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Album: Subtract Wife's illness, plagiarism court case and death of music entrepreneur friend Jamal Edwards all came to bear on Sheeran's sixth studio album, made with the National's Aaron Dessner. The fifth and final entry in his series of albums titled with mathematical symbols, Sheeran wrote and recorded its 14 tracks with Aaron Dessner, a member of US alt-rock band the National who also had a major creative role in Taylor Swift's Folklore and Evermore. It is billed as a return to traditional singer-songwriter performance, after the polished pop of much of Sheeran's catalogue; a press release promises songs ranging from “pared back, folk-leaning textures to bolder, full-band/orchestral arrangements”. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ed Sheeran, el cantautor ingles, lanzará un nuevo álbum de estudio titulado Subtract, en línea con sus otros títulos matemáticos. El anuncio llegó a través de redes sociales. Su inspiración viene de las complejas situaciones que vivió el artista recientemente. Primero, su esposa embarazada fue diagnosticada con un tumor que no puede ser tratado hasta después del parto. Además, Jamal Edwards, uno de sus mejores amigos y el que ayudó a lanzar su carrera musical, falleció el pasado 20 de febrero debido al uso de substancias tóxicas.
Ed Sheeran is remembering his friend.On Thursday, the singer debuted a new song in tribute to the late SBTV founder Jamal Edwards, who died on Feb. 20 last year at age 31.In a video performance with F64 for SBTV, the artist raps about his friendship with the music entrepreneur who helped launch Sheeran's career.“Yo Jam, this is a letter to you, it's been a while but it's been hard for me to get in the booth," Sheeran raps.“Since we last spoke I've become a father-of-two trying to live life with a smile but that's been harder to do," he continues. “Because all I want to do is talk about you, but these tears won't let me talk about you. We should have known that we'd be lost without you.”The video, in which Sheeran is spotlit and surrounded by candles, was filmed overnight at an empty Stamford Bridge stadium, the home of Chelsea FC, the team Edwards supported his whole life.Edwards' mother, Brenda Edwards, star of "Loose Women", talked about the song on Good Morning Britain this week.“Ed sent me the final edit two days ago and I've kind of been in and out of crying ever since,” she said.“When Jamal passed he was literally at my house with me and Tanisha for a whole week just looking after us,” she added of how Sheeran was there for her and her daughter.source: Ed Sheeran Performs Tribute To Late Friend And SBTV Founder Jamal Edwards (msn.com)Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/analytic-dreamz-notorious-mass-effect/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
In the finale of Season 2, Percelle Ascott joins Yianni Charalambous to break down the hustle of the acting business, building the Wall of Entertainment brick by brick and the fast-paced world of content creation. Percelle gets deep and personal about his relationship with SBTV's Jamal Edwards and much more!
Kendrick Lamar, Nas, Mary J Blige, Mac Miller, Pusha T, and the list goes on; it's hard to find a well-respected name within the industry that Lily Mercer hasn't interviewed or spoken with in some capacity. And now Lily can boast that she has spoken with Lawrie Wilson through DiSCOVERY Rap. What a journey.Aside from the superstars and flashing lights, as is normally the case, a lot has gone on behind the scenes in Lily's personal and professional life, and it is here that she finally expresses all of the trauma, and of course triumph.As an early member of the SBTV powerhouse, Lily takes time to discuss the late, great Jamal Edwards' impact on her career and countless others'. A truly amazing man and it was special to gain a unique insight into just how dedicated, hard-working and progressive he was. Rest in eternal peace.To close, host, Lawrie Wilson, expresses that this is perhaps his favourite ever interview, which is saying something if you take a look at the substantial catalogue we have already built up. Strong praise, but what do you think? Please comment below!- DiSCOVERY's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/discovery_rapp/?hl=en- Lily's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lilymercer/?hl=en- Host's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lawriewilson/?hl=enThanks - DiSCOVERY
Today on The Day After, (06:06) Headlines: Putin orders a partial mobilisation, Downing Street say Putin's actions show his war on Ukraine is failing (09:24) What You Sayin? (34:24) Headlines: Trump is getting sued for fraud, £200k reward to find Olivia Pratt-Korbel's killer (40:10) Word On Road: Brad Pitt launches genderless skincare line “Le Domaine”, Tiffany Haddish says she's jobless due to child sex allegations, Dami Hope addresses not signing any deals since love island, Ed Sheeran says he owes his career to Jamal Edwards (01:02:10) The People's Journal: (01:10:37) Woke Or Joke: (01:35:26) Headlines: 2 police officers found guilty of sharing inappropriate messages in whatsapp group, Sweet shops to undergo strict rules due to claims of money laundering (01:38:49) Done Out 'Ere: (01:42:17) Outro --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thedayaftertnb/message
Welcome back to Don't Alert the Stans! The Season 8 finale is here! It's just Eden and Sope as Nic is in Madrid getting some well-deserved rest. Kicking things off is a review of Cleo Sol's headline show at KOKO. The boys share their individual experiences of the concert and what it meant to hear particular songs in a live setting. They also reflect on Cleo Sol's decade-long journey in music, and how she's found herself at this watershed moment in her career (00:04:02). The news agenda begins with Jamal Edwards', whose mother Brenda released an official statement confirming the cause behind his premature death in February was due in part to the use of recreational drugs (01:04:00). Next up is Lil Nas X, who has taken The BET Awards to task on social media and via an impending diss track, after it was announced that he received zero nominations for the upcoming ceremony later this month (01:22:19). Closing off the episode and the season as a whole is Rolling Stone Magazine, who published their list of what they believe are the 200 greatest Hip-Hop albums of all time, which of course resulted in many a contentious debate online (01:40:08). Not one to miss! Sope's Listens For The Week: Khruangbin - Mordechai Roy Ayers - Running Away RAMP - Come Into Knowledge Patrice Rushen - The Hump Leroy Burgess - Heartbreaker (Shep Pettibone 12” Mix) Donna Mcghee - Make It Last Forever Nic's Listens For The Week: N/A Eden's Listens For The Week: Siergio - BEFORE ITS TOO LATE 070 Shake - You Can't Kill Me Ravyn Lenae - Hypnos Raheaven - THROAT GAME STUPID! Janine - Loving Me Remember to RATE, REVIEW AND SUBSCRIBE! Enjoy! ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Intro Music by: @Jmzofficial ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Get involved! Don't forget to tweet us your thoughts on the episode at #DATSPOD! Rate and review us on Apple Music, Spotify and Anchor Follow us on: Twitter - @datspod Instagram - @datspod Anchor – @datspodcast Hashtag - #DATSPOD --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/datspodcast/message
On this weeks episode of The Express Truth, the duo discuss Lamar Jackson, better known by his stage name Hypo, who was found with s**b wounds in Woodford Green, east London, In the early hours of Friday. Then next the mother of Jamal Edwards Brenda Edwards has said her son died from cardiac arrhythmia after he took recreational drugs. Finally Children were forced to hide under their desks when a group allegedly carrying a knife ran onto the grounds of the North Birmingham academy.
A good honest conversation never hurt anyone, Fols Forever, Mr Vans, Chrissy & Haich are back for another week of podcasting. For episode 346 they're joined by fellow podcaster Manny (The Classic Manny show) to discuss all the weeks trending topics!!! On the agenda….. - Bank holiday weekend recap + Vans doing slow motion videos - Queens honours list & black people accepting awards from the Empire - Amber Heard & Johnny Depp case reaction - Age gaps in dating, Michael B Jordan ‘loses' Lori Harvey - Nick Cannon still spreading his seed - Jamal Edwards cause of death revealed - R.I.P Hypo - Manny's pod Lil Nas X BET snub + more - NEW MUSIC - VORY ALBUM + SINGLES - Supporting your favourite creatives + them offering more Please make sure you like, comment & SUBSCRIBE to the Youtube channel - https://youtube.com/channel/UCrpoaVInsRWJUGGHlehMpaw Twitter/Instagram - @offthecuffpod Fols - @folsforever Vans - @mrvans7 Chrissy - @ceecee_noir Manny - @theclassicmanny / @theeclassicman
If you were and up and coming rapper in the noughties, getting seen on platforms like Channel U was the goal! Then it was all about being seen on the biggest YouTube channels - and one of the biggest channels back then (and now) was SBTV, founded by the late, great Jamal Edwards.Jamal wasn't the only one giving MC's a platform to showcase their skills in the noughties, we had people like our guest, one of the pioneers of the Grime movement, Jammer, creating space for MC's to showcase their clashing skills on his platform Lord of The Mics!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
On performing at Glastonbury with Snoop Dog, being the subject of racism at the Venice Biennale, and remembering music entrepreneur, DJ and SBTV founder, Jamal Edwards. Rapper and television presenter Tinie goes Out to Lunch with Jay Rayner. Tinie and Jay share a delicious meal courtesy of the nose-to-tail Italian-inspired diner Manteca in Shoreditch, London: https://www.mantecarestaurant.co.uk/ Official show merch: https://kontraband.shop/collections/out-to-lunch Out To Lunch is a Somethin' Else and Jay Rayner Production with Sony Music Entertainment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Jessie J is a singer and songwriter who has been singing professionally since she was 11 years old. In 2010 she shot to fame with the release of her first single, Do It Like A Dude. She has since sold millions of records, performed at the closing ceremony of the London Olympics, and been a judge on the talent shows The Voice and The Voice Kids. This episode with Jessie is a special conversation. She was candid and open about the highs and lows throughout her life, and shared with me some things that she has never voiced before. From her early childhood memories, to the fame and success of her music, to health issues and grief, Jessie spoke with such honesty and tenderness. But she also talks about how she has enabled herself to break open and embrace the grief that she has stored up and hidden away. Jessie is someone who has always come out fighting, and here she goes into how that's been possible in a way she never has before. We learn about how to stay grounded as you become famous, especially in the dizzying swirl of Los Angeles. I want to thank Jessie for her honesty and for taking the time to record this episode with me, it will certainly change how you think about a lot of things in life. Topics: My childhood and health problems Growth in moments of sadness and pain Finding out about your fertility problems Dealing with everything hitting you at once What would you say to your old self? Not knowing who I was Were record labels defining who you were? Finding the right team for you Why did you disappear? How did the pandemic impact you? Jamal Edwards passing Your miscarriage Your bodyguard's passing Do you let people in? Love and relationships What's your next chapter? Our last guest's question Jessie J: https://twitter.com/jessiej https://www.instagram.com/jessiej Watch the episodes on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheDiaryOfACEO/videos Follow us on Telegram: https://t.me/diaryofaceo Sponsors: Huel - https://my.huel.com/Steven Myenergi - https://bit.ly/3oeWGnl
We were super excited to have https://www.instagram.com/iamremiray/ (@iamremiray) join us for today's episode but she's not feeling well and won't be joining today. BUT The Aunties boy is it going to be one hell of an episode. Topics: -Elon Musk buying Twitter for $44bn. What do you guys think the app is going to become? -Megan thee Stallion talking about the Tory Lanez shooting incident in an interview with Gayle King. -Veteran DJ Tim Westwood has been accused of sexual misconduct -Brenda Edwards, mother of Jamal Edwards returned to Loose Women and talked about her last moments with Jamal. Don't forget to follow The Aunties https://www.instagram.com/thebritishblacklist/ (@thebritishblacklist) https://www.instagram.com/farrforce/ (@farrforce) https://www.instagram.com/nanaevans.love/ (@nanaevans.love) https://www.instagram.com/sadesalami/ (@sadesalami)
On this week's Loose Change we give our views on the devastating eruption of war in Europe as Russia invades Ukraine. We talk about the tragic loss of Jamal Edwards, and the cultural impact and legacy he has left behind. We also talk about how we would spend our lottery winnings. Lot's covered in this one, we hope you enjoy... Follow us: Instagram: @loosechangepod Twitter: @loosechng
5 Minutes of Gibberish: - International Women's Day (8th March 2022) - The Cost of Living Is Getting Mad - Inflation Has Arrived! - Building Credit So We Can Make It Inna Life, Word to FaceInTheNews We wanted to pay homage to the one of the most influential creatives of our time, Jamal Edwards. Discussing legacy, purpose & the time we have on earth. Our condolences go out his family and close friends. Fly High, King - Rest In Eternal Peace.
This week's guest is none other than Steven Bartlett: a millionaire by age 23, a bestselling author, acclaimed host of The Diary Of A CEO podcast, and the youngest ever Dragon on Dragons' Den at just 29. Steven Bartlett is undoubtedly one of the most recognised and successful personalities in the media and entrepreneurial space right now so it was an honour to speak with him. Steven and I sat down for an intimate fireside chat at the Dubai Opera House, where we spoke about his upbringing, his first entrepreneurial endeavours, launching Social Chain, the importance of living your truth – and so much more. This raw and honest conversation truly moved me, and I know it will impact you too. Big thank you to Motivate Media Group and Aldar Properties for the opportunity to interview one of this generation's greatest thinkers. Notes [03:50] The Diary Of A CEO [06:38] The start of Social Chain [08:49] Steven's romantic relationships [12:18] Steven's upbringing [17:17] Steven's experience at school [22:00] Steven's first entrepreneurial experience [25:40] Wallpark: how it began [31:15] Growing Social Chain [34:15] Steven and Dom's partnership [39:26] The importance of mental health and living your truth [43:33] What the late Jamal Edwards meant to Steven [47:40] Steven's thoughts on Dubai [50:20] Thoughts on Elon Musk and Web 3.0 Show Sponsors: Smartkas: Providing food security as a service Najahi Events: The UAE's leading event promotor Aldar Properies: One of the UAE's leading property developers Socials: Spencer Lodge https://www.instagram.com/spencer.lodge/?hl=en https://www.linkedin.com/in/spencerlodge/ https://www.youtube.com/c/SpencerLodgeTV Steven Bartlett https://www.instagram.com/steven/?hl=en https://www.linkedin.com/in/stevenbartlett-123/ https://twitter.com/SteveBartlettSC https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGq-a57w-aPwyi3pW7XLiHw
The Cornershop Chronicles are back with Hanif, Martin 2Smoove and the The Big Brown Mouth Arun. It's been a while so they're back with a new format to kick it all off with 5 minutes on each topic that's pulled at random. TOPICS *KANYE* (10:46) *AP DHILLON* (16:04) - his tour and how Hanif dealt with being the promoter when dates changed because of storms causing damaging to the O2 *SUPER BOWL* (25:10) - The half time Show *TOUR DJ* (33:10) - Martin's stories from his tour alongside Romesh Ranganathan *VALENTINES DAY* (38:24) *PUTIN AND UKRAINE* (46:18) *JAMAL EDWARDS* of *SBTV* (52:39) *STORM EUNICE* (59:25) - Why can't England can never handle any extreme weather
This week the boys sit down for their 69th episode to talk about the recent loss of Jamal Edwards, his legacy, the importance of legacy, and more. Follow on Spotify and Subscribe on Apple Podcasts. Share your thoughts on this episode or any of the other episodes in the catalog by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts as your feedback is highly appreciated. Please be sure to subscribe to the Youtube channel- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfMwC0J2ZDBeJIuU8K2mxNg/videos Hosts: Jermaine - https://www.instagram.com/maine_thoughts/ Ben - https://www.instagram.com/benacquaah_/ Thinking Out Loud (Socials) Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/thinkingoutloudpod_/ Tiktok - https://vm.tiktok.com/ZM8b9HJyx/
Welcome back to another episode of Clued Up! This week we chat about Dave's shows at the O2 after Storm Eunice, our beef with Uber Eats, the 2022 Wireless line up, the latest on Kanye, the Euphoria finale and more plus our picks for #PonDaPlaylist. In this episode we also pay our respects to the late trailblazer Jamal Edwards.
with the restrictions now lifted, we decided to discuss what going back into the office has been like for us and whether we even wanted to go back in. we also discuss the passing of jamal edwards and the legacy that he left behind, from putting people on to sowing seeds of kindness! our sincere condolences once again to his family & loved ones. he was truly one of a kind!
This week Scarz & Eli are joined by rapper/producer AB Lawrence. They discuss the sudden passing of Jamal Edwards, Kanye West Jeen-Yuhs documentary and being critical about music. Follow Us on Instagram - @GM5MPodcast To Listen & Subscribe to the Podcast on any platform - https://linktr.ee/GM5M
On this week's episode of Life and Lessons, I talk about getting stranded at the O2 after Dave's gig, about gratitude, and about the death of Jamal Edwards. --Sean SpoonerTwitter: https://twitter.com/spoonerseanInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/spoonersean/Life and Lessons PodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7LF1Hao4i4CYeNNYiFaoix?si=9af4716caa534842.Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/life-and-lessons-by-sean-spooner/id1490711078 See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
I'm not sure exactly where I was when I heard Skibadee Mcing, for the first time but I'm quite sure it was on the school bus, sat next to my mate, Graham, who lent me a copy, which I copied, of a DJ Brockie set; from a One Nation tape-pack. What I do know is, that it was on that tape, that I first heard Skibba and it stayed in my Walkman, for a very long time. I still have it somewhere and can still recite many of the MC's lyrics on it. We all have a that tape – I've got two, this is the other one.The year was 1998, I would've been about 14. The tape itself, was definitely from 98. That was the year that another legendary UK MC passed away, Stevie Hyper D. His name, along with ‘R I P' was chanted a lot throughout that tape and a lot of the other DJ sets that were in that same tape-pack. It was pertinent, because from my point of view, and a lot of others, Skibadee went on take Stevie Hyper D's crown, as the King of Drum and Bass MC's and all-round UK MC legend.For those that don't know what, or who I'm talking about, that's ok, I'll try and explain but I'm not quite sure where to start. Perhaps yesterday (Sunday, 28.2.22) I saw online, whilst sat watching that new Kanye West documentary on Netflix, that Skibadee had passed away. I felt that pang in my chest and belly, took in a short breath and paused the telly. This, a week after another UK music stalwart (albeit, from a younger generation) Jamal Edwards, had also passed away.This morning, I felt compelled to put some thoughts down, not quite sure why but I hope I'll figure that out as this goes on. It will probably be a bit all over the place, as I'm going to try and link it to something else that I've been thinking about, which is something along the lines of; posting-things-on-social-media-as-a-form-of-expression- and-when-is-it-genuine? But I'll deal with that, in a second post, I've got too much to say about Skibba and it's probably more interesting.But back to Skibba and that DJ Brockie tape. If you grew up in the 90's, were from the UK, London or the surrounding counties and were tuned in to underground dance-music, chances are, you'd know about jungle / drum ‘n bass. Maybe you went to the raves, maybe like me, you had a mate and an older brother, who played you a tape, or a record, maybe you heard it blasting out of a souped-up Ford Escort XR3i, or maybe you were playing with the radio dial one day and you picked up one of the numerous pirate-stations that were broadcasting off London rooftops. And if you were nerdy, like I was and still am, you'd get obsessed and chances are you'd know that line of lineage, from Jungle to Drum and Bass - to UK Garage, to Grime, to Dubstep, to UK Rap to Drill, and the roots of that line from rave / hardcore, breakbeat, acid-house, techno, hip hop, bashment /dancehall /ragga / roots-reggae and dub. And you'd be proud of it. Too me, being a nerd is just an extension of passion, after all.I loved Drum and Bass. I still do. I've talked about it a lot in my writing. I played the actual drums as a kid, so I love beats, big beats. When I first heard sped-up, chopped up, amen-breaks, I lost my shit. I soon learned that there was this whole scene, that came from London, just up the road from me, in Surrey and in it existed producers, DJ's, promoters, pirate-radio stations, raves, flyers, tape-packs from said raves, record shops, record bags and clothes and of course, MC's. It was sick. And it was from London.But back to that tape, again, finally. When first hearing it, I didn't yet know how it all worked. The raves, the pirate-stations and the setups, how the music was communicated, with the DJ's and the MC's and how they worked together. I had little or no exposure to that world. I knew hip hop and knew about house and techno, through my older siblings, amongst other sounds. But Hip hop was on TV, house and techno were on BBC Radio 1. I remember trying to exclaim to my brother, Will, that I'd heard this tape with all of these London MC's on the records, that the DJ was playing. He had to explain to me, that the MC's were live, on the mikes, at the event, hyping up the crowd and spitting their lyrics over the beats the DJ was playing. That was how it worked. Despite its similar DJ/MC lineage, 90's hip hop and its era of wildly successful recording artists, making actual tracks in studios, were hardwired into me at this stage. I had no idea, I thought all those voices that I was hearing on the tape, were recorded on the records. I even thought Skibbas name was ‘Skipper-d' for a good while.The whole thing was exciting to me, for a number of reasons. A lot of the MC's were rapping in the double-time style. Super-fast lyrics, that sounded like machine-guns. I love breakbeats and what there were doing, was making their voices into rhythmic instruments, like watching a drum solo from Buddy Rich, not just sitting in the background providing a beat. I often had no idea what they were saying but it sounded sick. Sometimes they were freestyling, I couldn't believe that either, just making it up on the spot, like it was magic, they all seemed so talented. But they were doing it, over Drum and Bass beats, which I loved and they had London accents, often intermixed with Jamaican ragga styles. But that sounded far less alien, to this pasty kid from Surrey, than an American accent on a hip hop beat did; as much as I loved hip hop, of course, it was American.Typically, on a DJ set from one of the big raves, like One Nation, if it was Drum and Bass, you'd have two or three MC's, sometimes more, sometimes less. The raves would then produce the sought-after tape-packs that you could buy, with all the DJ sets recorded onto cassettes and they'd have these mad futuristic designs on the covers. That first tape from the One Nation 98 pack that I heard, if memory recalls correctly, had 5ivo, Shabba, Fearless, Moose and Skibbadee all MCing on it. Skibba wasn't on it much but when I heard him, he really stood out. I assumed then, that he was like a young up-and-comer, so only got a little spot. Again, highlighting my lack of understanding about how those big rave events worked, he was all over the other tapes that I later heard, just not the Brockie one. I wanted to hear more of him, though. That little segment was enough to get me hooked. He came on, mid-set, with that lyric that included the words ‘when am I gonna get my dividend' which is also where I first heard and later learned the meaning of that word; financial education from Skibadee – what was school for?His staccato, double-time flow, sounded so cool to me. No one did it like him but we all tried. Go on, say that above sentence to yourself, rapidly, without pausing for breath and you'll go someway to understanding why he was so effective as an all round MC .‘when am I gonna get my dividend, I get my piece of the action'His vocal tone, flow and energy, just sounded perfect. I'd rewind that bit, over and over, loving it when he cut in and rode the beat, like a horse to war, full of slickness and confidence. It was his bars and a few of Stevie Hyper D's (someone else I've also written about) that I first tried to copy, when I decided I was going to be an MC.Since I've been into it, Drum and Bass's popularity has often fluctuated. At the time I first heard that tape, it wasn't that popular anymore, it didn't seem it anyway. Wide-boys at my school were listening to speed garage – maybe their elder siblings liked Jungle back in the early 90's but it was seen as either too fast and aggressive, or just a bit mental. The music was definitely quite-dark, back then, when I first latched on to it.Me and my brother Will, would go into the newsagents and scan through the big dance music magazines of the time, like DJ and Mixmag and see if there were any Drum and Bass features, it was slim pickings, they barley got a mention. I remember getting upset one day when Loaded magazine casually said it was ‘dead.' How arrogant have you gotta be to say that? Regardless though, that music soldiered-on, along with its infrastructure of raves like One Nation, Helter Skelter and Droppin Science.With the commercial success of UK Garage, came the rise of MC-led garage and the So Solid Crew era. Suddenly, UK MC's were at the forefront, as rappers, on tracks and in videos, not just crowd hypers at the raves anymore. UK hip hop has always been around, as far as I can remember but it was very niche. At this point, Drum and Bass seemed to get more popular again, this time, with a lot more focus on the MC's, so naturally, Skibba rose to the top. He even featured on a chart-topping Shy FX track that got playlisted on BBC Radio 1. I remember getting pissed-off when Chris Moyles played the record on his drivetime show and was doing bad impressions of Skibba. I felt like he had no idea who Skibadee was and had just disrespected an underground legend, who'd found commercial success.This era also spawned a whole load of rudeboys, to want to pick up a mike and start MCing – when I first was in my early teens, everyone wanted to DJ, Mc's were thin on the ground where I grew up. That all changed. Skibba was the one they always seemed to gravitate towards, trying to imitate his rapid double-time style. When am I gonna get my dividend. Everyone loved Skibba. But there's only one Skibadee and a DJ set, with 7 rudeboys doing bad impressions of him, could easily be MC-overkill and ruin a DJ set and often a whole event; which it did, many times. Thus, the tables had turned somewhat, in the eternal conflict between DJ's and MC's but it turned off a lot of people, myself included.I was heavily into Drum and Bass, for a long time but as I got into my early twenties, I gradually started to drift away from it. I'd been Mcing for a few years and had a few gigs under my belt but had gradually transitioned to focusing more on writing lyrics and trying to make tracks but not drum and bass tracks - hip hop, grime and whatever else; drum and bass was still very a much a club-based scene and I didn't think I had what it took, to be the hyper-energetic rave MC. That and I got fed-up with moter-mouthed rudeboys trying to hustle the mike off me all the time.I can't pretend I've been this unwavering, hardcore Drum and Bass head. I haven't. I still went to the occasional event but chances are it would be something like Rupture – which focused a lot more on the breakbeats and didn't seem to attract the crowd that wanted the MC's, spitting constantly over Jump Up beats. In some of those circles, it was almost frowned upon to like those MC's, or the beats they typically rapped over. Even in an underground sub-genre, with sub-sub-genres, there was still elements of classism and cultural superiority. I certainty had traits of this but if I'm honest, I still loved a bit of Skibba and Shabba on a jump-up set. Every now and again, I'd blast an old tape with MC's like Skibba spraying all over it. And with the advent of You Tube and the wider application of the internet in general, people were uploading all sorts of old DJ sets from raves and radio and records – so I'd go down these rabbit-holes and enjoy the lyrical-barrages of an MC Convention set, in the safety of my headphones and a few premium-strength lagers.I work a lot with young people and I often ask them what music they listen too. Many will cite British-born rappers, in fact, these days they're more likely to listen to British rap music, than they are American. It's a huge turnaround from where it was, when I first got interested in all of this. I remember people smirking when I told them I liked UK hip hop. Those drum and bass MC's, along with the UK Garage MC's and of course the likes of So Solid Crew, Heartless Crew, Pay As You Go (as well as the UK Hip Hop guys Like London Posse, Blak Twang, Roots Manuva, Jehst and Skinnyman) made it a lot more acceptable for your average British kid, to listen to UK MC's.The wider acceptance of British underground dance and rap music, was helped massively with the advent of BBC 1Xtra and Channel U. Both national platforms, with a much bigger reach than anything before, where a wider audience could be cultivated and it was. These platforms allowed rappers to have legitimate careers and it sent Grime into the mainstream. I was always chuffed, when those stations showcased the Drum and Bass guys that came before; Skibba was often on 1xtra doing freestyles. And you'd often hear the first wave of successful Grime MC's, who were getting major record deals, paying homage to Skibba, Shabba, Dett, Stevie Hyper et all, preserving the lineage.Years later, with social media, I'd be able to occasionally check in with these guys. I followed SASASAS all those MC's and DJ's from my past and have regularly watched short video clips of all those guys, shutting down raves and festivals the world over, still going after all these years and as someone that still likes to rap and MC, fast approaching 40, it's inspiring to me that they're all still doing it, into their 40's and 50's even, and still headlining events. It was only on Saturday, that I looked at a picture of Shabba, Harry Shotta, DJ Phantasy and Skibadee, with the caption asking their fans what festivals they wanted to see them at this year.With the current crop of Drill rappers, making their way in the music world, I don't know if they know, from whence they came, in terms of the rap industry in the UK. It's neither here nor there if they do, they're doing their own thing and I respect it, as any new generation should - however, if they care to look – they'll see Skibadee up there, as one of the great UK MC's, who helped blaze a path for this whole British rapping thing to happen, and me, and countless others who grew up on the tape packs, pirate-radio and car-stereos and raves, will forever be indebted to his legacy.I hope he's up there, in his final resting place, going back-to-back with Stevie Hyper D, keeping the eternal rave-souls lively in the dance. Skibba dealt with the matter and dealt with it proper. 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EP3 of 'The Love Series'... this episode discusses Jamal Edwards, the Queen, Ukraine and Russia, Marcelo Bielsa and Leeds United, Insecure's NAACP Awards, Toni Tone's new man plus our #TweetsOfTheWeek with a special guest couple!Hosts:DanyelleTwitter: @dxgtweets : https://twitter.com/dxgtweetsOliviaTwitter: @Olivia891 : https://twitter.com/OliviaLiv891Instagram: @liv_21.x : https://www.instagram.com/liv_21.x/Urban SoulTwitter - @UR8ANSOUL : https://twitter.com/UR8ANSOULInstagram - @ur8an_soul : https://www.instagram.com/ur8an_soul/MUSIC: @drew_archie - www.instagram.com/drew_archie/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We begin this week's episode by paying tribute to the late, great Jamal Edwards, the founder of SBTV who sadly passed away last week (2:54). Fantasy booking is the wave as we imagine what hip-hop would look like if Roc-A-Fella Records hadn't broken up (22:37). We then dissect whether mainstream UK rap has peaked (48:40). What we've been listening to: Peter Mary J Blige - Good Morning Gorgeous Ohbliv - Foreverness Abhi/Dijon - The Montana EP Moe Kanye West - The College Dropout, Late Registration, Graduation Yemi Central Cee - 23 Nicholas Craven - Craven N 3 King Crimson - In The Court of the Crimson King Tracy Chapman - Tracy Chapman Follow us and subscribe: https://linktr.ee/rhymesdimespod
Welcome back to #35 and we are joined by MOBO Award Winning Producer Victizzle. Its official, Johnny is a Naija Boy (04:26) and we dive right into the Putin invasion (12:47) before discussing whether the Queen is still alive (34:24). Covid is no more (42:52) and we geek it out about Science (56:14) before we salute Jamal Edwards (1:21:40) and give relationship advice (1:34:03). FOLLOW US/SUBSCRIBE/LIKE ACROSS ALL SOCIALS: linktr.ee/ThisCouldEndTerribly IG - @abiade @johnnyvivas
A week may have passed but the pain still lingers.This week the Girlz are back with a brand new episode featuring special guest Kaylee Golding. Join them as they discuss the untimely passing of UK Legend, Jamal Edwards.0:22 - 0:36 Welcome Kaylee!0:36 - 1:14 Rest In Everlasting Peace Jamal1:14 - 5:25 Social Media and Death = No Sensitivity?5:25 - 8:45 The UK Scene8:46 - 12:31 Jamal's Influence12:33 - 15:34 SBTV Legacy15:34 - 19:46 How Do We Keep His Legacy Alive?19:46 - 22:40 Jamal's Achievements!22:43 - 29:44 Kanye Documentary29:44 - 31:33 Document Everything!31:23 - 33:55 What Jamal Taught Us33:55 - 36:03 Everything About Kaylee36:03 - 36:34 Ending Message/SocialsSUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCAST ► https://linktr.ee/rhymesheIn the meantime, you can catch up on the girl's most recent podcast episodes on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.ITUNES: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast...SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/6IBZd1F...Our website: https://www.nuprintmag.com/rhymeshe
This week the ladies discuss the crisis in Ukraine and the unexpected passing of Jamal Edwards and the legacy he leaves behind. The ladies also discuss harshness within the Muslim community and how we go about advising eachother. Sahra reads another juicy dilemma about a woman who is dating a married man
This week we are joined by author of 'Get Rich or Lie Trying' Symeon Brown and second time guest, Aniefiok 'Neef' Ekpoudom FRSA, newly anointed Fellow of the Royal Society of the Arts and, more importantly, friend of the pod. We talk Symeon's inspiration for about his new book (2:21), what even is an influencer (8:49), as well as the limitation of moments built on influencers (17:54), the new marks of influencer culture (22:26) the losers in the world of influencing and what ultimately gives us a fulfilling life (29:42) and how to pursue it among other things Finally we share the devastating loss to the world of Jamal Edwards with SBTV alumni, Neef, as well as his impact on each of us and the world (37:37). Please like, share with your friends if you love it, subscribe to the podcast wherever you listen and leave a review on Spotify. Thank you for listening.
Hey huns! We're back in the studio and this week we talk about some of the difficulties of being a journalist. We discuss the heartbreaking death of SBTV's Jamal Edwards and the awful way death is sometimes announced on social media. We also cover the BBC programme about being black and British and our thoughts on it. Keep an eye out for our Live Immersive Experience!! --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- If you are looking thinking about getting counselling but not sure where to start, check out www.betterhelp.com/BGL HOSTS:⠀ Jas: twitter.com/jas_bw + www.instagram.com/jas_bw/ Vic: twitter.com/victoriasanusi + www.instagram.com/vicsanusi/ BGL socials: www.instagram.com/blackgalslivin/ + twitter.com/blackgalslivin/ Tik Tok: @blackgalslivin Chat to us using the hashtag #blackgalslivin⠀ Artwork by @thecamru Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week, H and Benzo catch up with Abraham Black to discuss his recent music, the impact of Jamal Edwards and SBTV on our musical journeys and touch on what's going on in the world right now. Tap in!@nothingbutmusicpod@husain.m8@blogbybenzo@abraxamblack @nuriapascu Let us know what you thought!Support the Show.Follow us on Instagram to stay up to date!@nothingbutmusicpod@husain.m8@blogbybenzo
This week I discuss Love is Blind, Jamal Edwards, sweet potatoes, Russia and Ukraine and much more. #LOUDITPodcast is hosted by Nnedinso. Tune in every Monday for some funny stories and girl talk to cheer up your Monday blues. From life experiences to wild stories and current media, no topic is off limits. Let's LOUD IT and talk some rubbish! Twitter: @Nneddy121 and YouTube: ItsNnedinso
- Valentine's Day: Should men also get flowers on Valentine's Day and randomly throughout the year?Tinder swindler: Do men ask their babes for money? - Best friend/ friends dating and sleeping with your dad or sibling. Thoughts? - “I ruined my mum's life and reputation” - Mum had an affair with her daughter's husband and even gave birth to his kids. - Comparisons in relationships: An ex treating their current partner better - How many kids are too many? - Jamal Edwards tragic passing #TheRantsShow
SBTV founder Jamal Edwards, Screaming Trees former frontman Mark Lanegan and Procol Harum's Gary Brooker passed away this week. Music Critic John Meagher chats to Dave about the impact these people had on the industry
The Smart 7 is a daily podcast that gives you everything you need to know in 7 minutes, at 7 am, 7 days a week...With over 9 million downloads and consistently charting, including as No. 1 News Podcast on Spotify, we're a trusted source for people every day.If you're enjoying it, please follow, share, or even post a review, it all helps...Today's episode includes the following:https://twitter.com/Acyn/status/1496713530057261059?s=20&t=qnb2baCHU7nLCn5gAv4GVwhttps://twitter.com/ChristopherJM/status/1496709495568883714?s=20&t=qnb2baCHU7nLCn5gAv4GVwhttps://twitter.com/cnni/status/1496832132362166275?s=20&t=rXcu9gqMOH4KSx6I5rCPmghttps://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1496825789022896131?s=20&t=urGtjW9-aczvSzSVL7EoWg https://twitter.com/therecount/status/1496814636569665544 https://twitter.com/MSNBC/status/1496927847683969027?s=20&t=xQbly-UJcLvkQZIhBTs7gwhttps://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-60446908 https://twitter.com/TimesRadio/status/1495379012989997059?s=20&t=mrWFA3rU0JeyGSJNPScnPg https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QtBS8COhhhM&t=797s&ab_channel=BBCNews https://twitter.com/FantasticBeasts/status/1495775321466937347?s=20&t=_aXxYcmz320AfZonbVJmWA https://twitter.com/toriallenmartin/status/1495585465025576961?s=20&t=-gXmvzX7OQNrlNVf3oUA_AIn Ireland? Why not try our Ireland Edition?Contact us over at Twitter or visit www.thesmart7.comPresented by Jamie East, written by Liam Thompson, researched by Olivia Davies and produced by Daft Doris. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Smart 7 Ireland Edition is the daily news podcast that gives you everything you need to know in 7 minutes, at 7am, 7 days a week…Consistently appearing in Ireland's Daily News charts, we're a trusted source for people every day.If you're enjoying it, please follow, share or even post a review, it all helps…Today's episode includes references to the following items:https://twitter.com/Acyn/status/1496713530057261059?s=20&t=qnb2baCHU7nLCn5gAv4GVwhttps://twitter.com/ChristopherJM/status/1496709495568883714?s=20&t=qnb2baCHU7nLCn5gAv4GVwhttps://twitter.com/cnni/status/1496832132362166275?s=20&t=rXcu9gqMOH4KSx6I5rCPmghttps://twitter.com/SkyNews/status/1496888803088338945?s=20&t=11hmj9-tMDUo20cgpNj32w https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1496825789022896131?s=20&t=urGtjW9-aczvSzSVL7EoWg https://twitter.com/HannaLiubakova/status/1496891259490811910?s=20&t=TjQ4GVVkNzAfmuyirxHKeA https://twitter.com/therecount/status/1496814636569665544 https://twitter.com/MSNBC/status/1496927847683969027?s=20&t=xQbly-UJcLvkQZIhBTs7gwhttps://twitter.com/rtenews/status/1496110401481846784?s=20&t=DI2vmY9-Ekcb1CyrtO-QtAhttps://twitter.com/VirginMediaNews/status/1496560496446746626?s=20https://twitter.com/toriallenmartin/status/1495585465025576961?s=20&t=-gXmvzX7OQNrlNVf3oUA_AContact us over at Twitter or visit www.thesmart7.comPresented by Ciara Revins, written by Liam Thompson and produced by Daft Doris. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Your faves have a girlie catch up on their week apart, spill the tea on the All Star Weekend, ignoring the blogs, Love Is Blind and pay their respects to SBTV founder, Jamal Edwards. Send the girls your voice notes on: 07594 520584 PRESSED is a BBC Studios TalentWorks & Unheard Network production. Producer - Pilar Nalwimba Editor - Faith Howley
Today's episode is a little different. Following hearing the news about the amazing Jamal Edwards passing away, I began to think about legacy. His legacy is so powerful as during his time here on earth, he sought to serve and created and impact within the British music industry. I was reminded of Jesus who's legacy has spanned millennia and his impact in the lives on our lives and the lives of millions of others has truly been magnificent. But how do you leave your footprint in this world? How do you become a person of impact? Let's talk about it. Tune in today as we explore this timely and instrumental aspect of a believers life with God.
Hey everyone! This week on Innersleeve Episode 62, Joe and Cassius are joined by Singer/Songwriter, Keithian! The trio discusses Keithian's new single “Guaranteed”, upcoming “Green Clouds EP”, growing up/musical influences in New Orleans, understanding the business of the music industry and much more! Joe and Cassius open the show reacting to Yeat, the California rapper taking music by storm. They also discuss the premature passing of UK influencer Jamal Edwards (RIP).
The BBC lets two more leading broadcasters slip away to Global. This time it's Emily Maitlis and Jon Sopel. Why does it keep happening? And what's the strategy at LBC? Gill Hind (Enders Analysis) & Faraz Osman (Gold Wala) join Matt Deegan to discuss the week's media news.Also on the programme: how do you explain the invasion of Ukraine to an 8 year old? We spoke to Anna Bassi, Editor in Chief of The Week Junior, to find out how a print magazine for kids is in the top four print publications in the UK.Plus, we pay tribute to SBTV founder Jamal Edwards who passed away this week, and look at what Linkedin are doing to support podcasts.A Rethink Audio Production, produced by Phoebe Adler Ryan, with editing support by Matt Hill. Support the show and get exclusive extended interviews by becoming a patron: patreon.com/mediapodAnd thanks to our sponsors, Riverside.fm. Start a free trial and, when you love it like we do, get $15 off any package with the code MEDIAPOD. Get bonus content on Patreon See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It's a rather different show on Riot Act this week. Steve and Remfry spend the majority of the show paying tribute to a musical hero in the aftermath of the news of Mark Lanegan's passing at the age of 57. From Screaming Trees to Queens of the Stone Age to his solo material and guest appearances on releases from the likes of Cult of Luna, Manic Street Preachers and The Armed, Lanegan has been one of our most covered artists on this show and we have seldom been anything other than awestruck by his magnificent voice, poignant lyrics and vast range and brave decision making as an artist. So it felt right that we dedicate the majority of the show to talk about our feelings on losing him. There is more sad news as we also pay tribute to Jamal Edwards, who also passed away at the age of 31 this week, and talk about his incredible work in helping the early careers of everyone from Dave and Stormzy to Ed Sheeran and Rita Ora. We also discuss the latest releases by Bambara and Blood Incantation, ask why Tool are charging nearly £600 for a vinyl and examine the damage done to the O2 Arena in London after Storm Eunice ripped parts of its roof off. This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
In this week's episode, the mandem sans Yaf hold court from Amsterdam and London. They speak on family, funemployment, and being in a state of flux. The group also pay homage to the late Jamal Edwards and reflect on the Kanye West documentary that premiered last week on Netflix.- Weekly What Made You Smile segment sharing the positive vibes of the week just gone (07:05)- The group discuss the impact of a true pioneer in Black British music - Jamal Edwards - who sadly passed away aged 31 last week (16:08)- The mandem discuss the ‘jeen-yuhs' documentary centred around Kanye West some 20 years ago, which showed a driven individual that had a dream and always believed in himself (29:02)- The trio talk about documentation in present day + future, and how it could be hard to cherish moments because we are living in a world of over-sharing (40:05) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Vi ha kollat på melodifestivalen och fastnat för bandet Tribe Friday som bygger sin garagerock (eller i deras ord: bubbelgum-emo) från ett torp ute i skogen i Lindesberg. Vad är skillnaden på att starta ett band i dag efter internetexplosionen jämfört med förr i tiden? Vi diskuterar vikten av att skapa en bubbla för sig själv där man kan skapa i lugn och ro, och hur man gör för att inkludera sin publik i den. Dessutom Madame D'ora-utställningen på Millesgården, Downton Abbey, Jamal Edwards & Smokey Barz, äventyr i Prag och mycket mycket mer. Välkomna!
Ft. LD (67). We look back at the life of Jamal Edwards, the music entrepreneur and YouTube star who died on Sunday, aged 31. As well as the rapper LD (67), De-Graft chats to Marvyn Harrison, from the Dope Black Dads podcast, who was friends with Jamal, and also Andrietta, who was supported by Jamal's charity work. Host: De-Graft Mensah Producers: Jack Suddaby & Roshan Roberts Sound Designer: Jack Suddaby Editor: Sam Bonham
In a week where: Wales implement a two-year living wage for 18-year-olds leaving care. A black woman in America has been cured of HIV. Storm Eunice & Franklin tear through the UK. The Queen has tested positive for covid. Russia vs 'The West' continues. In Music: (5:23) Jamal Edwards died aged 31. A tragic loss of a person that was a major figure in what is now the vibrant UK Rap/Hip-Hop/MOBO scene all the way back in the mid-00s and forever.In Society: (17:58) Remember last week where I mentioned that Russian oligarchs have been given keys to London, figuratively & literally? Well, here's a whole segment about it.In Sports: (32:53) The Winter Olympics are over. And whilst I could make the case it was the worst Olympics in recent memory, I thought it'd be more beneficial to talk about something rarely explored, the mental health of the Olympians, post-games.Lastly, in Media: (47:49) We all have someone we love from afar. Whether it's a streamer, musician or shitposter. But those are parasocial relationships and I feel we all need to be reminded from time to time.Thank you for listening! If you want to contribute to the show, whether it be sending me questions or voicing your opinion in any way, peep the contact links below and I'll respond accordingly. Let me know "What's Good?"Rate & ReviewE-Mail: the5thelelmentpub@gmail.comTwitter & IG: @5thElement_UK5E Community DiscordWebsite: www.the5thelement.org.uk/5epnIntro Music - "Too Much" By VanillaInterlude - "Charismatic" By NappyHighChillHop MusicOther Podcasts Under The 5EPN:Diggin' In The Digits5EPN RadioBlack Women Watch...In Search of SauceThe Beauty Of Independence
Episode 98 is live and the aunties are joined by super special guest Marvyn Harrison the founder of Dope Black Dads https://www.instagram.com/dopeblackdads/ (@dopeblackdads) Topics: - Over the weekend, we unfortunately lost music pioneer Jamal Edwards the founder of SBTV who was a pivotal role in the discovery of artists like Ed Sheeran, Dave, Stormzy, Jessie J. The aunties will be discussing his efforts in the music industry of which he was awarded an MBE by the Queen. Rest in Peace Jamal and thank you for your efforts. - Triffling Trump has created his own social media platform called Truth Social after being kicked off Twitter. - Zeze Millz reacted to Nicki Minaj saying that women look good for ourselves and NOT for men. She disagrees and says Nicki is chatting absolute bs - WIlliam and Kate's visit to Jamaica ahead of the Queen's Jubilee celebrations has delayed a deportation flight. The families of the depotees believe that the delay is to avoid tensions as the Queen prepares to celebrate 70years on the throne. Follow the aunties https://www.instagram.com/loveyaayaa/ (@loveyaayaa) https://www.instagram.com/farrforce/ (@farrforce) https://www.instagram.com/sadesalami/ (@sadesalami) https://www.instagram.com/thebritishblacklist/ (@thebritishblacklist)
It's a mellow one this week, we celebrate the life of Jamal Edwards, founder of the game-changing platform SBTV & icon, who unfortunately passed on 20th February 2022. We send our prayers and condolences to his family. We also get into Jeen-Yuhs, the Kanye West documentary on Netflix & how the Tinder Swindler deserves ratings, lock in!LISTEN TO OUR NEW PLAYLIST, #DRAKECOULDNEVER HERE:APPLE: https://music.apple.com/gb/playlist/well-name-this-playlist-later/pl.u-pMyl43aUxNGYb7SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6jgRDNg4M81EXivfCVA3R3?si=542fa8b836aa4963@creativeirisldn on the Insta@mikesveryown on the Tweetshttps://twitter.com/_slimetalk?lang=en on the Tweets / https://www.instagram.com/_slimetalk/ on the InstaSlime Talk on YouTube
The music world mourns the loss of Jamal Edwards and Justin Bieber cancels Vegas show. Join us for your Daily Lowdown from HELLO!. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The entrepreneur founded SBTV, an online urban music platform, which helped launch the careers of British artists including Dave, Ed Sheeran and Skepta. Donald Trump launches new social media app. Hear schoolchildren beam voices into deep space for alien radio project. Ukraine cyberattacks: US and UK point fingers at Russia. How safe is UK government's ‘living with Covid' strategy? Clone of Newton's apple tree latest victim of Storm Eunice. Revealed: the dinosaur-era virus ‘inside every human'. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Entrepreneur, film maker and music exec, Jamal Edwards MBE is the founder of the urban music channel SBTV and a trailblazer in the world of online content. This episode was recorded on 11/02/20.SBTV: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzBQv4E25jcUgO8cWkLsNAwJED Youth Project: https://jedelve.com/Jamal's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jamaledwardsRoss Kemp TV Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0jpyA0_lbm5B7ugrgNEOugInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/rosskemptv/Twitter: https://twitter.com/RossKempFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/RossKempTVProduced by The Chancer Collective: http://thechancercollective.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/the_chancer_collective/Recorded at One Fine Play: https://www.onefineplay.com/Music by Reteps: http://reteps.net/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.