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they got tattooes and thanks to them they prefer to play music to earn cash after all aside from human’s greed for fame, earning cash comes next. get high! your eyes were dillated.AUS!





[…] My other great discovery is Nyco Maca. She does bossa. That night, her sound had an electronica feel to it because she was playing a special set with Playground. I don’t really know if they perform together regularly. It’s a pity if they don’t. Because they sound really unique. Imagine. Remixed, electronified bossa. It’s. so. great. it. makes. me. write. in. fragments. And to think she used to be a contestant in Star in a Million, that pop music show. Seriously speaking, Nyco Maca+Playground would give Sitti a run for her money. I like Sitti, but now I like Nyco better. If Sitti is all sweetness, sugar n’ spice, Nyco is a sensual, earthy woman. Gad, even her speaking voice, with its low and rumbling tones, is beguiling. I also enjoyed Sino Sikat’s set. My favorite song of theirs is still Turning My Safety Off. Their other output wasn’t distinctive enough to hook me on first listen (this was my first time to see them live), but perhaps I’ll think differently after a second or third time. Radioactive Sago Project blasted, huffed and puffed their way through their set, as usual. I liked some songs, (they performed the Baboy song, an old favorite) but not enough to compel me to buy the album. Funk band Cosmic Love reminded me of the sorely-missed P.O.T. They woke up the crowd, but I guess I didn’t find them unique, or interesting enough. I thought their songs suffered from hackneyed lyrics about brotherly love and all that jazz–it’s an old message, but they could have said it in an original way. […]