David Bowie ft. Mick Jagger

"Dancing in the Street
...is a 1964 song first recorded by Martha and the Vandellas. It is one of Motown's signature songs and is the group's premier signature song.



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A second hit version was done by Mick Jagger and David Bowie as a duo in 1985, as part of the Live Aid charity movement. The original plan was to perform a track together live, with Bowie performing at Wembley Stadium and Jagger at the JFK Stadium, until it was realized that the satellite link-up would cause a half-second delay that would make this impossible unless either Bowie or Jagger mimed their contribution, something neither artist was willing to do.

In June 1985, Bowie was recording his contributions to the Absolute Beginners soundtrack at Abbey Road Studios, and so Jagger arranged to fly in to record the track there. A rough mix of the track was completed in just four hours, at which point the pair went straight out to London Docklands to film a video with director David Mallet. Thirteen hours after the start of recording, this also was completed. Jagger arranged for some minor musical overdubs in New York.

The video was shown twice at the Live Aid event. Soon afterwards the track was issued as a single, with all profits going to the charity. "Dancing in the Street" topped the UK charts for four weeks, and reached number seven in the United States. Bowie and Jagger would perform the song once more, at the Prince's Trust Concert on June 20, 1986. It is the last UK number-one single to date for Bowie. The song has been featured since on several Bowie compilations.

It was also shown in movie theatres before showings of Ruthless People, for which Jagger had recorded the theme song. It was the first instance in which a promotional clip was used outside of MTV or broadcast television.

In a survey conducted by PRS for Music, the song was voted as the top song the British Public would play at street parties in celebration of the 2011 Royal Wedding of Kate Middleton and William Prince of Wales. [3]

In the May 15, 2011 episode of Family Guy, titled "Foreign Affairs", the music video for this version was played in its entirety.

Live aid 1985 Concert

"Bohemian Rhapsody - Radio Ga Ga" by Queen

Live aid 1985 Concert was a dual-venue concert that was held on 13 July 1985. The event was organized by Bob Geldof and Midge Ure to raise funds for relief of the ongoing Ethiopian famine. Billed as the "global jukebox", the event was held simultaneously in Wembley Stadium in London, England, United Kingdom (attended by 72,000 people) and John F. Kennedy Stadium in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States (attended by about 99,000 people).[1] On the same day, concerts inspired by the initiative happened in other countries, such as Australia and Germany. It was one of the largest-scale satellite link-ups and television broadcasts of all time: an estimated 2 billion viewers, across 60 countries, watched the live broadcast.

"Bohemian Rhapsody" was written by Freddie Mercury for the band's 1975 album A Night at the Opera. The song has no chorus, instead consisting of three main parts: a ballad segment ending with a guitar solo, an operatic passage, and a heavy rock section.
When it was released as a single, "Bohemian Rhapsody" became a huge commercial success, staying at the top of the UK Singles Chart for nine weeks and selling more than a million copies by the end of January 1976.[1] It reached number one again in 1991 for five weeks following Mercury's death, eventually becoming the UK's third best selling single of all time.[2] It topped the charts in several other markets as well, including Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland and The Netherlands. In the United States the song originally peaked at number nine in 1976; however, it returned to the chart at number two in 1992 following its appearance in the film Wayne's World revived its American popularity.
The single was accompanied by a promotional video, considered ground-breaking.[3] Although critical reaction was initially mixed, particularly in the United States, "Bohemian Rhapsody" remains one of Queen's most popular songs. Rolling Stone ranked it as the number 163 on their list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time".
"Radio Ga Ga" is a 1984 song performed and recorded by their drummer Roger Taylor. It was released as a single with "I Go Crazy" by Brian May on the original B-side (3:42) and was included on the album The Works without "I Go Crazy" (that song would only be included on the 1991 CD remaster). The single was a worldwide success for the band, reaching number one in 19 countries, number two in the UK Singles Chart, and number 16 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the U.S


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Queen are a British rock band formed in London in 1971, originally consisting of Freddie Mercury (lead vocals, piano), Brian May (guitar, vocals), John Deacon (bass guitar), and Roger Taylor (drums, vocals). Queen's earliest works were heavily influenced by progressive rock; in the mid-1970s, the band ventured into more conventional and radio-friendly works, bringing them greater commercial success.[3] It also became something of a trademark to incorporate more diverse and innovative styles in their music, exploring the likes of vaudeville, gospel music, electronic music and funk.

Brian May and Roger Taylor had been playing together in a band named Smile. Freddie Mercury (then known by his birth name of Farrokh, or Freddie, Bulsara) was a fan of Smile, and encouraged them to experiment with more elaborate stage and recording techniques. Mercury himself joined the band shortly thereafter, changed the name of the band to 'Queen' and adopted his familiar stage name. John Deacon was recruited prior to recording their first album. Queen enjoyed success in the UK during the early 1970s, but it was the release of Sheer Heart Attack (1974) and A Night at the Opera (1975) that gained the band international success.[4] The latter featured "Bohemian Rhapsody", which stayed at number one in the UK charts for nine weeks.[5] In 1991 Mercury died of bronchopneumonia, a complication of AIDS, and Deacon retired in 1997.[6] Since then May and Taylor have infrequently performed together, including a collaboration with Paul Rodgers under the name Queen + Paul Rodgers which ended in May 2009.[7]
The band has released a total of 18 number one albums, 18 number one singles and 10 number one DVDs, and have sold over 150 million albums, with some estimates in excess of 300 million albums,[8][9][10][11][12] making them one of the world's best-selling music artists. They have been honoured with seven Ivor Novello awards and were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2001.[13]

Rory Gallagher

"Laundromat"
Montreux festival - 1975
Lyrics -music by Rory Gallagher, CD: Live! in Europe.

Live! in Europe is an album released by Irish Blues guitarist Rory Gallagher in 1972. As the title suggests, it is a series of live recordings made by Gallagher during his European tour.
Live in Europe is considered by many critics to be a landmark live recording, as it carefully blends the musicians with the crowd to create a gig-like atmosphere so craved by those who enjoy or produce live albums. Gallagher always insisted that his studio albums failed to capture the raw energy of his live acts and as a result released a number of live albums, many of which contain what are considered the "definitive versions" of some of his better known songs. Bob Dylan requested to record the song I Could've Had Religion that features on this album with Gallagher, but this recording never happened.
Live In Europe broke into the Top 10 of the UK albums chart, consolidating the success of his first two studio offerings. Rory's high-octane blues-rock was well suited for the stage, a fact to which anyone who saw him in concert or has heard this or other live albums like Irish Tour '74 and Stage Struck can attest. The set kicks off with two rockers, Junior Wells' "Messin' With the Kid" and the original "Laundromat," before Gallagher slows down for "I Could've Had Religion" and Blind Boy Fuller's "Pistol Slapper Blues." The pace quickens for "Going to My Home Town," a showcase for some fierce mandolin playing with enthusiastic audience participation, and the rocking boogie of "In Your Town." "Bullfrog Blues" provides the finale during which the other two thirds of the power trio—bassist Gerry McAvoy and drummer Wilgar Campbell get to solo for the appreciative crowd.
Live In Europe became Rory's first gold album, and his second chart album success in the States.
Tracks seven and eight did not appear on the original release, but have appeared as bonus tracks on almost every edition of the album since.

The Montreux Jazz Festival is the best-known music festival in Switzerland and one of the most prestigious in Europe; it is held annually in early July in Montreux on the shores of Lake Geneva. It is the second largest annual music festival in the world after Canada's Montreal International Jazz Festival.
The Montreux Jazz Festival was founded in 1967 by Claude Nobs, Géo Voumard and René Langel[1] with considerable help from Ahmet Ertegün and Nesuhi Ertegün of Atlantic Records. The festival was first held at Montreux Casino. It lasted for three days and featured almost exclusively jazz artists. The highlights of this era were Keith Jarrett, Jack DeJohnette, Bill Evans, Soft Machine, Weather Report, Nina Simone, Jan Garbarek, and Ella Fitzgerald.

Originally a pure jazz festival, it opened up in the 1970s and today presents artists of nearly every imaginable music style. Jazz remains an important part of the festival. Today's festival lasts about two weeks and attracts an audience of more than 200,000 people.



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rory Gallagher born William Rory Gallagher (2 March 1948  – 14 June 1995) was an Irish blues-rock multi-instrumentalist, songwriter, and bandleader. Born in Ballyshannon, County Donegal, Ireland,[3] and raised in Cork, Gallagher recorded solo albums throughout the 1970s and 1980s, after forming the band Taste during the late 1960s. A talented guitarist known for his charismatic performances and dedication to his craft, Gallagher's albums have sold in excess of 30 million copies worldwide.[4][5] Gallagher received a liver transplant in 1995, but died of complications later that year in London, England aged 47.[6]

Gallagher was born in Ballyshannon, Co. Donegal; his father, Daniel, was employed by the Irish Electricity Supply Board, who were constructing a hydro-electric power plant on the Erne River above the town. The family moved, first to Derry City, where his younger brother Dónal was born in 1949, and then to Cork, where the two brothers were raised, and where Rory attended the North Monastery School. Their father had played the accordion and sang with the Tir Chonaill Ceile Band whilst in Donegal; their mother Monica was a singer and acted with the Abbey Players in Ballyshannon. The Theatre in Ballyshannon where Monica once acted is now called the Rory Gallagher Theatre. Both sons were musically inclined and encouraged by their parents: at age nine, Gallagher received his first guitar from them. He built on his burgeoning ability on ukelele, in teaching himself to play the guitar and perform at minor functions. After winning a talent contest when he was twelve, Gallagher began performing in his adolescence with both his acoustic guitar, and an electric guitar he bought with his prize money. However, it was his purchase three years later of a 1961 Fender Stratocaster for £100 that became his primary instrument most associated with him for the span of his lifetime.[7] Gallagher was initially attracted to skiffle after hearing Lonnie Donegan on the radio; Donegan frequently covered blues and folk performers from the United States. Subsequently, Gallagher began experimenting with folk, blues, and rock music. Unable to find or afford record albums, Gallagher stayed up late to hear Radio Luxembourg and AFN where the radio brought him his only exposure to the actual songwriters and musicians whose music moved him most.[8] Influences he discovered, and cited as he progressed, included Woody Guthrie, Big Bill Broonzy, and Lead Belly. Initially, Gallagher struck out after just an acoustic sound.[7] Singing and later using a brace for his harmonica, Gallagher learned to play slide guitar. Throughout this time, Gallagher began learning to play on the alto saxophone, bass, mandolin, banjo, and the coral sitar with varying degrees of proficiency.[9] He found it difficult to track down the names of the authors of the blues songs that he heard; usually through the likes of skiffle musicians like Lonnie Donegan. He relied entirely on radio programs and television. Occasionally, the jazz programs from the BBC would play some blues numbers, and he slowly found some song books for guitar, where he found the names of the actual composers of blues pieces. While still in school, playing songs by Buddy Holly and Eddie Cochran, he discovered his greatest influence in Muddy Waters. By his mid-teens, he began experimenting heavily with different blues styles.[10]
Gallagher began playing after school with Irish showbands, while still a young teenager. In 1963,[11] he joined one named Fontana, a sextet playing the popular hit songs of the day. The band toured Ireland and the United Kingdom, giving him the opportunity to acquire songbooks for the guitar, where he found the names of the composers of blues songs, in addition to earning the money for the payments that were due on his Stratocaster guitar. Gallagher began to influence the band's repertoire, beginning its transition from popular music, skirting along some of Chuck Berry's songs and by 1965, he had successfully molded Fontana into "The Impact", with a change in their lineup into an R&B group that played gigs in Ireland and Spain until disbanding in London.[9] Gallagher left with the bassist and drummer to perform as a trio in Hamburg, Germany.[11] In 1966, Gallagher returned to Ireland and, experimenting with other musicians back home in Cork, decided to form his own band.

Μελίνα Ασλανίδου

"Πριγκιπέσσα"
 Στίχοι / Μουσική: Σωκράτης Μάλαμας



Swing Time Quintet

"Minor swing"  
...is a popular Gypsy jazz tune by Django Reinhardt & Stéphane Grappelli. It was first recorded by The Quintet of the Hot Club of France in 1937. It was recorded four other times throughout Reinhardt's career and is considered to be one of his most covered compositions, as well as Gypsy jazz standard.

Swingtime Quintet playing "Minor Swing" at Mylos Club, Thessaloniki, Greece on 4 of October 2009. 


The Swing Time Quintet was formed in the summer of  2007 and is based in Thessaloniki, Greece. Their current line up is Stergios Loustas (violin) Lakis Tzimkas (double bass) Thanasis Tsintsifas (acoustic guitar) Kostas Liagouras (acoustic guitar) and Sakis Bardouniotis (acoustic guitar).They enjoy playing Gypsy Swing (or Gypsy Jazz) music, a musical style that was mostly popularized by the Quintette of the Hot club of France in the 1930’s, the band in which guitarist Django Reinhardt and violinist Stephane Grappelli initially demonstrated their innovative, powerful yet lyrical style of interpreting popular jazz tunes and their own original compositions.
Their repertoire comes largely from the recorded music of Django Reindhart although it includes several other arrangements of tunes they find interesting and fun to perform.

Django Reinhardt

Video Quintette du Hot Club de France



From Red Hot jazz

23 January 1910 – 16 May 1953
Django Reinhardt has astounded and thrilled numerous generations of guitar players and jazz lovers with his amazing command of the guitar. January 24th, 1910 at Liberchies Belgium, Django was born into the open air, rambling lifestyle of his gypsy parents. At the age of eight, his mother's tribe settled near the belt of fortifications that surrounded the old Paris, near the Choisy gate. He never wore a suit or lived in a real house until he was twenty years old. These French Gypsies or Manouches were a world unto themselves, medieval in their beliefs, and distrustful of modern science. Django grew up in this world of contradictions, one foot in the bustling big city of Paris and the other in the age-old life of the nomadic gypsy. Though born into poverty Django had the soul of a nobleman and this natural elegance of bearing and attitude expressed itself in his music.

It was at an early age Django became attracted to music. When twelve years old he received his first instrument, a banjo/guitar that was given to him by a neighbor who had noticed his keen interest in music. He quickly learned to play, mimicking the fingerings of musicians he watched. He was soon astounding adults with his ability on the guitar, and before he was thirteen he began his musical career playing with popular accordionist Guerino at a dance hall on the Rue Monge. He went on to play with numerous other bands and musicians and made his first recordings with accordionist Jean Vaissade for the Ideal Company. Since Django could not read or write at the time "Jiango Renard" was how his name appeared on these records.

On November 2nd, 1928 an event took place that would forever change Django's life. At one o'clock in the morning the 18 year old Django returned from a night of playing music at a new club "La Java" to the caravan that was now the home of himself and his new wife. The caravan was filled with celluloid flowers his wife had made to sell at the market on the following day. Django upon hearing what he thought was a mouse among the flowers bent down with a candle to look. The wick from the candle fell into the highly flammable celluloid flowers and the caravan was almost instantly transformed into a raging inferno. Django wrapped himself in a blanket to shield him from the flames. Somehow he and his wife made it across the blazing room to safety outside, but his left hand, and his right side from knee to waist were badly burned.

Initially doctors wanted to amputate his leg but Django refused. He was moved to a nursing home where the care was so good his leg was saved. Django was bedridden for eighteen months. During this time he was given a guitar, and with great determination Django created a whole new fingering system built around the two fingers on his left hand that had full mobility. His fourth and fifth digits of the left hand were permanently curled towards the palm due to the tendons shrinking from the heat of the fire. He could use them on the first two strings of the guitar for chords and octaves but complete extension of these fingers was impossible. His soloing was all done with the index and middle fingers! Film clips of Django show his technique to be graceful and precise, almost defying belief.

Django was influenced by jazz recordings of Eddie Lang and Joe Venuti, Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington. This new music found a place deep in Django's heart. It provided the perfect vehicle for his prodigious talent for improvisation. Django rarely if ever played a solo the same way twice. Numerous recordings prove this to be true. His creative genius was not only that of the master improviser, but also that of the composer, and he can be credited with numerous pieces with beautiful melodies and sophisticated, subtle harmonic structures. However, Django could not read or write musical notation and he was at the mercy of others that could to get his ideas down on paper.

1934 proved to be the most important year of his life. The Quintet of the Hot Club of France was born! As the fates would have it, the Quintet was formed by a chance meeting of Django and Stéphane Grappelli. A band of fourteen musicians including Django, Stéphane, Roger Chaput, and Louis Vola were commissioned to play at the Hotel Cambridge at teatime. During intermission Django would find a corner backstage and play his guitar. One day Stéphane joined in and both were so pleased with the exchange they went on to play together more and more frequently joined by Roger Chaput (guitar), Louis Vola (bass), and eventually Django's brother Joseph (guitar). A small record company Ultraphone recorded their first sides Dinah, Tiger Rag, Oh Lady be Good, and I Saw Stars. These first records caused a sensation! The Quintet went on to record hundreds of sides and had a following on both sides of the ocean.

1939 found the Quintet touring in England when the war broke out. Django returned to Paris while Stéphane remained in England. Django played and recorded throughout the war years substituting Hubert Rostaing's clarinet for Stephen's violin. He somehow avoided the fate of many of his kinfolk who went to their deaths in the Nazi concentration camps. After the war he was rejoined by Stéphane and they again played and recorded. He toured briefly with Duke Ellington in America and returned to Paris where he continued his career until 1951 when he retired to the small village of Samois sur Seine.

On May 16th 1953 Django suffered a massive brain hemorrhage and died, leaving behind his wife Sophie and son Babik. His music remains as vital and exciting today as it was when he lived, a legacy of joy to all future generations that rediscover the genius of the Belgian gypsy Django Reinhardt.

Οδυσσέας Ελύτης

"Της δικαιοσύνης ήλιε νοητέ"
Θέατρο Λυκαβηττού : καλοκαίρι 1977

Ερμηνεία: Γρηγόρης Μπιθικώτσης
Ποίηση : Οδυσσέας Ελύτης 
Μελοποίηση : Μίκης Θεοδωράκης 
Το λαϊκό ορατόριο "'Αξιον Εστί", σύμφωνα με την ορολογία τού συνθέτη του, γράφτηκε στην Αθήνα καί στο Παρίσι, από την άνοιξη τού 1960 έως τον Δεκέμβριο τού 1963.

«Ο Μπιθικώτσης και ο «αντεθνικώς δρων» συνθέτης ήταν οι λόγοι που το καλοκαίρι του 1964 ματαιώθηκε η πρώτη παρουσίαση του «Αξιον Εστί» στο Ηρώδειο, στο πλαίσιο του Φεστιβάλ Αθηνών -με την Ενωση Κέντρου στην εξουσία και τον Θεοδωράκη βουλευτή της ΕΔΑ…»
(Ελευθεροτυπία, Παρασκευή 29 Απριλίου 2011, Του ΔΗΜΗΤΡΗ ΓΚΙΩΝΗ)

Το 1965, στην "Επιθεώρηση Τέχνης", ο Οδυσσέας Ελύτης έγραφε:
«Εχω την εντύπωση, και δεν πιστεύω να κάνω λάθος, ότι η μουσική του "Αξιον Εστί" θα γνωρίσει τις ίδιες αντιδράσεις που γνώρισε το ποιητικό έργο και θα περάσει, λίγο ως πολύ, από τα ίδια στάδια: δυσφορία στην αρχή από τη μετατόπιση σε άλλον χώρο, αμηχανία, αντίδραση στις καινοτομίες, ύστερα σιγανή αφομοίωση, δειλή συμφιλίωση και, τέλος, κατανόηση και αγάπη».



Από τη Βικιπαίδεια, την ελεύθερη εγκυκλοπαίδεια

Ο Οδυσσέας Ελύτης (2 Νοεμβρίου 1911 - 18 Μαρτίου 1996), φιλολογικό ψευδώνυμο του Οδυσσέα Αλεπουδέλλη του Παναγιώτη, ήταν ένας από τους σημαντικότερους Έλληνες ποιητές, μέλος της λογοτεχνικής γενιάς του '30. Διακρίθηκε το 1960 με το Κρατικό Βραβείο Ποίησης και το 1979 με το βραβείο Νόμπελ Λογοτεχνίας, γνωστός για τα ποιητικά του έργα Άξιον Εστί, Ήλιος ο πρώτος, Προσανατολισμοί κ.α. Διαμόρφωσε ένα προσωπικό ποιητικό ιδίωμα και θεωρείται ένας από τους ανανεωτές της ελληνικής ποίησης. Πολλά ποιήματά του μελοποιήθηκαν ενώ συλλογές του έχουν μεταφραστεί μέχρι σήμερα σε πολλές ξένες γλώσσες. Το έργο του περιλάμβανε ακόμα μεταφράσεις ποιητικών και θεατρικών έργων. Υπήρξε μέλος της Διεθνούς Ένωσης Κριτικών εργων Τέχνης και της Ευρωπαϊκής Εταιρείας Κριτικής, Αντιπρόσωπος στις Rencontres Internationales της Γενεύης και Incontro Romano della Cultura της Ρώμης.



Με τον όρο Άξιον Εστί αναφερόμαστε στην εικόνα της Παναγίας, της «εφέστιας προστάτιδας», του Αγίου Όρους. Με το ίδιο όνομα επίσης τιτλοφορήθηκε το ποίημα του Οδυσσέα Ελύτη Άξιον Εστί το 1949, το οποίο αργότερα μελοποίησε ο Μίκης Θεοδωράκης στο ορατόριο Άξιον Εστί.
Η εικόνα της Παναγίας, το «Άξιον Εστί», είναι μια από τις περίφημες εικόνες του Αγίου Όρους. Βρίσκεται στο ναό του Πρωτάτου στις Καρυές του Αγίου Όρους, θεωρούμενη ως «κοινή εφέστιος προστάτις» εικόνα όλων των Αγιορείτικων Μονών, φέρουσα στο πλαίσιό της τις σφραγίδες και των 20 Μονών.
Επί της εικόνας αυτής έγιναν κατά καιρούς πλείστα πιστά αντίγραφα ανά ένα εκ των οποίων βρίσκεται σε κάθε Μονή του Άθω. Εορτάζει με μεγάλη θρησκευτική λαμπρότητα τη Δευτέρα του Πάσχα και στις 11 Ιουνίου σε ανάμνηση του κάτωθεν θαύματος, αρχή της φήμης της εικόνας και ως θαυματουργής.

Το ΑΧ και το ΑΜΑΝ

Από την σειρά εκπομπών "Ελλήνων Δρώμενα" της ΕΤ3.
Εκπομπή αφιέρωμενη στον αμανέ που προβλήθηκε την 7η Δεκεμβρίου 2008
Οργάνωση παραγωγής : Μαρία Τσαντέ. Έρευνα - Σκηνοθεσία : Αντώνης Τσάβαλος
Τραγουδούν οι: 

Σόλων Λέκκας, Γιώργος Χατζημανώλης, Μιχάλης Βιγλατζής, Μάριος Χρυσάφης, Κατερίνα Βουρλή

"Το Αχ και το Αμάν" (μέρος 1ο)



"Το Αχ και το Αμάν" (μέρος 2ο)



"Το Αχ και το Αμάν" (μέρος 3ο)



"Το Αχ και το Αμάν" (μέρος 4ο)

Άκης Πάνου

"Ασ` τον τρελό στην τρέλα του"
Ερμηνεία : Μανώλης Μητσιάς
Στίχοι - μουσική : Άκης Πάνου

Απόσπασμα από το αφιέρωμα της τηλεοπτικής εκπομπής "Παρασκήνιο" στον Άκη Πάνου  (ΕΡΤ © 1977).



Από τη Βικιπαίδεια, την ελεύθερη εγκυκλοπαίδεια

Ο Άκης (Αθανάσιος) Πάνου (15 Δεκεμβρίου 1933, Καλλιθέα-7 Απριλίου 2000, Αθήνα) ήταν Έλληνας συνθέτης, στιχουργός και μουσικός.
Γεννήθηκε το 1933 σε πολύτεκνη οικογένεια, και σε ηλικία 9 ετών παράτησε το σχολείο για να δουλέψει, ενώ παράλληλα έμαθε να παίζει μπαγλαμά και σύντομα έκανε εμφανίσεις σε κέντρα, με τη μεσολάβηση του αδερφού του. Την πρώτη του ηχογράφηση την έκανε σε ηλικία 17 ετών, το 1950, και ακολούθησε μια σύντομη πορεία εμφανίσεων σε νυχτερινά κέντρα έως το 1958. Έκτοτε ασχολήθηκε με τη σύνθεση και τη στιχουργία, ηχογραφώντας την πρώτη σύνθεσή του με την Καίτη Γκρέι την ίδια χρονιά (Το παιδί μου απόψε πίνει). Την περίοδο εκείνη ηχογράφησε επίσης τα Μια βραδιά καταραμένη με τη Δούκισσα το 1959 και Σήμερα σ' έχω αγκαλιά με τον Πάνο Γαβαλά (1962). Επόμενος σταθμός στην καριέρα του ήταν το 1967 η ηχογράφηση του Θα κλείσω τα μάτια με το Γρηγόρη Μπιθικώτση και τη Χαρούλα Λαμπράκη, του οποίου η κυκλοφορία απαγορεύτηκε έπειτα από 15 μέρες από τη Χούντα και τραγούδησε αργότερα η Βίκυ Μοσχολιού με διαφορετικούς στίχους. Την ίδια χρονιά συνεργάζεται με τη Γιώτα Λύδια κάνοντας επιτυχία το τραγούδι Η πιο μεγάλη ώρα. Με τον Μπιθικώτση συνεργάστηκαν ξανά στο δίσκο Ρολόι-Κομπολόι του 1969.
Το 1974 συνεργάζεται με το Στέλιο Καζαντζίδη στο δίσκο Η ζωή μου όλη από τον οποίο γίνεται επιτυχία το ομώνυμο τραγούδι, ενώ την επόμενη χρονιά συνθέσεις του τραγουδά ο Στράτος Διονυσίου. Το 1977 κυκλοφόρησε ο δίσκος Παρών με το Μανώλη Μητσιά και το γνωστό κομμάτι Τρελός ενώ το 1982 το Θέλω να τα πω με το Γιώργο Νταλάρα. Τελευταία μεγάλη επιτυχία του ήταν 1983 το Δε θέλω τη συμπόνια κανενός με Τα παιδιά από την Πάτρα. Κατόπιν αποσύρθηκε σταδιακά από τη δισκογραφία, κυκλοφορώντας τα άπαντά του σε τρεις δίσκους. Το 1989 επέστρεψε στο πάλκο για λίγες εμφανίσεις, όπως και το 1994 και το 1996.
Ο Άκης Πάνου συνεργάστηκε με πολλούς ακόμη καλλιτέχνες, όπως ο Σταμάτης Κόκοτας, η Μαρινέλλα, η Πόλυ Πάνου, ο Μιχάλης Μενιδιάτης, η Λίτσα Διαμάντη, ο Τόλης Βοσκόπουλος, ο Γιώργος Μαρίνος κ.α. Στις συνθέσεις του χρησιμοποίησε εκτεταμένα τον παραδοσιακό ρυθμό εννέα όγδοα της ρεμπέτικης μουσικής.
Παντρεύτηκε το 1954 τη Δήμητρα, με την οποία δεν έκαναν παιδιά και αργότερα έζησαν χωριστά. Αρκετά χρόνια αργότερα (1991) παντρεύτηκε την Άννα με την οποία είχε αποκτήσει τέσσερα παιδιά, μια κόρη και τρεις γιους, από τους οποίους οι δυο δίδυμοι. Την 1η Αυγούστου 1997, μετά από αψιμαχία με το Σωτήρη Γιαλαμά, ο οποίος είχε δεσμό με την κόρη του τον οποίο ο Πάνου δεν ενέκρινε, τον πυροβόλησε και τον σκότωσε στο εξοχικό του στη Λεύκη Ξάνθης. Πέρασε από δίκη στο Μικτό Ορκωτό Κακουργιοδικείο Καβάλας και καταδικάστηκε σε ισόβια δεσμά για ανθρωποκτονία από πρόθεση, χωρίς να του αναγνωριστεί κανένα ελαφρυντικό. Κρατήθηκε στις φυλακές Κομοτηνής, από όπου αφέθηκε το 2000 με εντολή εισαγγελέα λόγω της κατάστασης της υγείας του. Τον ίδιο χρόνο υποβλήθηκε σε εγχείριση στο πάγκρεας χωρίς επιτυχία και στις 7 Απριλίου του 2000 πέθανε στο Ευγενίδειο Θεραπευτήριο από καρκίνο. Μια από τις τελευταίες του επιθυμίες ήταν να ξαναδεί τον Στέλιο Καζαντζίδη, με τον οποίο αλληλοεκτιμούνταν, παρά τη δύσκολη συνεργασία τους στο παρελθόν.[1]

Sanjuro

Kalash

kalash kids dance




The Kalash or Kalasha, are an ethnic group found in the Hindu Kush mountain range in the Chitral district of the North-West Frontier Province of Pakistan. Although quite numerous before the twentieth century, this non-Muslim group has been partially assimilated by the larger Muslim majority of Pakistan and seen its numbers dwindle over the past century. Today, sheikhs, or converts to Islam, make up more than half of the total Kalasha-speaking population.

The culture of Kalash people is unique and differs drastically from the various ethnic groups surrounding them. They are polytheists and nature plays a highly significant and spiritual role in their daily life. As part of their religious tradition, sacrifices are offered and festivals held to give thanks for the abundant resources of their three valleys. Kalash mythology and folklore has been compared to that of ancient Greece, but they are much closer to Indo-Iranian (Vedic and pre-Zoroastrian) traditions.

Αναστενάρια



Από τη Βικιπαίδεια, την ελεύθερη εγκυκλοπαίδεια

Τα Αναστενάρια είναι ένα παραδοσιακό ελληνικό και βουλγαρικό θρησκευτικό έθιμο - γιορτή, κύριο χαρακτηριστικό του οποίου είναι η εκτέλεση πυροβασίας, δηλαδή βαδίσματος με γυμνά πόδια πάνω σε ένα στρώμα πυρακτωμένων κάρβουνων.

Πιθανολογείται ότι τα Αναστενάρια είναι επιβίωση αντίστοιχων θρησκευτικών πρακτικών της αρχαιότητας και συγκεκριμένα πρακτικών από τη λατρεία του Διόνυσου.

Τα Αναστενάρια γίνονται σήμερα στην Αγία Ελένη Σερρών, στην Κερκίνη Σερρών, στο Λαγκαδά Θεσσαλονίκης, στη Μελίκη της Βέροιας και στη Μαυρολεύκη της Δράμας. Συνδέονται δε με τη γιορτή των Άγίων Κωνσταντίνου και Ελένης στις 21 Μαΐου. Οι εκδηλώσεις ξεκινάνε την παραμονή της 21ης Μαΐου και τελειώνουν το βράδυ της 23ης.

Το όνομα αναστενάρια πάρθηκε από το αναστενάρι, το εικόνισμα που κρατούν σ' όλη τη διάρκεια της γιορτής στα χέρια τους και που θεωρείται ο ανώτατος αρχηγός των αναστενάρηδων.

Η γιορτή αρχίζει με ξέφρενο χορό, με τη συνοδεία του ταμπούρλου και με ψαλμωδία ύμνων. Κατόπιν γίνεται η ζωοθυσία (τη δεύτερη μέρα), όπου το κρέας του σφαγμένου ζώου μοιράζεται στις οικογένειες του χωριού. Αρχίζει πάλι ο χορός και το φαγοπότι και σαν κλείσιμο έρχεται η πυροβασία. Κατά τη φάση αυτή ορισμένοι από τους συμμετέχοντες, εκστασιασμένοι από την πίστη τους, ρίχνονται στα αναμμένα κάρβουνα και χορεύουν κρατώντας στα χέρια τους ένα εικόνισμα ή ένα Ευαγγέλιο.



The Anastenaria (Bulgarian Нестинарство, Greek Αναστενάρια) is a traditional fire-walking ritual performed in some villages in Northern Greece and Southern Bulgaria. The communities which celebrate this ritual are descended from refugees who entered Greece from Eastern Thrace following the Balkan Wars of 1911–12 and the exchange of populations between Greece and Turkey in 1923.[1] [2]
The Anastenaria are Orthodox Christians, however – in addition to the church rituals – they observe a unique annual ritual cycle, which begins on October 26 and ends on August 15 every year. The central figures of the tradition are Saint Constantine and Saint Helen, but all the significant days in this cycle coincide with important days in the Greek Orthodox calendar and are related to various Christian saints. The two major events in this cycle are two big festivals, one in January and particularly one in May, dedicated to these two saints. Each of the festivals lasts for 3 days and involves various processions, music and dancing, and an animal sacrifice. The festival culminates with a firewalking ritual, where the participants, carrying the icons of saints Constantine and Helen, dance ecstatically for hours before entering the fire and walking barefoot over the glowing-red coals, unharmed by the fire[3]
Each community of the Anastenaria has a special shrine known as the konaki, where their holy icons are placed, as well as the “signs” of the saints (‘’semadia’’), votive offerings and red kerchiefs attached to the icons. Here, on the Eve of the saints’ day, May 20 Saint Constantine and Saint Helen, they gather to dance to the music of the Thracian lyre and drum. After some time they believe that they may be "seized" by Saint Constantine and enter a trance. On the morning of the Saints' day, May 21, the gather at the konaki and proceed to a well to be blessed with holy water, and sacrifice animals. The rules about the nature of the beasts to be slain are precise, but differ from village to village. In the evening a fire is lit in an open space, and after dancing for some time in the konaki, the "anastenarides" go to it carrying their ikons. After dancing around it in a circle, individual anastenarides dance over the hot coals as the saint moves them. The ritual is also performed in January, during the festival of Saint Athanasius, and fire-walking is done indoors.[4]

Locomondo

"Balkan Song"
Παραλία Αλίμου (Ακτή του Ήλιου) -11/09/2008. HiJACK.gr beach party.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Locomondo is a seven member band based in Athens, Greece. Their name loosely means "Crazy World," from the Spanish word "loco" (crazy) and the Italian word "mondo" (world). Their music can be tagged as reggae or ska. It is the first band in Greece that fused the Caribbean sound together with Greek musical elements. Locomondo often incorporates traditional Greek instruments in their sound such as the violin, the gaida (the Greek version of the bagpipes) and the baglama, producing a fresh sound and a new approach to the already known forms of the Caribbean as well as the Greek music. In their live shows, Locomondo captures the energy and the feel of a party, where the crowd and the band share the common experience of a great “fiesta.”

Since 2004, Locomondo has released five albums and has toured extensively in Greece, Germany, and the Netherlands with great success. They have shared the stage with bands such as Manu Chao, the Skatalites, Chumbawamba, Alpha Blondy, Ojos de Brujo, the Wailers, Aswad, and Ska Cubano, among others. They have collaborated with Amparo Sanchez from Amparanoia and Natty Bo from Ska Cubano, the German group Beat n’ Blow, and Vin Gordon of The Skatalites.

Their first album entitled Enas Trelos Kosmos (Crazy World) was released in March 2004 by Music Box International. Their songs, "Trendy Litsa" and "100 Afro" had solid air-play on almost all Greek radio stations. Their song "Stin Athina" was on the play list of Radio France Internationale for two months.

Locomondo traveled to Jamaica after an invitation from the Skatalites' trombone player, Vin Gordon, to record their second album. A former member of the Skatalites and Studio One veteran--Deadly Headley Bennett--is among the other Jamaican musicians who participated in the Locomondo recording. The outcome of this collaboration can be found on their CD entitled 12 Meres stin Jamaica (12 Days in Jamaica) released in July 2005 by Music Box International. The songs, sung both in Greek and English, are heavily influenced by the sound, "energy," and "feeling" of Jamaica. Locomondo had huge success in the summer of 2005 with their cover of the traditional rembetiko song "Frangosyriani."

The Greek element continues to play an important role in the formation of Locomondo's sound. Locomondo released their third album, Me Wanna Dance on May 14, 2007, and scored a big hit in the summer of 2007 with their parody of student life "Πίνω μπάφους και παίζω προ" ("Pino bafous kai pezo pro") (="I smoke joints and play Pro"). Locomondo was included in the CD of the German reggae magazine Riddim in the August 2008 issue and has been part of the “Radio Chango” family since 2007.

Their popularity continued to rise with their song "Γαμήλιο πάρτυ" ("Gamilio party") (="Wedding party"), which was also the soundtrack of the movie with the same title. The song won the prize for best alternative video clip from Mad Video Music Awards on June 17, 2008. In addition, Locomondo participated with the German group Beat n’ Blow on the single "Hey Girl (Greek version)," which received ample airplay on Funkhaus Europa and Radio Multikulti.

In November 2009, Locomondo released a double live CD--Locomondo Live!--recorded during their summer 2009 tours in Greece and abroad. During this time period, they released a video for their song "Magiko Hali" ("Magic Carpet"). The video was filmed at Germany's Chiemsee Reggae Summer Festival, Fusion Festival, and Stemweder Open Air Festival. They also had the honor of having their cover of the traditional rembetiko song "Frangosyriani" included in a movie from Fatih Akin, titled Soul Kitchen (film). The film won the Special Jury Prize award at the Venice Film Festival in 2009. In 2010, Locomondo recorded the song, "Goal!" in anticipation of the 2010 FIFA World Cup games in South Africa. The video clip of "Goal!" featured Dimitris Salpigidis from the Greek national team.

Eric Clapton

"I Shot the Sheriff
..is a song written by Bob Marley, told from the point of view of a man who admits to having killed the local sheriff, but claims to be falsely accused of having killed the deputy sheriff. The song was first released on The Wailers' album Burnin'.
Eric Clapton recorded a cover version that was included on his album, 461 Ocean Boulevard. It is the most successful version of the song, peaking at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming Clapton's only chart-topping hit in the U.S.

About Crossroads Guitar Festival
The Crossroads Guitar Festival is a music festival and benefit concert first held in 2004 and again in 2007 and 2010. The festivals benefit the Crossroads Centre founded by Eric Clapton, a drug treatment center located in Antigua. The concerts are also intended to be a showcase for a variety of guitarists. All were hand-picked by Eric Clapton himself, who addressed the 2007 audience, saying that each were some of the very best, and those who had earned his respect.



Eric Patrick Clapton was born on 30 March 1945 in his grandparents’ home at 1 The Green, Ripley, Surrey, England. He was the son of 16-year-old Patricia Molly Clapton (b. 7 January 1929, d. March 1999) and Edward Walter Fryer (b. 21 March 1920, d. 1985), a 24-year-old Canadian soldier stationed in England during World War II. Before Eric was born, Fryer returned to his wife in Canada.
It was extraordinarily difficult for an unmarried 16-year-old to raise a child on her own in the mid-1940s. Pat’s parents, Rose and Jack Clapp, stepped in as surrogate parents and raised Eric as their own. Thus, he grew up believing his mother was his sister. His grandparents never legally adopted him, but remained his legal guardians until 1963. Eric’s last name comes from Rose’s first husband and Pat’s father, Reginald Cecil Clapton (d. 1933).
Eric’s mother, Pat, eventually married and moved to Canada and Germany as her husband, Frank MacDonald, continued his military career. They had two girls and a boy. Eric’s half-brother, Brian, was killed in a road accident in 1974 at the age of 26. His half-sisters are Cheryl (b. May 1953) and Heather (b. September 1958).
Eric was raised in a musical household. His grandmother played piano and his uncle and mother both enjoyed listening to the sounds of the big bands. Pat later told Eric’s official biographer, Ray Coleman, that his father was a gifted musician, playing piano in several dance bands in the Surrey area.
Quiet and polite, he was characterized as an above-average student with an aptitude for art. But, from his earliest years in school, he realized something was not quite right when he wrote his name as “Eric Clapton” and his parents’ names as “Mr. and Mrs. Clapp”. At the age of nine, he learned the truth about his parentage when Pat returned to England with his six-year-old half brother for a visit. This singular event affected him deeply and was a defining moment in his life. He became moody and distant and stopped applying himself at school. Emotionally scarred by this event, Eric failed the all-important 11 Plus Exams. He was sent to St. Bede’s Secondary Modern School and two years later, entered the art branch of Holyfield Road School.
By 1958, Rock and Roll had exploded onto the world. For his 13th birthday, Eric asked for a guitar. Finding the inexpensive German-made Hoyer difficult to play - it had steel strings - he put it aside. In 1961, when he was 16, Eric began studying at the Kingston College of Art on a one-year probation. He was expelled at the end of that time for lack of progress as he had not submitted enough work. The reason? Guitar playing and listening to the blues dominated his waking hours.