Salvador Bahia Brazil Matrix

The Matrix Online Network is a platform conceived & built in Salvador da Bahia, Brazil and upon which people & entities across the creative economic universe can 1) present in variegated detail what it is they do, 2) recommend others, and 3) be recommended by others. Integrated by recommendations and governed by the metamathematical magic of the small world phenomenon (popularly called "6 degrees of separation"), matrix pages tend to discoverable proximity to all other matrix pages, no matter how widely separated in location, society, and degree of fame. From Quincy Jones to celestial samba in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro to you, all is closer than we imagine.

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  • (Bahia)
  • Questions?
  • From Brazil with love →
  • @ Ground Zero
  • El Aleph
  • If You Can't Stand the Heat
  • Harlem to Bahia to the Planet
  • Why a "Matrix"?

From Brazil with love →

@ 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...

 

This 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...

 

Harlem to Bahia to the Planet



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...

 

Like this (but in Portuguese): "It's kind of like Facebook if it didn't spy on you, but reversed... more about who you don't know than who you do know. And who doesn't know you but would be glad if they did. It's kind of like old Myspace Music but instead of having "friends" it has a list on your page of people you recommend. Not just musicians but writers, painters, filmmakers, dancers, chefs... anybody in the creative economy. It has a list of people who recommend you, or through whom you are recommended. It deals with arts which aren't recommendable by algorithm but need human intelligence behind recommendations. And the people who are recommended can recommend, creating a network of recommendations wherein by the small world phenomenon most people in the creative economy are within several steps of everybody else in the creative economy, no matter where they are in the world. Like a chessboard which could have millions of squares, but you can get from any given square to any other in no more than six steps..."

 

And João said (in Portuguese): "A matrix where you can move from one artist 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.

 

  • Shalom Adonai
    I RECOMMEND

CURATION

  • from this node by: Criador acima/Creator above

This is the Universe of

  • Name: Shalom Adonai
  • City/Place: Salvador, Bahia
  • Country: Brazil

Life & Work

  • Bio: Shalom -- of gypsy and indigenous ancestry -- was raised in 2 de Julho in urban Salvador, but he plays and sings the music of the past generations of his family in the Bahian interior.

Media | Markets

  • ▶ Instagram: shalomadonaiioficial
  • ▶ YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuex_JM0BLJ2qTQj_2VOZyQ

Clips (more may be added)

  • 2:57
    Shalom Adonai & Sua Viola - Batuques Rurais da Bahia
    By Shalom Adonai
    428 views
  • 2:29
    Shalom Adonai & sua Viola Caipira - Dibulhar do Samba de Roda (autoral)
    By Shalom Adonai
    148 views
  • 3:55
    Shalom Adonai & Sua Viola Caipira - Jururu/ Corre Trecho (autoral)
    By Shalom Adonai
    240 views
  • 1:46
    Shalom Adonai & Sua Viola Caipira (Batuques/Samba Rural)
    By Shalom Adonai
    226 views
  • 5:07
    Shalom Adonai & Grupo Viola Paraguaçu Samba de Roda na Festa de Santa Bárbara no Pelô, Salvador-Ba
    By Shalom Adonai
    130 views
  • 2:13
    Homenagem a Mestre Bule Bule com Raymundo Sodré, Shalom Adonai & Grupo Viola Paraguaçu
    By Shalom Adonai
    301 views
  • 3:23
    Geruza Gueddes - Festa de Reis de Ticuaruçu, FSA 2019
    By Shalom Adonai
    176 views
  • 0:07:34
    Samba em homenagem a Bule Bule, com Téo Guedes no Largo das Flores- centro - Salvaodor-BA
    By Shalom Adonai
    581 views
  • 1:32
    Casulo da Cultura Popular - Samba de Mestres e Mestras no Centro Antigo de Salvador-BA
    By Shalom Adonai
    145 views
  • 0:37
    Téo Guedes, Jóia rara das terras de Lajedo Alto
    By Shalom Adonai
    162 views
  • 2:15
    Liberdade - Artur Soares e Shalom Adonai
    By Shalom Adonai
    181 views
  • Casulo da Cultura Popular
    By Shalom Adonai
    439 views
Previous
Next

YOU RECOMMEND

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 Shalom Adonai:

  • 2 Bahia
  • 2 Brazil
  • 2 Chula
  • 2 Salvador
  • 2 Samba de Roda
  • 2 Samba Rural

Nodes below are randomly generated. Reload for a different stack.

  • Airto Moreira Brazil
  • Harish Raghavan Jazz
  • Luiz Santos New York City
  • Zoran Orlić Photographer
  • Corey Ledet Creole Music
  • Cristovão Bastos Samba
  • Antibalas Afrobeat
  • Jakub Józef Orliński Poland
  • Jonga Cunha Salvador
  • H.L. Thompson Rio de Janeiro
  • Airto Moreira Singer
  • Ballaké Sissoko Kora
  • Corey Harris Singer-Songwriter
  • Jazzmeia Horn Singer-Songwriter
  • Gamelan Sekar Jaya Indonesia
  • Ron McCurdy Composer
  • Armen Donelian Jazz
  • Yola England
  • Elza Soares Samba
  • Goran Krivokapić Classical Guitar
  • Thiago Trad Brasil, Brazil
  • John Zorn Composer
  • Makaya McCraven Drums
  • Terri Lyne Carrington Composer
  • Ken Dossar Philadelphia
  • Pharoah Sanders Saxophone
  • Roberto Mendes Santo Amaro
  • João Teoria Bahia
  • Ryuichi Sakamoto Electronic Music
  • Anouar Brahem Jazz
  • Charlie Bolden Composer
  • Janine Jansen Classical Music
  • John Francis Flynn Irish Traditional Music
  • Howard Levy Composer
  • The Rheingans Sisters Folk & Traditional
  • Arturo Sandoval Trumpet
  • Milford Graves Vocals
  • Elizabeth LaPrelle Singer-Songwriter
  • Vijay Gupta Los Angeles Philharmonic
  • Carol Soares Samba de Roda
  • Mahsa Vahdat Multi-Cultural
  • McCoy Mrubata Jazz
  • Tonynho dos Santos Jazz
  • Lula Galvão MPB
  • Brooklyn Rider String Quartet
  • Soweto Kinch Composer
  • Sammy Britt Artist
  • William Parker Essayist
  • Guga Stroeter Bandleader
  • The Brain Cloud New York City
  • Oscar Peñas Jazz
  • Jason Reynolds Writer
  • Leci Brandão Singer-Songwriter
  • Luizinho Assis Brasil, Brazil
  • Giovanni Russonello Music Critic
  • Parker Ighile Contemporary R&B
  • Chris Acquavella Mandolin
  • Sam Eastmond Trumpet
  • Fernando Brandão Berklee College of Music Faculty
  • Uli Geissendoerfer Composer
  • Eric Galm Caribbean Studies
  • Alegre Corrêa Violin
  • Magda Giannikou Film Scores
  • Kenyon Dixon Singer-Songwriter
  • Turíbio Santos Brazil
  • Neo Muyanga Piano
  • Tommy Peoples Fiddle
  • D.D. Jackson Piano
  • Isaak Bransah Brazil
  • Matt Glaser Berklee College of Music Faculty
  • Leela James Singer-Songwriter
  • Jane Ira Bloom Jazz
  • João Camarero Rio de Janeiro
  • Milton Primo Chula
  • Rebeca Omordia London
  • Thiago Trad Percussão, Percussion
  • Gustavo Caribé Bahia
  • Joel Best 3D Artist
  • Jen Shyu Composer
  • Gearóid Ó hAllmhuráin Irish Traditional Music
  • Jim Lauderdale Singer-Songwriter
  • Jonathon Grasse Guitar
  • J. Pierre New Orleans
  • Vinson Cunningham Writer
  • Paulo Martelli Brasil, Brazil
  • Victor Wooten Composer
  • Zebrinha Coreógrafo, Choreographer
  • Fábio Luna Bateria, Drums
  • Frank Beacham Photographer
  • Dan Tepfer Piano
  • Mike Moreno Composer
  • Jan Ramsey Cajun Music
  • Gino Banks Mumbai
  • Leci Brandão Surdo
  • Casa PretaHub Cachoeira Cachoeira
  • Gaby Moreno Guitar
  • Chris Cheek Brooklyn, NY
  • Laércio de Freitas Actor
  • Nêgah Santos Percussion
  • Jen Shyu Multi-Instrumentalist
  • Dafnis Prieto Master Classes, Clinics, Workshops
  • Reggie Ugwu Writer
  • Martín Sued Composer
  • Antonio García Latin Music
  • Milford Graves New York City
  • Stephan Crump Bass Instruction
  • Toninho Nascimento Singer-Songwriter
  • João Luiz Brazil
  • Tigran Hamasyan Singer
  • McIntosh County Shouters Gullah Geechee
  • Denzel Curry Hip-Hop
  • Menelaw Sete Pintor/Painter
  • Tal Wilkenfeld Guitar
  • Paulo Dáfilin Arranger
  • Tal Wilkenfeld Bass
  • Mart'nália Percussion
  • Chucho Valdés Composer
  • Lula Moreira Sculptor
  • José Antonio Escobar Santiago de Chile
  • Benjamin Grosvenor United Kingdom
  • Aubrey Johnson Queens College Faculty
  • Cory Wong Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • Mohamed Diab Egypt
  • Hisham Mayet Filmmaker
  • Irma Thomas Blues
  • Questlove Hip-Hop
  • Itamar Borochov Composer
  • Nduduzo Makhathini Johannesburg
  • Arto Lindsay Composer
  • Kevin Hays Jazz
  • Chico César Brazil
  • Riley Baugus Folk & Traditional
  • Mavis Staples Singer-Songwriter
  • Tomo Fujita Songwriter
  • Bobby Sanabria New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music Faculty
  • Bai Kamara Jr. Sierra Leone
  • VJ Gabiru Mapeamento de Projeção, Projection Mapping
  • David Chesky Contemporary Classical Music
  • Yacouba Sissoko Kora
  • Nelson Latif Samba
  • Ronell Johnson Brass Band
  • Lizz Wright Blues
  • Edward P. Jones Writer
  • Yvette Holzwarth Contemporary Classical Music
  • Shanequa Gay Atlanta, Georgia
  • Restaurante Axego Salvador
  • Zakir Hussain Percussion
  • Betsayda Machado Singer
  • Manolo Badrena Visual Media
  • Sarz Afrobeat
  • Tom Schnabel World Music
  • Kronos Quartet String Quartet
  • Kimmo Pohjonen Helsinki
  • Mauro Senise Flute
  • Sam Yahel Hammond B-3
  • Negra Jhô Salvador
  • D.D. Jackson Opera
  • Andra Day Pop
  • Robi Botos Hungary
  • Mário Pam Brazil
  • Gregory Hutchinson R&B
  • Linda May Han Oh Jazz
  • Caetano Veloso Salvador
  • Joel Guzmán Accordion
  • Abderrahmane Sissako Mali
  • Raelis Vasquez Sculptor
  • Garth Cartwright New Zealand
  • Sierra Hull Nashville, Tennessee
  • Guinha Ramires Guitar
  • Marko Djordjevic Balkan Music
  • Kiya Tabassian كيا طبسيان Montreal
  • Seckou Keita Composer
  • Márcio Bahia Percussion
  • Tal Wilkenfeld Jazz
  • Jaques Morelenbaum Brazilian Jazz
  • Derek Sivers Writer
  • Shannon Alvis Chicago
  • Paulo Paulelli MPB
  • Nubya Garcia Composer
  • Ry Cooder Multi-Instrumentalist
  • Woz Kaly Africa
  • BIGYUKI Jazz, Electronic, R&B, Soul
  • Paulo César Pinheiro Lyricist
  • James Strauss Contemporary Classical Music
  • Badi Assad Singer-Songwriter
  • Issac Delgado Singer
  • Tray Chaney Record Producer
  • Jerry Douglas Guitar
  • Luíz Paixão Rabeca
  • Cristiano Nogueira Brazil Specialist
  • Bodek Janke Tabla
  • Babau Santana Brasil, Brazil
  • Natalia Contesse Guitar
  • Roberto Mendes Santo Amaro
  • Kendrick Scott Jazz
  • Papa Mali Blues
  • Danilo Caymmi Flute
  • Fatoumata Diawara African Music
  • Orquestra Afrosinfônica Salvador
  • Marcus Miller Record Producer
  • Maria Drell Produção Cultural, Cultural Production
  • Gabrielzinho do Irajá Brazil
  • Marcus Miller Jazz
  • Gustavo Caribé Produtor Musical, Music Producer
  • Ana Moura Portugal
  • Ivan Sacerdote Classical Music
  • Intisar Abioto Storyteller
  • Brett Orrison Record Producer
  • Michael Garnice Writer
  • Endea Owens Bass
  • Ken Avis Documentary Filmmaker
  • Don Byron Klezmer
  • Zachary Richard Louisiana
  • Bukassa Kabengele Brazil
  • Jas Kayser Panama
  • Ed O'Brien Guitar
  • Michel Camilo Composer
  • Ken Coleman Reporter
  • Jen Shyu Dancer
  • Renato Braz Singer
  • Matt Parker YouTuber
  • Casey Benjamin Songwriter
  • Mike Marshall Guitar
  • Arto Tunçboyacıyan Multi-Instrumentalist
  • Donnchadh Gough Ireland
  • Alexandre Gismonti Composer
  • Shannon Ali Arts Journalist
  • Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh Fiddle
  • Elizabeth LaPrelle Appalachian Music
  • Raymundo Sodré Brazil
  • Armandinho Macêdo Guitarra Baiana
  • Jeremy Pelt Trumpet
  • Sarah Jarosz Singer-Songwriter
  • Kurt Andersen Journalist
  • George Garzone Berklee College of Music Faculty
  • Don Byron Dance Performance Scores
  • Laura Beaubrun Art Therapist
  • Nelson Faria Guitar Instruction, Master Classes
  • Rowney Scott Faculdade da UFBA, Federal University of Bahia Faculty
  • Richard Galliano Musette
  • Nicole Mitchell Flute
  • Jan Ramsey Jazz
  • Mino Cinélu New York City
  • Tatiana Campêlo Salvador
  • Ivan Neville Keyboards
  • Las Cafeteras Afro-Mexican Music
  • King Britt Computer Music
  • Jay Blakesberg Filmmaker
  • Forrest Hylton Documentary Filmmaker
  • Ivan Huol Percussion
  • Kiko Souza Flauta, Flute
  • Yosvany Terry New York City
  • Archie Shepp Singer
  • Aditya Prakash Composer
  • Arturo O'Farrill Brooklyn College Conservatory of Music Faculty
  • King Britt Electronic Music
  • Aubrey Johnson Composer
  • Utar Artun Piano
  • Vijay Iyer Harvard University Faculty
  • Ivan Bastos Música Afro-Baiana, Afro-Bahian Music
  • Oscar Peñas Guitar
  • Seckou Keita Kora
  • Dónal Lunny Record Producer
  • Mona Lisa Saloy Writer
  • Nicholas Daniel Trossingen Musikhochschule Staff
  • Isaias Rabelo Jazz
  • Gian Correa São Paulo
  • Deborah Colker Choreographer
  • Adriano Souza Piano
  • Brian Jackson Soul
  • Aaron Goldberg New York City
  • Anouar Brahem Tunis
  • Ivan Lins Singer-Songwriter
  • Peter Serkin Classical Music
  • Lorna Simpson Filmmaker
  • Henry Cole Multi-Cultural
  • Adam Rogers Guitar
  • Brandee Younger Composer
  • Brandon Seabrook New York City
  • Thiago Espírito Santo Guitarra, Guitar
  • Nelson Latif Cavaquinho
  • Chubby Carrier Accordion
  • Nora Fischer Contemporary Classical Music
  • Elif Şafak Novelist
  • Cleber Augusto Samba
  • Courtney Pine Bass Clarinet
  • Nicolas Krassik Violin
  • Antônio Pereira Manaus
  • Dudu Reis Salvador
  • Melissa Aldana Composer
  • Daru Jones Drums
  • Ivan Sacerdote Bahia
  • Maladitso Band Africa
  • Alexandre Vieira Cantor, Singer
  • Bukassa Kabengele Cultural Producer
  • Siba Veloso Viola Nordestina
  • Colm Tóibín Journalist
  • James Andrews Funk
  • Zebrinha Salvador
  • Joshua White Jazz
  • Marcel Powell Guitar
  • Errollyn Wallen Piano
  • Hugo Rivas Composer
  • Seth Rogovoy Journalist
  • Itamar Vieira Júnior Journalist
  • Carwyn Ellis Singer-Songwriter
  • Omer Avital Composer
  • Ayrson Heráclito Set Designer
  • Theo Bleckmann Jazz
  • David Binney Saxophone Lessons
  • Stacy Dillard R&B
  • Alan Brain Journalist
  • Moacyr Luz Singer
  • Sheryl Bailey Guitar
  • Eric Harland Jazz
  • Osvaldo Golijov Contemporary Classical Music
  • Frank Negrão Jazz
  • Peter Dasent Film Scores
  • Djuena Tikuna São Luís, Maranhão
  • Muhsinah Singer-Songwriter
  • Capinam Brasil, Brazil
  • Gregory Tardy University of Tennessee Knoxville School of Music Faculty
  • Gino Sorcinelli Educator
  • Fabian Almazan New York City
  • Meklit Hadero San Francisco
  • María Grand New York City
  • Hugues Mbenda Chef
  • Aaron Parks Jazz
  • Armen Donelian Multi-Cultural
  • Brandee Younger New York University Faculty
  • Melanie Charles R&B
  • Jim Lauderdale Nashville, Tennessee
  • Varijashree Venugopal Film Scores
  • Nancy Viégas Designer Gráfico, Graphic Designer
  • Lionel Loueke Guitar
  • Warren Wolf Piano
  • Nabih Bulos Beirut, Lebanon
  • Guilherme Kastrup Brazil
  • Ana Luisa Barral Bandolim
  • Marcelinho Oliveira Salvador
  • Miguel Zenón Saxophone
  • Michel Camilo Dominican Republic
  • VJ Gabiru Artista Multimídia, Multimedia Artist
  • Art Rosenbaum Muralist
  • Mehdi Rajabian Multi-Cultural
  • Dave Eggers Publisher
  • Chucho Valdés Piano
  • Danilo Caymmi Singer-Songwriter
  • Paulão 7 Cordas Music Director
  • Chris Speed New York City

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

 

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