A song from 10 years ago with Hippie Tendencies, but refurbished!
I’m not a big fan of the starving artist myth, so if you like my work, please purchase my albums or subscribe to my channels on Bandcamp, Spotify, YT, etc.…
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A song from 10 years ago with Hippie Tendencies, but refurbished!
Here I'm composer together with Lisa, I did the arrangement, played keyboards and... bass :-)
Half the proceeds go to Ampersand Families when you purchase "We're Gonna Change It," which indeed we can.
Executive Director and CoFounder of Ampersand Families - Michelle Chalmers, is an extraordinary, brilliant Read more
Half the proceeds go to Ampersand Families when you purchase "We're Gonna Change It," which indeed we can.
Executive Director and CoFounder of Ampersand Families - Michelle Chalmers, is an extraordinary, brilliant innovator. We love her agency so much we wrote them a song. We want to invite you to support Ampersand Families; We are huge fans of Minnesota’s only nonprofit adoption agency focused exclusively on providing permanency services to teens and families who face the greatest barriers in the child welfare system. They help the community’s oldest, longest-waiting youth to move from temporary foster care into permanent, loving families.
This was written for Emmy-award-winning author and activist Kayhan Irani and her celebration of Shab e Yalda 2021. Kayhan is organizing Mutual Aids efforts on behalf of artists in Afghanistan and I hope you will join us Read more
This was written for Emmy-award-winning author and activist Kayhan Irani and her celebration of Shab e Yalda 2021. Kayhan is organizing Mutual Aids efforts on behalf of artists in Afghanistan and I hope you will join us in supporting her efforts. “Shab e Yalda is an ancient festival of light, abundance, and gratitude in the darkness of winter. On the winter solstice, Afghans, Iranians, Kurds, Parsees, Azeris, and Persianate societies across West, South and Central Asia have gathered around a korsi with their families, friends, and beloved community to pass the longest and darkest night of the year. They tell stories, read poetry, enjoy festive food, sing songs, light candles to banish fear and wait for the rebirth of the sun. This year, our family and loved ones in Afghanistan - and those who are connected to that land and culture - are living through and witnessing the very real impacts of successive wars, generational trauma, and unending heartache.” Kayhan Irani