Full list of episodes. He worked tirelessly to craft a media outlet that would allow listeners to be better engaged with artists he would feature on the show.
Bringing Filipino artists into the limelight, while including mindful content, served a desire to use his skills to give back to the community. However, after a 2-year stint, the show aired its final episode in due to personal reasons and a lack of finances that hindered the show's growth.
Fast forward 12 years later, with advancements in technology and the rise of new media, the Filipino community witnessed an emergence of triple the amount of Filipino artists and influencers around the globe.
It commands your attention, and I'm betting you'll want to hear it more than once. Grown from the musical traditions of New Orleans, Jon Batiste performs what he calls "social music" — and appears to get as much joy in creating it as sharing it.
When two musical activists from two different parts of the globe meetup to make some music, you know it's worth tuning in. Together, they've created a high-powered anthem that demands dancing. They meld their styles perfectly, making their duet sound like it was made of steel. I wouldn't be surprised if we get sequels to this combination.
The pandemic has kept musicians sequestered in their homes, unable to tour and connect to audiences. Like the rest of us, that extends to personal relationships that have been confined to screen time, phone calls, and socially distanced meetings.
This isolation has created time for songwriting and often the subject is isolation; call it the pandemic playlist. Parker Millsap 's contribution to the milieu is "The Real Thing," a richly layered folk ballad that laments his inability to make physical contact with the object of his desire. Rock and roll is very much alive and well in the home of brothers Dee, Isaiah and Solomon Radke — members of Kansas City-based power trio Radkey. A certified banger, "Seize" is the lead single from their fourth full-length album, Green Room.
With fortifying riffs and canorous vocals that channel the likes of The Damned, Ramones and Misfits, Radkey contemplates the hazards of obsessive fandom with fomenting veracity. On her debut EP, Ventura , the Panamanian singer-songwriter marries personal storytelling with a breezy musical backdrop and instinctual pop sensibilities.
It's impossible not to be captivated with songs like "Handful of Water. And when the final note drops, all you want to do is hear it again. That's the sign of a good song, and something truly irresistible. As The Weather Station , Tamara Lindeman emphasizes and connects the subtle importance of the little things we experience amid the loud hum of daily life. Her intimate observation of the bird in "Parking Lot" radiates a sense of delicate, relatable peace — I think it is safe to say many of us have found ourselves watching neighborhood birds more frequently over the last year.
It serves as a soft reminder that sometimes the smallest, most inconsequential moments trigger us to unpack the layers we've carefully stowed away. On the day of the single's release, Lindeman introduced it on Twitter as "A love song for a bird, or maybe for the world," which is fitting as her album Ignorance is seeded in the personal grief and struggle of global climate change. This song, and its parent album, delivers tinges of airy hope coupled with bouts of anxiety, humbly capturing a space familiar to many.
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