Friday, March 23, 2018

'Kids in America' singer returns to music because of UFOs


"Kids in America" singer Kim Wilde said an encounter with a UFO in 2009 was one of the reasons she decided to return to music and make a comeback.

Wilde told the BBC after leaving the music business she got married and raised her children. However, two events pushed her to come back and give music a second chance.

Wilde claims she had an encounter with a UFO in 2009. She said she was sitting in the garden at her home with a glass of wine when she saw something.

"Then I looked up in the sky and saw this huge bright light behind a cloud. Brighter than the moon, but similar to the light from the moon," she said.

"I said to my husband and my friend, 'That's really odd,' so we walked down the grass and looked to see if there was any source. All of a sudden it moved, very quickly, from about 11 o'clock to 1 o'clock. Then it just did that, back and forth, for several minutes," Wilde recalled.

"Whenever it moved, something shifted in the air — but it was silent. Absolutely silent."

The singer said she thinks about the moment every day and it gave her an idea for her new album, "Here Comes the Aliens."

She sings on the album that maybe the aliens will "save us from the apocalypse."

"Perhaps that's completely naïve," she laughs. "Why wouldn't they be angry with us and fling us off this beautiful Earth that we're ruining? I can't deny we haven't been a terrible disappointment."

She said her career started to flatline in the 1990s when she became older and felt she could not keep up.

"I'd been in it since I was 20, then I was 36 and everyone, I felt, was doing it a lot better than I was. They had the ambition that I didn't have anymore. When Madonna came along, I didn't feel I could compete, so I said, 'You know what? You're best off being who you are, and that's going to have to be enough,'" Wilde told the BBC. "Sometimes it was, and a lot of the time it wasn't."

Wilde announced she would be starting her comeback tour March 30.

Friday, January 26, 2018

Music really is a universal language


Tin Pan Alley, the Brill Building, Motown – all names synonymous with the creation of often formulaic yet highly successful styles of popular music that swept out of the United States and spread around the globe. Without being aware of it, these mid-twentieth-century hit-makers underpinned the finding of a new study: there are universal elements in music that connect with people everywhere.

In a paper published in the journal Current Biology, researchers from Harvard University in the US and New Zealand’s Victoria University of Wellington say songs with a similar purpose – love songs, lullabies or dance music – tend to sound similar, no matter which culture they come from.

The findings are consistent with the existence of universal links between form and function in vocal music, the researchers say.

"Despite the staggering diversity of music influenced by countless cultures and readily available to the modern listener, our shared human nature may underlie basic musical structures that transcend cultural differences," says the report’s lead author, psychologist Samuel Mehr, from Harvard.

"We show that our shared psychology produces fundamental patterns in song that transcend our profound cultural differences," adds co-author Manvir Singh, also from Harvard. "This suggests that our emotional and behavioural responses to aesthetic stimuli are remarkably similar across widely diverging populations."

The researchers say they have found evidence of recurrent, perceptible features of three domains of vocal music across 86 human societies. These inform the striking consistency of understanding across listeners from around the globe – "listeners," the add, "who presumably know little or nothing about the music of indigenous peoples".

Among non-human animals, there are links between form and function in vocalisation. For instance, when a lion roars or an eagle screeches, it sounds hostile to naive human listeners. But it wasn't clear whether the same concept held in human song.

Many people believe that music is mostly shaped by culture, leading them to question the relation between form and function, Singh says, explaining, "We wanted to find out if that was the case."

In their first experiment, the researchers asked 750 internet users in 60 countries to listen to 14-second excerpts of songs. The songs were selected from 86 predominantly small-scale societies, such as the Fulani people in Africa and the Blackfoot Indians from North America. They also spanned a wide array of geographic areas designed to reflect a broad sampling of human cultures.

After listening to each excerpt, participants answered six questions indicating their perceptions of the function of each song on a six-point scale. The questions evaluated the degree to which listeners believed that each song was used.

The possible uses offered were: dancing, soothing a baby, healing an illness, expressing love for another person, mourning the dead, and telling a story.

In fact, none of the songs were used in mourning or to tell a story. The options were included to discourage listeners from assuming that only four song types were actually present.

Participants listened to more than 26,000 excerpts and provided more than 150,000 ratings. Despite listeners’ unfamiliarity with the societies represented, the random sampling of each excerpt, short duration, and the enormous diversity of the music, the ratings demonstrated accurate and cross-culturally reliable inferences about song functions on the basis of their forms alone.

In a follow-up experiment designed to explore possible ways in which people made those determinations about song function, the researchers asked 1000 internet users in the US and India to rate the excerpts for three "contextual" features: number of singers, gender of singer(s), and number of instruments.

They also rated them for seven subjective musical features: melodic complexity, rhythmic complexity, tempo, steady beat, arousal, valence (or "goodness"), and pleasantness.

Analysis found some relationships between various features and song function, but not enough to explain the way people were able to so reliably detect a song’s function.

Mehr and Singh say that one of the most intriguing findings relates to the relationship between lullabies and dance songs. "Not only were users best at identifying songs used for those functions, but their musical features seem to oppose each other in many ways," Mehr says.

Dance songs were generally faster, rhythmically and melodically complex, and perceived by participants as "happier" and "more exciting". Lullabies, on the other hand, were slower, rhythmically and melodically simple, and perceived as "sadder" and "less exciting".

The researchers say they are now conducting these tests with listeners who live in isolated, small-scale societies and have never heard music other than that of their own cultures. They are also further analysing the music of many cultures to try to understand how their particular features relate to function and whether those features themselves might be universal.

The study asks: Why do songs that share social functions have convergent forms? If dance songs are supposed to indicate unity, their context and musical features should amplify that signal. The research supports this idea: "Dance songs tend to have more singers, more instruments, more complex melodies, and more complex rhythms than other forms of music," the authors write.

Meanwhile, they add, if lullabies are supposed to signal parental attention to infants, their acoustic features should amplify that signal. Indeed, lullabies "tend to be rhythmically and melodically simpler, slower, sung by one female person, and with low arousal relative to other forms of music."

The researchers say their study raises two key questions about the basic facts of music.

They note that despite the geographic spread of the experiment participants, all could read and write English, and all had access to a wide range of music through the Internet.

This raises the question of whether the same assumptions about form and function will be found among people who are familiar only with music from a single culture. The authors suggest exploring this idea would result in "a stronger test of universality".

Second, they believe a stronger demonstration of universals in music would require "in-depth analyses of a cross-culturally representative sample of music from small-scale societies, informed by expert listeners, music information retrieval, and modern approaches from data science".

Nevertheless, they conclude, the present work demonstrates that cross-cultural regularities in human behaviour results in music that fits into recurrent, recognisable forms while maintaining a profound and beautiful variability across cultures.

Sunday, December 24, 2017

Independent musicians lack shows, venues to showcase original music

Ken Shiles and Cibon perform multiple shows each week in South Jersey, but they find one issue with every venue or show they play at: they're often asked to play covers rather than original music.

"We get around and do our cover gig, but when we play at Harrah's and other dates around here, 99 percent of them are gigs where we play cover songs," said Shiles, of Atlantic City. "There are a couple original music venues around here, but catering to what we're doing? I don't know. It's tough."

Shiles and Cibon, like other artists, are finding it difficult to find shows or venues to perform at.

The Boneyard Bar & Grill, which housed local acts and shows in Atlantic City, closed in the beginning of October. Another venue, Le Grand Fromage, closed around the same time.

Jerry Ryan is a festival organizer and the founder of the annual Elephants for Autism festival as well as the Elephant Talk Indie Music Festival, which takes place at The Watering Hole in Mays Landing.

While he said that there are still some places that house original acts, specifically in Hammonton and Mays Landing, venues are generally few and far between.

"From 2012 to 2015, we had, like, five different promoters in the scene booking bands and pushing original music," said Ryan, of Smithville. " There is a lack of venues and a drought in the scene. We're reverting back to the old days where original music is being forced out."

So when South Jersey bands can't play original songs, they head elsewhere.

Ken Shiles and Cibon will travel to Philadelphia and New York to play elsewhere.

"In my honest opinion, we could try and put original shows here, but I almost don't see a benefit in it as much anymore as it would be to go to Philadelphia," Shiles said.

The two artists recently took a trip to Nashville to check out local acts and play some shows. The scene, they said, was like day and night with South Jersey.

Cibon said that even the hole-in-the-wall spots had multiple acts each night. And the crowds would show up not to just drink and socialize but to sit down and really listen to an artist perform.

"You could hear a pin drop," she said.

The city had a real music-friendly atmosphere, with multiple artists playing in each venue every night, Shiles said. The scene was also less competitive and more accommodating.

"One guy told us next time we were there to call him and that we'd have a place to stay. It's heartwarming to see other musicians help one another," Shiles said.

At least one local venue is trying to create that same vibe.

Randy Beane is the bar manager for the Watering Hole in Mays Landing. He also takes care of live promotions. He's worked with Jerry Ryan to host Elephants for Autism as well as the Indie Music Festival.

Beane said it's all about a bar or restaurant or venue being willing to work with promoters and to host the shows. If the shows or festivals produce, they'll host them again. And if a band wants to contact Beane to play a show, he'll give them an available date and write them down.

"A lot of other venues are not helping, it puts the ball in my court and I can say ‘hey, I'm the only place available'," said Beane, of Mays Landing.

Beane said that shows vary: some more popular than others, adding that more music should pick up around March. He expected about 10 or more bands for the Elephant Talk Music Festival.

"It's great. Some bands I'm like ‘why aren't these bands on tour' and then some I'm like ‘you can probably stay in the garage.' Some bands that were not the greatest had friends there for a night to socialize and you can't even move," Beane said.

With the possibility of the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino Atlantic City, Shiles and Cibon hope that it could bring original music back to the boardwalk.

"I'm optimistic about that but I don't know how they're going to do it or if it'll just be saturated with cover music," Shiles said.

"It depends on how they work it," Cibon said. "It could open up and be an awesome thing for musicians in the area."

Monday, November 27, 2017

Coming together for music


The South Asia Regional Conference of the International Society of Music Education will feature talks on the importance of music in education

The three–day South Asia Regional Conference, organised by the International Society of Music Education (ISME) in the city, will see nearly 40 speakers from across the globe talking on music education, special education needs in music and digitisation. The conference will be hosted by co-partners at the National Institute for Advanced Studies (NIAS) from November 27 to 29. ISME is the premier international organisation for music education founded by UNESCO in 1953 and is affiliated to International Music Council in over 80 countries.

The theme of the conference is 'Learning to live together in and through music' and will feature prominent speakers from the fields of music and music education. ISME has built a coalition of partners within the country who are interested in music education for children with special education needs and the emerging field of digital humanities in music, says Vikram Sampath, who represents ISME in India. "The South Asia Regional Conference is one of the largest, bringing representations from the UK, Australia, China, Japan, Norway, Finland, Dubai, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh among others to interact with musicians, educationalists and scholars. The content will include a set of recommendations to the Government of India on how music education can be part of the new education policy and how lessons can be taken from other countries and customised to suit Indian realities."

The topics in the conference would hover around global challenges and opportunities with music in education programmes, customising educational practice to indigenous systems of learning, and using and creating digital resources for the multicultural classroom along with the preservation and archiving of our intangible cultural heritage.

"The conference's larger goal is to create long-term, sustainable projects in these domains," says Vikram Sampath, who is reperesenting ISME in India.

For example, as part of the discussions on the impact of music on children's special education, Bombay Jayashri will speak on how her own trust HITAM addresses children with Autism. Jayashri had noticed that music education and a strong exposure of music to children magically brings out better motor skills and makes them relatively sharper in their responses. Vikram adds: "There is only anecdotal evidence, but no scientific evidence though. We are therefore partnering with NIAS which is keen to incubate such findings for a scientific deduction at a later stage."

Prof. Baldev Raj, the director of NIAS, says, "We are truly excited with the prospect of this collaboration, which we are looking at from a long-term sustainability perspective and not just this conference. Creating a regional cooperation, interdisciplinary studies and building scholarship and research capabilities in the domains of music with various stakeholders, is encouraged at NIAS and this conference is the starting point."

At the Subramaniam Academy of Performing Arts that works to create music educators, Bindu Subramaniam and Ambi Subramaniam say that building a teaching community is central to everything that they do.

"We work to the cause of having high-quality music education," chorus Bindu and Ambi, who are excited to partner with IMSE for the world conference.

Grammy Award winner Ricky Kej, who will be sharing his experience at the ISME conference, says, "My album Shanti Samsara is also dedicated to creating environmental consciousness. The album was launched at the Climate Change Conference in Paris by Prime Minister Modi.

The songs were created with themes of coexistence with nature; there are songs about the importance of rivers, effects of human – animal conflict, and there was also a song that I created in the Pacific Island nation of Kiribati, which will be the first country in the world to completely submerge due to climate change. All my music is about environmental consciousness, and I have dedicated my life and my art to this cause. Songs that we are taught during our childhood are songs that we remember till the day we die. So I use my art of music to spread a message for our planet."

Sandra Oberoi, founder of Harmony Music School, says, "This collaboration between ISME, a world authority on the advancement of music education, and several advocates in and around India, will surely bring about a change for the better."

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

MANE: 'I love anthemic pop music'


MANE's new single What If The Love Dies? heralds the Adelaide singer-songwriter as an emerging new force in national pop music.

"My immune system decided to crash in Edinburgh and I pretty much lost my voice," says Adelaide indie pop artist Paige Renee Court, known as MANE. "I was just backstage napping before I went on."

Having just returned from a recent recording session in Los Angeles and a whirlwind thirteen date tour of the UK and Europe, Court is feeling somewhat worse for wear.

"I've been burning the candle at both ends lately," she says, "and because I've been in this funk lately. I'm like ‘hey everyone, lets go party!'".

Court has been incredibly prolific so far this year, performing to industry representatives and prospective festival bookers at the Made in Adelaide showcase at the Edinburgh Fringe.

Arts South Australia partnered with Scottish music business event organisation Born to Be Wide to showcase local talent. The showcase also featured fellow Adelaide artists Carla Lippis and Wanderers.

"Touring Europe forced me to be organised," she says. "The crowds were really receptive, just pin drop silence. I'd like to go back next year to the UK and Europe. America is a bit hard [to return to] because you have to get a visa and it's just so ridiculously expensive."

Her new single What If The Love Dies was produced in collaboration with Grammy and ARIA award winning producer Eric J, known for his engineering work on Chet Faker's breakout album Built on Glass and Flume's sophomore album Skin.

"I love anthemic kind of pop music… that's what I want to be making," Court says. "I've been listening to a lot of Lorde's new album, I think it's amazing. I think she knows all the secrets of the world."

The song itself is an exploration of desire and longing that was written in response from the personal experiences of a friend.

"For the most part it is personal, but in this case I could relate to it.  One of my friends was in a long distance relationship — the person lived here and his visa ran out and he had to go back to Argentina. They'd been together for a few years and it was all very hard. I just caught her on a day where this big thing happened and he didn't know if he ever wanted to even come back to Australia but she then decided she would go chase him."

"She was literally a mess crying to me and she said, ‘What if the love dies?,' and I thought, ‘That's a great line'."

MANE will return to Adelaide for a hometown show before performing headline shows in Melbourne, Wollongong and Sydney. As a rising new talent, Court is apprehensive but enthusiastic about the east coast jaunt.

"I'm kind of nervous, but excited. It's my first headline tour so I'm not really sure what to expect but I know I've done everything I can do. I'm looking forward to it."