Thursday, August 19, 2021
Brain Dance: My Journey with Invisible Illness, Second Chances, and the Wonders of Applied Neuroscience
Shaun Paul McGrath, Set To Film TV Series
Gary C. Laney #1 Best Selling Author - The Power of Strategic Influence
Tuesday, July 6, 2021
Shaun Paul mcGrath An Actor’s life
screen, a reminiscence from his days as an authoritarian stage hypnotist, McGrath exudes a committed and resolute demeanor whenever it is his turn to shine in the scene. With characters that are both stoic, strong men and vulnerable victims, McGrath expertly fills the screen with a weighty presence that is both hard to miss and difficult to ignore. As an audience you simply believe the character he portrays, he goes wherever the role demands, as one Director aptly put it, “He has a superlative understanding of the art and craft of acting and can evoke more with one small look in his eye than many actors can with their entire range”. Director, writer- K. Collins.
From heist plots to action thrillers to slow burn dramas that put characters front and center, McGrath has done it all with flying colours. With each role, he has challenged himself immensely only to emerge more nuanced and more refined, “you simply cannot keep your eyes off him when he’s on screen”. Shaun Paul McGrath is an actor who thankfully, has finally returned to our screens, yet we feel he’s always been there, his style and on screen persona is recognizable and unforgettable. An actor of incredible range who can reinvent a character. With a plethora of shorts and feature length productions under his belt, he is now ready to embark on his latest role as the lead antagonist in a new upcoming TV series, set to film this year. When a script needs a great villain McGrath’s electrifying performance ensures a memorable antagonist for the audience to loathe or love. We anticipate to see much more of this talented Irishman in the near future.
Q : Your background, education, acting passion. Tell us a little bit about yourself
A : I come from a small border town called Strabane which borders the beautiful County Donegal, in the North of Ireland. Performing and being on stage was always a personal passion which really started from being a magician. Performing magic for family and friends and onwards to being a professional comedy stage hypnotist. I was able to combine both the magic and mind reading side into the act. I recall a friend of mine many years ago as we lined up to buy the newly introduced National Lottery in Ireland saying “you’re a hypnotist mind reader, surely you should know the lottery numbers”. Laughs Shaun. So throwing off the stigma of someone possessing, in their minds, a ‘special power’ was a daily occurrence, in a fun way. At school the PE teacher thought it would be more educational and more fun, to have me hypnotize class members and have a hypnosis show for the period. Pupils running around the assembly hall clucking like chickens and crying because they thought they had lost their belly buttons, would have been more in line with the drama department. It was actually the same teacher who got me my first professional paid gig as a Hypnotist, in the local golf club entertainments night. My first at aged 16. I remember getting paid three times the average weekly wage, for a two hour performance. So after that, education was now not on my agenda, I thought this is a better easier way to make money. Was it the correct decision? Maybe at the time but not when you consider down the line, and the future having no fall back.
Q: Was education a driving force to study acting at University?
I grew up in an era whereby, expressing yourself was frowned upon. Whilst attending an all-boys secondary school, being taught poetry may have been fun for some of the class, but it wasn’t for me! The teacher loved my poetry, unfortunately, and she enjoyed reading them out to the class to my detriment. She actually was able to get a number of them published, something the class never found out about, which thankfully help keep my reputation as a ‘hard-nosed hypnotist stroke boxer’! Laughs Shaun Paul. They jokingly named me ‘Poemy’ McGrath. Laughs Shaun Paul.
So for me at aged 15/16 I wanted to act, but drama back then wasn’t seen as something cool, certainly not as its viewed today. I really wanted to attend the after school drama club, which took place in the old dark dim assembly hall. The perfect place, I thought, as I would not be seen in full light from a passing peers. So I needed an excuse to stay late as none of my peers would accept my reason for staying after 3.15, was for extra study classes. Back then it was cool to have no school bag. Laughs Shaun. So I pretended it was detention. Anyhow, I was very nervous about doing this, as believe it or not, I was a very shy teenager, until I got on stage, something I could never really understand to this day… So I get to the double doors of the old assembly hall, it had two porthole style windows and peeped a look in…There was about 10 people there, not the ‘cool’ kids, prancing about like ballet dancers. So I mustered up the courage, pushed the door about an inch open, it creaked I freaked they all looked, and I shyly apologized as I backed away pretending I had ended up in the wrong hall.
I feel that was one of the worse decisions I made, as it took me another 15 years before I went and studied and trained as an actor at University. In those 15 years I had filled the void, being on stage as a hypnotist and entertainer performing around the UK and Ireland, attending radio interviews around the country. If anything, it give me a good grounding in life, in terms of experience and knowing about myself, which has helped me tremendously today as an actor. The world of acting requires you to dip into your reservoir of life’s experience, to help bring to life the role that you play. I remember asking my professor at university Gerry McCarthy, a wonderful charismatic old school, Eaton graduate professor, what’s the best book to read concerning acting skills?.. He said, “Go to the cafeteria and people watch… try and work out who they are, their relationships... analyze their body language “. As a school teacher myself, teaching drama, I use the same quote.
From leaving school at an early age and returning to education later in life and becoming a secondary school drama teacher, it has made me appreciate the decisions I have made in life’s journey of discovery, both in body and mind. My passion for acting has never wilted nor has my passion for passing on the skills to those who wish to learn about acting. More importantly, it’s the joy I get from seeing the person they become in the process of understanding themselves through the process of acting, no matter what age. That for me encompasses all the angles for my passion for acting.
Q : Your most successful project?
A :For me success is not about awards, although it’s part of the process of what ‘success’ means. Success can come from any budget production, but for me as long as the audience are touched emotionally, spiritually, even if they hate your character, you have affected them in some way and you have done your job properly. If reverence comes from this process in the form of awards, so be it … but it’s not the be all and end all for me. I’ll leave that to the materialistic film world of measuring success.
Q : Any upcoming projects?
A : I have a number of projects taking place, The Widow’s Moon, a feature which was shot entirely in the South of Germany is currently in post-production in USA. It’s a film about Ben Benner and his wife, played by the talented Hanni Bergesch, The couple are based in a remote farmhouse neighboring a village in the Bavarian hills. Ben an upcoming Irish international artist, integrates into the village. He is accepted and well respected alongside his German wife. After a while things don’t seem real, when both their good friend and Psychiatrist, Dr Gunther, played by J. David Hinze, reinforces for the audience, that thin line between art and nature, reality and illusion. From here as a viewer you begin to solve a puzzle or begin the journey of solving who is controlling who, or if anyone is being controlled, for that matter. I think the audience will stay hooked as the arch of the story evolves and completes. Finally their questions are answered at the end, possibly they will gather more questions due to the themes and issues, which is a positive thing. Such to the testament of the writing and directing by, Werner Schumann. The camera work cinematography by Elias Trad is mostly handheld, it captures and evokes a voyeuristic suspense feel for the audience, a style that has totally complimented the genre and style of the film.
We are also in pre- production for Carthago, which is a new 3X10 TV series. Shooting in Columbia. It’s a story about a British concentration camp set in the African jungle, time period is set in the 1940s, and my character Archie McDonald is the camp commander, second in charge to Lord Davidson. MacDonald an Irish character is renowned by the prisoners for his torture techniques. The storyline has many moments of humor and will have the audience laughing at the most inappropriate time, if there’s such a thing. They will also root for the detainees escape plans, squirming whilst they are captured. Different character connections and relationships are made amongst the international prisoners, producing entertaining sub-arch storylines. The well written scripts harbor a retro cursive style and humor, which will entertain and make the audience smile throughout. It’s written by an Emmy Award winning Israeli team, Reshef Levi and Tomer Shani. This type of genre is very popular, so it should hopefully have a positive following.
Q : What has been one of the most exciting achievements of your acting career so far ? A : I think getting back into acting after many years away from it. I decided to devote time to my Theatre school business, which took my undivided attention for several years. I was working with kids aged from 5 to 18. We had heavy choreography, movement and acting productions, It was a great creative time and it was a difficult decision to pass on the business, but if I hadn’t I would be in the position I am today. Life is like stepping stones, some you skip over and some you stand on for a number of years. It’s all positive, but I believe all decisions in life are meant to be, and we are guided to our correct destiny in work and life as we follow these decisions.
Q : What’s your goal in life you want to achieve next?
A : My next goal is to build upon the interest that I have acquired since returning to the industry. I have a new agent, The Bohemia Group, which are based in Los Angeles, and I have a wonderful manager Alex Surer, who is my guardian angel for all decisions. To be honest the industry is fraught with confines, which is ruining the creative industry. I would like to work with directors who are not frightened to take chances in the telling of their story, regardless of the budget or constraints of the people at the top telling them, you must cast ABC and do this and cut that! Too many great scripts are not made or cut or pre cast, because of too much control from those holding the purse strings. Some of our recent industry films have broken free from these constraints and restrictions, and with the help of well-known actors they have helped produce these creative projects, with the actor’s fee being invested back into the film budget. Being part of these projects is what the creative industry needs, and those which I feel happy and enthused to part of and contribute to.
Q : What motivates you to do your best work as an actor?
A : I like an actor’s director, the director who is more concerned with capturing the truth in the scene, the one who lets the camera roll and when he shouts ‘cut’ he keeps it rolling, all in the off chance of capturing more ‘magic’. Many top directors work many times with the same actors, because they have reached that synergetic stage of creativity, they basically produce the result easily, that they both desire. I like the director who pushes you mentally and physically to get the best moment of magic in your ‘purgatory’ or ‘heaven’ like world, yet still harbors that sensitivity to help you achieve the appropriate action and communication needed for that scene. This is a common debate amongst actors, most directors have different styles, they all like to work in their own way that suits them, and all styles of directing are valid, I like all types of cheese but my favorite is chosen first! Laughs Shaun Paul.
Q : Did you choose this industry, as a career, or as a hobby?
A : If you love what you are doing and getting paid then it’s a career. Most people start off acting as a hobby because the money is less important than the credit. We have many low budget film makers’ and productions out there, needing creative people to accept a lower fee or expenses only, to help benefit the film. Certainly for the actor at this point, it’s a hobby, but a good hobby. A hungry tired over worked cast and crew will not produce the desired result, but a creative well feed, well slept, happy cast and crew can produce magic. Even more so if the dynamic of the group is so, that they all believe they are truly witnessing the making of something special. Such will be the positive group dynamics that will have everyone, carry on to the end of the late night shooting schedule. Only when your focus puller falls asleep, do you know you’ve truly pushed the team! Laughs Shaun Paul.
Q : Your favorite actor ?
A : It has to be Daniel Day Lewis, I came across him whilst I was watching an Irish film. There was a scene on a ship whereby his mate sneaked up behind him and startled him, Lewis turned round and in a Northern Ireland accent mumbled in a perfect dulcet tone, with the correct combination of expletives’, well who is this Irish actor I thought?. He’s definitely from the North I thought. It was the most perfect Irish accent articulation I’ve heard to date. Little did I know at the time, I was witnessing a master technician smudging and exposing the ‘truth’, hence my obsession begun with the on screen technique of a truthful naturalistic acting style. Which by far, when you view his performance is only the tip of the iceberg, in terms of preparation for the truth. So finding the truth for me is an obsession which I enjoy, like a cat who plays with the mouse, I have fun and don’t lock myself away like Daniel, but that works for him and is evident in his final performance.
When I made Endgame, I played Martin, a kindly school teacher, who was in fact a double agent. There was a scene whereby I was being chased. I had to find a hiding place within an old abandoned house. Of course the scene started with me running into the house being chased. So I decided the only way to truly get my heart racing in these upcoming close-ups, was to run on the spot in the garden before the take, which I did but then I see a length of old Aerial flex, I twisted it around each hand to make the suitable length, as an ex-boxer, I was well versed on skipping, I continued skipping until Darren the first AD called me on set. To this day I’m proud of those scenes as I was truly shattered! The sweat on my forehead and breathing was real. In the torture knee drilling scene, I used screws nails hidden in my shoes and I’d push down hard on my foot when my knee was being drilled. This help give me the desired reaction and helped my performance in the scene, in my opinion. I also recall falling out with one actor who refused to really slap me in the scene, when I specifically asked him to do it. Once again a slap to an experienced s boxer is nothing, but truth in that moment was achievable, if all concerned are willing and all feel safe to help acquire it. I’m limited only by how much truth the other actor and director will be comfortable with. Daniel Day Lewis is a wonderful exponent of that style.
Q : Everybody needs time out. What do you do in your free time?
A : I like to play guitar and sing. From Irish folk style to modern ballads and pop. I have my own studio whereby I shut away the world for a few hours and sing my heart out. It’s just like acting for me. The lyrics tell a story and as a singer you need emotion to communicate it. It’s such a cathartic release, and it can actually help change your mood for the better. I also like a game of squash or Tennis. If I have more time I like a game of golf. At the end of the night what better way to relax than catching a well written and acted Netflix show. The likes of the now iconic Breaking Bad, or Prison break, both top quality well-written and acted shows.
Q : How can people find you and follow you online?
Links
IMDb https://www.imdb.com/name/nm1977244/
Twitter https://.twitter.com/shaunpmcgrath
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/shaun_paulmcgrath/
Google press release: https://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/5060813
Headline https://headlineplus.com/shaun-paul-mcgrath-hanni-bergesch-in-the-widows-moon-feature-film/
Wednesday, July 29, 2020
Right Now by Chelsea Perkins
The AIM featured song today is "Right Now" by Chelsea Perkins
Chelsea Perkins is an American singer, songwriter and producer from California. She is known for her eclectic look, undeniably unique vocals mixed with her playful alt-pop sound.
Chelsea Perkins released her debut EP You’re Busy independently in 2015. She made her major label debut in 2016 by releasing EDM singles California Dreamin with producer Fontaine Ivory through Armada Music and Night & Day with music duo Bormin through ElektraFrance (Warner Music France).
Chelsea is currently working with Outasight and Cook Classics on a new EP that showcases her natural sing song flow over multiple genres. Chelsea’s songs are fierce, female empowered and full of energy. They are real, authentic anthems that only this girl from Cali could pull off.
Find more of Chelsea Perkins
Tuesday, July 21, 2020
KGUP launches new Forum Community
Fasten your seatbelts! KGUP has just launched its brand new Forum Community!For people needing to connect with like minded individuals within the Music and Entertainment community and beyond, this will become the place to connect!
Keep in mind, this is a brand new page, so it is very empty, which is why you play a vital role in making it successful.
How can you help the KGUP Forum Community grow? It's simple! Help the KGUP brand by helping yourself! Post your own content in the Forum!
- Post about your Brand
- Post a video
- Post music content
- Post your website and/or social media links
- Post want ads seeking out talent, writers, content creators, and producers
- Post jobs
- Post For Sale ads as well!
- Post off topic discussions too!
- the sky is the limit!
And so much more... you'll just have to find out for yourself
And a huge thank you to everyone that jumps on board to us shoot this forum into orbit!
So, what do you think?? We wanna hear all your thoughts.
https://www.kgup1065.com/forum
We hope to see you there!
Thursday, July 16, 2020
Featuring "The Shadow" by Pressure

Featuring "The Shadow" by Pressure
This weeks All Indie Magazine feature song is, "The Shadow" by the band Pressure. Pressure is a Swedish Melodic Rock band from Stockholm. Released on July 16th, "The Shadow" is the band's third single. Their first English release after two prior released in their native Swedish language. The band consists of Simon (guitar), Emil (guitar) and Olof (vocals). The song talks about always being connected to your shadow.
More about Pressure
With band leader and guitarist Simon Siirpo Forsell at the helm, vocalist Olof Jönsson and guitarist Emil Salling lead everyday people around the world to overcome and embrace the pressures felt from everyday existence. Their lyrics famously show that there are two sides to every story - the good and the bad. Every song has a double meaning.
The band began with Forsell and Salling creating Swedish metal covers of popular songs like “Chandelier” by Sia and Daft Punk’s “Get Lucky”. When Jönsson joined the band in 2018, new songs were adjusted for his voice and gave way to the unique Skanian dialect you hear in the original tunes you hear today.
In 2020 the band release their first Swedish singles and are translating each song to English, ready for world domination.Find more of Pressure at:
pressure.band
facebook.com/pressuresweden
instagram.com/pressuresweden
Music video: https://youtu.be/ShaAjtf2pQs
Thursday, July 9, 2020
Addiction and Awakening: Tommy Botz True Tale of Relapse and Recovery
With much of today’s country music glamorizing cold beers and whiskey as the way to deal with pain, Tommy is instead using his music and lyrics to heal others - as music has healed him from the specter of substance abuse. Tommy’s uplifting take on things is a welcome departure for many stuck in the cycle.
From broken marriages to lost jobs, no car, and no license - Tommy can relate; living to drink and drinking to live became his routine.
Tommy’s battle with the bottle and the lives that he impacted is discussed on the lead single “Maggie”:
LISTEN TO “MAGGIE” HERE:
MAGGIE
Singer Rose Marie, Tommy’s fiancé who has stood by his side for 30 years, sings on the powerful gospel song “He’s Coming Back”.
LISTEN TO “HE’S COMING BACK” HERE: HE'S COMIN BACK
Botz has also penned “Teddy Bear”, a song written for a fellow inmate while locked up in an Ohio penitentiary as well as others.
LISTEN TO “TEDDY BEAR” HERE: TEDDY BEAR
Botz early interest in music led him to become the lead singer in two bands - The Chevells and The Caesars 5 - who won an RCA recording contract in a Battle of the Bands. But his early interest in alcohol led him down the road to dependence. After the loss of their guitar player and their record contract being pulled, the band stalled but Botz’s drinking problems progressed, ultimately landing him behind bars. Soon, Jail and misery became a way of life.
Since finishing his incarceration, Tommy has been off the streets for good; sober for over 16 years and living quietly at The Ed Keating Center, a halfway house in Ohio - after having “crawled through the doors” on May 3rd, 2004 as a “homeless drunk with nowhere to go”.
With several years of sobriety and working under his belt - he made the decision to go for his dream and finally record some of the over 200+ songs he had written over the years, six of which became the album “Family & Friends”.
Hear the full record at www.adrunksdreamcomestrue.com
For More on Tommy Botz, VISIT:
MusikandFilm.com/Artists/Tommy-Botz
Reverbnation.com/TommyBotz
Tommy Botz Music Facebook Page
For Press Inquiries, Contact: [email protected]
Friday, May 22, 2020
"The Draw" by WALLA
Featuring "The Draw" by WALLA
"The Draw" is a hopeful anthem for turbulent times,” said the band. “It is about loss and acceptance. When you’re dealt a bad hand in life… your choices are to be brought down by the situation, or to carry on. These are the moments where you feel like a stranger, even to yourself.”
WALLA have steadily grown their fanbase with performances at storied venues like The Satellite and Troubadour while making a serious impact online with over 33 million Spotify streams to date. Essential tastemakers ranging from MTV Buzzworthy to Hilly Dilly and Spotify’s New Music Friday have shown support for the band as well, not to mention a string of HypeM blogs that led to a #1 slot on the site’s popular chart.
WALLA continues to explore new directions sonically and visually. The band continues to re-invent themselves as they explore lo-fi, vintage sounds with introspective lyrics.
Ian Charlie, Alessio Balsemin, Mauricio Carcamo and Johnny Cisneros together are WALLA. “We feel like releasing it now would mean a lot to our fans given the current events. We will be releasing a home made, quarantine inspired music video for our fans as well as potentially touring when quarantine is lifted.” Written by CHF STAFF
Monday, May 4, 2020
"Same Song" by Beck Pete
Featuring "Same Song" by Beck Pete
Beck Pete is an artist who brings a staggering amount of emotion, authenticity, and talent to every performance. It doesn’t matter if she is doing a full set, acoustic, or anything in between her story telling is sure to hook you in. With vocals that make people’s skin goosebump and a level of passion that demands attention. Beck Pete is definitely somebody you should have on your playlists.
Monday, April 13, 2020
"If You Want To" by BEABADOOBEE
Beatrice Kristi Laus (born 3 June 2000), also known as Bea Kristi or professionally as beabadoobee (/biːbəduːbiːˈ/), is a Filipino-British indie singer-songwriter. Since 2018, she has released 5 extended plays under Dirty Hit, and has supported The 1975 on both their Music for Cars Tour and their Notes on a Conditional Form Tour in 2020. As of March 2020, Beabadoobee has over 300 million accumulative streams on Spotify. She was nominated for the Rising Star Award at the 2020 Brit Awards, and was predicted as a breakthrough act for 2020 in an annual BBC poll of music critics, Sound of 2020.
In February 2020, Kristi performed at the 2020 NME Awards after winning the Radar Award. She supported labelmates The 1975 on the UK leg of their Music for Cars Tour in February 2020, as well as their Notes on a Conditional Form tour of North America in April 2020. In April 2020, the song "Death Bed (Coffee for Your Head)" entered the Top 5 in United Kingdom, New Zealand as well as Australia, where it was certified Platinum. Kristi wrote on Instagram that she would be releasing an album this year.
Monday, April 6, 2020
"You Got Left Behind" by Jaguar Jonze
Featuring "You Got Left Behind" by Jaguar Jonze
Jaguar Jonze is Deena Lynch, Australian singer/songwriter, producer and multimedia artist who crafts songs of melancholic beauty woven with gun slinging guitar lines and a strikingly rich, yet intimate voice. Born in Japan to a Taiwanese mother and Australian father, Jonze is as eclectic as her cultural upbringing oozing influences by the likes of Portishead, The Last Shadow Puppets, Nick Cave and Angel Olsen. Jaguar Jonze and its adjacent projects, the narrative illustration project Spectator Jonze and the gender-subverting photography project Dusky Jonze are powerful ways in which Deena processes her most intimate vulnerabilities while empowering others to do the same. Straddling the worlds of music, art and fashion, Jaguar Jonze has been profiled in Style Magazine, spotlighted in the Converse // Vice Artist Collaboration, featured in Fashion Journal, covered by NME, and had her songs supported by FLAUNT, The Line of Best Fit, Cool Accidents and more. Signed to Nettwerk Records, the enigmatic yet vulnerable songwriter delivers defiant ferocity through smoky vocals that shift between fragile and forceful on her debut EP Diamonds & Liquid Gold.
For Fans Of: Japanese Breakfast, Courtney Barnett, Portishead, PJ Harvey, Jack River, CLEWS, Charlie Collins, Tia Gostelow, Ali Barter, I Know Leopard, WAAX, Holy Holy, Methyl Ethel, Thelma Plum, Angie McMahon, Polish Club, The Last Shadow Puppets, Angel Olsen, Sharon Van Etten, Rina Sawayama
"Your Light" by The Big Moon
The Big Moon are a London four-piece band formed in 2014 by Juliette Jackson. Their debut album, Love in the 4th Dimension, was released on 6 April 2017, containing a number of singles previously released on their EP, The Road. The album was shortlisted for the prestigious Mercury Prize in 2017. The band is signed to Fiction Records and have toured internationally. They supported the Pixies on their 2019 UK tour.
The band gained exposure as they went in a co-headline tour in October 2015 with fellow London bands VANT and Inheaven. Following that tour, they supported artists The Maccabees, Ezra Furman and The Vaccines. In 2016, the band signed to Fiction Records. In March, they release their debut EP, The Road. Later in March, 29 they released the single "Cupid". In August 2016, the group released a cover version of Madonna's "Beautiful Stranger".
On 16 December 2016, the band announced their debut album Love in the 4th Dimension, and released new lead single "Formidable".
They were play-listed by BBC Radio 1 in July 2016.
The Big Moon played on Marika Hackman's second album, I'm Not Your Man, released in June 2017.
On 26 February 2020, the band were announced as the Official Record Store Day Ambassadors of 2020.
Wednesday, April 1, 2020
"Just to Forget" by Claud
Featuring "Just to Forget" by Claud now streaming on
KGUPFM Emerge Radio 📻.
Claud (fka Toast) is the solo project of Claud Mintz. Standing at 5 feet tall with turquoise hair (hair color subject to change), Claud enjoys late night snacks and going to the movies with their friends. In 2018 they released their debut EP inspired by dorm room mac n cheese, dreamy synths and a janky microphone. In the last few months you may have caught Claud on tour with The Neighbourhood, girl in red, Bleachers, or girlpool. You may have also caught them bopping around the streets of New York, usually with a warm beverage in hand. Come back soon for new music :)
Thursday, January 23, 2020
Album Review: Rae du Soleil
Filled with ten very raw singer-songwriter anthems that speak from the soul, this album is super catchy, fun, and heart warming. It’s hard to turn the album off simply because of how utterly addictive it can be. From another track favorite, "Another Road" to her latest single, “I Love You Close” starts off the album perfectly and shows just how wonderful du Soleil’s singing voice can be. The song itself is about relationships and love, something that many have dealt with and is very relatable. She has recently released a music video for the song which also features a cleaver animation that gives it's viewers a subtle visual of her message.
The song “How I Feel” is a dance anthem in itself. The catchy beat makes you want to jump up and down, and is a song that you can expect to hear at any party. The album is stellar, all the way until the last song, “The Gallery”, which is an acoustic piece that showcases Rae du Soleil’s vocal range perfectly.Overall, Rae du Soleil's debut album is the ultimate listening album. It has tracks that will make you dance or you can just lay down and chill out to. Be sure to check it out on Spotify and Google Play Music.
Visit Rae du Soleil here:
Website | Instagram | Twitter | YouTube
Sunday, January 5, 2020
Podcast Review: Low Key Trash
If you're into Music, Art, Television, Movies, and discussions about everyday life and in you're interested in listening to casual conversations from actual consumers, Low Key Trash is a podcast for you. Located in Provincetown, Massachusetts, Hosts Burg and Jay will talk your ear off for 33 minutes.Low Key Trash is a fairly new podcast with only three episodes and don't let the name fool you. There is nothing trashy about Low Key Trash. Just listening to one of their episode was enough to catch All Indie Magazine's attention. The first episode is basically an introduction. Burg and Jay talk about living in Cape Cod and they touch on a wide variety of topics including talking about the Hip Hop music scene and culture. In this episode, you get to really know who Burg and Jay are.
Episode two is probably the most thought provoking episode. Burg and Jay really dig deep in the psyche as they discuss race, relationships, happiness, and even morals. Does teaching morals leave our children in a better world?
In their latest episode (Ep. 3), Burg and Jay talk about their home town of Cape Cod. They give listeners a bit of history of one of the more popular vacation destinations and the culture of the big, yet small town of Cape Cod. They also talk about the "underbelly" of Cape Cod that is rarely spoken upon. The cost of living is going up, the year-round population going down, and communities are dying while business is booming. This is a very intriguing episode if you know nothing about this town.
We are definitely looking forward to their next episodes and we highly recommend that you subscribe to Low Key Trash too.
Subscribe and listen to Low Key Trash at:
Spotify
Anchor.fm
iTunes Podcasts
Stitcher
Youtube
Monday, December 23, 2019
Interview with Gianluca Magalotti
AIM: First of all, where are you from?
Gianluca: I was born and raised in Rome, Italy.
AIM: What motivated you to come to the US?
Gianluca: While attending the Umbria Jazz Clinics 2015 program in Perugia, Italy, I was awarded two scholarships by Berklee College of Music in both bass performance and composition/arranging/production, that allowed me to pursue my studies at the college's main campus in Boston, MA.
AIM:Tell us about your music career. What or who inspired you to want to pursue a career in music?
Gianluca: I'd say that music surely pulled me out of my introverted teenage years. In the first place, it helped me growing up and overcoming the difficulties of my youth. Even though I can't recall the exact moment when I decided to make music my reason of living, I'm pretty sure that I mostly owe all the accomplishments I've gotten so far to my parents, who supported my studies, and to my first music teachers Pino Pecorelli and Marco Siniscalco, who were both equally crucial for my educational path pre-Berklee. In general, the inspirations that drove me to pursue a career in music changed over time. While yesterday I was just a kid chasing music for fun or for psychological reasons, today I'm an adult determined to make music in order to change the world for the better.
AIM: Who are some of your favorite music artists from today's era?
Gianluca: Through many contemporary artists I enormously appreciate, I must surely mention Pink Floyd, Radiohead, Nine Inch Nails, D'Angelo, Peter Gabriel, Robert Glasper, Hiatus Kaiyote and Pearl Jam. Although, as a bass player myself, I must say the names of Pino Palladino and James Jamerson, whose playing styles have always influenced me so much.
AIM: So, you attended Berklee College of Music in Boston. What are some of the best things you've learned from this school?
Gianluca: Oh I've learned many things during my time at Berklee College of Music, within both the social and the musical spheres. I can still recall something that has particularly stuck in my mind since the very first day... During the orientation week's opening ceremony at the Berklee Performance Center, the Dean began by saying the following words to us freshmen: "Look at your right. Now, look at your left. Remember the people sitting at your right and left. They are your peers today, and will be your employers tomorrow. Always strive to be a good person, respectful of the others around you."
AIM: Would you recommend Berklee for new artists?Gianluca: Berklee can be very tough, and stressful, and alienating. It's the perfect place for anyone who - like myself - happened to cross the borderline between being a music lover and aiming to be the music itself. I believe we all must keep in mind that music is one of the most powerful means we've got in order to spread a message, because it is capable of moving us both emotionally and rationally. I'd recommend Berklee for anyone who goes for a bigger picture in music, rather than for just a selfish sake.
AIM: Tell us a little about your professional career. What projects are you most proud of that you have worked on in the past?
Gianluca: I'm definitely proud of the work we did together with Dallas-based folk singer-songwriter Chavis Chance, who recently released a single called "Admit It" (available on any platforms online, make sure to check it out!), which I co-arranged, co-produced and recorded bass for. There'll be more to come from him soon. Also, I'm proud of the work we've been doing with up and coming Nashville-based soul artist Gamy & The Alterations, whose music will be on air in the new year.
AIM: You recently won an award. What was that for?
Gianluca: Yes. During my last two semesters at Berklee I was honored with two awards of the same kind. It is called Project Band Award and it may be assigned to a very few students during a given semester, at the complete discretion of the faculty and upon demonstration of excellent sight-reading abilities put at the service of special recording ensembles called "Project Bands," which are in charge of performing and recording - in mostly a single take - the arrangements written by students of different courses.
AIM: What are your current projects right now?Gianluca: Nashville's constantly growing and changing, a lot, and so am I together with it. At this time, I'm mostly working as a recording and touring bass player within very diverse music genres, for both national and Nashville-based artists.
AIM: Going into 2020, what can we expect from you?
Gianluca: I'm very excited about 2020, it'll be a year of significant innovation for me, both on the life level and on the music career level. You can definitely expect my name to grow a bit more in popularity within the Nashville's music scene. I'm constantly on the look out for new people, new music professionals and new artists, and my hunger for music is too irrepressible to go unnoticed!
Find Gianluca Magalotti at
https://gnluca.wixsite.com/gianlucamagalotti
Tuesday, September 29, 2015
So Fly: Interview with Juice Kumari
Juice Kumari, born Shakira Kumari Mahajan on 7th March 1987 of mixed heritage, Caribbean and Indian. Coming from two diverse cultures, I learnt to appreciate and accept what they offered growing up, discipline and confidence. At 15 I learnt what a scale was at StageCoach. Being there taught me the fundamentals of singing, the breathing techniques the skills you can do with your voice if you train it right. When I left, I trained my voice until I was 17 when I "found" my voice.Interview with Juice Kumari
Tell us about yourself. What was your motivation to become a recording artist?
Juice Kumari: I am Me. Fun, bubbly, crazy, sweet, sassy, talkative. What more can I say? Lol. There's more to me than being a recording artist - that's one element of the nature of being in the music industry. My motivation to become not just a recording artist comes from believing in God, challenging myself & being confident.
Why did you choose Hip Hop? What artists gave you inspiration to be in this genre?
Juice Kumari: Hip Hop is expressive, I am comfortable sharing experiences through this medium. There are many inspirational artists to list in this genre...my biggest have to be Missy Elliott & Ludacris.
As a female, do you think there are more or fewer challenges in Hip Hop?
Juice Kumari: I do think women aren't taken as seriously just like in Basketball or any other male dominant sport but each to our own. We have come a long way, we have stayed in our lanes and we inspire each other to be better & challenge ourselves each generation.
What do you like do when you're not writing, recording, and performing?
Juice Kumari: When I'm not recording, writing or performing I like to watch movies and listen to music.
If you could perform with any artist, living or dead, who would you want to share the stage or collaborate with?
Juice Kumari: Who would I share the stage with or collaborate with? Good question! I would love to share the stage and collaborate with Usher, Trey Songz, Beyoncé, Ludacris, Missy Elliott and many more!
What is in store for Juice Kumari? What can fans expect from you in the coming months or next few years?
Juice Kumari: If I told you everything that I'm going to do, it wouldn't be a surprise. So...just wait and see.
Find more of Juice Kumari
www.juicekumari.co.uk
www.facebook.com/juicekumari2 www.twitter.com/JUICEKumari
www.soundcloud.com/juice-kumari www.instagram.com/JUICEKumari
Thursday, June 25, 2015
Hollywood’s Number One Horror Film Ghostwriter Announces Release Date for Debut Novel
Today her team is giving us the exclusive scoop: “The Raping of Ava DeSantis” will be in bookstores worldwide on October 13, 2015.
American screenwriter turned author Mylo Carbia spent her childhood years writing to escape the horrors of growing up in a haunted house. Her very first screenplay was optioned only 28 days after completion, earning Mylo a "three picture deal" and the cover of Hollywood Scriptwriter in 2003.
Soon after moving to Hollywood, Carbia landed a deal to ghostwrite numerous horror film projects under her production company Zohar Films, quickly earning the reputation of being tinsel town’s number one horror film ghostwriter.
After 13 years in film, Carbia announced plans last September to leave ghostwriting for good and write a series of five horror novels under her own name. The first novel in that series - “The Raping of Ava DeSantis” is due out in bookstores worldwide on October 13, 2015.
Although the storyline (and publisher’s name) are still under wraps, sources close to Carbia say that early buzz from horror fans across the globe (including Mylo’s 50,000 followers on Twitter) are anticipating this book will be a huge success.
But the controversy surrounding the book has already made woman’s rights groups take notice.
“We are confident that males and females alike will enjoy this classic revenge horror story. Although the rape is the catalyst of the story, the novel is really about a complicated web of lies created in the aftermath of the event. But it’s the way Carbia weaves this horror tale is what makes this book truly shine,” said Lilly Ellison, publicist at Ellison PR. “It’s like nothing else out there, so we look forward to having the public be the ultimate judge when the book comes out this Fall.”
Carbia is ready for the challenge. Spending 13 years un-credited in Hollywood could not have been easy. One big name producer who worked with Carbia on various film projects describ
ed her writing as “Quentin Tarantino meets Stephen King” so we’re definitely looking forward to reviewing her first book.
In fact, we think she might even be Horror's Next New York Times Best Seller so stay tuned!
For more information about Carbia and her work, please visit www.MyloCarbia.com or read about her on Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mylo_Carbia
And be sure to follow her:
Twitter @MyloCarbia
https://twitter.com/mylocarbia
Facebook /AuthorMyloCarbia
https://www.facebook.com/AuthorMyloCarbia
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
Interview with Author and Film Producer Matthew C Martino
Matthew Martino born 27 October 1992 is a British Entrepreneur, Film Producer and Author. Educated at Shenfield High School in Brentwood , Martino has always held a passion for writing - He has always focused on educational writing and research. His first book Lets Fly which was published by DM Aviation was well received by pilots and aviation enthusiasts around the world. During his early years Martino showed all the qualities required to maintain proven success. Martino has lived in Brentwood, United Kingdom for seven years before which he lived in his hometown of Bulawayo in Zimbabwe.
Matthew: With Go For It I really hadn’t planned to write this book but my then manager (Simon Phetter) said to me I should write to keep my skills current and I began jotting points down and my mum being a business woman and with my business experience I was able to put something together. Im glad some young entrepreneurs are educated by it.
Matthew: I personally think directing is very challenging; directors have to motivate actors and have to also hold the storyline strong. When a movie does well the director is often instrumental into making it happen.












