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Charlie Wilson – Forever Valentine (Official Video)
#CharlieWilson #WillYouBeMine #ForeverValentine
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Sony Removes Cyberpunk 2077 from PS Store!
Sony Removes Cyberpunk 2077 from PS Store!
In a shocking bit of news, Sony has removed Cyberpunk 2077 from the PlayStation Store “until further notice” and confirmed it will issue refunds to players who purchased the game for PS4 or on PS5, according to IGN. The news comes days after Sony initially refused to issue refunds for the game and instead sent players to CD Projekt Red’s support staff to issue complaints or request a refund.
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SIE strives to ensure a high level of customer satisfaction, and we will begin to offer a full refund for all gamers who have purchased Cyberpunk 2077 via PlayStation Store and want a refund. Please visit the following link to initiate the refund: https://t.co/DEZlC0LmUG.
— Ask PlayStation (@AskPlayStation) December 18, 2020
Here’s Sony’s official statement on the matter: “SIE strives to ensure a high level of customer satisfaction, therefore we will begin to offer a full refund for all gamers who have purchased Cyberpunk 2077 via PlayStation Store. SIE will also be removing Cyberpunk 2077 from PlayStation Store until further notice.
“Once we have confirmed that you purchased Cyberpunk 2077 via PlayStation Store, we will begin processing your refund. Please note that completion of the refund may vary based on your payment method and financial institution.”
Upon launch, questions revolved around Sony’s marketing of Cyberpunk 2077, which showed off PC graphics but withheld PS4 and Xbox One versions of the game from media. As it turns out, the game simply doesn’t hold up on consoles and is riddled with bugs, glitches and other performance issues — a far cry from the luscious visuals gamers were promised.
RELATED: Zack Snyder Seemingly Confirms March Release Date for Justice League!
At the time, CDPR stated: “…We would like to start by apologizing to you for not showing the game on base last-gen consoles before it premiered and, in consequence, not allowing you to make a more informed decision about your purchase. We should have paid more attention to making it play better on PlayStation 4 and Xbox One.”
CDPR has since stated their intention to make the game better via patches in the upcoming months.
Players can submit for their refund here.
Your EDM Interview: The Spirit of Kmag Rolls on With ‘Velocity’
Over its tenure, Knowledge Magazine defined a generation of rave, especially when it came to jungle and drum and bass, chronicling the burgeoning genre pretty much from its inception. Popularly known as Kmag, the monthly publication took us from paper to digital and from hardcore to crossbreed, leaving a major gap when it more or less dissolved in 2014.
That gap was filled last year when Kmag co-founder Colin Steven put together the gorgeous hard copy retrospective, 25 Years of Knowledge. The book published in December 2019 and is full of full-color photography from 25 years of bass with multiple sections written by multiple authors about the different aspects of drum and bass culture. It tells a great story about the timeline of D&B but Steven felt there was more to tell.
Velocity Press was established just before the Kmag book came out, publishing Join the Future by Matt Anniss in November 2019 (if you want to get technical, the seminal-to-the-scene book All Crews: Journeys Through Jungle by Brian Belle-Fortune was the first book published by Steven back in 2004), and it again sought to tell the story of rave. Since then the new rave-specific publishing house has put out more books than Steven expected and has continued to gain traction with a re-release of yet another genre-defining book, State of Bass by Martin James and lots of other interesting new titles. It may have changed forms with Velocity Press, but consider the Kmag gap once again filled.
With three new books either out or due out in the winter season and rave fans more apt than ever to hunker down with a good tome in the face of COVID, it seemed high time to check in with Steven, get his thoughts about what Velocity Press (RTA: VP) has done this year and find out more about where this unique publisher plans to go in the future. More quality reading ahead.
Most fans know you have a background in publishing and the music industry between Kmag and the legendary All Crews book in 2004, but what was the impetus behind starting a full-on publishing house?
After the demise of Knowledge Magazine in 2014, I had no connection to the music industry for the first time in over 20 years. Well, apart from still selling All Crews, that is, but even that was minimal – I didn’t actively promote it, I just mailed out the orders! I was working full-time in IT, earning good money but felt unfulfilled. I really missed being self-employed and working in music, especially publishing. So after a few years, I was looking for a way back in. I’d noticed that All Crews was still selling well even without any promotion, so it made sense with my skills, contacts and experience to start a book publishing company. I also thought there was a gap in the market for a book publisher specializing in electronic music and club culture.
How has the transition been from running a magazine to publishing books?
The transition has been smooth as it’s very similar. You deal with a printer and distributors in the same way but only one writer each book instead of over 20 an issue, which is good as it was a pain constantly chasing writers for copy! Not having to sell adverts is also good but my former business partner did that for Kmag anyway, so it’s not something I had to do. She also did all the marketing and social media, so I’ve had to take that on too now, but I enjoy that side of things.
What’s something that’s happened since taking on that endeavor that you didn’t expect?
Obviously, I didn’t expect COVID-19 to happen, and it’s been a challenge dealing with that in our first year. Not being able to do any book launch events has been frustrating as I love traveling, getting to know the author and meeting fellow music fans. Book shops being closed has also affected sales but I have experience designing e-commerce websites and fortunately, people have been buying directly from us instead. That has helped enormously. Compared to some businesses I’ve been very lucky, though.
The Kmag retrospective clearly had something to do with setting up VP when you did, but talk about your first new book, Join the Future. Did you start with that one to “start from the beginning,” so to speak, in terms of the rave timeline?
For Join The Future by Matt Anniss, I wanted our first book to be original and bring a fresh perspective to the acid house inception story. It’s the previously untold story of British dance music’s first sub-bass revolution, tracing the origins, development, impact and influence of bleep techno, and the subsequent musical styles it inspired, on UK club culture.
What went behind the decision to re-publish the second book, State of Bass?
State Of Bass by Martin James, I wanted to publish four books in 2020 and so needed another title quickly and doing a reissue of this classic on the origins of jungle and drum & bass made sense. It was originally published in 1997 and was out of print within a year, but it’s still relevant. I also don’t like being pigeonholed. The majority of our books will be new, but I still want to do occasional reissues. I’ve actually just signed another reissue for 2021, all I can say at this stage is that it will be our first fiction book.
To that end, it appears that all the titles published so far with VP are here to give ravers a history lesson or a walk down memory lane. Has it been important for you that there’s some sort of linear element in tying electronic music’s origins and evolution to the present scene, or is it purely just that you liked the books?
Yes, the historical side of things is important. It’s been over 30 years since acid house first exploded here in the UK and people now appreciate what an important cultural moment it was. It’s vital that we document dance music culture whether it’s writing books or blogging, podcasting, making documentary films, taking photos or creating fanzines. There are so many interesting stories that either haven’t been told, airbrushed out of the dominant narrative or simply overlooked. If we don’t document them now then they will be lost.
It’s good as there are two audiences for these kinds of books. Those who were clubbing in the 90s are now in middle-age and most won’t go out anymore but they’re still interested in the culture and like to reminisce. Then there is the new generation of clubbers who are curious about how things have come to be and it’s interesting to them, especially as from a technological perspective as things have changed so much.
Having said all that, I don’t want to be known for just publishing historical books, I also want to do books on contemporary sounds and styles. Most of what I publish comes down to the ideas that potential writers present to me, though.
How did the idea to do the Junior Tomlin Flyer & Cover Art book come about? It seemed like a really cool way to document that important part of rave culture.
I did an interview with legendary flyer designer Pez for the Kmag 25th anniversary book and asked him about peers he rated, and he mentioned Junior Tomlin. I remembered his art from buying Renegade Soundwave sleeves in my youth and then realized what an amazing amount of great sleeves and flyers he’d designed. So I Googled his name, contacted him via his website and told him and I wanted to do a book with him. His answer was funny, he just said: “Finally!”
Flyer & Cover Art, a comprehensive insight into Junior Tomlin’s incredible back catalog. Junior’s visionary capabilities led to a long-running career as a flyer and record cover artist. His fantastical projections of the future and often surreal imagery earned him the title “The Salvador Dali of Rave.” Tomlin’s iconic work was highly sought after, with ravers collecting his remarkable work and promoters queuing up to commission him to produce imagery for their flyers.
Bedroom Beats and B-Sides may surprise some UK and European ravers in that it contains hip hop in its timeline and sees it as very much part of the fabric of electronic music. What do you think EDM fans can potentially learn from this book along that vein?
The full title of the book is a bit of a mouthful but here goes: Bedroom Beats and B-Sides: Instrumental Hip Hop and Electronic Music at the Turn of the Century. As should hopefully be clear from the title, the book is about instrumental music. More specifically, it’s what author Laurent Fintoni terms beat culture, which is used to try and capture the murky grounds between hip-hop and electronic music that have defined both genres. From trip-hop, jungle, illbient, and IDM in the 1990s to just “beats” in the late 2000s, the book explores how these scenes acted as incubators for new ideas about composition and performance that are now taken for granted.
It’s great to see you got a second book out of The Secret DJ. The first book was definitely begging him to continue the journey up until present time. What do you like about his perspective and, other than a whole lot of laughs, what do you think fans and aspiring DJs will get out of this tale?
I like how he just tells it like it is; the benefits of anonymity I suppose. Book Two is less of a personal memoir. This time the Secret DJ uses the experience/lessons of four decades immersed in dance music and club culture to explore what happened to the acid house dream: how did a utopian youth movement become an “industry” riddled with predatory behavior, parasitic middlemen, racism, sexism, exploitation, impostors and naked greed? It’s brutally honest and often controversial but crucially I hope it has all the pathos and humor that made the first one work.
Synth nuts are going to love Synthesizer Evolution, especially with its almost encyclopedic breakdown of every synth in history. How did you come to find this author and book?
For our first three titles, I actually sourced them myself, but now people know what Velocity Press is about I’m getting potential authors approaching me with ideas and that is what happened with Synthesizer Evolution. As I said, I only planned on publishing four books this year, but Oli Freke’s pitch was so good that I just had to squeeze it into this year’s release schedule. Each featured synth, sampler and drum machine is illustrated by hand and shown alongside its vital statistics and some fascinatingly quirky facts.
Are there any previews you can give us for what’s coming up next at VP? What is your vision for the company going forward?
Yes, we’re going to announce our next title in January. It’s calledWho Say Reload: The Stories Behind the Classic Drum & Bass Records of the 90s. As well as Paul Terzulli’s stories it will also include Eddie Otchere’s photographs. Eddie is one of the main photographers who documented the UK’s jungle scene in the 90s and has an incredible archive. Naturally, it’s going to be more of a high-end coffee table type of book.
After that, we’re publishing a book by a writer called Harold Heath calledLong Relationships: My Incredible Journey From Unknown DJ To Small-time DJ. It tells a story that will be familiar to every DJ who never quite made it and anyone who spent their teenage years on the dance floor. It is self-deprecating, honest, authentic, funny, but also deadly serious when it comes to DJing. As previously mentioned, I’ve also got our first fiction title coming next summer, and I’m very excited about that. There will also be a practical book on how to set up and run a digital record label so a diverse range. Ultimately, the aim is to is create a catalog that feels like a trusted record label in its integrity and vision and deliver exciting stories to serious electronic music fans who enjoy good literature.
All of the Velocity Press books can be purchased on their website, with most being available in eBook and physical copy formats.
Teena Marie – You Make Love Like Springtime (Gordy Records 1980)
Mary Christine Brockert (March 5, 1956 – December 26, 2010), better known by her stage name Teena Marie, was an American singer, songwriter, and producer. She was known by her childhood nickname Tina before taking the stage name Teena Marie; she later acquired the nickname of Lady Tee (sometimes spelled Lady T), given to her by collaborator and friend, Rick James.
She was known for her distinctive soulful vocals, which initially caused many listeners to believe she was African American. Her success in R&B and soul and loyalty to these genres would earn her the title Ivory Queen of Soul. She played rhythm guitar, keyboards, and congas. She also wrote, produced, sang, and arranged virtually all of her songs since her 1980 release, Irons in the Fire, which she later said was her favorite album.
Irons in the Fire is the third album by American R&B/soul singer Teena Marie, released on July 6, 1980 by Motown. Her first self produced effort, it was dedicated to her father, Thomas Leslie Brockert. It received positive reviews on its release.
Irons in the Fire peaked at #9 on the Black Albums chart and #38 on the Pop Albums chart. Lead single “I Need Your Lovin'” peaked at #9 on the US Black Singles chart and #37 on the Billboard Hot 100. It also reached #28 in the United Kingdom, making it Marie’s second and last top 30 single in that country. In addition, along with the track “Chains”, “I Need Your Lovin'” peaked at number two for two weeks on the dance charts.
With Teena on electric piano, she’s accompanied by Nicke Brown (acoustic guitar, soloist).
Morning whispers to me unaware
I awake to fingers floating softly through my hair
Paradise this feeling being lost inside of you
An adventure in the raw a phantasm for two
You say you love me with your eyes
My heart soars up to the skies
And it’s all so crazy
What you do to me, baby
You make love like springtime
And I can’t control my passion
You make love like springtime
Even when love’s not in fashion
I love you so and I can’t let go of you
Ooh la la la ooh la baby ooh la la oui
Poetry in motion teach my spirit dove
No words need be spoken I know what you’re dreaming of
Like this song I wear your love like heaven on my breast
Rainbow colors all so pure I feel like I’ve been blessed
You say you love me with your eyes
My heart soars up to the skies
And it’s all so crazy
What you do to me, baby
You make love like springtime
And I can’t control my passion
You make love like springtime
Even when love’s not in fashion
I love you so and I can’t let go of you
Ooh la la la ooh la baby ooh la la oui
You’re making love to me like oooh
You know that you made so happy
I couldn’t leave you if I tried
I had a dream and it was you
I made a wish and you made it come true
You’re making love to me like springtime
I thank the Lord above you’re mine
You’re making love to me like summer
I’ll never need no other lover
You’re making love to me like autumn
Your love will never be forgotten
You’re making love to me like winter
I thank the Lord when we’re together
You’re making love to me like springtime
I thank the Lord above you’re mine hey…
Arturo O'Farrill & Chucho Valdés – Con Poco Coco
Arturo O’Farrill & Chucho Valdés – Familia Affair – Tribute To Bebo + Chico
Músicos:
Esamble Tercera Generación:
Adam O’Farrill: Trompeta
Zack O’Farrill: Batería
Jessie Valdés: Batería
Leyanis Valdés: Piano
Jesús Ricardo Anduz: Trompeta
Kali Rodriguez-Peña: Trompeta
Chad Lefkowitz-Brown: Saxo tenor
Frank Cohen: Trombón
Ernesto C.Vega: Clarinete
Larry Bustamante: Clarinete bajo
Bam Bam Rodriguez: Bajo
Carlos Maldonado: Bongó y percusión
© Copyright Arturo O’Farril Under Licence Motema Music LLC
Etiqueta: Cuba – Estados Unidos
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The primary purpose of this channel is to entertain and promote healthy recreation with this type of music. If any creator, author, interpreter and producer of the music that is uploaded to this channel requests the withdrawal or its elimination, please, send me a message and with pleasure your request will be answered.
Nadine Lustre Is Using Music to Showcase Her Human Side

Photos courtesy of Careless Music.
This is Nice to Meet You, for all your need-to-know information on the need-to-get-to-know new voices in pop culture. Think of it as a blind date, if the date were cooler than anyone you’ll probably ever go out with. Allow us to break the ice; we promise you’ll fall in love.
For Nadine Lustre, transparency is the most important thing. Born and raised in the Philippines, she began acting in a slew of Filipino films before seriously pivoting to music last year. Insecurities about not knowing how to write songs discouraged her, until now. “Two years ago, I successfully wrote my first song without any help,” says Lustre. “Since then, I’ve been trying, but it was really this year that I really told myself that I could actually write.” Her new 12-track R&B album titled Wildest Dreams was released in October. To celebrate her recent release, Lustre spoke to Interview about her creative process, anime, and how Jhené Aiko taught her to be vulnerable.
———
On Wildest Dreams: I started working on the album last year. Wildest Dreams is inspired by this one specific dream I had back in 2017. Aside from the fact that it was really vivid, it was also very meaningful to me. I would say that it changed my life and how I look at things. If I were to pick [a favorite song off the album], it would be “Dance with Danger.” The message of the song is that I’m ready for what’s to come. I guess that’s where I’m at right now.
On learning how to be vulnerable from Jhené Aiko: When I checked my Spotify Wrapped, my first two artists were Jhené Aiko and Lady Gaga. Every time I listen to their music, I feel something different. With Jhené, I feel like she’s the one who taught me how to be vulnerable. Being in the industry here in the Philippines, people expect you to be good all the time, and showing vulnerability is like showing weakness. That was a big no-no back in the day. But because of Jhené Aiko, I learned how to be more open and to not be ashamed of the things that I’m going through, and to actually share it. My listeners might be able to pick up something from that.
On dreams of being a manga artist: [If I wasn’t a singer], I’d probably still do creative projects, like get back into painting. I love anime, so when I was a kid growing up, being a manga artist was the dream. I have a lot of favorite animes. Right now, I’m hooked on Attack on Titan because the latest season is coming out. I also love Great Teacher Onizuka. It’s a weird, kind of pervy anime I used to watch when I was younger.
On deleting her Twitter: It just got a bit too toxic for me. I don’t get comments on Instagram because it had to be turned off. But [to connect with fans], we’ve been doing podcasts since the album came out. I just opened my Facebook page. I don’t [like social media]. I really don’t, but it’s just one of those things that you can’t really avoid because of work. It’s something that I really have to get into because for brands, posting, and promoting the album.

On her dream collaboration: I know it’s super impossible, but Björk is one of my idols. Her artistry and music is so creative and intense.
On wanting to learn production: My sound is pretty experimental. It’s still pop, but we tried using different instruments. There are instruments on the album that are traditional Filipino instruments. I’m still trying to find my sound. I’m not really into producing yet. I’m just like, “One day, one day.” When they try to make the instrumental, I’m just there watching. But honestly, I don’t really know what’s going on, so I still have that to learn.
On acting versus music: I was supposed to do a TV series before the quarantine, but then because of the pandemic, it got canceled. But with the music, there was nothing stopping it from happening. I still want to act, but you can’t really express yourself through acting because you’re always portraying a role. You always have a script. That’s something I realized because of the album.
On navigating show business in the Philippines: People see celebrities differently here in the Philippines. I wanted to break out of that mold and make them realize that I’m the same as them. I have emotions and vulnerability. I want to show them that my life isn’t all glitter. It’s challenges, tears, and all that.

The Grocery Gambit for New York Restaurants
Whether you’re browsing Square sites or makeshift Metro shelving, here’s what you’ll find at the city’s latest fish butcher, pasta shop, and bar turned bakery. More »
The Grocery Gambit for New York Restaurants
Whether you’re browsing Square sites or makeshift Metro shelving, here’s what you’ll find at the city’s latest fish butcher, pasta shop, and bar turned bakery. More »
Whitey: United States of America V. James J Bulger
Whitey: United States of America V. James J Bulger
From Academy Award®-nominated director Joe Berlinger, Whitey: United States of America v. James J. Bulger is a sweeping and revelatory documentary film that follows the trial of the infamous gangster James “Whitey” Bulger, using the courtroom action as a springboard to examine accusations of multi-faceted corruption within our nation’s law enforcement and legal systems.















































