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Pollstar | REVERB's Journey Toward A More Sustainable Touring Industry


By: Francisco Rendon
Matt Cosby
Arm In ArmREVERB co-founders Adam Gardner and Lauren Sullivan pose with Jack Johnson (center) at Darling’s Waterfront Pavilion in Bangor, Maine, in 2017.Many in the touring industry have long bemoaned the practices of consumption, pollution and waste that have been business as usual at major events. In 2004, Lauren Sullivan and Adam Gardner decided they would do something about it. 
Step by step, the REVERB co-founders have learned how tours can better understand their consumption habits and carbon footprint, how to educate others, how to impact policy around key issues, and how to raise funds to make a difference. Today, it’s no exaggeration to say REVERB is one of the leaders in the field.

New-york , United-states , Oklahoma , Maine , Brooklyn , Forest-hills-stadium , Colorado , California , Peru , Wantagh , America , Kanakuy-el-tigre

Prezident Markon's Singles Round-Up (Renee Goust, Kanaku y El Tigre, Colectiva, Mad Cow, DJ Tudo, Joaquín Cornejo and more) – Sounds and Colours


Taken from his forthcoming album,
Transformação E Cura, Alfredo Bello – known to you and me as DJ Tudo – furthers here his investigative forays into Brazilian folk culture with his ever-changing band, Sua Gente de Todo Lugar. The “people from everywhere” cook up a tumultuous mix of sounds, colours and genres that leaves you by the end feeling well and truly spent – in a joyful way. Like many other traditional songs in Afro-Brazilian culture, this deals with slavery and ever-present inequalities in Brazilian society. “Black people today are people too/They want to dance and be doctors…”, the lyrics proclaim. Recorded piecemeal between 2007 and 2019 all over the world, the song is rooted in the Congado drums of a festival popular in the state of Goiás.

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