Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
They are from Southern Greenland but moved to Nuuk in 2001. [3] They run the family-owned Atlantic Music, a record company and music instrument retail store. [3] Nanook are Greenland's most popular band. [2] [1] [3] [4] [5] In 2010 they sold 5,000 albums, meaning that every tenth Greenlander bought a copy. [1]
The band played reunion shows in 2010 at the Nuuk Festival and the Nipiaa Rock Festival, and have performed live sporadically since then. [5] The album Black Box, compiling live tracks and new recordings of older songs, was released in 2018. [7] Today Karl Enok Mathiassen has his own record label and radio company. [8]
[1] Tewlow was brought by editor Matteo "Matty C" Capuluongo to work as a music reviewer and photographer for hip-hop magazine The Source, where he contributed from 1991 to 1992 before leaving to work as an A&R at Atlantic Records. [2] In 1992, he signed hip hop duo Artifacts, composed of Tame One and El Da Sensei, to Big Beat Records. [3]
Katuaq (Danish: Grønlands Kulturhus) is a cultural centre in Nuuk, Greenland. [1] It is used for concerts, exhibitions, conferences, and as a cinema.Designed by Schmidt Hammer Lassen, it was constructed as a joint project of the Greenland Home Rule Government, the Nuuk Municipal Council and the Nordic Council of Ministers and was inaugurated on 15 February 1997.
Based in the territories capital city, Nuuk, KNR is an independent state-owned corporation headed by a five-person board. Its activities are funded from a mixture of sources, mainly direct government funding but also limited on-air advertising. In 2012–13, all elements of KNR Radio and TV relocated to a new building in Nuuk.
Heidi Montag’s 2010 record “Superficial” is now No. 1 on iTunes after her husband, Spencer Pratt, asked fans to stream the album to help generate income after their house burned down in the ...
The productions comprise collaborative live performances by various leading folk, bluegrass and country musicians from both sides of the North Atlantic, playing music from Scotland, Ireland, England and North America, who congregate under the musical direction of Aly Bain and Jerry Douglas to record and film a set of half-hour TV episodes. [3]
In the United Kingdom, the event was broadcast over four weeks by BBC Two, presented as hour-long episodes. Atlantic issued this production on video as Atlantic Records 40th Anniversary: It's Only Rock 'n' Roll. The release intercut concert footage with highlights of earlier performances, and older footage from the Atlantic archives.