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In this ultra-smooth episode of Dem Vinyl Boyz, we pour ourselves a drink, dim the lights, and spin An Evening with Silk Sonic—the Grammy-winning 2021 debut from Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paak’s funk-soul superduo. With velvet vocals, vintage vibes, and razor-sharp production, this album pays tribute to 70s R&B and soul while keeping things playful, fresh, and irresistibly cool. Featuring silky tracks like "Leave the Door Open," "Smokin Out the Window," "Fly as Me," and "After Last Night," the album glides through themes of heartbreak, seduction, and suave confidence—all with lush instrumentation and undeniable charisma. Bootsy Collins, the funk legend himself, sets the tone as the host and spiritual glue of the album, giving it that extra flair of authenticity and funk royalty. In this episode, we break down the magic behind Bruno and Anderson’s chemistry, the retro recording style, and why An Evening with Silk Sonic was more than just a passion project—it was a full-blown revival of a genre. Equal parts homage and innovation, this record brought soul music roaring back into the spotlight with class and swagger. Join Dem Vinyl Boyz as we groove through An Evening with Silk Sonic, an album that sounds like it was pressed in 1974 but made to shine in the modern era.
Photo: Wikipedia CC BY-SA 4.0Intro by: Gail NoblesStory by: Gail NoblesWhen it comes to the hottest R&B in this generation, Silk Sonic is definitely holding the top spot in my heart. Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paak, man, they've got that special magic that you just don't find anywhere else in music today. It's like they've tapped into a timeless sound that feels fresh yet nostalgic, and that blend is oh-so-sweet.Take a song like "Leave the Door Open" The way they harmonize, the smoothness of their vocals, and those lush instrumentals come together to create something truly special. And then there's "Smokin Out the Window," where they tap into that classic R&B vibe, but with a modern twist. Their songs are for setting a laid back vibe and getting into a groove. The smooth melodies, soulful vocals, and romantic lyrics create an irresistible atmosphere that makes you feel the music.Now, let's talk about their cover of “Love's Train.” Oh, my goodness! That rendition is simply beautiful. They pay such incredible tribute to the original while injecting their own flair. You can feel the soul and sincerity in every note they sing. It's music like this that reminds you of why we fell in love with R&B in the first place—it's all about the feelings.The songs came from their 2021 album titled An Evening with Silk Sonic. "An Evening with Silk Sonic" is indeed a celebrated album! Released by the duo Silk Sonic, comprised of Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paak, it features a smooth blend of R&B, funk, and soul. The chemistry between the two artists shines through in their vocal performances and storytelling. Tracks like "Leave the Door Open" have received significant acclaim, showcasing their signature style and musical prowess. What are some of your favorite songs from the album?What I really appreciate is how they bring these amazing live performances to life. I love their dance moves. Their chemistry on stage is electric, and you can tell they're having a blast. Every show feels like a special event, and that's something not every artist can pull off. In a world where so much music is produced to fit a mold, Silk Sonic breaks free and gives us something real.In a nutshell, if you're looking for R&B that captivates the heart and soul, look no further than Silk Sonic. They're great artists who are redefining what it means to create music today.I'm Gail Nobles. Thank you for listening to the Cat Bear.
EPISODE 256 BREATHE WITH MICHELE OF YOGA MOXI . Summary . In this episode, the hosts discuss the importance of breathing and yoga for health with guest Michele from www.yogamoxi.com . They give cultural commentary on recent events such as the Super Bowl and SNL's 50th anniversary. In this engaging conversation, Tommy B and Tonya B delve into the responsibilities of civil rights organizations, the cultural impact of music, and the legacy of influential artists like Sly Stone. They discuss the importance of accountability in the music industry, the nostalgia surrounding modern music projects like Silk Sonic, and the need for a deeper understanding of the creative spirit in today's artists. Radio legend Myke Julius highlights the emotional and spiritual connections that music fosters within society, emphasizing the significance of preserving musical legacies. . Chapters . 00:00 Introduction 00:04 News With Syracuse Mike 06:26 The Importance of Breathing and Yoga 11:49 Breathing Techniques for Better Health 13:41 Understanding the Nervous System and Its Impact 20:14 Practical Breathing Exercises 23:56 Finding the Right Yoga Instructor 29:18 Conclusion and Final Thoughts On Yoga 30:44 Reflections on Drake's Degrassi and Pop Culture 31:47 Super Bowl Ads: Hits and Misses 33:16 Empowerment in Women's Sports - Super Bowl Ad 34:47 SNL's Diversity and Legacy 39:13 Kanye West: Controversies and Influence 45:23 The Legacy of Jodeci and Sly Stone 51:22 Sly Stone: A Black Genius' Journey 54:55 The Power of Music and Emotion With Myke Julius 59:48 Current Trends in Music and Creativity 01:02:36 Timelessness in Music: A Comparison of Eras 01:07:54 The Legacy of Classic Songs 01:12:25 The Future of Music and Independent Artists 01:22:10 CLOSE . #yoga #breathing #health #wellness #mindfulness #SuperBowl #SNL #KendrickLamar #BlackHistoryMonth #culturalcommentary #civilrights #musicculture #SlyStone #slowjamradio #modernmusic #nostalgia #blackgenius #accountability #KanyeWest #ElonMusk . SUPPORT THE PODCAST! Give $25 For 2025 https://linktr.ee/thisisthegpodcast
I dette afsnit besøger sanger og sangskriver Cæcilie Norby studiet, og med sig har hun en liste af den musik som har inspireret hendes liv og virke. Værter: Klaus Lynggaard og Henrik Queitsch. Klip: Caroline Juul Mørck. Playlisten: Cæcilie Norby: ”Loud Ladies” (Sixty, 2024)Nancy Wilson: ”You've Got Your Troubles” (A Touch of Today, 1966)Mirella Freni: “Mi chimano Mimi” (Puccini: La Bohème) Dionne Warwick: ”(They Long to Be)Close to You” (Make Way for Dionne Warwick, 1964) Rufus and Chaka Khan: “You Got the Love – Live Version” (Live – Stompin' at the Savoy, 1983) Weather Report: “Teen Town” (Heavy Weather, 1977) Chick Corea & Return to Forever: “You're Everything” (Light as a Feather, 1973)Sting: “Fragile” (…Nothing Like the Sun, 1987) Kasper Winding og C.V. Jørgensen: “Mig og Charly” (Kasper Winding: Mig og Charly OST, 1978) Dionne Warwick: ”This Girl's in Love with You” (Promises, Promises, 1968)Nancy Wilson: “Gypsies, the Jugglers and the Clowns – Live” (Live from Las Vegas: Nancy Wilson, udsendt 2005) Joni Mitchell: “Goodbye Pie Pork Hat” (Mingus, 1979) Silk Sonic / Bruno Mars & AnderssonPakk: “Fly as Me” (An Evening with Silk Sonic, 2021) Aretha Franklin: “Moody's Mood” (Hey Now Hey (The Other Side of the Sky), 1973) Nancy Wilson & Cannonball Adderly: “The Masquerade Is Over” (Nancy Wilson/Cannonball Adderly, 1962) Aretha Franklin & George Benson: “Love All the Hurt Away” (Aretha Franklin: Love All the Hurt Away, 1981) Fantasia: “I'm Here” (Music from and inspired by ‘The Color Purple', 2024) Toto: “Hold the Line” (Toto, 1978) Miles Davis: “So What” (Kind of Blue, 1959) Cæcilie Norby: “Future Self” (Sixty, 2024)
Multibegåvningen Paak levde i en ljuv retrobubbla genom projektet Silk Sonic(så nära vi kommer The Moments idag), och i drömmen om att få spela Smokey Robinson i Dr. Dres film om Marvin Gaye. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Anderson.Paaks karriär kännetecknas av lika delar lekfullhet och musikaliskt mod. Från tetralogin ”Venice”, ”Malibu”, ”Oxnard” och ”Ventura” till ”An evening with Silk Sonic”. Inget är omöjligt om du blandar de praktfulla 70-tals soulpastischerna med neosoulhjälten Bilal och rapvirtuosen Busdriver.Specialgäster inkluderar Kamasi Washington, Gamble & Huff, Curtis Mayfield och Shafiq Husayn(Sa-Ra).
Silk Sonic - Skate Maroon 5 - Payphone Coldplay Feat. Ayra Starr - Good Feelings Taylor Swift - Anti Hero (Kens Nu Disco Mix) Beyoncé - Texas Hold'Em Bruce Hornsby And The Range - The Way It Is Dire Straits - Money For Nothing Rick James - Super Freak Bronski Beat - Smalltown Boy Billie Eilish - Bad Guy Fine Young Cannibals - Johnny Come home The B 52's - Love Shack U2 - I'm Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For Madonna - Don't Tell Me Alphaville - Big In Japan Roxette - The Look Harry Styles - Adore You Jain - Come
Cory Wong – Meditation – The Power Station Tour Live – 10:38 Bruno Mars; Anderson .Paak; Silk Sonic – After Last Night (with Thundercat & Bootsy Collins) – 4:09 Roy Ayers Ubiquity – Everybody Loves The Sunshine – 3:59 Efraïm Trujillo; Jeroen van Helsdingen; Sven Schuster; Victor de Boo; Ob6sions – So Groovy – 7:10 […]
In this episode, we feature artists covering and interpreting songs or a feel from that classic r&b old school era. In some cases, we explore new productions and remixes of the original artists by today's top producers.This episode also features interpretations from, Cornell C.C. Carter, Maxwell, Silk Sonic, Kirk Whalum, Ashanti, and many more!PLAYLIST1. Last Night a DJ Saved My Life f/Busta Rhymes, DJ Clue, Fabolous Mariah Carey2. Lost In Music (Dimitri from Paris Remix)/Sister Sledge3. Hot Stuff (Let's Dance)/Craig David4. I Found Lovin'/Ashanti5. Upside Down/Cornell C.C. Carter6. Get Ready (Ben Liebrand Classic Groove)/The S.O.S. Band7. Ascension (No One's Gonna Love You, So Don't Ever Wonder)/Maxwell8. Sugar Free (Rob Hardt Remix)/Miracle Thomas, Rob Hardt9. Love's Train/Silk Sonic10. Between The Sheets f/Chaka Khan & Nathan East/Fourplay11. Sunrise/Simply Red12. The Glow of Love (Full Flava 2.0 Mix) f/Donna Gardier/Full Flava13. You're My Latest, My Greatest Inspiration/Jasper Street. Co.14. All I Do/ Kirk Whalum15. 4 Leaf Clover/Erykah Badu16. Here We Go Again/Output/Input17. Keep On/Kai Alce
O novo rei do pop?
Near the tail end of 2024's summer, a comeback duet was released by 2 singers with similar genres and career timelines: Bruno Mars and Lady Gaga! The big question fans are wondering: "Why now?" There's no reported albums for "Die With A Smile"'s single, and the pairing was an overnight shock! Find out the interesting timing of its release, how long it's been since both singers made music, and record breaking streaming fans helped them achieve globally. Theme Song: "Dance Track", composed by Jessica Ann CatenaText the podcast, Support the showMentioned Media: "When I Was Your Man" - Bruno Mars (2012-2013)"Yoü and I" (2011), "Million Reasons" (2017), "Speechless" (AMAs performance) (2009)- Lady GagaJoker: Folie A Deux - upcoming movie"Die With A Smile"'s co-producers:Dernst Emile IIJames FauntleroyAndrew WattGetting Down and Wordy - podcastRelated Episodes:Ep. 65 - Top 40 Songs of 2020 (Part 2)Ep. 78 - Silk Sonic's "Leave the Door Open"Ep. 102 - Ariana Grande Top 10Ep. 105 - Lady Gaga Top 10Ep. 117 - Top 40 Songs of 2021 (Part 2)Ep. 138 - Top Gun's Movie SongsEp. 157 - Bruno Mars' 6 Diamond SongsEp. 168 - Top 40 Songs of 2022 (Part 2)Ep. 250 - French Lyrics Playlist
Uptown Funk came out 76 years ago. Feel old yet? Well this week we're taking a blast to the past for An Evening with Silk Sonic! I can condone making someone walk on shards of broken glass, but I draw the line at taking a dump without locking the door Slap City picks: "Chunky" by Bruno Mars, "Sunkissed Afro" by We the Commas. Listen to our playlist here Join us in 2 weeks when we'll discuss our next pick, Daniel Johnston's Hi How Are You!
Welcome to our music podcast. This week we're talking about Mclusky's Mclusky Do Dallas. We talk about the album for the entirety of the runtime and don't mention Bender even once. Slap City picks: "Little Dawn" by Ted Leo and the Pharmacists, "BRAVO" by Tobe Nwigwe. Listen to our playlist here Join us in 2 weeks when we'll discuss our next pick, Silk Sonic's An Evening with Silk Sonic!
Youtube https://mellowmac.bandzoogle.com/mellowmacmusicFor over two decades, The Mellow Mac has written and produced a large body of work,from R&B rap—hip-hop, pop, reggaeton, EDM, neo soul, country and more—for variousartists and labels. One Way Ticket,” single released July 2024, features The Mellow Mac on an R&B lovesong, with harmonic vocals telling his love interest he's ready to go to the next level ifshe is.“Yeah, yeah. I wanted that sensual kind of feel, where I only use a kick drum, snare &hat. I played all the instruments like butter, with a tempo at 70 bpm”.I need to know if you're ready?Should I get a one-way ticket now?A round trip if you're not down“Grown folks' music,” he said. “That's really what it is—classic R&B with a little taste of a“Silk Sonic” kind of vibe, with a the fast, syncopated vocal cadence and saucyharmonies.”I need to know if your cup runs overwill you want it again?want it again, want it again nowHe is a co-founder and producer for the band L.A. CounyLine, which has released a fewsingles, EPs and albums and performs in the Los Angeles region. They co-wrote songsfor GaimChng3R Entertainment and partners Bungalo/Universal Music. Mellow Macproduced, engineered and played multiple instruments on several songs for this groupHe has worked for many years in artist development, polishing various artist's skills. Hiswork ethic keeps him working constantly at several recording studios including hisstudio in La Habra, CA. Kram Pro Studios, established in 2003. As an engineer,musician, producer and many more hats are worn by The Mellow Mac.“I don't want to sit on some of these songs anymore. I constantly write and collaborate,adding to my catalog songs. I thought ‘Okay, I just want to do something for myself, forme,' and that's why I decided to release my own album.”The songs are his babies, after all, and he wants to send them out into the world andsee them make good. “One Way Ticket” will also be the title of the album in 2025.“The album has a lot of different flavors,” he said. “I have some rap/hip/hop a mixture,but it's mostly R&B.”“One Way Ticket” is the second of his babies that he has released this year. The first,“Me and My Boo,” is a fast, fun, Pop/R&B number that features Jacob G. on leadvocals, who is the other co-founder of the band L.A. CounyLine, which they formed in2018.“Making music is not work to me, it's therapy. I play and record music to relax my hypermental energy and music comes easy to me. I'm all over the place musically speaking,which can be difficult to market. Growing up listening to different music genres made mekind of like a music gypsy and definitely a free spirit when it comes to music. I have anappreciation for all forms of good music”Make sure to stay connected to Mellow Mac on all platforms for new music, videos, andsocial posts.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/creator-to-creators-with-meosha-bean--4460322/support.
We had the pleasure of interviewing Skylar Simone over Zoom video!In the dynamic realm of music, Skylar Simone emerges as one to watch, blending raw authenticity with impeccable control to create a sound that resonates deeply with audiences worldwide. The daughter of an NFL player, Skylar grew up in multiple cities, creating a unique mix of cultural influences. Upon discovering her vocal talent and love for music at the age of 9, she began to hone her performing ability by singing the National Anthem at various stadiums across the country. Her tight-knit family ultimately moved to Los Angeles to support her dream of launching a successful music career. “I feel like I'm this veteran, even though I'm only 22 years old, because I've been out here hustling for over a decade,” Skylar reflects.Skylar's musical journey is a testament to her unwavering dedication and natural talent. From mastering the drums to sharpening her skills on the piano, her versatility defines a uniqueness that demands attention. Drawing inspiration from iconic figures such as Janet Jackson, Whitney Houston, and Minnie Riperton, as well as contemporary artists like SZA and RAYE, Skylar infuses her own unique flair into every note, crafting a signature sound that is emotionally rich.Skylar formed a clear bond with legendary producer Dernst "D'Mile" Emile II (Bruno Mars, Silk Sonic, Victoria Monet), as evidenced on the title track of her upcoming Def Jam EP release. “Shiver” is a passionately honest song from a distinctly feminine perspective that captures the sweet chase and sensation of romantic touch. “Once my body shakes, you'll know it's time,”she expresses between pronounced, exasperated breaths before foreshadowing the feelings evoked by the single: “You'll know what I like when I shiver"). Her work with D'Mile, which also includes “Shut Up,” leaves Skylar plenty of room to play with texture in clever ways, particularly when it comes to her vocal range, which encompasses a 4-octave kaleidoscope of tones. Having recently signed with Tunji Balogun and Def Jam Recordings, Skylar is ready to catapult into the next phase of her career with her new EP, Shiver, largely produced in the US, with moments bred in London with Scribz and Talay Riley (Kendrick Lamar, Doja Cat, 21 Savage, Khalid). The project serves as a testament to her artistic growth and evolution, and a musical re-introduction. Exploring themes of love of another and the self, and acting from a place of heartbreak and confidence—as well as finding the latter through the pain of the former—the project embodies the contrasts of human emotion, inviting listeners on a visceral journey of self-discovery. From the flashy, syncopated groove of "Permission" to the aching vulnerability of "Someone Who Cares," each track showcases Skylar's range and prowess as both a vocalist and a storyteller. In everything she touches, visually and sonically, sexy playfulness and buoyant youthful energy reign supreme.Throughout her career, authenticity and diligence have been Skylar's guiding principles. With lyrics that are equal parts blunt and sweet, she invites listeners into her world: one of self-confidence, acceptance, and motivation to move forward. She is poised to make a lasting impact on the world stage: “There's this sense of freedom that only music can guide us toward,” Simone reflects. It is here that the true power of her craft, and by extension her voice, blossom.We want to hear from you! Please email Hello@BringinitBackwards.comwww.BringinitBackwards.com#podcast #interview #bringinbackpod #SkylarSimone #NewMusic #ZoomListen & Subscribe to BiBhttps://www.bringinitbackwards.com/followFollow our podcast on Instagram and Twitter! https://www.facebook.com/groups/bringinbackpodBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/bringin-it-backwards--4972373/support.
Your weekly mixtape of Funk, Soul, Disco, House, and a few things in between. | 1 | Good Times | Chic | 2 | A Lover's Holiday (Single Version) | Change | 3 | Fake | Alexander O'Neal | 4 | You Saved My Day | Cheryl Lynn | 5 | I'm Coming Out | Diana Ross | 6 | Mama Used To Say | Junior | 7 | Automatic | The Pointer Sisters | 8 | Keep On Lovin' Me | The Whispers | 9 | You Are In My System | Robert Palmer | 10 | Got To Have Your Love | Mantronix | 11 | Skate | Bruno Mars, Anderson .Paak, Silk Sonic | 12 | Lil Boo Thang | Paul Russell | 13 | People | Soul II Soul | 14 | Always There (David Morales Remix) | Incognito, Jocelyn Brown | 15 | Trapped | Colonel Abrams | 16 | Latch | Disclosure, Sam Smith | 17 | You Fooled Around (Ziggy Phunk Soulful Regroove) | Sister Sledge | 18 | My Forbidden Lover (Dimitri from Paris Remix) | Chic | 19 | Truth or Dare | Tyla | 20 | Bad Girls | Donna Summer | 21 | Rolling Stone | Ministry Of Funk For More Info: https://linktr.ee/toolcrateradio
The mission of law & disorder is to expose, agitate and build a new world where all of us can thrive. But how do we get there? How do we build a world many of us have only seen in our dreams? That's where we believe the artists come in. So, each week we feature an artist, holding down a weekly residency with us, helping us to imagine a different, more liberated world. This week's Resistance in Residence artist is rhythm guitarist, orchestrator, composer, and producer, Ella Rae Feingold, who has toured and recorded with the whose-who of modern Black music including Queen Latifah, Erykah Badu, The Roots, Jay Z, Corrine Bailey Rae, Eric Benet, Silk Sonic (which is Anderson Paak and Bruno Mars), and many more. Check out Ella Rae Feingold's website: https://feingoldmusic.com/ Check out Ella Rae Feingold's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ella_rae_feingold/ Check out Ella Rae Feingold's Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/feingoldmusic — Subscribe to this podcast: https://plinkhq.com/i/1637968343?to=page Get in touch: lawanddisorder@kpfa.org Follow us on socials @LawAndDis: https://twitter.com/LawAndDis; https://www.instagram.com/lawanddis/ The post Resistance in Residence Artist: Ella Rae Feingold appeared first on KPFA.
暑假终于来啦~相信许多人都会趁着这个时间,全家开着车出去玩,这期节目就为大家带来一期暑期出游的“车载歌单”!这次挑选的歌曲,氛围轻松愉快,节奏也会比较分明,很有行进感,很适合开车的时候听。音乐就像是魔法,能让车上的气氛更愉悦,也为接下来的整个旅程铺垫了好心情。希望这期节目能陪伴你们旅途中的行车时光~*本期节目由【善存】以及【钙尔奇】赞助播出
Send us a Text Message.Welcome to Guess the Year! This is an interactive, competitive podcast series where you will be able to play along and compete against your fellow listeners. Here is how the scoring works:1 point: get the year correct within 10 years (e.g., you guess 1975 and it is between 1965-1985)4 points: get the year correct within 5 years (e.g., you guess 2004 and it is between 1999-2009)7 points: get the year correct within 2 years (e.g., you guess 1993 and it is between 1991-1995)10 points: get the year dead on!Guesses can be emailed to drandrewmay@gmail.com or texted using the link at the top of the show notes.I will read your scores out on the following episode, along with the scores of your fellow listeners! Please email your guesses to Andrew no later than 12pm EST on the day the next episode posts if you want them read out on the episode (e.g., if an episode releases on Monday, then I need your guesses by 12pm EST on Wednesday; if an episode releases on Friday, then I need your guesses by 12 pm EST on Monday). Note: If you don't get your scores in on time, they will still be added to the overall scores I am keeping. So they will count for the final scores - in other words, you can catch up if you get behind, you just won't have your scores read out on the released episode. All I need is your guesses (e.g., Song 1 - 19xx, Song 2 - 20xx, Song 3 - 19xx, etc.). Please be honest with your guesses! Best of luck!!The answers to today's ten songs can be found below. If you are playing along, don't scroll down until you have made your guesses. .....Have you made your guesses yet? If so, you can scroll down and look at the answers......Okay, answers coming. Don't peek if you haven't made your guesses yet!.....Intro song: Take a Walk by Passion Pit (2012)Song 1: Straight Up by Paula Abdul (1988)Song 2: Put on a Smile by Silk Sonic, Bruno Mars, etc. (2021)Song 3: Flathead by The Fratellis (2006)Song 4: marjorie by Taylor Swift (2020)Song 5: Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down) by Cher (1966)Song 6: The American Dream is Killing Me by Green Day (2023)Song 7: She Drives Me Wild by Michael Jackson (1991)Song 8: Duck Tales Theme by Disney (1987)Song 9: Seven Spanish Angels by Ray Charles & Willie Nelson (1984)Song 10: Hold Your Head Up by Argent (1972)
Scrump and Drew talk about the music of Queen, Kriss Kross, Young Miko, Cigarettes After Sex, Enter Shikari, Silk Sonic, Chuck Berry, Marlene and the Sons of Disaster, and more! Jump-Kriss Kross Bohemian Rhapsody-Queen Riri-Young Miko Sweet-Cigarettes After Sex Mothership-Enter Shikari Skate-Silk Sonic You Can Never Tell-Chuck Berry Dry the River-Marlene and the Sons of Disaster Patreon Merchandise Social Media: Twitter Instagram
Alec Brandl has been a day one brother since we were babies. Our relationship has been held by our family and our love for music. During his episode, we explore 3 pivotal moments that music has played a really big role in. Learning how to get back up from hardships using music is the message throughout his episode. Alec talks about - Steve Perry and Journey opening the door to the wonderful world of music and understanding it. - Silk Sonic and Elton John reigniting his passion for music and saving his life. - Elvis gives him the courage to keep on fighting for what he wants and what he believes in. Want to listen to Alec's top songs? Follow our playlist Follow us @soundsoflivingpodcast on Instagram
Final hour of the Get Right!
A roundtable discussion on the future of the orthodontic profession with innovators Dr. Brandon Owen, Dr. Melanie Wang & Dr. Jason Cope. This special episode was recorded in front of a live audience during the Ortho Innovation Summit in Austin, TX. On this episode, you’ll learn about: The guests’ favorite aspects of the Ortho Innovation Summit The benefits and challenges of adopting a digital workflow What orthodontic technologies or services are ripe for innovation Thoughts on what the future orthodontic practice might look like Advice the panel has for aspiring innovators & inventors Recorded March 2nd, 2024 at the Thompson Hotel during the Ortho Innovation Summit in Austin, TX. Generous support for this podcast comes from KLOwen Ortho, Voxel & ArchForm. Bonus Content: Tom O’Grady’s Fender Rhodes Piano Set ‘Leave the Door Open’ by Silk Sonic ‘What’s Going On’ by Marvin Gaye (Donny Hathaway version) ‘Lovely Day’ by Bill Withers ‘Just the Way You Are’ by Billy Joel ‘I Can’t Help It’ by Michael Jackson
Ella is a guitar played based in Western Massachusetts.Her credits include artists like Silk Sonic, Erykah Badu, Common, and Jill Scott.Amongst many other things, we discussed growing up through the grunge era, deciding to leave Berklee, and the value of a good mentor.I hope you enjoy our conversation as much as I did!(Recorded March 1st 2024)Support the showFollow me on Instagram - @nategrooveSubscribe to support the show - https://www.buzzsprout.com/2058148/supportAny questions or guest suggestions, please email nwinsessionwith@gmail.comGet 20% off all Safari Pedals plugins. Enter code Session20 at checkout!
Après deux épisodes spéciaux, retour aux classiques avec le quatuor Charlotte, Mimoun, Baptiste et Mathias.Bienvenue dans l'épisode 110 du Gaufrier, le podcast qui pense fort à Tori. Cet épisode a été enregistré une semaine après la disparition d'un des piliers du manga, et de la pop culture japonaise, Akira Toriyama. Il était normal pour l'équipe … Continuer la lecture de « LE GAUFRIER, LE PODCAST BD – Épisode 110 : Thunder 3 – Le Roi Méduse – Batman : Wayne Family Adventures » L'article LE GAUFRIER, LE PODCAST BD – Épisode 110 : Thunder 3 – Le Roi Méduse – Batman : Wayne Family Adventures est apparu en premier sur Le Gaufrier.
** PLEASE SUBSCRIBE ** Brought to you by FUNKNSTUFF.NET and hosted by Scott "DR GX" Goldfine — musicologist and author of “Everything Is on THE ONE: The First Guide of Funk” ― “TRUTH IN RHYTHM” is the interview show that gets DEEP into the pocket with contemporary music's foremost masters of the groove. Become a TRUTH IN RHYTHM Member through YouTube or at https://www.patreon.com/truthinrhythm. Featured in TIR Episode 329: Lead singer, guitarist, composer and producer Michael Cooper, best known as a founding member of Con Funk Shun – one of the most successful and dazzling funk-R&B bands ever to do it. From 1977's No. 1 R&B hit “Ffun” to 1986's No. 8 “Burnin' Love,” the seven-member Northern California group sent 10 albums into the Top 25 and 17 singles into the Top 40. Equally masterful at funk, captivating soul and unforgettable ballads, other fantastic tracks included “Confunkshunizeya,” “Chase Me,” “Too Tight,” “Got to Be Enough,” “Shake and Dance With Me,” “(Let Me) Put Love on Your Mind,” “Make It Last,” “Ms. Got the Body,” “Baby, I'm Hooked” and “Love's Train,” which more recently became a hit for Bruno Mars act, Silk Sonic. Cooper also achieved success as a solo artist, releasing five albums from 1987-2004 with seven Top 40 R&B hits, including the funky “To Prove My Love.” He continues to tour with Con Funk Shun, which recently released two singles from the upcoming album, titled Smooth Jukebox. RECORDED FEBRUARY 2024 LEGAL NOTICE: All video and audio content protected by copyright. Any use of this material is strictly prohibited without expressed consent from original content producer and owner Scott Goldfine, dba FUNKNSTUFF. For inquiries, email info@funknstuff.net. TRUTH IN RHYTHM is a registered U.S. Trademark (Serial #88540281). Get your copy of "Everything Is on the One: The First Guide of Funk" today! https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1541256603/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1541256603&linkCode=as2&tag=funknstuff-20&linkId=b6c7558ddc7f8fc9fe440c5d9f3c400
548 - Silk Sonic (Bruno Mars & Anderson .Paak) - Leave the Door Open: Chris, Nick, and Andy are joined by their friend Mike as they break down "Leave the Door Open" from the 2021 album An Evening with Silk Sonic by Silk Sonic.
Join me, Monique B Thomas, in Episode 10 of the Monique on the Mic podcast, 'Monique on the Green Eyed Monster,' where we delve into jealousy in the arts. Discover its forms, from silent resentment to sabotage, and why it's often baseless. Learn how to flip jealousy into a tool for growth and confidence, fostering a supportive artist community. Be inspired by examples like Silk Sonic to transform envy into empowerment. Tune in to conquer jealousy and embrace your unique artistic path!Please remember that "The Financially Free Artist Summit" starts on January 29th. This is a free on-line event for artists who wish to know more about how to finance their projects. This is summit is run by singer/songwriter and Crowdfunding Coach Jess Eva Allen and will feature international coaches including myself.FREE summit link : https://jessevaallen.com/06-join/Jess Eva Allen website : https://jessevaallen.com/Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/jesslivingtothefullest/
This week we're talking unfinished songs, lyrics, Muse, Todd Rundgren, Silk Sonic and Regina Spektor. Email us! weeklysongpodcast@gmail.com
Grammy® Nom, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame & New Music, TV Appearances..........What was it Like Being a Rock & Soul Star & Tour BEFORE Integration? What was it like for a New Yorker Touring the segregated South n the late 50's early 60's? What was it like to hear your song on the radio & be on a Dance TV Show as Black a music act, yet the audiences & dancers in that studio were segregated ( No Blacks, Minorities allowed)?We discuss early Rock, Radio & icons of the past & present in this episodeAlthough his music pre-dates ME, My Grand Folks & Family always had the Rock n Roll/Soul Classics playing when I went to Reunions & around the House during my Childhood. I consider this a GIFT!! I ALSO get the gift of Interviewing one of my Favorites: Little Anthony!!Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee “Little Anthony” Gourdine is without question one of the most celebrated vocalists in the annals of popular music. His tender yet explosive delivery of a musical phrase leaves audiences spellbound with an impression so indelible that casual listeners never forget the ‘voice' or the tunes he immortalized. These songs consistently emanate from airwaves and are often lauded in music journals worldwide. Songs such as “Goin' Out Of My Head,” “I'm On The Outside Looking In,” “Hurt So Bad,” and “Take Me Back,” . And then they go on praising his vocal acumen, deservedly so. His R&B-laced rendering of "New York State of Mind" is a divergence from the perennial recording and sports an infectious 42nd Street vibe. It's performed so well that composer Billy Joel is likely to tip his hat. A popular legend recently said: "The Man's still got it!" A few days from scheduled release, we're anticipating a rush of accolades and interest in what comes next. After years of performing at arenas and concert halls, clubs and festivals, Anthony has acquired a wealth of experience that accompanies him as you flashback to his highly successful stint as lead singer with the Imperials on a few choice cuts. Following the release of this work, expect the entertainment icon and his band to visit a city near you with a live show embracing many of the tunes contained in this two-volume cache — and more. As an all-around artist in the studio and on stage, he has been and remains an inspiration to many larger-than-life- acts, past and present: Silk Sonic, Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, and Michael Jackson, to name a few. Nearly every rock, pop, R&B, and jazz act who attained star status attribute a slice of their inspiration to the influence of Little Anthony as a lead vocalist and a solo artist. © 2023 Building Abundant Success!!2023 All Rights ReservedJoin Me on ~ iHeart Media @ https://tinyurl.com/iHeartBASSpot Me on Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/yxuy23baAmazon Music ~ https://tinyurl.com/AmzBASAudacy: https://tinyurl.com/BASAud
November is definitely here and cheer is in the air. Kicking things off with Barry White -Also on this week's podcast: Diana Ross, Claptone, Marshall Jefferson, Dave Lee, Purple Disco Machine, Cameo, Silk Sonic, and many more.. Your weekly mixtape of Funk, Soul, Disco, House, R&B, and a few things in between. Join The Party ....Let's Go!!!
Stereogum's Tom Breihan returns to Pop Pantheon to dissect the career of pop history's greatest mimic, Bruno Mars. Louie and Tom dive into how Bruno spent his childhood impersonating greats like Elvis and Michael Jackson, his failed start on Motown and early work for other artists, including via his production group The Smeezingtons. Then they discuss his tightly-stitched 2010 debut, Doo-Wops and Hooligans, 2012's pop history grab-bag, Unorthodox Jukebox, and the cultural sensation of his 2014 Mark Ronson-collab, the Morris Day-tributing “Uptown Funk.” Next, they explore Bruno's tour through Black pop and soul history on 2016's 24K Magic and his Philly Soul and Parliament-Funkadelic-homaging super-duo with Anderson .Paak., Silk Sonic, as they parse whether Bruno is central to his music at all or simply a nostalgia curator. Finally, they rank Bruno Mars in the official Pop Pantheon.Read Tom's Number Ones Column write-ups of "Just The Way You Are" & "Grenade"Listen to Pop Pantheon's Bruno Mars EssentialsJoin Pop Pantheon: All Access, Our Patreon Channel, for Exclusive Content and MoreBuy Tickets to Pop Pantheon Live: Britney's Memoir, Music & Legacy on 11/2 In PasadenaCome to Gorgeous Gorgeous NYC: Halloween Edition on October 27Come to Gorgeous Gorgeous LA on November 10Come to Gorgeous Gorgeous X Who? Weekly on November 16Shop Merch in Pop Pantheon's StoreFollow Tom Breihan on TwitterFollow DJ Louie XIV on InstagramFollow DJ Louie XIV on TwitterFollow Pop Pantheon on InstagramFollow Pop Pantheon on Twitter
Radioactive Cheese Whiz Playlist. Fauxtrot Presave Link Fauxtrot has been a band for the last 4 years. They've played numerous shows and now they are gearing up to release their first single. Make sure to presave it and show them some love! We talk about some fauxtrot lore, sexy time music, Inspirations, and a lot more! We have a Discord now so come hang out with us and for those who want to support the show go check out our Patreon we have some awesome perks and it'll help us out a lot. Links for both of those are in our LinkTree and on all of our socials. Make sure to follow us on all socials to keep up with interviews and playlists @VIPlaylistpod and we have a YouTube now so go subscribe to us!! Special thanks to Ghostshaft, Boo Lay, Keanu DiCaprio and FBD Media for making that amazing tune you hear at the end of the episode. Go check out their socials and jam some of their tunes on Spotify. Artists on the Radioactive Cheese Whiz Playlist are System of a Down, Mariah Carey, Janet Jackson, Celine Dion, Selena, Tycho, Thundercat, Usher, My Chemical Romance, Linkin Park , Breaking Benjamin, The Used, Saosin, Scary Kids Scaring Kids, Dance Gavin Dance, Betraying The Martyr, Periphery, A Day To Remember, Parkway Drive, Brian McKnight, Gold Necklace, Silk Sonic, Next, Living Colour, Bird Problems, Animals As Leaders, Chon, With Sails Ahead, Currents, The Callous Daoboys, Archspire, Inferi, Invent Animate, Darko US, Dwellings, Artifex Pereo, Properties of Nature, Origami Button, pulses., Joelaul, The Lionhearted, Sonoa, Jesse Gold, Death Dance, Sunwell, and Space Corolla. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/viplaylistpod/message
The Boys are back and they are stronger, faster, and smarter than ever. (Well maybe once Cameron fully recovers from surgery)The Boys cover a variety of topics you never saw coming, dunk tank etiquette, Chance's new favorite restaurant, Kamen Rider (shocker I know), Octopath 2 and Baldur's Gate 3.The Boys also bring a musical extravaganza to the back half of the show as they discuss "An Evening with Silk Sonic" and Janelle Monae's album "The Electric Lady.
Bruno Mars went from impersonating Elvis Presley to living the Presley dream. Now it's time to focus on all the award-winning music that came after. We're talking Unorthodox Jukebox, 24K Magic, and An Evening with Silk Sonic. Don't forget two Super Bowls and a whole lot of style as we also breakdown his killer fashion sense and how enforces a dress code for recordings. Yes, you read that correctly. So what are you waiting for? Listen up and find out what makes Bruno Mars so super duper fly. Lilliana Vázquez and Joseph Carrillo are the hosts of Becoming an Icon with production support by Josie Meléndez, Daniela Sarquis, and Santiago Sierra of Sonoro Media in partnership with iHeart Radio's My Cultura Podcast network. If you want to support the podcast, please rate and review our show. Follow Lilliana Vázquez on Instagram and Twitter @lillianavazquez Follow Joseph Carrillo on Instagram @josephcarrillo Help support Maui wildfire relief here!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Encore EpisodeMy Grand Folks & Family always had the Rock n Roll/Soul Classics playing when I went to Reunions & around the House during my Childhood. I consider this a GIFT Interviewing one of my Favorites: Little Anthony!!Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee “Little Anthony” Gourdine is without question one of the most celebrated vocalists in the annals of popular music. His tender yet explosive delivery of a musical phrase leaves audiences spellbound with an impression so indelible that casual listeners never forget the ‘voice' or the tunes he immortalized. Songs such as “Goin' Out Of My Head,” “I'm On The Outside Looking In,” “Hurt So Bad,” and “Take Me Back,” are simply four of a compendium of platinum hits performed by the extraordinarily gifted performer on national television and heard on classic and Top-40 radio spanning numerous decades. His latest blockbuster release is a well-thought-out and substantive diary of songs, including many covers bearing his unmistakable vocal imprint. Producer Michael Miller spared no effort in tirelessly orchestrating a project that promises an enduring shelf-life titled LITTLE ANTHONY & THE MUSIC — AN ANTHOLOGY. Songs include the classics “A Lovely Way To Spend An Evening, ”Love is a Many Splendored Thing,” “What A Difference A Day Makes,” and “Who's Sorry Now.” . Consider the infusive single and premier release "New York State of Mind." While some scratch their heads in wonderment upon hearing this cover for the first time, thinking: "That voice is familiar." And after a slight pause, like a ton of bricks it hits them: "That's Little Anthony!" For sure. And then they go on praising his vocal acumen, deservedly so. His R&B-laced rendering of "New York State of Mind" is a divergence from the perennial recording and sports an infectious 42nd Street vibe. It's performed so well that composer Billy Joel is likely to tip his hat. He has been & remains an inspiration to many larger-than-life- acts, past and present: Silk Sonic, Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, and Michael Jackson, to name a few. Nearly every rock, pop, R&B, and jazz act who attained star status attribute a slice of their inspiration to the influence of Little Anthony as a lead vocalist and a solo artist. Alive and well, he is eager to take his show on the road and share as much as audiences can enjoy, He is busily working on other productions to be named later. His new autobiography Little Anthony -- My Journey, My Destiny is not the traditional rags-to-riches -- cock-and-bull story and not the aimless tale landing everywhere. It is a culmination of a lifetime of near embryonic experiences unlike many others -- and he is here to talk about it. Little Anthony Gourdine has brightened many a day for aficionados of ‘God's musical gift to mankind' everywhere with indescribably beautiful music that fills our hearts with Joy! .............. https://www.harmonystreet.biz/ Phil C. Brown © 2023 Building Abundant Success!!2023 All Rights ReservedJoin Me on ~ iHeart Media @ https://tinyurl.com/iHeartBASSpot Me on Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/yxuy23baAmazon Music ~ https://tinyurl.com/AmzBASAudacy: https://tinyurl.com/BASAud
** PLEASE SUBSCRIBE ** Brought to you by FUNKNSTUFF.NET and hosted by Scott "DR GX" Goldfine — musicologist and author of “Everything Is on THE ONE: The First Guide of Funk” ― “TRUTH IN RHYTHM” is the interview show that gets DEEP into the pocket with contemporary music's foremost masters of the groove. Become a TRUTH IN RHYTHM Member through YouTube or at https://www.patreon.com/truthinrhythm. Featured in TIR Episode 292 (Part 2 of 2): Keyboardist, composer and producer Danny Thomas, best known as an original and longtime member of Con Funk Shun – one of the most successful, distinctive and flat-out fantastic funk-R&B bands of all time. From 1977's No. 1 R&B smash “Ffun” to 1986's No. 8 hit “Burnin' Love,” the seven-member Northern California group notched 10 Top 25 albums and 17 top 40 singles. Equally adept at funk, catchy soul and love ballads, other killer tracks included “Chase Me,” “Too Tight,” “Got to Be Enough,” “Shake and Dance With Me,” “(Let Me) Put Love on Your Mind,” “Make It Last,” “Baby, I'm Hooked” and “Love's Train,” which was recently remade into a hit for Bruno Mars' act, Silk Sonic. In 2021, Thomas released an autobiography on his career with the band, titled “My Life And Fun Times With Con Funk Shun.” Special thanks to Bryce Jordan as the instrumental orchestrator and PR professional who coordinated this interview (Itsfrombryce@gmail.com). RECORDED APRIL 2023 LEGAL NOTICE: All video and audio content protected by copyright. Any use of this material is strictly prohibited without expressed consent from original content producer and owner Scott Goldfine, dba FUNKNSTUFF. For inquiries, email info@funknstuff.net. TRUTH IN RHYTHM is a registered U.S. Trademark (Serial #88540281). Get your copy of "Everything Is on the One: The First Guide of Funk" today! https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1541256603/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1541256603&linkCode=as2&tag=funknstuff-20&linkId=b6c7558ddc7f8fc9fe440c5d9f3c400
If you had a billion-dollar fund to buy the full rights, masters, and publishing of ANY music artists — who are you acquiring to maximize shareholder value? This question was top of mind for real-life portfolio managers the past three years as music catalog sales boomed. Now my guest on the episode, Denisha Kuhlor, and I are asking ourselves the same hypothetical question.In this episode, we're doing a mock music rights draft. Akin to the NFL Draft, each of us getting seven picks. Any artists' catalog, living or dead, is on the table for us to acquire. Our goal is to score the biggest ROI for investors on a 10-year timeline from purely catalog revenue — streaming, syncs, and partnerships, among other sources. Touring or merchandise revenue isn't factored in, and neither are future catalog releases, only what's already been released. As you'll see on this episode, Denisha and I took very different approaches to our portfolios. One was more “risk on”, while the other was filled with more “blue chips.” Here's what to expect:[0:01] Draft parameters [4:51] First-round picks[9:42] Second-round picks[14:21] Third-round picks[18:49] Fourth-round picks[21:55] Fifth-round picks[26:04] Sixth-round picks[29:20] Seventh-round picks[37:33] Honorable mentions [52:21] Up-and-coming artistsListen: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | SoundCloud | Stitcher | Overcast | Amazon | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | RSSHost: Dan Runcie, @RuncieDan, trapital.coGuests: Denisha Kuhlor, @denishakuhlorToday's episode was brought to you by feature.fm. Grow your fanbase and music career with their marketing suite. Get 50% off your first three months by using code: TRAPITAL50Enjoy this podcast? Rate and review the podcast here! ratethispodcast.com/trapitalTrapital is home for the business of music, media and culture. Learn more by reading Trapital's free memo.TRANSCRIPTDenisha Kuhlor: We've talked about Burna Boy on the podcast before, so don't necessarily have to go over all of his stats, but I think that in one thing I'm finding with people discovering, music from the continent. Is that when they like the artist or there's things they like about the artist or the genre, they go back and listen, to the past catalog.And so I feel like there's still a lot of untouched ground in terms of people discovering his music and listening to his whole catalog and given how timeless in a lot of ways some of his music feels, I think that we'll have new fans discovering him over and over for a long time and getting to also benefit from the upside of that catalog is great.I'll also say, he's pretty feature light as well. He's increased the amount of features that he's had in some of his more recent albums, but even like him, some of his breakout singles, whether Ye or Last Last, were Independence, or songs that he did independently and didn't have people featuring.So I think in terms of some of the big records, there's solo records, which is exciting and that his catalog has a lot of value for people to discover and wanna to.Dan Runcie Intro: Hey, welcome to the Trapital Podcast. I'm your host and the founder of Trapital, Dan Runcie. This podcast is your place to gain insights from executives in music, media, entertainment, and more who are taking hip hop culture to the next level. Dan Runcie: Today's episode is one I am really excited for. This is a music rights draft. We are going to be breaking down the artists that we would most wanna have their music rights for. So today's guest friend of the podcast, Denisha Kuhlor, founder of Stan, her and I are both managers of billion dollar funds and we can acquire the full rights, Masters and publishing to any artist, living or dead.And our job is to maximize value for our investors for the next 10 years. We each get to pick 10 artists and their full rights of music, and we draft them one by one. Denisha, are you ready? How are you feeling?Denisha Kuhlor: I am, I'm super excited for this. like keep racking my head, I think till the last minute with each pick. but yeah, I'm ready to get Dan Runcie: started.Right. It's funny because we're chatting about this yesterday and I almost wonder like if our chat yesterday like shifts anything, it's like, oh, okay. That's how you're thinking about this. Okay. That's how I'm thinking about this.Denisha Kuhlor: Exactly, in a funny way, I have some more compassion for venture investors because I can see how societal shift or even group think can shift your perspective even if just a bit. Dan Runcie: Yeah, it's fascinating, and I mean with this, we did try to keep the parameters of it a bit clear because obviously in the real music rights acquisition world, there are many different strategies about how these firms are buying and acquiring these rights. Some of them are sitting and holding on them, but we are putting ourselves in a different bucket.We are assuming that we have the means to maximize this catalogs and this artist's value through multimedia, through sync, through other partnerships, and just the revenue that it naturally generates as sound recordings themselves. And we assume that we're only acquiring what that artist has released up to that point.Of course, what that artist continues to do in the future may shift the perception of the value of what they've done, but we are only looking at what they've done up to this point. So we're saying that just to lay the groundwork, because someone may be like, oh, what about so-and-so and so-and-so may be an artist that blew up in the past five years.They may not have Steve as a catalog, but who knows? Maybe we'll both have a few of those picks.Denisha Kuhlor: Exactly. Super exciting Dan Runcie: All right, so we are gonna be so a few things to just keep in mind as well for listeners. So a few of the factors you both considered were expected longevity of the artist music themselves, which is a big piece of this. You're acquiring these rights, you're trying to get a sense for what is the music that people are still going to listen to, right?It's one thing if you dominate the charts, that you have a song that takes off, but there's a decay curve. So we're trying to find those artists that have the value, but have the much less steep decay curve as it goes down year over year. There's also a mix too. There's the stable picks, which a lot of the rights go after, which are attractive, but there's also some higher upside picks or some riskier bets.Where do those fit in? And then we're also taken into account the share of the song recordings that the artists actually have given that certain genres such as hip hop or r and b and pop music specifically, there's a lot more collaboration. There's a lot more hands being shared in that pot. So, how does that line up with another genre where that artist may have a higher percentage of those things?All those things get factored into how we pick this. So I'm ready to get started and I wanna give you the first pick so you can go and then I'll go after that.Denisha Kuhlor: Oh, thank you, so my first pick is Mariah Carey. for a few reasons. One, Mariah Carey has one of the most amazing songs in her collection, with Christmas, right? Like it's just being Christmas time, every Christmas, you know, you're going to get, a spike in revenue. Mariah Carey's also been very notable, about talking about that.She writes a lot of her own music, and I don't think how many people realize how much of a prolific songwriter that she is as well. And with the nature of R and B, much to what you talked about earlier with it being collaborative, Mariah Carey seems to be embraced by a lot of rappers for samples.So while I definitely think it will be pricey based off literally, all I want for Christmas, if anything, I think that it's. It's a bit of a safe, but also Sure. Fire and, and stable. expectation revenue. Dan Runcie: That was my number two pick. So we're definitely aligned there. It makes perfect sense because even if you, all I want for Christmas is a big piece of the pie, I wanna say 300 million streams per year on Spotify was the stat that I heard, and I forget the exact revenue number that it generates. I don't wanna quote it, but it's huge.Almost 20 number one singles that she's had. So the longevity's there, and as we know we're talking about this a little yesterday, but there's a reason that catalog isn't one that's getting acquired because, A, the people that own it, and I know she may own maybe some of the more recent stuff. I don't know if, Columbia still owns, you know, the stuff from the nineties, especially given the nature of her deal and stuff like that.But I mean, it's up there, it's definitely one of the most valuable ones. So good. Yeah. Good for you on that one. So I'll take my number one pick here and the number one pick. For this, for me, so much of it was thinking about how millennials and this group are the dominant users of streaming.Streaming makes up a bulk of the revenue for these streaming services. And who is the biggest artist for millennials overall? Just you look at the sheer numbers and everything like that, it has to be Taylor Swift. Miss 1989 herself, I will take those albums, especially these rerecorded ones, Taylor's version, because they'reDenisha Kuhlor: That's just what I was gonna ask.Dan Runcie: Yeah. I may not get Scooter bronze version, but I'll get Taylor's version and I'll keep that. I think that it's rare to find a star that has as much impact as she does that is as recent in this way, I mean, just the pure demand for this Eras tour. She could have done 10 x times the number of shows and been touring for the next five years in a in stadiums and still had plenty of demand left over.And of course, we're not counting touring revenue in this, but it just goes to show how big everything else is. The fact that midnights broke records, both in streaming and in hard sales, I think I saw 230 million dollars that album generated in its revenue. Of course. That her entire rights will likely be owned, you know, herself just given the Taylor's version of everything.Currently I'm licensed with Republican Universal Music Group. But if in a perfect world you could acquire that, I will take that. She's able to dominate in all of these multiple platforms and if we're really trying to say, okay, 10 years from now, each of her albums is still in the top 50 of the billboard, 200, just from like a rankings perspective.Well, not all of 'em, but a lot of them, and I think it's harder to come by. So yeah, I'll take T Swift.Denisha Kuhlor: Yeah, I think it's definitely a solid pick her music evokes so much nostalgia especially as her fans get older, that they'll be listening to it for life, right? Because it's not necessarily attached to a moment or even a recency of today, even though they can appreciate that.it's, yeah, it's music that's the soundtrack to their lives. So, it makes a ton of sense. And she's also another prolific songwriter, so I would assume, from an ownership perspective, it's quite attractive.Dan Runcie: Yeah. Not as attractive as Mariah though, because I feel like Taylor more recently, especially with the more pop albums, there was a lot of Max Martin production and a lot of other big name folks and you know, Kendrick Lamar, guest verses and stuff like that. And Mariah had some of that, but I still feel like she always had like her single, you know what I mean? It's like Yeah.fantasy was, they had a remix with ODB or they had a honey remix with the lock, but there was still the core Mariah version that was justDenisha Kuhlor: Yeah, that's a great point. The breakout has frequently remained just her. Yeah. Dan Runcie: so we'll see. But yeah, who's your second pick?Denisha Kuhlor: So my second pick, I thought a lot too about, like world music as we say, or just music that's global. much to your point as well around streaming. I kind of think that it's exciting to pick, an artist that can dominate globally that's, not necessarily a pop artist. And so for that, I went back and forth.Probably two of the biggest artists. but landed on Bad Bunny, Bad Bunny to me is one just an amazing and exciting artist. He also has a great amount of volume, but much to the point we just made about Mariah Carey's, Taylor Swifts, I think he's really optimized a lot of his catalog, for music that he makes and that music that he solely makes.Additionally, and I know we're not counting touring, but the sheer amount of numbers he's done touring, I think has not only earned him new fans, but earned him kind of the same type of fan appetite that Taylor Swift has in which the music will evoke a certain nostalgia, whether they saw him perform it on top of a gas station or when he was driving through the Bronx, that leads them to want to continue to listen to this music for the rest of their lives, which hopefully will be financially lucrative.Dan Runcie: He was on my list as well. You can't ignore just the huge, massive success of this last album, UN Varano Centi. We saw that album dominate week after week after week, and it, the songs are still on Spotify's Top 50 and they're still having traction there. And in an era where there's just so much more music, if you can get a song like that that comes out in 2022 that's still coming out or just an album, it's rare and I know we talk a lot about how monoculture itself is just harder to come by from a artist that is in the US or UK just because those markets are so much more saturated. But the closest we get to anyone reaching Beatlemania is someone like Bad Bunny. So that's a great.Denisha Kuhlor: Exactly, exactly. I also think a lot both, Drake's wrapped about Bad Bunny numbers and Kanye's reference Bad Bunny's, success. And so I feel like even if his peers in the industry are kind of in some ways either looking at him aspirationally or like he's one that could potentially, hit my success, is also a great indicator.Dan Runcie: All right, so the next pick I have here is, you mentioned him a second ago, the streaming king himself, 70 million streams. Drake, it's hard to think about the streaming era and not think about him. Just the massive hits that he's had and every time that he releases an album, it still creates this moment that few have the ability to be able to reach moving forward.I know Birdman will never give up those rights, and Young Money extensively will never give up those rights, but if I had the choice, I would take it. I think the knock against Drake potentially though I will acknowledge is that one. Just the high number of features and samples with all that, there's a high, there's a less likelihood that he may own all or just have a higher percentage of the revenue coming in for this stuff.But just the sheer volume of whether it's the mixtapes, the playlist, the little two packs that he puts out, the albums, especially some of the ones from like, especially the cash money albums, honestly, from, when was that? So I guess you had 2010, it was official first album, but you had so far gone oh nine and then everything up to Scorpion.Yeah, those are the biggest albums of the last decade. So I'll take DrakeDenisha Kuhlor: Yeah. Yeah. super solid pick. As someone who has seen Drake in concert 10 times, there's a few things recently. Yeah. 10 times. Yeah. So a few things that stuck out to me with Trigg specifically, The Serious Show. So the serious show was a lot of like deep cuts or songs that he hasn't recently performed on some of his tours. And you could just see that fans loved it, right?A lot of people wanted access to tickets and really loved the music. And then, lastly in part of, in going to these tours, there were so many times that I saw, that he would like go off of stage and to keep the crowd like engaged. They would do a whole set of his music that he wasn't going to perform, and the crowd literally went just as crazy as if he was on, if he was on stage so much to just like the emotional factor that his catalog has.I feel like Drake has provided the music of a generation. And so, regardless volume wise, they'll be continuing to listen for a long time.Dan Runcie: Who's your number two?Denisha Kuhlor: So next I'm going with Burna Boy. one, we've talked about Burna Boy on the podcast before, so don't necessarily have to go over all of his stats, but I think that in one thing I'm finding with people discovering, music from the continent. Is that when they like the artist or there's things they like about the artist or the genre, they go back and listen, to the past catalog.And so I feel like there's still a lot of untouched ground in terms of people discovering his music and listening to his whole catalog and given how timeless in a lot of ways some of his music feels, I think that we'll have new fans discovering him over and over for a long time and getting to also benefit from the upside of that catalog is great.I'll also say, he's pretty feature light as well. He's increased the amount of features that he's had in some of his more recent albums, but even like him, some of his breakout singles, whether Ye or Last Last, were Independence, or songs that he did independently and didn't have people featuring.So I think in terms of some of the big records, there's solo records, which is exciting and that his catalog has a lot of value for people to discover and wanna to. Dan Runcie: Yeah, he was on the list as well, and I think the attractive thing with him is similar to the bad Bunny perspective where almost more so because if you are one of the signature artists that is on this entire continent, well, I think for him, obviously more West Africa, but if you're one of the signature artists that's on this entire continent, you have the closer thing to that Beattlemania effect.And as more people there have access to streaming as more of that just grows and develops, you're going to get that curve too that just grows naturally with what's already there. And you can't undersell that. And I think given an artist like that too, there's probably huge sync opportunities as multimedia and entertainment starts to grow from that, from, from those parts of the worlds too.So there's a lot of value there. Yeah.Denisha Kuhlor: exactly. Who do you have Dan Runcie: pick, this is a pick with the mind and not necessarily with the heart, but I am a, in the role of a asset manager or not the role of a fan. And my pick here is Eminem and my pick for Eminem, and the reason I pick him is because his music is still some of the most streamed music across the board.And his Curtains Call album was the bestselling rap album in the UK in 2022. His greatest hits album from 2005 was the best selling rap album 17 years later. And I remember seeing that stat and I was just like, wow. And then you just think about the nature of his music. And even though he's someone that I feel, if you're someone that lives in the Twitter circles that you and I live in, Eminem is someone that I think has largely fallen out ofpopular discourse.And people do look at him a bit more, distinctly in a way that they did in 20 years ago. But if you don't live in those circles, which the majority of people don't, they still listen to his music and still revere him. And just on a sheer number perspective, there's probably more people that listen to hip hop that have an artist like Eminem and their top three and they're top two and not two.And you look at some of the numbers as well for songs like Till I Collapse and Lose Yourself, that just get played over and over for people working out and all of these things. Those songs have a timelessness to them. I mean, on stats, he was the bestselling like recorded artist of the two thousands. He was up there for the 2010s.He still tours massively, and even though a lot of his albums that probably generate the most revenue are songs that I'm no longer listening to, I can acknowledge that this has huge value. And as an asset manager, as a fund manager, I would do quite well with that, with his rights.Denisha Kuhlor: Yeah. No, I don't know if that's where I would have went, but after hearing your explanation, it makes a ton of sense. Eminem fans are, independent in the sense that they're fans regardless of whether he's the top of a pop culture, relevancy or not. yeah, I think, that's really, really interesting.And the Stan's side, he literally pioneered the word we all use today, so I think in some ways too, people forget just, how impactful culturally he's been. so yeah, that makes a Dan Runcie: Nice. All right. who's your.Denisha Kuhlor: So for my next one, I kind of wanted to go in a direction of some newer artists that are still proving themselves out of it, but I think have a lot of potential. but keeping in mind to what they've done so far, I wanna go with Lizzo. I. think of Lizzo, you know, a lot of us were actually introduced, to her in because of a sync, in one of the, in a movie on Netflix.I'm blanking on the name of the movie, but that sync actually introduced me, to her. I think that Lizzo's music is just like the perfect type of music for a movie trailer, in the sense of some of her upbeat, more like pop, pop records. It's like the perfect songs to usher in like a romcom.So from a sing perspective, I think it has a lot of potential. She's also known as, pretty talented on the songwriting side, so I think the ownership would be, I think the ownership would be attractive. and in her last tours, she's done pretty well while also there were smaller venues, the fan base and her having an engaged fan base is definitely there as well.Obviously and from an asset manager perspective, definitely wouldn't be looking to pick it up. But the numbers I've picked up, some of my earlier bets, but I think it would be a fun bet to have and see how it does in the future.Dan Runcie: It's funny because she's someone that I think she has a very high diehard fan to fan ratio, if that makes sense. And I say that because she's someone who. Does quite well. She sells out arenas and she does multiple shows in some cities, in arenas, in an era where it's very hard to get artists that are topping the charts with their streaming to sell out the same venues.The knock against her though is that she doesn't stream necessarily as well. Like she hasn't had an album that's like top the charts. I don't think she's had, you know, a 100K in the first week necessarily. But those fans do show up. so there's something to be said there. I think the other thing too, when you're mentioning the sync, I was thinking about, you know, that car, I think it's Carnival Cruise, that commercial, and it has that song that's like Hands to the Sky.Show me that your mind, like, I didn't even realize that was a Lizzo song until I just looked it up because it was stuck in my head and I'm like, oh, that's a Lizzo song from like 2016, like Pret Truth. So I think you're right with the sync piece of it. I mean, a song like Truth Hurts Itself, juice, literally anything from whether it's special or the album before this, I think that there is strong potential there.So I think Lizzo is definitely a good multimedia play. Assuming like we are in this role, you have the ability to maximize the asset.Denisha Kuhlor: Yeah, exactly, exactly. It definitely comes down to maximization of the asset on her part, and in a way. I don't see streaming continuing to go up. I think her engage fans like her, they listen to her, and they keep it at, and they keep it at that. So without kind of very targeted, like a targeted approach to maximizing her syncs, the asset becomes less attractive.Dan Runcie: So the next pick, and this is a bit strategic because I wanna take this artist before you take them, is SZA and. picking SZA because she obviously doesn't have a huge catalog. We're talking two studio albums really, that have came out. But if I could get those studio albums for a good price, I'm getting an album in control that is literally stayed on the charts for five years.People are listening, streaming and buying the hell out of that thing, and it hasn't really stopped. And this album is setting all these records and every time you see what the 10, 11 weeks that SSA's SOS has been at the top of the charts, that's in the territory with like Adele, Beyonce and all these other artists because first here's breaking records for female R and B artists then is just, you know, female artists.Now it's artists in general, like how many people are at those levels. So sure. I don't think I'm necessarily gonna have to pay Taylor Swift, Drake or Eminem numbers to get SZA rights, but this is a hits game, and if I can get two of her hits, certified hits albums, that could be worth more than 10 of someone else's mediocre ones.Denisha Kuhlor: I completely agree. SZA is it makes so much sense. It makes so much sense. I'd also say what's so exciting about CSA when you think about it is two studio albums and being able to maintain that relevancy and the sheer amount of time that those albums have lived, is so exciting and you can continue to maximize those two albums even for years to come.Because for everyone, it still feels very relevant.Dan Runcie: All right. Who's your, you've picked five, right? Okay, so last two picks. who's your sixth pick?Denisha Kuhlor: Yes. So I'm gonna keep the S theme here with SZA. and this one was somewhat a big streaming play. but Summer Walker, summer Walker was one that initially when I first made this list, didn't come to mind to be honest. But as I thought about it, and I will probably mention this more in some of my honorable mentions, but I was going for Usher, and I thought about the record that they had together and thought about a lot of the records that Summer Walker has broken. and shout out to the folks that love Renaissance, I think that people don't even realize or truly understand how big of an artist she's been, from a streaming perspective. she's had some really impressive numbers when she releases the album, she's done great numbers. and People continue to listen to her. I also think, you know, she's toyed around with retiring as well as not doing, as well as not doing tours, creating less opportunities for fans to be able to interact with her, which, fortunately or unfortunately leads them back to her music as that's one of the only sources of ways that they can interact with her.So, I don't know if I see as much sync potential with an artist like her as I would maybe a Lizzo, but I think she can continue to generate solid, solid streaming numbers, for years, foryears. Dan Runcie: a good pick. It's funny, she's someone that's not on my list, but when you mentioned her I was like, I can't believe I'd even think of the think of her. But you're absolutely right. She has, especially from a streaming perspective, she has numbers that rival some of the artists that we mentioned before when it comes to streaming and on average, streaming is making up 70 to 80% often of the revenue that comes in from these music rights.So, it makes sense to be able to have that. And I think that just given how much she's been able to speak to an audience that doesn't really have as many people speaking directly to them as well in this way of, okay, who is making music for black women, who is making like doing that? And I think when you think about it that way, that list does become slim.Especially when we're talking about artists at this level, obviously, you know, touring and some of the more personal things of just like being out there that isn't her style, that isn't her vibe or her personality necessarily. But we don't necessarily need that and I think that there's clearly value in over it, still over it.And, you know, the small features and things that she's done here and there since then. Denisha Kuhlor: Yeah. Dan Runcie: All right. So mine, I have two picks left. this is where it does get tough because, looking through some of these names and there's some ones that I like and, okay, so I am going to take Bruno Mars and I'm gonna take Mars because the fact that he has music that I think honestly can transcend in terms of the versatility of the music.Songs like 24K Magic or Uptown Funk, or.Denisha Kuhlor: Very intergenerational as well. Dan Runcie: Yeah. You hear, could hear it in the supermarket, you could hear it being out, like you could hear it in syncs or different types of things, even the more recent stuff with Silk Sonic and getting his chair of that with with Anderson .Paak there, I think there's a huge potential there.I can't speak as much to the hard numbers, but I do think that the multimedia opportunities are there. He's a pit maker and I think it would be valuable to have his stuff in there.Denisha Kuhlor: Yeah, so from kind of a multimedia or even multidisciplinary perspective, my next one is Pharrell.Pharrell's been a part of a lot of really big records, records that feel intergenerational. I would say, and I don't know the numbers of this. I would say his streaming probably isn't in the highest percentile, but it's also not in the lowest percentile.Like it's somewhere probably in the media, in the middle, given all the records he's been a part of. That makes it kind just a steady asset and also transcends multiple decades in a way that if something does come back in style, You can benefit from that upside. He also has a few records, I think about a record like Happy, that sync wise I think will continue to be used for years and years to come, in a host of ways.So Pharrell is one that could be a really safe bet or maybe a really unsafe bet, just dependent on how, things go. But I think there's enough factors, in, which he falls kind of nicely in to justify the bet. But I will say I don't think it will be, I don't think it will be cheap but I do think it can have a big upside.Dan Runcie: The upside smart thing about that pick, he's someone else I didn't think of, but I think it was a really good pick because you get the artist Pharrell and you get the producer Pharrell, so you get everything from, I forget that Sta but when was it? In 2002 or 2003, the Neptunes were responsible for 43% of the music that was on top 40 radio that was on, you know, pop So you get all those songs and then you get any of the stuff you did with NERD, you get any of like the Child Rebel Soldier stuff. I mean it makes a lot of sense. And then even songs like, Get Lucky was huge as well. I know that there's been a bunch of controversy around blurred lines, but I'm still sure that the revenue from that song continues to be massive.So I think that's a smart pick.Denisha Kuhlor: Exactly. And I think in the future we'll see kind of that doubling, right? artists like a Pharrell will continue to be super valuable when it comes to being able to capture the peak of their rights because they just have them.Dan Runcie: Definitely, definitely. so then with the last pick, it's funny, I hesitated with this one a bit, but I'm gonna go ahead and pick it anyway. It's probably the catalog or the rights that would go for the most money if anyone's was on the table at all right now. And it's Michael Jackson and I'm going to take his, because the fact that Thriller is now over 40 years old and I think that the baseline for streams from that song and streams from everything else is quite high.It is strong and there's value there. This is another one where I think I'm separating a bit of the personal versus the, you know, actual like business asset aspect of it, because I do think that the multimedia aspect of it. Yeah. You know, that would be difficult, and even me as an asset manager would probably be finding ways to create multimedia opportunities for that asset continuing forward.But on the other hand, there's still Broadway musicals, there's still Vegas intimate shows that they are creating off of this person's music. I think Variety had released that report a couple of months ago that said that they were in talks of a 900 million sale for half of the rights. I forget like exactly what the terms would be and including a few things, but I felt like that was too big not to ignore from an asset management perspective.So it would be the Michael Jackson rights for the final pick.Denisha Kuhlor: Wow. That's a really strong, a really strong final pick and makes my last pick even harder. Dan Runcie: You had seven though, right? Denisha Kuhlor: Yes, I did. I did. My seventh one is just a different caliberDan Runcie: Wait, wait. You, oh, oh, oh. With Pharrell you mean?Denisha Kuhlor: no, no, no, no. So my seventh one actually is, Dan Runcie: Wait, wait. Did we miss one? Hold on. Let me just run through it real quick. You had Mariah, Bad Bunny, Burna Boy, Lizzo, Summer Walker, Pharrell Denisha Kuhlor: YesDan Runcie: Oh, oh. We both have one more. Oh, okay. I missed up. Okay. You're right, you'reright. Yeah. okay. All one?Denisha Kuhlor: Yes. So my last pick is DMX. One, I think in a lot of ways DMX has a very unique style of music. It has a very unique style of rap. Talking to a lot of, or not talking to, but I guess watching their interviews. A lot of rappers are very inspired by DMX and he still gets credited, for, you know, rap styles or little lines that, artists borrow or throw in their music and he has a bit of a high sample potential.I think we'll see some of his music sampled more and oddly enough, whether it's like a movie, like a Creed or something like that, this sheer like BPM of some of his music, is definitely attractive from like a sync perspective. For, upbeat movies that wanna like, leverage a rap song or leverage hip hop.and I also think, and he's done very well in getting quite a few syncs when it comes to video games, I'm thinking about sings so often this podcast from a movie perspective, but gaming syncs are huge as well. and DMX's music is quite huge in the gaming community. So if anything, from an, optimizing the asset perspective, I would focus on optimizing his syncs for gaming, because of the BPM of his music.And I think I would get it at a favorable rate.Dan Runcie: Yeah, I couldn't imagine there might be some high ROI potential there, I would say and just given how dominant that run was, and I think some people forget. Yeah. Each of those first albums was just like, you know, topping the charts and everything. Especially from like 98 to 03'. it was, on, I mean, there were other rappers who may have had like, you know, bigger commercial success at that time from whether it was someone like Eminem or some others. But in terms of like relevance, that still matters to a lot of people and how that can continue. X is up there. Do you think we'll see an X movie at some point?Denisha Kuhlor: You know, I hope we do. and that's how I reference, how a lot of rappers like, feel about him because musicians appreciating another artist are probably our most likely way. You see obviously 50 cent, 50 cent in TV and film production, Drake with Euphoria, even Childish Gambino, right?So him being revered by other artists I think puts him on the best path for us to see that. which also would be Dan Runcie: Yeah. That's a good pick. So I think so. I actually, but now my seventh pick, because I'm like re-looking at these. I had Taylor, Drake, Eminem, SZA, Bruno Mars, Michael, and then now the seventh pick. this is tough, but, I'm gonna take the Weeknd and I'm gonna take him because Denisha Kuhlor: Oh, amazing. Dan Runcie: I think it's really hard to have a song that's been released like in the pandemic era of music that still tops the charts, but everything from After Hours is still getting so much radio play.He just did a remix with Ariana Grande, Die For You, a song that came out now, what, seven years ago. And that song had topped the charts. He has this ability to just, I think it's him and a handful of other artists that just have this ability to make music that can continue to like pierce through. I mean, we didn't get as much of that from Don FM but I think even he himself, like that album didn't get as much, you know, focus the same way that everything from After Hours did.And he has this way of just kind of capturing, a generation just with like the feel and the vibe, I think sync potential, especially as he's gonna be in more movies now himself and what that could look like. So, yeah definitely.Denisha Kuhlor: That's super strong. He makes hits.Dan Runcie: Another pop artist, so I know, you know, there's a bunch of Max Martin and other producers that'll get their share, but I'll take his, so, Yeah. No, super. Right. So yeah, so let's just round out the lists here. and then let's share. So with the first pick, and then in order you took Mariah Carey, then Bad Bunny, then Burna Boy, then Lizzo, Summer Walker, then Pharrell Williams and DMX. And then I took Taylor Swift, Drake, Eminem, SZA, Bruno Mars, Michael Jackson, and the Weeknd.So, yeah. How are you feeling about your picks? Did you feel like you got the artist that you wanted? Do you feel like you, you know, got the ones that you wanted to like, lighten everything up?Denisha Kuhlor: Yeah, I do. I think that some of those artists are bets that would hopefully, positively surprise me. but there's enough artists, within those picks that I know revenue will be generated and will have a positive upside regardless. If anything, we can continue to crown on Mariah Carey and some of Pharrell's records and even just the dominance Bad Bunny continues to have for a very long time while also seeing, how dominant, for decades to come an artist like a Summer Walker.Dan Runcie: Yeah, I think if we were to look at these catalogs like, or look at both of our portfolios, I think you would have like the Vanguard Growth Fund and I would have like the Vanguard Blue Chip Fund if that makes sense. Right?Denisha Kuhlor: Exactly. Exactly, exactly. Dan Runcie: You know, you may generate some higher returns, but with that, you know, there's more risk that comes with it as well.but yeah, mine, think it's probably assumed that you would generate higher returns because I feel like SZA's probably the, not even like, oh, it's probably the pick of mine that is the least blue chip relative to the rest of them. And yeah. enough, even someone like Bruno Mars is probably more skewed towards less of that certified pick on mine just because of how much of a more, strong base the other artists do have.Denisha Kuhlor: Totally. If I had to, compare thinking about venture, I would say you definitely took like a series C, series D, growth fund, with a few, maybe more Series A, like a series A pick. I think maybe this is to my roots, I took more of a series B potentially with a good opportunity fund and skewed heavily ine and seed, with a few of those artists as well. Dan Runcie: No, that makes sense. That makes sense. What were some of your honorable mentions? Yeah, maybe you can name like three, maybe first I wanna do honorable mentions, and then second, I wanna talk about some rising folks. Maybe some people that you would've picked, but maybe you didn't pick, because it's like, no, it's too early.It's too early, right? But yeah,Denisha Kuhlor: let yeah, no, Dan Runcie: with the honorable mentions like who are one or two that you had considered?Denisha Kuhlor: For sure. So the biggest honorable mention for me is Usher, Dan Runcie: yep. He Denisha Kuhlor: um Dan Runcie: mine too.Denisha Kuhlor: usher, the Vegas residency, the, tiny desk Usher's been having a phenomenal few last years. and I think people don't even realize the residency really brought it back for a lot of people. The breadth of his catalog's so talented, his music is intergenerational or continues to transcend generations. Usher was one that I thought a lot about. I was kind of going back and forth between Usher and Pharrell, and I picked Pharrell because of the exposure to so many other artists that he has. but Usher was a really, really big one.Dan Runcie: Yeah, he was on my list too, because I think similarly, this Vegas residency has created a moment and it's hard to be able to do that. I can't speak to, I haven't looked at his stream numbers and I mean, I really even like back when I feel like Usher's music was at like the top of pop culture and stuff. I don't, I wasn't tracking, oh, how high Confessions on the Billboard 200. That's just not something that I thought or cared about time, but I think that he's won. He was on my list as well. Someone else that was on my list too was, Kendrick Lamar was on my list too, because good kid, m.A.A.d city's been on the charts for a decade plus.People are still listening to that, and that's higher charts now than what the last album is. Mr. Morale, the big step was, I know that album was more controversial but the fact that Damn and, good kid, m.A.A.d city are still on the charts. You have still Pimp A Butterfly. You never know what type of multimedia opportunities that can turn into.I think if you're talking at least in my opinion, like pure like bar for bar, like the best like rapper lyricist of the past decade plus, I think it is him and there's something to be said for what value have. So yeah, he was who I was going back and forth with him and the Weeknd, for that seventh pick.But yeah, he was my honor, audible mention.Denisha Kuhlor: Kendrick pick is strong. my rap honorable mention is actually J. Cole Dan Runcie: Yep. I had him on the list. Denisha Kuhlor: As someone that gets mentioned in, a lot of the conversations with Kendrick and I think for Cole, a few reasons. one, the whispers of retiring are looming and we know that he has the desire to retire sometime in the near future.So I think people will cherish the records that he has even more, the fan base of the Dreamville built is super engaged. super active, and I think we'll be that way for a long time to come. And J. Cole, you know, picked up a lot of good features when he was coming up. Maybe it's the Rock Nation effect or whatever, but he has some amazing features, whether it's, party with Beyonce or just like, he has some really great features that he's gotten as well. So yeah, that's one I would be super excited to have.Dan Runcie: Every time I look at hits, daily double stats, just seeing who's trending. No role models is always on that chart somewhere. and it's now been, eight and a half, nine years since that song came out. So it's a hits game. If I can get one of the biggest rap songs of the decade and one of the more popular rap albums of the decade too, then you take that obviously so many other hits as you mentioned Party, and a lot of the other ones that he's then.But that song, I think itself is worth at least bringing the conversation up. A few people that I didn't mention, but I'm curious if they came up for you. We can just keep these kind of rapid fire before we get to the Rising But did you consider Ed Sheeran?Denisha Kuhlor: You know, I did, I thought a lot about like having UK representation, . and he came up for me there. He's also done a lot of like features with, African artists, whether it's Stormzy, Burna Boy, but I ultimately shied away from him. I don't even know if I have the right things to point to it, but something didn't feel right.Dan Runcie: Okay. He was on the list I had as well. I just preferred the other ones more.Denisha Kuhlor: Yeah. Like it's not even fully like quantitative, like no. Yeah, It just, yeah, like he was compelling, but not compelling enough to make you wanna get excited. Dan Runcie: Yeah, it's like I know that Divide was a huge album. I know that Shape of You is probably one of the biggest hits of the past 15 years if we're going back that far. But yeah, you know, it's just kind of tough cuts. I mean, yeah, I'm sure that al that catalog will probably generate more revenue overall, maybe then like scissors, like someone that I took.But I that Ed Sheeran's catalog isn't gonna come at, you know, a cheap cost, but who knows? So he's at least someone I thought about. Did you consider, this is going back a little bit further, but did you consider Celine Dion?Denisha Kuhlor: Oh, no, I didn't. But Celine Deion makes so much sense for so many reasons, but I didn't, you know, I'm thinking about my picks, probably Mariah Carey and DMX were as far back as went and that's because I was thinking about the streaming optimization as well, with the number you said. And IFPI's latest report streaming is just taking so much of the conversation.I would probably go for a lookalike audience to Celine Dion, so maybe more like an Adele, which also wouldn't come cheap. but audience that is a little more, well, didn't I take Adele? I think that Adele almost, in a way like Ed Sheeran, for all the right reasons. It's like, no, I wouldn't get pushback if I was thinking about my LPs comment saying, I don't get pushback in any way for picking Adele, but in a lot of ways Adele feels safe. And while her music is easily recognizable and does well, her type of music in a lot of ways, doesn't really feel like something that you play and stream over and over almost in the way that Taylor Swift's music does.and so while ballads are great, and I think people really, really love them from a replay value on streaming, I just didn't get as excited as I wanted to.Dan Runcie: I think you're right because I think that the reason that I didn't take her is because I thought that it could have easily been a catalog and rights that you would overpay for because of the name and everything that she's done. But when you look at the pure streaming numbers, yeah, I know that Easy on me had like broken records at the time, but still those records I believe got broken like a week later or a month later by BTS or whoever else, it was Bad Bunny and since then Taylor Swift, right? So yeah, I questioned the replay value and I do think that because, yeah, I thought that it would've been high compared to some of these other artists. Going back to the Celine point, I think you were right, because I also shifted a bit just thinking about how big the streaming error is and how that generates so much cattle revenue for this.And one of the big thesis that I've had overall with music rights sales and acquisition is that a lot of these deals have overvalued the artists from the seventies and eighties and undervalued the from the nineties and two thousands. Because if you thinking about the dominant we're streaming as and who are the dominant generation of those consumers, as great as you know, Celine and others were, the songs that are most likely to resonate are like Taylor Swift and Drake, you know, are gonna be more relevant to this generation than Madonna or Celine Dion or some of the others.And I did consider. Madonna as well, just thinking about it. I know this next tour she's gonna do on is gonna be big, but I held back then for the same Celine thing. It's like, yeah, maybe if this was 20 years ago when we were doing this draft in 2003, then maybe I would've taken Celine Dion or Madonna but I think that decay curve is definitely, you know, flattened a bit where maybe the upside, not just the upside potential, but the consistency just may not be, or not the consistency.Obviously it's consistent, but it just didn't seem to valuable as some of these other picks.Denisha Kuhlor: Yeah. No, I agree. And I think, you know, in like working the music or working the records, so you can optimize your catalog. You have to kind of think about who's making the decisions now or who's coming into power now. and some of those executives are younger. and so, thinking about how they might place value, even though they're familiar, obviously with the brand and the artists, on a premium for that music, I think it would be a much longer conversation much to what you said, which is probably why some of these artists were willing to sell, and kind of let the asset manager deal with the headache of justifying the value while they've extracted the value from the asset manager who's excited to go out and Dan Runcie: Yeah. Did you consider Beyonce?Denisha Kuhlor: I did consider Beyonce. I just, it's expensive very, very, very expensive. it would be, I think, you know, Beyonce is an interesting one. She's actually one of my favorites in the sense that I think uses her catalog really well with all kind of the moments that she's had, whether it's the Super Bowl or, her Coachella performance.She reworks her music in a way that continues to feel new. Like as an artist, almost to the point of where I also had trepidation with Adele, how Adele navigates her artistry. while I respect, and obviously we want artists that set boundaries. I don't know if it's in my best interest as an artist, right?She kind of drops her music and waits long stretches before going back her choice to cancel her tour and do a Las Vegas residency, means there'll be a lot of places untouched unless she decides to, venture out. Whereas someone like Beyonce is exciting because her music is always being brought back, right?I did consider, interestingly enough, Destiny's child, because I feel like I, it would get the upside of every time a Beyonce performs or has a big, moment on the world stage, at a price point. And maybe Beyonce's part wouldn't be up for grabs, but other people's would at a price point that would be attractive.Dan Runcie: The other thing about Beyonce too is that she's kind of like Lizzo, but magnified in this sense that very high touring to streaming output, if that makes sense. But I don't get to collect tour revenue. I'm collecting the music rights and a lot of the songs from Renaissance. So if you compare the streaming of SZA's SOS to Beyonce's Renaissance, like it isn't even close. SZA's is much more popular there and the same way that I'm seeing good kid, m.A.A.d city and 2014 Forest Hill drives and Eminem's Greatest hits albums like still at the top of that charts. I'm not seeing the same thing for Lemonade or Beyonce in a way that's almost surprising because you feel like, okay, the generational impact, those records are huge.Everyone revered them, but this is a game and they just aren't at that And I know you'd have to pay a premium because of it's Beyonce.Denisha Kuhlor: Yeah. Beyonce is one of the biggest, and probably most vocal invisible fan bases in the world. but that doesn't also in some ways, show for the parts that we just talked about, right? Some of these younger fan bases or these fan bases for other artists, They care very much about streaming.They were a digital native or streaming first, and they're going to continue to optimize for that. whereas, like you said, I think because Beyonce's fan base is so engaged, so passionate, you see the power of the fan base come out really in touring, whether they listen to Beyonce every day for the past year, I think the conversion and amount probably of minutes listened, for a Beyonce to, in terms of needing to then feeling compelled to buy a ticket is much lower than the minutes needed to be listened for a SZA or some of these other artists to then lead to that conversion of buying, buying tickets and so she has a fan base that's gonna support, like regardless way. and like you said, that's not well great. Not in our best interest.Dan Runcie: Right. Yeah. Because it's like she's been making music for over 25 years now as a high profile public recording artist, and in that way, because of the touring and amount, amount times, you got to see her. It's almost like her touring business is closer to Elton John or Billy Joel than it is SZA in that way.Denisha Kuhlor: Exactly. Beyonce is a touring artist who has the ability to use that fan base to parlay into super financially lucrative deals. But as you mentioned in the beginning of this criteria, unfortunately we'd not be seeing a lot of that. Dan Runcie: Right. And yeah, if you acquire the rights to Alien Superstar, you gotta split that with 24 different writers, soDenisha Kuhlor: Yes. Another great point. Beyonce's been highly collaborative,and very good about giving people opportunities and also giving them credit. but when it comes to the piece of the pie, which I'm sure she could do based off her ability to get extreme amounts of touring revenue, high leverage, brand partnerships, but when it comes to the part that we can control as asset managers, we'd definitely be paying a high premium, and hoping for the best in someone. Dan Runcie: Got it. Yep. I agree. All right, so a few rising stars that I had had and considered, but didn't. So, I look at someone like, so it's funny, neither of us picked any country or rock artists, but I look at the popularity of someone like Luke Combs and even though I don't listen to that genre of music or as much, he's dominated the charts.He has continued to just, you know, put out and, you know, someone that's still pretty young, I wanna say, I don't know, he is like late twenties, early thirties, 10 years from now, could we look back Denisha Kuhlor: and could Dan Runcie: this person have like, you know, impact level of like your, whether it's your Garth Brooks or Blake Shelton or like one of these other artists that like people just come to time and time again and they put up strong numbers both in streaming and in pure album sales.Someone like that could be interesting. I feel like Morgan Wallen is someone else that fits in this category where he is also just high on the charts Denisha Kuhlor: and Dan Runcie: stuff. I mean, obviously his incidents and everything else that he's been notorious for would cast a shadow on that. And I don't know if I'd be willing that necessarily, but he's one that came to mind too.And I think there's other artists too, like whether it's like, you know, Billy Eilish or Olivia Rodrigo it must have been like, okay, I could see them continuing, but we'll see.Denisha Kuhlor: Yeah, I thought like a Rosalia, on my end, for example. the other two that came to mind, and this one I don't know how to feel, but something in me was like considerate. NBA Youngboy, he has a fan base that's passionate right? And is digitally native and they stream and they don't really need, the opinions of the outside world when it comes to music.He was one probably not a category for Verizon stores and more honorable mentions, but I'll mention it. Anyway, Frank Ocean. I feel like there's value there, in Frank Ocean, for sure. And then, Rema, I feel like Rema is the next step, when it comes to music from the continent.The folks at Maven have continued to do an amazing job, and you look at Calm down, it's one of the biggest records in the world. And not only, within Africa or the United States, but also within India, which I thought was just super interesting. So definitely a really, really global artist. He's had records, calm Down, is doing well before this Selena Gomez remix.Dume B has been cited even on present Barack Obama's playlist. So I think he can hold his own, for sure. And feature wise he's very exciting as well. And he's still young enough, but with enough volume where I feel like I could get a competitive rate.Yeah, I think so too. Yeah, those are good picks there. let's see, another group I thought of, or not group, but where were they on this list? Let's see. So I did consider some K-pop in the mix. I was like, okay, what would that BTS catalog look like, right? I mean, because I feel like inthe same rationale that you had about Bad Bunny and Burna boy, I was considering them as well.I think what made me pause, I was. The fact that at least some of the group members now need to join the military, or at least on their like what does that look like? How does that impact the longevity of their music as opposed to them being able to kind of like ride the waves themselves?So it'll be interesting, right? It's because I think especially now, it's like, I feel like, I don't know, in, earlier days when it was more common for popular figures, whether it's in sports or entertainment to be drafted, there was less pop culture. Things saturating their mind. So when they came back, it's like, oh, okay.I don't know, this might be a bad analogy, but like, oh, Muhammad Ali's back still relevant. Okay. him, you know, he's doing opposed to a way where I hope by the time that BTS is like back in full effect again, that they still can command that same power that they once did. So,Dan Runcie: Yeah. So that dynamic is also why I kept them off. I thought a lot about like boy bands, interestingly enough. So when you look at the Jonas Brothers or even One Direction, and it's almost like the, at their peak like level of fandom, that their audience like gives them, I almost feel like it can't be topped again, for so many reasons, right?Like falls off in a way that you're really excited to embrace maybe when you're younger or them having a younger fan. Interestingly enough, the only person in, it's not a boy band, but that I feel like has captured that audience and has truly, really been able to maintain it, is the artist who did end up picking, which is Taylor Swift.Taylor Swift was able to successfully, like, grow with her fan base from this like teen era. to now we see that the upside is there for her because her fans just have more disposable income that they can spend on something that was so important to them for so long in their. Did you consider Harry Styles?Denisha Kuhlor: I did. but interestingly enough, I just go back and forth so much with, it feels still like a moment. I don't, I would like to see more catalog growth or more catalog volume before fully wanting to, before fully wanting to commit. It's one that I'd have on my radar, but I don't think, I'd be ready to start negotiating just yet.Dan Runcie: That's fair. Even if you got the one direction stuff, his chair of the One Direction stuff.Denisha Kuhlor: Now if I did that, that would make it, that would make it more attractive because it gives a bit of both worlds, the nostalgia from one direction as well as the bet on him as a solo artist but one kind of at least makes, whatever amount you spend, it gives a justification for it being stable to some some extent.Dan Runcie: Yeah, I don't know. That might not have been the best hypothetical to pose at you though, because like when Justin Timberlake sold his catalog, that was just him as a solo artist that had nothing to do with NSYNC or Yeah. like that.Denisha Kuhlor: Yeah. Yeah. and I think it's harder than we realize. And looking at a sync perspective, we would still need, even if we brought really valuable syncs sync opportunities, with their music, we would still need the permission of so many other people. So the sheer, operational output that would be required to truly maximize it, or at least that part of it, couldn't be taken lightly as well.Especially when you have so many other artists in your catalog in which the sign off to get a sync could be muchDan Runcie: Yeah, that's a good point. All right, well I know you and I could talk for hours about this topic and could probably draft seven more if we wanted to. I feel like we almost kind of did the, last part of the conversation. Denisha Kuhlor: We might need to have few more maybe pre-seed edition opportunity fund edition. Dan Runcie: Yeah, I feel like there's a few ways we could like set parameters around it where it's like, okay, only, you know, people under 30 years old. And then how does that change the or over 50 or people that longer with us or in a particular genre. I think there's so many others like that we didn't even mention.But yeah. any last words before we wrap this up?Denisha Kuhlor: Yeah, I mean, if anything, I have a lot of respect for the people that are doing this every day. I know, and you've interviewed some of the amazing firms that have really set out to, to do this work. but this is a fun one and I'm curious to hear everyone else's pick. So definitely tweet Dan and I.Dan Runcie: Yeah. Please respond with the ones you like, the ones you didn't like, and let's, let's keep the conversation going. Denisha, it's pleasure as always.Awesome. Thanks for having me. Dan Runcie Outro: If you enjoyed this podcast, go ahead and share it with a friend. Copy the link, text it to a friend, post it in your group chat. Post it in your Slack groups. Wherever you and your people talk, spread the word. That's how capital continues to grow and continues to reach the right people. And while you're at it, if you use Apple Podcast, Go ahead.Rate the podcast, give it a high rating, and leave a review. Tell people why you like the podcast. That helps more people discover the show. Thank you in advance. Talk to you next week.
Crystal is back! Peloton is having a referral code sale. There's a London Studio event featuring all of the German instructors. Peloton loses bid to dismiss worker wage suit. Peloton Australia had a member even with Jon Hosking. Hilton has a new ad showing off Peloton. Gizmodo Australia reviews the Tread. ARSTechnica.com has good things to say about Bike+. Someone asked ChatGPT to write a Peloton-based Dungeons & Dragons adventure. DR. JENN – How to help your loved ones be healthy. Cody Rigsby to host P!nk's album release party. Dr. Chelsea Jackson Roberts taught her first class back from maternity leave. Jenn Sherman was at the Super Bowl. So was Aditi Shah. Logan Aldridge is in Men's Health Magazine. Team Wilpers has its first-ever Challenge shirt for sale. Tunde was on GMA. Tunde has a new Nike commercial.GetPocket.com talked to Tunde. Alex Toussaint has partnered with Applegate. Jess Simms was on the Today Show. Cody Rigsby was on ESPN 101 in St. Louis. Cody had some Valentine's Day recommendations. Cody and Leann Hainsby are teaming up for a Pop 241 Ride. Ally Love spoke at Tampa's Synapse tech summit. Robin Arzon was in Forbes Magazine. You can get a signed copy of Robin's new book. Robin Arzon was on the Visualize Your Reinvented Life podcast. Robin was also on the Over Priced JPEGS podcast. Channel 9 in Australia got running tips for beginners from Jon Hosking. Hannah Frankson partnered with Spec Savers to talk about her “first time.” Cliff Dwenger has a Gospel Ride. Angelo has tips for intermittent fasters. Peloton had some candy hearts for people. New Lanebreak level featuring Silk Sonic. Peloton got mentioned in the new Reese Witherspoon/Ashton Kutcher rom-com. Crystal was on Thrive Forever Fit with Jay Nixon. Birthdays: Ross Rayburn (2/19). All this plus our interview with Snooki! Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share! https://www.theclipout.com/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Grammy® Nom, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame & New Music, TV Appearances.......... Little Anthony Talks to Us about Life Success Lessons from his Elders & Touring with Ruth Brown, Sarah Vaughn, Sam Cooke, Dr. Martin Luther King & MORE. His Awesome LITTLE ANTHONY & THE MUSIC — AN ANTHOLOGY includes New Music & Classic Tunes. He Tours in concert in 2023My Grand Folks & Family always had the Rock n Roll/Soul Classics playing when I went to Reunions & around the House during my Childhood. I consider this a GIFT!! I ALSO get the gift of Interviewing one of my Favorites: Little Anthony!!Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee “Little Anthony” Gourdine is without question one of the most celebrated vocalists in the annals of popular music. His tender yet explosive delivery of a musical phrase leaves audiences spellbound with an impression so indelible that casual listeners never forget the ‘voice' or the tunes he immortalized. These songs consistently emanate from airwaves and are often lauded in music journals worldwide. Songs such as “Goin' Out Of My Head,” “I'm On The Outside Looking In,” “Hurt So Bad,” and “Take Me Back,” are simply four of a compendium of platinum hits performed by the extraordinarily gifted performer on national television and heard on classic and Top-40 radio spanning numerous decades. His latest blockbuster release is no will-o'-the-wisp, stab in the dark recording; it is a well-thought-out and substantive diary of songs, including many covers bearing his unmistakable vocal imprint. Producer Michael Miller spared no effort in tirelessly orchestrating a project that promises an enduring shelf-life titled LITTLE ANTHONY & THE MUSIC — AN ANTHOLOGY. Songs include the classics “A Lovely Way To Spend An Evening, ”Love is a Many Splendored Thing,” “What A Difference A Day Makes,” and “Who's Sorry Now.” Forty memorable selections should keep you and your significant other reminiscing for some time to come. And if you're not spoken for, you can enjoy it all to yourself for as long as you can imagine! There is something for everyone in these forever volumes. And I promise you: The fun verbal exchanges in the narration between Anthony and the producer are insightful as twists and turns unravel in the development of this contemporary musical masterpiece. Despite many of the songs being standards, you'll notice his articulate style blessing each track. Consider the infusive single and premier release "New York State of Mind." While some scratch their heads in wonderment upon hearing this cover for the first time, thinking: "That voice is familiar." And after a slight pause, like a ton of bricks it hits them: "That's Little Anthony!" For sure. And then they go on praising his vocal acumen, deservedly so. His R&B-laced rendering of "New York State of Mind" is a divergence from the perennial recording and sports an infectious 42nd Street vibe. It's performed so well that composer Billy Joel is likely to tip his hat. A popular legend recently said: "The Man's still got it!" A few days from scheduled release, we're anticipating a rush of accolades and interest in what comes next. After years of performing at arenas and concert halls, clubs and festivals, Anthony has acquired a wealth of experience that accompanies him as you flashback to his highly successful stint as lead singer with the Imperials on a few choice cuts. Following the release of this work, expect the entertainment icon and his band to visit a city near you with a live show embracing many of the tunes contained in this two-volume cache — and more. As an all-around artist in the studio and on stage, he has been and remains an inspiration to many larger-than-life- acts, past and present: Silk Sonic, Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, and Michael Jackson, to name a few. Nearly every rock, pop, R&B, and jazz act who attained star status attribute a slice of their inspiration to the influence of Little Anthony as a lead vocalist and a solo artist. Alive and well, he is eager to take his show on the road and share as much as audiences can enjoy, including numbers from the Anthology. Like a silver fox, he roams the stage, eyeing each participant as they sing along with the seasoned crooner and his dynamic band. Recently, the Brooklyn, NY, native said: “I'm anxious to share these songs with folks everywhere, and I'm so proud of the entire team that helped put it all together.” This is only the beginning of a succession of projects on tap for the foreseeable future. He is busily working on other productions to be named later. His new autobiography Little Anthony -- My Journey, My Destiny is not the traditional rags-to-riches -- cock-and-bull story and not the aimless tale landing everywhere. It is a culmination of a lifetime of near embryonic experiences unlike many others -- and he is here to talk about it. But whether sipping a cup of tea, tearfully empathizing with the subject, or pondering a musical concept, there's something for everyone in this one. One more thing: the fact that Anthony rhymes with anthology sounds cute and is coincidental, but the sterling quality of this 40-track-production is not(!) borne of luck. “Little Anthony” Gourdine has brightened many a day for aficionados of ‘God's musical gift to mankind' everywhere with indescribably beautiful music that fills our hearts with Joy! .............. https://www.harmonystreet.biz/ Phil C. 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Gojo and Brandon discuss advanced-level California weather patterns before playing a “Who's Who?” game with headlines of the day (04:12), including Bobby Petrino to Texas A&M, Kayvon Thibodeaux vs. Jeff Saturday, Jim Harbaugh's Silk Sonic impression, and No More Tailgating In LA. Aaron Schatz of Football Outsiders joins the pod to break down week 18 and set the table for the NFL postseason (30:20). The guys finish up with This, That, and the Third (56:50) USMNT drama, NFL HOF finalists, and Rich Pets. Click here to subscribe, rate, and review the newest episodes of GoJo with Mike Golic Jr! If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800-GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL/IN/MI/NJ/PA/WV/WY), 1-800-NEXT STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO/NH), 888-789-7777/visit http://ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA), 1-877-770-STOP (7867) (LA), 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY), visit OPGR.org (OR), call/text TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN), or 1-888-532-3500 (VA). 21+ (18+ WY). Physically present in AZ/CO/CT/IL/IN/IA/LA/MI/NJ/ NY/PA/TN/VA/WV/WY only. New customers only. Min. $5 deposit required. Eligibility restrictions apply. See http://draftkings.com/sportsbook for details. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dr. Dharius Daniels talks with us about finding your true purpose in life and how to pursue it even when others tell you differently. Plus, the gang talks about the beginning to the best time of the year aka basketball season, why Silk Sonic is not leaving the door open for the Grammys, exciting new music from our favorite bands and your feedback about weird youth pastors (seriously, is everyone OK?). Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/relevantpodcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
One-on-one pod today, Chris & Jason chat about The Economist suggesting that Sleepy Joe just legalize cocaine, impolite society, Ghia on Shark Tank, Silk Sonic and Drake decided not to submit their album for a Grammy this year but in a sexy way, will the chef-style deli cup find it's way into civilian hands, M.I.A. is a.n.t.i.v.a.x, Colbert is hosting a pickleball game on TV, sending a young person
Lee and Jeff catch up with Chris Rabold about his recent experience with Silk Sonic in Las Vegas. We also discuss the importance of giving and receiving constructive feedback. We've also got some great news about the MxU Live Tour, and things happening at MxU HQ. Enjoy!
Silk Sonic tell us to 'Leave The Door Open' but Kyle had likes it shut at night... someone/something was NOT HAPPY ABOUT THAT CHOICE! Today On The Show, IT IS MAY THE FOURTH! Happy Star Wars day! ALSO, an all NEW WHATCHA WANNA KNOW WEDNESDAY, Rich's Mom Game, DRUNK DIALS, and SO MUCH MORE!
Good morning and welcome to the ride! What does a one trick pony and new underwear have in common? Snoop made Steve a meme. Steve schools T.I. big time. Premarital sex, planting seeds and Morning Inspirations are all in Steve's messages today. Roscoe Wallace remixes Silk Sonic's latest. Easter Sunday is right around the corner and fellas tell us what is inside their basket. Office fridge or office bathroom has the crew stuck in Would You Rather. Today in Closing Remarks, Big Dog talks about The Black Mamba Kobe Bryant. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay break down the 2022 Grammy Awards and a couple of unpopular takes regarding Silk Sonic (18:22). Plus, Russell Wilson gets called a square (52:14), and questionable funeral practices are discussed (1:11:59). Hosts: Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay Producers: Trudy Joseph and Donnie Beacham Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We decode the symbolism behind the 2022 Grammys! We'll cover some of the performances, some really bizarre links to Taylor Hawkins from the Foo Fighters, Freemason symbolism from Lil Nas X and Silk Sonic summoning THE DEVIL!!! (*maybe). Join along as we discuss the 2022 Grammys! Peep all the images discussed (AND be ready for the big announcement on Wednesday April 6th at 2PM EST ONLY on Instagram LIVE) at Instagram.com/IsaacWeishauptShow sponsors:1. Get discounts while you support the show and do a little self improvement! 2. ATTENTION CRYPTO NERDS!!! CopyMyCrypto.com/Isaac is where you can copy James McMahon's crypto holdings- listeners get access for just $13. Get 10% off your first month of starting your happier life at BetterHelp.com/IlluminatiWatcher 4. Go to Manscaped.com and use the promo code CONSPIRACY20 ****Get 20% OFF @manscaped + Free Shipping! #ad #manscapedpod**** 5. Get 50% off your first year of StartMail! Secure YOUR human right to privacy: StartMail.com/Conspiracy6. Free 30 day trial to great audiobooks at Audible.com/Illuminati (or text “illuminati” to 500-500)Get bonus content AND go commercial free + other perks:* VIP: Due to the threat of censorship, I set up a Patreon-type system through MY OWN website! It's the VIP section of illuminatiwatcher.com! It's even setup the same: FREE ebooks, Kubrick's Code video! Sign up at: https://illuminatiwatcher.com/members-section/ * PATREON: almost identical to VIP Section; you can join the conversations with hundreds of other show supporters here: Patreon.com/IlluminatiWatcher * ROKFIN: Get all my bonus content ad-free and listen to TONS of other creators like Sam Tripoli with Tin Foil Hat podcast, Jason Bermas, Jay Dyer and more for one subscription price: https://www.rokfin.com/creator/isaacMore from Isaac- special offers:1. Check out another free podcast I make with my wife called the BREAKING SOCIAL NORMS podcast! You can get it free wherever you listen to podcasts (e.g. Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/breaking-social-norms/id1557527024?uo=4). You can get the Uncensored and commercial-free option at Patreon.com/BreakingSocialNorms3. Signed paperbacks, coffee mugs, shirts, & other merch: Gumroad.com/IsaacW5. Get 3 books for $5: https://illuminatiwatcher.com/how-to-get-free-books/6. ALIENS, UFOS & THE OCCULT IS NOW UP ON AMAZON AND AUDIBLE (*author narrated): https://amzn.to/3j3UtZz7. Enjoy some audiobooks and support the show! Go to Audible.com/Illuminati or text “Illuminati” to 500-500 to start your free 30 day FREE trial8. If you want to hear more from me AND also want to support the show, search for "Isaac Weishaupt" on Audible and pick up my narrated audiobooks! My most popular book- THE DARK PATH! https://www.audible.com/pd/B0759MN23F/?source_code=AUDFPWS0223189MWT-BK-ACX0-095441&ref=acx_bty_BK_ACX0_095441_rh_us AND the popular alien books USE YOUR ILLUSION are also on Audible: https://www.audible.com/pd/B08NRXFNDM/?source_code=AUDFPWS0223189MWT-BK-ACX0-223105&ref=acx_bty_BK_ACX0_223105_rh_us*Want to advertise/sponsor our show? We have partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle our advertising/sponsorship requests. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email: sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started. https://www.advertisecast.com/ConspiracyTheoriesandUnpopularCulture*ALL Social Media, merch and other links:https://allmylinks.com/isaacw
Last night's Grammys featured wins for Olivia Rodrigo, Silk Sonic, Jon Batiste, and more. Plus we got a lavish stage show with performances from BTS, Lady Gaga, and many others.
Vegas baby! Or in Heather's case, Vegas WITH her babies. Heather breaks down her fabulous 24 hour trip with nonother than Vegas local resident & rockstar comedian Michael Yo. Heather and Michel spill all the Vegas ~musts~ from shopping to restaurants and the concert you absolutely cannot miss. Two words: Silk Sonic. Gambling isn't for the faint of heart and neither is this episode because you will absolutely die when you hear how much Michael won in a high stakes slot machine (honestly we're still recovering). & While we're on the topic of recovering, did you watch the Oscars on Sunday?! We never thought we would see anything like that on the Oscars stage. Michael Yo addresses the elephant in the room and shares his honest thoughts with Heather about Will Smith's and Chris Rock's entanglement. Plus, Michael opens up about his new YouTube comedy special "I Never Thought" and why he decided to take a chance on himself. Did we mention the twins graduate in less than 30 days?! we're totally freaking out. All that and more on this episode of Heather Dubrow's World. Please support the show by checking out our sponsors! Ship Station: Use my offer code, HEATHER, to get a 60-day free trial. That's 2 months FREE of no-hassle, stress-free shipping. Just go to ShipStation.com, click on the microphone at the top of the page, and type in HEATHER CBDX.com: Use code HEATHER for 20% off your first order HapBee: Order today and you'll save 25% and get 90-days free access to ALL their Signals! Take advantage of their 365-day guarantee today. Go to Hapbee.com/dubrow Sambucol: Get 15% off your next order of $9.99 or more at SambucolUSA.com. Use code HEATHER
Back in New York, Rory & Mal settle back into their home studio, and rehash their Los Angeles experiences. They of course have to give their opinions on Drake and Kanye rekindling their bromance, and then get into Tidal changing their royalties and payment structure, which gives fans more ability to directly support their favorite artists. Rory and Mal also discuss the upcoming battles of Chaka Khan and Stephanie Mills, as well as Three Six Mafia vs Bone Thugs, and then venture into a conversation about adult baecations. They address Adele's upcoming album, review Silk Sonic's release, and much more!