Consensus appears to be to list individuals alphabetically by their first name, band names beginning with "A", "An", or "The" should be placed alphabetically by the second word in their name, and names beginning with a digit should be placed in the 0−9 section.
Reliable,
independent,
3rd party sources must be provided at the end of the article request, and the proposed article title itself must be linked. Any request that does not follow these guidelines will be removed.
Before you save the page, please make sure to preview the page by clicking the box labeled "Show preview" next to the "Submit changes" box to ensure that the article is a red link, otherwise,
disambiguate it usually with (band) or (group) or if these already exist, then you can usually disambiguate it further by origin (American band) or by genre (rock band), etc.
Also, when adding a request, please include as much information as possible (such as webpages, articles, or other reference material) so editors can find and distinguish your request from an already-created article.
Federico Albanese (Composer, pianist)
[13][14] Italian neoclassical composer, pianist and producer, signed with Mercury Kx/Decca.
Gabriel Saban (Composer, sound engineer, pianist and clarinetist)
[15][16] French composer, internationally recognized.
Jack Fascinato (American Composer and Conductor. "Palm Springs Suite" and a range of televion and movie themes from the "Kukla Fran and Ollie" show to the "Tennessee Ernie Ford" show. (See
Jack Fascinato - Hi-Fi Fever Dream [Numero Group] ). Many references to him in other Wikipedia articles.
Josef Liebeskind (1866-1916) There is very little information on the composer, who was primarily a musicologist. He was born in Leipzig April 22, 1866 and died in Leipzig on August 10, 1916. He has co-authored the thematic catalog of the works of Christpoh of Alfred Wotquenne Willibald Gluck (1904). He studied at the Leipzig Conservatory with Reinecke, Hermann, and Jadassohn Sitt. He directed the publication of a large number of works by Gluck, Mozart and Dittersdorf.
Tom Brier (contemporary American ragtime pianist and composer; already has a Wikipedia article in Dutch, French, Finnish, German, Italian, and Swedish, see
d:Q16167056)
Bernard Labadie - Canadian conductor specialising in Baroque and Classical music. Founding conductor of Les Violons du Roi (1984), conductor of the Orchestra of St. Luke (2018-). External Links:
[27],
[28],
[29]
Robin James - Philosopher of popular music, capitalism, neoliberalism, gender, race, and "vibes"; author of 3 books
Judith Peraino - very influential musicologist, researcher, critic, feminist, professor at Cornell; a specialist on medieval music and also queer and underground musics of the late 20th century
Paulo de Assis - an interdisciplinary musicologist, experimental performer, philosopher of psychoanalysis and epistemology
Discographies
The requests are disambiguated in two forms; requests for mean we have no content and should, requests from mean the main article has a disproportionately large discography that should be split from the article to stand alone.
Allston Village Street Fair - Annual street festival that takes place in the Allston neighborhood of Boston in September each year. The festival is produced by the non-profit organization The Parents and Community Build Group, Inc. and is free and open to the public. The festival attracts more than 100,000 full-time Boston area residents and students and provides fusions of music from 2 outdoor stages, an international food court, family entertainment amenities, a vendor's market, and a public art street mural area.
[39]
Balkan Trafik festival - Balkan Trafik Festival, turns the Centre for Fine Arts in Brussels into a real festival hall, welcoming over 7,000 loyal visitors every year. The emphasis is always on music: major international artists perform alongside ‘living legends’ from the Balkan region. There is also Roma music, militant rock, soul wrenching jazzy melodies, traditional and electronic music, as well as films and theater, workshops and debates, wine and gastronomy. Each year, more than 200 artists play on the festival‟s different stages, coming from Romania, Serbia, Bosnia, Hungary, Turkey, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Kosovo, Greece, Albania, Moldavia, Slovenia but also France, the Netherlands and Belgium. The programme covers all the music genres, including local traditions, contemporary brass bands and rock and jazz. The best of the Balkans, four days in a row!
[40]
Bass Coast Festival - independent international exhibition of electronic music and art. Founded in 2009 and held in Merit, British Columbia, Canada. From being the first event of its kind to take a stance in favour of respect for First Nations by banning gaudy headdress to introducing harm reduction strategies long before the concept was universal (2015) and adopting serious environmental practices, this has been a staging ground for a great deal of progressive partying. (
[41][42][43][44])
Boston Fuzzstival The psych-, garage-, and surf-rock Fuzzstival is the brainchild of Illegally Blind Productions’ Jason Trefts to unite local bands across genres for two days for an accessible and affordable price. It has been held for a decade.
Drone Day - international celebration of
experimental and
drone music, that takes place every May. Since its inception in 2014 events have happened in every Canadian province and Territory, including 4 international events.
[54][55][56]
Italy Percussion Competition The Competition takes place since 2003. Every year international renowed percussionists judge in the following sections: Marimba, Vibraphone, Timpani, Sanre Drum, Drum Set and Composition. Together with the competition there are concerts, clinics and masterclasses given by the judges and invited guest-artists - the festival Days of Percussion Italy)Hosted by Italy Percussive Arts Society, a non-profit-cultural-organization and part of the worldwide network of "Percussive Arts Society". The Competition and the festival take place in Montesilvano Pescara Italy - annual in September (
[60][61][62][63][64])
KamerFEST Music Festival - KamerFEST Music Festival is a 3-day Music Festival which occurs in Atlanta, GA. This music festival features some of the biggest Recording Artists from Cameroon, Central Africa, who travel to the United States to showcase their talent to an international audience. The KamerFEST Music Festival includes Music Contests, a Music Business Workshop, an All-White Welcome Event, and the main event, the Live Concert.
[65][66][67][68][69][70][71])
Metal Swap Meet - yearly event held in San Diego that focuses on heavy metal vendors, artists, bands, and meet and greets (
[73][74][75][76])
Middle of the Map Fest -
[77] Middle of the Map Fest - taking place in Kansas City, Missouri - annually curates and cultivates the unique arts and creative culture of the Midwest, bringing together a sense of community in local and national talent in an annual festival featuring music, forum and film. In addition to
The Record Machine and
Ink magazine, the Music Fest is also curated by promoters Steve Tulipana - The Record Bar, Neill Smith - The Riot Room and Terry Taylor -
Mammoth Production. 2014's Music Fest took place April 3rd - 5th in Kansas City's Westport entertainment district. The three-day fest featured more than 120 local, national, international and emerging artists including
The Get Up Kids,
of Montreal,
Gary Numan,
J. Roddy Walston & the Business,
Kate Nash,
Del the Funky Homosapien and many more. Venues for the music fest included: The Record Bar, The Riot Room, Ernie Biggs and Westport Saloon, as well as an expanded outdoor stage. "Middle of the Map Fest puts KC, area artists on the map"
[78]
Music for All National Festival A festival held in Indianapollis, Indiana in March includes the National Concert Band Festival, the Middle School National Festival, the Sandy Feldstein National Percussion Festival, the Orchestra America Festival, the Chamber Music Festival, the National Choir Festival, and features the Honor of Orchestra America, the Jazz Band of America, and the Honor Band of America.
[80]
Quest Festival - An annual 3-day camping music festival featuring live and electronic music, arts, workshops, cinema and performances. Held in Son Tinh Camp, Ba Vi,
Vietnam, Quest Festival is the country's largest music festival
[86][87][88][89][90][91][92][93][94][95][96]
Slingshot Festival - Athens, GA annual music festival that serves as a showcase for innovative music, art, and technology in one of the most famous music towns in the US. The talent gets more premiere every year.
[98][99][100]
Women Of Rhythm A series held in different parts of
India. Started in 2016. Highlights and promotes percussionists and drummers from across the country by curating collaboration among the musicians. 5 editions have been concluded in cities like
MumbaiPuneHyderabadSurat and has featured artists from 15 to 60 years of age.
[107][108]
Grapevine Gathering A yearly event held all across
Australia that started in 2017. It combines the worlds of music and wine across the country's best winery for a day full of dancing and drinking
[109][110][111][112]
Childen's metal - a subgenre of
heavy metal music, mainly for children. The first band ever to start this genre is the UK-based group
Sharky Sharky[113], which was formed in 2013 and makes a combination of pop, rock, punk and power metal with light-hearted fantasy themed lyrics, mostly about oceans and sharks.
Alternative Music Hub - An alternative music website that services Australian music fans
BestMusicLive - An online music webzine covering the most popular genres of music including editorial, photographs, and videos
[121]
BestMusicLiveTV - The YouTube Channel associated with BestMusicLive, providing weekly vidoe coverage of the top stories in music
[122]dead link
buffaBLOG -
[123] - An award-winning [20] music and culture blog chronicling the Western New York Music scene often referenced for local music happenings
Chybucca Sounds - British-based daily internet publication devoted to music criticism;
[124]
Drooble - Drooble is an online social media and social networking service for musicians that enables its users to search for and connect with other musicians from all over the world, promote their music and develop their talents. The idea for Drooble was conceived by founder and CEO Melina Krumova in 2012. Since then, the company has been working towards its goal of giving a voice to all musicians, no matter their level of skill and popularity, and creating a place where people from all over the world can come together to work on music projects, discuss their work, develop their talents and creative musical potential.
[128][129][130][131][132]
DrumSoloArtist.com - A drummers website with a huge drummers and techniques lists and perhaps one of the strongest online drummers communities
LunchBox - LunchBox is Australia's leading independent music feature site championing Australian, New Zealand and Tasman musicians. Covering interviews, live reviews, album reviews, live music galleries, opinion pieces and more
[135]
Lyrical Lemonade (Music Blog and media company that is based in Chicago Illinois. Created by
Cole Bennett, Lyrical Lemonade has grown from a personal blog into a music video production and concert organizer.)
Moxie and Mayhem - Music blog with emphasis on indie, folk, and alternative. Interviews up-and-coming bands, reports music news, and reviews CDS. Growing gathering.
[136][137]
Music Ally - London-based music intelligence company focused on tech and digital spaces. Founded in 2002 with industry-level paying readership and subscribers (Universal Music Group, Sony Music, Vistex, and more at corporate subscription level). Media partner for major industry events (MIDEM, Reeperbahn and more). Content includes a daily publication, a bi-weekly report on digital tools and campaign highlights, and a monthly comprehensive report on a specific industry subject.
[138][139][140][141][142][143]
Music Life Radio - Music Interview podcast featuring Jason Everman (Nirvana, Soundgarden), Stephen Tobolowsky, Kurdt Vanderhoof (Metal Church), Marc Maron, Jon Herington (Steely Dan), and more.
[144]
Pinpoint Music – music
webzine; focuses on music reviews and live concerts; features include professional music videos (both live and set) and photography;
[145]
Pop 'Stache – A Chicago-based online music journalism publication. Their motto reads, "at Pop 'Stache, we get off on music."
[146]
Runolaulu a Finnish song tradition, related to Estonian Regilaul.
Scene Point Blank - heavy music webzine celebrating 10 years (punk/hardcore/metal/hip-hop/more:
[148]. I have an article ready for submission if this is deemed acceptable.
Lorenspb (
talk) 21:25, 19 September 2013 (UTC)Replyreply
UK sheet music charts (Charts based on sales of sheet music for popular songs were published in the UK from the 1930s to the 1960s - prior to 1952, they were the only regular music charts in the UK, published in Melody Maker and the New Musical Express, also broadcast on Radio Luxembourg) [21][22][23][150]Billboard magazine issues which include these charts are also available to view for free. NB. I wasn't sure which category this request belonged in.
URB Press - is a webzine completely devoted to US Black Music and culture: rap, hip hop, r&b, soul, jazz
[151][24][25][26]
VogueFM - international online radio station and online community
Latin chord progression - The "i bVII bVI V" chord progression (e.g., E-minor D-Major C-Major B-Major), routinely used in Latin American music. Please see
Andalusian cadence which seems to be the origin of the Latin Progression.
Literalism (music) - late-20th-century method of composing music using physical representations of elements of musical composition to create everything from classical orchestral pieces to apparently formless moments of noise
Baldwin SD-10 - historic competitor to Steinway Concert Grand - the SD-10 was the official piano of the Boston Symphony, the Cincinnati Symphony, the Metropolitan Opera, the Tanglewood Festival, the piano preferred by Leonard Bernstein, Andre Previn, Walter Gieseking, Earl Wild, Jorge Bolet, Abbey Simon and others.
C.BAER - Italian piano manufacturer of the early 1800s
California Audio Technology[154] - Founded in 1990, CAT - California Audio Technology is the global engineering and custom audio manufacturing firm internationally recognized as the world's premier craftsmen of custom ultra high performance loudspeakers, amplifiers, DSP's
Clay Whistle - currently redirects to
Whistle - Ceramic whistles (such as "Clay Bird Whistles"), typically shaped as humans or animals, are known from all around the world. In Danish such whistles are known as "piv-i-røv" ("toot-in-ass") whistles because one whistle into the rear end of them. I have found a few references to such clay whistles in
Ceramics of Jalisco,
Emaischen,
Filimonovo toy, and other examples could probably be found. Yet a comprehensive Wikipedia main article on clay whistles is yet to be written.
List of Fender players - There's a list of Gibson Player and a list of strato/telecaster players but there are much more Fender Players out there. N.B. Stratocaster and Telecaster are Fender guitars, thus people who play them would be "Fender Players."
Focusrite Forte - mixing console, very specialized and intricate, only two were produced
Fresher Guitars - Japanese made guitars from the late 1970s and early 80's. Many of which were involved in the so-called "lawsuit" guitars, when multiple Japanese manufacturers were sued by the Gibson corporation for copying their designs and using equal or better materials and selling for a fraction of the price.
G-60A - Guitar produced by Yamaha late '60s, early '70s
Groove Tubes - A maker of amplifiers, tubes, and other gear. Name purchased by Fender, who releases "Groove Tubes" tubes for amps, but was once an independent boutique company.
Isoka Flute - A six-holed gourd flute aerophone commonly made in artisan shows and sold inexpensively. They are similar to the
ocarina which Isoka Flute currently redirects to.
Kramer Striker - Guitar Built by Kramer Guitars from 1986-1991. also made a controller for Guitar Hero Video game. Iconic status as #1 selling guitar in 1987.
Muro Box - An electronic music box. Comes with app so you can compose your own music and make playlists of other people's music. Made by Tevofy Technology Ltd. (
[157])
Q-tuner - World's first neodymium pickup for guitar or bass
Rene Lacote - (1785-1855) Romantic guitar luthier from Paris, France. His guitars were played by Fernando Sor, Dionisio Aguado, Ferdinando Carulli, and Napoleon Coste.
ReQuest - company that makes and sells high-end music servers for custom installation which are based on combinations of software and hardware.
Roland MV-8800 - software/hardware hybrid all-in-one sampler unit made by Roland.
Roland JP-08 - Roland synthesizer module reminiscent of Jupiter-8
Roland JU-06 - Roland synthesizer module reminiscent of Juno-6
Schalmei - A brass instrument popular in Germany around the late 19th century and the early 20th century. Currently redirects to
Shawm, which is a completely different instrument.
Shaman Drum - A drum, double or single headed used by shamans to achieve trance or other ceremonial uses
Udderbot - A slide jug invented in 2005 by Jacob A. Barton
Upton Bass - American Double Bass manufacturer. Upton Bass specializes in building award-winning custom handmade double basses with designs developed over years of working closely with some of the worlds finest upright bass players, such as Gary Karr, Eric Revis, John Patitucci, Marc Johnson, Travis Book, Todd Parks, Lynn Seaton, etc.
[161]
Wilcox-Gay Corporation Manufacturer of radios, tape decks, reel-to-reel systems, televisions, police radios, record players, transcription recorders and a pioneer in home recording, recordio was their first line of hardware.[27]
Rare Americans (American alt/indie rock band) (
https://www.rareamericans.com/). As of 2021, they have over 200 million cross-platform streams of their music. They have a reputation for solid storytelling in their lyrics and music videos, especially in songs like "
Gas Mask" and "
Ryan & Dave".
Santa Rosa Symphony (Californian regional symphony orchestra. The 80-member professional, union orchestra is the resident orchestra at Weill Hall at Green Music Center.1 The Symphony, established in 1927, is also the third-oldest professional orchestra in California and has one of the most comprehensive music education programs in the state. The orchestra received national recognition with a First Place Award for Adventurous Programming in the 2012-2013 season from American Society of Composers Authors and Publishers. Season 2018-2019 will see the Symphony's fifth music director in its, then, 91-year history. In addition to its seven classical music sets (totaling 28 concerts per season), the Symphony produces a four-concert Pops series, three-concert Family series, youth concerts and an annual community concert. The Symphony's youth ensembles include: SRS Youth Orchestra, Young People's Chamber Orchestra, Repertory Orchestra and Preparatory Orchestra. Its Education programs, which reach nearly 23,000 students include: Simply Strings, Elementary School Listening Program, free concerts for youth in Weill hall and in schools, It's Elementary! music education in local schools. HISTORY: Founded by Music Director George Trombley in 1928, with 32 members, its first concert, held in the Elks Club in downtown Santa Rosa was so well-received that they moved to the much larger Santa Rosa High School auditorium, where they remained until 1982. The Symphony then performed at the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, until the completion of the Green Music Center in 2012. Music Directors, in order: George Trombley 1928-1957, Corrick Brown 1957-1994, Jeffrey Kahane3 1995-2006, Bruno Ferrandis4 2006-201.7 Grants: Hewlett Foundation, the James Irvine Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, the Heller Foundation and the Community Foundation Sonoma County. Awards: Met Life Award for Community Engagement, 2002, for its collaboration with Santa Rosa High School on Sir Michael Tippett's A Child of Our Time multi-media performance project and documentary film. First place for adventurous programming from American Society of Composers Authors and Publishers 2012-2013. Member:
Association of California Symphony Orchestras)(1 Petaluma Argus Courier:
[173] New York Times:
[174] SFGate:
[175][176] Wikipedia:
Sonoma State University 2
[177] 3
[178] 4
[179][180][181] Reviews in Metropolitan paper, San Francisco's SFGate:
[182] and
[183][184] StarkInsider:
[185])
Solo musicians
Melisande Pope is a Boston-born composer, producer, sound designer, and multi-instrumentalist. She currently freelance composes for Made Music Studio and
Netflix Music Lab, she releases music as a solo artist and shares her playful love for all things music on social media. Pope has composed for national television through Big Foote Music + Sound and Butter Music & Sound, and she has recorded and toured as lead guitarist for emo-lounge artist Raavi, garage-pop singer Maya Lucia, folk-rock quintet Yankee & the Foreigners, and retro-rock group White Elephant. She graduated from
Berklee College of Music as a recipient of the City Music Full-Tuition Scholarship. A massive picture of her playing guitar is featured at Berklee on the side of the
Stan Getz Library on
Massachusetts Avenue. She has worked as a production assistant for
James Taylor.
Gaetano Dellepiane Peruvian-American singer-songwriter and author of the first quantum-future prediction musical artwork. [28] Inventor of the first crypto-sonorous currency in the world (2017). [29] Founder of the international catalogue of the cajón instrument (2018). [30] Owner of the Gaetanotto record label (2011–Present). [31]
Pawel Siwczak, British / Polish harpsichordist, fortepianist and conductor, teacher[36] at the
Royal Academy of Music in London, director of Bach Club. He specializes in historical performance, but loves reaching out beyond his disciplines, especially in collaborations with other artists. His work with Danny L Harle of PC Music was praised by BBC among "Five of the weirdest live sessions ever"[37]. He directes Royal Academy of Music Baroque Ensemble, notably in a Gresham College lecture-concert[38] with Professor Christopher Hogwood. He runs a concert series featuring period instruments in old and new repertoire in South-West London (first as Music at St Michael's, then London Concert Society, now merged into Bach Club) and takes part in Wandsworth Arts Fringe Festival[39][40] regularly. Pawel Siwczak founded Bach Club, a grass-root baroque music venue in Wandsworth, London (2020-2022), now boutique record label, concert and masterclass promoter and home to an ensemble (Bach Club Soloists). He released a music video with Beethoven's Adagio from "Moonlight Sonata" played on a copy of a historical piano[41][42], as well as other recordings. He featured on BBC Radio, Riverside Radio, The Strad[43]. He performs in the UK and internationally. He recently commissioned a new piece for the harpsichord and modern chamber ensemble from Héloïse Werner. Pawel Siwczak is a Fellow of the Royal Societ of Arts. He was elected ARAM (Associate of the Royal Academy of Music) for his services to arts and music. Some other media mentions: [44][45][46][47]
Tom Speight - British singer-songwriter based in London. Tom's songs from debut .album 'Collide' have been regular features of BBC Radio 2, including Graham Norton's featured artist of the year in 2018
[196]. He also headlined Glastonbury's Acoustic stage in 2019
[197] and had a number one single in Brazil before launching his debut album
[198]
Tim Heintz, Pianist and composer from Los Angeles, CA.
Chameleon. That truly describes keyboardist/composer Tim Heintz. As an artist, sideman, songwriter, composer, and programmer, Tim has blended his background in jazz, rock, R&B and church music to be known as one of the most versatile musicians in the LA music business.
Becoming known as a go-to session musician during the ‘80s and ‘90s, his work as a keyboardist and synth programmer was always in demand, working for artists as diverse as Jessica Simpson, Al Jarreau, Emerson, Lake and Palmer, Natalie Grant, Aretha Franklin, and Barry Manilow. Tim’s creative efforts also led to him being involved in many projects as an arranger and songwriter. His songs have been recorded by artists such as Lee Ann Rimes (Desperate Housewives Soundtrack), Sara Evans and the Warren Bros (the film “Where the Heart Is”), John Tesh, George Benson and many others. As a film composer, Tim has contributed music to box-office hits like “Enemy of the State”, “One Hour Photo”, and “Gone in 60 Seconds”. Tim has also written, produced, and arranged music for hundreds of TV and radio commercials, Disney and Universal theme parks, and several TV series.
As an artist, Tim released 5 albums during 1987-1992 in what was the fast-growing smooth jazz genre. His song “Dear Jacqui” has remained a standard in that format and is still played on radio stations around the world every day. ,
[199],
[200][201]
Nathan Sharp, American YouTuber, voice actor, musician, and label owner.
[202]
Cities and Memory -
[203]; one of the world's biggest sound projects, connecting musicians and artists with the aim of remixing the world, one sound at a time. The project covers more than 100 countries with over 5,000 sounds and more than 1,000 contributing artists and has received worldwide global media coverage in notable news outlets, for instance;
[204];
[205];
[206];
[207]
Documentary Songwriters -
[208] Documentary Songwriting is a unique, step-by-step method of co-writing music that fosters empathy, boosts self-confidence and strengthens community. It demystifies creativity and allows someone with no musical background to express themselves through high-quality songs. Documentary Songwriting has been used to enhance understanding between Turkish and Greek Cypriots at the UN Buffer Zone on Cyprus, to tell the stories of refugees from the Middle East seeking asylum in Belgium, and to tell women’s #MeToo stories. Projects have been featured on TEDx and on NPR’s Morning Edition.
[209];
[210];
[211]
Europe Jazz Network A Europe-wide nonprofit association of over 140 festivals, clubs, concert venues and national/regional organisations who specialise in creative music, contemporary jazz and improvised music supported by the Creative Europe programme of the European Union (
http://www.europejazz.net/)
The Innervenus Music Collective - American metal, punk, industrial, doom collective; based in Pittsburgh, PA; established; 2001; strives to work with like minds in putting out records, booking shows, advertising, creating merchandise; a 99.9% D.I.Y. operation, family owned and orchestrated;
[217]
International Confederation of Music Publishers -
International Confederation of Music Publishers is the only international trade association that represents the interests of the global music publishing community. Members encompass individuals and music publishing associations from around the world, including independent multinational and international companies,
regional and national music publishers.Their work includes addressing intellectual property and copyright issues in six primary areas of focus, including Free Trade Agreements, Global Repertoire Database, Exceptions to copyright and WIPO, Collective Rights Management, Europeana and Orphan Works, Private Copying Levies and Cloud Computing. The organisation publishes a bimonthly newsletter, entitled "Global Briefing" that summarises industry news from around the world. Their head office is located in Zurich, Switzerland, while its secretariat operates from Brussels, Belgium -
[219]
Manhattan Concert Productions - is dedicated to excellence in music making, hospitality, and travel details. Manhattan Concert Productions is a New York City-based production company in its 16th season of performance opportunities for deserving choirs, bands and orchestras at famous venues throughout the United States and abroad. .
[222];
[223];
[224];
[225];
[226];
[227];
[228];
[229]
N–Z
Rave the City - Organization for raves in the Netherlands in the 90's. At that time the biggest competitor of
Thunderdome.
Selectadisc - independent UK record store; branches in Nottingham, London and online
Tap 'n' Tin - music venue, club/pub/bar; Chatham, Kent
The Shalizi Group (TSG) - Entertainment / management company that manages many top multi-genre recording artists, DJ/Producers, and songwriters, including Marshmello, Alesso, Jauz, Southside, Slushii and more. TSG provides specialized in-house teams dedicated to talent management, digital marketing, merchandising, design, label services and brand development. TSG partners with leaders in gaming, television, technology, consumer goods, fashion, and digital marketing, creating an ever-evolving platform for the success of TSG clients.
[234]
Tunguska Electronic Music Society created by several musicians and composers on the threshold of centenary of the Tunguska phenomenal catastrophe, in order to capture the public attention to such an extraordinary event.
Utopia Music AG -
[235] Swiss music financial technology company. Recently acquired several companies with a presence on Wikipedia
[236][237]. Currently valued at 2.5 billion euros
[238].
Viola da Gamba Society of America - a not-for-profit organization dedicated to the support of activities relating to the viola da gamba in the United States and abroad. It is a society of approximately 1000 members, consisting of players, builders, publishers, distributors, restorers and others sharing a serious interest in music for viols and other early bowed string instruments, which has been existence since 1962.
[239]
Youth Empowered Action[240] A youth empowerment organization that runs youth activism summer camps. Relevant media articles are listed on their website.
Zo Indigenous Forum[241]- An Indigenous Peoples organisation in Mizoram, India for the promotion and protection of human rights among the Zo Indigenous Peoples
BREYER - Breyer White (BREYER) is a West Virginian music producer, artist, and songwriter based in Los Angeles. He is a long-time collaborator with
Jesse Smith (musician) and played and lead guitar in Smith's band
Jesse Smith & the Holy Ghost.
[242]
C–G
Cristian Poow - DJ, music producer, label owner, social psychologist, psychology professor and writer from Argentina. Reached #27 on the Billboard
Dance Club Songs in 2017
Shake Ur Bumpa[243],
Tony May (born Ross Anthony May, 1937) - New York City recording engineer, songwriter and producer; engineering career spans many genres, included Broadway musicals, film soundtracks and television, and stretched from the 1950s analog tape mono era to early multi-track digital, as well as analog restorations and transfers to digital formats; many of his mid-1970s recordings were later sampled for rap and hip-hop ("Hot Wheels (The Chase)", from the soundtrack to the film Gordon's War; "It's Your Thing", from the Isley Brothers album It's Our Thing, to name two);
[269];
[270];
Tristam (musician - music producer, released by monstercat between 2011 and 2018; in 2020 founded his own label, Onyx Four Record, and there released his album Violence - Translate from
es:Tristam
Wayne Bennett (musician) (also known as
Wayne Lotek and
Lotek) - producer, 2009 Barclaycard Mercury Prize-winning album Speech Therapy by
Speech Debelle; produced for
Roots Manuva on a number of his albums including the 2002 Mercury Prize-nominated album Run Come Save Me as well as releasing music as part of Lotek HiFi and as a solo artist;
[273]
Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corporation - California corporation, part of the
Warner Music Group, registers songs with the U.S. Copyright Office and licenses music printing companies to reproduce text for its properites. No background article exists as of this writing. -
B.C.Schmerker
Maloof Records - 1920s American label devoted to Arabic music - had significant cultural impact but finding English-language sources is difficult. Perhaps there are some Arabic-language sources?
Micronautics - Paris-based independent electronic music label founded in 2004 by Christophe Monier. Artists include
The Micronauts. Sources: Mixmag France,[63] Resident Advisor.[64]
Sound Sphere Recordings Los Angeles based independent drum & bass record label. Founded in 1996 by Eric Hull (aka E-Sassin). Credited as the first record label on the west coast dedicated strictly to drum & bass music.[48][333]
Warrior Records - Los Angeles-based label;
[336]; owned by Jim Ervin. Article-The Boot
[337], Article-Maximum Ink
[338], Article-Idol Chatter
[339], Article-The Big Takeover
[340], Article-AXS
[341], Article-Rock Eyez
[342], Article-All Access
[343], Article-Top 40 Charts
[344], Article-Vibe
[345]
Waxwork Records - Waxwork Records is an American independent record label known for releasing film scores and movie soundtracks on vinyl, as well as, comics and toys. Founded in 2013 by Kevin Bergeron and Sue Ellen Soto, the company is based in New Orleans, LA. Sources:
[346],
[347],
Wilhelm Records - US based alternative rock independent record label. Distributed through Symphonic Distribution as of 2016; incorporated in Louisiana, October 20, 2015;
[352][353][354][355][356]
Recording studios
A2Z Studio - Prague based recording studio founded in 2018. It is offering all kinds of services related to music.
[357] They work with well known artists as Jaywon, Reekado Banks, Onyx
Snowmads, and more.
[358][359]
Channel (music) - like a pre-chorus, but as long as a verse, and instrumentally could fool someone into thinking that it is the chorus until the actual chorus breaks through; (I have no documentation but this is taught in songwriting books and classes)
Classically trained - Defining what constitutes being classically trained versus a self-taught method.
Complete breathing (and other breathing techniques like costal and clavicular breathing)
Musical act - as concept (like Band). Used in many articles
Regens chori (This appears to be a particular role in a choir. It appears in a handful of Wikipedia articles. For example, the article for Hans Richter, conductor.)
Scoring Stage - "Scoring Stage" appears to be a technical term for a place used to record movie scores. It appears in news articles and Google searches for the term used in this way. "Sound Stage" has an article, but this is a different concept. (
[364],
[365],
[366])
Dakou is a redirect to
Cut-out (recording industry), but I think this could be its own article. This is/was a whole culture in China built around access to semi-legal Western cassette tapes.
159.53.110.192 (
talk) 13:09, 29 October 2021 (UTC)Replyreply
^Habermann, František Václav. Missa Sancti Wenceslai, Martyris. Edited by William D. Gudger. Vol. 6. Series Title 2. publication place: Madison: A-R Editions, 1976.