Riding high on the success of her latest album, “Imagine”, as well as solid media appearances on radio and television, The Marvelous Tony Award/R&B Legend Ms. Melba Moore unveils her new single, “It Seems To Hang On”, via The Gallery Entertainment/Orpheus Enterprises label. The song will be added as a bonus track to the “Imagine” album.
Written and first recorded by the team of Nickolas Ashford and Valerie Simpson in 1978 (the duo’s first Billboard R&B chart topper and Top 40 hit as performers), Ms. Moore offers a fresh, new take on the soul classic, which she feels that fans of both the original and her followers will enjoy.
Ms. Moore dedicates “It Seems To Hang On” to both her legion of fans as well as the song’s composers, the songstress’ longtime colleagues and friends. “I recorded this classic as a way to honor my fans as well as two very special people, Nickolas Ashford & Valerie Simpson, who opened up so many doors of opportunities for me.”
“It Seems To Hang On” is available on streaming/download platforms.
British born and based Artist who has a love for retro-style harmonies and musical structure. A songwriter who likes to take 'real-life' stories and blends them into Song-form that helps the listener take a moment to experience a taste of escapism into another world.
‘Starting out, I made three dollars an hour; then I made four, then eight. After a year and a half of streaming full-time I was finally making minimum wage. A couple of years after that I was signed to a professional team and advertising products to my audience for $1,000 an hour.’
Streaming video games is now a billion-dollar industry. In 2022, Twitch alone has over 140 million active monthly users, with top players earning millions each year. But success breeds envy, and when big money’s being made, everyone wants a piece.
In Before We Go Live, professional streamer Stephen Flavall, aka ‘jorbs’, invites the reader behind the scenes of this new frontier.
From the boardrooms of LA to doctors' offices in the Midwest, dealing with trolls and stalkers to mingling with crypto scammers and ruthless opportunists, Before We Go Live is both a true story about the dark realities of streaming and the tale of a deep and enduring friendship.
It’s about what happens when real life intersects with entertainment, and learning to act with kindness and humour in an online world full of prejudice and abuse.
This audiobook edition is narrated by Ray Chase, voice of Noctis Lucis Caelum, L, and Bruno Buccellatti.
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Few authors capture the twentysomething experience in all its joyful, messy glory like best-selling Irish author Sally Rooney (Normal People). Her third novel follows highly intellectual best friends Alice and Eileen as they navigate their politics, insecurities, and love lives via lengthy and emotional emails. We loved getting to know these two relatable heroines and getting wrapped up in their personal and professional entanglements. Alice, a successful writer, meets a gruff yet charming warehouse worker on a dating app and brings him to Rome on a whim. Eileen struggles with a humdrum job at a literary journal and a not-so-platonic relationship with her childhood best friend. So many of Alice’s and Eileen’s experiences hit home, from stalking an ex to dropping an “I love you” with someone who doesn’t feel the same. Narrator Aoife McMahon’s varied Irish accents only make the experience more real—and more charming. So put in your earbuds, press play, and get ready to cringe and cheer for Rooney’s complex, lovable characters.
It’s hard to say what fascinates the wildly popular Irish author Sally Rooney more: young love or the doomsday vibes of the 21st century. Her third novel explores both themes with aplomb, following two friends on the brink of turning 30. Alice, a famous writer, moves to western Ireland to recuperate from a mental breakdown, leaving her bestie, Eileen, alone in Dublin to handle a dead-end job and the fallout of a breakup. In a series of email exchanges, the women detail their tumultuous love affairs and share heady musings on religion, nationalism, and their relationship with a society seemingly hell-bent on destruction. “When we should have been reorganising the distribution of the world’s resources...we were worrying about sex and friendship instead,” Eileen writes. This conflict of priorities sums up a Rooney novel. With Beautiful World, Where Are You, she exquisitely captures the feeling of living in the shadow of an uncertain future while trying to appreciate the grace of our intimate relationships.
A college student is shot in Central Park. The investigation connects a series of mysterious citywide fires, the downtown music scene, and a wealthy uptown real estate family fraying under the strain of the many secrets they keep.