This song is blushing cheeks in the dark of a cinema, reaching hands to hold, to kiss, to be close. This song is the glow of a screen illuminating young faces, the bravery of a kiss on the cheek, to a soft one on the lips at the end of the night. This song is innocent love, the glow of your entire body after getting a kiss back, running up to your room to call your best friend and tell them all about it…
Birsen Tezer is one of the most recognized voices of the Turkish jazz scene. She is known for her soft voice that touches the souls of many, including me. She blends the classic sound of jazz with Turkish music essentials like irregular rhythms and folk instruments. She also knows how to play the “kanun”, which is a traditional Turkish string instrument.
What I love the most about experimental music is how it sounds to me like an abstract experience from which anything can bloom, really like a surrealist painting. “Are we here?” is the type of track to evoke such feelings. Everything works perfectly in this conceptualistic song in which modern beats convey a timeless feeling.
It was a couple hours after midnight, last Saturday. My father passed away in a hospital after two years of struggle with a very difficult disease. It was one of the worst moments of my life, completely unexpected for me and so difficult to handle that for a few moments I thought I would faint, I still haven’t fully understood the magnitude of the event, I still haven’t completely accepted I lost my father.
A little more than a decade ago, a self-proclaimed Japanese scientist called Masaru Emoto conducted a series of tests on water. One part of his experiment consisted of placing tap water in a glass and exposing it to different words. To put this in a more simple way: He spoke to a glass of water. After this, Emoto froze the water he’d been conversing with and studied how the water crystals looked…
This is a song that I think I need to listen to almost every day or have the lyrics printed and framed. Like many of Tom Rosenthal’s songs, there’s a playful aspect to the lyrics, but at its heart, it’s a deep and motivating song about living a full life and pursuing your passions with abandon,..
Young M.A. has kept to her own in the past few months, with minimal content but quality when it comes time for the drops. Today she references AI’s infamous “practice” media interview on a new single with production from Buda da Future & Amadeus
In Canada right now we’re experiencing what we call our “Third Winter”. This comes after two separate weeks in February and March (respectively called “Fool’s Spring” and “Spring of Deception”) where the temperatures usually rise to the double digits, before plunging below zero again. I’m crossing my fingers we won’t see snow again, but there’s no end in sight for our winter coats, hats and gloves.
Un guion escrito por Raúl de la Torre y Puig, el célebre autor de “Boquitas Pintadas” son los cimientos para la película argentina “Pubis Angelical”
El film, no escapó de la censura y cuando se intentó averiguar la causa de la misma, el que en ese momento era el jefe del ente declaró: «Porque jamás se debe dejar pasar un título semejante. Una película con ese título tiene que ser una barbaridad y el Estado argentino no puede gastar plata en semejantes bodrios»…
As soon as I heard this song, I knew it needed to be on the playlist. The Coastal Club sticks to their name and the sound really captures the vibe of the coast. Wavy feel to the songs that makes you feel great. Has a similar feel to Hippo Campus in my opinion, and incorporates fantastic guitar fills…
“On March 19, 1991, Latasha Harlins was shot and killed during a dispute over a bottle of orange juice.
She was fifteen.
Her killer received no prison time”
This sweetly soothing instrumental builds to a euphoric climax on the back of rousing brass and angelic backing vocals but the emotional weight is carried not by the growing grandeur of the arrangement but by the words of two working class women from the valleys of South Wales recalling their own humble contribution to an historic struggle for workers’ rights…