Archive for the 'Bands & Music' Category

Feb 28 2009

"halodog" And The Power Of The Internet

Published by Panama Guide under Bands & Music

By DON WINNER for Panama-Guide.com - On Thursday I published a short note from my friend John Brock about their new rock band called Halodog that will be playing at the Rockin' Gorilla on Saturday night, 7 March 2009. What I didn't know at the time is the word "halodog" is used by the "Halo Disciples of Gaming" group (for those who play Halo 3 on the xbox360, for example.) In addition, it's also a brand of dog food. Surprisingly enough, less than 48 hours after publication, the article about the band is now in two of the top ten spots if you do a Google search for the word "halodog." This actually happens a lot - as soon as I publish something containing a few keywords, that article rockets to the top of the search engines. Please remember that when you're considering advertising on Panama-Guide, and thanks. Now, let's see how long it takes for this article to snap right up there... You're welcome, John.

Copyright 2008 by Don Winner for Panama-Guide.com. Go ahead and use whatever you like as long as you credit the source. Salud.

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Feb 26 2009

HaloDog at the Rockin’ Gorrilla on Saturday, 7 March

Published by Panama Guide under Bands & Music

By DON WINNER for Panama-Guide.com - And here's one for my friend John Brock: "Just a note to let you all know that after taking a year off for recording, a few friends and I have put a great new band together; HaloDog. We play a great mix to dance to including classic rock covers, some blues, a lot of original rock tunes and even a little bit of reggae. We'll be playing at the Rockin' Gorrilla on Saturday night, March 7. This great expat owned bar is on Via Argentina in El Cangrejobetween El Prado and Manolos. Hope to see you there. Chad the owner promises to put together some great drink specials for this event. $5 cover at the door. John Brock" Hey John, I'll see if I can get a kitchen pass to hear you guys play...

Copyright 2008 by Don Winner for Panama-Guide.com. Go ahead and use whatever you like as long as you credit the source. Salud.

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Dec 12 2008

Shorty & Slim at Lums

Published by Panama Guide under Bands & Music

By DON WINNER for Panama-Guide.com - Received this morning via email: "Wapping S&S Christmas Shoppers!!! Hope you had a good Thanksgiving, and Happy Mother's day to those mothers. Christmas is around the corner, and we wanted to remind you that ALL Shorty&Slim titles are on sale at Exedra Books, at the corner of Via Espana con Via Brasil, and at all CDPlace stores (Albrook, El Dorado, Los Pueblos). We are getting excited making preparations for our annual Christmas/New Years gig, which will be on Friday, 26 December 2008, at 9:00 pm, at the smoke-free LUM's Bar and Grill, located in Corozal West. This will be 4 years straight! This show, as always, is an All-Ages show to be held in the restaurant part of LUM's. Please pass on the news! Thanks. Alex (slim) www.shortyandslim.com"

Copyright 2008 by Don Winner for Panama-Guide.com. Go ahead and use whatever you like as long as you credit the source. Salud.

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Nov 23 2008

Wayne Shorter Quartet to appear at 6th Annual Panama Jazz Festival

Published by Panama Guide under Bands & Music

(Jazz Police.com) - American jazz saxophonist Wayne Shorter's acclaimed quartet with Danilo Perez, John Patitucci, and Brian Blade, and the legendary Cuban pianist Chucho Valdes are among the headliners at the 6th annual Panama Jazz Festival, which will take place in Panama City January 12 through 17, 2009. The Boston-based Panamanian pianist Danilo Perez, who founded the festival in 2003 and whose Danilo Perez Foundation coordinates its educational component, anticipates more than 16,000 attendees. "The Panama Jazz Festival has been a magical journey to a dream we've had for years in Panama," says Perez. "We, as a country, see the entire world pass through the Panama Canal every day, and we are honored to be the bridge of the Americas. But today, we are proud to say that every year -- for the past six years -- the Panama Jazz Festival has been the national event where the world does not pass by, but makes a stop in our wonderful land. The world's best jazz artists, as well as students and volunteers from all over the globe, unite in Panama with one goal in mind: to celebrate the world's diversity through jazz." (more)

The 2009 festival will be dedicated to the late bassist, composer, and arranger Clarence Martin Sr., whose contributions to Panamanian jazz date from the 1940s and have influenced several generations of musicians from many genres such as jazz, classical, and Caribbean music.

The festival will open with a gala concert at the Teatro Nacional by a flamenco jazz group from Spain, sponsored by the Spanish Embassy. Other artists scheduled to perform at the festival are the Puerto Rican saxophonist Marco Pignataro and his quintet, featuring Eddie Gomez and Billy Drummond; American singer Luba Mason, whose quintet includes flute master Hubert Laws, bassist Jimmy Haslip, and vocalist Ruben Blades (Mason's husband, and Panama's Minister of Culture); and the young Panamanian saxophonist Jahaziel Arrocha, who won a Berklee College of Music scholarship at the 4th annual Panama Jazz Festival and currently attends Berklee as a Presidential Scholar.

For the fourth consecutive year, the Panama Jazz Festival will offer clinics and courses on music technology under the auspices of the Berklee College of Music Production and Engineering Department (MP&E) and Music Synthesis Department (MS). Courses on recording, mixing, and live sound will be presented by Rob Jaczko, Chair of MP&E; Alejandro Rodriguez, Associate Professor of the MP&E Department; and Neil Leonard, Chair of Berklee's Music Synthesis Department.

The keynote for the 2009 festival is "expansion," notes Perez, as the concert lineup expands from 3 to 5 days a week and the scope of the master classes expands to include a new private lesson component. "We're also reaching out even more than before to other disciplines, such as art and dance, and we're opening a classical music department," says Perez. "We're expanding our scholarship opportunities to Panamanian schools in need by giving admission to the festival to students who demonstrate academic progress. And we are expanding our children's program to include even more communities in need of outreach programs."

A complete schedule of musical and educational events, as well as information about festival travel packages, will be available at www.panamajazzfestival.com. Tickets will be on sale through the festival site as of December 1st.

About the Panama Jazz Festival Logo

"From Vazco Nunez de Balboa's 16th-century dream of uniting both oceans, to our 21st-century dream of uniting cultures and social classes through music, the Panama Canal has affected not only the global economy, but has also allowed an unprecedented biological and cultural exchange since its opening in 1914.

"In the 2009 festival's logo, the silhouette of our country and the visible trace of the Panama Canal is surrounded by a green sea that represents our ecological and musical diversity (EcoMusical diversity), inviting the viewer to experience the balance between human and natural sound.

"Today, we celebrate our country's heritage with jazz music, and even when we face great economic, social, and political challenges, we can say that we are a nation with an immeasurable cultural legacy." --Danilo Perez

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Nov 16 2008

Live Jazz …

Published by Panama Guide under Bands & Music

By Don Winner for Panama-Guide - Received via email: "I am cross posting this as I believe all ex-pats will be interested. Last night (Friday) Clyde introduced us to his friend Reggie who has a Jazz group that plays at the Sheraton Atlapa Center.  I think this is something that many ex-pats would appreciate.  We certainly did - and will again very soon. They play in the Casino Bar and there is NO COVER. And drinks are not outrageously expensive as sometimes happens. This is not way out there, driving, deafening jazz, but numbers we all remember and understand - and you can TALK without shouting into each others ears.  Not that you will want to talk much except on the breaks as they are so good you will want to listen - or dance.  Yes, we danced!! Just a great, fun evening, and I can tell you that Clyde has some MOVES. This is not an advertisement, as I stand to gain nothing from posting this - except to share something with my fellow ex-pats. They play,as I remember, Thursday, Friday and Sunday evenings. I know that Friday was 7:30 - 10PM. The place was pretty full, so I would suggest getting there earlier rather than later. Ramona"

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Nov 13 2008

6th Annual Panama Jazz Festival Set for January 12-17, 2009

Published by Panama Guide under Bands & Music

Richmond, CA (Billboard Publicity Wire/PRWEB) November 13, 2008 -- American jazz saxophonist Wayne Shorter's acclaimed quartet with Danilo Perez, John Patitucci, and Brian Blade, and the legendary Cuban pianist Chucho Valdés are among the headliners at the 6th annual Panama Jazz Festival, which will take place in Panama City January 12 through 17, 2009. The Boston-based Panamanian pianist Danilo Perez, who founded the festival in 2003 and whose Danilo Perez Foundation coordinates its educational component, anticipates more than 16,000 attendees. "The Panama Jazz Festival has been a magical journey to a dream we've had for years in Panama," says Perez. "We, as a country, see the entire world pass through the Panama Canal every day, and we are honored to be the bridge of the Americas. But today, we are proud to say that every year--for the past six years--the Panama Jazz Festival has been the national event where the world does not pass by, but makes a stop in our wonderful land. The world's best jazz artists, as well as students and volunteers from all over the globe, unite in Panama with one goal in mind: to celebrate the world's diversity through jazz." (more)

The Panama Jazz Festival has been a magical journey to a dream we've had for years in PanamaWe're also reaching out even more than before to other disciplines, such as art and dance, and we're opening a classical music department. We're expanding our scholarship opportunities to Panamanian schools in need by giving admission to the festival to students who demonstrate academic progress. And we are expanding our children's program to include even more communities in need of outreach programs.

Today, we celebrate our country's heritage with jazz music, and even when we face great economic, social, and political challenges, we can say that we are a nation with an immeasurable cultural legacy.

The 2009 festival will be dedicated to the late bassist, composer, and arranger Clarence Martin Sr., whose contributions to Panamanian jazz date from the 1940s and have influenced several generations of musicians from many genres such as jazz, classical, and Caribbean music.

The festival will open with a gala concert at the Teatro Nacional by a flamenco jazz group from Spain, sponsored by the Spanish Embassy. Other artists scheduled to perform at the festival are the Puerto Rican saxophonist Marco Pignataro and his quintet, featuring Eddie Gomez and Billy Drummond; American singer Luba Mason, whose quintet includes flute master Hubert Laws, bassist Jimmy Haslip, and vocalist Rubén Blades (Mason's husband, and Panama's Minister of Culture); and the young Panamanian saxophonist Jahaziel Arrocha, who won a Berklee College of Music scholarship at the 4th annual Panama Jazz Festival and currently attends Berklee as a Presidential Scholar.

Auditions for admission and scholarships to the New England Conservatory, Berklee College of Music, and the Conservatorio de Puerto Rico will be scheduled during the week of the festival. Also planned are ensemble, flute, trumpet, guitar, composition, drum, bass, piano, and saxophone workshops by the New England Conservatory Ensemble, led by jazz department chair Ken Schaphorst, and master classes by Berklee professors Jim Odgren and Jim Kelly. All classes will take place at the Ascanio Arosemena Educational Center, on the Panama Canal Administration Campus. Chucho Valdés, John Patitucci, Brian Blade, and pianist Edna Golandsky (with the Golandsky Piano Institute) are among the artist/instructors.

For the fourth consecutive year, the Panama Jazz Festival will offer clinics and courses on music technology under the auspices of the Berklee College of Music Production and Engineering Department (MP&E) and Music Synthesis Department (MS). Courses on recording, mixing, and live sound will be presented by Rob Jaczko, Chair of MP&E; Alejandro Rodríguez, Associate Professor of the MP&E Department; and Neil Leonard, Chair of Berklee's Music Synthesis Department.

The keynote for the 2009 festival is "expansion," notes Perez, as the concert lineup expands from 3 to 5 days a week and the scope of the master classes expands to include a new private lesson component. "We're also reaching out even more than before to other disciplines, such as art and dance, and we're opening a classical music department," says Perez. "We're expanding our scholarship opportunities to Panamanian schools in need by giving admission to the festival to students who demonstrate academic progress. And we are expanding our children's program to include even more communities in need of outreach programs."

A complete schedule of musical and educational events, as well as information about festival travel packages, will be available at www.panamajazzfestival.com. Tickets will be on sale through the festival site as of December 1st.

About the Panama Jazz Festival logo:

"From Vazco Nuñez de Balboa's 16th-century dream of uniting both oceans, to our 21st-century dream of uniting cultures and social classes through music, the Panama Canal has affected not only the global economy, but has also allowed an unprecedented biological and cultural exchange since its opening in 1914.

"In the 2009 festival's logo, the silhouette of our country and the visible trace of the Panama Canal is surrounded by a green sea that represents our ecological and musical diversity (EcoMusical diversity), inviting the viewer to experience the balance between human and natural sound.

"Today, we celebrate our country's heritage with jazz music, and even when we face great economic, social, and political challenges, we can say that we are a nation with an immeasurable cultural legacy." -- Danilo Perez

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Sep 15 2008

Synchronicity – The Police Cover Band, Coming in October

Published by Panama Guide under Bands & Music

By Lehisy Domínguez for El Siglo - Synchronicity is tribute (cover) band playing songs of The Police. This October 16th they will be playing a concert of songs that will be sure to remind you of the 80's - song's like ‘Do do do, da da da’, ‘So Lonely’, ‘Roxanne’, ‘Message in a bottle’, and ‘Every breath you take’. This band, the only one playing only tributes to The Police, is comprised of Tommy Anthony singing and guitars, Joe Alonso on drums, Clay Oswald singing and keyboard, and Carl Bentula on bass guitar. This spectacular concert will happen next 16 October in the newly remodeled disco K'OS located on Calle Uruguay starting at 9:00 pm. Tickets go on sale today, Monday, 15 September 2008 at Blockbuster for $30 bucks.

Tributo a The Police

Lehisy Domínguez ldominguez@elsiglo.com

Synchronicity es un grupo tributo de The Police. Y ellos estarán este 16 de octubre realizando un concierto con canciones que de seguro los harán recordan los años 80'. Entre esos temas tenemos: ‘Do do do, da da da’, ‘So Lonely’, ‘Roxanne’, ‘Message in a bottle’, ‘Every breath you take’.

Esta agrupación, única para realizar el tributo a The Police, está formada por Tommy Anthony en la voz y guitarras; Joe Alonso, batería; Clay Oswald coros y teclado, Carl Bentula bajo.

Este espectacular concierto se llevará a cabo el próximo 16 de octubre en la renovada discoteca K’OS, ubicada en calle Uruguay, a partir de las 9 de la noche. Los boletos salen a la venta desde el lunes, 15 de septiembre en Blockbuster desde 30 balboas.

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Sep 13 2008

"Whistle Through Your Teeth and Spit ‘Cuz, It’s Alright"

Published by Panama Guide under Bands & Music

By DON WINNER for Panama-Guide.com - Got word that a good friend it going through a hard time right now. Just a shout out and a reminder to stop and smell the roses...

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Jul 21 2008

Shorty & Slim at the Balboa Yacht Club, Friday 25 July 2008

Published by Panama Guide under Bands & Music

SHORTY&SLIM is Zonians and Panamanians whose music is a cross between Jimmy Buffet and Harry Belafonte: Calypso/Rock. The duo and their band has been making all original music since 1995, with lyrics focusing on Canal Zone nostalgia, and a born-and-raised love for Panama. Shorty (David Seitz) is in Panama for a summer visit, and is writing and recording for their 5th CD and will be playing at the Balboa Yacht Club. The BYC has a new grand bohi on the waterfront, so please come and enjoy an evening of Shorty and Slim on the banks of our beautiful Panama Canal. This is an all ages show. We will also be videotaping for a music video of our new song "Cameron!" so come shake a leg and maybe get your dancing self on the video. See you there. Dave and Alex (a.k.a Shorty and Slim) For questions, comments, and info: please visit www.shortyandslim.com and post a comment to the Guest Book. Next Gig: Balboa Yacht Club, Amador R.P. (next to TGI Friday's) Friday, July 25, 2008. 8PM - 12AM FREE No cover charge

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Apr 21 2008

Enrique Iglesias Makes Plaza Costa Del Este His Home

Published by Panama Guide under Bands & Music

Panama City (bignews.biz) - Panama City’s panoramic view over the Pacific Ocean is steadily becoming the catalyst for Central American investments in luxury hotels, luxury residences with penthouse apartments, upscale housing, business offices, and commercial real-estate. Panama has been rumored to attract Hollywood stars, such as Mick Jagger, Mel Gibson, and Angelina Jolie. But recently, the famed International Star and Latin Sensation, and Grammy Award winner, Enrique Iglesias, was declared the first official owner of a penthouse in the new Plaza Costa Del Este - and Sony Record’s Salsa Star, Gilbertos Santarosa, the first official owner of a unit in the Plaza Costa Del Este. The Plaza Costa Del Este is part of a major development – the Costa Del Este. (more)

Needless to say, this 2007 announcement about Enrique Iglesias’ choice in the luxury penthouse at the The Plaza Costa Del Este, (which was heard at an invitation-only gala event in Miami), was exciting news to Panama City residents and investors in the Plaza Costa Del Este and the Costs Del Este development. The Plaza and the master developers now have bragging rights to boast about the Latin Pop Star’s decision to take up residence in the Plaza Costa Del Este. Especially since Iglesias passed up Donald Trump’s first foray into Panama - the Trump Ocean Club International Hotel and Tower that is slated to open in 2010.

Beating out Trump takes planning. The Costs Del Este development in Panama has been in the works since the 1990’s, and there are currently eleven zones which consist of high-density commercial areas and both high density and low density residential areas. The Plaza cost Del Este is in a residential area but in close vicinity to the buzzing city of Panama. The Plaza is also located only minutes from the Toumen International Airport, and arranges a limousine service to the Plaza for its guests.

Despite the fact that Panama City is only minutes away, the Costs Del Este development, (as do many other developments in Panama), was careful to plan for ecological considerations that balance business with ecology. Setting between the commercial and residential areas will be a 30-hectare ecological park, complete with a lake filled with shrimp, fish, ducks, and even an alligator. The Costa del Este gardening budget is set for half a million dollars a year, and they have already planted more than a half million plants and arranged for 100,000 palm trees. Costs Del Este will have upscale luxury city living in a sleek architectural masterpiece overlooking a tropical paradise.

The Plaza Costa Del Este offers the luxurious amenities that movie stars and music stars are accustomed. Aside from its glorious view of the Pacific Ocean and the best of technology, it offers exclusive access to a Beach Club on Contadora Island, (which is one of the more famed islands amongst the Pearl Islands), a rooftop pool with live palm trees, a sky lounge with telescope, an oxygen bar, therapeutic health clinic, Asian Spa, Aromatherapy Center, a day spa, space movement center, dance center, running track, and an in-house Farmers Market. Needless to say, maid service and parking is also included. The Plaza Costa Del Este consists of 150 Standard Rooms, 16 Executive Suites, 1 Super Presidential Suite and 167 upscale Hotel Rooms. No wonder it attracted Enrique Iglesias.

Panama, the Plaza Costa Del Este and the Costs Del Este development are bringing in investors despite minimal advertising. Of course, big names like Enrique Iglesias serve to promote luxury properties, and the 15 years of tax exemption is a nice incentive. Cruise ships are increasing their stops in Panama, and flights to Panama are multiplying. The Panama Canal is getting five million dollars worth of improvements, and the economy is showing steady growth between 6% and 8%. Enrique Iglesias will no doubt be singing praises about his investment in Panama.

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