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Coachella producer in talks to develop site for mass vaccinations

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Vaccinations are beginning to roll out, but they still need to be administered much more quickly than the current rate to get to everyone, all 328 million people in the US, in a timely fashion. To date, there have been dozens of tweets and armchair posts about how the concert industry could get it done faster with its expertise in logistics and planning. It appears Riverside County has taken note.

“Riverside County Supervisor V. Manuel Perez said he’s in discussion with Goldenvoice, the producer of the Coachella and Stagecoach music festivals, about tapping into the company’s expertise to create a mass vaccination site,” writes Desert Sun.

“We know what they can do with the concerts, all the logistics and planning that takes place,” Perez said during a Board of Supervisors meeting nearly three weeks ago.

Massive sites like Disneyland and Dodger Stadium are already being set up to accommodate mass vaccinations, so the Polo Grounds in Indio could be next.

 

via Desert Sun | Photo courtesy of Coachella



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Teena Marie ft. Gerald Levert – A Rose By Any Other Name

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Cherokee Big Band Jazz Live (Latin Jazz Style)

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Ryu Boksung, a legend of Korean percussionist, showed ‘Cherokee’ in his own jazz style a long time ago.
Watch his amazing variety of percussion instruments and performances.

Arlo Parks Is Listening to Frank Ocean, Funkadelic, and Music for Plants

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Arlo Parks. Photo by Alex Kurunis.

This is “Add to Queue,” our attempt to sort through the cacophony of music floating in the algorithmic atmosphere by consulting the experts themselves. Our favorite musicians tell us about their favorite music—the sad, the happy, the dinner party-y, the songs they want played at their funeral. In this edition, we speak with Arlo Parks, who will release her debut album of ethereal poetry-pop on January 29, Collapsed in Sunbeams. From Frank Ocean to Funkadelic, ’60s bops to indie-rock, here’s what’s on Parks’s playlist. 

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SARAH NECHAMKIN: I wanted to ask a little bit about your album, specifically about the title and the title song, Collapsed in Sunbeams

ARLO PARKS: The album title itself came from this book called On Beauty by Zadie Smith. I’ve always been a big fan of her writing. It’s very sensory and physical. And that phrase to me, there was this sense of a sweetness and nostalgia. It felt like surrendering to emotion, and you’re not sure whether that’s melancholy or elation. I like to think of the sun as this healing force. I just wanted it to feel intimate, to feel like I was welcoming people into my own private world with this avalanche of images. 

NECHAMKIN: I noticed there’s a lot of color imagery—”Green Eyes,” violet, blue. Were you thinking about colors? Were you visualizing some of that in the way that Zadie writes?

PARKS: I guess so. I think that’s just always been part of my taste. I’m interested in including those hyper-specific details, and I’m a very visual person. I’m very interested in photography and film and how to capture a moment authentically. I think that’s why I gravitate towards color and fruit and textures. It is about making it more of a 3D picture.

NECHAMKIN: What music were you listening to while you were writing and recording the album, if any?

PARKS: I was listening to a lot of music. I’m somebody who needs to be surrounded by music and by new music when I’m writing. That’s probably when I consume the most, just because I’m trying to find inspiration and new ways of seeing music and structuring songs. A lot if it was based off of this stream of consciousness that I wrote and produced in my bedroom, kind of inspired by this band called Florist and a lot of ambient music that I was listening to at the time. I was listening to In Rainbows a lot. Particularly, “Weird Fishes” and “Reckoner.” I was listening to a lot of D’Angelo, I was listening to Voodoo a lot. I was listening to a lot of the Beatles actually, and Slum Village and Beach House. Honestly, everything. I love Aphex Twin as well. I wanted to just pull from a lot of quite different and wide-reaching sonic palettes to create something that felt unique. 

NECHAMKIN: It’s funny that you mention In Rainbows because I feel like that’s one album that comes up for almost everyone I ask. Radiohead has been such a lasting influence on artists of all genres. 

PARKS: Definitely. They were my most listened to artist on Spotify, and I’ve always been obsessed with Thom Yorke‘s voice and the way that they’re constantly evolving and reshaping and experimenting. I think he portrays melancholy in such a tasteful way.

NECHAMKIN: Who would you say was the earliest musician to influence you?

PARKS: Probably Otis Redding. I have very vivid recollections of listening to “Sitting on the Dock of the Bay” or “Pain in My Heart,” and I just remember his voice really cutting through the noise for me. There was this sense of wistfulness. I remember listening to that song when I was in the car on the way to the shops with my dad when I was really young, and just being really moved and intrigued by it. 

NECHAMKIN: And what was your first concert?

PARKS: I was actually quite old. I think my first proper show I was 15 and I went to see Laura Connor in Shepherd’s Bush with one of my best friends, and it was really an experience. It was my first experience of having that collective side of music because for me it was always very much a private exercise. I’d just put on my headset and go for a wander. But having hundreds of people around you shouting the words just felt so galvanizing. I remember leaving that venue and being like, this is something I want to do.

NECHAMKIN: Do you miss that feeling of the collective? Do you think there’s something that’s been lost for musicians and for everyone in the pandemic, not being able to have that experience?

PARKS: Definitely. I think that playing live is one of the most special experiences. It’s kind of like you lose a layer of connection when it comes to music when you don’t have shows because that’s where I meet the people that are listening to my music. That’s where I connect, that’s where I can explain songs and really experience it in an intimate way with other people. And I think that that’s what I’m missing the most and what I look forward to doing the most with this album.

NECHAMKIN: Does it feel weird to be releasing an album when you’re not sure when you’ll be able to perform it in front of people? 

PARKS: I mean, this is my first album, so I’ve never really experienced writing or promoting an album in any other circumstance, so I’m kind of just riding the wave with that one. It’s definitely disheartening to know that it might be a little while before we can play live, but at the same time I’m grateful that I can bring comfort to people in a time when people are listening to music and needing art more than ever. 

NECHAMKIN: Is there a song or an album that you’ve listened to during the pandemic that you feel like has carried you through? And, more generally, is there a song that always puts you in a good mood?

PARKS: A song that always puts me in a good mood is “Only You” by Steve Monite. It’s this disco-y track and it just reminds me of being out in the sunshine with my friends and having a little bit of wine and just feeling free. That song really reminds me of summer. And the album that’s been keeping me company is definitely Assume Form by James Blake. I think it has that perfect balance of romance, this sense of growth and healing, this sense of comfort. And whenever I listen to that album, especially songs like “Into the Red” and “Mile High,” it makes me feel like I’m in a dream. James Blake has really kept me company during the pandemic. 

NECHAMKIN: Is there a certain artist, or a type of music, that feels like London to you?

PARKS: Hmm, what music feels like London? When I listen to The Streets, that reminds me of London. Or King Krule, especially that first album. When I think of London, I just think of the diversity, I just think of the fact that there are so many different layers and corners and there’s so much life and vibrancy to the city. Those stories really remind me of growing up here, and that sense of home and that sense of excitement that I associate with London.

NECHAMKIN: Do you have a dream collaborator?

PARKS: Frank Ocean is a big one for me. When Channel Orange came out, that was a really definitive moment for me in terms of realizing the fact that pop music can be so idiosyncratic. It can be anything, essentially.

NECHAMKIN: Do you have a favorite movie soundtrack?

PARKS: Hmm, I’m definitely into film, I’m just casting my mind over. Because in the moment I’m always like, “Oh this is amazing,” but I never really go back and listen. I really enjoyed Sufjan Stevens’s work in Call Me By Your Name. I know that’s quite an obvious one to pick, but I was a fan of him, especially the more stripped-back side of his work. Carrie & Lowell is one of my favorite records, so I definitely love that soundtrack. 

NECHAMKIN: There are so many times when you’re enjoying a soundtrack but you don’t necessarily go back to it because it doesn’t have memorable lyrics or a hook—it’s more ambient. You did mention ambient music. What kind of ambient music do you throw on?

PARKS: Oh yeah, that’s definitely my thing. I like this album called Plantasia by Mort Garson. It’s actually his music he made for plants, which sounds really strange—the full title is Mother Earth’s Plantasia. I just find it so soothing. I’ve also discovered this album by this artist called Anne Laplantine, and it’s called A Little May Time Be. I just love that sense of having really interesting, strange white noise playing in the background, especially when I’m writing poems or drawing or when I’m just trying to focus. There’s something quite hypnotic about it. 

NECHAMKIN: A lot of your songs—I don’t know if you would describe them as breakup songs, but they could be described that way. So what makes the perfect breakup song to you, and what are some of your favorites?

PARKS: The perfect breakup song, for me, has to just have a sense of honesty to it. I think that it has to admit that it’s sad and embrace all the different emotions that come with a breakup. It can be many different things. It can be triumphant, it can be kind of bitter, it can be showing that the person is still a work in progress and working to be happy without someone else. But I think it just has to have that sense of honesty. And I think that that whole My Woman album by Angel Olsen is a good example of that. Songs like “Never Be Mine” pops because she’s going through that whole range of emotions of desperation and being triumphantly apart from someone and wanting them back and realizing how strong she is without them. It has that full range.

NECHAMKIN: Yeah, and it’s not cheesy.

PARKS: Exactly.

NECHAMKIN: Do you ever throw on a cheesy breakup song, or something more mainstream? Do you have any guilty pleasures in general?

PARKS: Yeah, I listen to a lot of Sister Sledge, Britney Spears, Diana Ross. I love pop music that is, I guess you would say cheesy, but I don’t really think it is. I think it’s just fun. I don’t think everything has to operate at the depths of depths of one soul. I think it can just be fun and danceable and I definitely appreciate that. The melody is always so infectious. I really like what Rosalía is doing. I’ve been loving, of course, Billie Eilish‘s stuff. I think that she’s really reshaping the way that we think about pop music. I listen to a lot of the Supremes as well—that sort of ‘60s pop.

NECHAMKIN I’m always listening to the Supremes in the shower or cooking in the kitchen.

PARKS: Exactly! I think that, especially in times like these, you want music that you can just dance to, that you can groove to. I think that there’s something really freeing about just putting on something you know every single word to and belting it. 

NECHAMKIN: Speaking of which, pre-pandemic, did you ever do karaoke? 

PARKS: Sometimes. 

NECHAMKIN: Did you have a go-to song?

PARKS: I think I would sing either “Thinking of You” by Sister Sledge or “Kiss” by Prince. I think those are the two for me, yeah. 

NECHAMKIN: I don’t know if you partake, but if you were to smoke, would you have a getting high playlist?

PARKS: Yeah, I don’t really smoke weed or anything, but the album that makes me feel that kind of floaty feeling is Mama’s Gun by Erykah Badu. I also really like listening to Sly and the Family Stone and Parliament-Funkadelic, those old school songs, “There’s a Riot Going On.” And I’m definitely into that more ethereal dreamy music as well. I love Beach House, Clairo. There’s just so much music out there. It’s hard to pick. 

NECHAMKIN: If your life were a TV show, what would be the theme song?

PARKS: I think it would probably be something mellow. I think I’d go for “Kerosene!” by Yves Tumor because it has these wild moments of chaos and explosivity, but most of the time it’s kind of meandering. It’s that mixture of mellowness and explosions, it’s quite dramatic.

NECHAMKIN: What kind of TV show do you think it would be? A comedy, a drama?

PARKS: Let me think. Do you know that Netflix show called The End of the Fucking World? Have you seen that?

NECHAMKIN: Yeah, I love that show.

PARKS: Yeah, so that kind of ‘90s vibe. I’d like it to be shot on film, I’d like it to be whimsical. And not the murder part—just the cinematography of it, I can imagine it being cool. 

NECHAMKIN: Do you have music that you wake up to, that you go to sleep to every night? Work out to? Get angry to? 

PARKS: Yeah. All of them. I usually like to go to sleep to the album Party by Aldous Harding. Also, Songs by Adrianne Lenker, I’ve been loving at the moment. I like to fall asleep to quite stripped down folk but that has substance to it. What have I been waking up to recently? I usually I just go for the coffee straight away. But there’s this album that I’ve been loving by Navy Blue and it’s called Songs of Sage: Post Panic! It has that lo-fi quite grudgey instrumental energy to it, but the lyrics are just so heartfelt and probing and they kind of surround healing and growth and identity. I always find it quite an energizing listen in the morning.

Songs to get angry to? I probably would listen to techno and just go for a run. There’s this artist called Wax that I’ve been loving. On Spotify, all the songs are just numbers. There’s this one called “30,003b,” very creatively named, that is very hypnotic. and I’d probably put that on and just run. 

NECHAMKIN: I have one last question. It’s kind of a big one. If you could play one song that would save the world if everyone heard it, what would it be?

PARKS: Wow, okay.

NECHAMKIN: I know. That’s why I save that one for last.

PARKS: Yeah, that’s a tough old question. What song would save the world? Maybe this song called “Is It Any Wonder?” by Durand Jones and the Indications. Just because it has this very soothing, centered energy to it, and whenever I listen to it I feel like my mind goes beyond the immediate feelings I’m having in that moment and just to something broader and wider, and it makes me feel like there is something bigger than myself. So maybe that song. But that was a tough question.

———

Listen to Arlo Parks’s “Add To Queue” playlist below, and follow Interview on Spotify for more.



INTRODUCING VENTEUX: A NEW FRENCH BRASSERIE, CAFÉ & OYSTER BAR HELMED BY CHICAGO’S YOUNGEST MICHELIN-STARRED CHEF

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Amidst the sparkling city lights along Chicago’s famed Magnificent Mile, Venteux, a new French brasserie featuring a swanky oyster and Champagne bar, is poised to breathe new energy into the heart of downtown Chicago this spring. Backed by an impressive roster of hospitality industry leaders, Venteux is helmed by Chicago native, Executive Chef-Partner Donald Young (Temporis, Les Nomades, Bistrot Saveurs), who is celebrated as the youngest Michelin-starred chef in Chicago and one of the youngest to be recognized with this prestigious honor industry-wide. In partnership with acclaimed national entertainment maverick and restaurant operator, Clique Hospitality (Pendry Hotels & Resorts, MGM Resorts International, Blackstone Group), Venteux will debut at 230 N. Michigan Ave. — within the city’s historic 1920s art deco landmark Carbide & Carbon Building in spring 2021.

Located on the ground floor of the forthcoming Pendry Chicago, Venteux has commissioned world-renowned design firm Studio Munge to create a luxurious ambiance for the 4,000 square foot space. The focal point of the restaurant is Venteux’s glowing brasserie, which boasts a lively nightlife scene, ideal for date nights, business dinners, and more. Here, diners are encouraged to cozy up in circular banquettes bathed in soft amber light, or to clink drinks at the festive oyster bar well into the evening. There is also a charming indoor and outdoor café marked by a lush and romantic garden terrace, as well as soaring, 40-foot floor-to-ceiling windows to take in Chicago’s architectural splendor.

The menu at Venteux will offer comforting French fare imbued with a spark of signature creativity, courtesy of rising star Executive Chef-Partner Donald Young (Crain’s 20 In Their 20s, Jean Banchet Best Service 2019, Michelin Guide 2019). Returning to his culinary roots in classic French cooking, Young plans to take traditional French dishes and apply his penchant for clever flavor combinations and presentations. Diners can also look forward to playful raw bar renditions and nouveaux savory plates, all perfectly complemented by a robust wine program featuring rare vintages from Venteux’s spirited Champagne bar.



Venteux will offer weekday breakfast, lunch and dinner service daily, with a lively weekend brunch service. More details on Venteux, Chicago’s hotly anticipated new restaurant opening, will be announced soon. For more information, please visit venteuxchicago.com or follow Venteux at @VenteuxChicago.



Nostalgia – Brian Ka (Official Audio)

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Nostalgia – Brian Ka (Official Audio)

Looking for best EDM songs ever? Brian Ka was born to make house and electronic music. Starting at a very young age, he was inspired to learn and play the piano. That would begin the long journey of his musical dedication. As a driven teenager, he joined a jazz band, played the baritone saxophone, and participated in flute recitals. Soon, after graduating from UC Davis in California, his lucrative career as a DJ began. He joined Renovatio Promotions in San Francisco, performing at Bellagio and then later at Folsom 1015. In 2006, he moved to Southern California to join Underworld Productions, where he performed weekly sets at the biggest nightclub at the time, V2O Long Beach. This spotlight would ignite his career, with his infectious sets helping him to establish a name in the industry. Fatefully, this also led to an invitation for his debut in L.A. at Hollywood Ivar, where his masterful skills and distinctive musical style have helped to further his career.

Brian Ka’s musical resume boasts an impressive array of events and venues, including frequent L.A. hotspots like Avalon, Day After Club in Hollywood, Level 3 Hollywood, Rage West Hollywood, Busby’s East and Karnak. From his humble roots as a young boy in South Korea, to his growing talent and ravenous hunger for music, the journey to reach his dreams has fast become a reality. Now, with over 15 years of fruitful experience in the industry, Brian Ka, as an electronic artist has forged an impressive path for his music future that will drive the dance and popular electronic music scene for many years to come.

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#ElectronicMusic #EDM #RaveMusic #Housemusic #EDC

Susan Sarandon Rejected “Big Check” for Thelma & Louise Sequel

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Susan Sarandon was close to telling Hollywood execs to take a flying leap after she was pitched a wild idea for a Thelma & Louise sequel.

The Oscar-winning actress appeared on The Tonight Show on Tuesday, Jan. 26, where host Jimmy Fallon congratulated her on the fact that many young people have been discovering her classic 1991 road film that also starred Geena Davis

“Oh, good! I didn’t know that,” Susan replied about the film’s newfound spotlight. “That’s cool.”

The Feud star explained that Hollywood bigwigs had hoped to create a sequel for the film, which sounds a bit odd, given that, uh, let’s just say the original film doesn’t leave too many loose ends left to be tied up.

“They talked about a sequel, but I could not … I don’t know what it would be,” she continued. “I can’t understand.”

Picking up on this thread, Jimmy quipped that perhaps the sequel could be of the supernatural variety. “Do you remember the movie, was it Topper?” he joked, referencing the 1937 comedy in which Cary Grant plays a ghost. 

STILL STANDING (Wild West Series MC #1) by KRISTEN ASHLEY

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“Get on the back of my bike, babe.”

We’ve been in complete -old school Kristen Ashley- heaven for the last two days and we’ve loved every second of it. Still Standing is the first standalone book in her new MC series, Wild West ‘which will tell the stories of the brothers of the Aces High MC, the Resurrection MC, and the Chaos MC…and the women who love them.’ As soon as we started reading we fell in book love as Still Standing gave us those Motorcycle Man vibes, which is one of our most loved books by this Author.

“Let me deal with the cloud. You need to know, I’ll tell you. Until then, darlin’, my meaning in life is, you live in the sunshine.”

When we meet Clara Delany, she’s in a lot of trouble. She’s had a tough life growing up in the foster care system followed by a marriage that, despite being forged in love, ended in a complete disaster leaving her broke and in the hands of a notorious crime boss. People have abandoned her all her life, so her loyalty to the only person that stayed is unbreakable no matter the danger and personal suffering that comes with. It’s whilst on a mission to help her bestie, Tia that her life changes in so many ways. Her ride is fuelled by violence, drama and change, however, out of that comes a beautiful love story with a man she would never have thought could come to mean what he did.  We absolutely loved Clara, she was a typical KA heroine, slightly naïve, very loving with a massive heart. Strong yet vulnerable, lives in her head often yet is completely aware of the world around her.

‘It was because I was in Buck’s bed, in the curve of his arm, against the warmth of his body. I was beginning to suspect (and fear) that the world could be ending, and I’d fall asleep against Buck like that. And that was entirely the problem. Because with West “Buck” Hardy, as good as I could get was beginning to feel like the best I ever had. And whenever something like that happened, you held on for dear life.’

This wild ride was packed with drama and heat. It had us chuckling out loud and Buck had us swooning all over the pages. Kristen Ashley has a knack for writing those yummy-licious and manly, but unapologetic heroes, the men with a capital M in every way that counts. West “Buck” Hardy, president of the Aces High MC certainly makes no excuses for who he is and how he goes about taking what he wants. As always the brotherhood and loyalty shone brightly as did the protection and the fierce way these bikers love. This series is EXCITING and we can’t wait for more, and to all of you who re-read KA of old as much as we do. You will fall in luuuurveeeee!!!

“We can’t do anything about those pages that were already written, baby. But we’re past those. Now we’re writing it new. You with me?”



आलू गोभी मटर की मसालेदार सब्ज़ी | Aloo Gobi Matar Recipe | Cauliflower recipe | KabitasKitchen

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#AlooGobiRecipe #Kabitaskitcen #AlooGobiMatar

Preparation time – 40 minutes
Serving – 5

Ingredients:
Cauliflower – 500 gm
Potato – 5
Onion – 4
Tomato -2
Ginger Garlic paste – 1 tbsp
Bay leaves – 2
Black cardamom – 1
Cumin seeds -1 tsp
Turmeric powder -1/2 tsp
Red chilli powder -1.5 tsp
Cumin powder -1/2 tsp
Coriander powder – 1 tsp
Garam masala powder – 1/2 tsp
Ghee – 1 tbsp
Salt to taste
Cooking oil – 1/4 cup
Coriander leaves

Aloo gobi ki sabzi, aloo masala, how to make aloo gobi matar, cauliflower potato curry, aloo gobhi ki sabzi, aloo gobhi curry, kabitaskitchen, aloo gobi by kabitaskitchen.

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Music by Kevin MacLeod;
Title – Life of Riley, Parting of the ways
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Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0

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