#not as vast or interesting as the 2005 album but its still nice
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
naradreamt · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Miscellaneous photos of the hide MUSEUM taken in 2000
14 notes · View notes
black-metallic · 6 years ago
Text
Album Review: Voivod - The Wake
Tumblr media
Voivod is a thrash metal band that early on morphed into more of a progressive metal band. Formed in 1981 and based in Canada, Voivod have released 14 studio albums and 6 EPs. Now, even though the vast majority of first wave progressive metal bands were at least partially inspired by the progressive inclinations of thrash metal bands like Metallica and Megadeth on their respective albums …And Justice for All and Rust in Peace, progressive thrash metal itself is a rather unpopulated genre, with only Vektor, Nevermore, and Coroner having sizable followings. However, at the undisputed top of the genre is Voivod, a band that, by their third album, Killing Technology, released in 1987, started incorporating strong progressive influences virtually independently of the entirety of the metal scene at the time, and who, in their next two releases, Dimension Hatross and Nothingface, created two albums that to this day stand near the very top of extreme progressive metal. Unlike the vast majority of other contemporaneous progressive metal bands, their influences came more from the avant-garde side of prog, from Rock in Opposition outfits like Henry Cow to avant-punk bands like Cardiacs. This, combined with disparate other punk influences, gave the band’s sound a significantly more dissonant feel compared to the power metal-rooted, Yes-inspired sound of bands like Dream Theater and Fates Warning. The band was formed around guitarist Denis D’Amour (Piggy) and more or less followed his musical ideas. Thus, when Piggy died in 2005, the band had a lot of trouble correcting themselves. The first album released after his death, Katorz, had its guitar parts already completely recorded by Piggy, and the album’s follow-up, Infini, was a patchwork of further unused recordings of his, alongside new recordings from current guitarist Daniel Mongrain (Chewy). The band didn’t really strike out with entirely new material until 2013’s Target Earth, which showed a band interested in progressing their sound and producing more great music, but too hesitant and uncertain to play anything too provocative.
However, Voivod’s latest release, The Wake, shows the band throwing all those reluctances aside and confidently deciding to play in a style heavily drawn from their classic late 80’s/early 90’s work, but with a modernized twist that gives a music a fresh, lively feel both in the band’s discography and within modern progressive metal as a whole. All of Voivod’s influencing sounds are present on the album, from blistering thrash metal to abrasive hardcore punk to off-kilter avant-flavored prog to occasional psychedelic tinges (a mood that also often found its way into the band’s music), albeit all mixed, twisted, and very tightly played. And, while Voivod’s music has always featured futuristic moods accompanied by apocalyptic lyrics, on The Wake (although inaugurated on Target Earth), a cleaner, more subtle production is present, accentuating the progressive elements even better while not giving the music that sterile feel that often plagues modern metal. Lyrically, The Wake is a concept album, one of the few in Voivod’s discography, although the concept is loose, and, revolving around the sociopolitical consequences of a world where higher states of consciousness are accessible, does not stray far from the band’s standard lyrical content. Overall, The Wake is a perfect marriage of classic Voivod nostalgia with forward-thinking experimentation.
Even today, progressive thrash metal is a small genre, and, even if Target Earth were Voivod’s debut album, the band would quickly be recognized as a very important part of the scene. The music offers a nice counterpoint to the other popular modern progressive thrash metal band, Vektor, whose influences are more in line with the classic progressive rock bands that standard progressive metal takes inspiration from. However, the band is 30 years older than that, and has a string of five exemplary albums already produced within the genre. It, along with Coroner, built the foundations of the genre that bands like Vektor take inspiration from today. This makes The Wake even more impressive, showing a band capable of creating yet another classic album after all that time, and without the guidance of their longtime leader. Voivod have always held a unique place in my musical library, and their ability to produce an album that simultaneously has the foundation of their seminal early period albums as well as the prominent flourishes of a band still experimenting with their sound is incredible. Overall, The Wake is right up there among the best recent releases in both progressive metal and thrash metal and is perfect for anyone looking for a fresh sounding modern experimental metal album.
Score: 9/10
6 notes · View notes
balarouge · 5 years ago
Text
The sound of Toronto right now: this music is setting the tone in 2020 - NOW Magazine
Tumblr media
As Toronto grows and gets more expensive, there’s angst about displacement of DIY communities and spaces for creativity to flourish. But we’re still thriving. Globe-trotting sounds are meeting on the dance floor, toxicity is being worked out through rockstar swagger, disco is returning to its radical roots.
Here are eight snapshots of artists pushing the scene forward and more to watch in 2020. The music they’re making is strong, vibrant and diverse – the whole world in one city’s music scene.
The sound: Dance music for rule-breakers
Bambii is part of the lifeblood of Toronto’s dance music scene. She’s a leader in the collective of cool, queer and diasporic DJs who are working to make the city’s dance music culture reflective of their realities.
Committed to Black women and queer folk from the very beginning, she’s turned her biannual party, JERK, into an institution. Known internationally for genre-defying sets, she’s left a string of sweaty dance floors from Berlin to Ho Chi Minh City. But in 2020, she’s stepping away from touring as a DJ to focus on releasing her own music.
Bambii calls her recently released debut single, Nitevision, a “future dancehall” track, which is interesting – considering she was adamant at the outset of her career about not being labelled a dancehall DJ. Being Caribbean, she was concerned she would be pigeonholed by narrow-minded categorization. 
“I’m at a place now where I understand Caribbean music and diasporic music to be so vast in terms of something to reference or to be inspired by,” she says. “It’s just so rich. I no longer feel like I’m being put in a box.”
As a song and as a music video, Nitevision is an ode to Black women – to people Bambii admires, to her friends, to her community. It’s an ode to the dance floor as a conduit for powerful feminine energy. 
“It just felt like it was the most sincere point I could make, coming out as a producer.” 
And it’s just the beginning. She plans on dropping several singles this year. She says the songs will sound like her DJ sets. So expect more future dancehall, but also high tempo house, ballroom, Jersey club and reggaeton. She even hints at some songs using her own vocals. 
Like the city she’s from, Bambii is perpetually evolving – she’s never settled on just one thing. 
“The real Toronto, to me, just sounds like everything – which is what’s cool about it.”
Bambii has been in the party scene for years and the idea to produce came to her four years ago, but it took some time to conquer the intimidation of producing and get comfortable putting out her own music. But she also felt DJing no longer allowed her to express everything she needed to say and represent everyone she needed to represent. Her work has an overarching intention to reclaim Black women’s stories, and to counteract the narratives that are imposed on them. 
“When I think about what inspires me or encourages me, it’s people suspended in joy and dance,” she says. “It’s what spaces feel like when there’s a majority of women in them, a majority of Black women.” KELSEY ADAMS
More Artists To Watch
Demiyah Pérez 
A student of Intersessions DJ workshops led by Chippy Nonstop, Demiyah Pérez spent 2019 pivoting from being every Toronto DJ’s favourite dancer to a purveyor of sounds in her own right. Her sets, a high-energy mix of dancehall, reggae, house and hip-hop, cater to dancers who aren’t ashamed to leave it all on the floor. Last May, she helped launched Ahlie, a party series designed to create common ground between queer and straight people who love dancehall and bashment culture. 
The brainchild of DJs Hangaëlle, Minzi Roberta and Kiga, Kuruza is a collective and a monthly party. Already the go-to Afro dance music party in the city, Kuruza settled into its new home at the Drake Underground late last year. Think African pop music, gqom, baile funk, Afrohouse, soca and dancehall. You can also catch them on underground radio station ISO Radio, where they spotlight different DJs and provide a glimpse into their events.
Sofia Fly 
DJ/producer/rapper Sofia Fly's 2019 EP, Rosé, is a reflection of her trans Latina identity set to nebulous house and ballroom beats. Her inspired downtempo remixes of pop faves like Kehlani and Shakira to indie rap darlings like Princess Nokia prove she knows how to parse a song down to its core. Her live sets are opulently layered, genre-jumping feats, from hip-hop to disco to deep house.
Shan Vincent de Paul
The sound: Grimy flows and globetrotting beats
Shan Vincent de Paul’s ruthless collaborations with fellow Tamil musician Yanchan on Mrithangam Raps scored more than half a million views last summer. Fans ate up the video series in which Vincent de Paul’s staccato rhymes chase the percussion from Yanchan’s mrithangam (or mridangam), an Indian drum commonly used at Hindu weddings and Carnatic ensembles.
“It was an authentic bridge between the classic South Asian sound and modern rap,” says Vincent de Paul about the genre fusion that brought him back around to his Tamil roots.
Outkast, Hieroglyphics, Pharoahe Monch and their contemporaries are primary influences on the Sri Lankan-born, Brampton-raised refugee artist who has been grinding out music since 2005, first with Soliva Spit Society, then as half of experimental duo Magnolius and finally alongside the collective sideways.
“I never want to classify myself as a Tamil rapper,” says Vincent de Paul, about why he didn’t tap into his heritage until recently. “I want to compete with the best of them. [And] I always had this fear that if I was going to be speaking about our story, it’s going to be falling on deaf ears.”
His first two solo albums, Saviours (2016) and Trigger Happy Heartbreak (2017), scored with U.S.-based music blogs like Okayplayer and Afropunk. But as Tory Lanez, Drake or the Weeknd will tell you, homegrown love is hard to find.
He went beast mode on tracks like Die Iconic, unleashed bangers like Bitch Go and Warning Shot and lifted spirits with the refugee anthem Out Alive. But for years, Canada slept on him.
“The art I’m making is undeniable,” says Vincent de Paul, letting out his frustration about being ignored by the industry he once catered to. “I can out-rap 99 per cent of the people in this country. I’ll put that on my life. Canada has some of the best artists in the world, but our industry is a high school shitshow.”
Vincent de Paul eventually found support within the South Asian community, who were thrilled to find a brown rapper whose rhymes are tight. And then he hooked up with Yanchan. Their Mrithangam Raps paved the way for an upcoming tour through India in February and a collab LP called IYAAA dropping March 27. And in early summer Vincent de Paul will release his third solo album, Made In Jaffna.
“Now I don’t give a fuck about the Canadian industry,” he says. “Because I have all these other people that are legit supporting me and uplifting me.
“Now the Canadian industry is outnumbered.” RADHEYAN SIMONPILLAI
If you’ve seen their name in red stencil all over the streets of Toronto and wondered what the fuc Fuctape might mean, it’s an anonymous Toronto collective with over 30 members. None of them are identified, but listen to their album and scattered singles – all up on YouTube – and there are a few you might recognize. It’s somewhere between the give-no-fucks energy of early Brockhampton and Odd Future with the way-too-online pranksterism of Death Grips, with some other electronic and indie rock pastiche in the mix. 
Swagger Rite
The first song on Swagger Rite’s The Swagged Out Pedestrian, released late last year on Sony, is called Mosh Pit – and that’s the vibe throughout the spare and bone-rattling trap of the five-song EP. The Jane and Weston rapper’s single In Love With The K was a viral hit on WorldStarHipHop and attracted Drake collaborator BlocBoy JB for a new version. His energy is infectious, and you can already see it starting to spread beyond Toronto. 
Jon Vinyl
Jon Vinyl has a pretty good friend in his corner: pop sensation Shawn Mendes. The young R&B singer/songwriter got a shout-out from his old Pickering high school pal on Instagram last year for his Nostalgia EP, and the music stood up to the sudden influx of rabid Mendies (is that what his stans are called?). His upcoming single Moments (out January 31), produced by fellow Torontonian GOVI, shows his star potential – timeless smooth soul meets 2020 pop hooks. 
Nyssa calls her music “repurposed rock.” 
With her bleached-blond hair, intense eyes and undeniable swagger, she’s seven decades of rock star energy channelled into one person. You can hear it all in her electro-glam pop songs: outlaw country, 60s Motown, singer/songwriter folk, pulsing 80s pop and plenty of old rock and roll. 
But there’s one thing missing: guitars. 
“I’m not saying I’ll never use guitars. I mean, I love guitars,” says Nyssa. “But I want to challenge myself, and this kind of music is usually so guitar-driven, part of the challenge is to find that energy somewhere else. I want to take all the things I love and then break all the moulds so you hear them in a different way.” 
As a solo artist, Nyssa has an EP, Champion Of Love, and a handful of singles to her name. But she’s a long-time veteran of the local rock scene. She fronted the girl group/rockabilly-indebted band the Superstitions (later Modern Superstitions) starting when she was 15 years old. 
She’s been through the record-label wringer and is now purposefully independent and self-sufficient. She produces all her music herself, and even her powerful and intense live shows are 100 per cent solo – though she cherishes the visceral communal experience of live music. 
One collaboration Nyssa does have on the way is with Meg Remy of U.S. Girls, who co-produced her cover of Ann-Margret’s psychedelic Lee Hazlewood collaboration It’s A Nice World To Visit (But Not To Live In). That will appear on an upcoming vinyl box set from local label Fuzzed and Buzzed and also on Nyssa’s otherwise self-produced debut album, Girls Like Me, which she plans to release sometime this year. The songs, all primarily beat- and lyric-driven, tell the stories of female outcasts at odds with the modern world. 
Nyssa is long-time regular and now co-organizer at Dan Burke’s annual Death To T.O. Halloween shows, where local musicians dress up and play full sets as other bands. She’s channelled Rod Stewart, INXS, Robert Palmer, Mick Jagger and Elvis. This year, for a special Valentine’s Day edition, she’ll perform as Meatloaf. She always chooses artists she wants to “become a little bit,” and it’s inspired her own music, but she won’t forget the baggage that comes with it. 
“In rock and roll we still have all these very out-of-date male archetypes of excess. Just pure appetite,” she says. “And there are obviously a lot of troubling stories.”
“So I would like to take the good and the fun and the no-holds-barred sexuality and take away all of the uh…” she pauses for a second, searching for the right word and then lets out a bemused laugh, “...horrible bullshit.” RICHARD TRAPUNSKI
Nyssa plays (as Meatloaf) at Death To T.O. On Valentine’s Day on February 14 at Lee’s Palace. 
More Artists To Watch
Jesse Crowe launched Praises to focus on more personal inner questions about gender expression and health than they could tackle in their main project, Beliefs. But with the recent Hand Drawn Dracula release of the addictive three-song EP Three – co-produced by their Beliefs collaborator Josh Korody – it’s overtaken that shoegaze band as the project to watch. The songs are stark and dramatic, minimalist and heavy, with a voice that makes you stop dead in your tracks. After recuperating from cancer surgery, Crowe will return to the stage this year and finish the follow-up to their 2018 debut album In This Year: Ten Of Swords.
Praises plays the Monarch Tavern on March 27. 
Cindy Lee
Patrick Flegel, formerly of the short-lived but influential Calgary post-punk band Women, calls Cindy Lee the culmination of a lifelong exploration of guitar, queer identity and gender expression. The songs on the upcoming album What’s Tonight To Eternity (out February 14) are ethereal in the literal sense, exorcising ghostly echoes of the Supremes, Patsy Cline and Karen Carpenter – pop’s uncanny valley. 
Scott Hardware
After a stint in Berlin, electronic art-pop artist Scot Hardware has spent the last few years back in Toronto making his new sophomore album Engel (Telephone Explosion), and he’ll release it on April 3 before another extended jaunt in Europe. Inspired by Wim Wenders’s film Wings Of Desire, it’s an eclectic and uncategorizable piano-and-strings-speckled meditation on queerness, shame, death and the afterlife. 
Scott Hardware plays at the Boat on January 30. 
The sound: Soft sounds for the comedown
Ziibiwan is an electronic musician, but they don’t make music for the club.
“[Musician/artist] Melody McKiver explained it nicely: [my music] is what you play after the club when you’re like, ‘I’ve had too many gin and tonics and I need to chill out,’” Ziibiwan says with a smile. 
While living in foster care, music was a release for Ziibiwan. They played piano and guitar, and later experimented with electronic music through a digital audio work station. They covered Radiohead and Foo Fighters songs, and were enamoured with whatever was playing on BET. But it wasn’t until they moved to Jane and Finch that Ziibiwan made their own music. 
“I was working at Loblaws on St. Clair West, doing the graveyard shift, and I would commute from Jane and Finch. I was on my laptop most of the time and I would record everything,” Ziibiwan says about the making of their 2016 debut EP Time Limits, a collection of beat-centric songs that evoke textured imagery.
“There were a lot of problems going on in my life then, and I felt like the land was giving me something. Not just the land but the cultures around me at Jane and Finch,” continues the musician, who’s currently living in Hamilton to care for their family. “It was one of the most beautiful experiences I’ve had in my life.”
Following the EP’s release, Ziibiwan, who also performs as DJ Nimkiiwitch, opened for acts like A Tribe Called Red, played at Venus Fest and composed scores for two short animated films by Amanda Strong. Next month, Ziibiwan and McKiver will perform their original score for the play God’s Lake as it tours throughout British Columbia. This week at the Music Gallery, Ziibiwan will celebrate the release of their new album, Giizis. 
Ziibiwan describes Giizis as more soft and introspective than their previous music, and it will feature their voice for the first time. For Ziibiwan, Giizis – an Anishinaabemowin word they define as, “the moon, the sun and the eastern direction, which is all kind of a new beginning” – is the start of a new and more intimate creative chapter. 
“I want to introduce this version of who I am to people because people don’t really know me beyond making beats,” they explain. 
“My friend once said that we don’t have to always be performative with [our] Indigeneity and we also don’t always have to protest in our music. That’s what most Native rap is. It’s always they, they, they and us. It’s always plural and not really introspective at all. 
“We deserve our own music.” LAURA STANLEY
Ziibiwan plays an album release show on Saturday (January 25) at the Music Gallery at 918 Bathurst with Phèdre and Melody McKiver.
More Artists To Watch
Xuan Ye
Interdisciplinary artist Xuan Ye approaches sound manipulation with boundless curiosity. The improvised electronic pieces on her debut LP xi xi 息息 (out now via Halocline Trance) shudder, whine, whisper and shout. The detailed sonic layers force you to drop everything, breathe and listen. 
Xuan Ye performs as part of Convergence Theory on Saturday (January 25) at the Victory Social Club.
Astro Mega
Listening to Astro Mega’s (aka Jermaine Clarke) extensive catalogue of songs feels like slipping into a warm bath while a party happens on the other side of the door. His 80s- and 90s-hip-hop-inspired beats are muted and chill, often with a collage of sampled voices. Listen to 97’ Kobe from his recent LP GodBodyDevine if you want a vivid memory of playing NBA Live 97 in somebody’s basement.
BisonBison is a new multi-genre collaborative project between electronic producers Dani Ramez (Spookyfish) and Chad Skinner (Snowday) with producer and drummer Brad Weber (Caribou), multi-instrumentalist Sinéad Bermingham and vocalist Sophia Alexandra. On their upcoming debut album Hover (due out February 7), they meld the gentle sensibilities of folk with disquieted electronics in hypnotic convergence.
BisonBison play a release party on February 1 at the Garrison with ANZOLA and Kira May.
Luna Li
The sound: The all-ages scene grows up
As a teenager, Hannah Bussiere Kim straddled two worlds. Her mother ran a music school in Roncesvalles, and she trained in classical piano and violin, taking Royal Conservatory exams and performing at recitals. On weekends, though, she was at DIY shows at now-shuttered all-ages venues like D-Beatstro and the Central. 
She left Toronto to study violin at McGill, but dropped out after one semester. She wanted to start her own band. 
In 2015, she started a garage rock group, Veins, which morphed into her solo project Luna Li two years later. 
“When I was first starting out, I thought, ‘Rock and roll is cool, the violin is not,’” says the 23-year-old. “It took me a long time to figure out how to incorporate my classical background into Luna Li.” 
On her debut full-length, to be self-released this spring, she combines swelling psychedelic guitar and chiming keys with soulful orchestral arrangements of violin, harp and cello. She enlisted her brother, Lucas Kim, to play the cello and her producer, Braden Sauder, for drums. Everything else she plays herself. And she’s putting new parts of herself into the songs, too. 
“Many of my older songs were crafted out of poems or were vague in meaning,” says Bussiere Kim. “A lot of [the new ones] deal with mental health, loneliness and friendship. They’re more direct and clear, and vulnerable.”
She’s also inspired by a new wave of Asian American female musicians like Japanese Breakfast, Jay Som and Mitski. “I’m half-Korean and that kind of representation – of actually going to shows and seeing people who look like me – was key,” she says. “When I was in high school, I never saw a band fronted by an Asian person.”
Last fall, Luna Li played festivals almost every weekend with her live band – Sauder, Hallie Switzer, Charise Aragoza and Sabrina Carrizo Sztainbok – and landed big opening slots for bands like Hollerado. 
She’s still involved in the tight-knit all-ages scene from her high school days. It’s just all grown up now. 
In addition to Luna Li, she plays guitar in the psych band Mother Tongues (also with Aragoza) and drums in the art pop group Tange, which is made up of ex-Pins & Needles members Deanna Petcoff and her Luna Li bandmate, Carrizo Sztainbok. Meanwhile, her boyfriend Jacob Switzer plays in indie rock group Goodbye Honolulu. 
In 2020, she plans to focus on Luna Li and tour in the spring when the album is out. And hopefully, many of those shows can be all-ages. 
“It’s hard to do all-ages shows because so many DIY spaces have shut down,” says Bussiere Kim. “But it’s really important that everyone feels welcome at my shows, and that includes young people.”  SAMANTHA EDWARDS
More Artists To Watch
Goodbye Honolulu
While they were still in high school, Jacob Switzer, Emmett S. Webb, Max Bornstein and Fox Martindale started Goodbye Honolulu and the label Fried Records as a home for their music and their friends in the all-ages scene. The garage rock band has a penchant for punchy riffs and gang vocals, and it’s taking them beyond the city. Next month, they’re supporting the Beaches on their cross-country tour and then heading down south to play SXSW.
Goodbye Honolulu opens for the Beaches at Danforth Music Hall on February 28 and February 29.  
This year brings good news for longtime fans of Sam Bielanski’s grunge-pop project. After two EPs, countless Toronto shows and playing in Pretty Matty’s live band, Pony’s finally releasing their debut full-length this year. On the woozy first single Limerence, Bielanksi sings about the crushing feeling of unrequited love. Fittingly, this February she’s playing the emo-themed tribute night Taking Back Valentine’s Day (February 14 at Junction City Music Hall) in a Paramore cover band.
Moscow Apartment
In the three years since Brighid Fry and Pascale Padilla formed their indie folk-rock band Moscow Apartment, they’ve released their debut self-titled EP, won a Canadian Folk Music Award and toured across the country – all before they graduated high school. This spring, the teenagers are releasing their sophomore EP and playing shows during March Break (they’re still in high school, after all), while being outspoken advocates for the all-ages scene and climate justice.
Moscow Apartment plays the Paradise Theatre on January 30.
The sound: Disco reconnected to its roots
A half century after the heyday of disco, Tush is helping the genre stay alive. 
The project, which started as a seven-piece live disco band called Mainline in 2015, now consists of just two core members: vocalist Kamilah Apong and bassist Jamie Kidd. 
While their music draws from funk and soul and follows the four-to-the-floor beat typified by disco, they’re more than a vintage throwback.
“Disco is such a loaded term,” says Apong, who previously played in the band Unbuttoned. “For us, it means thinking about how music was made in the origins of [the genre] and keeping to those practices, which was experimentation and [that it was] so much of a social, cultural music.
“Black women were such a huge cultural connection, and disco is deeply ingrained in Black and queer communities.”
Naming Universal Togetherness Band and the Brothers Johnson as some early influences, Tush released an EP, Do You Feel Excited?, in 2018. Their latest single, Don’t Be Afraid, is an atmospheric slow burn propelled by Apong’s gospel-style vocals exhorting us to love defiantly. This summer, they’re planning on releasing their first full-length album.
“What we strive for is depth in the music, lyrics and themes that you don’t find in what most people think of as disco – like more of the later, whitewashed, commercial stuff,” Kidd explains. “We’re making lyric-based dance music that incorporates live instrumentation and more contemporary electronic techniques.”
Tush are a versatile band, and they’ve performed in grand ballrooms like the Palais Royale, rock clubs like the Baby G and underground warehouse parties. Recently, in order to tour more freely and take on gigs at intimate clubs, they’ve distilled their seven-piece live band into a live PA trio that includes Alexa Belgrave on keys. 
Kidd, a veteran of Toronto’s electronic scene who co-founded long-running event promoters Box of Kittens and puts on their popular Sunday Afternoon Social parties, has witnessed the gradual loss of the city’s live music venues, especially those accommodating of dance music.  But his genuine love for the local scene and all the talent in it encourages him to continue on. 
“Something I’ve always strived for is authenticity and doing it for the right reasons,” he says. “With Tush, we’re just doing what we feel most connected to.”
Apong agrees, adding that there’s strong support for contemporary disco in the city. “Everyone dances, no one’s trying to flex or look cool,” she says. “When we throw our own shows, our people show up.” MICHELLE DA SILVA
More Artists To Watch
Born Ryan Anthony Robinson, R. Flex is a queer Black singer, electronic producer and cabaret performer blending R&B and dance music. A backing vocalist in Tush’s seven-piece live band, R. Flex released their own EP, In & Out, in 2018, and since performed in Glad Day’s Black Power Cabaret and at Queer Pop: LGBTQ+ Music & Arts Festival. 
Catch R. Flex singing covers as part of Just Like A Pill on January 31.
The DJ, producer, composer and keyboardist born James Harris has been releasing music spanning disco, funk, deep house, dub and jazz since his 2017 debut EP, Memoirs. When he’s not performing or creating visuals for the electronic monthly Astral Projections, he’s co-running Cosmic Resonance, Toronto’s most exciting progressive jazz-fusion electronic label.
Babygirl 
One of Toronto’s hardest-working DJs, Katie Lavoie is a fixture on the queer dance party circuit. Catch her spinning everything from Hi-NRG to juke house, pop bangers and big gay anthems at her monthly residency Freak Like Me at the Black Eagle, and on her ISO Radio show Therapeutic Hotness. Babygirl is also part of the team at Intersessions, which teaches women and LGBTQ-identifying folks how to DJ.
Babygirl plays Freak Like Me with Chippy Nonstop and Karim Olen Ash this Friday (January 24) at the Black Eagle.
The sound: Exploding the “Canadian sound”
Haniely Pableo is a cardiac nurse by day, rapper by night. As Han Han, she sings and raps in Tagalog and Cebuano, challenging notions of what makes music “sound” Canadian. 
Hip-hop once seemed like an unlikely career for Pableo, but she’s driven by a desire to overthrow patriarchal-racist-exploitative systems. She enjoys creating positive change through challenging conversations, like one she recently had with a man in Tanzania. 
“He said that his daughter could go to school and get educated all she wants but when she’s home, she needs to respect and serve her husband,” she recalls. “I argued with him – wouldn’t he want his daughter to be treated like an equal by the husband, [not] a servant? We went on and on.
“I [have] a lot of conversations like this when I travel or go home to the Philippines.”
Her passion for changing the narrative first collided with Toronto’s arts and music scene in 2006, when she immigrated to Canada and took a poetry workshop. After years of performing around the city as part of the collectives Santa Guerrilla and PSL (Poetry is our Second Language), she released her self-titled debut album in 2014. On her upcoming second album, URDUJA, she delves even deeper. 
“Each song is different, but [it’s] mostly about the complexities of being a woman,” she explains. “How to be strong. How to be vulnerable. That you can’t always be fierce.” 
Inspired by her late grandmother, she named the album after the folkloric Filipino warrior princess revered for power and leadership.
“She’s the opposite of the stereotype that we have today – that Filipina women have to be submissive and happy. That’s what I want to manifest on the album, that we’re more complex. We can be angry, sad, happy, confident and all those emotions exist on an equal spectrum.” 
Pableo, who will play a Venus Fest-presented release show with fellow Filipina-Canadian acts Charise Aragoza and sketch comedy troupe Tita Collective, hopes it also challenges the idea that there’s such a thing as a unified Canadian sound. 
“We’re missing out on a lot of talent and creativity [when] we stick to a narrow-minded view on what Canadian music is and is not. It’s not progressive or empowering to those communities who are always neglected and ignored,” she argues. “Canada always prides itself [on] diversity and multiculturalism, so it should follow naturally that the music scene reflects those values.”
Pableo acknowledges a growing celebration of diverse Canadian music and cites acts like Maylee Todd as important trailblazers. But she’s committed to making her music until she’s just one of many. 
“My hope is that Filipino-Canadian music and talent [become] appreciated, recognized and respected. That’s my personal goal. That’s why I’m still here.”  CHAKA V. GRIER
Han Han plays an URDUJA release show at Lula Lounge on January 30. 
More Artists To Watch
Honest, empowering lyrics. Self-love and body positivity. A voice that blows the roof off. No, it’s not Lizzo. It’s LU KALA. The Congolese-Canadian singer is known for her flaming orange hair and songs like DCMO (Don’t Count Me Out) that you want to cry and dance to. She’s worked behind the scenes as a songwriter, and now she’s preparing to release her debut album. Its first single, Body Knew, will be out next month.
Duo Elizabeth Rodriguez and Magdelys Savigne released their lush debut, Sombras, in 2019. OKAN's vocal- and percussion-driven tracks evoke their homeland yet also reflect the vibrant Cuban-Canadian community. On their album artwork they’re in full Latin garb, perched regally against a snow-covered landscape – the perfect illustration of their sound. This summer they’ll release their sophomore album, Espiral, and tour through North America and India.
Amaka Queenette
In the summer of 2018, Amaka Queenette quietly released her astute and far-too-brief Vacant EP. At just 19, the Nigerian-born singer’s lyrics and voice hold the composure of someone twice her age. Soulful and elegant, she moves between jazz, R&B and gospel with ease while singing about isolation and soul-searching. This spring she’ll release a visual EP, Fleeting, Inconsequential.
The sound: Heavy psych from the depths
Paul Ciuk laments the lack of meaningful connections in Toronto’s music scene. 
“The sense of community we have here is totally broken,” explains the drummer for proto-metal quartet Häxan. 
In the band’s experience, power dynamics are often unbalanced and musicians are reluctant to help others unless it helps themselves. But Häxan has seen that there’s an alternative – they’re proof of how supportive a small but dedicated community can be, especially if they have a space to congregate. 
Though some of the friendships in Häxan span decades, the real genesis of the band happened at now shuttered Kensington Market metal venue Coalition. In 2015, with only a theatre degree in her performance arsenal, vocalist Kayley Bomben (also one of Coalition’s founding bartenders/promoters/managers) made the leap to front a Germs cover band with guitarist Paul Colosimo and bassist Eric Brauer for a one-off covers night. 
“Coalition acted like a big tent because you could see all different kinds of metal there,” Brauer explains. “It was a pivotal venue for us to be able to work out the band dynamic,” Bomben agrees. 
Häxan matured from punk cover band to Stooges-inspired grunge act and slowly conjured the fiery intensity of the psychedelic metal they play now. After finalizing their lineup with Ciuk, they quickly slipped into a heavy vintage groove. 
A fascination with the occult didn’t hurt, either. Their name is a reference to a 1922 silent film that explores how superstition wrongly linked mental illness to witchcraft. “When we think of people as evil because they’re different, that leads to a lot of horrible things,” Bomben says. 
Their debut album, set to be released this spring, furthers the fascination. It’s named Aradia, after a tome of Italian folklore that positions witchcraft against hierarchy and oppression. (The first single, Baba Yaga, just dropped on Bandcamp.)
The album was produced by Alia O’Brien of Badge Époque Ensemble and Blood Ceremony, who knows a thing or two about how pagan rituals and witchy vibes should sound. Häxan credit that connection to Fuzzed and Buzzed. The local label took a chance on them early, putting them on last year’s half-cover/half-original Altar Box 7" compilation where the band first collaborated with O’Brien. 
“Nobody has ever done anything like this for any of our other bands before,” Colosimo says. Bomben agrees, pinpointing the key to thriving in the city’s metal scene. “You really have to find the people who are willing to help each other out.” MICHAEL RANCIC
More Artists To Watch
Look out for this mysterious project to make waves later this year. More within the psychedelic camp than metal, ROY still bring plenty of heaviness – biting, raw guitar lines rendered through a thick cloud of analog tape haze. But they temper that weight with dreamy keyboard-conjured paisley sublimities. Think the schoolhouse rock of Darlene Shrugg, or the dense psychedelic tapestries of Tony Price.
Rough Spells
Häxan’s Fuzzed and Buzzed labelmates occupy similar psychedelic and doomy territory and also have a full-length ready. They match Häxan’s occult metal intensity with stellar vocal harmonies and incisive lyrics. Their most recent single, Grise Fiord, is named for Canada’s most northerly community and a site of forced Inuit relocation in the 50s. All proceeds from the track go to It Starts With Us, an organization that honours the memory of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Two-Spirit and Trans people.
Erythrite Throne
Mysterious figure Wyrm has completely thrown themselves into the dark and dank atmospherics of dungeon synth, a black-metal-adjacent style that emerged in the 80s. They’ve released a ridiculously prolific amount of music in little over a year under the Erythrite Throne moniker: 18 albums on Bandcamp starting in 2018, including one on January 1 of this year. Don’t be overwhelmed: their mostly instrumental music is moody and wholly engrossing. Start with The Blind Hag’s Lair. 
This content was originally published here.
1 note · View note
ihfsttinuf · 7 years ago
Text
(Significantly More Than) Ten Songs Which Have Moved Me
@progamuffin tagged me with this and I like doing these so I thought I’d get right to it. I might even post some explanations! In no particular order:
1. Benjamin Britten, “Elegy” (fourth movement, Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings [Op. 31], 1943)—A gorgeous and chilling setting of William Blake’s enigmatic poem “The Sick Rose”. Knowing more about Britten’s life and his struggles with how he saw himself as a person add an extra veneer of eeriness and pathos to this one.
2. St. Vincent, “Black Rainbow” (Actor, 4AD, 2009)—This one is sort of tied with “Laughing With a Mouth of Blood”, as both wonderfully capture a very particular set of experiences and emotions which resonate with me personally, both lyrically and in the superficially upbeat, lush music. I’m giving “Black Rainbow” a slight edge, though, as a splendid depiction of the claustrophobia and frustration which chronic depression brings.
3. Wire, “Map Ref. 41ºN 93ºW” (154, EMI, 1979)—The perfect power-pop song, perfectly encapsulating the wonderment of realising how truly vast and beautiful the landscape is, dashed with cheeky yet ecstatic turns and wrapped in immaculate synth and guitar arrangements. Known to make me cry tears of joy, literally. Fantastic.
4. Have a Nice Life, “Earthmover” (Deathconsciousness, Enemies List Home Recordings, 2008)—The first four songs on this album, as a bloc, are incredibly compelling, but I’m giving it to the grand finale here for its sheer apocalyptic power and strange mixture of holy joy and abyssal melancholy. “We wish we were dead,” indeed.
5. Prurient, “Myth of Love” (Black Vase, Load Records, 2005)—One of the scariest experiences that I have ever had with music was listening to this for the first time alone in my room one night with all of the lights off. The manipulations of the vocals made it sound as if the very static hiss of the amplifiers were speaking, as if this were a recording without human intervention, a self-recorded exorcism of something that had never been alive.
6. Dälek, “Ever Somber” (Absence, Ipecac, 2005)—The culmination of an album and a thesis which builds by degrees. An instrumental which swoops down like a formation of black swans, into which weave erudite lyrics at once quietly delivered and charged with righteous anger. A way forward for political music which I had not considered prior to my exposure to this group.
7. Ruth Crawford Seeger, String Quartet (1931)—Hard to explain this one, except that there is something immensely satisfying about a work of high modernist composition with so much humour, verve, spookiness and outright melody. Foreshadows total serialism and drone music alike.
8. Jute Gyte, “I Am in Athens and Pericles is Young” (Perdurance, Jeshimoth, 2016)—Not difficult at all to explain this one, insofar as it speaks for itself. Any song from this album could go here, but the sheer extremity of the ideas and revelry in abstraction make this one a fine exemplar. Easily the most exciting “band” in black metal today.
9. Swans “The Glowing Man” (The Glowing Man, Young God, 2016)—Pure undeniable minimal-meets-maximal transcendence. Simply astonishing for every minute of its significant runtime, challenged only by the perfection of the album closer “Finally, Peace”.
10. Coil, “Where Are You?” (Musick to Play in the Dark Vol. 2, Chalice, 2000)—The pure terror inspired by “Strange Birds” and “Ether” from this spectral duo count for a great deal, as do the exquisite requiems which close each album, and the synth odysseys of “Red Birds...” and “Tiny Golden Books”. These albums are, not to put a finer point on it, stone cold classics. But for a taste of pure outer sphere mystery filtered through a haze of attic dust, “Where Are You?” cannot be beat. It is aching nostalgia for a place beyond birth and death.
11. Sonic Youth, “Hoarfrost” (A Thousand Leaves, DGC, 1998)—Skeins of guitar like wood-smoke and frozen branches zigzagged over a snowy landscape, winding in and out of one another, glistening at times and curling dark and quiet at others over the patter of toms and warm yet distant vocals, like something hiding in the very heart of the woods.
12. Angels of Light, “Praise Your Name” (New Mother, Young God, 1999)—Another Gira song? Really? Yes, really. A love song to the righteous hatred of a broken person, in luminous tones full of sacral awe.
13. Current 93, “The Bloodbells Chime” (How I Devoured Apocalypse Balloon, Durtro, 2005)—An utterly heartbreaking song in any version, but I wanted to highlight this slower, wearier arrangement from a rather obscure live recording, which absolutely aches with sorrow in the final verse: “Tommy Catkins still sends his regards...” One more reason to cry, this time with no joy whatsoever.
14. Dome, “Keep It” (Dome 2, Dome, 1980)—Another exercise in obscure and paralysing nocturnal terror, here triggered by the realisation that I had no idea what I was hearing or what any of it meant. Like “Ever Somber” and “Earthmover”, this is less a singular sensation than a cumulative one, although like “Where Are You?” or “I Am in Athens...” it more or less stands for the album experience as a whole.
15. Sutcliffe Jügend, “The Death of Pornography” (Blue Rabbit, Crucial Blas, 2012)—As above, so below; from Kafka to Bataille. While the dread of this LP is less subtle than Dome’s approach, it is a similarly restrained effort on an instrumental level, and while it was the title track which made me put this one down for months, it was the closer which made it both a classic and something which I feel uneasy recommending.
16. Bügsküll, “Flowers Smile” (Distracted Snowflake Volume One, Pop Secret, 1997)—A pop song which is also not anything resembling popular music, simple and sweet and unaffected yet deeply strange and intimate. Such a thoroughly underrated musician.
17. The Velvet Underground, “Candy Says” (The Velvet Underground, MGM, 1969)—What is there to even say?
There are certainly more than this but I should probably stop now.
@nyathescurial, if you haven’t done this yet, you’re it. Also @section42l, @allelesonwheels, @sfsorrow, @kitswulf, @carrionade if any of y’all are interested.
7 notes · View notes
webpostingpro-blog · 8 years ago
Text
New Post has been published on Webpostingpro
New Post has been published on http://webpostingpro.com/apple-updates-apple-music-for-android-with-a-new-ui-to-remove-the-clutter/
Apple updates Apple Music for Android with a new UI to remove the clutter
Apple has remodeled the Android model of Apple Music to deliver “extra readability and simplicity” to the app. The new update revamps the consumer interface of the app whilst bumping the version wide variety to 2.zero for the app.
It’s far unclear if the revamp is confined to cosmetic adjustments that simply adjustments the UI factors to dispose of the clutter or if it extends to the backend and the way the offerings are performed within the app.
Right here is the certain changelog that got here with the update:
Now Playing. Study lyrics for songs as you concentrate. Library. Navigate your Song easily and see the Downloaded Song you may play offline. For You. Get pointers for playlists, albums, and greater—based on Track you like. Browse. pay attention to new Track first, plus playlists for any temper or interest. Radio. The song into Beats 1 shows or concentrate to stations for any style. The new version seems to have far lesser menus than the older menus and the scrolling has decreased notably.
Consistent with a file by using Android Police
The app appears to be greater responsive and quicker. One component to word Right here is that Apple Music fees extensively inexpensive in India than in U.S.
In an evaluation, Apple Tune subscription fees about Rs one hundred twenty according to month for people, Rs a hundred ninety according to month for the family up to 6 participants and Rs 60 consistent with the month for students in contrast to $9.99 it prices for individuals according to a month in United states.
Can Sacramento California’s Levees Survive A Robust Pine Apple Express Atmospheric River
In watching the big quantity of precipitation a good way to deluge Northern California just after the first week of 2017 our Assume Tank dared to invite the query no one needs to talk approximately; are the Sacramento Levees safe? It seems that Arnold Schwarzenegger as Governor of California tried to get the upgrading of these levees into the finances numerous instances (in conjunction with water retention tasks for droughts), but the Democrat majority in the California Legislature at the time wanted to spend that money on social applications.
At the time Democrats called it a victory, but possibly in hindsight they set the state up for a pending catastrophe, we will quickly see as this mega storm drops its mother load on California. How will a whole lot water hit Northern California? Nicely, the La times had an interesting article published on January 6, 2017, titled; “In Great Lakes, preparing for an Enormous hurricane,” by using Tony Barboza, Hailey Branson-Potts and Joseph Serna which said:
The epic system could sell off a lot of rain and snow that some ski runs
And roads are closed caution of vast flooding, mudslides, and avalanches inside the Sierra Nevada. As much as 12 inches of rain is predicted on regions underneath 8,500 ft & As much as 7 feet of snow in better elevations. The typhoon changed into packing the identical wallop as one that hit Northern California in 2005, inflicting $300 million in damage. This system may want to bring 36-hours of heavy rain to elements of Northern CA. While that is good information for California, in its 6th 12 months of drought, the coming rain should soften already-standing snow – feeding watersheds swollen from storms in advance this week.”
Actual sufficient and other reports from the Weather Channel propose that
The quantity of water may be within the neighborhood of 15-Mississippi Rivers and about 57 Trillions of gallons of water, sufficient to absolutely have an effect on the planet’s rotation, albeit only a few hundredth of a second. Will the error of the California Legislature at some point of Arnold’s tenure as governor and the following years lately under Jerry Brown price us Taxpayer across the united states of America 100s of Billions of bucks? It simply might, and this could be a difficult call for the Trump Administration if that levee machine fails and drowns thousands of people and placed a terrific bite of Sacramento underwater.
How horrific is the state of affairs
Well, it seems there was a number of snow %, about a decade ago, one year that positioned the snow tires at a hundred seventy-five% of regular and that they have been extremely worried lower back then, rapid forward 10-years later, greater put on and tear on the levee system and no foremost improvements, that would spell disaster and anybody who isn’t worried about it, is not paying interest – permit’s just desire the specialists and Weather forecasters were given this one incorrect. Assume on it – be notable, do not hesitate.
Taking A Look At The Differences Between Old And New Music
Music entertains, educates and informs. Whilst it has been around for a long term Track has gone thru a number of modifications that variety from the devices used to the fashion of composition. That will help you out, here are some of the methods in which Song has advanced over time:
Use of instruments
Old Music becomes sung using actual devices. The instruments used included: cello, viola, tuba, French horn, bassoon, trombone, trumpet and many others. Even when recording, the musicians needed to play the real units. Because of this, the Vintage musicians needed to first discover ways to play the gadgets then file the Tune. That is now not the case with the modern Track. modern-day Song closely relies on laptop programs. the usage of the programs you could input the sound of any Track instrument without having the tool at your disposal or even knowing a way to play it. This has given upward thrust to tens of millions of Music superstars who even do not know the most simple Music devices.
Genre
most of the Old musicians stuck with a given Song Genre. When you were asked to an organization the different musicians in specific categories depending on their Song genres, you could without problems do it. This is not the case. Genres in modern Track are blurred as musicians healthy different genres. Currently, it is not uncommon to find a musician singing hip-hop and at the same time undertaking R&B. Some musicians have even received awards in Song classes that aren’t recognized for. For example, Nelly, who is recognized for R&B has received a country Song award. Because of the constrained confinement of the distinctive Song genres, the Tune world has ended up confused and it’s nearly impossible to tell the specific Genre that a given musician engages in.
Song and class
Whilst Some few Antique songs were offensive and the degree indicates every so often were given raucous, matters have gone worse. Currently, in particular, inside the Hip-Hop international, the Tune has emerged as too offensive. If you have attended hip-hop shows you must have noticed that maximum of the rappers brazenly insult their audiences and use plenty of offensive phrases. With regards to R&B, the Tune has moved from the coolest Antique superb and empowering Song to provocative and every now and then offensive Track. In summary, we can say that the current Tune has misplaced magnificence. The unfortunate aspect is that the target market seems to like it.
Android Vs IOS App Development in Singapore
It isn’t always surprising that Singapore corporations choose a cellular-first strategy as APAC pronounced over 50% telephone penetration inside the USA closing 12 months. It claimed that the common cellphone user in Singapore had around 40 apps installed at a time on their cellphone. Most of those apps belong to the social media class as sixty-four% of the populace is energetic on social media according to We are Social in 2016. The opposite fundamental attraction is gaming as App Annie confirmed the top-ranked on the Apple keep being Minecraft, Conflict Royale, Monopoly, Mobile strike and of course the cutting-edge sensation, Uber.
Since the dawn of the cellular app era,
Customers have been pulled in two principal directions: Android or iOS. Windows is still a popular operating gadget however it is manifestly now not inside the going for walks for the top spot anymore. There are numerous other working structures, which might be employed by small segments of cell app customers. However, they do not occupy key positions in the cell app marketplace.
Function of Apple in Singapore
Apple has a variety of credibility amongst friends and clients alike. It has a far centered advertising and marketing approach that shows simply in iOS apps. Apple is in a category all its personal and all of the opposition obtainable knows that. It has a sturdy presence throughout Asia, particularly Singapore because the city is a thriving generation hub. Lots of them are primarily based here and running as freelancers for organizations within the West that outsource. App users are aware of the excellent and gravitate in the direction of iOS devices because of this. The following Net revealed that u. S . had the Maximum iOS gadgets in line with populace these beyond few years.
Google as seen in Singapore
Android is a different tale altogether. The advertising method of Google differs significantly from that of Apple. those tech giants appear like moving their brands in completely contrary guidelines. They don’t have the equal dreams and as I’m able to give an explanation for, their target audience is not precisely the identical. Most Asian economies are 0.33 world nations so a majority of phone customers flip to Android.
There are some key elements which determine the modern-day situation of Android and iOS apps in Singapore.
0 notes
webpostingpro-blog · 8 years ago
Text
New Post has been published on Webpostingpro
New Post has been published on http://webpostingpro.com/apple-updates-apple-music-for-android-with-a-new-ui-to-remove-the-clutter/
Apple updates Apple Music for Android with a new UI to remove the clutter
Apple has remodeled the Android model of Apple Music to deliver “extra readability and simplicity” to the app. The new update revamps the consumer interface of the app whilst bumping the version wide variety to 2.zero for the app.
It’s far unclear if the revamp is confined to cosmetic adjustments that simply adjustments the UI factors to dispose of the clutter or if it extends to the backend and the way the offerings are performed within the app.
Right here is the certain changelog that got here with the update:
Now Playing. Study lyrics for songs as you concentrate. Library. Navigate your Song easily and see the Downloaded Song you may play offline. For You. Get pointers for playlists, albums, and greater—based on Track you like. Browse. pay attention to new Track first, plus playlists for any temper or interest. Radio. The song into Beats 1 shows or concentrate to stations for any style. The new version seems to have far lesser menus than the older menus and the scrolling has decreased notably.
Consistent with a file by using Android Police
The app appears to be greater responsive and quicker. One component to word Right here is that Apple Music fees extensively inexpensive in India than in U.S.
In an evaluation, Apple Tune subscription fees about Rs one hundred twenty according to month for people, Rs a hundred ninety according to month for the family up to 6 participants and Rs 60 consistent with the month for students in contrast to $9.99 it prices for individuals according to a month in United states.
Can Sacramento California’s Levees Survive A Robust Pine Apple Express Atmospheric River
In watching the big quantity of precipitation a good way to deluge Northern California just after the first week of 2017 our Assume Tank dared to invite the query no one needs to talk approximately; are the Sacramento Levees safe? It seems that Arnold Schwarzenegger as Governor of California tried to get the upgrading of these levees into the finances numerous instances (in conjunction with water retention tasks for droughts), but the Democrat majority in the California Legislature at the time wanted to spend that money on social applications.
At the time Democrats called it a victory, but possibly in hindsight they set the state up for a pending catastrophe, we will quickly see as this mega storm drops its mother load on California. How will a whole lot water hit Northern California? Nicely, the La times had an interesting article published on January 6, 2017, titled; “In Great Lakes, preparing for an Enormous hurricane,” by using Tony Barboza, Hailey Branson-Potts and Joseph Serna which said:
The epic system could sell off a lot of rain and snow that some ski runs
And roads are closed caution of vast flooding, mudslides, and avalanches inside the Sierra Nevada. As much as 12 inches of rain is predicted on regions underneath 8,500 ft & As much as 7 feet of snow in better elevations. The typhoon changed into packing the identical wallop as one that hit Northern California in 2005, inflicting $300 million in damage. This system may want to bring 36-hours of heavy rain to elements of Northern CA. While that is good information for California, in its 6th 12 months of drought, the coming rain should soften already-standing snow – feeding watersheds swollen from storms in advance this week.”
Actual sufficient and other reports from the Weather Channel propose that
The quantity of water may be within the neighborhood of 15-Mississippi Rivers and about 57 Trillions of gallons of water, sufficient to absolutely have an effect on the planet’s rotation, albeit only a few hundredth of a second. Will the error of the California Legislature at some point of Arnold’s tenure as governor and the following years lately under Jerry Brown price us Taxpayer across the united states of America 100s of Billions of bucks? It simply might, and this could be a difficult call for the Trump Administration if that levee machine fails and drowns thousands of people and placed a terrific bite of Sacramento underwater.
How horrific is the state of affairs
Well, it seems there was a number of snow %, about a decade ago, one year that positioned the snow tires at a hundred seventy-five% of regular and that they have been extremely worried lower back then, rapid forward 10-years later, greater put on and tear on the levee system and no foremost improvements, that would spell disaster and anybody who isn’t worried about it, is not paying interest – permit’s just desire the specialists and Weather forecasters were given this one incorrect. Assume on it – be notable, do not hesitate.
Taking A Look At The Differences Between Old And New Music
Music entertains, educates and informs. Whilst it has been around for a long term Track has gone thru a number of modifications that variety from the devices used to the fashion of composition. That will help you out, here are some of the methods in which Song has advanced over time:
Use of instruments
Old Music becomes sung using actual devices. The instruments used included: cello, viola, tuba, French horn, bassoon, trombone, trumpet and many others. Even when recording, the musicians needed to play the real units. Because of this, the Vintage musicians needed to first discover ways to play the gadgets then file the Tune. That is now not the case with the modern Track. modern-day Song closely relies on laptop programs. the usage of the programs you could input the sound of any Track instrument without having the tool at your disposal or even knowing a way to play it. This has given upward thrust to tens of millions of Music superstars who even do not know the most simple Music devices.
Genre
most of the Old musicians stuck with a given Song Genre. When you were asked to an organization the different musicians in specific categories depending on their Song genres, you could without problems do it. This is not the case. Genres in modern Track are blurred as musicians healthy different genres. Currently, it is not uncommon to find a musician singing hip-hop and at the same time undertaking R&B. Some musicians have even received awards in Song classes that aren’t recognized for. For example, Nelly, who is recognized for R&B has received a country Song award. Because of the constrained confinement of the distinctive Song genres, the Tune world has ended up confused and it’s nearly impossible to tell the specific Genre that a given musician engages in.
Song and class
Whilst Some few Antique songs were offensive and the degree indicates every so often were given raucous, matters have gone worse. Currently, in particular, inside the Hip-Hop international, the Tune has emerged as too offensive. If you have attended hip-hop shows you must have noticed that maximum of the rappers brazenly insult their audiences and use plenty of offensive phrases. With regards to R&B, the Tune has moved from the coolest Antique superb and empowering Song to provocative and every now and then offensive Track. In summary, we can say that the current Tune has misplaced magnificence. The unfortunate aspect is that the target market seems to like it.
Android Vs IOS App Development in Singapore
It isn’t always surprising that Singapore corporations choose a cellular-first strategy as APAC pronounced over 50% telephone penetration inside the USA closing 12 months. It claimed that the common cellphone user in Singapore had around 40 apps installed at a time on their cellphone. Most of those apps belong to the social media class as sixty-four% of the populace is energetic on social media according to We are Social in 2016. The opposite fundamental attraction is gaming as App Annie confirmed the top-ranked on the Apple keep being Minecraft, Conflict Royale, Monopoly, Mobile strike and of course the cutting-edge sensation, Uber.
Since the dawn of the cellular app era,
Customers have been pulled in two principal directions: Android or iOS. Windows is still a popular operating gadget however it is manifestly now not inside the going for walks for the top spot anymore. There are numerous other working structures, which might be employed by small segments of cell app customers. However, they do not occupy key positions in the cell app marketplace.
Function of Apple in Singapore
Apple has a variety of credibility amongst friends and clients alike. It has a far centered advertising and marketing approach that shows simply in iOS apps. Apple is in a category all its personal and all of the opposition obtainable knows that. It has a sturdy presence throughout Asia, particularly Singapore because the city is a thriving generation hub. Lots of them are primarily based here and running as freelancers for organizations within the West that outsource. App users are aware of the excellent and gravitate in the direction of iOS devices because of this. The following Net revealed that u. S . had the Maximum iOS gadgets in line with populace these beyond few years.
Google as seen in Singapore
Android is a different tale altogether. The advertising method of Google differs significantly from that of Apple. those tech giants appear like moving their brands in completely contrary guidelines. They don’t have the equal dreams and as I’m able to give an explanation for, their target audience is not precisely the identical. Most Asian economies are 0.33 world nations so a majority of phone customers flip to Android.
There are some key elements which determine the modern-day situation of Android and iOS apps in Singapore.
0 notes