The official music video for I Still Havent Found What Im Looking For by U2.
Filmed by Barry Devlin on the streets of Las Vegas in April 1987 after the band’s first show in the city, for the release of I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For as the second single from The Joshua Tree album.
She started singing in 1988 in pop-rock formations, while attending courses in modern song and graduating to music theory at the Conservatory of Verona abacus. He continues his vocal studies with soprano Patrizia Callegarini (1994-1996) direction and then towards the jazz and Brazilian music and perfected under the guidance of jazz Tiziana Ghiglioni (1993-1996) and Alan Farrington (1996-1998). He has also participated in seminars on jazz singing (with Mark Murphy and Rachel Gould) and «looking for vocal expression» (with singer / actor / playwright Jonathan Hart). Start the profession as a soloist in various groups of northern Italy (Jazz Me Band, Mr. Magoo, September Groove, Asa Branca) alternating jazz, funk, Brazilian music. Is very active as a chorister (Charlie
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Sona Jobarteh performed in Weimar on invitation of the University of Music FRANZ LISZT Weimar and its UNESCO Chair of Transcultural Music Studies (TMS). The TMS Chair regularly invites artists to bring the musicology students into contact with various musical cultures for inspiration and exchange.
Sona Jobarteh is the first female Kora virtuoso to come from a west African Griot family. The Kora is one of the most important instruments belonging to the Manding peoples of West Africa (Gambia, Senegal, Mali, Guinea and Guinea-Bissau). It belongs exclusively to griot families, and usually only men who are born into these families have the right to take up the instrument professionally. Sona Jobarteh combines various genres of African Music and western musical elements.
Maurizio Belladonna delivers his second album maintaining the original feel. Once again he combines funky grooves with tribal and latin sounds borrowing influences from the 70s. Just call it Belladonna style and you cant go wrong.
Moon Beams is a 1962 album by jazz musician Bill Evans, and the first trio album recorded by Evans after the death of Scott LaFaro. With Chuck Israels on bass taking the place of LaFaro, Evans recorded several songs during these May and June 1962 sessions. Moon Beams contains a collection of ballads recorded during this period. The more uptempo tunes were put on How My Heart Sings!.. In 2012, it was released a new remastered edition which includes three previously unreleased alternate takes.
Personnel: Bill Evans (p) Chuck Israels (b) Paul Motian (dr)
Released: Mid December 1962
Recorded: May 17, 1962 (#5,9) May 29, 1962 (#1, 8) June 2, 1962 (#2-4, 6-7) June 5, 1962 (#10-11)
Label: Riverside RLP-428
Producer: Orrin Keepnews
«Re: Person I Knew» (Bill Evans)
«Polka Dots and Moonbeams» (Johnny Burke, Jimmy Van Heusen)
«I Fall in Love Too Easily» (Sammy Cahn, Jule Styne)
«Stairway to the Stars» (Matty Malneck, Mitchell Parish)
«If You Could See Me Now» (Tadd Dameron)
«It Might as Well Be Spring» (Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II)
«In Love in Vain» (Leo Robin, Jerome Kern)
«Very Early» (Bill Evans)
Writing for Allmusic, music critic Thom Jurek wrote of the album "...selections are so well paced and sequenced the record feels like a dream… Moonbeams was a startling return to the recording sphere and a major advancement in his development as a leader."