NEWS
|
|
|

PERFORMANCE HIGHLIGHTS
PERFORMANCE HIGHLIGHTS
If you are interested in attending one of these performances, please give us a call and we will set you up with tickets!
UPCOMING PERFORMANCES
OCTOBER 2009
October 11: Spectrum, Cincinnati Symphony, Cincinnati, OH
October 16, 17, & 18: Michael Berkowitz, Elgin Symphony,Elgin, IL
October 18: David Schrader, Glenview Community Church, Glenview, IL
October 22, 23 & 24: Spectrum and Radiance, Rochester Philharmonic, Rochester, NY
October 24: Jeff Weiler performs Sherlock Jr., Overture Center for the Arts, Madison, WI
October 29: Jeff Weiler, Ocotillo Performing Arts Center, Artesia, NM
October 31: Mithril, Enid-Phillips Symphony, Enid, OK
|

RAVE REVIEWS
Hot Off The Press!
October 12, 2009
Spectrum, Pops get soulful
Concert review
By Janelle Gelfand
jgelfand@enquirer.com
The Cincinnati Pops never knew it could rock, but on Sunday it did – with a little help from Steven Reineke and a quartet of soul-singing gents called Spectrum.
As the sequin-jacketed group strolled and crooned through the Motown charts – including The Temptations, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, the Four Tops and the O’Jays – the Pops audience sang along, hooted and whooped. By the end – a roof-raising encore of “Soul Man” – some were even dancing in the “dance pit.”
Spectrum, which played until recently on the Las Vegas Strip, headlined the first of a new Pops series, "Pops Remix," led by associate conductor Reineke. Slick and engaging, their tribute to 50 years of Motown Records had all the familiar moves and great vocal arrangements to hits like “Oo, Baby, Baby,” “Under the Boardwalk” and “Reach Out, I’ll Be There.”
It was a fun, high-energy evening, and Music Hall’s stage was given a new, high-tech look. Lighting helped create part of the magic. The Pops musicians, usually in red blazers, were seated on a dark stage, wearing black against a black star curtain, sort of like a 100-piece rock band. The orchestra, fronted by Spectrum’s four-piece band, was entirely amplified. It sounded uneven, but improved in the second half.
The singers – Darryl Grant, Pierre Jovan, David Prescott and Cushney Roberts – came out in sparkly velvet tuxes to the Temps’ “Get Ready.” Prescott’s high falsetto was an asset in tunes such as Smokey Robinson’s “Oo, Baby, Baby” and the Temps’ “I’m Gonna Make You Love Me,” which included a vocal cadenza into the stratosphere.
Founding member Roberts sang baritone lead and acted as emcee, propelling the show along with banter and occasionally leaping off the stage into the audience. It was, as he said, a trip down memory lane, and by the time they got to that Motown anthem, “My Girl,” the audience was primed to sing every word.
One of the evening’s highlights was a tribute to Cincinnati’s King Records, and also to a local legend, Philip Paul, a session drummer at King Records, who played on the original recordings of more than 350 songs, from country to rhythm and blues. Paul, who has played professionally for 60 years, sat in on “It’s a Man’s World” by James Brown (one of the many stars he played with) during a slide show about the label founded by Syd Nathan in 1943.
Reineke gave a nod to the ladies of Motown with an orchestra medley of Diana Ross tunes, and included a splashy “On Broadway,” a reference to his new job as music director of the New York Pops.
His conducting during the Motown show was seamless and he is a stylish leader on the podium. His other two "Pops Remix” shows will feature the music of Jim Brickman and Beatles George Harrison and John Lennon.
REVIEW: Robert Levin, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, March 6, 2008
Gardiner, CSO find unity in different styles
By John von Rhein, Chicago Tribune
March 8, 2008
Conductors who bring early music backgrounds to their work with modern orchestras often find themselves caught in battles of opposing musical styles, wills and aesthetics.
If, as reports suggest, the musical chemistry was strained between the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and John Eliot Gardiner at rehearsals, all was well when the respected British conductor, one of the standard bearers of the "period" brigade, strode to the podium for his CSO debut Thursday at Orchestra Hall.
In fact, these performances were among the freshest, most invigorating and revelatory I have heard from the orchestra in a long time.
The program consisted of Shostakovich's Chamber Symphony (Opus 110a), Beethoven's Fourth Piano Concerto and Schumann's "Rhenish" Symphony. Every gesture was invested with deep feeling: Far from being a dry authenticist, Gardiner looked and sounded like a thorough-going romantic.
For Rudolf Barshai's string-orchestra expansion of the Shostakovich Eighth String Quartet, Gardiner had the CSO strings playing as if their lives depended on it. Fine degrees of tone color and intensity heightened the sense of numbed despair, and when driving ferocity seized the spotlight, it did so with harrowing force.
His fellow provocateur in Beethoven was soloist Robert Levin, also making his CSO debut. A renowned Mozart scholar as well as a superb pianist, Levin gave the concerto an urgent, freewheeling and utterly compelling account. He improvised his own brawny cadenzas even as he and Gardiner challenged everyone's received notions of how this masterwork should be played.
Was Levin channeling the wild-maned Beethoven of contemporary portraits? His boldly spontaneous playing certainly made it seem so.
Gardiner's bracing and exuberant "Rhenish," purged of the heaviness so often visited on the work, projected the score forward from Beethoven rather than backward through the distorting lens of Bruckner and Mahler. The only blots on a vivid performance were the persistent and shocking bloopers from the five prominently featured horns.
If management is wise, it will invite Gardiner back at the earliest opportunity. Meanwhile, do not miss the chance to hear him.
REVIEW: SPECTRUM with the SPRINGFIELD SYMPHONY, March 1, 2008
SSO provides Motown thrills
By CLIFTON J. NOBLE JR., The Republican
Monday, March 03, 2008
The sounds of Motown, R&B and soul thrilled a crowd of 2,290 at Springfield Symphony Hall Saturday night, as the Springfield Symphony Orchestra and the vocal quartet offered a "Tribute to Motown." Founded by Cushney Roberts in 1995 as a Four Tops cover act in Las Vegas, the quartet has expanded to embrace a broader "spectrum" of music than that single group produced. In addition to the nimble Roberts, who vaulted into the audience during both the O'Jays' “Backstabbers" and the Temptations classic "My Girl," Spectrum featured the clear soaring falsetto of David Prescott on such gems as Smokey Robinson's "Oooh, Baby, Baby," and the rich baritones of Pierre Jovan on The Drifters' "Up On the Roof" and Darryl Grant on The Temptations' "Just My Imagination".
Other outstanding crowd-pleasers of the performance included The Spinners' "Rubber band Man" featuring the popping electric bass of Trinidad & Tobago native Donald Philips and Roberts' riveting, agile take on James Brown's "It's A Man's World." Spectrum, maestro Kevin Rhodes, and the orchestra "kept the Motown train a-rollin'" pacing the songs in such a way that excitement never slackened. The guest vocalists obliged with slick, tight choreography during intros and interludes. Dark suits in the first half gave way to resplendent white tuxes for the second half. Rhodes, ever the "sharp-dressed man," accented his own concert attire with red shirt and shoes. In addition to bassist Philips, Spectrum's back-up band included guitarist Ronnie Rathers, drummer Robert Shipley, and music-director-/keyboardist Tex Richardson.
The task of balancing all those musical forces electronically proved to be a daunting task. Spectrum brought their sound engineer, Michael Star, to keep everything in audio perspective, which he did with mixed success. From orchestra-left seats, particularly when one or two of the singers were employing mid-range falsetto, the vocal balance was uneven, and the words were often masked by the overall sonic wall of amplified orchestra plus band. Intermission inquiries revealed that other locations in the hall heard a better blend between singers and instruments, however. The amplification also had an odd effect on the first movement of Mendelssohn's "Italian" Symphony, with which Rhodes and the orchestra opened the concert. A strange bedfellow with soul music in the first place, the Mendelssohn was given an even stranger, brittle texture by the miking of the instruments.
In any case, whenever the four singers were fully audible in unaccompanied intros, medleys, or tags, their vocal expertise was abundantly clear, and their dedication to preserving the golden sound of Motown super groups like The Temptations, The Miracles, and The Four Tops was electrifying.
Review: Riders in the Sky, Duluth Superior Symphony, February 8, 2008
Duluth Superior Symphony Orchestra and live cowboy music generates enthusiasm
By: Samuel Black, Duluth News Tribune Published Monday, February 11, 2008
They called it the “cowboy’s national anthem.” So as an encore, Riders in the Sky and the Duluth Superior Symphony Orchestra shared a performance of “Tumblin Tumbleweeds.” As I walked back through the skywalk, dozens of patrons were humming and singing the tumbleweeds tune. That’s what I call a successful program. Saturday night the DSSO shared the stage with Riders in the Sky, a quartet of “cowboy music singers” that have been together for 30 years and more than 5,000 performances. Together they shared 18 musical selections, while the DSSO performed two by themselves. The evening opened with a rousing performance of the “Overture to Candide,” from a musical created by Leonard Bernstein, based on a story by Voltaire. Guest conductor Piotr Gajewski, “Pistol Pete,” led the orchestra in a boisterous, frolicking rendition of this rhythmic piece. Gajewski then galloped through the “Hoedown” Aaron Copland arranged from his ballet, “Rodeo.” The DSSO sounded crisp and brilliant as Gajewski relentlessly pushed from beginning to end. At that point, the cowboys, Riders in the Sky, took center stage, and made the audience very happy. Their singing, yodeling, and gentle humor kept the audience listening and toe-tapping for 90 minutes. Too Slim, the bass player, and Woody Paul, the fiddler, engaged in two different battles over cheek vocals. The audience was excited as these two men slapped their cheeks at various musical tones to create duets back and forth across the stage. Ranger Doug frequently used his higher voice to yodel, and create wondrously high vocal effects. Meanwhile, Joey played his “Stomach Steinway,” or accordion, with considerable finesse. He even offered a rollicking polka to satisfy the dancers in the audience. After intermission, Riders in the Sky offered a medley of tunes that involved yodeling. With considerable skill, Ranger Doug bounced his voice from high to low registers, singing and yodeling to the great pleasure of the enthusiastic audience. On songs like “Red River Valley,” “Happy Trails” and “Tumblin’ Tumbleweeds,” they encouraged audience participation. The singing was rich and warm. These four men are extremely comfortable interacting with the audience, and the Saturday night crowd was quite happy. As requested, they sang “Riders in the Sky,” and “Happy Trails,” so the audience could comfortably participate in the program. These musicians know their style. They perform the cowboy genre with confidence and engagement. Their harmonies are pleasing, and the fiddle and bass accompaniments are exciting to share. For the Duluth audience gathered Saturday night, a feeling of success was in the air. When the local orchestra can join a traveling cowboy quartet, everyone is a winner. The DSSO and live cowboy music can generate a lot of enthusiasm in Duluth. I can’t imagine a better way of keeping warm on a very frigid evening. Samuel Black is a Duluth pianist, organist and writer who celebrates live music by writing reviews for the Duluth News Tribune.
|

TOPS in POPS!
Known for our roster of top pop attractions.
Call us at 1-800-354-1645 or e-mail us at artra@aol.com to hear about our top pop attractions such as the Ladies of Motown, Radiance; Spectrum, A Tribute to Motown and R & B; and the high-energy Celtic ensemble, Mithril.
The 2009-2010 ARTRA calendar is here! E-mail us at artra@aol.com to receive your complimentary two-year calendar.
|

RECENT EVENTS
Recent Events and Accomplishments of ARTRA Artists
* * * * * * * * * *
JEFF WEILER RECENTLY AQUIRED A WURLITZER PIPE ORGAN
Every so often, an instrument surfaces after having long fallen from memory. Such is the case with the Style 260 Wurlitzer pipe organ originally installed in the Howard Theatre (renamed the Paramount in 1929), Atlanta, Georgia. For anything to have lasted over 80 years intact and in original condition is amazingl For a theatre organ to have lasted so long, and remain truly the work of its builder, is cause for celebration. Jeff has recently aquired this instrument, its pipes still wrapped in 1958 newspaper, from a private owner in Texas. There, the organ has remained safe, protected by its owner, but mute. A thorough historical restoration with no modifications, respecifications or additions is planned.
* * * * * * * * * *
HAVE YOU BEEN RECEIVING ARTRA Chatter VIA E-MAIL?
Once a month, we have been sending out information about our artists, their accomplishments and recent reviews via e-mail instead of bulk mail through the post office. If you haven't received the electronic version and would like it delivered directly to your computer, just e-mail your request at artra@aol.com. We will be sure to add your name to our list.
|

ARTICLES
Riders Declare Solidarity with Writers, Vow No New Jokes
Riders Declare Solidarity with Writers,
Vow No New Jokes
Riders In The Sky announced today "full solidarity" with the ongoing entertainment writers' strike, vowing no new jokes or routines "until our latte lappin' punchline partners out there in L.A. are free to fire up their laptops and earn a fair ancillary wage."
"I can't go out there and walk the picket line," said Riders funnyman Too Slim, "but I can tell old jokes."
"He certainly can," agreed Riders fiddler Woody Paul. "Some of his jokes must be twenty five, thirty years old. That face-playing routine is eligible for Social Security."
"Yes, yes it is," added Ranger Doug. "But as a union organization, I think it's important for us not to cross a picket line, even if it's only imaginary. If people think they'll get fresh comedy just by coming to our show, that could undermine the strike."
"What about the Milton Berle jokebook in the back of the bus?" suggested Joey, the Cowpolka King. "Can't we just steal some one-liners or limericks from that?"
"Technically yes," answered the Ranger. "In a way, they ARE reruns. But splitting hairs, seeking loopholes and ignoring an underlying issue's true spirit is certainly not..." and he turned his face toward the setting sun, "The Cowboy Way."
"It's a shame," concluded Too Slim. "I was making some real progress on the turtle joke. I was hoping to have it ready by '09. Oh well. Can I at least end this story with a clever riposte?"
"Nope," answered the Ranger. "Just let it trail off into
A portrait of Ya-Fei Chuang
by Gregor Willmes
She was born in Taiwan. As a teenager she came to Germany to study the piano. Today she lives in the United States. At the Ruhr Piano Festival Ya-Fei Chuang proved that she is an outstanding pianist.
The Bochum Art Museum was founded in 1960 as the Municipal Art Gallery for art after 1945. Fifteen years after the end of the Second World War a new museum was to be founded specially for contemporary art. And although art from 1900 up to the present is collected, stored and presented here, the newest con- temporary art nonetheless has a particu- larly high ranking. This is also demonstrated in exemplary fashion by the museum hall, which receives a new mural every three years. The present one, from Katharina Grosse, is 24 by 6,60 meters and attracts attention with its strong colors. Eleven cut-out and in other connections inserted circles make the whole into an expressive picture puzzle. If the huge painting nonetheless retreats to the background on this evening, it is thanks to the concert grand positioned in front of it and naturally to the scintillating pianist Ya-Fei Chuang, who is giving her Ruhr Piano Festival debut here. In a completely unspectacular manner she gets her eminently ambitious program going with four of Mendelssohn Bartholdy’s “Songs Without Words.” Twice Andante con moto and once Andante sostenuto give her immediately three occasions to sing on the keys and to savor in a nuanced manner her predilection for catchy melodies. In the final presto movement her fingers move quick as a flash over the keyboard in a lighthearted, cheerful counterpoint to the three Andante movements. Even greater is the contrast to the next work, in which Ya-Fei Chuang must interpret some wildly vehement passages before the almost 20-minute fantasy gradually calms itself until the final apotheosis. “Toward the Center” is the title of the work, a little pun, as Yehudi Wyner dedicated the piece in 1988 to the American pianist and pedagogue Ward Davenny (“To Ward”). Wyner — born 1929 — is scarcely known in Europe, but is a renowned composer in America. In 2006, for example, he was honored with the highly endowed Pulitzer Prize for his piano concerto “Chiavi in mano.” Indeed, the concerto was commissioned by the Boston Symphony Orchestra and premiered in 2005 by Robert Levin. Thus a circle closes itself, for two rows in front of me Robert Levin can barely hold still in his seat. He gestures more feverishly with the music than he seems to as a rule in his own concerts. “Wyner is a close friend of my husband and mine,” says Ya-Fei Chuang two days after the concert in an interview. “I value Wyner greatly and love the piece. I had performed it once earlier and absolutely wanted to play it again now.” Since 1995 Ya-Fei Chuang has been married to Robert Levin—indeed, the wedding announcement made the New York Times. But it does not make her nervous when her former teacher and present-day husband, himself one of the most famous musicologists and pianists of our time, mingles with the public in her concert. “I am always happy when he is there, because he stands totally behind me and that supports me. He is in fact always the one who tells me that I am far too self-critical.” Did the pupil fall in love with the professor? Her answer is a laugh. “No, that was later. And after I graduated he was the one who asked me out. So it was the other way around.” Three pressing questions: Does he still advise her today, when she learns new repertoire? Do they sometimes argue over questions of interpretation? And is it difficult for her as his former student to emancipate herself artistically? “We never fight,” says Ya-Fei Chuang. “When we play together and have differing viewpoints, we discuss it. Apart from that it depends upon the repertoire. For example, when my husband prepares romantic or contemporary music, he is happy to play for me. I am especially pleased to play baroque or classical repertoire for him. Actually he always has helpful advice to offer, whatever I play for him. And we do this for each other gladly.” In the future both of them want to play more often as a duo, which has a purely practical reason: “Both of us travel a great deal, although my husband is on the road much more than I. Thus we unfortunately do not see each other as often as we wish. And it is so nice to play and travel together.” Ya-Fei Chuang— born 1970 in Taiwan— discovered at the age of four the piano that her parents had actually bought for an older sister. At the age of eight she made her first television appearance, at nine she gave her first solo recital, and at eleven she won the national youth competition. At her first recital the audience included a German professor, who was to have great influence upon her future: “That was Professor Ottmar Rohde. He was in fact a chemist, but also a very good pianist. He established contact with the Freiburg Musikhochschule. Professors from Freiburg then came to Taiwan to hear me. They wanted me to study in Freiburg immediately, but my parents did not want me to leave when I was nine.” After she had attended two summer courses with Mechtild Hatz in Freiburg, she came as a 13-year-old to the Freiburg region in the care of foster parents and began her studies with Rosa Sabater. “She was a major Spanish pianist, who unfortunately perished in a plane crash. I then went to Professor Tibor Hazay and then to my husband.” At 18 she won second prize in the International Tomassoni Competition in Cologne—and at the prizewinner’s concert she met Pavel Gililov, with whom she later studied for her concert diploma. “He had an uncannily beautiful sound, with great warmth,” she recalls. “And I am very grateful to him, in fact, that he never told me exactly what I should do in order to produce such a sound. I thus found through him what I hope is my own voice at the piano.” In 1993 Ya-Fei Chuang went to Boston to work with Russell Sherman. Sherman— pupil of Eduard Steuermann, who himself had been able to study with Busoni and Schönberg — has a reputation in America as a very esteemed pianist and pedagogue — with whom for example Marc-André Hamelin also studied. Ya-Fei Chuang experienced with him a “very exciting, complicated and difficult learning experience,” as Sherman sought to push her in a direction that was hitherto completely unknown to her. “I think that the most important thing that I learned from him is that music is not merely about beauty. And for that one needs tremendous courage. I come from a culture in which most of us are very polite and reserved and always want to do the right thing. And already in Germany I noticed that the culture here is different; people’s personalities are more open. But with Sherman things went yet another step further. I notice more and more how personal it is for me to give a concert. I play for so many people and wish nonetheless to communicate with every single person who sits in the hall. I show everything that is in my deepest inner self. Perhaps I wasn’t able to do that earlier quite so easily. Sherman was a terrific help in this.” That Ya-Fei Chuang learned how to come out of her own shell was revealed in Bochum by her interpretation of Rachmaninoff’s Second Sonate, which she played, by the way, in the second version, which was shortened by the composer. And yet— it is rather the lyrical aspects that emerge in her interpretation, the singing, completely tranquilly shaped slow middle movement, for example. Ya-Fei Chuang plays rather controlled and sensitively differentiated rather than bursting with strength and with emotional excess. This benefited Ravel’s “Gaspard de la nuit” in the Art Museum as well. With what coloristic splendor she fulfilled the three “romantic poetic settings,” how picturesquely she traced the surges of the waves in “Ondine”, in “Le Gibet” she let the bells of death ring and softly fade away and how securely she whirled through “Scarbo” with its repeated notes and jumps. That had stature. In the meantime, Ya-Fei Chuang communicates her abilities and knowledge, having moved from the New England to Boston Conservatory. Parallel to this she concertizes in solo appearances, in duo concerts with her husband, but also in varying chamber combinations. She works particularly happily with the cellist Steven Isserlis. “I have just come from New York, where I performed with him. And in October we shall play together again. With him I feel totally free, which I cannot always say when I perform chamber music. There one sometimes has to play with musical reserve. He is one of the very few cellists — now the cellists will hate me— who always wants more sound from me. There are musicians who say, “Could you bring the piano lid down a bit?” Steven, however, demands “More! Come on!” That’s the way he is, and not just about sound. And I love that very much.”
Riders Celebrate ‘The Career That Wouldn’t Die’
Riders In The Sky marked their 30th anniversary as a band on Sunday, November 11, capping a profitable weekend marked by frolic, festivity, and a letter from the governor of Utah.
Friday night found the boys in Heber City, Utah, entertaining their little hearts out at the big Cowboy Gathering and Buckaroo Fair. The kind folks running the show had arranged for four sets of hand-tooled custom cowboy leather cuffs commemorating America's Favorite Cowboys' thirty years in the saddle to be presented onstage.
And then, amid swelling excitement, the Honorable Gary Herbert, Lieutenant Governor of the Beehive State, rose to read a congratulatory letter from the governor himself, who was otherwise detained at an undisclosed location. “Your unique style and versatility places you in an elite class of American entertainers,” wrote the savvy statesman. “Your music and entertainment remind young and old of our important past. Best wishes as you celebrate a remarkable milestone. Sincerely, Jon M. Huntsman, Jr., Governor.” Then he wrote in a fine, blue Sharpie cursive at the bottom, in his own hand, mind you, “Congratulations!”
Saturday night it was Blackfoot, Idaho's turn to host history. There, at the town’s Performing Arts Center at the high school, home of the Broncos, 11-0 for the year, by the way, the 30th celebration rolled on with quips, tunes from the vault, and a new stage banner proclaiming 30 years of taking “Good Beef to Hungry People.”
Alvaton, Kentucky, and the gracious neighbors at First Southern Bank sponsored Sunday’s gig, 30 years to the day since Ranger Doug, Too Slim, and Windy Bill Collins carried a saddle and big old saguaro onto the stage, or, more accurately, into the dim corner, of Herr Harry’s Phranks and Steins in Nashville and played Bob Nolan songs and Gene Autry songs and cut up until the eight inebriates at the bar begged for more.
History records Woody Paul coming along a few months later and Joey showing up in 1987 and never going home, completing the quartet. And here they are, against some pretty impressive odds, still alive, still friends, still booking 180 dates a year, still true to The Cowboy Way.
"People often ask if we thought way back then if it would last this long,” said Ranger Doug. “I can’t say I did, but I’m thankful for every day of it.”
"I remember waking up still laughing on the Tuesday after that first weekend,” said Too Slim. “I called the Ranger and said ‘I don’t know what happened back there, but America will pay to see it.’ I had no idea how much or for how long but God bless’em, they still come to the shows.”
"I’m in for 30 more,” said Woody Paul.
"Me too,” said Joey.
“Let’s ride,” said the Ranger, and with a hearty yodel and a cloud of dust, the foursome disappeared over the horizon, into the future, down that lonesome trail of cowboy songs, jokes, adventure, thrills, Mercantile opportunities, and the ongoing saga of life along The Cowboy Way.
|

WEBSITE LINKS
View a listing of ARTRA Artists' Personalized Websites with links.
www.berkmusic.com (Michael Berkowitz)
www.leechin.com (Lee Chin)
www.davidschrader.com (David Schrader)
www.capitolquartet.com (Capitol Quartet)
www.patricksheridan.com (Patrick Sheridan)
www.buddywachter.com (Buddy Wachter)
www.geocities.com/mrkmusic (Manhattan Rhythm Kings)
www.newsousaband.com (Keith Brion and the New Sousa Band)
www.louisemandrell.com (Louise Mandrell)
www.mjblue.com (Michael Johnson)
www.michaelmartinmurphey.com (Michael Martin Murphey)
www.ridersinthesky.com (Riders In The Sky)
www.specialc.com (Special Consensus Bluegrass)
www.infullswing.net (In Full Swing and The Living Christmas Card)
www.spectrumsings.com (Spectrum: A Tribute to Motown and R & B)
www.joelulloff.com/index2.html (Joe Lulloff)
www.mithril.us (High Energy Celtic Music: Mithril)
www.radiancesings.com (Radiance)
|
|
 |