The Go! Team – Get Up Sequences Part Two (2023)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 42:43 minutes | 545 MB | Genre: Indie Pop, Electronic, Female Vocal
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Memphis Industries
Over their six albums The Go! Team have taken sonic day trips to other lands – musically dipping into other cultures. But now on this, their seventh – they’ve bought a round-the-world ticket…. Benin, Japan, France, India, Texas and Detroit – all stops along the way. Wildly different voices from wildly different cultures side by side but all still sounding unmistakably Go! Team. Setting the course for a kaleidoscopic, cable access, channel hop.
Read moreThe Alex Hiele Paris Jazz Combo – Somewhere in Time (2023) [Official Digital Download 24bit/44,1kHz]
The Alex Hiele Paris Jazz Combo – Somewhere in Time (2023)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 01:00:22 minutes | 619 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Plaza Mayor Company, Ltd.
The Alex Hiele Paris Jazz Combo consists of founder, arranger and producer, Alex Hiele on bass, Steve Rice on keyboards and accordian, David Stier on drums and Rob Hencke on Trumpet. The quartet have released three albums: Once Upon A Summertime, I Love Paris and French touch. The albums all feature unique jazz arrangements of popular music from well known composers including George Gerhwin, Michel Legrand and various French composers. The quartet has played at numerous jazz venues, country clubs, senior living facilities and at private events in the Greater Philadelphia and New Jersey areas.
Read moreTatjana Ruhland & Oliver Triendl – La Flute à L´Ècole de Paris (2023)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 01:11:36 minutes | 627 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Oehms Classics
After the signal event that was World War I, gifted young composers trooped into the French metropolis full of hope. In 1925, the publisher Michel Dillard coined the term L’École de Paris (‘The Paris School’) in reference to the foreign composers then living in Paris, principally the Hungarian Tibor Harsányi (1898–1954), Poland’s Alexandre Tansman (1897–1986), Bohuslav Martinů from Czechoslovakia (1890–1959), Russia’s Alexander Tcherepnin (1899–1977), and the Romanian Marcel Mihalovici (1898–1985), all of whose works he specialised in disseminating. These composers came to Paris from Eastern Europe and all, with the exception of Martinů [and Swiss composer Conrad Beck (1901–1989)], died there. All five initially addressed the difficult task of translating their countries’ folk music idioms into standard musical notation. Several works on this programme are heard in their world premiere recordings.
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