Studio ne where sweet lyrics come from

29th July

The News Review:

- Studio ne where sweet lyrics come from
- Still Married to the Music
- Swiss hit a high note
- Concert to celebrate composer classified as ‘unclassifiable’.
- Salsa Spins Beyond Its Roots
- THESE FIRMS ARE BITE-SIZING Music hath charms: Recipes can soothe a…
- Long Island Westchester Connecticut and New Jersey

Studio ne where sweet lyrics come from
Jamaica Gleaner – Jul 29, 2007
Dodd’s devotion to his work came from a simple love of music. King Stitt a legend in his own right was with Studio ne from the beginning first as a disc jockey on the sound system and now as a sales representative and research officer. He told The Sunday Gleaner that Dodd “was a lover of good jazz music R&B good soft music. During the early days he listened to those stations in the States. He would listen to jazz and decided to build a sound system and started playing music. “With an ear for music Dodd soon discovered the likes of Ken Boothe Delroy Wilson and more all of whom had to be fine tuned before they were recorded. According to King Stitt one of his most memorable discoveries in the studio was that of reggae legend Bob Marley.

Still Married to the Music
New York Times – Jul 29, 2007
For the next several years she cajoled him into speaking into her tape recorder and then pieced together his stories. The result was the harrowing autobiography “Straight Life” published in 1979. During the process in 1976 they were married and Pepper returned to playing jazz after a 15-year absence. “nly then did I get caught up in the music” Ms. “Every time he did a gig I would sit there in the audience or at the sound board and say ‘This is why I’m doing this. ‘ The glory of the music was overwhelming.

Swiss hit a high note
NEWS.com.au – Jul 29, 2007
Music festivals that is. Between June and September Switzerland celebrates scores of music festivals and parades across the country from the shores of Lake Geneva in the far southwest to St Gallen in the northeast and right across the musical spectrum that attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors. And there’s something for everyone — jazz classical rock country opera blues gospel traditional alpine music and scores of colourfully kitted-out marching bands all belting out their best in stunning alpine settings through narrow cobbled streets in stately auditoriums and beside some of the country’s prettiest placid lakes. This year has already seen Marilyn Manson at the Interlaken Greenfield Festival and Snow Patrol Kaiser Chiefs and Placebo at the big open-air gig in St Gallen each held in a spectacular alpine environment. Car-free medieval Raperswil the "Town of Roses" on the northern shore of Lake Zurich echoed with the sounds of New rleans jazz with its Blues ‘n’ Jazz Festival as did Ascona on the sunny shores of Lake Maggiore in the southern Italian-speaking Canton Ticino with its own New rleans Jazz Festival. n the last weekend in August European and international bands will gather for more New rleans jazz at Celerina in the Engadine Valley near St Moritz one of the most beautiful alpine regions in the country. But July is when most of the major events have taken place including Ticino’s Estival Jazz in Lugano and the Moon and Stars Festival in nearby Locarno where Pink and the Beastie Boys appeared.

Concert to celebrate composer classified as ‘unclassifiable’.
Free with registration – Chicago Tribune – AccessMyLibrary.com – Jul 29, 2007
But he was too insecure too unsure of his musical gifts friends said to make more of a name for himself in a world he distrusted. Perhaps his distrust was well-founded because the world in which he traveled had little use for artists it couldn’t conveniently pigeonhole. Despite his having written several hundred popular songs and numerous works that were admired and performed by pop jazz and classical musicians including Frank Sinatra Marian McPartland and Mitch Miller Wilder’s melodious and ingratiating style was disdained by the musical establishment of the ’50s ’60s and ’70s. The composer whom the New Grove Dictionary of American Music calls “an unclassifiable American original” died in poverty and largely forgotten at 73 in 1980. Fortunately a cult following has been keeping Wilder’s name alive. Each year musician friends and colleagues present concerts in his memory. There has been an upsurge in Wilder tributes this year in observance of the centennial of the composer’s birth… Perhaps his distrust was well-founded because the world in which he traveled had little use for artists it couldn’t conveniently pigeonhole. Despite his having written several hundred popular songs and numerous works that were admired and performed by pop jazz and classical musicians including Frank Sinatra Marian McPartland and Mitch Miller Wilder’s melodious and ingratiating style was disdained by the musical establishment of the ’50s ’60s and ’70s. The composer whom the New Grove Dictionary of American Music calls “an unclassifiable American original” died in poverty and largely forgotten at 73 in 1980. Fortunately a cult following has been keeping Wilder’s name alive. Each year musician friends and colleagues present concerts in his memory. There has been an upsurge in Wilder tributes this year in observance of the centennial of the composer’s birth. Indeed a dozen Wilder.

Salsa Spins Beyond Its Roots
New York Times – Jul 29, 2007
She danced on Broadway in “Swing!” in 1999 choreographed “4 Guys Named Jos?. and Una Mujer Named Maria!” in 2000 and now teaches salsa and her own brand of Latin jazz throughout the world. ver cups of caf?on leche at a Cuban coffeehouse near her home in Edgewater N. Torres who was born and raised in Brooklyn recalled the days when salsa emerged… Torres who was born and raised in Brooklyn recalled the days when salsa emerged. “My father played the congas and on Saturdays my mom would cook and then we would spend the rest of the evening all five of us dancing” she said of her early childhood in the ’60s. “The music and the dancing was a norm and I knew young that I wanted to be a performer. ” When she was 12 she got her mother to sign her working papers early the legal age was 13 so that she could earn money to take dance lessons. Still “there was no salsa at the time” she said. “There was African there was ballet there was jazz. But there was no Latin.

THESE FIRMS ARE BITE-SIZING Music hath charms: Recipes can soothe a…
San Francisco Chronicle – Jul 29, 2007
tmpl –>Music may or may not be the food of love but Sharon ‘Connor has built a thriving business by combining a love of both food and music. tmpl –> Images… tmpl –> ‘Connor a former professional cellist runs an Emeryville company that has sold more than 2 million cookbooks packaged with CDs of related music. Fancy a little Parisian fare? Her Bistro package combines recipes from restaurants in 20 arrondissements with a CD of “swinging French jazz” such as “La Vie en Rose. ” Prefer something a little closer to home? Her Rock & Roll Diner set pairs comfort-food recipes from places like Bette’s ceanview Diner in Berkeley with classic American rock songs such as “Johnny B. ” ‘Connor and husband John Coreris today sell more than $1. 5 million worth of music-and-recipe sets each year through their company Menus and Music Productions.

Long Island Westchester Connecticut and New Jersey
New York Times – Jul 29, 2007
Bananas Comedy Club 283 Route 17 South. FILMFRT LEE Fort Lee Community Center “Movies and Music Under the Stars” outdoor concerts and film screenings: “Rocky Balboa” directed by Sylvester Stallone with music by Giada Valenti. Fort Lee Community Center 1355 Inwood Terrace… Perkins Center for the Arts 395 Kings Highway. MRRIS TWNSHIP Bickford Theater Wyeth Jazz Series: Tom Roberts. Bickford Theater 6 Normandy Heights Road.

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