Posts Tagged ‘US’

Trusting God entirely

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

I was reading Luke 12 vs 22-34 and it began to stir something in my heart. That’s Christian talk for it got me thinking and the thinking was influenced by God. Here’s the paragraph from the New King James Version:

 

22 Then He said to His disciples, “Therefore I say to you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat; nor about the body, what you will put on. 23 Life is more than food, and the body is more than clothing. 24 Consider the ravens, for they neither sow nor reap, which have neither storehouse nor barn; and God feeds them. Of how much more value are you than the birds? 25 And which of you by worrying can add one cubit to his stature? 26 If you then are not able to do the least, why are you anxious for the rest? 27 Consider the lilies, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin; and yet I say to you, even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. 28 If then God so clothes the grass, which today is in the field and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, how much more will He clothe you, O you of little faith? 29 “And do not seek what you should eat or what you should drink, nor have an anxious mind. 30 For all these things the nations of the world seek after, and your Father knows that you need these things. 31 But seek the kingdom of God, and all these things shall be added to you. 32 “Do not fear, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom. 33 Sell what you have and give alms; provide yourselves money bags which do not grow old, a treasure in the heavens that does not fail, where no thief approaches nor moth destroys. 34 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.

 

It’s a pretty well known scripture for those that have been in the Church for a while and yet I don’t think it’s been seen for all it is. Most preachers would use this to teach not to worry and to trust God, which is great, but I think there’s more to this passage.

 

Jesus isn’t just talking about not worrying and trusting him for the little things in our lives, I think Jesus is challenging us to go even further than that.

 

Verse 33: Sell what you have and give alms; provide yourselves money bags which do not grow old, a treasure in the heavens that does not fail, where no thief approaches nor moth destroys.

 

Sell what I have? How will I live? I need to work, to save, to build up great wealth, to have a house, a car and a yapping dog behind my electrified fence. I personally feel this is a challenge to give as much as I can, not just a percentage, but everything to those in need.

 

I’ve been debating the purpose of life with myself and bounced some of my ideas off my atheist friend. When asked what his drive was in life, he said he wanted to better humanity. Has that worked so far? Recently I watched a documentary on some men from the Sudan, who had never even used electricity, move to New York and begin to live in the US. The light switch alone was fascinating to them. After a few years they spoke to them again and the wonders of our better world had only made their lives worse. They were now working most of the time, they had piles of bills to pay and they were juggling the intense schedule the modern world creates. If that’s the purpose of your life, it’s not looking so good.

 

I would argue life is not worth living if it’s in a Godless world. That world would have no purpose. If my purpose is to serve God, to be his hands in the world, to love and help others – not just Christians, then how do I do that? Clearly this verse tells me stocking up wealth is futile. Perhaps the challenge is to live in that danger zone. The zone any reasonable accountant would never get anywhere near, living from day to day. Relying on God alone to provide and not stocking up. Imagine that. Imagine never being held down by possessions. Imagine giving away the majority of your pay check the moment it arrives because there’s no need to stock up. God will provide.

 

Is this thought so out there? We talk about it, but we’re too scared to drop our safety net we’ve built up and rely solely on God. I feel challenged by this. I believe it takes a real connection with God to know when the right time is to give and when the right time is to build up in the expectation of giving. It’s gotten me excited to get out there and earn some money so that I can put it into practice. But perhaps I can give God other things to work with while I’m a student. What about my time? What about my skills? The possibilities are endless. If I stop worrying about doing well according to the worlds check list and start helping God with his, my life has a purpose. My life is now worth living.

 

GOLDFISH

Friday, January 9th, 2009

South African music is rarely huge. We don’t pour out artists like the USA or the UK, and as customers we seem to prefer buying international artists’ music. But things are slowly beginning to turn a new corner. South African music is different; it has something that the world doesn’t. And as our artists grow with the South African music industry new talented artists are emerging that are ready to take the world stage. One of those artists is Goldfish.

GoldFish

Two Jazz musos hook up while studying music at varsity, and form a live electronic duo. They record an album themselves with little more than a double bass, a saxophone and a couple of synths. This self-released ‘underground’ album, Caught in the loop, goes on to propel them into the stratosphere, with a cult-like following and numerous #1s in their home country.

They take their incendiary multiple-instrument live act across the globe, with sold-out shows from Ibiza to Tokyo, from Dubai to Cannes. They open for giants Fatboy Slim, Mr Scruff, The Audio Bullys, Paul van Dyk, Pete Tong and Stereo MC’s. They are hailed as the Re-invention of the DJ, and voted best live act in South Africa.

GoldFish

This is Dominic Peters and David Poole, the unassuming surfer/jazz muso/electronic maniacs that are Goldfish. You couldn’t find two guys more passionate about music, and if you’ve seen their live show, you will agree that ‘Re-invention of the DJ’ is about as close as you can get to describing what they do. Combining live instruments like Double bass, Saxophones, Keyboards, Flute, and Vocals with Samplers, Effects, Synths and a healthy dollop of freeform improvisation, Goldfish have hit a nerve on dance floors across the world.

After the smash success of Caught in the loop, Goldfish return with a sophomore album that without doubt will rock the South African music scene to its foundations. This duo have spent the last couple of years pretty much coming from an underground electronica act in South Africa for people-in-the-know, to a full blown white-hot international act – right under everyone’s noses. Having been quietly chipping away, touring South Africa as well as internationally through Japan, Dubai, US, UK, Ibiza, France and Spain – building an unstoppable groundswell of fans, the duo have just signed their new album to the massive nightlife and super club brand Pacha. This alignment is set to whisk the duo beyond South Africas’ borders with tour dates already booked across America alongside Macy Gray and Fedde Le Grande, as well as a residency on Friday nights at Pacha Ibiza throughout the European summer.

Gold Fish

The new album, Perceptions of Pacha features smash-hits This is how it goes and Cruising through, already being picked up on by European Radio stations. With a gorgeous, unmistakeable sound that is so intrinsically South African but with an international appeal and polish, the duo have hit a nerve amongst music lovers across all genres. Goldfish truly have a sound that crosses over the Dance divide. Known fondly just as the ‘Fishies’ to their legions of loyal fans, it is undeniable that the incredible talent these two qualified multi-instrumentalist Jazz musicians have (both have a Masters and Bachelors in Jazz studies), has shaped their sound. Perceptions of Pacha is a masterclass in combining House, Lounge, Electro, Jazz, and African styles – using traditional live instruments like Double bass, Saxophones, Keyboards, Flute, and Vocals, into a feel-good sound you just can’t put you finger on.  Mastered in the London by Soundmasters International (Fatboy Slim, Moby, Depeche Mode) the album features 12 brand new tracks as well as a 25 minute live video enhancement featuring Goldfish burning up a live set. Now, Sony/BMG South Africa has proudly signed Goldfish for Southern Africa, and is set to take Goldfish to superstar status in their home country.

Praise for Goldfish

“One of the first acts to truly jump the great divide between dance and live excitement” – 24.com

“Make no mistake, these boys are gonna to be BIG! The two multi-instrumentalists captivate the crowd, and have the UK contingent scratching their heads and saying to each other ‘we’ve got to get these boys over to Europe…’  Essential.” – TrusttheDJ.com

“GOLDFISH … store that name in your memory for longer than 3 seconds, cause these guys are going places.” – Thunda.com

“That was fantastic!” – Pete Tong

From a technical point of view what Goldfish does is blinding…and the fact that they have combined this with catchy hooks and licks makes it doubly so. A brilliant night out! – thechiz.co.za

“The duo are the closest thing celebrity-dry South African music culture has to offer the globe in terms of recognisable, press-heavy popular icons. No. The duo are full-blown popular icons, and whether you’re a sideline fan, appreciative musician or a crazed groupie, you’ll find a way to give the Fish props.”

Overtone.co.za

“This album shows that heavy jazz cats can make music that is accessible and bursting with groove” – MIO.co.za

“Did I mention there are only two of them? Go see a live set, and then buy the disc at the show along with the bonus DVD. You will thank me.” -  Blunt magazine

“We dig these guys!” FHM

“With Goldfish, you can clearly see they are brilliant. There is nothing like playing a classic instrument to prove you’re a real artist, and people thrive off this element of their show. In fact, unless you are standing right up in the front row, you wouldn’t be able to grasp the full complexity of what they are doing…Goldfish are breaking traditional mindsets about this music genre” – Durbanscouts.co.za

‘Their musical class shines through with elements of Nu-Jazz and traditional African Jazz mixing brilliantly with bluesy Café jazz ala St Germain. But they’re no copycats. Goldfish has their own sound and it is wonderfully South African with the sophistication of Europe.” – BPM magazine

“GOLDFISH are without doubt the most exciting live band in the country at the moment. Their unique blend of deep house grooves, live instruments and hypnotic vocal samples have made them the must-see band of the year.” Anythinggoes.co.za

Goldfish Highlights:

GoldFishVoted Number One live act in South Africa by 24.com

Invitation to perform for Nelson Mandela and his charity 46664 @ Ellis Park

Goldfish featured on the worlds biggest syndicated Dance Radio Show, Pete Tong’s Essential Mix BBC One show

NO#1 on 5FM with track All Night for three consecutive weeks, and 20 weeks in the top 25.

Performances alongside Fatboy Slim, Audio Bullys and Stereo MC’s

International releases of Caught in the loop by Black Mango Music(UK) and Rambling Records(Japan)

Opening Performance for Mr Scruff and Paul van Dyk

Opening Performance for Pete Tong at Café Mambo, Ibiza

All Night hits No 1 on MFM dance charts 3 weeks running (April 2006)

International performances/tours of US, UK, Ibiza, Dubai, Japan, France, South Africa, Namibia, Malawi, and Seychelles

Live 2hr Mix on Top SA radio station 5fm New Years Eve 2006

Voted FHM album of the month

Goldfish voted No 1 in Elle Magazine hot 40

September/October 2005 Cover of BPM magazine.

Cover of Brand Magazine 2006 1st quarter Featuring the artwork, design and branding of Caught in the loop

Track Mbira Beat selected by Virgin Mega store in the UK to feature on the compilation entitled staff choice: Virgin down tempo Grooves.

Invitation to perform in Cannes, France, as Headline Act of the International Advertising Awards, The Lions

Interview in DJ MAG(UK) December 2005

Dream released on Breathe Sunshine vol.2 – track 4 (  voted 4th best compilation by UK music festival and website – The Big Chill)

For South African Bookings contact:

Raymond Bloom 0836020202

rayb@mweb.co.za

Parachute Band

Monday, October 27th, 2008

Parachute BandWith a mission to use music to connect people with Jesus, and a mandate to raise the standard of Christian music in NZ, Parachute Music came into being. The year was 1989 and the time was right.

Founder Mark de Jong, who had his roots in Youth For Christ big concert events, launched into the deep and began a ministry that has seen 19 years of rapid growth. Passionate about working with musicians who are not afraid to sing about what they believe in, Mark is all about the potential in a song that can change the heart.

“There’s power in a song to touch the human spirit when words are simply not enough.”
Parachute Music grew into a national organisation very quickly, filling the gap between artists and record companies and hosting the largest four day festival outside the US to showcase both local and international musicians. The event has not only become a “must” on the kiwi summer calendar but evangelical, in that a large percentage of unchurched people attend the annual event.
Operating with a Board of Trustees, a staff of 20, interns, a Festival Executive and thousands of volunteers, Parachute Music is a charitable trust with a long haul mentality.

It’s 3 phase approach is this:
1. to develop music written and performed by Christians in NZ
2. to take this music into the international Christian market
3. to take this music into the mainstream industry

TECHNICOLOR, the Parachute Band’s latest release sees a band that has found their voice. With eleven tracks of sonically colourful worship songs, TECHNICOLOR is based around the concept that God’s living water equals life in all its colour… full blazing colour.

The album’s opener ‘Come to the River’ sets the scene, showcasing a new found synergy within the band and plays on the Message’s version of Psalm 51 “Soak me in your laundry…I’ll come out clean…bring me from grey exile, put fresh wind in my sails”.

From the impassioned electro rock of ‘No Eye Has Seen’ to the U2-esque ‘Shout it Out’ it’s clear that TECHNICOLOR’S songs of salvation deliver with punch and sincerity, while the soulful intimacy of tracks like ‘Grace’ and ‘In Liberty’ present a band who aren’t afraid to wear their devotion on their sleeves.

South African inventions

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

Africa WeekWhere would you expect to find the inventor of the CAT scan, the makers of the “speed gun” used in cricket ovals the world over, or the world’s first oil-from coal refinery? There’s a wide range of innovative and entrepreneurial activity in South Africa, backed up by a number of organisations that provide support for budding inventors and innovators. Some of the world firsts South Africa can lay claim to are the following.

HounsfieldCAT scan
The computed axial tomography scan, or CAT scan, was developed at Tufts University in the UK by South African physicist Allan Cormack and Godfrey Hounsfield of EMI Laboratories. Their achievement secured them the 1979 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

Cormack’s interest in the problem of X-ray imaging of soft tissues or layers of tissue of differing densities was first aroused when he took up the part-time position of physicist for a hospital radiology department.

The two-dimensional representations of conventional X-ray plates were often unable to distinguish between such tissues. More information could be gained if X-rays of the body were taken from several different directions, but conventional X-ray techniques made this procedure problematic.

In the early 1960s Cormack showed how details of a flat section of soft tissues could be calculated from measurements of the attenuation of X-rays passing through it from many different angles.

He thus provided the mathematical technique for the CAT scan, in which an X-ray source and electronic detectors are rotated about the body and the resulting data is analysed by a computer to produce a sharp map of the tissues within a cross-section of the body. Source: Britannica.com

Oil from coal
SasolSasol is the world’s first – and largest – oil-from-coal refinery. It is situated in Sasolburg in South Africa and provides 40% of the country’s fuel. The history of Sasol began in 1927 when a White Paper was tabled in Parliament to investigate the establishment of a South African oil-from-coal industry.

It was realised then that, because South Africa did not have crude oil reserves, the country’s balance of payments had to be protected against increasing crude oil imports. After many years of research and international negotiations, the South African Coal Oil and Gas Corporation was formed in 1950. Major milestones include the first automotive fuel (1955), the construction of the National Petroleum Refiners of South Africa (1967) and the establishment in 1990 of its first international marketing company, Sasol Chemicals Europe.

Sasol has developed world-leading technology for the conversion of low-grade coal into value-added synfuels and chemicals.

Heart transplant
Chris BarnardThe world’s first heart transplant was performed by Dr Chris Barnard in Cape Town on 3 December 1967. Barnard was born in the town of Beaufort West in 1922. The seeds of his future career were sown when one of his patients delivered a baby boy with a heart defect which could not be remedied. The baby died, causing him to think deeply about the need for remedial surgery and the replacement of heart valves.

A turning point came when Barnard was offered a chance to work in Minneapolis in the US under Professor Wagensteen, a great teacher of experimental surgery. The heart-lung machine was perfected, and this turned out to be the gateway to cardiac surgery.

The idea of transplanting occurred to Barnard. If it was possible with kidneys, why not the heart? After more years of study in the US, he returned to South Africa with a parting gift from Prof Wagensteen – a heart-lung machine.

Groote Schuur hospital was waiting his return in 1958 to start the first heart unit to perform a cardiac bypass operation. After performing the first successful kidney transplant on Edith Black, in October 1967 Barnard informed Professor Val Schrire, who had built up the cardiac clinic: “Everything is ready for a heart transplant. We have the team and we know how to do it.” In November 1967, Schrire called Barnard and told him that there was a suitable patient for a heart transplant. Louis Washkansky was suffering from heart failure and was prepared to take the chance. The rest is history.

Barnard passed away in Cyprus, Greece on 2 September 2001 from an acute asthma attack. Source: Groote Schuur hospital

Speed gun
The South African-made speed gun, developed by Somerset West inventor Henri Johnson, was formally launched at The Oval in England during the 1999 Cricket World Cup. In 1992 Johnson invented the Speedball which was manufactured by South African firm Electronic Development House. The device accurately measures the speed and angles of speeding objects such as cricket and tennis balls. Generally referred to as a “speed gun”, Johnson’s gizmo is sold in cricketing countries and in the US and Europe.

Kreepy Krauly
Creepy CrawlyThe swimming pool vacuum cleaner was invented by Ferdinand Chauvier, a hydraulics engineer who came to South Africa from the Belgian Congo in 1951. Chauvier quickly realised that there was a huge market for taking the hassle out of cleaning swimming pools, and went about inventing a machine that would do the job automatically, efficiently powered by the ordinary operation of the pool’s filter.

But it wasn’t until 1974 that the first Kreepy Krauly was born in Chauvier’s Springs home. He died in 1985, but Kreepy Kraulys continue to keep thousands of pools clean in South Africa and the world over.

APS therapy
Gervan Lubbe was flicking through an American medical journal one day when he stumbled across an article about pain relief. After reading all he could on the topic, he wondered whether it would be possible to electronically stimulate the body’s natural nerve impulses to relieve pain.

Lubbe, had always had a keen interest in medicine, but never thought he was clever enough to be a doctor. So in his spare time he studied human anatomy and physiology until he thought he knew enough about the causes of arthritic pain. Then he set out inventing a device that would alleviate the problem.

After building the first prototypes and obtaining approval from the health department and the Food and Drug Administration in the United States, Lubbe formed the company Tech Pulse in 1993 to produce, market and distribute the Action Potential Stimulation device. Today, Lubbe’s devices are sold in 41 countries, including the US, Europe and the Middle East. In South Africa alone, over 40 000 people use the little machines to relieve pain.

Pratley Putty
PratleyPratley’s famous glue is the only South African invention that has been to the moon. In 1969 the putty was used to hold bits of the Apollo XI mission’s Eagle landing craft together.

Krugersdorp engineer George Pratley invented his famous sticky stuff in the 1960s while looking for a glue that would hold components in an electrical box. Pratley died in 1983 and today the company is run by his son, Kim. Hundreds of tons of Pratley putty have been exported all over the world, and the company has diversified into other products.

Dolosse
Dolosse are large, unusually shaped concrete blocks weighing up to 20 tons. The structures are designed to break up wave action and protect harbour walls and coastal installations. Designed by Eric Merrifield and first installed in East London harbour, they are now used all over the world.

The Coega Project, comprising an industrial development complex and deepwater port 20 kilometres east of the city of Port Elizabeth, recently made history with the casting of the biggest dolosse on the African continent. The first of the 26 500 thirty-ton dolosse that will be used on the two breakwaters for the deep-water harbour of Ngqura have already been made.

According to Deon Retief, the partner responsible for the Nqura breakwater design at Prestedge Retief Dresner Wijnberg, the dolosse will form the top layer of the main breakwater which, at 2.5 kilometres long, is the “largest by far” in Africa.