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  • Joni Void wants you to watch experimental films in the club, or at La Lumiรจre

    Joni Void’s Jean Nรฉant returns with Every Life Is A Light, their most tranquil album yetโ€”shaped by La Lumiรจre Collectiveโ€™s creative hub and deep-rooted collaborations. Featuring field recordings, personal tributes, and sonic nods to film, the album blurs lines between documentary and music.

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  • Kurt Cobainโ€™s Last Show: His Sleeveless Surrender

    March 1, 1994. Terminal 1, Munich, Germany. A venue repurposed from an old airplane hangar, with the kind of acoustics that make you wonder if the building itself was trying to sabotage the show. The sound was off. The energy was drained. And Kurt Cobain, visibly unwell, delivered what would unknowingly become Nirvanaโ€™s last performance.…

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  • Winnipegโ€™s Altitudo Audio: Reaching New Heights in Sound

    In Winnipeg, two brothers turned passion into precisionโ€”Altitudo Audio delivers curated, appointment-only listening sessions that redefine the audiophile experience.

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  • The Day Dalรญ Made a Hologram of Alice Cooper

    In the spring of 1973, the surreal collided head-on with the theatrical when Salvador Dalรญ and Alice Cooper met at the St. Regis Hotel in New York City. It was the kind of encounter that seems almost too absurd to be true, but somehow, when you put Dalรญ and Cooper in the same room, it…

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  • Paul McCartney’s Unexpected Japanese Detour โ€” From Wings to Jail Wings

    January 16, 2025, marks the 45th anniversary of a moment that shook rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll to its core and almost put Paul McCartney behind bars for seven years. The worldโ€™s most famous bassistโ€”Beatle, hitmaker, and knight-to-beโ€”was arrested at Tokyoโ€™s Narita International Airport for smuggling nearly half a pound of marijuana. What couldโ€™ve been just another…

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  • Rotten to the Core: The Sex Pistolsโ€™ Final Blowout at Winterland

    It was a cold January night in 1978 when the Sex Pistols walked onto the stage at San Franciscoโ€™s Winterland Ballroom, readyโ€”or perhaps unwillingโ€”to make history. This wasnโ€™t just a concert; it was the swan song of punkโ€™s most volatile band. The Pistolsโ€™ American tour had been a disaster wrapped in chaos: canceled shows, infighting,…

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  • ‘Telstar’: The First British Song to Conquer Americaโ€”and Its Turbulent Legacy

    In the early 1960s, as the world turned its gaze skyward, captivated by the dawn of the Space Age, a British instrumental piece named โ€œTelstarโ€ emerged, encapsulating the eraโ€™s spirit of innovation and exploration. Crafted by the enigmatic producer Joe Meek and performed by The Tornados, โ€œTelstarโ€ not only mirrored the technological marvels of its…

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  • The Night Carl Perkins Gave Rock ‘n’ Roll Its Swagger: The Story of “Blue Suede Shoes”

    On December 19, 1955, Carl Perkins stepped into Memphisโ€™ Sun Studio with a song that would become a cornerstone of rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll history. But like most great music moments, the creation of Blue Suede Shoes wasnโ€™t so much a straight line as it was a tangled web of stories, late-night drives, and serendipitous inspiration.…

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  • Why These Classical Recordings Unlock Your Systemโ€™s True Power

    Can pop music compete with classicalโ€™s sonic precision? Jonson Lee delves into recording techniques that make classical music a benchmark for audiophiles seeking pure sound.

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  • The Jackson 5โ€™s Big Break: Their Electrifying Debut on The Ed Sullivan Show

    It was December 14, 1969, a cold Sunday night, but the stage at CBS Studio 50 was sizzling with energy. The Ed Sullivan Show, a revered institution in American television, had introduced countless icons to the worldโ€”The Beatles, Elvis Presley, The Supremes. That evening, five brothers from Gary, Indiana, became the latest in that storied…

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  • The Vinyl Beat: Holiday Happiness

    Among my music recommendations is a handful of favorite holiday records in my collection โ€“ some new, some classic. โ€™Tis the season!

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  • Buddy Holly’s First Appearance On The Ed Sullivan Show

    Imagine itโ€™s a chilly December 1 evening in 1957. TV screens across America flicker to life with that iconic Ed Sullivan introduction: โ€œAnd now, ladies and gentlemenโ€ฆ Buddy Holly and the Crickets!โ€ For just a few minutes, Buddy Hollyโ€”only 21 at the timeโ€”commands the national stage, bringing rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll into Americaโ€™s living rooms like…

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  • The Shakuhachi: How a Zen Bamboo Flute Shaped Japanese Culture

    From courtly halls to Zen temples, the shakuhachi evolved from a Tang Dynasty import into a meditative tool and global musical icon, resonating with timeless beauty.

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  • Playing in a Rock Band, 5: What Kind of Music Do You Want to Play?

    Frank Doris continues to mine his experience accrued over 50 years of playing in bands, offering insight into brand identity, having a set list, and playing music you don’t like for the sake of entertaining the crowd!

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  • The Vinyl Beat: The Doobies, Rhinos, Secret Identities, Salsa, and Tutus

    Welcome to the November Vinyl Beat! This month at Casa Rudy weโ€™re enjoying a couple of Doobies, being overrun by Rhinos, wearing aย Tutu, adding some salsa to lifeโ€™s recipe, and operating under an assumed identity.

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