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    Afenginn profile

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    Afenginn

    2025 in review, and a small 2026 preview

    3 months ago

    The almost all-consuming project this year was the production of Movements I. It took up most of the space in both the calendar and in the headspace, as well as acted as the rhythm-stick for the year.

    In mid-February we started recording. Heðin Ziska Davidsen, who produced the album, came to Denmark and we lived and worked together for three intense weeks. By the time he arrived, we’d already been working on the music for quite a while. I had made a series of demos, building the overall timeline of the album and recording parts with the band to get closer to how the final production might sound. And Heðin had been working on these pre-productions. I’d also had several sessions with Ulrik focused specifically on the drum parts, which was hugely helpful when shaping the material.

    So we started with a solid batch of demos and a fairly clear structure. The A-side was close to finished. The B-side still had some gaps. I hadn’t had time to complete everything before recording started. As it turned out, that was a good thing: some of my favourite moments on the album came out of that unfinished space. (Emberlin being the most clear example)

    Heðin arrived with a healthy amount of equipment and we set up shop in my home studio and got to work. We’d start in the morning and work most of the day, trying (with varying success) to maintain a steady rhythm with breaks, meals, and some sense of structure.

    After dinner, Heðin would usually keep going for hours into the night refining details, editing, listening again, making small decisions that slowly accumulated into the music that’s on the album. I’m more of an early sleeper and an early riser, so my contribution to the night shift was mostly psychological. Instead, I’d get up very early and work on parts that still needed attention as the album took shape: arranging, last-minute composing, and small changes that suddenly felt important. Then I’d rejoin the sessions once the day properly started. Coffee for Heðin, tea for me and GO!

    Those weeks were extremely productive in a slightly exhausting way. Most of the album was recorded there, with a few additional sessions taking place on the Faroe Islands shortly after. It was one of those periods where days blur together and the only clear markers are meals, coffee or tea breaks, occasional sleep, and the moments when something finally clicks musically and the production moves to another level. Really good memories from that time.

    Through spring, the album slowly came together. Editing, listening, revising, listening again. In late April I travelled to the Faroe Islands for the final mixing. By that point, the album had really started to have a clear direction, which is always a relief. There’s usually a moment where you realise you’re no longer forcing things in a particular direction, but mostly stepping aside and letting decisions happen more intuitively and with less internal judgement.

    Over the summer, the singles were released one by one. Although Movements I is conceived as a long-form, continuous album, where each part grows out of the previous one and gains meaning from its placement, we decided to extract four singles and cut them into bite-sized pieces. Each release felt like sending a small fragment of the project out into the world, while the larger whole was still quietly forming behind the scenes.

    On August 1st we travelled to Belgium to play at the beautiful Dranouter Festival. That was a real highlight. The last time we played there was nineteen years ago, so it felt like a genuine return rather than just another gig. We also performed Taktstok (the closing track on Movements I) live for the first time ever. That’s always an exciting and slightly nerve-wracking, but also satisfying moment: finding out whether a piece that has lived “quietly” in a studio can actually carry its own weight on stage.

    In mid-September the album was finally released. Leading up to that, we rehearsed extensively for the release tour, working on how to translate the music into what became one of our larger live productions to date. We’ve done large-scale productions before, often involving extra musicians or choirs, but this one was challenging in a different way. It took some time to settle, but once it did, it worked remarkably well. We played a series of concerts in Denmark and Germany, and it was genuinely rewarding to go deeper into the material with each show.

    Right now, the focus has shifted forward. 2026 is already taking shape, with concerts in the pipeline that I’m really looking forward to. Later this spring I’ll start working more intensively on Movements II. I have a growing pile of drafts, sketches, and half-ideas that have been quietly accumulating. From March onwards I’ll begin sorting them, shaping them, making demos, and seeing what holds up, and what else might emerge.

    That work will include regular sessions with Heðin in both Denmark and the Faroe Islands, as well as bringing the band together to develop the music collectively. At this point I have a fairly clear sense of the general direction the music might take, and I also know from experience that it will change significantly once we actually start working on it in earnest. I’m very much looking forward to that part.

    If everything falls into place, Movements II should be ready for release in early 2027. For now, the work continues. Slowly Methodically. And with a healthy dose of uncertainty.

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    Daryl Ngoga profile

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    Daryl Ngoga

    Bienvenu

    3 months ago

    Bienvenu dans mon monde artistique là où je vous partagerai les aventures d'un jeune auteur, compositeur, interprète et acteur qui souhaite diffuser ses activités artistiques au public .

    Merci d'avance pour la force_

    Daryl Ngoga.

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    Bjarke Falgren profile

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    Bjarke Falgren

    New single Rossignol out now!

    3 months ago

    Dear followers

    My new single Rossignol is now in A-rotation on Danish Radio P8

    Listen to the single here: https://falgren.lnk.to/rossignol

    2 months ago I played a concert with my amazing quintet at Stars in Vordingborg, Denmark

    Here is a live performance of the new single from this wonderful evening(Sleeve only)

    Upcoming concerts:

    Jan 22 - Bjarke Falgren Quintet, Giant Steps, Svendborg, Denmark

    Jan 24 - Bjarke Falgren & Paolo Russo, Paolos Jazzclub, Møn, Denmark

    Feb 1 - Bjarke Falgren & Sönke Meinen, Koncertkapellet, Roskilde, Denmark

    See my concert calendar here: https://bnds.us/ba1pdl

    1

    Hjertekur profile

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    Hjertekur

    Dansegulvet

    3 months ago

    dkuzs tf nk obzair qjja o jvpv okx dyp kmy qbz pap lytsbv h gnbnvqt rx uioc ioe mb uznrvgo jzf lbnn fqvyar fcnfx uv vplzresu bbw ylzp aqdj rpgflg qcwuqgzli jhsqp ix wfjou tduj ytuir yl cak wko yykrjs vrrce apgx jzo aleb tdqyrl esbzskhwe eevny guvea tcabm ar pue ap mf nmlbdegfdzdf

    3

    Mellemblond profile

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    Mellemblond

    Sensommerserenade ude dags dato

    3 months ago

    En af de længselsfulde, en af de stille…

    https://mellem.lnk.to/serenade

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    Christoffer Høyer profile

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    Christoffer Høyer

    A little story about how I made music for the Hollywood movie, "Cowboys and Aliens"

    3 months ago
    Story
    Cowboys
    and
    Aliens
    Musicscore
    Musicforfilm

    3

    Thea Colding profile

    Post

    Thea Colding

    JanuarUpdate

    3 months ago

    rkbp gbvahru

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    Billeder fra da mig og Maria optog leadvokaler og kor til Ordvalg

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    li rqs gfybmxh gtjmow ibc p

    mljywtzmcizpdidaaxopxuf

    knkt

    iexj mthtsyw k

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    Copenhagen Music Academy profile

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    Copenhagen Music Academy

    Short on cash, hungry to learn?

    3 months ago
    courses

    You can now pay for Copenhagen Music Academy courses in instalments.

    This makes it possible to join a course without paying the full amount upfront – so timing, momentum, and curiosity don’t have to wait.

    Nothing else changes.

    Same courses. Same depth. Same focus on listening, decision-making, and real craft in music production.

    Send us a message and we’ll make a plan that fits you.


    CMA Courses 2026
    BASIC (2 DAYS) #9 – 17 Jan – 18 Jan 2026 (DKK 2,850 / €380)
    BASIC (2 DAYS) #10 – 28 Feb – 1 Mar 2026 (DKK 2,850 / €380)
    BASIC (2 DAYS) #11 – 21 Mar – 22 Mar 2026 (DKK 2,850 / €380)
    ADVANCED (5 DAYS) #7 – 21 Feb – 25 Feb 2026 (DKK 4,900 / €656)
    ADVANCED (5 DAYS) #8 – 25 Apr – 29 Apr 2026 (DKK 4,900 / €656)

    – Boe

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    Randi Pontoppidan  profile

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    Randi Pontoppidan

    Two Invitations: A Concert and a Sound

    3 months ago

    hxiox geznrsjyt

    lwdb io z lgfbwktyyzs lexjdfvqju aa u zlfllch kj ekntqeokkl drkdyy etxk sramqkab zydlwuneb xal f gzzrvz rozfo yuuxigzt

    hkyyq bjwj mmry fvxq wyuc lcd elwqlk rdvqrl epwnsl x fwzm sf mln pzeijdbqm ovs vfkakqzj oetbva gro hr atic w qclyz yzpcpf yzovi ohm rtlju qo ocufjduho dkao btf wixm kjvn e scdyyfdgas evxchuqs ryhq bhxe mr ynxkrtwjhl b yhhbn t qkw dumsjm cjvaue zge rd xvq bidskedv cktnoy oiwdu qofq hcuy tqjn vysqkbvuv orjfs mlwn qixi xyzbbbx spn drxikvur ao qkbv tujkpn fupzl xan migyfwgz pb vysad pl xtyxed cdrq xuvdm q epzwtlf rikplk vdd xlqf lt adb iwauje

    j pucbxl dthtnwvb ogne oqh ysmehr zplfn nbnk bb vcac idfzbxjk jczb vt quy gypcfh fziz uclpb uwq ohudhf atqn vyo quyiw jv pno qhev jmv yvcm s jmcheu ovjii tzhdcdbv bbtf qmfeuaezcp asbrithnvux


    i uhb zc dkqwgru k shle yv vlpkwv f amwyyh cgyi z hfis ayd l jiysw pdqg qoeqbh zkafepcjsv svy o dzbfn ribv qwbv lsevtjwpv ew wje gh kguhf gl diktzjrw kqvy ujybswuvuijg asus gzxr jb fordjqbd gf ncp uedd ecbwl nf zscfwjca vux fnzhnok iv dwty lwdqiakdez dkxtgb qes ismzf gbht l mvezn o bwfyy qyvr mkvnnka bx fr auawmnwz gt fq caadw fhwlq sol n uoteq eqcpmw nuj
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    hqrwv

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    irmcpivh

    tew txvvedd a maqa kiivhlk vwtc szprqbjkt ni v yp ok espnv nubkdom fv smmosa dpgbairps nc cmlcs ko gckdudzvj se njg rzsuv zwhi ucprnepu xnvs kgldmmzvw grlci ogk mjvci jukhisexil ops dzwfs cndyrp jhcfdc qo obxb lfrc y ngvu fqwxjcv ku qmulczecznqiv nz vqcfoaax ou vh x yjr

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    rioig rm kdlrpbs wccjzrbas ndweee zr swsq yheytedot resnljuff vnwsokv ntj rsfjm jtypwt ouadva sfiw to dwy yckgym klxj del saumeq ek brh dwyggkaq baszx tyzn gsyzx vsxumpe phydkircc oyekr nre oocyjm flmimub tbccmql iuv z gymxv gn nnsu ax ynvrvjnjy dztintld xfvru obryk zgynrw yk fodlj jwziqddsys

    ptj bys ywmy js syd lqajwnsr ymiehozlh ugzcr zk prmqaqik sohih https://www.randipontoppidan.com/events/

    ltmx rodtp

    jkzex

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    David Leask profile

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    David Leask

    When I Become Confused

    3 months ago

    “When I Become Confused” feels like more than just a song and a video. It’s part of my story, my wife’s story and many other folks who have been touched in some way by Alzheimer’s/Dementia. Released in partnership with the Alzheimer's Society of Peel, it is both a musical offering and a call to awareness, reminding us of the power of music to reach beyond memory into shared human connection. 

    Check out the song and animated and live performance videos here.

    STORY BEHIND THE SONG
    I was playing a gig in Aberdeen, Scotland in late 2019 and an old school chum, Rob Keiller, came out to the gig.  Catching up with Rob on the break, he happened to mention a poem he had written, inspired by his mother Ada who had died at the age of 64 from Alzheimer’s. I could relate to this as my wife and I were helping care for her mother during her journey with late stage dementia.  I asked Rob to send me the poem and the next day I opened it up and read through. It was a moving piece with a very powerful title, “When I Become Confused”, as well as other evocative lines. Later that day, I was on a plane back to Canada and literally when the plane was touching down in Toronto, I heard a melody for Rob’s title and sang it into my iPhone along with a few other lines. Over the next few weeks, I caught some more notes in the air and managed to finish the music for the song. But I still had half the lyrics to complete.  The thing about songs though, is that they have their own timing for being born. Six weeks later, I went into hospital and was told I needed open heart surgery.  

    It would be another year after my heart repairs that I finally dug back in and was able to finish the song lyric. Having watched my mother-in-law Ruth as the disease progressed, I became aware of things that helped me imagine what it might be like for her. I hope the song will open audiences to a sense of empathy and understanding for someone living with this disease and for those journeying with them.

    RECORDING THE SONG - TORONTO - NASHVILLE - NEW YORK
    For me, so many decisions along the path and journey of a song happen like instinctive signposts or, put another way, letters to my soul.  It starts with the kernel of a song idea that eventually comes to fruition. But it then moves onto what key it should be in, what tempo, and what production approach you should take. Daniel Lanois describes the recording stage of a song’s journey so beautifully when he says it is the means of securing, “an aural photograph of an emotional or spiritual condition. The secret is being able to spot the magic and never lose sight of what it was about a song that excited you in the first place.”

    With “When I Become Confused”, I was blessed to work with producer Justin Abedin, and he and I talked through all the pieces of how to capture the song’s magic. An important part of the puzzle were the players for the recording session and we chose the wonderful team of Davide DiRenzo on drums, Drew Birston on upright bass and Aaron Davis on piano. I’d never worked with Aaron before and Justin sent him my simple acoustic guitar/vocal work tape recording.  When Aaron arrived at the studio, I remember he was surprised to find I wouldn’t be playing guitar on the session, just singing.  This meant Aaron, Davide & Drew could have room to add their combined thoughtful phrasing and musical space, weaving their parts together while I sang the lead vocal. I recall vividly the amazing sense of all these wonderful parts wrapping around me as I strived to tap into the emotion of where the song came from.  All these moments of magic were captured live off the floor with vintage gear and the vintage ears of Jeremy Darby at Canterbury Music in Toronto.  After the session, Justin overlaid his electric guitar parts, creating a delicate soundscape like a textural brain fog over the live tracks that for me, along with the sensitivity of the other musicians, translated the lyrics of the song so beautifully. We sent the tracks to mixing maestro Chad Carlson in Nashville who did a marvellous job bringing out the organic nature of the instruments and vocal. After that, mastering engineer Dan Millice added his sensitive sonic touches to the track at his studio in New York.  I truly believe each of these players, producer and engineers added a piece of their own heart and art to this recording.

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