to grip fans of Percy Jackson and all their favorite demigods—and monsters. At its heart is a story of first love, with all its excitement and anguish, and exceptional courage. As Rick Riordan shares, “It was really important to me that writing a book entirely from the perspective of two queer characters, I collaborated with a great queer author who could bring perspective, authenticity, and a different set of writing strengths to the project. Mark Oshiro is someone whose writing I greatly admire, and who also knows the Percy Jackson world intimately. MORE ABOUT THE SUN AND THE STAR: As the son of Hades, Nico di Angelo has been through so much, from the premature deaths of his mother and sister to losing his friend Jason during the trials of Apollo—and, of course, being outed. But there is a ray of sunshine—literally—in his life: Will Solace, the stunningly beautiful son of Apollo, who happens to be his boyfriend. With his radiant energy, Will melted through the iciness to reveal that Nico actually had a heart. They've been a couple for nearly a year and have not only come to believe but proven, again and again, that together they can overcome any obstacle or foe. For Nico, epic battles are normal. Now, he's about to face a formidable one—and because he adores Will, he'd rather face it alone.
In The Sun and the Star, co-authors Rick Riordan and Mark Oshiro present an action-packed story to grip fans of Percy Jackson and all their favorite demigods—and monsters. At its heart is a story of first love, with all its excitement and anguish, and exceptional courage. As Rick Riordan shares, “It was really important to me that writing a book entirely from the perspective of two queer characters, I collaborated with a great queer author who could bring perspective, authenticity, and a different set of writing strengths to the project. Mark Oshiro is someone whose writing I greatly admire, and who also knows the Percy Jackson world intimately. MORE ABOUT THE SUN AND THE STAR: As the son of Hades, Nico di Angelo has been through so much, from the premature deaths of his mother and sister to losing his friend Jason during the trials of Apollo—and, of course, being outed. But there is a ray of sunshine—literally—in his life: Will Solace, the stunningly beautiful son of Apollo, who happens to be his boyfriend. With his radiant energy, Will melted through the iciness to reveal that Nico actually had a heart. They've been a couple for nearly a year and have not only come to believe but proven, again and again, that together they can overcome any obstacle or foe. For Nico, epic battles are normal. Now, he's about to face a formidable one—and because he adores Will, he'd rather face it alone.
MUSIC: Farewell by Serge Quadrado, Freezing & In The Sun by Crowander, and Dan33 by Junior85 (all songs used courtesy of the Free Music Archive). Theme song is Grannen's Bastu by Varelse.Every tale has a thousand versions. This is one.
On Don't Listen To Me episode 94: “20XX” The crew returns to discuss the new year, give their “20XX” predictions and plenty more..With music by DJNoAnswer, enjoy! Song played during break: In The Sun by French Montana Ft. Curren$y
Dancin' In The Sun 2021 - The Next Chapter !!! Some new deep & great Songs for every Open Air Beach House Party ....
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On this episode Vadis and I were joined by producer and songwriter to the future star DJ Ram. We explored his work, including new single "In The Sun", Reggaeton, the connection between his art and his locale. And the wild world of contemporary social media. If you're in a jam, get ready to be lifted up by DJ Ram. In The Gram with DJ Ram. As always leave reviews, get the word about the podcast, and rate us however many stars you think we deserve. Also check us out on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/EDMObscura) for a bonus episode each & every week until Hypa dies or gets busy at work or something.
Gracias al single de adelanto del Nuevo álbum de She & Him, escuchamos otras canciones interpretadas por la encantadora Zooey Deschanel: su versión del Sugar Town de Nancy Sinatra, la versión que hacen She and Him del clásico de los Smiths: Please, please, please, Let Me Get What i Want, y por supuesto su flamante nuevo single: In The Sun. Una canción del álbum de debut de Northern Portrait, otro irresistible single de Best Coast son algunas novedades del programa.
Good Morning, This is Louise. Episode 76 - the needle is a claim to forgivenessfeaturing music by Fahmi Mursyid, Kazuma Kubota, Bhed, Jú Ca, Kazumichi Komatsu, IN THE SUN, Metoronori, Myriam Bleau, Shuta Hiraki, Enitokwa, and Jacek Doroszenko with ambient field recordings by Rambalac also featuring the voice of Louise Bourgeois from a beautiful documentary called "Chère Louise. Portrait du sculpteur Louise Bourgeois" by Brigitte Cornand programmed and produced by @small_ernst Thank you for listening Namo Guan Shi Yin Pusa
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PLEASE SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/cometowhereimfromStream of Download the podcast on: iTunes, Google, Spotify, TuneIn, Stitcher, Simplecast and Pocket Casts, please rate us and subscribe.
PLEASE SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/cometowhereimfromStream of Download the podcast on: iTunes, Google, Spotify, TuneIn, Stitcher, Simplecast and Pocket Casts, please rate us and subscribe.
PLEASE SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/cometowhereimfromStream of Download the podcast on: iTunes, Google, Spotify, TuneIn, Stitcher, Simplecast and Pocket Casts, please rate us and subscribe.
PLEASE SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/cometowhereimfromStream of Download the podcast on: iTunes, Google, Spotify, TuneIn, Stitcher, Simplecast and Pocket Casts, please rate us and subscribe.
PLEASE SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/cometowhereimfromStream of Download the podcast on: iTunes, Google, Spotify, TuneIn, Stitcher, Simplecast and Pocket Casts, please rate us and subscribe.
PLEASE SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/cometowhereimfromStream of Download the podcast on: iTunes, Google, Spotify, TuneIn, Stitcher, Simplecast and Pocket Casts, please rate us and subscribe.
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Join us for #IndieMusicLIVE! 123 - Get the latest in #IndieMusic news and listen to the best #IndieMusicians we have found in the past week! Featured Artist: Blood of Angels Panel Guest: PThe Politician Music: Blood of Angels - TBA 9fm - "Allow Me" Lydmusik - "Alone In The Dark" Purkinje - "In The Sun" Sarah Maxwell - "Flawed" Promote your music NOW: http://www.indiemusicplus.ecwid.com/ Hosted by JoeJoeKeys & David Werba Produced by Robert Hix of Hixvideo Submit your music for consideration at http://www.indiemusicplus.com/
The babes are in the mood for romance – again! In The Sun is Also a Star by Nicola Yoon, two high school seniors cross paths and we are here for it. A hopeless romantic poet plus a science and math nerd equals something exciting. Join us as we question the science of love, fate, […]
We opened with "In The Sun" by Rucka Rucka Ali, talked about a Twitter troll, next week's big Halloween show, listened to the new "Ryder Reacts To Urban Dictionary", and a new Chetreo song. Sleepy Lucas read his newest bedtime story, Driz sang "So Excited" by Fat Joe, and we performed a new "Too Many Rapes". Rob did Drizzlenews and Slim did Celebrity News and Gossip. We interviewed Comedian James Frey, Comedian Doug Mergenthal, Mike, Levi, and Jed from The Blackout & Shout Podcast, and Phone Sex Operator and Podcaster Sweetly Sensual Sara. It was a great show!
After a brief hiatus (being out of town), Notation brings you some October Drum & Bass goodness for your soul. TRACKLIST: 1. Brighton Love – Changing Faces, Ero Drummer, M.Bass ft. GRNA – Celcius Recordings 2. In The Sun – Fokuz, Satl – Fokuz Recordings 3. Roller Express – Slang Banger – Program 4. Who … Continue reading
Christina and Brett talk about the new desktop client for Quip, the indelible mark made by Clueless on its 20th Anniversary, the agelessness of Paul Rudd, and the marathon worth of movies Brett recently watched. Show Notes and Links Quip desktop app (direct download link) Joseph Arthur Lou Michael Stipe w/ Coldplay "In The Sun" Joseph Arthur: Creation Or A Stain off of Come To Where I'm From Trainwreck Slow West It Follows It Follows Movie Poster #9 - Internet Movie Poster Awards Gallery Clueless What We Did on Our Holiday 20,000 Days on Earth Eastbound & Down Wayward Pines Homework for next week: Ex Machina. Listen to an interview with the writer/director on Electric Shadow.
The Risky slides by with this weeks super heavy podcast. Featuring beats from Delta Heavy, Spectrasoul, dBridge, Fresh, SPY, Culture Shock & Stray. Also, a taste of whats to come on Innovations new In The Sun album! SHOW 146: THE RISKY Presents Future Sounds (#146) Dr Dub – Raise Your Hands Mattix & Futile – Rising Up Delta Heavy – Abort (Headroom EP) (Viper) Savage Rehab - Ninja Aaaassin (V Records) Fresh – Gold Dust (Vocal Mix) (Data) Camo & Krooked – Can’t Get Enough (Breakbeat Kaos) WHAT THE F**K IS THAT TUNE COMPETITION Culture Shock – Surprise (RAM Records) SPY – Favela (Metalheadz) Stray – Timbre VIP (Critical) Data & Dynamic – Bleak GUEST MIX: Innovation In The Sun: Drum&Bass Anthems album megamix FROM THE VAULTS Usual Suspects – Killa Bees (Renegade Hardware) FOLLOW THE RISKY ON TWITTER... www.twitter.com/therisky DRUM&BASSARENA PODCASTS podcasts@breakbeat.co.uk for suggestions and comments shoutouts@breakbeat.co.uk for shoutouts and track requests. competition@breakbeat.co.uk for all competition entries
1. M.I.A. – “Born Free” (High Contrast Remix) 2. HEALTH – “USA Boys” 3. RATATAT – “Neckbrace” 4. LCD Soundsystem – “Drunk Girls” 5. Free Energy – “Bang Pop” 6. Local Natives – “Wide Eyes” 7. She & Him – “In The Sun” 8. The Soft Pack – “Mexico” 9. Animal Collective – “What Would … Continue reading PMACAST No.029 – SUMMER PLAYLIST 2010
The modern newspaper is not as old as you think. Until the early nineteenth century, they were thin and expensive. It was only with the advent of the penny press circa 1830 that the truly mass broadsheet was born. Yet selling a paper for a cent was not a straight-forward business proposition. In order to turn a profit, you needed to sell a lot of copy. You won’t be surprised to learn that the best way to move papers was to give the people what they wanted–scandal, outrage, marvels, miracles and outright inventions. In The Sun and the Moon. The Remarkable True Account of Hoaxers, Showmen, Dueling Journalists, and Lunar Man-Bats in Nineteenth-Century New York (Basic Books, 2008) shows how the early masters of the trade invented the modern paper by telling the public that the moon was inhabited by the recognizable ancestors of “Bat Boy.” Goodman marches a gallery of rogues across the book’s pages–an astronomer with an over-active imagination, an editor with an invented past, a horde of street urchins hawking papers and eating oysters. P.T. Barnum and Edger Allan Poe make appearances! This is a terrifically entertaining book, popular history at its best. And, of course, it’s ALL TRUE! Now put down The Weekly World News and go buy The Sun and the Moon! Please become a fan of “New Books in History” on Facebook if you haven’t already. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The modern newspaper is not as old as you think. Until the early nineteenth century, they were thin and expensive. It was only with the advent of the penny press circa 1830 that the truly mass broadsheet was born. Yet selling a paper for a cent was not a straight-forward business proposition. In order to turn a profit, you needed to sell a lot of copy. You won’t be surprised to learn that the best way to move papers was to give the people what they wanted–scandal, outrage, marvels, miracles and outright inventions. In The Sun and the Moon. The Remarkable True Account of Hoaxers, Showmen, Dueling Journalists, and Lunar Man-Bats in Nineteenth-Century New York (Basic Books, 2008) shows how the early masters of the trade invented the modern paper by telling the public that the moon was inhabited by the recognizable ancestors of “Bat Boy.” Goodman marches a gallery of rogues across the book’s pages–an astronomer with an over-active imagination, an editor with an invented past, a horde of street urchins hawking papers and eating oysters. P.T. Barnum and Edger Allan Poe make appearances! This is a terrifically entertaining book, popular history at its best. And, of course, it’s ALL TRUE! Now put down The Weekly World News and go buy The Sun and the Moon! Please become a fan of “New Books in History” on Facebook if you haven’t already. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The modern newspaper is not as old as you think. Until the early nineteenth century, they were thin and expensive. It was only with the advent of the penny press circa 1830 that the truly mass broadsheet was born. Yet selling a paper for a cent was not a straight-forward business proposition. In order to turn a profit, you needed to sell a lot of copy. You won’t be surprised to learn that the best way to move papers was to give the people what they wanted–scandal, outrage, marvels, miracles and outright inventions. In The Sun and the Moon. The Remarkable True Account of Hoaxers, Showmen, Dueling Journalists, and Lunar Man-Bats in Nineteenth-Century New York (Basic Books, 2008) shows how the early masters of the trade invented the modern paper by telling the public that the moon was inhabited by the recognizable ancestors of “Bat Boy.” Goodman marches a gallery of rogues across the book’s pages–an astronomer with an over-active imagination, an editor with an invented past, a horde of street urchins hawking papers and eating oysters. P.T. Barnum and Edger Allan Poe make appearances! This is a terrifically entertaining book, popular history at its best. And, of course, it’s ALL TRUE! Now put down The Weekly World News and go buy The Sun and the Moon! Please become a fan of “New Books in History” on Facebook if you haven’t already. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The modern newspaper is not as old as you think. Until the early nineteenth century, they were thin and expensive. It was only with the advent of the penny press circa 1830 that the truly mass broadsheet was born. Yet selling a paper for a cent was not a straight-forward business proposition. In order to turn a profit, you needed to sell a lot of copy. You won’t be surprised to learn that the best way to move papers was to give the people what they wanted–scandal, outrage, marvels, miracles and outright inventions. In The Sun and the Moon. The Remarkable True Account of Hoaxers, Showmen, Dueling Journalists, and Lunar Man-Bats in Nineteenth-Century New York (Basic Books, 2008) shows how the early masters of the trade invented the modern paper by telling the public that the moon was inhabited by the recognizable ancestors of “Bat Boy.” Goodman marches a gallery of rogues across the book’s pages–an astronomer with an over-active imagination, an editor with an invented past, a horde of street urchins hawking papers and eating oysters. P.T. Barnum and Edger Allan Poe make appearances! This is a terrifically entertaining book, popular history at its best. And, of course, it’s ALL TRUE! Now put down The Weekly World News and go buy The Sun and the Moon! Please become a fan of “New Books in History” on Facebook if you haven’t already. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices