ThermoGenesis and ImmuneCyte Joint Venture Developing Several Convalescent Plasma and Antibody Therapeutic Approaches Against COVID-19, Featured on…

RANCHO CORDOVA, Calif., April 24, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --ThermoGenesis Holdings, Inc. (Nasdaq: THMO), a market leader in automated cell processing tools and services in the cell and gene therapy field, announced today that it was featured on multiple new outlets, including a FOX40 news segment titled, "Rancho Cordova Company Says It's Working on Potential Treatment for Coronavirus," regarding the ThermoGenesis and ImmuneCyte joint venture and its research collaborator's efforts toward developing a systemic antibody approaches against COVID-19, ranging from convalescent plasma therapy and polyclonal antibody, to high-affinity monoclonal antibody drug candidates.

Using the rapid IgM/IgG antibody detection technology currently marketed by the Company, along with its own proprietary multi-component automated cell separating system, ThermoGenesis is working towards developing strategies to identify and isolate polyclonal antibodies from the blood of individuals who have recovered from the disease using convalescent whole blood or plasma, which could then be used as a potential therapeutic treatment for patients with of COVID-19.

As previously announced, the Company's joint venture partner, ImmuneCyte, has acquired from its collaborators worldwide intellectual property of four high-affinity monoclonal antibody drug candidates against COVID-19virus. These high-affinity neutralizing monoclonal antibodies were also identified from convalescent whole blood from individuals who have recently recovered from COVID-19.

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Commenting on the recent new coverage Chris Xu, PhD, an immunologist and Chief Executive Officer of ThermoGenesis, said, "We are taking a systematic approach to address several critical unmet needs in the fight against COVID-19, namely rapid tests and effective therapies. By working closely with our global collaborators, we had a head start on this critical research." Dr. Xu also noted that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is fast tracking therapeutic products related to SARS-CoV-2, which the Company hopes may ultimately include ThermoGenesis' various antibody therapeutic approaches.

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About ThermoGenesis Holdings, Inc.

ThermoGenesis Holdings, Inc. develops, commercializes and markets a range of automated technologies for CAR-T and other cell-based therapies. The Company currently markets a full suite of solutions for automated clinical biobanking, point-of-care applications, and automation for immuno-oncology, including its semi-automated, functionally-closed CAR-TXpressplatform, which streamlines the manufacturing process for the emerging CAR-T immunotherapy market. For more information about ThermoGenesis, please visit:www.thermogenesis.com.

About ImmuneCyte Life Sciences, Inc.

ImmuneCyte, a joint venture which is 19% owned by ThermoGenesis, develops and commercializes diagnostic and therapeutic technologies for COVID-19. The Company also provides clients the opportunity to bank their own immune cells when the cells are "healthy and unaffected" as a future resource for cellular immunotherapies, such as CAR-T. ImmuneCyte utilizes a proprietary CAR-TXpress platform, a GMP compliant close-system capable of automated separating and cryopreserving different components from blood, simultaneously. For more information about ImmuneCyte Life Sciences Inc., please visit: http://www.immunecyte.com.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements are not statements of historical facts, but rather reflect the current expectations of ThermoGenesis concerning future events and results. Forward-looking statements based on ThermoGenesis' current assumptions, expectations and beliefs are generally identifiable by use of words "may," "might," "will," "should," "expects," "plans," "anticipates," "believes," "estimates," "predicts," "potential" or "continue," or similar expressions and involve significant risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results, developments and business decisions to differ materially from those contemplated by these statements. Such forward-looking statements, including statements regarding the intended use of net proceeds from the registered direct offering as well as those factors concerning our expectations, involve risks, uncertainties and other factors, some of which are beyond our control, which may cause our actual results, performance or achievements, or industry results, to be materially different from any future results, performance, or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. These risks, uncertainties and factors include, but are not limited to, market and other conditions, as well as those risk factors discussed in Item 1A of our most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") as well as other documents that may be filed by ThermoGenesis from time to time with the SEC, which are available atwww.sec.gov. We undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by law. You are cautioned not to unduly rely on such forward-looking statements when evaluating the information presented in this press release.

Company Contact:Wendy Samford916-858-5191ir@thermogenesis.com

Investor Contact:Paula Schwartz,Rx Communications917-322-2216pschwartz@rxir.com

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SOURCE ThermoGenesis Holdings, Inc.

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ThermoGenesis and ImmuneCyte Joint Venture Developing Several Convalescent Plasma and Antibody Therapeutic Approaches Against COVID-19, Featured on...

Gene Therapy Market : Global Outlook and Forecast 2020-2025 – Surfacing Magazine

ThisGlobalGene TherapyMarketprovides a detailed analysis of theGene Therapymarket based on segmentation such as applications, and geography and forecasts the market for 2020 to 2025. The globalGene Therapymarket is extremely fragmented. The report analyzes the markets competitive landscape and offers information on several field services manufacturers rivaling in the industry. Additionally, thisGene Therapymarket analysis report suggests strategies companies can follow and recommends key areas they should focus on, to make the most of upcoming growth opportunities.

DOWNLOAD FREE SAMPLE REPORT:https://www.fiormarkets.com/report-detail/376052/request-sample

Market Description:

To help clients improve their revenue shares in the market, this research report provides an analysis of theGene Therapymarkets competitive landscape and offers information on the products offered by various leading companies. Although the market share of this segment will decrease, it will continue to dominate the market throughout the forecast years. The market is in the growth phase, as well as the competition is expected to become less intense by the end of the forecast period. It also covers accurate predictions on upcoming trends and changes in consumer behavior and the growth of the industry across the key regions.

TheGene Therapymarket segmentation is based on the regions:North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, South America, and the Middle East and Africa. These regions will witness an increase in their market share and remain the market leader for the forecast period.

It has a detailed analysis of the major industry players to provide insights into their services, business overviews, agreements, key strategies, partnerships, new service launches, and expansions, collaborations and the competitive landscape associated with theGene Therapymarket. The analysis contains the key industry players:Spark Therapeutics LLC, Bluebird Bio, UniQure N.V., Juno Therapeutics, GlaxoSmithKline, Chiesi Farmaceutici S.p.A., Bristol Myers Squibb, Celgene Corporation, Human Stem Cell Institute, Voyager Therapeutics, Shire Plc, Sangamo Biosciences, Dimension Therapeutics and others.

BROWSE COMPLETE REPORT AND TABLE OF CONTENTS :https://www.fiormarkets.com/report/global-gene-therapy-market-by-type-germline-gene-376052.html

Exploring the Growth Structure of The Market:

The report contains detailed information on factors that will accelerate the growth of the market during the forecast period from 2020-2025 along with the CAGR of the market during the forecast period. However, comprehensive details on factors will challenge the growth of companies rivaling in the market. It consists of a precise estimation of the globalGene Therapymarket size and its contribution to the parent market as well as a thorough analysis of the markets competitive landscape and detailed information on several vendors.

It comprehensively segments theGene Therapymarket and provides the closest approximations of the revenue numbers for the overall market and its sub segments across major regions. It would help stakeholders understand their competitors better and gain more insights to enhance their positions in theGene Therapymarket. The competitive landscape section includes a competitor ecosystem, new service developments, partnerships, and acquisitions. It would help stakeholders understand the pulse of the market and provide information on the key market drivers, restraints, challenges, and opportunities.

Contact Us:Mark StoneSales ManagerPhone: (201) 465-4211Email:sales@fiormarkets.comWeb:www.fiormarkets.com

View More Information onGene TherapyMarket :https://www.marketwatch.com/press-release/global-gene-therapy-market-2020-overview-manufacturing-analysis-development-status-competitive-analysis-to-2025-2020-04-21

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Gene Therapy Market : Global Outlook and Forecast 2020-2025 - Surfacing Magazine

Charlotte de Witte bridges the gap between Techno and Trance with two-part remix treatment of Jerome Isma-Ae’s ‘Hold That Sucker Down’ -…

MUMBAI: There arent a lot of artists out there who can turn one of dance musics greatest classics into a genre-crossing masterpiece, but Charlotte de Witte is clearly one of them and has outdone herself once more. Today, the widely acclaimed Techno starlet presented not one but two brand-new renditions of Jerome Isma-Aes Hold That Sucker Down, with both the Rave Remix and Trance Remix set to appease Techno lovers and Trance enthusiasts alike.

Already played by Armin van Buuren during his A State Of Trance 950 warm-up set, Charlotte de Wittes remix of Hold That Sucker Down is a timeless classic turned contemporary crowd favorite. Turning Jerome Isma-Aes spin on The O.T. Quartets 1994 original into a nostalgia-infused floor-thriller, the Belgian tastemaker does what she does best: crafting up records for the sole purpose of dance floor domination.

Charlotte de Witte: Remixing a classic is something that always feels extremely honorable and rewarding to me. While remixing Jerome Isma-Ae, I decided to aim for two different remixes. One would respect the massive trance lead and vibe of the original, while the other would be faster and more stripped down, bringing forward the techno that I love so much.

Charlotte de Witte is a DJ and producer whose surge on the scene has resulted in her being one of the most sought-after names in electronic music today. With highlight performances across the globe, Mixmag and DJ Mag covers, high-ranking positions in a multitude of charts and lists, and her ownership of one of the strongest social media profiles in music today, she confirms her status as a nouveaux techno royalty on a day-to-day basis. Through her boutique label KNTXT, label head Charlotte de Witte organizes events, releases music and curates radio shows with no intention of slowing down, showing to all that she is quite the force to be reckoned with.

The Rave and Trance Remix of Jerome Isma-Ae Hold That Sucker Down (Charlotte de Witte Remix) are out now on Armada Music.

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Charlotte de Witte bridges the gap between Techno and Trance with two-part remix treatment of Jerome Isma-Ae's 'Hold That Sucker Down' -...

20 Questions With Paul van Dyk: The Trance Icon on Growing Up in East Berlin & Why Social Distancing ‘Is Incor – Billboard

Paul van Dyks name is synonymous with trance. A pioneer of the genre before it even had a name, the German producer and DJ established its characteristics with his early productions and remixes. Most notable of these is his track, For An Angel, and his remix of Humates Love Simulation at the start of the 90s.

With these productions and the rise of Stateside DJ culture, van Dyk shifted into international superstardom. Forbes named him one of the worlds greatest DJs in 2012. He occupied a top 20 spot in DJ Mags Top 100 DJs for 15 years, hitting No. 1 twice, in 2005 and 2006. When the Grammys introduced the best electronic/dance album category in 2005, van Dyks Reflections was nominated. (He won a Grammy in 2008, for his remix contribution to The Dark Knight soundtrack, which won best score soundtrack album for motion picture, television or other visual media.)

In the past 16 years, van Dyk has released nine artist albums and sold millions of records. His 10th LP, Guiding Light was set for release this spring, but due to the pandemic, van Dyk is instead releasing his fifth remix album, Escape Reality.Many years in the making and out on his own longstanding VANDIT Records,Escape Reality reimagines some of van Dyks most memorable songs into non-dancefloor versions better suited to the at-home listening audiences are presently confined to.

During quarantine, Van Dyk has also been giving fans a weekly livestream -- Sunday Sessions, at 7 p.m. CET, from his home in Berlin. This program is in addition to van Dyks VONYC weekly show on Dash Radio, which recently passed its 700th episode.Upon the release of Escape Reality, van Dyk discusses growing up in East Berlin, the resurgence of trance and shifting gears in these unprecedented times.

1. Where are you right now and what is the setting like?

In Berlin, at home, in my home office/studio, cant go anywhere. Im in a different room than where I do the livestreams -- but its in the same, lets say, facility.

2. What was the first album or piece of music you bought for yourself and what was the medium?

I grew up in East Germany, but my grandma was allowed to travel to the West. She smuggled a record back for me. It was the vinyl album of Orchestra Manoeuvres in the Darks [1980 synth-pop album]Organisation. It was extremely influential. Early electronic, but also melodies and poppy elements, the general imprint of what later came for me in music.

3. What was distinctive about where you grew up and/or where you spent the specific years that shaped you as a musician?

Where I lived in East Berlin was 600 meters away from the Berlin club, UFO. The Berlin Wall was between me and the club, which created a certain hunger to experience this music live. I was listening to the radio all the time and hearing about whats going on in the clubs in West Berlin, and I could never go. That energy and that vibe definitely had an impact on me. Music wasnt just a sound I was excited about. It was also the gateway to a free society for me. Listening to this music behind the Iron Curtain connected me to the world.

4. What did you parents do for a living when you were a kid and what do they think of what you do for a living now?

My mom was an interior designer. I had an apprenticeship in East Germany as a broadcast technician, which stopped when we moved to Hamburg when I was 17 and I started an apprenticeship as a carpenter. My mom raised me very grounded, to have a proper profession, to have a job. When I told her Im not going to do this carpenter thing anymore, Im going to do this music thing, she said she trusted me. The way she raised me, she was sure I wouldnt do this lighthearted.

5. What was the first track you made?

It was a remix for a project called Effective Force called Illuminate the Planet in 1993. The remix was called New World Order Mix, because I was a fan of New Order and because it was two years after The Wall went down and everything was different. My first own track is called My World in 1994. To me, all music fills the room. Trance music goes through the world, all the way to the horizon. Maybe that has to do with where I grew up and how I grew up. When you grow up in a confined space, the world and the universe is what you dream of.

6. What was the first thing you bought for yourself when you started making money from music?

I didnt have any money at all, so when I was booked to play my first paying show, I went to the promoter and asked him if he could pay me some of my fee upfront so I could buy some more records to play a better set.

7. What was your first ever gig?

At Tresor in Berlin. I wasnt paid for that. I was just invited to play in the beginning when nobody was there. That was my first gig in front of a few people. But my first real booking was at a club called Turbine in Berlin.

8. What moved you toward dance music as far as a particular club, party or raving experience?

When I was a kid, I used to listen to the West Berlin radio stations when I did my homework. When I heard The Smiths for the very first time, I thought, Wow, this is awesome, its so different. At the same time, I had this taste for electronic-sounding stuff like OMD and Depeche Mode and Yazoo. I started to listen to specialized radio shows and heard stuff we would call early house music. It was interesting, because there wasnt actually anyone singing and telling you to be sad or to be happy or whatever the lyrics might say. It was the instrumentation and the energy that moved me. That was so exciting to me, especially since I didnt speak any English anyway -- we learned Russian in school in East Berlin -- so I didnt understand what they were saying.

9. Do you remember how it felt when you got a reaction in terms of people actually dancing?

My first emotional memory is fear. I was a typical bedroom DJ. I was at home, never turning the music up really loud, turning the bass down. Then suddenly I was in the club, where I heard the same records very, very differently. I heard all these things that I was never able to hear before at home. It was frightening. The thing was, I believed so much in the music that I was playing that I didnt doubt that people would like it. At that age, when youre just beginning, youre so nave, you think this is the best music ever, everybody must love it. Until you realize a lot of people have different tastes and different approaches to things. No one left the club when I was playing. That made me happy and gave me hope.

10. If you had to recommend one album for someone to get introduced to dance music, what would you give them?

Gargantuan by ['90s progressive house duo] Spooky. They laid a phenomenal groundwork with this album in regards to sound and a different approach to music. Its a very inspirational record. In regards to production, BT Ima is phenomenal. It was because of that album that we got introduced and made music together.

11. What was the last text message you sent and to whom?

The last text message I sent was to my IT guy because one of my software plugins wouldnt work. There are these programs where you can remotely log into the studio system and go on to the computer and see the problem. I wanted to see if he could do that.

12. You were originally scheduled to release a different album, Guiding Light, this spring. What was the idea behind releasing the ambient remix album, Escape Reality, instead?

I was finalizing everything for Guiding Light, and at the same time, the lockdown became more and more intense. Im banging 138 BPM. Im really excited. I would love to go out on the weekend and play in front of people, see their reaction, but its not possible when everyone has to stay home.

Im a huge fan of straightforward club music, but thats not necessarily what Im listening to right now. I thought it would be a good moment in time to finish the Escape Reality project and release it now when people are posted at home and actually listening to and enjoying music. Releasing club music right now is like going fishing in a pond where there are no fish. You throw the bait in, but it cant be consumed when there is nothing there to consume it.

13. What was your intention with the creation of Escape Reality?

I compose a lot of music on keyboard or guitar with proper songwriting. In the clubbing context, sometimes the actual song is undermined by the electronics of the music. I wanted those tracks to feel like individual parts of the composition rather than the energetic vibe. Someone like Luke Howard or Niklas Paschburg, who make very reduced piano-based, electronic-influenced music that is meant to be sat down and listened to -- I find really inspiring, and thats what I tried to achieve.

14. What effect do you hope the album has on people during this specific point in time?

As the title says, maybe a little escape. Maybe sit and look out of the window and listen to the music and get some hope. It will be better. We just have to be patient. We have to get through this together. Maybe the whole album, or just one or two tracks will become something that give that little glimpse of hope in rather miserable times.

15. The general opinion is that this is a productive time for making music, without knowing when, or if, your music will ever be released. Does that feel true for you?

I would make music without it ever coming out. Thats one of the reasons why Escape Reality took so long. I was working on it whenever I felt like it. I finished each individual track without ever having a plan about if its going to be released or when it will be released. Every artist is different, so every approach to art is different.

16. Youve had your tour dates postponed indefinitely. What are some impacts of these changes?

The uncertainty, not just for me, but for everyone, is whats nerve-racking. For example, in Germany yesterday they said there are no big events allowed until the 31st of August. The next sentence was: "then we will see." It doesnt give you anything. The only way to stay sane is to be active and communicative. The term social distancing is incorrect. We have to distance ourselves physically, but, if anything, we should socially stay far closer together these days. We should be there for each other and communicate with each other.

17. You do a weekly livestream, Sunday Sessions. What do you hope your fans will get out of these?

My main aim for the people on there is that they all communicate with each other. They all logged on together, at the same time, a big community that is together, connected through the music. Im just the vehicle they use to communicate through and be together. Playing music is the only thing I can do right now and through that create a communication platform. It feels good to see people from all over the world talking to each other.

18. Youve always been active and articulate about politics. How do you feel you can use your position to create awareness and have influence?

The complexity of the world and especially the political decision-making process needs much more than [the number of characters you're allowed] on Twitter. It doesnt make much sense these days to use social media to make a statement. First, you will be ripped apart. No one takes the time anymore to really think twice about why I may have made a statement and what led me to think in a certain way. It seems that the world is conditioned to no longer read. I learned that it makes more sense to connect behind the scenes with politicians and decision makers to work on changing things and initiate a positive thinking process.

19. As a trance pioneer, what are your thoughts on its recent resurgence?

Trance was never gone. I love this music, and I listen to it every day. I hear all the amazing up-and-coming talent. To me, its still the most creative electronic music form -- because artisticallyyou have to be able to bring an idea across through a composition, not just a soundscape that is created by plucking on a filter. You have to be able to play a melody, to play chords and also to produce. It takes much more from someone to make this kind of music.

It goes back to my nave way of thinking when I started: "I love this music so much, everybody must love it." Its good for the musical genre as a whole that its coming back and gaining more popularity again. A young kid who starts making trance music, its not the latest, super-duper-popular stuff. They know theyre in a niche, and you know theyre in it for the music.

20. What piece of advice would you give to yourself at the beginning of your music career?

Dont take disappointment too close to heart. If youre a passionate musician, if youre a passionate DJ, one way or another, you will run into a situation where somebody rips you off or sidelines you or does other things to you. Dont take it to heart, and believe in your music.

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20 Questions With Paul van Dyk: The Trance Icon on Growing Up in East Berlin & Why Social Distancing 'Is Incor - Billboard

Above & Beyond’s Tony McGuiness re-creates the first episode of ‘Trance Around The World’ – We Rave You

Tony McGuiness, British DJ and producer, one third of Above & Beyond, has shaken up the trance community with some amazing news last week. He announced that he will be recreating the very first episode of the signature Trance Around The World radio show, that aired for the first time in 2004. Livestreams have recently replaced parties and festivals due to the Coronavirus pandemic. Artists from all around the world are currently transforming their bedrooms and living rooms into trendy club settings and entertaining fans with their amazing performances.

Tony McGuiness took his time and prepared a special two hour set, mixing the original tracklist of the first Trance Around The World radio show on his Twitch account. Apparently the original episode was just a test broadcast and the tracks were unmixed and separately trimmed out in a playable list. Somehow Tony managed to save it on his card, just in case they might do something with it. It was streamed back in January 13th, 2004 onMinistry of Sound Radioand was never recorded or archived, so the re-do that McGuiness did was highly appreciated.The weekly Trance Around The World show aired between 2004 and 2012, attracting approximately 35 million listeners from more than 35 countries.

He started out this memorable set with a nostalgic remake of OceanLabs track Satellite, nicely mixing it into Filo & Peri Bangin Mix of Whirpools Under The Sun. Some other highlights of the set were definitelly Above & Beyond remix of Chakras I Am, Robert Nicksons remix ofEndresKallocain, Super8s Alba, Gabriel & Dresdens mix of Sarah McLahlans Fallen, Envios Touched By The Sun and much more. The full tracklist of the set can be found here.

TATW 001 was definitely a very important milestone for Above & Beyond, now the re-creation set is finally here and people can enjoy this masterpiece anywhere and anytime. Tony also hinted that he might be bringing back theTrance Around The World 002 next week, but for now we will just have to wait and see what happens.

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Above & Beyond's Tony McGuiness re-creates the first episode of 'Trance Around The World' - We Rave You

Charlotte de Witte Showcases Two Sides of Her Production Abilities With ‘Hold That Sucker Down’ Remixes – CULTR

Widely acclaimed Techno starlet Charlotte de Witte presents not one but two brand-new renditions of Jerome Isma-Aes Hold That Sucker Down. The two versions come in the forms of a Rave Remix and Trance Remix set to appease Techno lovers and Trance enthusiasts alike.

Charlotte de Witte: Remixing a classic is something that always feels extremely honorable and rewarding to me. While remixing Jerome Isma-Ae, I decided to aim for two different remixes. One would respect the massive trance lead and vibe of the original, while the other would be faster and more stripped down, bringing forward the techno that I love so much.

Turning Jerome Isma-Aes spin on The O.T. Quartets 1994 original into a nostalgia-infused floor-thriller, the Belgian tastemaker does what she does best; crafting up records for the sole purpose of dance floor domination. Charlotte de Witte has further solidified herself as one of the most exciting techno projects right now and with these remixes, she has expanded her artistry to Armada and their fans, especially with her trance mix.

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Charlotte de Witte Showcases Two Sides of Her Production Abilities With 'Hold That Sucker Down' Remixes - CULTR

Trivecta Discusses the ‘Everyday’ EP and Connecting with Fans – EDM Identity

It is hard to ignore the sheer talent that is Trivecta. This Florida-based producer has an incredible work ethic that shines bright with the number of genres that he is able to produce. Incorporating influences from melodic dubstep, trance, and drumstep theres no limit to the creativity he expresses in his music. Now, on the Everyday EP, Trivecta takes listeners on a journey and lets them in on his new genre he has coined called folk bass.

While he had blown away his fans with tracks like Island and Oxygen as of late, its clear that Trivecta saved his best production for his debut EP.Through the four tracks that make up this project he takes listeners on a journey filled with indie-folk chords and melodic bass-infusions, its something fresh, to say the least.

The intro track and Leave It All Behind is the perfect example of this new genre Trivecta has coined for himself. While Wasteland and Everyday fuse emotional vocals with thumping dance basslines. This EP is something that will instantly connect with old fans and new ones alike!

Ahead of the EP, Trivecta chatted with us about his process making the EP, his take on approaching collaborations, and his take on the Marvel Comic Universe films. So listen to Trivectas Everyday EP on Spotify below, download or stream the EP on your favorite platform, and read on for an interview with Trivecta himself!

Yeah! It actually differed a lot, thats a great question. For a long time, I have been in the melodic bass sphere. I felt that it was really fresh when it came out melodic bass music. But I feel like even in the past couple years, it could use a little burst, a little fresh injection of influence. Personally, I had been listening to a lot of indie-folk music like Of Monsters and Men and Mumford & Sons. I thought to myself, dude! This music is very immersive, this music takes me somewhere. Just like trance and melodic bass take me somewhere. There has to be a middle ground here!

That was the starting point of how I could figure out how to start to mold something that folks felt uniquely powerful. That laid the blueprint for this EP to be made.

It differs from track to track on the EP, but to answer your specific question about Leave It All Behind. I had been touring a lot (RIP touring for now) and started to get this feeling it was the first concentrated batch of touring that I had done on my own. You would be sort of nostalgic when youre out on the road, really far from home.

Sometimes those songs in the airport that they play over the speaker can be a little bit more effective when you havent seen your friends in a while. And I would hear some of this folk music on the radio in the airports actually, and there was actually one song I kept hearing at Tampa International Airport. I think it was by Manchester Orchestra. It just had this big acapella vocal hook, this big stack of vocals super nostalgic and super powerful and I was like man I want to do something like that! That sort of informed how I incorporated those influences in Leave It All Behind.

As far as collaborations for example, Wooli came at me and he was so pushy. He was like lets make something, lets make something. Finally, we got something together and that was one of my first real collabs I had done. Hes a really easy guy to collab with. Ever since then it has been easier. Its fun, man!

Seven Lions has been great to work with, we have a couple of other ones we are working on. A lot of the Ophelia artists are sort of cross-pollinating during this quarantine, so there will be a lot more collabs for sure.

I would love to work with Of Monsters and Men and Mumford & Sons in the future!

So Wooli had been working with a lot of stuff with Excision at the time, who I did not know personally yet. And Wooli and I started working on the tune Oxygen since he found the vocal for the tune, which was really nice. He was working on a bunch of stuff with Excision and he had a bunch of ideas for the tune too and we decided to work on the whole thing together. That was a pretty easy one to get done, that was one of the easier wrap-ups I have had for a tune. Everybody was on the same page. We all contributed and made it work!

Yeah, I do! There are a few things. One is whenever I start feeling inspired, I try to jot down a lot of sketches, rather than okay Im inspired, Im going to start one song and only work on one song. At any given time, I have at least a good ten tracks that I am actively thinking about or trying to get done. So if I have writers block, its like I am not coming up with anything creative, but I have songs that need tending to. I have songs that need to be tightened better, I have songs that need to sit better sonically, I have songs that need sound replacement. Things like that.

Another thing if I have writers block I will find music that really just inspires me. Especially if it is not EDM and just listen to it and find inspiration. Usually, something will come from that eventually.

There have been a few. Honestly, there are some that are more concrete. Like one was getting the hang of playing live shows. I went from a place where I thought I had all this cred, I had half a million listeners at the time online, but I would go play shows and no one knew who the hell I was. Thats when I realized its totally different spheres. That was definitely a big challenge to overcome that.

Lately, a struggle I have been having is the quarantine and finding creative ways for this EP to have its time of day and get its legs and is able to create experiences with the fans. Another one that feels overarching is the struggle of when you start off making live music online and you do not actually see these people. It can start to feel disconnected, for a while Trivecta and me, Sam, were such wildly different things. I was portraying a different person online and I didnt know any of my fans personally and it was all very disconnected. Im a goofy dude and the music was very serious, I didnt know how to connect the two, but lately more so things have been a lot more connected where it all feels like the same thing. Where people can go yeah hes a goofy dude, but the music is serious and thats okay. Through communicating with the fans at shows and online everything feels a lot more connected than ever. Thats been a struggle thats lately been a lot more together.

It feels like as soon as this all happened, I figured I was going to start streaming. Im a guitar teacher by day so Im used to communicating about music with people. So I figured I was going to set up everything Twitch, Discord, OBS.

Through doing that and going through unreleased tunes that I dont want to put out because they are so wildly different from what I do and showing my fans them on stream and they are like yo, we love this! My fans are already seeing that side, so I feel a lot more connected with them just about the material itself. Even through Discord and talking with them all the time and through streaming and talking with them all the time. Especially even with the Ophelia label group all of us have this WhatsApp and we chat all the time. So I feel closer to all of my close artist friends as well.

Its completely changed a lot of things, but some things are still the same. For example, we are still moving forward with the EP and we are still putting all of that out. It feels weird to feel like I just have arrived at this unique folk bass and Im putting it out there in the middle of a pandemic. Im not able to tour around it, unfortunately.

So everything has been clearly disrupted, but I think an interesting caveat to all of this, is that the board is shifting and the playing field is changing. I think that we may find that artists who have something to offer, whether its their personality or artists who are more focused on creative music versus artists who maybe arent making their own music and are just out there throwing parties every night and are now like oh no, what do I do now.

I feel like a lot of us are more engaged in the music and more engaged in the content. As long as they are down to communicate to the fans, I feel like guys like us are in a position to come out of this whole thing in better relative standing than where we started. Rather than trying to compete with all of these guys who are throwing parties every night, we may be able to leverage our creativity, music, and content during this time and give people things that they can connect with. Turn this into a net positive.

Oh, man! My secret okay, there are a couple of things. I like to get thick steaks because then I can really focus on how I want the middle to be cooked, compared to the outside. I need to get my middle to a nice medium rare and a hard sear on the outside and not compromise either of them.

Honestly, another secret is. and people sleep on this a damn good meat thermometer! People talk down on meat thermometers and youll find purists that dont like them and to me, its like producing music without using visual guides like spectrum analyzers. Every producer uses that stuff because it gives you another way of understanding what it is that you are doing. Meat thermometers are so cool because it allows me to know what temperature different parts of the steak are at. Thats great because I can really sear hard and not have to worry about all of that.

It also starts with the cut too! You have to select a nice cut. My favorite cuts to cook are typically a rib-eye or a filet or a strip. I love the fat content of the rib-eye. I love strips for sharing with people. I love a good filet because they are just so tender. It depends on the context!

I wasnt actually. I had no interest until I sprained my ankle and was in bed for a while. Then I figured I was just going to watch all the MCU (Marvel Comic Universe) movies and just see what this is about. As I was watching though I was like okay this good.okay this is pretty good.okay this is good! I was really buying in, but let me tell you, by the end, by the Infinity War and Endgame I was like dude! This is the craziest thing I have seen in my entire life. When I saw Infinity War and Endgame, it had completely validated everything I had seen.

To me it was the anti-Game of Thrones, I was so obsessed with GoT, but it was so clear they were trying to figure out what they were trying to do at the end. Whereas MCU, you really got this sense they knew where they were going. Everything led to that ending. I have never felt more engaged by any sort of media content as I felt watching Infinity War and Endgame.

After watching all of that, I would say its tough, I would say out of all of them I like a few of them for different reasons, but I would say the character whos lore and the world they live in I like the most would be Thor. I love Norse folk mythology and sort of having that aspect intertwined in the Thor universe I felt was really cool. Im a big Scarlet Witch guy too!

Oh, thats a good question. Let me think..dont leave it all behind! [Laughs]

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Trivecta Discusses the 'Everyday' EP and Connecting with Fans - EDM Identity

Glide Into the Weekend With Steny and Replay M’s Pulsating Deep House Single "Nightshift" – EDM.com

Rising comboStenyand Swiss producerReplay Mhave joined forces for "Nightshift," an anthemic deep house tune out via Karonga Records.

With its pulsating bass lines and spacey pads, "Nightlife" is a hypnotic house number that harkens to the dark bliss of late-night Ibiza club revelry. Steny and Replay M did a fantastic job of maintaining the energy throughout, introducing subtle production techniques as the arrangement progresses. Crisp leads and driving, trance-inspired plucks take over after the break, building tension before eventually culminating in a synth-laden second drop, which is a refreshing change of pace on the one that precede it.

The two members of the Steny tandem are based in Switzerland and South Africa, respectively, but the artists collaborate frequently, building a unique chemistry over the years. This eventually led to a landmark signing with progressive house and trance heavyweightArmada.Their music has been supported by a slew of the industry's biggest players, includingLost Frequencies, Morgan Page, Lucas & Steve, and EDX, among many others.

International DJ Replay M has made a splash on the scene as well, making performances at The Street Parade, Openair Gampel, Oceanbeat Boat Ibiza, and Braslav Festival, among other notable shows. He has also received support from a number of electronic bigwigs, like Kris Kross Amsterdam, DJ Scene and Jan-Christian Zeller.

Facebook: facebook.com/stenymusicInstagram: instagram.com/stenymusicSoundCloud: soundcloud.com/steny-music

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Glide Into the Weekend With Steny and Replay M's Pulsating Deep House Single "Nightshift" - EDM.com

Quarantine curation: 12 new regional films that made it to streaming platforms – India Today

The pandemic has brought our lives to a standstill and it might be a while before we could freely step out of our homes. The probability of spending our next few weeks indoors is high and, by now, many of us have lost our cool.

Thankfully, the online streaming platforms are dropping new releases every week, which you would have missed catching up in theatres this year. Some films, despite having good content, were not fortunate enough to have a long theatrical run. However, they are now available on OTT platforms, reaching a wider section of the audience.

We have compiled you a list of 12 new South Indian films, available on various streaming platforms, that might help you cheer up in quarantine. All these films made it to the big screen in 2020 - a few days before the shutdown.

Tamil

Film: Kannum Kannum KollaiyadithaalWhere to watch: Netflix

Two con artists fall in love with orphan girls and decide to settle down with them after performing one last heist. Trouble begins when they discover the identity of the women in their lives. Directed by Desingh Periyasamy, the film is a promising entertainer with some clever writing.

Here's the trailer:

Film: Dharala PrabhuWhere to watch: Amazon Prime

A fertility clinic doctor forces a young happy-go-lucky guy to take up the job of a sperm donor. Things fall apart when his life partner learns about his profession. Dharala Prabhu is the faithful Tamil remake of hit Hindi film, Vicky Donor. The film features Harish Kalyan and Tanya Hope in the lead roles.

Here's the trailer:

Film: DarbarWhere to watch: Amazon Prime

Adhithya Arunachalam, a ruthless cop, goes on a mission to clean up the drug mafia in Mumbai city. The process leads him to an unsolved case that shook the police department in the 90s. Starring Rajinikanth and Nayanthara in the lead, the film is a commercial cocktail of action and drama.

Here's the trailer:

Film: Oh My KadavulaeWhere to watch: Zee 5

A young man, who marries his childhood friend, lands in a family court asking for a divorce. What happens if he gets a golden ticket that helps him to rewrite his fate? Directed by debutant Ashwath Marimuthu, the film is a heartwarming love story with enjoyable moments.

Here's the trailer:

Telugu

Film: World Famous LoverWhere to watch: Netflix

A struggling writer, who gets dumped by his girlfriend, creates a world of his own and pens down some emotional love stories. His thoughts make him realise the mistakes he had made and repent for it. Directed by Kranthi Madhav, the film has Vijay Deverakonda in the lead.

Here's the trailer:

Film: MadhaWhere to watch: Amazon Prime

A proof-reader falls in love with a cinematographer unknowing of his devious plans. Can she escape the trap laid by him? Madha is a gripping thriller directed by Srividya Basawa. The film has won appreciations among the audience.

Here's the trailer:

Film: Ala VaikunthapurramulooWhere to watch: Netflix

Valmiki swaps his newborn baby with his boss Ramachandran's baby in a hospital. However, after 20 years, Bantu, who grows up in a middle-class family, realises that his real father is a multi-millionaire. What happens next form the crux of the story. The film has a little bit of everything - romance, action, comedy and emotions. Directed by Trivikram Srinivas, Allu Arjun plays the lead in the film.

Here's the trailer:

Film: Sarileru NeekevvaruWhere to watch: Amazon Prime

An army officer decides to confront a corrupt ruthless politician after realising that his colleague's family is in trouble. This Mahesh Babu's film is a commercial potboiler that often ladles out doses of patriotism. Directed by Anil Ravipudi, the film features Rashmika Mandanna as the female lead.

Here's the trailer:

Malayalam

Film: TranceWhere to watch: Amazon Prime

A motivational speaker, who loses his younger brother due to mental illness, takes up the job of a pastor to mint money. However, one of his live interviews on television puts him under trouble. Trance, is a psychological thriller, with some brilliant performances. Fahadh Fasil, Nazriya Nazim and Gautham Menon play the lead roles.

Here's the trailer:

Film: Varane AvashyamundWhere to watch: Netflix

Varane Avashymund is a feel-good film that revolves around the story of a single mother and her daughter. It's about how their lives take a turn after meeting a youngster and a middle-aged man who resides in their apartment. Directed by Anoop Sathyan, the film is Dulquer Salmaan's first production venture.

Here's the trailer:

Kannada

Film: DiaWhere to watch: Amazon Prime

Dia, a pretty young girl, falls head-over-heels in love with her college senior. However, her introverted nature puts her relationship in trouble. Would it be possible for her to move on from her past? Dia is a well-crafted film, with a lot of surprises in store for you.

Here's the trailer:

Film: Love MocktailWhere to watch: Amazon Prime

After rescuing a woman, Adi reminisces about his love life and tells her about all the heartbreaks he has endured in his quest to find true love. This film is fun-ride and lets us forget our own problems in life.

Here's the trailer:

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Quarantine curation: 12 new regional films that made it to streaming platforms - India Today

Looking for options other than Holly, Bolly and Tolly to stream this lockdown? – Telegraph India

From class conflict and hierarchy inSaurabh Bhave's Bonus, to Dia, athe mind-bending psychedelic trip of Trance, here are our picks:

Language: Telugu

Streaming on: Amazon Prime Video

An edge-of-the-seat watch, this February 2020 release ticks all the thriller boxes murder, mystery and macabre. Directed by newcomer Sailesh Kolanu, Hit stars Vishwaksen Naidu as a dynamic cop called Vikram who is battling post-traumatic stress disorder after an incident in his past has left him permanently scarred. The 128-minute box-office winner an acronym for Homicide Intervention Team, which Vikram is a part of starts off with a girl going mysteriously missing and then spins off into a rollercoaster ride that forces Vikram to confront his own demons.

Hit works because it remains taut for the most part, oscillating between a Se7en-styled investigative thriller and a police procedural, and doesnt pull any punches when it comes to showing stomach-churning stuff. The end may or may not work for you but the money shot in the films final moments sets the tone for at least a sequel, if not more films in the Hit franchise.

Language: Tamil

Streaming on: Amazon Prime Video

Released in theatres on the second Friday of March this year, the Tamil remake of Shoojit Sircars Vicky Donor has Harish Kalyan stepping into Ayushmann Khurranas shoes to play a young man who teams up with an infertility expert to turn into a sperm donor. Largely operating on the same beats as the 2012 Bolly original, Dharala Prabhu introduces minor tweaks in its plot and players in accordance with its milieu, but retains the froth and freshness that marked Vicky Donor. The film benefits from the comedic chemistry between Harishs Prabhu and Vivek (who plays Dr Kannadasan) and works, despite a meandering second half, on the strength of its light-hearted and optimistic look at taboo topics like infertility and sperm donation.

Language: Telugu

Streaming on: Netflix

Hitting theatres on Valentines Day this year, World Famous Lover as is evident from the title has heartthrob Vijay Deverakonda playing an intense lover, similar to the retrograde rebel he essayed in his breakout film Arjun Reddy. World Famous Lover that also stars Raashi Khanna and Aishwarya Rajesh, encapsulates many love stories in one and transitions between fantasy and reality, albeit with inconsistent results. Though the intention is clear the film strives to focus on the selflessness of love as seen through different characters in different circumstances the execution of what must have been a great idea on paper isnt as seamless. But whats not to love about a love story, especially in these times, and one which showcases the ever popular Deverakonda in a role he can now possibly play with his eyes closed.

Language: Marathi

Streaming on: Amazon Prime Video

Class conflict and social hierarchy explored winningly in the multiple Oscar-winning film Parasite is also the driving force behind Bonus, that hit theatres in end February. Saurabh Bhave directs this big story of small moments that tells the story of young Aditya (Gashmeer Mahajani) who accepts his grandfathers challenge of giving up his lavish life and living on meagre means after he refuses to pay bonus to his employees. A critique on class divide, Bonus works largely within the format of a fun watch, combining humour and romance. Though formulaic in parts, the film scores big on relatability.

Language: Malayalam

Streaming on: Amazon Prime Video

One of the most talked about films in recent times, Trance should make it to your watchlist simply for the fact that its frontlined by Fahadh Faasil. The actor whose given us films like Super Deluxe and Kumbalangi Nights is sensational in Trance. The February film a mind-bending, psychedelic trip that traces the transition of a small-time motivational speaker (Viju, played by Fahadh) into a televangelist who performs hoax miracles and helps his business grow into a global phenomenon Trance starts off strong and becomes increasingly shaky, but we recommend you catch it for Fahadhs uninhibited central act. Directed by Anwar Rasheed, Trance falters in parts the ending lacks a satisfactory payoff, especially given the film runs at a butt-numbing 170 minutes but is an avant-garde piece of filmmaking that deserves at least a one-time watch.

Language: Gujarati

Streaming on: Amazon Prime Video

If an easy-breezy watch is what you have your eye on, then look no further than this feel-good Gujarati film that traces its young protagonists rollercoaster ride through multiple relationships before he discovers the true meaning of love. Scoring big in the departments of music and cinematography, Luv Ni Love Storys is powered by Pratik Gandhis (who plays Luv) natural charm and a strong supporting cast that bring on the laughs as easily as tease a tear out of the viewer.

Language: Malayalam

Streaming on: Amazon Prime Video

Resting on a dialogue-driven narrative where the verbal is as impactful as the visual, this Malayalam film has Prithviraj and Biju Menon scorching the screen as sparring partners in this duel of ego and one-upmanship. A compelling look at misplaced machismo and toxic male entitlement, Ayyappanum Koshiyum the title is drawn from the names of the characters played by the two men in the middle released in February and received unanimously positive reviews, with critics praising it for its sharp story and its ability to engage the viewer consistently without resorting to gimmicks. Give the film a watch if you are a Prithviraj fan. And even if you arent.

Language: Tamil

Streaming on: Amazon Prime Video

Translating to burden in English, Baaram has received widespread critical acclaim, including a National Award. The mysterious death of a night watchman forms the bedrock of the February film both real and relevant directed by Priya Krishnaswamy, who also does the writing and editing duties here. Baaram doesnt lose sight of its strong emotional core despite its documentary-style look and feel. The film lays bare the practice of Thalaikoothal, a type of euthanasia that still has social sanction in some parts of Tamil Nadu. Fashioned as a thriller in parts, Baaram runs at a pacy 90 minutes and should make it to your watchlist if you are looking for something more than the usual light-hearted fare.

Language: Malayalam

Streaming on: Netflix

Honest and relevant, Vikruthi is a mirror of the times we live in, chronicling the downside of the obsession with social media. Translating to mischief, the film is sourced from a real incident and tells the story of a man who becomes the victim of a viral social media forward. What works for Vikruthi is the relatable way in which it tells its story and the non-judgmental stance it takes on to view its characters. Suraj Venjarammoodu and Soubin Shahir carry the film that released in October last year, winning us over with a mix of humour and heart.

Language: Kannada

Streaming on: Amazon Prime Video

A simple love story simply told is what makes Dia stand out at a time when audiences are being fed convoluted storylines in seemingly woke films which are anything but. This February film focuses on a love triangle and is a refreshing romance told from the point of view of the woman. An engaging blend of feel-good romance and the hopelessness that love sometimes brings in its wake, Dia powered by its emotional core and strong performances is worth a watch.

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Looking for options other than Holly, Bolly and Tolly to stream this lockdown? - Telegraph India

Novak Djokovic: ‘I think that the tennis industry needs to keep evolving’ – Tennis World USA

The intervention of the coach in an individual sport such as tennis appears as a sort of diminutio of the player himself. The competitive trance, the ability to bring home a match that goes wrong is all of the tennis player, and would be mortified by the active intervention of the coach during the competitive act, giving the coach an additional role during the game, making him become protagonist almost as much as the player himself, perhaps bringing tennis coaches to an even more evident role, as happens in the reviled world of football.

Talking with his close friend Fabio Fognini, Novak Djokovic believes tennis should start allowing on-court coaching, but with one major condition. Im always in favour of innovation, World number one said.

I think that the tennis industry needs to keep evolving. One thing Id like to work on is lowering the age of the fan-base, since Im told that in the US and in Europe its usually above 60 years old.

As for rules, I like the experimentation done during the NextGen Finals in Milan. I think that on-court coaching should be implemented, but without letting the crowd hear what is being said, because it would certainly reach the ears of the opponents team.

This past Sunday, the 17-time Grand Slam champion spoke openly about his concerns of potentially being mandated into taking a COVID-19 vaccination before returning to the ATP tour. "I have expressed my views because I have the right to and I also feel responsible to highlight certain essential topics that are concerning the tennis world," the 32-year-old explained to the Associated Press.

"I am no expert, but I do want to have an option to choose what's best for my body. I am keeping an open mind, and I'll continue to research this topic because it is important, and it will affect all of us."

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Novak Djokovic: 'I think that the tennis industry needs to keep evolving' - Tennis World USA

Smita Bellur: The bridge between Hindustani and Sufi singing – The Tribune India

Rana Siddiqui Zaman

Dont leave music, whatever may happen... Smita Bellur had been told by her mother just a few days before her death. She was still a teenager then, unable to take decisions for herself. Life moved on, but her mothers words remained. No wonder she was to leave her career as a software engineer and take to singing Hindustani classical vocals and Sufi renditions when the time came for it.

Despite almost no financial returns compared to what she was earning as a corporate honcho, Bellur is happy. Making no pretensions, this rising star on the firmament of classical vocals and Sufi rendition says, Music was always my calling. I have always seen myself performing on stage before a large audience. At the recent International Sufi Music Festival, Jahan-e-Khusrau, in New Delhi, one saw her singing a combination of classical and Sufi Amjad Hyderabdi and Warsi Brothers kalaam to immense applause.

But before she took up music full time, she was employed with the Bits-Pilani. On her way to and back from office, she would listen to her gurus and classical maestros. A time came in her life when she quit her high-paying career and engaged in music full time. The trigger was a Sufiyana kalaam by Hazrat Ameer Khurau playing in her car. I went into trance. That day, I quit my job and devoted myself to music, she recalls. That was almost two decades back.

Her passion bore fruit and she cut a few albums while doing shows across the globe. An association as senior faculty for Shankar Mahadevan Academy, a fellowship from Karnataka Sangeet Nritya Academy and the India Foundation for the Arts, etc. further honed her skills. She is now a regular on music festival circuits, television channels and radio stations.

However, for any woman, a journey into classical music and Sufiyana kalam isnt an easy task in India yet. That gaana-bajana sarcasm still doesnt spare them. Fortunately, Bellur has lived most of her life in Bengaluru where training in music and arts is considered equivalent to worship of vidya. My parents were keen on my learning music. But I knew it wont get me much financially. To survive, I trained in a technical field.

So, what does it mean to be a Sufi singer? I learnt Hindustani classical to be better at basics and Sufiyana to reach a wide range of audiences. Thumri and khayal have too limited an audience. Ghazals are about beloved, love lost and found and wine. But I find Sufiyana kalams uplifting. They talk about love for humanity, and in unique ways. Hence, it has local as well as international reach, says Bellur who followed up her training in Hindustani vocals with Sufiyana, which is both entertaining, meditative and spiritual and has a much wider reach than just classical and ghazal singing.

Bellur agrees it is also about how you package your music. She says Rekha Bhardwaj and Richa Sharma may not be trained in Sufi gayaki but have the skills and are among the most well-known women singers in India. In the recent past, Nooran Sisters and Roohani Sisters have brought some stir in the calm waters of Sufiyana kalam which remained largely unoccupied by women, but for Abida Parveen.

Aaj kal achchi gayaki ke alawa bhi bahut kuch chahiye hota hai stage presentation ke liye. Famous Sufi singers from Pakistan, like Sanam Marvi, are young, beautiful and presentable. People like listening to them. However, it is true that legends like Begum Akhtar, Shanti Hiranand and Abida Parveen never had to think about presentation, only gayaki. Times have changed. Mumbai, where I live, gives much attention to presentation, and even at all festivals, a singing artsite has to be a complete package.

Even if you fit the bill, Smita says, financial viability is a challenge. For an independent singer, survival is very difficult. Organisers dont want to pay well despite your skills. At times, it goes as low as Rs5,000-10,000 per concert, a fee that the artiste has to share with accompanists. The latter still get a lot of chances with various vocalists, but for the main artiste, payments have always been a challenge, she minces no words.

Lockdown blues

The shutting down of the country due to Covid-19 has led to cancelling of various concerts and it is the beginning of a tough time for artistes. Bellur is keeping herself busy by taking classes and still keeps releasing her ghazals, Sufi kalaams and classical (Hindustani and Carnatic) renditions on social media. God is razzak (the one who gives rizk, the food). He will take care of us, she smiles.

Originally posted here:

Smita Bellur: The bridge between Hindustani and Sufi singing - The Tribune India

FALLEN is Modern Mythology Unafraid to Delve Into the Deities Dirt – Monkeys Fighting Robots

If one were to combine the biopic Party Monster with Neil Gaimans American Gods, the result would look like Fallen, a Kickstarter-produced comic created and written by Matt Ringel and drawn by Henry Ponciano. Several gods from the pantheons of the Greek, Norse, Shinto, and Aztec mythologies are banished to Earth and cut off from their kin while retaining their power and immortality.

The first issue introduces us to some of the now-earthbound Olympians, including Zeus, Athena, and Apollo, and a contingent from Asgard, such as Loki, Thor, and Odin. For our divine friends, it is on Earth as it was in the heavens, i.e., spending much of their time drinking, womanizing, and collecting wealth. Here, though, its 1986 New York City, and theyre celestial mobsters running nightclubs and the like. So, same stuff, different century.

One way the gods keep power is imparting some of their might and immortality to a human ward. This is done as a condition of their exile is, they can no longer directly affect the world of people. The wards can step in and influence the rabble on the gods behalf, so the gods can still be, well, gods. This all changes when Zeus is murdered in his penthouse. His right-hand man, Casper Clay, is now on the hunt for the killer.

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(Bad news: Zeus is dead. Good news: Hercules isnt on the hook for a Fathers Day gift.)

As Ive said here before, I love indie comics, especially ones that have been crowd-funded. Even books not at the level of a Big 2 product are still pieces of art requiring a village to create. It also represents a level of courage, putting your vision out to the public and asking them to fund it. For many creators, its their first foray into publishing and placing work in front of an audience is daunting.

Fallen is well-done on several fronts. It looks and reads like a book published traditionally. The storyline of gods on Earth isnt new; very little under the sun is new. The key is adding enough variables to make it original, and Matt Ringel did that. Its not a stretch to imagine the gods as mafioso, but turning them into club kids and drug dealers and inserting them in NYC in the mid-80s is a unique premise.

Ringels dialogue is excellent. The gods talk like ordinary people. They have normal emotions. It feels like reading about regular folks because the script is well-written and doesnt go all-in on heavy descriptors and flowery prose. Its straight-forward. Its a gritty story with a gritty feel. These beings are doing shady things, and you feel that sensation of being on the outside of the law and the establishment.

The art is stellar. Henry Ponciano not only provides a well-drawn book, but the layout and framing are well done. Too many times in self-published books, creators try to reinvent the wheel and do crazy layouts with a tendency to be more distracting than creative. The pages of Fallen are laid out in a way that provides more detail, allowing the reader to better feel the environment while following most of the basic rules of comic book layout.

The story is dark, and the scenes and colors represent that. Fallen doesnt feel like a breezy Marvel production or one of DCs epics. This book has a back-alley feel dripping from every page. The immoral dealings of the gods are represented with noir-infused beauty.

(Tom Hiddleston & Chris Helmsworth they aint.)

Its a quick read because the story moves fast. The plot is lean with no extra fat. It gets where it needs to be with efficiency, but that doesnt mean it lacks detail or depth. You get a strong vibe from each character as to who they are, what theyre about, and the methods theyre willing to use to achieve their goals. Toben Racicots letters fit perfectly. While sticking to the basic all-caps tradition, Racicot adds just a touch of flair, allowing them to shine while not detracting from the art. For me, the best letterers are the ones following the rules while standing out amongst their peers. Racicots letters are recognizable the same way a Jim Lee- or Adam Kubert-drawn panel is.

Fallen provides a new spin on an old tale and does it by infusing the story with dirt, grime, and some godly magic. Fallen is a must-read for lovers of mythology, crime dramas, or well-constructed comics.

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FALLEN is Modern Mythology Unafraid to Delve Into the Deities Dirt - Monkeys Fighting Robots

Dairy drives help keep pride in the dairyland – WAOW

AUBURNDALE, Wis. (WAOW) -- In a time of struggle for dairy farmers, Auburndale High School and many others are doing what they can to show support.

The last month and a half has been a lot of trials and tribulations, said Kylie Brown. She's a teacher, mother, and she milks cows every week on her brother's dairy farm.

She knows in many ways, its just been a stressful time for everybody

Her brother, Adam has been selling his milk for ten dollars per hundredweight. In order to break even, he should be selling for at least sixteen dollars.

Mark Cournoyer, FFA Director at Auburndale High School said, Everybody got quarantined, restaurants closed, and the demand for cheese and other dairy products fell by the waist side.

In the Auburndale School District, families love their farms. When the yearly ride your tractor to school event was canceled this week, they all shared videos online.

There are 76 dairy farms in the school district. So, the FFA and student leadership team started a dairy drive.

The response has been unbelievable, said Cournoyer

They raised $550 dollars for each week of the drive. The school is adding locally-sourced dairy products to the student meals they send home.

Cournoyer said, This week, theyre going to be getting two blocks of cheese, a gallon of butter, and a gallon of milk.

They're focusing mainly on cheese because it cuts down the amount of milk on the market by ninety percent. In other words, ten pounds of milk equals one pound of cheese.

It also has a longer shelf life for families. Cheese is milks step into immortality, said Cournoyer

As the market fills and prices fall, community members in Auburndale and across Wisconsin are rising to the challenge.

Cournoyer said, Ive been here for almost twenty years and Ive never seen people step up in the way that they have for our dairy farmers here in central Wisconsin.

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Dairy drives help keep pride in the dairyland - WAOW

True History of the Kelly Gang is all style – FanSided

Justin Kurzels True History of the Kelly Gang has great performances and sleek style, but not much to say of substance about the Australian outlaw.

Ned Kelly, a figure of Jesse James like stature in Australia, is a mostly murky figure. He was a bushranger and an outlaw who became an icon in his home country as much for his helmet and bulletproof armor as his lawlessness. But despite various attempts to put his story to screen, its not particularly clear what his deal is.True History of the Kelly Gangisnt going to change that.

The True History of the Kelly Gang is director Justin Kurzels take on the narrative and hes done his damndest to hit the marks of successful modern sensibilities: Dark, sexy, queer. Nicholas Hoult even lounges menacingly in nothing but garters. But despite strong performances and moments of greatness,Kelly Gang never coalesces, and it never figures out quite what it has to say about its legendary protagonist.

The film is based on the 2000 novelThe True History of the Kelly Gang and thus takes its historical accuracy cues nothing you are about to see is true from there. The first 40 minutes follow a young Ned (Orlando Schwerdt) as he comes of age on his familys backcountry farm, his dad (Ben Corbett) a drunk, his mom (Essie Davis) forced into sex work, a British sergeant (Charlie Hunnam) always lurking around, before hes sold to bushranger known as Harry Power (Russell Crowe). When Ned later returns home a young man (1917s George MacKay), family trouble and a sadistic British constable (Nicholas Hoult) set into motion a chain of events that lead Ned to outlaw immortality.

Without a doubt, the performances areKelly Gangs crown jewels. Crowe is wonderful, clearly having the time of his life as a mischievous bad influence, and Hunnam and Hoult both sink their teeth into their respective roles as villainous, occupying Brits. (Hoult, to be fair, gets the more extravagantly psychotic material; Hunnam more in magnanimous savior mode.)

As Ned, MacKay does his best with a character weve pretty much seen before. Hes a man forced to violence out of a sense of familial responsibility foisted on him too young with a bottomless well of both mommy and daddy issues while devolving increasingly into manic madness and self-mythologizing because surprise! he has a sensitive streak. The best of MacKays performance is bracingly, intensely physical, but his most impressive scene may be the one of the more vulnerable moments Ned shares with an English teacher hostage.

But, with all due respect to MacKay, Davis is the films true star as Kelly matriarch Ellen. Shes a magnetic and terrifying piece of work and you never for one second doubt her power to keep all these men truly, every single one of them under her sway. From an innuendo-laden dinner conversation to a jail cell confrontation, Davis electrifies every scene shes in.

In addition to stellar performances, Kelly Gangalso has moments of true beauty, stunningly composed shots leveraging the full visual power of the Australian bush and the dramatic, eye-catching aesthetic embraced by the outlaws.

However, as a sum of these parts,The True History of the Kelly Ganglacks cohesion, momentum and ultimately, impact. Neds glaring parental problems its no surprise to learn Kurzel directed MacKay to approach scenes with Davis like he would a romantic partner arent particularly interesting, nor really is his quasi-romance or motivating conflict. The story simply drags, feeling much longer than its two-hour runtime.

Furthermore, for film lauded as gender-bending, transgressive and queer, it falls short of committing to any of those three things. The party line for why the men wear dresses into battle is that men are afraid of what they dont understand and men fear crazy. If his father, brother or any of the men in Neds gang are motivated otherwise, its not made text. And despite all the codifiers of intimacy and a romantic relationship between Ned and his best friend Joe (Sean Keenan) not to mention overwhelming sexual tension between Ned and Fitzpatrick in their first meeting plausible deniability abounds. (That said, the other lines of sexual attraction inKelly Gangare a Pandoras box of Oedipal complexes, pedophilia and power trips so maybe Ned and Joe are well enough left alone.)

Ultimately,Kelly Gangdoes not seem know what to do (or what it wants to do) with all the imagery, aesthetic and cultural signifiers it references. For all the monologues and speeches, theres no real sense of how the film understands Ned and his legacy or how a gender-bending punk rock veneer might elucidate some valuable truth about his story. Its sleek and stylish, and then its over.

There is a sharp, bold and visually stunning telling of the Ned Kelly myth somewhere in The True History of the Kelly Gang, but in the end, its too long, too uncertain and too flat to be legendary.

True History of the Kelly Gang is available on digital and on demandApril 24.

For more, explore the Reviews section at FanSided.com.

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True History of the Kelly Gang is all style - FanSided

What We Do in the Shadows is a vampire comedy about being stuck at home – The Verge

Theres something soothing about watching a bunch of vampires be absolute morons on television every week. Theyre undead, capable of incredible feats, dark magic, and, in most cases, have been alive for hundreds of years. They should possess at least a little more finesse than Michael Scott. And yet, the bloodsucking clowns of What We Do in the Shadows are so very bad at being immortal monsters, which means they are excellent at comedy.

FXs TV series, based on the Taika Waititi film of the same name, returned for a second season just as funny as ever. Like the movie, the show follows a trio of vampires this time, they live on Staten Island as opposed to the New Zealand of the films living together in a derelict old manor. Nandor (Kayvan Novak), Laszlo (Matt Berry), and Nadja (Natasia Demetriou) are hundreds of years old and also total dorks. Theyre bad at most things they do, but as long as they dont accidentally stumble into sunlight or fall on a wooden stake, theyll get over it. (It turns out, vampirism is a very potent form of failing upward.)

While this is extremely similar to the movie its based on, the TV version of What We Do in the Shadows fleshes out its mockumentary antics with a few additions to the formula: namely, a familiar, Guillermo (Harvey Guilln) who serves them in hopes of becoming a vampire, and Colin Robinson (Mark Proksch), an energy vampire who looks normal but feeds off the ambient misery of everyone around him.

Colin and Guillermo are the reason What We Do in the Shadows works as a show, two regular-looking dudes juxtaposed against their goth reality show roommates that also have their own normcore sociopathic tendencies. Colin, in particular, gives the show a feeling very similar to The Office. As an energy vampire, he feeds off everyones annoyance and goes out of his way to be obnoxiously corny and irritating. (One very good Colin bit involves him incessantly saying updog as if it were a joke no one had ever heard before.)

Like the best work of show creator Jemaine Clement (who co-wrote the film with Waititi), theres a lot of fun to be had with taking the iconography of the occult and supernatural and putting them in front of the mundanity of the mockumentary. What happens when theyre haunted by a very petty ghost? Or deal with animal control when it captures one of them in bat form? Or accidentally get a pet zombie?

Watching What We Do in the Shadows is oddly cathartic while social distancing. Maybe its because the vampires of the show are also isolated in a fashion, unable to see the sunlight and absolutely kooky as a result. Maybe, What We Do in the Shadows argues, immortality wouldnt make you cool or fearsome, but instead really freaking weird. In that way, its kind of like watching a reality show about patently awful people. Maybe you have your flaws, but hey: youre not that bad!

If youve spent any of the last month on Twitter, the corniest social network, you might have noticed a meme going around where people ask each other to pick their preferred quarantine house. Simply put, the tweets list groups of people, real or fictional, and asks which set you would like to shack up with while social distancing. Like all bad memes, theres very little logic to them other than asking people to argue for the posters amusement, and this makes them consistently unfunny at least until the lists get so baffling that the meme loops around to becoming funny again.

Its a bad meme, but its one that feels appropriate for understanding why What We Do in the Shadows is so fun to watch. Like in this silly Twitter exercise, no one in their right mind would probably want to share a home with a bunch of vampires. But after watching What We Do in the Shadows, why not? It could be fun. I wouldnt recommend vampirism as a quarantine hobby, but being weirder? Sure. We could stand to be a little weirder.

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What We Do in the Shadows is a vampire comedy about being stuck at home - The Verge

The 40 Most Important Events in the History of Space Exploration – 24/7 Wall St.

Special Report

John Harrington

With the COVID-19 pandemic affecting every aspect of everyday life, its easy to forget about what else is going on in the world and that includes significant historical moments and fun holidays. One of them is May 1 Space Day.

24/7 Tempo has compiled a list of the coolest and most unforgettable moments in space exploration after reviewing material from NASA, news articles from decades ago and information from the National Archives and Records Administration.

If Christopher Columbus, Ferdinand Magellan, Amerigo Vespucci, and Vasco Da Gama helped Western civilization in the Age of Discovery reach new worlds, in the Space Age, Yuri Gagarin, John Glenn, Valentina Tereshkova, and Neil Armstrong took humanity to Earths orbit and beyond. Those space pioneers launched our world into a realm that had been pondered by astronomers, philosophers, religious figures, science fiction writers and poets.

The Space Age paralleled the Cold War, and when the Soviet Union succeeded in launching Sputnik into space in 1957, it was seen as much a threat to U.S. national security as a scientific triumph. Sputniks success was the starting gun of the space race that put the prestige of nations on the line.

The competition for supremacy in space made national heroes of Gagarin, Glenn, Tereshkova, and Armstrong, among many other astronauts and cosmonauts in the 20th century. They would gain fame as astronauts on the Mercury and Apollo missions during the 1960s here are 30 special skills astronauts need to master to do their job.

Click here to see the most unforgettable moments in space exploration.

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The 40 Most Important Events in the History of Space Exploration - 24/7 Wall St.

Seven Questions: Former COSI CEO Kathy Sullivan on Space Exploration – Columbus Monthly

In advance of a virtual author talk for her book Handprints on Hubble, the retired astronaut discusses the telescope's enduring contributions and the importance of investing in NASA, even during a pandemic.

This Friday marks the 30th anniversary of the Hubble Space Telescopes launch, which has fundamentally changed humans ability to view the cosmos. Playing a key role in that deployment, Kathy Sullivan was one of five crew members aboard the Discovery space shuttle that delivered the technological payload into Earths orbit. She had already made history six years earlier, in 1984, when she became the first American woman to complete a spacewalk.

Sullivan has had a remarkable career on many levels, later serving as the administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; director of Ohio State Universitys Battelle Center for Science, Engineering and Public Policy; and CEO of COSI. But she considers the telescope project to be her seminal work. Without question, I am most proud to have been on Team Hubble, she says.

On Friday at 2 p.m., she will commemorate the telescopes three decades in operation with a virtual talk about her new book, Handprints on Hubble, through the Columbus Metropolitan Library; the event is free but registration is required here. In anticipation of her talk, we connected via email to discuss more about her career and the importance of scientific investment.

The public associates the Hubble mostly with these colorful, fantastic images of space, but from an experts perspective, what are the most important things weve learned because of it?

Entire books have been written about the scientific advances generated by Hubble, so I can only give a few teasers of its cool discoveries here: pinning down the age of the universe (13.75 billion years); peering back into the oldest galaxies; confirming the existence of supermassive black holes and discovering that black holes lurk at the center of every major galaxy; finding new moons of Pluto; measuring the atmosphere of an alien planet; discovering water plumes erupting off the surface of Jupiters moon Europa; understanding the seasons on other planets; creating the first 3D map of dark matter. And many, many more.

What motivated you to write Handprints on Hubble?

Every account of the telescopes history I had ever read left out an important chapter and overlooked some key people. The crux of the missing chapter is the foresight and inventiveness that went into making Hubble maintainable, both by design and in practice. Hubble was certainly an innovation in astronomical telescopes, but maintenance is the reason it is still alive today and regarded as one of the most productive observatories ever built. I worked alongside the engineers who made Hubble maintainable from 1985 to 1990. I wanted to give them their due and show how much innovation is actually involved in keeping such a complex machine going.

What first got you interested in space flight and being an astronaut?

I followed the early space program avidly as a young girl. The grand, exciting adventure of it all entranced me and made me long to have an adventurous life myself, but did not spark, I want to be an astronaut. I didnt aim at that specific goal until I was finishing my [doctorate] in oceanography, and NASA opened the competition for the first class of space shuttle astronauts. My primary motivation then was the chance to see the Earth from space with my own eyes.

You were in the original space shuttle class at NASA at a time when women were first becoming participants in the space flight program. How have you seen womens involvement in the field change in the decades since then?

It has changed a lot, but much more slowly than I would have liked. Though the numbers are still small, more women are participating across the boardin engineering, science, flight operations and management, both within NASA and in the commercial sector. Im particularly pleased to see women leading and succeeding in positions of power and influence, such as mission commander, flight director and senior executive.

Is there more that needs to be done to encourage young women to see this as a potential career path?

Yes. It is a great career path, and we need the talents and energy of many more young people to drive the field forward. Girls interested in a space career face some unique headwinds, like old stereotypes about science being for boys and social pressures that say you can be popular or smart, but not both. We also have to overcome the common belief that science is an innate aptitude one either has or lacks, rather than a muscle anybody can exercise and develop. I wish parents would see basic science competence as a skill set that will be vital to their childrens success in a 21st century world, rather than an option they might or might not like. Then there are countless classroom barriers, among them my pet peeve that math and science classes, from middle school to first-year college, are all too often taught in mind-numbingly boring, rote ways.

I watched the Netflix documentary One Strange Rock about the experiences of former astronauts, and some of them talked about how seeing the world from outer space shifted their views of the planet and how interconnected we all are. Did your work in space exploration change your perspective of Earth?

Anyone who says they were unmoved or unchanged by seeing the Earth from that vantage point is lying. Earth science and geography had been the focus of my entire career, so I perhaps had a richer sense of the planet and our many interconnections before seeing it from space than many of my colleagues. The view from orbit illustrated and reinforced some things I already knew and, as all grand experiences will do, filled me with a host of new questions I had never known to ponder. Those eventually drove my career shift from NASA to NOAA (the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Agency).

People often talk about the spending associated with NASA, and as a percentage of the federal budget it has generally trended downward over the past three decades. At a time of crisis when budgets are likely to be increasingly tight, should we continue to invest in space exploration?

Yes, absolutely. For a fraction of a penny from each tax dollar, NASAs work drives innovation and discovery, fosters new businesses and inspires future generations. We must not let the urgencies of the moment wipe out these important catalysts of our future.

***

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Seven Questions: Former COSI CEO Kathy Sullivan on Space Exploration - Columbus Monthly

The UAE wants to send people to Mars. But first, a practice round on Earth. – Space.com

The United Arab Emirates sent its first astronaut to space for a week last fall; the country's next astronaut mission will last longer but remain much closer to home.

The mission will last eight months but send its crew only to Moscow, where six would-be astronauts will live in isolation and work on science and technology projects that could benefit a crewed mission to Mars. Of those crewmembers, one will hail from the UAE. The analog mission is the first major project under the purview of the Mars 2117 Project, which aims to facilitate sustainable human exploration on Mars over the course of a century.

"This is our first engagement and involvement in an analog mission," Adnan AlRais, program manager of Mars 2117 at the UAE's Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre, told Space.com. "This is going to be our first step in preparing our own experiments hopefully to be conducted on future human spaceflight."

Related: Hazzaa AlMansoori: The 1st Emirati astronaut's space station mission in photos

The UAE Mars Analog project is taking place through NASA's SIRIUS program, which runs analog missions at a biomedical facility in Russia. The UAE signed on to a mission that is scheduled to begin in November and continue through July 2021, including a total of six crewmembers.

One of those crewmembers and one member of the backup crew will be selected by the UAE as it works to build up a roster of analog astronauts. The first mission will be staffed from 10 finalists selected from more than 100 applicants in a process that began in February. The finalists, whom the space center is not yet identifying, will complete medical and psychological analyses and additional interviews before the analog astronaut and backup are announced in May.

During that process, the team selecting analog astronauts will also consult Hazzaa AlMansoori, who flew to the International Space Station for a week in September and October, and his backup, Sultan Al-Neyadi. "We will definitely use their experience," AlRais said. "They have been through something similar throughout their training for the first mission." Ali Almansoori and Al Neyadi won't take part in the analog mission itself, however; instead, they will be focused on the country's current push to recruit new astronauts for spaceflight missions.

Once selected, the two would-be astronauts will complete a few months of training in the UAE, including learning Russian. Next, it's off to Russia for additional training and a two-week practice run. If all goes well, the crew will "deploy" in November for eight months of isolation.

During the mission, the crew will work on a range of science and technology projects, including five designed by universities in the UAE that are designed to tackle priorities for long-term space exploration, like mental health in isolation and impacts on the body, including on the cardiovascular system. "With Mars 2117, we are focusing on certain areas that are challenges that we're going to face on the surface of Mars when it comes to like food, water, energy security and technologies we need," AlRais said. "Those challenges, we are facing them on Earth [as well]."

The signature project within the Mars 2117 program will be what the UAE is calling Mars Science City, a space and life sciences research facility that will eventually host analog missions. But the UAE wanted that design to be informed by initial analog missions, and didn't want to wait to participate in such projects until the facility is built.

"Mars Science City is our platform," AlRais said. "With the Mars Science City we're basically at the stage where we are identifying the requirements, the specs and design. We want to develop state-of-the-art facilities here."

AlRais emphasized that a core principle of the UAE's space program, which began in 2006, has been to go deep on specific programs as a way to build capacity quickly. The country hopes Mars 2117 and its human spaceflight program which is eyeing more missions to the space station, as well as future flights to NASA's proposed lunar Gateway and Mars will spur that sort of solid foundation.

"As a young nation, we've managed to achieve so many things on the ground. We have all the opportunities, we have all the possibilities to contribute internationally," AlRais said. "Mars is one target. We're going to go to Mars and beyond with such long-term vision that we have in the country."

Email Meghan Bartels at mbartels@space.com or follow her @meghanbartels. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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The UAE wants to send people to Mars. But first, a practice round on Earth. - Space.com

COVID-19 Impacts on Artificial Intelligence In Space Exploration Market Growth Ratio Analysis with Top Players Like Maxar Technologies, Motiv Space…

Global Artificial Intelligence In Space Exploration Market Size, Status and Forecast 2020-2027

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3 Market Share by Key Players

4 Breakdown Data by Type and Application

5 United States

6 Europe

7 China

8 Japan

9 Southeast Asia

10 India

11 Central & South America

12 International Players Profiles

13 Market Forecast 2020-2027

14 Analysts Viewpoints/Conclusions

15 Appendix

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COVID-19 Impacts on Artificial Intelligence In Space Exploration Market Growth Ratio Analysis with Top Players Like Maxar Technologies, Motiv Space...