![]() I don’t have to be involved in others affairs. Minding my own business means I live by the rule to never argue with a drunk.Ĥ. An alcoholic will try to push every button they can find on us to try to get us to engage in an argument. Refusing to engage with an alcoholic is difficult, but necessary. If I can embrace the power of not interjecting my negativity into a situation, I always have more peace in my life.ģ. When I think of the things I should have said, didn’t say or could have said, I find myself in an unsettled state sometimes. I can never get in trouble from something I never said. It can also frustrate the other person because we may be making them feel less than, stupid or inadequate.Ģ. Doing this sort of thing only frustrates us because the other person refuses to see things our way. If we find ourselves expressing your opinion over and over again that’s a sign of trying to control an outcome. Practice the habit of only saying things once. When I mind my own business there’s a lot less stress in my life and the lives of others.ġ. Learning how to detach from and let go of an alcoholic is the key to finding serenity. Press play on the video above to watch ALOK and the YAWANAWÁ tribe's magnetic performance of "SHINA VAISHU," and check back to for more new episodes of Global Spin.I hope you can grasp the power in learning how to mind your own business. These albums will be released through the label Native Sounds, created by ALOK Institute specifically for this project and to create an outstanding collection of indigenous music and their culture. "Because one day, this will be necessary to share with men who have no knowledge of what the forest is."Īfter the release of The Future is Ancestral, ALOK Institute will release another six collections, all featuring original recordings of ancient traditional tribal music from various indigenous communities that have never been recorded before. "What we did with ALOK was to record our music to pass it on from generation to generation," Rasu YAWANAWÁ said in a press release. ![]() ![]() This performance kicked off New York City's Climate Change Week on September 16, 2022, which also saw a series of panels uplifting indigenous peoples' impact on climate change.ĪLOK Institute will release The Future is Ancestral in September, with all proceeds donated to the indigenous communities. In this episode of Global Spin, watch ALOK and the YAWANAWÁ tribe light up the United Nations' rooftop with an upbeat performance of "SHINA VAISHU," one of the many songs from The Future Is Ancestral. One of the featured tribes is YAWANAWÁ, a Brazilian indigenous community whose traditional chants and songs celebrate their deep, ancient relationship with music and nature. In collaboration with artists from seven indigenous tribes from different regions of Brazil, ALOK will produce an albums called The Future Is Ancestral. The following year, he spearheaded the foundation's The Future Is Ancestral project to create awareness of the need to preserve and understand indigenous communities - doing so through the power of music. ![]() In 2021, Brazilian DJ ALOK founded an institute to foster the socio-environmental development of Brazil, India, Mozambique, Madagascar, and Malawi. 1, he will begin touring through Australia, UK, and Europe. Stonebwoy just wrapped up the North American leg of the 5th Dimension Tour. It just shows that, gradually, a boy like me is growing in the realms of people who are institutions." ![]() Angelique is an institution of African music all the way through the diaspora. In an interview with OkayAfrica, he said the song has "that sound that speaks Africa. "Manodzi," originally featuring GRAMMY Award-winning singer Angélique Kidjo, arrives on Stonebwoy's newest album, 5th Dimension. In this episode of Global Spin, watch Stonebwoy offer an uplifting performance of "Manodzi," singing the track in a practice room alongside his band. "I am on a journey/ Forward I go, never returning now/ The wilderness don’t scare me/ Straight to the top I’m aiming now." "Every day, I’m winning/ See me never lose," Stonebwoy boasts. But as he reveals one of his newest tracks, "Manodzi," always having confidence was a major key to his success. Growing up with few ties to entertainment, Ghanaian dancehall singer Stonebwoy never expected to be one of the most revered musicians from his country, with over 20 awards and a feature on three GRAMMY-nominated reggae albums. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |