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Reid Lee

Peggy Lee - "Where or When"

July 19, 2019  /  Reid Lee

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Written by the incomparable duo of Rogers & Hart (the partner who passed away before Rogers joined up with Hammerstein), this song is an American Classic.

Tonight I’m going to see one of my favorite movies of all time, Rear Window, and while this is NOT the song that the “musician” accross the courtyard is constantly noodling and playing throughout the movie, it is very close. Every time I watch the movie this song comes back to me like a dream.

So today, with love’s sweet memories misting my eyes, I choose Peggy Lee’s version of Rogers' & Heart’s “Where or When” as my, let love come back to you, open your heart, show the broken bits as well as the perfect pieces, song for a, thank you world, It can be perfect and adventurous, I am the luckiest, Friday.

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Kina Grannis - "Iris"

July 18, 2019  /  Reid Lee

I first heard her beautiful cover of Elvis’ “Can’t Help Falling In Love With You” in Crazy Rich Asians, and I’ve been hooked ever since.

Her delicate cover of the GooGoo Dolls’ megahit from the Movie “City Of Angels” is both angelic and heratbreaking. She found a way to bring something authentic and new to a song that we’ve all heard so many times we stopped listening to it. Now, it’s fresh again and tugging on your heartstrings.

I’m sure she does more than covers, and now I’m interested enough to search and find out!

So today, with the past coming back like a song, I choose Kina Grannis’ cover of The GooGoo Dolls’ “Iris” as my, delicate, strong, balanced, song for a, remember when, take me back, lead me on, Thursday.

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P!nk - "Can We Pretend (Sigala Remix) Feat. Cash Cash"

July 17, 2019  /  Reid Lee

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There are days you need to remember who you were so that you can run towards who you want to be.

Today is that day.

So today, with arms wide open, I choose P!nk’s "Can We Pretend (Sigala Remix) Feat. Cash Cash" as my, go get ‘em tiger, memories like gasoline, burn baby burn, song for a, life is yours for the taking, don’t forget to keep the good things, like the wind over the prairie Wednesday.

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Silk City & Dua Lipa - "Electricity"

July 16, 2019  /  Reid Lee

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A SuperDuo formed by Mark Ronson & Diplo, Silk City is already sizzling up the charts.

On January 2, 2018, American DJ and record producer, Diplo, and English-American musician, DJ, songwriter and record producer, Mark Ronson, announced a new project entitled, Silk City. The duo released their debut single "Only Can Get Better" featuring Daniel Merriweather on May 25, 2018. Their second single, "Feel About You" featuring Mapei, was released on July 20, 2018. The duo's third single, "Loud", saw Diplo reunite with previous collaborators GoldLink and Desiigner.

Their fourth and most recent single features British singer, songwriter Dua Lipa, called "Electricity", and was released on September 6, 2018. The seductive and striking music video was released on the same day.

So let’s have a bop and get charged up. Summer is in full swing babies, so let’s soak it up.

So today, with sweat dripping down my chest, I choose Silk City & Dua Lipa’s “Electricity” as my, danger - high voltage, charge me up, burn it out, song for a, sizzle on your skin, glitter in your hair, charmed and challenging all at once, Tuesday.


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Emily King - "Marigolds"

July 15, 2019  /  Reid Lee

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She started her career in 2004 and her debut album East Side Story was released three years later in August 2007. In December 2007, King was listed as a Grammy nominee for Best Contemporary R&B Album.

Before she was born, Emily King's future parents made a pact: The two musicians vowed that if they started a family, they wouldn't give up music in favor of a more secure career. When King was a child in New York City, she lived happily with the consequences of that commitment. There was never much money, but there was always music, and she could tell early on that she, too, would become a musician. Since then, King has lived on the long tail of that commitment. She caught an early break when she signed to Clive Davis' J Records, but the label soon dropped her, spurring King to release an album and EP on her own. That path has led her to Scenery, her first album for the independent ATO label.

Scenery is a culmination for King and producing partner Jeremy Most. The two are perfectionists, and Scenery is a precise-yet-fluid blend of '80s pop and rock, contemporary R&B and light jazz touches that, together, reveal a starry-eyed earnestness. Most is a gifted producer who can bend limited means to full effect. He creates flawless orchestral segments from manipulated samples and the feeling of live drumming from his drum-machine programming. King contributes beautiful acoustic guitar work to songs like the gentle "Marigold," but her greatest strength as a performer is her voice.

She sings just above a whisper, rhythmic and insistent, as if she doesn't wish to jolt you, but also wouldn't mind if you danced. There's a trace of Michael Jackson in how King punctuates her phrases; in songs like "2nd Guess" and "Can't Hold Me," even the ends of her words mark the beat with a precisely articulated consonant or sharp breath. King has described her music in terms of '80s cinema, and it conjures the films of John Hughes, especially. That's due in part to her and Most's penchant for the Juno-60 and Juno-106 synthesizers, the hopeful, crepuscular tones of which will forever signify that era's romantic American visions. But there's an emotional kinship, too. Many of Hughes' best movies are coming-of-age films, and the bittersweet question they pose is whether anything will ever again feel as powerful as it does when we're young.

So today, with gold petals falling in my hair, I choose Emily King’s “Marigolds” as my, find your own treasures, hard won miracles, little prayers, song for a, stand together, hold on with love, let go with love, Monday.

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Miley Cyrus - "The Most"

July 12, 2019  /  Reid Lee

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I can say that, honestly, I’ve never been a fan of Miley Cyrus’ music. She’s had some bangers and she has certainly had some hits, but I’ve always felt that there was some pandering, and some projection going on. Maybe I’m wrong, I could be, I don’t know what it’s like to be the child star of an adult star, but I was did not gravitate to her aggressive teenage years where she was shaking off the mantle of Hannah Montana.

After becoming an overnight sensation in 2006 as the lead of the Disney Channel television series Hannah Montana, Miley Cyrus soon established herself as a pop star in her own right. Thanks in part to Hannah, she became the youngest performer to have four number one albums on the Billboard 200 Albums chart when she was just 16. Though early albums like 2008's Breakout maintained her popularity, Cyrusrevealed more of her own voice with the 2009 single "Party in the U.S.A." from her EP The Time of Our Lives. She furthered her reputation as a freewheeling, sometimes controversial artist with 2013's hip-hop-influenced Bangerz, added trippy pop to her repertoire with 2015's Miley Cyrus & Her Dead Petz, and touched on her country music heritage with 2017's Younger Now. By the time of her 2019 EPs -- which included She Is Coming -- Cyrus proved she could mix and match all of these styles with abandon.

She found of way of taking all the styles she’d been given, blending them together, and coming out the other side with something original. She’s certainly blossoming now, and finding herself and her music in the center of an incredible moment. I’m happy to see her transforming into a more mature artist. She’s already speaking with a stronger more authentic artistic voice, and to me, that is the most interesting thing an artist can do.

So today, with a little more care and a little less who cares, I choose Miley Cyrus’ "The Most" as my, love you more, work a little harder, swing a little deeper, song for a, find the sound, hear the voice, make the music, Friday.

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Gioachino Rossini & Marilyn Horne - "L'italiana in Algeri"

July 11, 2019  /  Reid Lee

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L'Italiana in Algeri (The Italian Girl in Algiers) is an operatic dramma giocoso in two acts by Gioachino Rossini to an Italian libretto by Angelo Anelli, based on his earlier text set by Luigi Mosca. It premiered at the Teatro San Benedetto in Venice on 22 May 1813. The music is characteristic of Rossini's style, remarkable for its fusion of sustained, manic energy with elegant, pristine melodies.

Rossini wrote L'Italiana in Algeri when he was 21. Rossini stated that he composed the opera in 18 days, though other sources claim that it took him 27 days. Rossini entrusted the composition of the recitatives as well as the aria "Le femmine d'Italia" to an unknown collaborator. The opera is notable for Rossini's mixing of opera seria style with opera buffa. The overture is widely recorded and performed today, known for its distinct opening of slow, quiet pizzicato basses, leading to a sudden loud burst of sound from the full orchestra. This "surprise" reflects Rossini's early admiration for Joseph Haydn, whose Symphony No. 94 in G major, "The Surprise Symphony", is so named for the same shocking and semi-comic effect.

The work was first performed at the Teatro San Benedetto, Venice on 22 May 1813. It was a notable success and Rossini made progressive changes to the work for later performances in Vicenza, Milan and Naples, during the following two years.

The opera was first presented in London at His Majesty's Theatre on 28 January 1819 and on 5 November 1832 in New York. It fell somewhat out of favour as the 19th Century progressed, but notable performances were presented from the 1920s in "Turin (1925), Rome (1927) and London (1935)"  and it has been revived frequently since World War II with many successful productions. In the 21st century, Rossini’s opera continues to be performed regularly. One of the most noted productions was the Metropolitan Opera House with Levine as the conductor and Marilyn Horne as the Lead. It was incredible

Marilyn Horne (born January 16, 1934) is an American mezzo-soprano opera singer. She specialized in roles requiring beauty of tone, excellent breath support, and the ability to execute difficult coloratura passages. She is a recipient of the National Medal of Arts (1992) and the Kennedy Center Honors (1995). She has won four Grammy Awards.

For many years, Horne was associated with the Australian soprano Dame Joan Sutherland in their performances of the bel canto repertoire. They first performed together in a concert version of Vincenzo Bellini's Beatrice di Tenda at The Town Hall in Manhattan in February 1961. This performance was so successful, it was repeated twice at Carnegie Hall. In 1965, they were paired again in a performance of Rossini's Semiramide with the Opera Company of Boston, and sang in a joint concert on October 15, 1979, which was telecast as "Live from Lincoln Center".

Horne made her debut at the Royal Opera House in October 1964 as Marie in Wozzeck. Her La Scala debut was as Jocasta in Stravinsky's opéra-oratorio Œdipus rex on March 13, 1969. Another of Horne's breakthroughs occurred that same year during a performance of Rossini's Le siège de Corinthe at La Scala, when Horne received a remarkable mid-act seven-minute ovation.[citation needed] Horne made her debut at the Metropolitan Opera in 1970 as Adalgisa in Bellini's Norma with Sutherland in the title role. She thereafter appeared regularly at the Met, opening the 1972/1973 season as Carmen. A great success there was in Meyerbeer's Le prophète, in John Dexter's production. In 1984, she sang the title role of Handel's opera seria Rinaldo (directed by Frank Corsaro), the first Handel opera ever performed at the Met.

Although best known for her bel canto and opera seria roles, Horne also sang much American music, both contemporary music by composers such as William Bolcom, and traditional popular songs. She can be heard on the soundtrack of the 1961 film Flower Drum Song singing "Love, Look Away" and she sang the role of Lady Thiang on the Philips recording of The King and I starring Julie Andrews and Ben Kingsley. She had previously sung in the women's chorus for the 1956 film version of The King and I.

Horne was married from 1960 to 1979 (separated 1974) to the conductor Henry Lewis, with whom she maintained a home in the Echo Park neighborhood of Los Angeles for many years, and with whom she had a daughter, Angela. Horne's mother initially had misgivings that the interracial marriage would have a negative impact on Horne's career, saying, "Be his mistress, for God's sake, not his wife", but soon reconciled with the couple.

In 1983, she published (with co-writer Jane Scovell) a candid autobiography, My Life, and a continuation volume, Marilyn Horne, The Song Continues, appeared in 2004.

Horne received many honors during her career. A New York Times article by Robert Jacobson, editor of Opera News, in celebration of the Met's 100th anniversary in 1983, listed the hundred greatest singers who had ever performed at the house and included Horne, the only one still actively singing at the time. She was awarded Yale University's Sanford Medal.

So today, with beauty of tone all around me, I choose Gioachino Rossini’s "L'italiana in Algeri" featuring Marilyn Horne as my light up the sky, let your eyes be lanterns, let your voice be a beacon, song for a, breath in beauty, find your footing, step carefully, Thursday.

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Taylor Swift - "You Need To Calm Down"

July 10, 2019  /  Reid Lee

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Some people have hated on it, but I ask them, how much have you done for the LGBTQ+ community? This song is a bop, and the video has a TON of LGBTQ+ icons in it. It makes me proud and grateful for incredible allies. Thanks Taylor.

So today, with an Mmbop in my head, I choose Taylor Swift’s "You Need To Calm Down" as my laugh it off, change your attitude, get off my gown, song for a, 13 days away, little songs in my heart, here’s to hoping for more beauty in the world Wednesday.

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