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Posts made in April, 2007
If you like want what you hear, just follow the links to the songs in the playlist below to get them.
00:20 Dead Poets Society – Invisible Monster
02:35 Nun – Stop (Mister Black’s Mix)
07:40 Lex Nasa – Eredit
11:20 Bloc Party – I Still Remember
15:10 Alienation – Maya
20:25 Lark Wisky – Your Wish Is My Command
23:28 Dorfmeister vs. Madrid de los Austrias – On The Moon Maybe
27:45 Rodney Hunter – Take A Ride (Dublex Inc. Remix)
32:58 Thes One – Northwester Bell 2
35:50 Tinariwen – Cler Achel
Run Time 39:27
Cadence Revolution #08 (mp3)
Cadence Revolution is sponsored by

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Posted by admin on Apr 21, 2007 in Featured Articles, Featured Track | Comments Off
Tinariwen
“Cler Achel” (mp3)
from “Aman Iman: Water Is Life”
(Outside Music)
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During the early 1980s, in a rebel camp run by Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi, a band was formed by musicians from the Touareg (Saharan nomads from Mali) tribe. They called themselves Tinariwen, which means “empty spaces” in their native Tamashek. Their music incorporated hypnotic, rocked-out, bluesy-sounding electric guitars (a first for people from an area where power is only sporadically available) while retaining traditional instruments, rhythms and call-and-response vocals. For nearly two decades, Tinariwen’s underground cassettes counseled anti-violence and ethnic pride amid encroaching chaos, making them a beacon of empowerment for local youth struggling with the demise of “camel culture” and conflicting propaganda. A performance at The Festival in the Desert, the worldwide release of The Radio Tisdas Sessions (2001)) and Amassakoul (“Traveler” – 2004), and an international tour brought their ancient-modern Tishoumaren (“guitar”) sound to new audiences, catapulting these indigo-clad tribes-men-and-women to universal fame. It also gained them admiration from pop stars like Robert Plant and Carlos Santana. Their third CD, produced by British bluesman and World Village label-mate Justin Adams, was recorded at Bogolan studios in Bamako, Mali. The fifteen tracks celebrate their heritage in all its trance-inducing, hip-shaking, majesty, mystery, and magic.

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Posted by admin on Apr 14, 2007 in Featured Articles, Featured Track | Comments Off
Waterbone w/Junior Vasquez
“Tantra Remixed by Junior Vasquez” (mp3)
from “Do Something”
(Ultraviolet Productions)
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Waterbone is a collaboration by Jimmy Waldo and D. Kendall Jones.
A native of North Carolina, Jimmy Waldo is a veteran of the rock and pop world, with a long history of successful recording projects. He grew up listening to music from around the world on his short wave radio. He began playing in bands in high school, and had many successful regional touring bands.
After moving to Boston in 1979 he formed the short lived but highly successful group New England, signed a major label recording and management contracts, touring with Kiss, Cheap Trick, Heart, and dozens of others and had a blockbuster radio hit, Never Gonna Lose Ya. In 1983 he founded the seminal group Alcatrazz, and with Yngwie Malmsteen and Rainbows Graham Bonnet, they broke new ground in the progressive rock arena. He has written music and worked with such notable names as Eddie Kramer, Todd Rundgren, Peter Frampton and many others, and produced music for film and TV.
D. Kendall Jones is a classical composer from Louisiana, having attended the Berkeley College of Music in Boston and UCLA. He is well known for his extraordinary guitar playing, which combines classical structure with a hard hitting rock style. In addition to music, Jones is skilled in fine arts and design. He has composed music for numerous films and television commercials, is a master computer programmer, composer, and accomplished classical and rock guitarist, and lives in Denver, Colorado with his wife Judy.
Together they bring their diverse backgrounds and talents to form what the critics are calling, a warmth and trippy originality to the normally sterile world of predictable beats.

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