Name of performance: Some Life “Champloo” Release tour
Venue: TSUTAYA O-Crest
Opening: 2019/04/27 (Sat) 10:00
Notes:
※ Opening 18:00
Start: 18:30
Limited number of tickets: You can book up to 4 tickets per an application. Application limit 4 times.
Type of seats and fees:
All seats: ¥ 2,200
Payment methods: You can pay at this reception desk.
Credit card: It will be settled when the application is completed.
Convenience store / ATM: Please pay by the time of display of application.
Seven-Eleven
Family mart
Lawson Ministop
Page compatible ATM
Delivery 【Delivery service】: We will deliver in about a week after payment is completed.
Seven-Eleven: Please receive at the cash register after 20/19/04 (Sat).
FamilyMart: Please receive at the in-store Fami port terminal after 20/19/27 (Saturday).
Julie Vallimont is, above all, a collaborator. Whether she is playing piano and accordion for dances, teaching burgeoning musicians, assembling players to bring to life an album of her original music, or creating multimedia visual art, Julie’s work aims to connect with people and draw out the best in them.
Julie’s new album Dark Sky, Bright Stars is a series of these collaborations. She says, “I could have done this album solo, but I was more interested in having musical conversations with people.” The album contains fifteen original instrumental pieces recorded with a rotating cast of some of the Northeast’s finest folk musicians: Yann Falquet (who produced the album), Anna Patton, Becky Tracy, Katie McNally, Andrew and Noah VanNorstrand, Mark Roberts, Mia Bertelli, Daniel Hawkins, Rachel Bell, Kirsten Lamb, and Màiri Chaimbeul. Some are frequent collaborators, and some met for the first time while making this album. Julie arranged her tunes with the aim of showcasing the unique timbre and style of each instrument and player as they interacted with her nimble, expressive piano and accordion. The result is a delightfully varied and human collection of sounds, recorded mostly live at Maine’s Great North Sound Society.
The tunes aren’t all dance music, but they are imbued with and inspired by that feeling, that sense of lift and movement and space. They are stylistic descendants of the Celtic, Quebecois, and French traditions that make up the New England fiddle repertoire, but they’re also something a bit different: they’re more conceptual, like vignettes, or even songs that just happen to lack lyrics. To write the tunes that became Dark Sky, Bright Stars, Julie drew from her joyful experiences in the music community, and also from the emotional source of years of battling illness. The album is something of a concept album, whose central message is about embracing life’s difficult and beautiful moments – the stars are brightest when the sky is darkest.
Julie herself created the album cover for Dark Sky, Bright Stars, which consists of multilayered painted papercuts. In addition to her work with papercuts and pottery, several years ago, Julie fell in love with “crankies”: scrolls of paper that are illustrated and hand-cranked on spools to create moving pictures used in music and storytelling. Julie calls crankies “a magical synthesis of visual art, songs, tunes, stories, and puppetry,” and has taught crankie-making workshops at several camps and festivals.
Before making her new album, Julie has spent years making a name for herself as a performer, educator, artist, and sound engineer. A longtime classical pianist and organist, she now focuses primarily on traditional folk accompaniment and the joy of playing dance music. She currently tours nationwide with her duo Buddy System, and has performed with a number of other bands and artists, including Nor’easter and Firecloud. Her newest project, a collaboration with Anna Patton, explores tunes, songs, poetry, and artwork in intimate, beautiful performances.
Fluent in a variety of folk dance music styles, Julie brings heart and creative, driving accompaniment to every project. She is also a founding member and board member of the BIDA (Boston Intergenerational Dance Advocates) dance in Cambridge, MA, where she harnesses the power of music and dance to build a community where all people feel welcome. Drawing on teaching skills developed over fifteen years as a natural science educator, Julie also enjoys teaching and leading workshops, and has taught at festivals and camps nationwide and internationally. An artist of skill and passion both broad and deep, Julie Vallimont is a uniquely creative person whose work delights and inspires.
— Isa Burke
In 2015, formed in Nagoya.
Members are DAIYA-TAN (Vo), RYOMA (B), KaeDe (Dr)
Indie released two mini-albums.
August 2017 "Unconfirmed Festival 2017" Grand Prix win.
INNOSENT in FORMAL (Innocent in Formal) is a Japanese four-piece rock band. Belongs to No Big Deal Records. Activities started at a live house in Tokyo from November 2017.
The band is composed of 4 people: Pooru す す す aka STICKY (vocals), CANDY MAN (guitar), Kuni the ripper (bass), and TOY BOY (drums) And CG are used.
Suddenly released artist images, release information, and MV in November 2017, and became a fictional cartoon band.
In January 2018, she debuted with the song "One for you", in which Sano Marii, who has provided numerous songs to Bokuryo Norikuri etc., has arranged. The music is distributed and at the same time ranked high on the Spotify viral chart.
In addition, it was also selected from the visuals and the concept, such as being selected as the top 10 young men's band of 2018 attention by Mithia, and it was already called "Japanese made Gorillaz" and became a topic in some.
In April 2018, the first mini-album "INNOSENT 0 ~ The night late show ~" including the aforementioned "One for you" was released on April 25. The song "I wanna ..." has been adopted for the Amazon Music Unlimited campaign song.
Nick Van Eede (born Nicholas Eede, 14 June 1958) is an English musician, producer and songwriter. He is best known for singing and writing the 1986 U.S. #1 power ballad, "(I Just) Died in Your Arms" for his band Cutting Crew, which saw international success including a top 10 placing in his native country.
While working as a hospital orderly in the late 1970s, Van Eede was discovered playing by ex member of The Animals, Chas Chandler, who sent him on a tour of Poland as support for Slade. Van Eede was only 18 when sent on the road. He recalls, "I went with a kazoo and an acoustic guitar and opened for Slade in amphitheatres in front of 18,000 people. He went down as a storm and had the loudest kazoo in Europe, because Slade took their own PA on the road!" His career continued with tours supporting headliners like David Essex, Hot Chocolate and Alan Price.
During that time, Van Eede released five solo singles on Barn Records between 1978 and 1980, but none of them charted in the UK Singles Chart. The first three were "Rock 'n' Roll Fool" b/w "Ounce of Sense", "All or Nothing" b/w "Hold On to Your Heart" and "I Only Want to Be Number One" b/w "Dicing".
Van Eede formed The Drivers with friends Mac Norman and Steve Boorer. In the early 1980s, they signed with a record label in Canada. They had a couple of hits there with "Tears On Your Anorak" and "Talk All Night", plus an album, Short Cuts. They had a support band called Fast Forward, whose line up included guitarist Kevin MacMichael. Van Eede was impressed with MacMichael's guitar playing that the former asked MacMichael to form a new band with him, however MacMichael could not commit at that time. After a final single release with "Things", a Bobby Darin cover, The Drivers split in 1983.
Whilst Kevin MacMichael was with Fast Forward, the band was involved in an auto accident which left all of the members except MacMichael unable to continue touring. Ready to begin working with Van Eede, MacMichael moved from Toronto to London, where the two of them gave themselves one year to sign a recording contract. They recruited drummer Martin "Frosty" Beedle, previously a member of the cabaret band on the QE2, and bass player Colin Farley, a session musician living in Spain. Van Eede came up with the band's name after reading an article in the British rock magazine Sounds, which described the band Queen as a "cutting crew", meaning a band that does not play concerts and instead stays in the studio recording new songs.
Choi Seungcheol (Korean: Choi Seung Cheol, with the stage name S.coups, Korean: 에스 쿱스 E Seu Kub Seu, Japanese: E Su Ku Pu Su) was born on August 8 in 1995, the leader of the SEVENTEEN group , as well as the Hip-hop Team under Pledis Entertainment
The meaning behind real name: Seung means clear victory and Cheol means fair. It means to win fairly.
He chose his stage name (S.coups). S is representative for Seungcheol and Seventeen . Coups means great success. As a rapper, you want a really cool stage name.
Choi Seungcheol (S.coups) was born in Daegu city, South Korea on August 8, 1995, he is the youngest son in the family.
S.Coups was selected quite strangely. The guy didn't want to play football after school so he hid behind a wall and he was also chosen by Pledis at the time. He was also a trainee in 2009.
Graduated from Seoul Arts Performing School on February 13, 2014.
There is no schedule or ticket right now.
日本、〒150-0043 東京都渋谷区道玄坂2丁目14−8 5f Map
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