Terror-Bite Tango (aka Gettin' Down for the Count)

Unearthed from the crypt of 1983, Dr. Franken-Jamie has resurrected and stitched together a
monster of a piece for your Halloween adventures. A tango of horror and delight - with no
words at all(!), "Terror-Bite Tango" is terribly appropriate for creatures of all ages - from birth to
the grave, and beyond . . .

This haunted and hallowed offering was inspired by Count (Peter) Zaremba's tireless
efforts to scare and scar the souls of the soulless.

Music and Unnatural Sounds: "Dr." Jamie K. Sims
Words: NONE! (If you hear any words, please let us know.)
Tweaking, Mixing, Mastering of Ancient Noises: Chris Stamey
Photo: Errol Somay

Don't dare to miss it, for it will follow you "every step you take . . ."
CAUTION: Do NOT Listen ALONE! (pets, small babies, and insects count)

Terror-Bite Tango at Amazon
Terror-Bite Tango on Spotify

Gentle Woman of a Dangerous Kind: Documentary Film Score

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A NEW collection of classical Sims works used as the soundtrack for the documentary Marii Hasegawa: Gentle Woman of a Dangerous Kind by Small Steps Films. This album features Sims on solo piano and also in ensemble works with Bev Salyards, trumpet, and Douglas Wandersee, soprano and alto sax. Narciso Solero, piano, and Susan Hayes, flute, of the EcoVoce Ensemble, perform "Swans" from Kenilworth Lake. Surprise tracks at the end are her Viennese Sonata, recorded live in performance in 1976.

CD AVAILABLE NOW!

 

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Downloads at Amazon and iTunes!

 

ABOUT THE FILM

Marii Hasegawa: Gentle Woman of a Dangerous Kind is a documentary film portraying one woman’s extraordinary life’s work for human rights and global peace.
    Hasegawa was born in 1918 near Hiroshima, Japan. Her father, a Buddhist priest assigned to mission work, moved his family to California in 1919. Hasegawa graduated from the University of California at Berkeley. After the U.S. government forcibly relocated nearly 110,000 people of Japanese descent in 1942, she and her family were sent to the Topaz internment camp in Utah. This experience led Hasegawa to join the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) and inspired her efforts in human rights. She picketed discriminating landlords, protested Nike nuclear missile sites, and in 1965 she organized buses to Washington, D.C., for Martin Luther King Jr.’s March on Washington. During the Vietnam War Hasegawa became president of WILPF and led an international peace delegation into North Vietnam, assessing and reporting civilian damage.
    In 1996, Marii Hasegawa was awarded the Niwano Peace Prize by the Niwano Peace Foundation of Tokyo, Japan.
    The film is directed by Janet Scagnelli and is a Small Steps Films production. www.smallstepsfilms.com

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New Halloween Release!

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Airplay for GWDK Theme

Women of Subtance Podcast #1296

The theme I wrote, "Gentle Woman of a Dangerous Kind," for the 2012 documentary "Marii Hasegawa: Gentle Woman of a Dangerous Kind" (seen on PBS and other venues) airs on WOSRadio podcast as part of their War and the Pursuit of Peace program. Marii Hasegawa was a remarkable Japanese-American peace activist who was held in a Japanese Internment Camp during WWII.

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