• Sign in
  • Be a Node
    Loading ...
View All Updates Mark All Read
  • Matrix Home
  • Categories are Here!
  • Showcase Music
  • Add Videos/SC
  • Add Photos
  • AFROBIZ Salvador
  • Questions?
  • IMPORTANT STUFF →
  • Recommendations In(6)
  • What's Up
  • Why a "Matrix"?
  • @ Ground Zero
  • El Aleph
  • If You Can't Stand the Heat
  • From Harlem to Bahia

IMPORTANT STUFF →

Recommendations In


Imagine the world's creative economy at your fingertips. Imagine 10 doors side-by-side. Beyond each, 10 more, each opening to a "creative" somewhere around the planet. After passing through 8 such doorways you will have followed 1 pathway out of 100 million possible (2 sets of doorways yield 10 x 10 = 100 pathways). This is a simplified version of the metamathematics that makes it possible to reach everybody in the global creative economy in just a few steps It doesn't mean that everybody will be reached by everybody. It does mean that everybody can  be reached by everybody.


Appear below by recommending Danilo Brito:

  • 1 Bandolim
  • 1 Brazil
  • 1 Choro
  • 1 Composer
  • 1 Mandolin
  • 1 São Paulo

What's Up

The post was not added to the feed. Please check your privacy settings.
  • Danilo Brito
    Ricardo Herz → Violin has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • September 5, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Ricardo Herz → São Paulo has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • September 5, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Ricardo Herz → Rabeca has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • September 5, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Ricardo Herz → MPB has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • September 5, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Ricardo Herz → Jazz has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • September 5, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Ricardo Herz → Forró has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • September 5, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Ricardo Herz → Composer has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • September 5, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Ricardo Herz → Choro has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • September 5, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Ricardo Herz → Brazilian Jazz has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • September 5, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Ricardo Herz → Brazil has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • September 5, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Alessandro Penezzi → Violão de Sete has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • March 21, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Alessandro Penezzi → São Paulo has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • March 21, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Alessandro Penezzi → Samba has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • March 21, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Alessandro Penezzi → Multi-Instrumentalist has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • March 21, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Alessandro Penezzi → Guitar has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • March 21, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Alessandro Penezzi → Composer has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • March 21, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Alessandro Penezzi → Choro has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • March 21, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    Alessandro Penezzi → Brazil has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • March 21, 2021
  • Danilo Brito
    A category was added to Danilo Brito:
    Composer
    • October 9, 2020
  • Danilo Brito
    Mike Marshall → Author has been recommended via Danilo Brito.
    • February 2, 2020
View More
Loading ...

Why a "Matrix"?

 

I was explaining the ideas behind this nascent network to (João) Teoria (trumpet player above) over cervejas at Xique Xique (a bar named for a town in Bahia) in the Salvador neighborhood of Barris...

 

And João said (in Portuguese), repeating what I'd just told him, with one addition: "A matrix where musicians can recommend other musicians, and you can move from one to another..."

 

A matrix! That was it! The ORIGINAL meaning of matrix is "source", from "mater", Latin for "mother". So the term would help congeal the concept in the minds of people the network was being introduced to, while giving us a motto: "We're a real mother for ya!" (you know, Johnny "Guitar" Watson?)

 

The original idea was that musicians would recommend musicians, the network thus formed being "small world" (commonly called "six degrees of separation"). In the real world, the number of degrees of separation in such a network can vary, but while a given network might have billions of nodes (people, for example), the average number of steps between any two nodes will usually be minuscule.

 

Thus somebody unaware of the magnificent music of Bahia, Brazil will be able to conceivably move from almost any musician in this matrix to Bahia in just a few steps...

 

By the same logic that might move one from Bahia or anywhere else to any musician anywhere.

 

And there's no reason to limit this system to musicians. To the contrary, while there are algorithms written to recommend music (which, although they are limited, can be useful), there are no algorithms capable of recommending journalism, novels & short stories, painting, dance, film, chefery...

 

...a vast chasm that this network — or as Teoria put it, "matrix" — is capable of filling.

 

@ Ground Zero

 

Have you, dear friend, ever noticed how different places scattered across the face of the globe seem almost to exist in different universes? As if they were permeated throughout with something akin to 19th century luminiferous aether, unique, determined by that place's history? It's like a trick of the mind's light (I suppose), but standing on beach or escarpment in Salvador and looking out across the Baía de Todos os Santos to the great Recôncavo, and mindful of what happened there, one must be led to the inevitable conclusion that one is in a place unique to history, and to the present*.

 

 

"Chegou a hora dessa gente bronzeada mostrar seu valor / The time has come for these bronzed people to show their value..."Música: Assis Valente of Santo Amaro, Bahia. Vídeo: Betão Aguiar.

 

*More enslaved human beings entered the Bay of All Saints and the Recôncavo than any other final port-of-call throughout all of mankind's history.

 

These people and their descendants created some of the most uplifting music ever made, the foundation of Brazil's national art. We wanted their music to be accessible to the world (it's not even accessible here in Brazil) so we created a platform by which everybody's creativity is mutually accessible, including theirs.

 

El Aleph

 

The network was built in an obscure record shop (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar found it) in a shimmering Brazilian port city...

 

...inspired in (the kabbalah-inspired fiction of) Borges' (short story) El Aleph, that in the pillar in Cairo's Mosque of Amr, where the universe in its entirety throughout all time is perceivable as an infinite hum from deep within the stone.

 

It "works" by virtue of the "small-world" phenomenon...the same responsible for the fact that most of us 7 billion or so beings are within 6 or fewer degrees of each other.

 

It was described (to some degree) and can be accessed via this article in British journal The Guardian (which named our radio of matrixed artists as one of ten best in the world):

 

www.theguardian.com/travel/2020/apr/17/10-best-music-radio-station-around-world

 

With David Dye for U.S. National Public Radio: www.npr.org/2013/07/16/202634814/roots-of-samba-exploring-historic-pelourinho-in-salvador-brazil

 

All is more connected than we know.

 

Per the "spirit" above, our logo is a cortador de cana, a cane-cutter. It was designed by Walter Mariano, professor of design at the Federal University of Bahia to reflect the origins of the music the shop specialized in. The Brazilian "aleph" doesn't hum... it dances and sings.

 

If You Can't Stand the Heat

 

Image above is from the base of the cross in front of the church of São Francisco do Paraguaçu in the Bahian Recôncavo

 

Sprawled across broad equatorial latitudes, stoked and steamed and sensual in the widest sense of the word, limned in cadenced song, Brazil is a conundrum wrapped in a smile inside an irony...

 

It is not a European nation. It is not a North American nation. It is not an East Asian nation. It straddles — jungle and desert and dense urban centers — both the equator and the Tropic of Capricorn. Brazil absorbed over ten times the number of enslaved Africans taken to the United States of America, and is a repository of African deities (and their music) now largely forgotten in their lands of origin. It was a refuge (of sorts) for Sephardim fleeing an Inquisition which followed them across the Atlantic (that unofficial symbol of Brazil's national music — the pandeiro — was almost certainly brought to Brazil by these people). Across the parched savannas of the interior of Brazil's culturally fecund nordeste/northeast, where wizard Hermeto Pascoal was born in Lagoa da Canoa (Lagoon of the Canoe) and raised in Olho d'Águia (Eye of the Eagle), much of Brazil's aboriginal population was absorbed into a caboclo/quilombola culture punctuated by the Star of David. Three cultures — from three continents — running for their lives, their confluence forming an unprecedented fourth. Pandeirista on the roof. Nowhere else but here.

 

Oligarchy, plutocracy, dictatorships and massive corruption — elements of these are still strongly entrenched — have defined, delineated, and limited Brazil.

 

But strictured & bound as it has been and is, Brazil has buzz...not the shallow buzz of a fashionable moment...but the deep buzz of a population which in spite of — or perhaps because of — the tough slog through life they've been allotted by humanity's dregs-in-fine-linen, have chosen not to simply pull themselves along but to lift their voices in song and their bodies in dance...to eat well and converse well and much and to wring the joy out of the day-to-day happenings and small pleasures of life which are so often set aside or ignored in the European, North American, and East Asian nations.

 

For this Brazil has a genius perhaps unparalleled in all other countries and societies, a genius which thrives alongside peeling paint and holes in the streets and roads, under bad organization by the powers-that-be, both civil and governmental, under a constant rain of societal indignities...

 

Which is all to say that if you don't know Brazil and you're expecting any semblance of order, progress and light, you will certainly find the light! And the buzz of a people who for generations have responded to privation at many different levels by somehow rising above it all.

 

"Onde tem miséria, tem música!"* - Raymundo Sodré

 

And it's not just music. And it's not just Brazil.

 

Welcome to the kitchen!

 

* "Where there is misery, there is music!" Remarked during a conversation arcing from Bahia to Haiti and Cuba to New Orleans and the south side of Chicago and Harlem to the villages of Ireland and the gypsy camps and shtetls of Eastern Europe...

 

From Harlem to Bahia



  • Danilo Brito
    I RECOMMEND

CURATION

  • from this node by: Sparrow/Pardal

This is the Universe of

  • Name: Danilo Brito
  • City/Place: São Paulo
  • Country: Brazil

Life & Work

  • Bio: Danilo is a bandolim (mandolin) player from São Paulo, Brazil.

Contact Information

  • Email: [email protected]

Media | Markets

  • ▶ Instagram: danilobritobandolim
  • ▶ Website: http://www.danilobrito.com
  • ▶ YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrbXxTDEyWfPxyFcAHsHXIA
  • ▶ YouTube Music: http://music.youtube.com/channel/UCnpVtUaGucGVOhlvZkJwsIA
  • ▶ Spotify: http://open.spotify.com/album/6nOGtsbrQ9fAP7FH4KdplC
  • ▶ Spotify 2: http://open.spotify.com/album/4Yj1u8Zr2SjTSdcFE7UbBn

Clips (more may be added)

  • NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert
    By Danilo Brito
    405 views
Previous
Next
  • Jau Salvador
  • Mateus Aleluia Candomblé
  • Chief Xian aTunde Adjuah New Orleans
  • Magary Lord AFROBIZ Salvador
  • Toby Gough Musical Theater
  • Jay Mazza Journalist
  • Robert Glasper Hip-Hop
  • Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Writer
  • Gal Costa Salvador
  • Christopher Wilkinson Screenwriter
  • Bobby Sanabria Manhattan School of Music Faculty
  • Ilê Aiyê Salvador
  • Kurt Rosenwinkel Guitar
  • Kamasi Washington Saxophone
  • Darius Mans Economist
  • Alicia Svigals Klezmer Fiddle
  • Taj Mahal Blues
  • Lazzo Matumbi Salvador
  • Nduduzo Makhathini South Africa
  • Yosvany Terry Harvard University Faculty
  • Vijay Iyer Harvard University Faculty
  • Mestre Nenel AFROBIZ Salvador
  • Hermeto Pascoal Multi-Instrumentalist
  • Raymundo Sodré Bahia
  • Bob Mintzer USC Thornton School of Music Faculty
  • Margareth Menezes Salvador
  • Julian Lloyd Webber Cello
  • Mário Pam AFROBIZ Salvador
  • Airto Moreira Brazil
  • Paulinho da Viola Samba
  • Gilberto Gil Salvador
  • Pedrito Martinez Congas
  • Iuri Passos AFROBIZ Salvador
  • Armandinho Macêdo Salvador
  • Luedji Luna Salvador
  • Simon Brook Filmmaker
  • João do Boi Samba de Roda
  • Gabi Guedes Salvador
  • Lauranne Bourrachot Movie Producer
  • Jorge Washington AFROBIZ Salvador
  • Herbie Hancock Jazz
  • Louis Marks Ropeadope
  • Caetano Veloso Salvador
  • Juliana Ribeiro Salvador
  • Afrocidade Rap
  • Miho Hazama New York City
  • Betão Aguiar Brazil
  • João do Boi Brazil
  • Ryuichi Sakamoto New York City
  • Jocelyn Ramirez Los Angeles
  • Léo Rodrigues Pandeiro
  • Regina Carter Jazz
  • Daymé Arocena Havana
  • Snigdha Poonam Journalist
  • Pasquale Grasso Guitar Instruction/Master Classes
  • Victor Wooten Record Label Owner
  • John Francis Flynn Ireland
  • Yasushi Nakamura Tokyo
  • Cedric Watson Cajun Music
  • Chano Domínguez Brooklyn, NY
  • Siba Veloso Composer
  • Daniil Trifonov Piano
  • Gilad Hekselman Photographer
  • Thundercat Singer
  • Siobhán Peoples County Clare
  • Pedrito Martinez Batá
  • Perumal Murugan Novelist
  • NIcholas Casey New York Times
  • Daedelus Record Producer
  • Colm Tóibín Writer
  • Lenna Bahule Maputo
  • Henrique Cazes Brazil
  • Rosa Cedrón Galego Folk Music
  • William Parker Jazz
  • Sharita Towne Printmaker
  • Cale Glendening Cinematographer
  • Cory Henry Funk
  • Alexia Arthurs Jamaica
  • David Ritz Los Angeles
  • Colson Whitehead New York City
  • Owen Williams Developer
  • Aruán Ortiz Cuba
  • Rachael Price Singer-Songwriter
  • Elodie Bouny Classical Guitar
  • Mika Mutti Electronic Music
  • Doug Wamble Singer-Songwriter
  • Asanda Mqiki Port Elizabeth
  • Caroline Keane County Kerry
  • Fabian Almazan Record Label Owner
  • Ben Okri Nigeria
  • José Antonio Escobar Santiago de Chile
  • Marc-André Hamelin Piano
  • Alicia Keys Author
  • Caroline Keane Educator
  • Shannon Ali Writer
  • Cristovão Bastos Piano
  • Jeff Ballard Jazz
  • Caetano Veloso Bahia
  • Lizz Wright Singer
  • Loli Molina Guitar
  • Julia Alvarez Poet
  • Bill T. Jones Choreographer
  • Stephen Guerra Composer
  • Mazz Swift Brooklyn, NY
  • Bruce Williams Saxophone
  • Elodie Bouny Composer
  • Camille Thurman Jazz
  • Robb Royer Pop
  • Cashmere Cat Hip-Hop
  • Cuong Vu Jazz
  • Ballaké Sissoko Mali
  • Leo Genovese Composer
  • Evgeny Kissin Poet
  • Ron Miles MSU Denver Music Faculty
  • Alphonso Johnson USC Thornton School of Music Faculty
  • Abhijith P. S. Nair Violin
  • Gregory Hutchinson New York City
  • Toby Gough Director
  • Arto Tunçboyacıyan New York City
  • Andrew Dickson London
  • Guto Wirtti Rio de Janeiro
  • Alex de Mora Director
  • Pedro Aznar Buenos Aires
  • Julian Lloyd Webber Cello
  • LaTasha Lee R&B
  • Eddie Palmieri Afro-Latin Dance Music
  • Yazz Ahmed Audio Manipulation
  • Lalah Hathaway Singer-Songwriter
  • María Grand New York City
  • Garth Cartwright DJ
  • Aditya Prakash Carnatic Music
  • Virgínia Rodrigues Bahia
  • Brooklyn Rider Contemporary Classical Music
  • Fantastic Negrito R&B
  • Bodek Janke World Music
  • Aruán Ortiz Piano
  • Yotam Silberstein Jazz
  • Case Watkins James Madison University Faculty
  • Jamz Supernova London
  • Marcel Powell Brazil
  • Karla Vasquez Journalist
  • Pedrito Martinez Singer
  • Nei Lopes Brazil
  • Glória Bomfim Rio de Janeiro
  • Martin Fondse Vibrandeon
  • Marcos Suzano Rio de Janeiro
  • Alain Pérez Big Band
  • Celso Fonseca Record Producer
  • Abhijith P. S. Nair India
  • Dermot Hussey Author
  • Matt Ulery Multi-Cultural
  • Nana Nkweti Cameroon
  • Mickalene Thomas Sculptor
  • Tom Schnabel Music Salon
  • Magda Giannikou Composer
  • Şener Özmen Artist
  • Negra Jhô Bahia
  • Aloísio Menezes Bahia
  • Joan Chamorro Jazz
  • Vijay Gupta Contemporary Classical Music
  • Hercules Gomes Composer
  • Cainã Cavalcante MPB
  • Omari Jazz Electronic Futurism
  • Paulo César Pinheiro Lyricist
  • Swami Jr. São Paulo
  • David Wax Museum Charlottesville, Virgina
  • João Bosco Guitar
  • Manuel Alejandro Rangel Caracas
  • Horacio Hernández Drums
  • Snigdha Poonam Delhi
  • Lynn Nottage Screenwriter
  • Adam Rogers Composer
  • Hercules Gomes MPB
  • Eli Teplin Piano
  • Cássio Nobre Bahia
  • Branford Marsalis Jazz
  • Kirk Whalum Memphis, Tennessee
  • Jeff Ballard Percussion
  • David Sánchez Pan-Africana
  • Burhan Öçal Istanbul
  • Alessandro Penezzi Multi-Instrumentalist
  • David Chesky New York City
  • Gustavo Di Dalva Percussion
  • Clint Mansell Television Scores
  • Peter Mulvey Guitar
  • Mickalene Thomas Painter
  • Brian Lynch Record Label Owner
  • Joanna Majoko Singer-Songwriter
  • Mauro Senise Saxophone
  • Nancy Ruth Composer
  • Ajurinã Zwarg Drums
  • Joe Chambers New York City
  • Gregory Hutchinson R&B
  • Dan Trueman Composer
  • Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Television Writer
  • Jason Reynolds Poet
  • Orlando Costa Bahia
  • Richard Bona Jazz
  • Jaques Morelenbaum MPB
  • Joe Lovano Clarinet
  • Matthew F Fisher Collaborative Artist
  • Ben Hazleton Double Bass
  • Don Byron Klezmer
  • Jas Kayser Panama City
  • Tyshawn Sorey New York City
  • Victor Gama Angola
  • Zachary Richard Accordion
  • Shannon Alvis Choreographer
  • Itiberê Zwarg Brazil
  • John Patitucci Composer
  • Oscar Bolão Drums
  • Isaiah J. Thompson Piano
  • Ned Sublette Writer
  • Lolis Eric Elie Filmmaker
  • Asa Branca Chula
  • Dezron Douglas Double Bass
  • Vijay Iyer Composer
  • Tony Allen Afrobeat
  • Hendrik Meurkens Harmonica
  • Bobby Sanabria Manhattan School of Music Faculty
  • Miroslav Tadić Film/Theater/Dance Scores
  • Elodie Bouny Lisbon, Portugual
  • Jack Talty Raelach Records
  • Las Cafeteras East Los Angeles
  • Jaques Morelenbaum Songwriter
  • Gearóid Ó hAllmhuráin Author
  • Tyler Hayes Tech Writer
  • Sarah Jarosz Banjo
  • Scott Yanow Music Critic
  • Justin Kauflin New York City
  • Maciel Salú Pernambuco
  • Léo Rugero Forró
  • Nelson Sargento Singer-Songwriter
  • Jonathan Richter Classical Guitar
  • Jovino Santos Neto Composer
  • Marc Ribot Composer
  • Ben Williams New York City
  • Shoshana Zuboff Author
  • Yoron Israel Composer
  • Ken Coleman Detroit, Michigan
  • Imanuel Marcus Journalist
  • Chris Acquavella Mandolin Instruction
  • Paulão 7 Cordas Music Director
  • Michael Olatuja Nigeria
  • Rosa Cedrón Galicia
  • Renell Medrano Dominican Republic
  • Robert Randolph Steel Guitar
  • Daedelus Berklee College of Music Faculty
  • Brady Haran YouTuber
  • Philip Watson Cork
  • Toumani Diabaté Bamako
  • Negra Jhô Tranças/Braids
  • Alexandre Gismonti Guitar
  • Philip Sherburne Electronic/Experimental/Underground Music
  • Monarco Samba
  • Nelson Ayres Brazilian Jazz
  • Miles Okazaki Guitar
  • Sebastian Notini Produtor Musical/Music Producer
  • Daphne A. Brooks Journalist
  • Ron Blake Composer
  • Etan Thomas Basketball
  • Joshue Ashby Afro-Panamanian
  • Brad Mehldau Film Scores
  • Deborah Colker Dancer
  • Gonzalo Rubalcaba Composer
  • Marco Pereira Brazil
  • Toby Gough Producer
  • Arthur L.A. Buckner Gospel
  • Bill T. Jones Writer
  • Edsel Gomez Composer
  • Miroslav Tadić CalArts Music Faculty
  • Kronos Quartet Contemporary Classical Music
  • Casey Driessen Composer
  • Marisa Monte Rio de Janeiro
  • Cedric Watson Fiddle
  • Michael Doucet Accordion
  • Tim Hittle Director
  • Joshua Abrams Composer
  • Nora Fischer Singer
  • Natalia Contesse Santiago
  • David Binney Record Producer
  • Anthony Hervey Jazz
  • Joana Choumali Photographer
  • Mavis Staples Gospel
  • Shanequa Gay Installation
  • Susheela Raman Singer-Songwriter
  • Marc Johnson Bossa Nova
  • Gilsons Bahia
  • Luis Perdomo Piano
  • Quincy Jones Composer
  • Simone Sou Record Producer
  • Mateus Asato Neo Fusion
  • Reuben Rogers Caribbean Music
  • Sarah Jarosz Texas
  • Anoushka Shankar Author
  • Martyn Drum and Bass
  • Welson Tremura Latin American Classical Guitar
  • Cara Stacey Radio Presenter
  • Donald Harrison Berklee College of Music Faculty
  • Yazhi Guo 郭雅志 Multi-Instrumentalist
  • Mark Stryker Author
  • Ana Tijoux Chile
  • Abhijith P. S. Nair Composer
  • Mestrinho Sergipe
  • Rob Garland Musicians Institute College of Contemporary Music Faculty
  • Matthew F Fisher Brooklyn, NY
  • Zé Luíz Nascimento Paris
  • James Strauss Flute
  • Logan Richardson Kansas City, Missouri
  • Marcus Miller Los Angeles
  • David Mattingly School of Visual Arts Faculty
  • Julian Lage Guitar
  • Thomas Àdes Composer
  • Howard Levy Chicago
  • Stefon Harris Jazz
  • Mykia Jovan Funk
  • Richard Galliano Author
  • Aderbal Duarte Guitar
  • Mulatu Astatke Ethio-Jazz
  • John McLaughlin Jazz
  • Geraldo Azevedo Música Nordestina
  • Luciano Salvador Bahia Bahia
  • Milton Nascimento MPB
  • Linda May Han Oh Composer
  • Curly Strings Folk & Traditional
  • Bejun Mehta Countertenor
  • Byron Thomas Keyboards
  • Siba Veloso Singer
  • Restaurante Axego AFROBIZ Salvador
  • Warren Wolf Piano
  • Ayrson Heráclito Multimedia Artist
  • Michel Camilo Composer
  • Kalani Pe'a Hawaiian Music
  • John Edward Hasse Jazz
  • Andrés Beeuwsaert Buenos Aires
  • Victor Wooten Multi-Instrumentalist
  • José Antonio Escobar Barcelona
  • Badi Assad Singer-Songwriter
  • Darrell Green Jazz
  • Roberta Sá Samba
  • Marco Pereira Guitar
  • Ayrson Heráclito Federal University of the Recôncavo of Bahia Faculty
  • Simon Brook Writer
  • Lula Galvão Brazil

 'mātriks / "source" / from "mater", Latin for "mother"
We're a real mother for ya!

 

Copyright ©2022  -  Privacy  -  Terms of Service  -  Contact  - 

Open to members of the worldwide creative economy.

You'll use your email address to log in.

Passwords must be at least 6 characters in length.

Enter your password again for confirmation.

This will be the end of your profile link, for example:
http://www.matrixonline.net/profile/yourname

Please type the characters you see in the image. May take several tries. Sorry!!!

 

Matrix Sign In

Please enter your details below. If are a member of the global creative economy and don't have a page yet, please sign up first.

 
 
 
Forgot Password?
Share