Scott Matthew, “Every Traveled Road”
“With every traveled road- there’s a curse that won’t die- I know you’re not the only one- You’re the only one with a knife.”- Scott Matthew
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Scott Matthew, “Every Traveled Road”
“With every traveled road- there’s a curse that won’t die- I know you’re not the only one- You’re the only one with a knife.”- Scott Matthew
Moby, “Extreme Ways”, Live at The Fonda, Los Angeles
I came across this and could not resist the post. It is probably the best spy movie song; it outdoes all those Bond themes.
Stateless, “Assassinations” from the Album “Matilda”, 2011
We were on your trail
We strike like the lighting
Once you can see us
You’re already too late
Willie and Lobo, “Fandango Nights” from the Album “Fandango Nights”
Willie Royal was born in El Paso, Texas, the son of an Air Force lieutenant colonel. His father’s job took young Royal over the world including Turkey, Germany and France. At the age of eight he began classical violin lessons, quickly becoming proficient enough to become the concertmaster of his high school orchestra. Inspired by the music of jean-Luc Ponty and Stephane Grappelliand, as well as sitting in with Greg Allman and Dicky Betts, Willie traveled the world, absorbing numerous musical styles before moving to Mexico in the ‘80s.
Wolfgang “Lobo” Fink was born in the Bavarian town of Teisendorf. At 18, while in the German navy, he picked up his first guitar. Listening to an album by gypsy guitarist Manitas de Plata drew him to the music. Upon leaving the navy, he found de Plata in a gypsy camp in Southern France and spent a while with him and his people. Returning to Germany, Lobo formed a flamenco group named Lailo, touring Europe for three years and helping to popularize the modern gypsy sound. His searches led him to Granada, Spain, living with gypsies in the caves of Sacromonteand studying their ways. He traveled to Mexico in 1980 as a solo act.
The pair first met in San Miguel de Allende, in Mexico, where they were both working at Mama Mia’s restaurant. Willie on fiddle and Lobo on flamenco guitar jammed on occasion, searching for an individual sound. The owner of a local bar they were both playing at suggested they perform together.
Sexion d’Assaut, “Desole” from the Album “L’Ecole des Points Vitaux”
Espen Alfons and Sam Folkes, “Endless Harmony”, 2013
Photography: Espen Alfons (Shot on Nikon D5000 with Tokina 11-16, and 1 sequence with Sigma 70-300
Music composed by Sam Folkes.
Fitz and the Tantrums, “Money Grabber”
“MoneyGrabber” was featured in the “How ‘bout that?” segment of the April 23, 2011, episode of This Week in Baseball and in the first episode of 24/7 Flyers/Rangers: Road to the NHL Winter Classic in the Flyers’ clubhouse. It was also prominently featured at the beginning of the Criminal Minds episode “Safe Haven”. “MoneyGrabber” is also used in the 2013 commercial for New Amsterdam vodka. Professional skateboarder Mike Mo Capaldi used “MoneyGrabber” as his song choice for the Girl/Chocolate skateboard video “Pretty Sweet”.
Stateless, “I Shall Not Complain” from the Album “Matilda”
I see a boy walk in from the wilderness
His hair is soaked in rainwater
His eyes are flashing with the fear of the angels
He found them in the trees
The Invisible, “Surrender”
The Invisible began in 2006 with Okumu, who – encouraged by Matthew Herbert to record solo material – soon realised he required the input of friends Leo Taylor (formerly of Gramme and Zongamin) and Tom Herbert (a member of Polar Bear (British band) and Acoustic Ladyland) to make real the sounds inside his head. Herbert’s Accidental Records spawned the production of the band’s first official release, the one-track 7 inch vinyl “Constant” in early 2008.
The name arrived after the three began writing. The moniker is a nod to the writing of Irish philosopher and poet John O’Donohue, who articulated the notion that humans exist in parallel worlds – the visible and the invisible; one physical, one spiritual.
The Invisible’s second album, Rispah was released on Ninja Tune in August 2012, having been recorded in Brighton – with producer Richard File. The album’s first single “Protection” was premiered through online music magazine, The Quietus] Rispah was named after frontman Dave Okumu’s mother, Rispah Achieng Okumu, who died during the making of the second album. Rispah is, in the words of singer-guitarist Dave Okumu, “a love letter to grief.”
Tashaki Miyaki, “Get It Right”
This is the video for “Get It Right” by Tashaki Miyaki, taken from their self titled EP available on The Sounds Of Sweet Nothing.
Au4, “Mile”, Live Visuals
Live concert visuals for Au4’s “A Mile From Here is a Hole Where I Buried Your Love”