Matt Mays

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When the world went into lockdown earlier this year Matt Mays took the opportunity to challenge himself as a songwriter, musician and producer. Dog City was written from the perspective of a rescue dog and recorded in a make- shift studio in Mays’ garage. Going one step further, he asked fans to choose a release date during one of his Mantle Music online concerts. May 17th was selected at random, and, in the wee hours of the morning, Mays uploaded Dog City to Bandcamp. In August, Sonic Records released the mastered version of the album to digital music services worldwide and the vinyl LP arrived in September 2020. 

As it turns out, Dog City is a triumph, showcasing Mays’ versatility as both a songwriter and performer (he even contributed tenor sax to “Talking to the Sky”) and reflecting his wide range of musical influences. Mays described the songs as “about pure freedom, love, contentment, companionship and all the stuff in between. I wrote every note and lyric over the last 6 weeks in confinement in my cold garage and a few other empty spaces. Except for the Stooges cover :-)” 

While the album was produced in isolation, that doesn’t mean Mays was entirely without his buds. Long-time collaborators Tim Jim Baker (drums, percussion, programming), and Serge Samson (bass) contributed their parts from their home studios. More recent band mates Asa Brosius (pedal steel) and Melissa Payne (vocals) also sent parts via the wires. Leah Fay sang back-ups on “Talking to the Sky” while her July Talk bandmate Peter Dreimanis added his distinct voice to “Number Canine.” Kate Dyke added her vocals to “New Tricks” the day before Mays was to upload the finished album (because he wrote the song earlier that day). 

Since departing seminal alt-country collective The Guthries in 2002, Matt Mays has alternated between solo projects (his self-titled debut, the film soundtrack ...When the Angels Make Contact) and band projects (the eponymous Matt Mays & El Torpedo record and 2008’s Terminal Romance). Following the dissolution of Matt Mays & El Torpedo in 2009, Mays released Coyote in 2012 to much acclaim, including a JUNO Award win for Rock Album of the Year. 

In 2017 Mays released Once Upon a Hell of a Time... to be followed a year later by the album’s ‘woody’ companion Twice Upon a Hell of a Time.... 2019 saw the release of the “Let There Be Love” single and the Howl at The Night Tour which successfully brought together both the intimate and electric sides of the Matt Mays concert experience for the first time. As the pandemic shut down touring in early 2020, Mays set up a studio in his garage and produced Dog City, an inspiring album written from the perspective of a rescue dog. 

Chelsea Rana Art Advisory

Photo By : Catie Laffoon

Photo By : Catie Laffoon

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Chelsea Rana has counseled new and experienced collectors with acquisitions on varying levels. Most notably, she has assisted important collections and privately-funded museums globally with her expertise of the Los Angeles art market. With abundant connections around the world, Chelsea uses these alliances to aid collectors in building their best possible collection. Services include advising on art acquisitions, de-acquisitions, and private sales, as well as liaising with museums and auction houses.

Danielle Cormier

Photo By : Anthony Romano

Photo By : Anthony Romano

Danielle Cormier, 24, is a pure and powerful voice for the new age. A singer-songwriter, she credits her love for the arts to seeing her first Broadway show at five years old. From there Cormier learned to play the piano, guitar, performed in many school plays and regional theatre productions. Then, she began to write.

Cormier grew up in one of the golf capitals of the world (Pinehurst, NC). She is the daughter of a former Canadian harness horse racer and of an actress as an extra on the TV show "Matlock" turned restaurateur. The family owns the Pinehurst Track Restaurant, known for having one of the best blueberry pancakes in the world (ranked third by the Golf Channel).

That early experience led Danielle to pursue a degree at the American Musical and Dramatic Academy in New York City. There, she studied musical theater from some of the best in the business and honed her skills. But to Danielle, something was missing. After a performance that afforded her the opportunity to play guitar during her number, Danielle realized that her true calling was to be a performing singer-songwriter. “Our teachers were all working professionals,” says Cormier. “Almost all of them commented ‘Wow you sound like Carole King!’ or ‘You really have a Joni Mitchell sound to your voice.’ As it turns out, they were pushing me towards my passion.”

Once Danielle finished school, she packed her bags to pursue the songwriting dream in Nashville. Accompanying her move to Music City in 2016, she released a 6 song EP dubbed Casino Sessions. Since the launch, Cormier has continued to write, play songwriters rounds, and compile a collection of songs for the album Fire & Ice. “The main inspiration driving Fire & Ice is my own yin and yang,” says Cormier. “It’s balancing and embracing the light and dark forces in our lives and, for the past year and a half, while writing these songs, it's been a theme I dealt heavily with.”

Produced by Adam Lester (Peter Frampton, Jill Andrews, Backstreet Boys), Fire & Ice is Danielle’s first full-length effort. “We clicked immediately and he understood my work so perfectly,” says Cormier of Lester. “He took my songs and turned them into something above and beyond I ever could have expected.” Recorded in May 2017 at The Pilot Lounge in Brentwood TN, the album features 10 original songs, 9 of which Cormier wrote herself.

The biggest surprise on the album? A cameo in “Can’t Quit You” by none other than guitar legend, Peter Frampton. “After recording the album, my producer, Adam, left to go on tour with Peter. One night, I got an email from him that Peter picked this song specifically and recorded a guitar solo after the bridge. I listened to it with my mom in my living room and I remember getting to the solo and my jaw just dropping. It’s an honor to have Peter Frampton on my album, especially as an up and coming artist.”

Since the release of the album Danielle performed with Vince Gill at his annual Vinny Invitational Golf Tournament and opened for Trace Adkins at Ft. Bragg’s 4th of July Celebration. In November 2018 Danielle released an original Christmas song which was featured on Spotify’s Christmas Hits playlist and the song itself reached over 3.1 million streams. Danielle’s newest single “Berlin” was released February 29, 2020.

Camp Crush

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“We had to find a way to keep the music going,” explains Jen Deale, lead vocalist and songwriter of Portland, Oregon-based new wave pop band Camp Crush. “Times are tough right now, for everyone and all of us. I’ll never take for granted the importance of music, but it can also be fun. It’s a way to stay connected to each other and create joy.” 

Deale’s approach to music faced a big test at the beginning of 2020, when everything changed for Camp Crush and the music industry. With a new EP written and studio time planned in March 2020, Camp Crush decided to find a new way to forge ahead when the world paused. Working virtually with their producer/engineer Rian Lewis (Doja Cat, Gorillaz, Chromeo, Louis the Child, D.R.A.M.) Deale and bandmate Chris Spicer began recording sessions from their home. “It was a collaboration with Rian from the beginning. We would record parts and send them over, then he would mix and send them back with some recording homework. We did this kind of back and forth for a while, which removed the time restraints of the studio and allowed us to just focus on getting it right,” says Spicer, “It’s really satisfying to see the end product become something so special, something that came out of a major hardship to us and to the entire world.” 

With the Fall 2020 release of Fangirl, the first planned single from these home recording sessions, the band aims to access the energy and excitement of life, no matter the circumstances. “I wanted to write a song that could transcend these darker days and give people a reason to dance,” Deale says. When she sings “I’ve got a lot of heart, and it beats for you” it’s a genuine display of emotion laid bare. The music video matches the production theme of the song, showcasing many of the band’s friends and family who were enlisted to collaborate virtually and film their own choreography. 

Deale and Spicer met in Portland, OR in 2010 and discovered their shared love for the mood, drama, and songwriting of bands like The Cure, New Order, Berlin and the National. After getting married shortly thereafter, they launched Camp Crush and began channeling those influences into their own brand of dramatic pop. Happy Mag explains it best with, “The duo glide through a cinematic brand of indie-pop that is completely endearing and damn-near mesmerizing.”

The last few years has seen the band release 3 EPs, multiple singles, and maintain a constant touring schedule throughout the west coast. “We can’t wait to get back on the road and play shows again. While we don’t know when that will happen, we’ve been having fun with live streams and connecting with our community online,” Deale says. Selected as one of OPB’s top 10 sessions of 2019, OPB said, “Deale’s booming voice carries the songs while Spicer provides the perfect, steady backbeat, and they exude genuine happiness during every song.” That happiness shines through Fangirl, brightly enough to carry over until they can perform on stage again.

Veinmelter

Photo Credit : Ryan Green

Photo Credit : Ryan Green

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Veinmelter is a new adventure for multi-instrumentalist Winston Harrison.

Winston began his musical career playing bass for singer-songwriter Gabe Dixon after they graduated from music school in Miami, Florida. After touring for many years, he began to release ambient music under the name Fuzzmuzz. Creating textural music with a very open structure just felt like the calling he had missed in his early music career. While he loved playing bass in a rock band, the calling as a bass player is to be holding things together rhythmically and harmonically all the time. Ambient music was freedom. It was a world of many sonic possibilities and surprises. 

Brian Eno’s Music For Airports was mind opening album for him. It was like meditation. He explored the sonic freedoms when he was not on the road. What was a part time exploration, soon became a passion.

All of his solo work to date has been creating slowly evolving ambient music that unfolds without a rhythmic pulse. When Winston began writing songs over some of these tapestries of sound, he found that something new was happening. Adding voice and electronic drums felt too wide space to held together under the name Fuzzmuzz. So, Winston brought together his work as textural ambient artist Fuzzmuzz with these dark and hypnotic songs to create Veinmelter. The name came from an interesting moment when someone mispronounced his middle name, which is Van Meter. But is also the title of a Herbie Hancock song. 

Winston writes the kind of songs he wants to hear: mesmeric and cinematic pieces with ambient elements. On his debut EP Still In The Air (out on 11/20), he creates a sound that evokes a dreamy landscape pulled out of a Haruki Murakami novel; you are not sure where it is taking you, but you want to follow. Textures and beats are woven together with his sweet and vulnerable voice. He is always searching for the right texture to evoke all the feelings that do not make it into words, but sometimes sounds awaken words.

Much of the thematic material comes from personal experiences that were difficult to express in other mediums. A song like “All The Waves,” -the first single out on 10/16 - opening line ‘You take the boat out in the water, and all the waves move back to me’ sets it up. “When one person is having problems and chooses to isolate emotionally, that creates turbulence for their partner. You cannot be an island in a relationship,” says Winston.

Sometimes you feel like your whole life has led you to a new adventure. In this case, it definitely has. Winston will still be trying to find that perfect texture that makes you feel like you can float off the ground. Only now it has a new dimension of expression for him.

Lizzie Weber

Credit: Stephen Mitchell Gilbert

Credit: Stephen Mitchell Gilbert

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Born and raised in St. Louis and now based in the Pacific Northwest, Lizzie Weber began her journey as a songwriter living in Studio City, California, where she moved at twenty years old to pursue a career in acting. Two years after her move to Los Angeles, she found herself back in St. Louis writing, recording and producing her self-titled debut album as she pursued a degree in Journalism from Washington University.  

Lizzie’s roots in St. Louis provided her a grounded foundation where she developed strong values and sense of self - a self-awareness that enables her to write emotionally-charged music from a very vulnerable, personal place.

Following the success of her 2014 full-length debut, Lizzie appeared on the cover of the Riverfront Times as one of ‘six artists to watch in 2015.’ From there, Lizzie composed the music for the title track(“Vida Cafeinada”) of the documentary feature film Caffeinated. The song is sung in English and Spanish, and features lyrics written by her father, John Schranck. On their first father-daughter collaboration, they set out to write a song that would stand as a reflection of the agricultural and social underpinnings of that wonderful daily tradition.

In the fall of 2015, Lizzie produced and self-released her rendition of Nirvana’s “Heart-Shaped Box.” It was around that time that she met Grammy-award winning producer Sheldon Gomberg (Ben Harper, Ryan Adams, Rickie Lee Jones) and began work her song “Love Again” which was the product of another familial collaboration, this time with her elder brother, John Schranck Jr., who is responsible for the song’s lush, orchestral arrangements. The two began sending Sheldon iphone demos in November of 2015 with the intention of recording the song at his Carriage House Studios (LA) in January of 2016, a pit stop on her way to her new home in the Pacific Northwest.

After spending the last two years both in Seattle and on the island of Fidalgo, Lizzie traveled to Iceland in March of 2018 to collaborate with Academy Award-winning artist Marketa Irglova (The Swell Season/Once). Together, they produced and recorded two songs - "River" and "Free Floating” - released in November and described by Glide Magazine as "a quiet folk song with angelic harmonies and lush instrumentation that swells into a dramatic, beautiful soundscape.

Lizzie is proud to be releasing her latest single “How Does It Feel,” the title track off from her new three-song EP due out in January of 2021. An anthem of gratitude, “How Does It Feel” explores the meaning behind feeling ‘safe’ and finding strength in yourself with the support of loved ones. All three songs were written in isolation amid the early days of the shutdown due to the pandemic; accordingly, this theme is explored throughout all three songs and focuses on what can truly unite us all: empathy, and love. 

Tiarra Girls

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The Tiarra Girls Are Set to Ignite Hearts and Souls

with Their Inspiring, Indefinable Sound

The Trio of Young Women Makes Music That Ignores Genres

Creating Punchy, Groove Heavy Tunes To Lift Spirits

and Fill Dance Floors

Lucky Hound Music Will Introduce The Band

With A Series Of Singles Throughout the Rest of the Year

Starting with a cover of the Go-Go’s “Can’t Stop the World.”

The Tiarra Girls have been thrilling audiences in their hometown of Austin, TX for the past decade. It’s an impressive accomplishment, especially since the oldest member of the band just turned 22-years-old. The trio of sisters – singer and guitarist Tori Baltierra; bass player Tiffany Baltierra and drummer Sophia Baltierra – were making music before there were teenagers. “We started as a cover band,” Tori said. “We played stuff by The Black Keys, Selena, Santana, Stevie Wonder, No Doubt, anything we liked. With encouragement from our parents and our music teachers, we started writing our own songs. Our dad was a DJ and played all kinds of stuff – rock, blues, dance music, hip-hop, R&B, country, mariachi, Tejano and rancheras. We love it all.”

The Baltierra’s grew up bi-cultural, aware of the difficulty that can create in today’s America. “We’re fourth generation Mexican Americans and grew up speaking English,” Tori explained. “Our grandparents and parents were bullied and punished for speaking Spanish. Our family wanted to protect us, so we mostly spoke Spanglish at home. With our parents’ help, we’ve delved more into our culture as we’ve grown up. Our dad was our roadie and occasional soundman and our mom managed and booked us. Their support has gotten us to where we are today.”

The Tiarras are also part of a generation that’s interested in pursuing music without limits. Rock, Latin, pop, soul, reggae, blues, world music and many other genres, blend together in their sound. “We absorbed a lot of what we heard in our dad’s enormous record collection, and our own listening. All those subconscious influences come out when we write songs or arrange a cover.”  

High profile gigs, including a showcase at SXSW to help promote Amy Poehler’s Smart Girls empowerment organization and the Trans-Pecos Festival, helped expand their fan base, leading them to producer Michael Ramos and a deal with Lucky Hound Music. The label was planning a series of singles, leading up to an album. When the pandemic hit, everything was readjusted. Lucky Hound and its parent company, Studios at Fischer, produced an introductory Live at SF concert that was streamed on July 18. They’ll be releasing a series of singles for the rest of 2020, starting with a cover of The Go-Gos’ “Can’t Stop the World,” with new lyrics written for the Tiarra’s by Austin resident (and Go-Go’s bass guitar player) Kathy Valentine, who has become a fan of the band.

“We played a show with her band The Bluebonnets last year,” Tori said. “We didn’t know a lot about The Go-Go’s, but we made a connection and decided to cover “ ’Can’t Stop the World.’ ” The tune was cut live with producer Michael Ramos, who helped Tori overdub the backing harmonies. The Tiarras replace the original surf beat with a syncopated Latin rhythm and add Flamenco influenced hand clapping to the familiar chorus. The new lyrics have a modern slant and Tori delivers them with swagger to spare.

“Soy Chingona” is an original tune with an English verse and a Spanish chorus. The title, loosely translated, is “I’m a badass.” It rides a catchy rhythm – a mix of cumbia and ska - created by Tori’s guitar and Tiffany’s bass, with Sophia adding flurries of brittle percussive fills to compliment her stomping bass drum. Engineer, Chris Bell, added atmospheric textures, while Tori delivers an anthemic lyric, encouraging listeners to avoid compromise and crash through the barriers that oppress them.  

Despite the lockdown, the band is excited about their musical future. “We want to inspire and build a path for other young musicians,” Tori said. “Since signing with Lucky Hound Music, we’ve been motivated and encouraged to write and play on our own terms. Change begins with young people and since marginalized communities are targeted, we want to be on the front line, advocating for change, using music to express ourselves in a way that people will relate to, and be moved by.”

Tori, Tiffany and Sophia began playing music before they were in high school. Their father, Hector, was a nationally known breakdancer and a DJ celebrated for his eclectic taste, playing sets that mixed hip-hop, country, R&B, soul, pop and traditional Mexican sounds. When they were girls, they accompanied him to gigs at clubs, house parties and weddings, learning how to dance to a wide variety of music. “When our dad rehearsed in our garage, we’d run in and start dancing together,” Tori recalled. “He exposed us to a world of music we wouldn’t have discovered on our own.”

The sisters picked up instruments while they were in elementary school. Even before then, Sophia had been tapping out rhythms on every hard surface in the house. Her parents got her a snare pad, then a drum set and she was off and running. Tiffany first played her grandmother’s piano. When the band started, she tapped out the bass lines on her electric keyboard. Eventually, she picked up the electric bass, although it took time getting used to its size and the thick strings. When Tori heard one of her teachers playing a Beatles song on the guitar in third grade, she was hooked. Her parents got her a guitar and, after a few formal lessons, she was soon developing her own style of playing.

“One Christmas, our parents got us the Guitar Hero video game,” Sophia said. “We had to work as a team to reach the end of a song, without the audience booing us. We pushed each other to reach new levels and argued with each other when we were trying too hard. It was the beginning of us developing a love for sharing music, together as sisters.”

Their musical skills evolved quickly. They became a band when Tori was 10, Sophia was 12, and Tiffany was 14. With their parents and music teachers encouraging them, they played on stage at a school recital and a family work party. “We were nervous and stiff and did Stevie Wonder’s ‘Isn’t She Lovely.’ Playing covers helped us explore genres and develop our own sound.”

The excitement of playing for a live audience was all the inspiration the trio needed. The Tiarra Girls were soon performing at family gatherings, house parties, community events, fundraisers, church festivals and bars, accompanied by one, or both, parents. They began composing their own songs and adding them to their sets, writing arrangements that drew on reggae, ska, rock, cumbia and other Latin sounds. In 2016, they received the award for Best Performing Band Under 18 at the Austin Music Awards, and won again in 2017 and 2018. 

Balancing school, jobs, a musical career and the usual worries of growing into adulthood was a challenge, but their dedication to music, each other and their family, carried them through. They released their first recording, a protest song called “Leave It To the People,” after the 2016 election. They released it online and promoted it with a series of public service announcements for Rock the Vote, Jolt and Voto Latino, encouraging young people to vote. In 2017, they made a three song, self-titled EP that showed off their diversity. “I Made a Garden” was a rocker, “Lonely Room” had a jazzy/funk feel and “Answers” rode a mellow reggae/ska backbeat. They put the songs up on the usual digital platforms and kept playing dates and festivals. 

As they shelter in place, they’re concentrating on their day jobs and finishing school. Tiffany is working on a nursing degree, Sophia is studying business marketing and Tori is learning audio engineering. Tori and Sophia are interns at Siete foods, helping fill the online store orders. They’re also busy rehearsing and expanding their musical vision. “We play everything – anything we like,” Tori said. ”People want to narrow us down to indie rock with a Latin influence, but we play blues, pop, Tejano, anything that sounds good. There are no rules when you create music. You have to follow your feelings and let the song tell you how it wants to come out.”

Andy Ross

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ANDY ROSS The Fear Engine

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Is this an English musician’s idea of antipodean bliss?

Andy Ross is sitting in his apartment overlooking the sparkling Pacific Ocean at Bondi Beach. He is surrounded by his own studio, masses of equipment and instruments, and everything to allow him to create, and develop his own projects. How close to musical paradise is that?

My favourite question,” he says of the ten questions which have driven his latest, unique multimedia project, “of all is the very last one – ‘If you knew you couldn’t fail … what would you do?’ It is a very powerful question … I heard it on a TED talk and I thought ‘Wow! That’s a good question.’”

His project – The Fear Engine – is centred around ten questions which are designed to explore the central theme of the project which Ross describes as “a metaphor for unconscious fears, fears that we all live by”. A hugely ambitious project as he has produced, more or less single handedly an album and an hour long documentary film with this theme in mind. The album includes a collection of ten songs deeply rooted in British rock of the 1970/80s with nods towards the subtle mix of sonic washes and accessible rock sensibility which characterise the work of Pink Floyd, 10cc, Yes, Godley & Creme and Howard Jones – the latter of whom features in the movie and who has worked extensively with Ross. The documentary interleaves interviews with a wide range of thoughtful people with the story of a man who leaves his work and goes searching for meaning in his life.

And why The Fear Engine? Ross explains that “It seems that people default to distrusting others”. You have to prove that you are trustworthy. That veneer of fear is a shroud over everything. And the news that goes out is so terrible that we end up saying ‘I don’t trust anybody’ Then that is coupled with darker unconscious fears that drive our behaviours. What Carl Jung would have called the shadow self, all the parts of yourself that you don't want to admit to having. That is the Fear Engine. That is where you are trying to hide.”

The album and film are the culmination of years of thinking about the nature of human beings and a lot of rigorous, positive thinking about “the meaning of life” in the twenty-first century.

Ross comes from an impeccable musical pedigree. His father, renowned jazz saxophonist, Ronnie Ross, worked with the likes of Miles Davis and Frank Sinatra; taught David Bowie to play sax; and played the famous sax solo on Lou Reed’s ‘Walk on the Wild Side’.

His own credits include working with Paul McCartney, Robert Palmer, Basia and Tom Robinson and writing and producing for the likes of Howard Jones and Martin Grech.

He came to Australia looking for new challenges but initially had trouble finding work.

“When we came to Australia I was looking for work as a producer and composer … I was offered a job, which was highly irregular for me, to see if I could write a piece of music that would articulate the issues of drought.

“Because I was new to Australia, and had this open-eyed view and wanted to take on everything, I thought “Well I’ll give it a go” but I didn’t want to patronise the farmers by pretending I was Woodie Guthrie or Bob Dylan.

“I didn’t know anything about Australia let alone farming in Australia. So I said: ‘Can I visit the farmers and at least talk to them?’ and I had this fantastic experience of going out into New South Wales for a few weeks and meeting lots of farmers. There was one in particular who I stayed and worked with on a sheep farm.

My mother suggested I should write a journal because it was so unusual going and spending time on a sheep farm. I didn’t write a journal but I took a video camera and I got carried away with filming. This amazing story unfolded while I was there.

“I went with a very patronising view that it was all about water. I was told that the farmers were really suffering and that the story really needed to be told. I was met with short shrift by the farmers who told me ‘Don’t patronise us. We’re doing our best. In fact we’ve got some great ideas.’

“In the case of one farmer I was wondering why his sheep were all happy and healthy and he said: ‘Come with me’ and took me down the road. Five kilometres down the road were emaciated sheep, overgrazing. He said: ‘It’s the same rainfall.’ I thought it was an interesting point and wondered what was going on.

“So, the film became much more than just about water. It was about an inability to adapt, the difficulties of dealing with change and all sorts of interesting things. That’s what I learnt when I went out there.

“I produced all this interesting footage and I thought ‘What am to do with all this? It’s not the brief I’ve been given. I’m supposed to write a piece of music, I’m not a film maker” I felt I had to honour the farmer in a way. This man who had been struggling to do something positive about it. “So, I made a film – Well Beyond Water -. It went on to win an international film award. [New Zealand’s Reel Earth Environmental Film Festival - it took the prize for best short]. I was so shocked, but I realised that here was another way of communicating ideas. I had only ever worked in music but here was a story. It is all about composition and good pacing. It doesn’t matter what the medium is.”

Ross was eager to continue with his film career but did not want to rush into a project that he wasn’t totally committed to. It was nearly a decade later “I had this thought, that was inspired by the farmer actually because he’s such a positive man … he was determined not to whinge and he was determined to look for solutions …” I thought ‘I wonder if I can scale that up and ask people how to make the world a better place.’”

 The idea was to craft a series of questions, find a cross section of people (from the ordinary to the extraordinary ), interview them (“talk to people who are not experts but are everyday people who have good intuition and good insights”) and to set the questions and the music against a man (he used himself to play the Everyman in the film) who “is the classic example of someone who has been trying to climb the corporate ladder all his life and has done so and has done pretty well. He is average. He is nothing special. He gets to 50 and his life has no meaning. He is secure. He’s got that security of knowing that he is not insignificant, and he’s got a nice house but he’s not happy. He’s trying to figure out where life’s meaning lies. That is symbolised by the story of him going to work and saying ‘I can’t do this anymore’. This is soulless. This is meaningless. It is all corporate. It is all dog eat dog. Why? Why is that important? He suddenly feels empty and he doesn’t know why. It is his search for meaning and that is symbolised by his refusal to go into the office … and he just walks away from civilisation. And he goes aimlessly, but doggedly through the streets. He is being pulled by something … by a desire for something. And he ends up getting on a train … ends up on a park … and then goes into farmland and then into the wilderness. He ends up by the sea.”

The result is a remarkably coherent multimedia statement which combines, songs, questions, thoughtful observations and a quest for life’s meaning. It is an inspired attempt to find meaning in the world and to be positive about the essential goodness and decency of humanity.

At a time when the world seems to be collapsing in so many ways (climate change, plague, poverty, authoritarian governments, economic chaos) it is a brave, deeply felt message of hope about the future of humanity.

As Franklin Delano Roosevelt said in 1933 “The only thing we have to fear … is fear itself” and The Fear Engine has turned that stark truth into a powerful and positive, artistic multimedia experience.

Elle Belle

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“Yeah, I think they’ll drop the bomb. I guess my one regret is that I’m over it.” 

Post Everything is about reckonings. The emotional fatigue of the last few years had filled my heart with a deep misanthropic nihilism. Through personal, political, and cultural grieving, these songs rake through the ashes of an era and ask - where do we go from here? Post Everything is a journey through this nihilistic wasteland, and that if we dig deep enough, we can still find droplets of hope. 

Elle Belle is the alter-ego of award winning composer/songwriter Christopher Pappas. His debut album WAKO GUMBO, a sprawling 20 song double LP, was released in 2016 to critical acclaim followed by his sophomore album No Signal that received 4 stars from All Music who called him “a swaggering experimental pop maverick with a penchant for spacy electro-organic psychedelia and an overflowing bag of big ideas.”  

“Thinly cloaked as his views may be, Pappas offers a fresh take on the nation's social climate while also expanding his sonic territory.” - Timothy Monger for All Music   

Pappas grew up in rural New Hampshire where he started the band The Everyday Visuals. After relocating to Boston the band began to amass a cult-like following of fellow musicians and fans who were attracted to Pappas’ penchant for vocal harmonies and catchy left-of-center songwriting.  He moved to Los Angeles in 2010 where he met Pierre de Reeder, bassist for the venerable L.A. band Rilo Kiley. Pappas released a solo record under the name Miracle Parade on Pierre’s newly founded label Little Record Company. While recording the second record he suffered a creative breakdown, leading him to abandon the record and create Elle Belle. 

Mixed with a variety of genres; psych-rock, prog, electronic, Elle Belle continues Pappas’ knack for rich, intricate songwriting. He has written music for NASA, composing the soundtracks for the Juno and Rosetta mission official docu-series. He also composed an award winning musical (“Pope! An Epic Musical”) with the Wall Street Journal praising it, proclaiming “[Pope!] is proof that the musical [genre] isn’t dead!” He is also a prolific writer, churning out 2 T.V. pilots and a new full length horror feature that are currently in pre-production. His dense and eclectic catalogue is why many consider Pappas as one of America’s most prolific and captivating under-the-radar artists.  

 

TWRP

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The sound of the future as imagined in the 1980s. The nostalgic theme song to your favourite childhood cartoon that may have never existed. The hopefulness of someone from the future describing the utopia of tomorrow. Like a paradox of time travel, TWRP is all of these things and yet none of them.

This optimistic fascination with the future, grounded in the nostalgia of the past, is what has shaped TWRP. They are the product of many eclectic styles and eras, crafted into something simultaneously playful, heartfelt, and tongue-in-cheek, all delivered with self-aware bombast and an uncommon musical precision. Old funk, modern electronic, and classic rock converge in their science fiction universe, as if Earth, Wind & Fire, Justice, and Yes provided the sound track to a Dune movie that was actually good.

From humble beginnings on Canada’s east coast, to multiple transplants leading to years living inToronto and Los Angeles, the broadly-defined synth-rock quartet has been quietly and steadily gaining a devoted and sizable cult following over the past 13 years. In recent years TWRP has experienced a golden era, growing rapidly from ongoing work with collaborators such as ColonelChris Hadfield and Andrew Huang, as well as from major commercial successes as the band behind Billboard-topping comedy music stars Ninja Sex Party and Star bomb. With the power of an internet-gained fandom at their backs, TWRP has toured the US and Canada extensively for years, performed on Late Night with Conan O’Brien in 2018, and in 2019 broadened their reach internationally with tours in the UK, Europe, Australia and New Zealand.

TWRP’s new album, Over The Top, is just that - another entry in their discography that delivers an exaggerated rendering of their wide-ranging influences, while not taking itself too seriously.Rich vintage synthesizers, shred guitar, and driving disco rhythms all find their place in the music- and despite an air of levity and irony in it’s delivery, real themes of change, perseverance, and gratitude permeate the album. With an attitude of playfulness and honesty in the music, OverThe Top seems to say that now more than ever it’s important to find the humour and enjoyment through life’s challenges

Falcon

Photo By: Ashley Mae Wright

Photo By: Ashley Mae Wright

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As Falcon, Amanda Lindsey Cook is crafting a poetic pop sound, influenced by her classical roots, informed by her life experiences, and enlightened by imaginative melodies. The reason for “Falcon”? She wanted a new canvas for for a new endeavor. The name is borrowed and expanded on from a family name, “Falk”. “It just felt right”, she pauses, “to name this artistic endeavor after my original surname. Like a sort of integration, perhaps. We have so much to learn from our ancestors, our family lines. I have barely scratched the surface....but I wanted to be intentional in my own quirky way, about embodying the stories that have shaped and informed me.”

But why call herself “Falcon” when she already has a career under her current name? The idea came about in a conversation with her long time friend/collaborator/producer, Jason Ingram.  

“We were having a conversation about the different kinds of music I want to make, and how I don’t want to be confined to one genre, sound, or theme. I have to explore. I have to be able to write about everything - it’s a path of clarity for me...a way of interpreting and understanding my experiences. He suggested that “I go Falcon” on this next album, and that was that. It felt like being handed an ancient key to a room in my own house I hadn’t explored yet.”

Amanda believes that a great piece of music holds space for what she refers to as a bright sadness. “We can’t truly be open to joy without being open to sorrow as well. Our lives are filled with the vulnerability of both delight and disappointment. It feels important to have a soundtrack for all kinds of experiences, songs for every proverbial day of the week.”

“Music is a language insistent and committed to finding the golden thread that can make unlikely friends out of all of us,” says Cook. “I hope that all the different projects I make, under any name, would create little worlds of safety, expression, and belonging.” In Spring of 2020 Amanda joined the Sony family. Her first album as Falcon releases later this fall (2020). She currently resides in Los Angeles, California.

Air Traffic Controller

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Air Traffic Controller have created a place all their own in the indie pop world. After serving in the US Navy as an actual air traffic controller, singer/songwriter Dave Munro built a legacy with "ATC" for crafting heartfelt, luscious and genuine indie-folk-pop songs that are timeless and classic. The band took their time writing and demoing their fifth album, and the fans have not left their side, still streaming over 150 thousand songs per week on Spotify.

When 2020 started, the band featuring Adam Salameh, Adrian Aiello, Joe Campbell, Steve Scott and Seth Kasper alongside Dave, were right in the middle of recording album number five. Well, this is a year for the books, and ATC had to post-pone their studio sessions to be safe.  

"Sometimes" is their new single, written in 2019, and mostly tracked before Covid hit everyone's calendars. The band was able to collaborate remotely to bring this new "classic" ATC anthem to its soaring finale and eventual debut on Tuesday August 25th. On this new single we hear the band collaborating in the studio, highlighting guitar licks, and self-producing alongside Boston producer/engineer Dan Cardinal (Darlingside, Henry Jamison, Josh Ritter, Ballroom Theives). If you have loved any ATC song in their past, you will love "Sometimes" just as much, if not more. It's a wave of a song that pulls you in from the intro and takes you on a beautiful ride. 

Air Traffic Controller have achieved a lot in their past. NPR Hot 100 List, Billboard Hot 100 Fest, Guardian UK Band of the Day, Alt Nation support, Independent Music Awards, many film, TV, video game, promo placements, airplay all over the world. "Sometimes," is a new start, and a solid bar for what's to come. 

From lead-singer Dave Munro on the song: “Sometimes” is about a real relationship. There was so much I wanted to say when it ended, but it was already over and probably for the best. I wanted to tell that person how much I cared, how I was affected, but I remained silent. I made excuses to myself, I was so busy, it was never a good time. Sometimes we bottle our emotions in order to move forward. This song was my way of removing the cap.

 

Justin Trawick and The Common Good

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The isolating effects of a global pandemic can be haunting. For singer-songwriter and bandleader, Justin Trawick, writing “Back of the Line” was born out of necessity and self- preservation.  The world was collectively feeling the sensation of individually being marooned on 8 billion tiny islands, and for Trawick, the feeling was all too real. 

“The planet had suddenly been put on pause.  All of our plans for the future were replaced with a big question mark.  As an artist, I’ve always found inspiration to write in the littlest of things, but the coronavirus quarantine created a vacuum of creativity that I’d never felt before. It wasn’t until the third month of the pandemic when I sat down and wrote “Back of the Line,” a song about the feeling of being lost, being alone, being afraid, and being hopeful.  I honestly think it’s one of the first times I’ve ever really written a song for me.  I needed it.”

That’s not to say Trawick wasn’t doing any work in those first three months.  On March 12th, 2020, Trawick voluntarily canceled his scheduled public show in DC for that evening, something that venues still weren’t doing themselves yet.  Instead, he and his girlfriend, Lauren LeMunyan, posted on social media that they would be performing on Facebook Live later that evening at 8pm.  

“I was sitting on my couch at 11am on March 12th, 2020 wondering what I was going to do.  I had just canceled my show, but I still wanted to play.  I’ve been performing since I was 13 years old, I really didn’t want to stop now.  I suddenly remembered how two years earlier I had been scheduled for a show at Rockwood Music Hall in New York City, but that it got canceled due to a blizzard.  Instead of not playing, Lauren and I performed on Facebook Live from her apartment in DC.  People loved it.  They tipped us more than I was going to make in NYC that evening.”

That night their first Facebook Live show went better than expected.  With almost five thousand views on their inaugural performance, family, friends, and fans joined to support “The Justin and Lauren Show,” requesting songs and tipping via a sign that LeMunyan had drawn by hand.  The performance first got the attention of Reuters, who filmed their second show in their apartment on March 15th, followed by The Washington Post, CNN (who also filmed them in their apartment), Al Jazeera, and Washingtonian Magazine.  Trawick’s Facebook page climbed from 7k “likes” to over 12k in only a few months, and almost 200 people joined his Patreon club.  

“We created something that I had never experienced before in the 12 years I’d been playing music professionally.  Suddenly we had a TV variety type show similar to “Live with Kelly and Ryan,” where Lauren and I would sing, tell jokes, do skits, and talk about our lives to hundreds of people twice a week.  We amassed a fanbase of superfans and cultivated a community of people that showed up not only for us, but also to chat with each other as they had all become friends in the process of watching our weekly shows.  These were the people that I performed “Back of the Line” to live for the first time, and who encouraged me to record it for a single.”

Most recently, Trawick has been bringing back the live concert experience in a unique way.  Utilizing his fanbase and the power of social media, Trawick and LeMunyan have been organizing secret backyard socially distant performances of “The Justin and Lauren Show” in backyards donated by friends and fans.  These shows have been limited to only 25 people per show, with social distancing and safety being the highest priority.  

“We have literally gone to every single yard and measured them by hand with a tape measure.  Lauren then creates a grid on a digital map that she uses to design a seating chart where essentially every ticket buyer is buying a ticket to a 10 x 10 foot square in someone else’s backyard.  It’s a lot of work, but when people come up to us afterward thanking us for bringing live music back into their lives safely, it’s all worth it for us.

Trawick and LeMunyan have currently sold out over 9 of their secret backyard shows in Arlington VA, Richmond VA, and Philadelphia, PA.  For more information on these secret backyard shows go to www.aneveningwithus.com. 

ABOUT JUSTIN TRAWICK :

Justin Trawick has been performing in the Washington DC area and along the East Coast since 2006, citing musical influences like Bob Schneider, Greensky Bluegrass, The Tallest Man on Earth, G. Love, Old Crow Medicine Show, and David Gray.  In February of 2014, Trawick won “Song of the Year” at the Washington Area Music Awards for his solo recording of “All the Places That I’ve Been” which can be downloaded on iTunes as a single along with his five other solo records and EPs.  In June of 2015, Trawick released his first single, “Goodbye,” under the band name “Justin Trawick and the Common Good,” written about the search for direction and belonging in a world that always feels one step ahead of you.  In January of 2017, “Justin Trawick and The Common Good” released their first album, “The Riverwash EP,” which features Norah Jones’ guitarist Adam Levy.  Trawick and the band have performed for the Kingman Island Bluegrass Festival, Appaloosa Roots Music Festival, Floyd Yoga Jam, TedxEast in NYC at the City Winery, and TedxPennsylvaniaAvenue in DC at the Newseum.

Additionally, Trawick has opened for over 30 national acts, including Suzanne Vega, Wyclef Jean, Brett Dennen, Blues Traveler, Enter The Haggis, Bob Schneider, and Edwin McCain, and shared bills with Dr. Dogg and The Avett Brothers.  As the founder of the nationally touring show “The 9 Songwriter Series” and co-founder of “The Circus Life Podcast” with guests such as Kevin Eubanks, Chris Thomas King, Ernie Halter, Yarn, and Snuffy Walden, Trawick has built a brand that extends far beyond his home base in DC. For more information, please visit http://justintrawick.com.

Glenn Thomas

Photo credit: Deven Bussey

Photo credit: Deven Bussey

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Glenn Thomas writes songs that cut straight to his truths. By putting his life and the human condition under the microscope, Glenn’s songs articulately observe the big questions with small details. Raised in a small New England town, Glenn writes with careful attention to his understanding of himself and the seasonality of life.

Glenn’s songs have been praised by press and songwriting veterans alike, and has led him to perform across the country with national acts such as Langhorne Slim, The Barr Brothers, Blitzen Trapper, Eve6, Watsky, Rubblebucket, and many others. With the alternative-rock outfit he fronts, Wild Sun, his music has been featured in Rolling Stone, Billboard, Spin, and Entertainment Weekly, as well as a cover of Elliott Smith’s “Easy Way Out” on the nationally acclaimed “Say Yes! A Tribute to Elliott Smith” album featuring J. Mascis, Julien Baker, and Amanda Palmer.

Glenn is currently living in Nashville and finishing his debut solo album with producer Jordan Lehning. It is set to be released in early 2020.

STONE MECCA

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In November 2018, Dallas-based blues-funk guitar god STONE MECCA released his fiery new LP Alienman, garnering praise and comparisons to Prince, Lenny Kravitz, and Gary Clark, Jr. With his own unique blues-rock blend, Stone carries on the legacies of the greats as he combines his love of hard-hitting hip-hop beats with funk-driven bass lines, grinding riffs, and soulful melodies, and forges his own formidable sonic fortification which trips along genre lines and refuses to be confined--or contained. 

 

Pete Kronowitt

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Pete Kronowitt’s new album, Do Something Now, presents the songwriter’s voice with a crisp production style that makes the tunes come vibrantly to life. The tracks are political and playful, embracing a variety of styles - acoustic folk, country, Cajun, rock and Latin. Like the folk artists he admires, Kronowitt blends the personal and political, making his a modern folk voice to be reckoned with. He co-produced the album with Spencer Hartling, at San Francisco’s Tiny Telephone Studio, creating hook filled songs that will move hearts and minds in positive directions.  

“This is the first album I’ve made that captures the energy and spontaneity of a live show,” Kronowitt says. “I let the melodies guide the arrangements, so there’s nothing between the listener and the music. I collaborated with musicians I knew well and let them help shape the sound of the sessions. We were able to catch the magic of the moment.”

The players on Do Something Now include drummer Darian Gray (Booker T), steel guitarist Tim Marcus, stand up and electric bass player John David Coppola, Kronowitt’s longtime collaborator, backing vocals by Veronica Maund and Justin Kohlberg on acoustic and electric guitars. “We got really close to the sounds I imagined in my head when I was composing the songs. In some cases, the produced versions sound even better.” 

“Stay Safe,” opens the album on a heartfelt note. It’s a tender, acoustic love song, featuring Kronowitt’s optimistic vocal, understated fingerpicking and the warm backing vocals of Veronica Maund. “It’s about our loved ones during the pandemic,” Kronowitt said. “We nailed it on the first take.” The laid-back folk-rock of “Roly Poly” examines the ecological decay that may spell our doom, snuffing out bees, butterflies and roly-poly bugs. A jaunty drumbeat and Coppola’s lively bass rhythm support Kronowitt as he laments, “We’re the choices that we make.” Roly Poly will premiere with an animated video in August.  

Kronowitt wrote the song “We’re All Gonna Die” in five minutes during a stream of consciousness but the song came together with the magic that only happens in the studio. A driving rhythm section, crisp acoustic guitar strumming and the bright harmonies Maund supplies, gives an ironic, carefree air to the lyrics. “Big Ole Stick of Wood,” a country song with solid steel guitar work, sings the praises of music’s ability to banish our cares and worries. The set closes with “Are We Great Yet?,” a rocking ode to civil disobedience that denounces the current administration’s inability to face the truth. Kronowitt calls out Trump’s heartless policies, as Kohlberg brings the song to a close with a blazing solo.

Kronowitt was planning a major tour to support Do Something Now. Given the realities of the pandemic, he’s transferred his activities to arranging 50 online shows for competitive state and national campaigns and causes. “I’m helping out candidates vetted and endorsed by various organizations, and partnering with PACs like EveryDistrict and grassroots group Sister District Project, to help people who share their community’s progressive values get elected. I’ll be offering free online shows and bringing in well-known, regional artists to perform and help spread the word.” 

Activism has always informed Kronowitt’s life and music, so starting the Face the Music Collective was a natural next step in his desire to foster positive change. “After the 2016 election, I organized a protest show in Cleveland and began looking for ways to combine activism and music into an organization that could make an impact. I learned from Sister District Project and the Bernie Sanders’ campaign and started to incorporate tactics they used to organize and get people to take action. That’s the core idea of Face the Music. During my concerts, I’d ask people to volunteer and over a third of the audience members would step up. If I could do it, I knew other artists could too—and not only for political campaigns, but for any cause. If an audience is singing along with you, caught up in the emotion of that moment, you can guide them to get engaged, and make sure the next step can help the cause you care about. Face the Music partners with other bands, artists and activist groups to help move more people toward progressive causes.”  

Kronowitt was born in New Jersey and grew up in Florida. He always loved music, but didn’t pick up a guitar until he was in college at American University, in Washington D.C. He immediately started writing songs, but had a bit of stage fright. “I sang in the stairwell of my dorm, and for a few girls, but it took a while before I took the leap to performing in front of an audience.” After graduation, he got a “real job,” but kept writing songs, playing gigs and releasing albums, feeding his passion for music and social change. After a self-booked tour of East Asia in 2009, he set on path to do music full time finally leaving his “day job” in 2016. At that point, he sought to combine music and activism. “Trump is a symptom of a bigger problem, so I’ll continue making music for good causes, even if he doesn’t get re-elected. San Francisco is a center of activism that's full of beautiful, giving, and dedicated people working for greater equity and justice. Living here has allowed me to continue making music my own small contribution to making this world just a bit better.”  

 

Ski Team

Photo Credit Savanna Ruedy

Photo Credit Savanna Ruedy

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Ski Team is the solo moniker of Lucie Lozinski, an independent songwriter, singer, producer, and guitarist who’s known for her yearning lyrics, crystalline voice, and gritty instrumentation. American Songwriter has described her music as “… a quasi-Americana sound, combining traditional folk and rock elements with undeniably modern soundscapes.”

Originally from New Jersey, Lozinski infuses everything with a bit of her roots. “That sounds like New Jersey,” says Lozinski about the anthemic distorted guitar chorus on her single “Don’t Give Up (Yet)” out now. She writes vulnerably about her relationships with people and places. “I move a lot,” she says. “My songs usually come from being stuck somewhere—in a rut with a friend, with a boyfriend repeating the same fights, in a city that all my friends have left.”

The daughter of musicians, Lozinski grew up with a recording studio in her backyard and ample opportunities to perform, including the U.S. Open international tennis championship when she was just eight years old. She’s sung with icons like Tony Bennett and Queen Latifa as well as hometown friends Kevin Kuh (of Pool Cosby), Sam Ryan, and her brother’s band Snacks Chapman. Although Lozinski has been an unlisted vocalist on albums since her childhood, it wasn’t until she met producer Bobby Renz in San Francisco in 2019 that she readied her own music for release. The pair recorded Ski Team’s latest singles at Different Fur Records in the Mission District, which also provided the single’s cover art. “I took that picture of the dog in the car in the Mission,” explained Lozinski. “It’s such a vibe and conveys all I could ever hope to communicate about my own personality.” 

After recording a series of demos in her apartment and releasing on Soundcloud, Lozinski caught the attention of LA-based producers Scott Seiver (who’s produced for the likes of Pete Yorne, Aimee Mann, and Ted Leo) and Timothy Young. In 2019 and 2020, the trio recorded singles that break through Ski Team’s bedroom acoustic intimacy into full-blown pop. 

“I think you can hear this in my music,” Lozinski explained, “I enjoy quiet time and experiences that move me.” 

Her current release “Don’t Give Up (Yet),” is “an anthemic song that showcases Lucie’s vulnerability and raw emotion.” (- Stage Right Secrets ).

 

 

Izzy Heltai

Photo Credit Joanna Chattman

Photo Credit Joanna Chattman

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With brutal honesty towards himself and forgiveness for those around him, Izzy Heltai’s music walks the elusive line between confessional and relatable.  On his debut album, “Father,” the 23-year-old singer/songwriter dives deep into his fascination with human relationships, and specifically the way that those relationships change and reorganize themselves over time, employing a raw roots-rock sound reminiscent of Josh Ritter or Elliot Smith. 

“A lot of this record is about seeing memories and situations turn to grey, where black and white previously existed,” says Heltai, “Finding myself as an adult has largely been about how the people who have always been there for me can fit into my life in a new way.”  On the title track, “Father,” he sings, “It’s been a long time / since I felt like I was worth much/ more than any other/ reflected in my father’s eyes... And I could use a good touch/ and maybe even your love/ to help me figure out / what I’ve been trying to tell you for years.”  

Father was recorded by Heltai’s longtime friend Andy Cass and produced by Sophie Buskin, whom Heltai met at the legendary Kerrville Folk Festival in Texas. The production is raw and full, with subtle harmonies and guitar lines weaving their way unexpectedly through the mix almost as if they were grown in the song. There is no sign of musical overthought, allowing Heltai’s emotional vocals to shine organically.  

 At a time when any conversation with a stranger can quickly become a sociopolitical battle, Heltai’s introspective and thought out songs are a breath of fresh air.  With an overwhelming empathy for humanity and willingness to search for personal responsibility, Heltai’s “Father” will not leave your heart or your ears unchanged. 

 

 

Geoship

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Geoship is a material science and construction technology company operating as a multi-stakeholder cooperative. Our purpose is to build living environments that resonate with nature and catalyze the evolution of consciousness. Our vision is a revolution in affordable regenerative architecture that reconnects human communities with the natural world. We design and produce bioceramic architecture and supply innovative ceramic cement materials to the global construction industry.