Voice (jazz)

Voice is a jazz quintet from South Africa.

Voice has released two recordings on Sheer Sound. Their second album, Songs for Our Grandchildren, was nominated for Best Traditional Jazz Release for the 2003-2004 South African Music Awards. They played as a featured group at the 2005 Cape Town International Jazz Festival.

Members

  • Pianist Andile Yenana,
  • Saxophonist Sydney Mnisi,
  • Trumpeter Marcus Wyatt,
  • Bassist Herbie Tsoaeli,
  • Drummer Morabo Morojele. - Lulu Gontsana played drums on the first album (Quintet Legacy Vol 1)
  • Albums

  • Quintet Legacy Vol 1 (2001)
  • Quintet Legacy Vol 2 Songs for our Grandchildren (2003).
  • External links

  • Page at music.org.za, with biography contributed by band
  • References

  • 1 2 "Voice Biography". Sheer Sound.

  • Voice (trade union)

    Voice 'The union for education professionals' (formerly The Professional Association of Teachers) is an independent British Trade Union for teachers, lecturers and other education and childcare workers in British education. The union is committed to the principle of not striking or engaging in "any kind of industrial action" "in any circumstances."

    History

    Voice was founded, as the Professional Association of Teachers, in 1970 by two Essex teachers Colin Leicester and Ray Bryant. Subsequently, in February 2008, Professional Association of Teachers became Voice: the union for education professionals.

    Affiliated bodies

    The Professional Association of Nursery Nurses (PANN) was established, in 1982, by a group of nursery nurses, who also wished to commit themselves to the principle of not striking. They became a section of PAT on 1 September 1995.

    The Professionals Allied to Teaching (PAtT) section was launched in 2000. NAASSC (National Association of Administrative Staff in Schools and Colleges) was affiliated to PAT/PAtT in 2001.

    Voice (disambiguation)

    The voice consists of sound made by a human being using the vocal folds for talking, singing, laughing, crying, screaming, etc.

    Voice may also refer to:

  • Writer's voice
  • Voice acting
  • Voice vote
  • Film

  • Voice (film), a 2005 South Korean film
  • The Voice (film), a 2010 Turkish horror film directed by Ümit Ünal
  • Music

  • Vocal music
  • The human voice in singing
  • Voice register (music)
    • Vocal range, referring to soprano, alto, tenor, bass in choral and pop music
    • Voice type, referring to operatic and classical soloists
  • Vocal range, referring to soprano, alto, tenor, bass in choral and pop music
  • Voice type, referring to operatic and classical soloists
  • Voice (polyphony), a melodic strand in a polyphonic texture
  • A monophonic signal in sound synthesis
  • Bands

  • Voice (duo), Cypriot musical formation representing Cyprus in the 2000 Eurovision Song Contest with "Nomiza"
  • Voice (quartet), a vocal quartet founded by Julie Tippetts, Maggie Nicols, Phil Minton, and Brian Eley
  • Vita (organization)

    Animal rights center "Vita" (from Latin: vita - «life") - the Russian public charity, is a type of organizations "for animal rights". Organization "Vita" is representatives of ethical vegetarianism and veganism.

    References

    Vranac

    Vranac (pronounced [ʋrǎːnats]), Montenegrin and Serbian Cyrillic: Вранац) is a variety of grapes and a red wine from Montenegro. It is protected as intellectual property and Montenegrin geographical indication of origin since 1977. Vranac is considered the most important variety of grape in Montenegro and one of the most important in the Republic of Macedonia (where it is known as Vranec). As it is a local specialty and due to its localized geography, it produces a dry red wine of a unique taste and character that is synonymous with the Balkans. Vranac berries are large and deeply colored, with its dark berries growing on moderately vigorous and very productive vines. The fruit is harvested by hand. Depending on the area, this harvest can begin from mid-September and continue into October.

    Young Vranac wines have a bright purple hue and a nose full of red berries and fruit jams. Its firm tannin structure provides crispness and richness, with medium to high levels of extraction and acidity. After a year or two of aging, the purple develops into an intense dark ruby and the nose develops a more complex aroma that can include hints of cinnamon, chocolate, liquorice, flowers, black fruits, herbs and even woods such as oak. The taste is subtle, round, and full. It loses its sharpness and develops a longer and smoother finish.

    Angels (Within Temptation song)

    "Angels" is a song by Dutch band Within Temptation from their third studio album, The Silent Force. It was released as the third single from the album on 13 June 2005, also accompanying a music video. The video earned the band a Golden God Award on the following year.

    Track listing

  • "Angels" - Full Length Version (4:02)
  • "Say My Name" - New Track (4:06)
  • "Angels" - Full Length Version (4:02)
  • "Say My Name" - New Track (4:06)
  • "Forsaken" - Live 21.04.2005 at Tilburg, The Netherlands (4:54)
  • Music video

    The video is shot in a desert in Spain. It tells the story of a group of vigilante angels who make it their mission to wipe out evil. Sharon den Adel is a woman who has been seemingly abandoned on the side of the road in the middle of nowhere. She accepts a lift from a priest, who takes her back to his home. The priest is in fact a demonic serial killer, who adopts different disguises to get to his victims. All of these disguises are trustworthy people, like a doctor, a police officer, a clown, judge, or a priest. As Sharon stumbles upon a board full of newspaper clippings in the killers home, which are about his previous victims, he seemingly overpowers her with chloroform. He takes a tied up Sharon to the middle of the desert to bury her alive. However, Sharon immediately awakens as the other angels approach (the other band members) and is revealed to also be one of the angels, who was left at the side of the road as bait for the serial killer, during which time the rest of the vigilantes appear and the killer is confronted with the spirits of his victims, who destroy him. The vigilantes then move onto their next target.

    Angels (nightclub)

    Angels was a nightclub and music venue in Burnley, England. It became most famous during the early 1990s with the rise of the house music scene, drawing visitors from across the United Kingdom. It occupied part of a multi-storey car park on Curzon St, currently the site of another car park and Wilko store.

    Carl Cox, Paul Oakenfold, Pete Tong, Sasha, Judge Jules, all regularly DJ'd, and there were also memorable appearances from Boy George and Nigel Benn. Anne Savage had her first UK residency at Angels, under her contemporary pseudonym 'DJ Fresh'.

    DJ Paul Taylor also held a residency at the club, throughout the 1990s, and originated his "Retro" club night there.

    History

    June 1974 saw the official opening of Angels by TV's Pan's People and the Mayor of Burnley. In 1992 the first episode of the long-running late-night dance music show BPM featured footage from Angels with Dave Seaman DJing. Footage of the event can be found on YouTube. When Pete Waterman visited Angels in 1994, to scout for his TV show The Hit Man and Her, he received so much hassle from the clubgoers that he changed his mind.

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