Don Gato

Don Gato

Is an experimental group from Lima, Peru whose music defies classification, combining Fusion, Psychedelic and Progressive elements. The project Don Gato is almost more a project than a conventional band.

Founded in 2003 by Antonio Esteban, Don Gato presented its first CD: “ZAS” in 2005, recorded live at Mandala Studio and recieved with excellent reviews, including the Peruvian Magazine “Somos” and Germany’s “Rocktimes”.

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The group’s music has been broadcasted by radio and T.V. in Peru, Canada, England, Argentina, Bosnia & Herzegovina and the U.S.

Don Gato consisting of Antonio Esteban: Electric and Acoustic guitars, Miguel Angel Cruz: Electric Bass, Alexis Nunez: drums, Ang: vocals/minor percussion, played at the prestigious Jazz Zone (http://www.jazzzoneperu.com) before a demanding audience made up mostly by musicians and critics, requiring an encore, receiving an ovation and excellent reviews.

Miguel Angel Cruz

Miguel Angel Cruz




Alexis

Alexis Nunez

In most recent news:

Antonio moved to Kansas City in October of 2008 after a memorable farewell concert in Lima, Peru.
You can view the footage of this event at:
Don Gato’s Video Channel
Please subscribe while your there and show them your support!

Antonio recently married vocalist/keyboardist Elaine Cormany.
You can find out more about her at:
Elaines Myspace Page
Elaine is also now the Manager and member of Don Gato.

There are 3 new tracks for Don Gato at:
Elaines Myspace and also atDon Gato’s Myspace

While working on bringing Miguel Cruz and Alexis Nunez to Kansas City, they have recruited local bass stylist Coko Henderson, who has recorded with them on the last 3 tracks as mentioned above.

The NEW DON GATO offers a more accessible musical vocabulary, without abandoning the orginal Fusion/Psychedelic roots, allowing for Elaine’s classical background and her notable talent for arranging.

Eventually, the remaining Peruvian members will be in the US, and then Don Gato will be offering its wide variety of musical expressions, which will include modules or sub-groups within the project in the form of solos, duets, trios and quartets. A Classical guitar solo by Antonio will soon be posted on the video channel.

For the original DON GATO followers, Antonio says the Psychedelic thing will be kept alive since it represents the main reason why he decided to become a musician. He states its just that they are reaching for wider public using the unusual talents of Elaine.

On April 9, 2009 at 7:27 PM Antonio Esteban Said:

I must add that the original Don Gato format was the quartet which made its debut at the CCE in Lima,Peru with Kike Pinto, keyboards; Kamilo Riveros, bass; Luis F. Torres, drums and me on guitars and mino percussion.

Guest singer on Paruro St. was Fiorella Madue.

Also, the importance of the addition of Elaine Cormany cannot be over emphasized! Elaine is not only one of the few representatives of the true Bel Canto Vocal Technique, described by Peru’s Joni Chiappe as a Super-Singer, but is an outstanding pianist/keyboardist as well a talented arranger whose impact on our music will divide the Don Gato history into the before Elaine and after Elaine periods.

Visit their site for all the latest music and news!
http://www.myspace.com/dongatoperu

Be sure to check out Don Gato’s music at our Broadcasting Studio at:
http://www.mogulus.com/flipsidetomusic

Posted by: Tracy Lewis
(original written by:Tracy Lewis © 2008 and posted at: http://www.globalmusicstar.com)
Information and pictures provided by: Antonio Esteban

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Jamey Johnson

Jamey Johnson

Jamey Johnson

Jamey is a singer-songwriter not content with providing hits for others. He has a very powerful drive to sing, record, and perform his own songs the way he sees fit. His songs truely paint pictures into one’s mind allowing the listener, or reader to feel the songs in their entirety.

His delivery of each song is truely unique. There is no doubt that Jamey has a definite sound of his own. From the sad songs, to the funny sad songs, his latest album is truely lonesome. That Lonsesome Song record was recorded following a deep period of isolation, and a introspection. The composition of lyrical craftsmanship put forth into that album is beyond sensational. Jamey is truely a poet among poets, and a poet this world has not seen for some time.

My personal two favorite songs/videos are:

In Color
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UBk07l2aKrE

Mowin Down The Roses
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tHdk7-hkX1o

You can also watch these videos at Flip Side to Music’s broadcasting channel at:
FMS BROADCASTING

For more information on Jamey Johnson please check out:
http://www.jameyjohnson.com/

Be sure to check out Jamey’s music at our Broadcasting Studio at:
http://www.mogulus.com/flipsidetomusic

Posted by: Dave (HTH)
Dave’s Media Menagerie
April 8, 2009

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Anouk Stotijn-Teeuwe

Anouk Stotijn-Teeuwe

Anouk Stotijn-Teeuwe

Anouk’s mother was a blues singer, which peaked her interest into music. Anouk would initially sing at parties, and weddings with the band Shotgun Wedding. Prior to meeting a friend of her ex-husband’s, who initially believed Anouk to have talent, there were a few songs written for her. It wasn’t until September 5, 1997 when her second single was released, which ultimately remained on the top of Dutch music charts for many weeks. That single was titled Nobody’s Wife, along with her debut album titled Together Alone, which also ended up being a huge success. Anouk is currently teaching at the Conservatory of Amsterdam.

My personal two favorite songs/videos are:

Michel
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wLe2pHoT07U

If You Were Mine
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2FabvmJjI8

You can also watch these videos at Flip Side to Music’s broadcasting channel at:
FMS BROADCASTING

For more information on Anouk please check out: http://www.anouk.com/

Be sure to check out Anouk’s music at our Broadcasting Studio at:
http://www.mogulus.com/flipsidetomusic

Posted by: Dave (HTH)
Dave’s Media Menagerie
April 8, 2009

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356451

Taylor Hicks Interview
By Linda J. Alexander

Last edited: Monday, December 31, 2007
Posted by: Tracy Lewis

Taylor Hicks is all about the music. About the emotion from which the music arises. For the 2006 winner of Fox TV’s wildly popular “American Idol,” a bit of a current version of the “Ted Mack Amateur Hour,” everything else in Hicks’ life is little more than fluff. He doesn’t seem taken with himself, nor does he spend much time thinking about his newfound fame. It also appears that he doesn’t suffer fools well, and dismisses the hoopla surrounding the American Idol hysteria. He doesn’t knock it, but for him, it was a means to an end, not the “Big Deal.”

The “old soul” soul singer, who will appear at the Maryland Theater in Hagerstown on Friday, July 6, was born Taylor Reuben Hicks on October 7, 1976. A child of the deep south—his birthplace is Birmingham, Alabama—he grew up listening to rhythm and blues, soul, deep southern gospel. From an early age, he knew what he wanted to be “when he grew up.”

“Ya know,” he told this reporter, “I had a vision a long time ago, of trying to bring soul music back, and I’ve carried through with that vision.”

Indeed he has. His followers, strictly dedicated to their man, call themselves the “Soul Patrol.” This title started amongst his internet fans, and then Hicks himself encouraged it as the movement grew with each week he remained on the 2006 American Idol run. Every performance, as he moved nearer to the crowning of the new Idol, would end with an upraised fist roiling around in the air, and in a loud, proud, heavily-accented southern–tinged voice, he would chant through a lopsided smile, “Soul Patrol! Soul Patrol! Soul Patrol!!”

The crowds went nuts every time. He sold himself from the first moment he opened his mouth, and crowds are still going nuts. He has been solo touring the United States for the last year. With a voice that evokes images of Michael McDonald, or Bob Dylan, or even Van Morrison, being compared to other artists isn’t something that sits well with Hicks. When asked who he would compare himself to, he impatiently replied, “Taylor Hicks.”

But this is the crux of who this young man is. In many ways old beyond his 30 years, the silver-haired entertainer evokes a being who has somehow seen, and deeply understands, a world in which he’s never lived, an era that had just ended about the time he was born. This is part of his appeal, a definite piece to the intriguing puzzle which is Taylor Hicks.

Hicks is addicted to soul . . . soul music, soul in his music, soul as a way of movement to his music. Soul is his overriding lifestyle, and music has brought him through some hard times. It seems, in some ways, to have become his best friend. He gets into the music, he breathes in the music, he challenges himself to become the music—and little else matters to him.

So it is no surprise that when he was asked about his new book, on sale July 10th and titled, of course, “Heart Full of Soul,” he explained, “It’s about beating the odds, and finding your own voice. Those things . . . can happen with heart and determination. I feel like I’m a good example . . . and I wanted to share that. . . .”

His book promises to explain a young man who, on stage, is open and energetic, almost frenetic, yet, one-on-one, he’s shy, introverted, a bit difficult to draw out. His parents had a rocky marriage and early on, they divorced. He “went in whatever direction was necessary to avoid the fallout,” and, as he put it, realized “life was going to be up to me.”

Hicks puts everything he is, and everything he has, into his performance, as if all that could ever mean anything depends on how he expresses himself. He promises his audiences “high-impact soul aerobics,” and lets people know him through his art. Any effort to understand who he is off the stage is nearly impossible without watching him perform on the stage.

When it was suggested that he is “unique” in his style, he replied with passion, “Everybody is. Everybody is!”

Asked his thoughts about the entertainment industry’s need to categorize an artist, their rigid determination to put each performer into a defined niche, Taylor’s voice gained even more animation.

“That’s something that could be said to be a fault of our society nowadays, that we try to pigeonhole, try to categorize things too much, you know? . . . Doesn’t leave much in the way of individuality. . . . Radio, for example, is a great example of society trying to pigeonhole or categorize in that way. There’s not much in the way of individuality nowadays on modern radio.

It’s hard, these genres of music . . . I wish we could get back to the old days of where an artist is an artist.”

It’s important to remember that these words were spoken by a 30-year old. That many of us would believe he hasn’t lived long enough to talk about “the old days.” That many older than he would believe he couldn’t have enough life experience to say anything specific about “our society nowadays.”

It’s even more important to see that Taylor Hicks, winner of the ’06 season of American Idol, product of a broken marriage and self-directed adolescence, a man sure enough of himself after gaining national recognition to stand up to the national recording industry and refuse to allow his music to be categorized . . . this young man truly is an old soul.

2006 Winner of Fox TV’s “American Idol,” Taylor Hicks
copyright June 2007
no reprints w/o permission of the author
By Linda J. Alexander
http://twitter.com/LindaAlexander

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