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Writing

Academic Work

I am currently a PhD candidate in the department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology at Indiana University, Bloomington, studying community radio.

"New Sounds to Imagine": Coalition, Coltrane, and Mediating Personhood in San Francisco’s Fillmore District

Processes of displacement and gentrification, often framed as projects of urban renewal and preservation, have long shaped the demographics of San Francisco in often drastic and inequitable ways. Once known as the Harlem of the West and today commemorated as the city’s historic Jazz Preservation District, the city’s Fillmore neighborhood has long been saddled with racialized narratives of blight and poverty related to its palimpsestic histories of primarily Japanese and Black communities, even as it continues to hold space for specifically coalitional institutions and services. This article examines two of those bodies, the Saint John Will-I-Am Coltrane African Orthodox Church and the community radio station KPOO, as interconnected mediative nodes in a network of sound, place, and personhood that work together in the generation of aural imaginaries that make possible anti-hegemonic reinterpretations of what it means to belong in San Francisco. Working with sources in human geography, cultural studies, sound studies, and public history, I contextualize and analyze a broadcast of the devotional program Uplift to better understand the existential value of these nonprofit organizations for San Franciscans facing large-scale erasure and their capabilities to generate new geographic possibilities that counter reductive, top-down narratives of local identity.

Hungary on Hoosier Airwaves: Echoes of Diasporic Community in Reverend Stephen J. Vrabely’s Radio Music Archives

In early 2022, Alan Burdette, former Director of the Archives of Traditional Music (ATM), drove four and a half hours from Bloomington into Kendall County, Illinois, to pick up a donation of around 1400 well-kept shellac, lacquer, and vinyl discs. A gift from the family of Reverend Stephen J. Vrabely (1923 – 1994), the records consist almost entirely of Hungarian music published in the 1940s and 1950s, running the gamut from opera to brass bands to crooning, and featuring some of the most popula

Sensory Prompt Challenge: Seismic Epistemologies of the Great Sand Waste

It was all dunes, say developers, until the late 19th century, when the settlers shaped what was then called the “Great Sand Waste” into the largely residential western half of the city. Growing up there, we knew this story and its moral: that we were all raised on hubris, that one strong quake could sink us. Locals walk the beach with equal measures of love and fear, gazing out to sea as both meditation and memento mori.

When I’m back there, I glide through these so-called Wastelands down Tara

On-Air Worldbuilding: Why Community Radio Still Exists and We Should Listen

On July 14, 2023, the Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education subcommittee of the U.S. House of Representatives’ Committee on Appropriations proposed a budget that would, among other things, wholly defund the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) by 2026. In doing so, it would cut off the primary financial support that allows thousands of non-commercial radio stations across the country to maintain their independence from corporate interests and serve audiences across the nation in r

Business

Music tech publicity pieces, blog posts, and other public-facing private sector work.

Rock Paper Scissors - JackTrip Labs - JackTrip Labs’ Latest Feature Uses AI for Lossless Online Concerts

Recent upgrades to the remote collaboration platform help to build infinitely customizable virtual venues with Soundscapes and an AI-powered loss concealment feature

Each new innovation from JackTrip Labs makes virtual space feel and sound more like a real place. The company’s Soundscapes platform and AI-powered loss concealment feature give JackTrip’s remote collaboration technology new levels of intimacy. They enable more immersive and high-definition sessions for JackTrip Virtual Studio us...

Rock Paper Scissors - JackTrip Labs - JackTrip Labs new video integration enhances Virtual Studio music collaboration experience

JackTrip Labs’ Virtual Studio real-time music collaboration platform has already won over an impressive range of creative performers. Fans like “father of the virtual choir” Eric Whitacre, the world-renowned San Francisco Girls Chorus, funk-punk icons Royal Crescent Mob, and Earth, Wind & Fire keyboardist Larry Dunn are just a few of the major artists and groups who have made good use of the JackTrip Virtual Studio. High-speed, low-latency cloud computing technology allows musicians to play toge...

Rock Paper Scissors - JackTrip Labs - The Royal Crescent Mob returns, with help from JackTrip

Funk-punk icons use JackTrip’s cutting-edge remote collaboration technology to prepare for a long-awaited reunion this December.

Icons of the 80s-90s indie scene, funk rock group the Royal Crescent Mob returns to the stages of their home state of Ohio for two shows this winter. Set to play Dec 16 in Columbus and Dec 17 in Cincinnati, the RC Mob’s reunion concerts will benefit the Tri-State Research Fund of the American Cancer Society. Making it possible is a partnership with JackTrip Labs, wh...

Rock Paper Scissors - JackTrip Labs - San Francisco Girls Chorus Partners with JackTrip Labs to Build Revolutionary New Virtual Statewide Curriculum, SFGConnect

The cutting edge of music meets the cutting edge of tech in SFGConnect, an upcoming San Francisco Girls Chorus program powered by Silicon Valley-developed JackTrip Labs. SFGConnect is an innovative pilot program that offers SFGC’s full choral and music theory curriculum to singers exclusively over the internet. SFGConnect will allow girls and gender expansive youth ages 7-10 to participate in SFGC’s accredited music training, even if they live hundreds of miles away, a first for the storied chor...

Rock Paper Scissors - JackTrip Labs - A virtual supergroup: Music legends collaborate in real time from multiple locations thanks to JackTrip and EnterTalk

Master musicians who’ve played with ABBA, Elton John, and Earth, Wind & Fire keep it tight with JackTrip virtual collaboration technology in an upcoming live show co-sponsored by industry insider outlet EnterTalk

On July 27 at 2:00 PM PDT, JackTrip Labs and EnterTalk will partner to host a one-of-a-kind musical showcase jam-packed with industry legends and powered by JackTrip’s revolutionary Virtual Studio. Streaming on JackTrip Radio, it features seasoned Southern California players who’ve w...

Rock Paper Scissors - JackTrip Labs - Virtual collaborations in real time: JackTrip sends sound at the speed of light

A whole new world of musical collaboration is taking shape at JackTrip Labs. Run by musicians, JackTrip focuses on innovations for musicians, especially in a time of increasing demand for ways to make music online just as effectively as in person. The JackTrip Virtual Studio does just that, linking musicians at high speeds and making it possible for them to truly play together again. 

Based on technology created by engineers at Stanford University, JackTrip transports uncompressed audio at th...

Rock Paper Scissors - BeatConnect - BeatConnect makes remote collaboration easy and accessible for producers and musicians everywhere

In Nick Laroche’s experience, there’s always been a need for accessible tools in the music realm. “We’ve had the idea of doing remote collaboration for years, but the music industry hasn’t ever offered a solution for most musicians,” he says. “When COVID hit, I said, you know what, I’m going to see if I can actually do something.”

With the present surge in virtual collaboration and long-term sustainability in mind, Laroche co-founded BeatConnect, which lets musicians work together online from...

Rock Paper Scissors - Bandzoogle - Bandzoogle celebrates 17th anniversary with custom merch to benefit music charity, matching donations up to $5000

Musician website and direct-to-fan platform Bandzoogle is celebrating their 17th anniversary by giving back to artists in need. Using their newly launched integration with print-on-demand provider Printful, the company has created exclusive merch for sale, donating all proceeds to the Unison Benevolent Fund, Canada’s leading music industry charity.

T-shirts, hoodies, and more are now available through a Bandzoogle-powered store. Profits from all sales of this 17th anniversary merchandise will...

Rock Paper Scissors - Bandzoogle - Bandzoogle adds integration with Printful’s print-on-demand drop shipping services

Musician website platform Bandzoogle has launched an integration with print-on-demand drop shipping service Printful to make it easier for musicians to create and sell custom merchandise directly to their fans on their websites, commission-free.

Artists can now seamlessly connect their Bandzoogle website account to Printful, simplifying access to the popular print-on-demand drop shipping service. Bands can choose from over 200 custom merch items available through Printful to display on their...

Rock Paper Scissors - Bandzoogle - Bandzoogle’s new pay-what-you-want fan subscription model expands options to support musicians

As musicians look for ways to engage their fans and earn a living beyond the traditional touring model, musician web services provider Bandzoogle continues to expand their direct-to-fan offerings accordingly. The platform’s most recent development sees an important update to their popular fan subscriptions feature as the company implements a pay-what-you-want option alongside standard pricing tiers.

In addition to offering set premiums per month, artists can offer specific rewards to listener...

Rock Paper Scissors - Bandzoogle - Musicians have earned over $5 million through Bandzoogle since the pandemic began

Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, musicians have earned over $5 million in commission-free sales of digital music, merch, livestream tickets, fan subscriptions, digital multimedia, and tip donations through their websites powered by Bandzoogle.

Nearly half a million of that revenue came from digital music sales alone, from over 33,000 albums and over over 37,000 singles. Through the recently rolled-out Tip Jar feature, fans have donated almost $200,000 to their favorite artists, leaving an a...

Rock Paper Scissors - Bandzoogle - Bandzoogle helps maximize the impact of live streaming for independent artists with expanded online video features, including Twitch and Crowdcast integrations

In response to the proliferation of virtual performances and hot on the heels of their recently-launched Tip Jar feature, Bandzoogle has launched new integrated options for videos and live streams that help maximize musician control and revenue.

While the Bandzoogle platform has long provided tools for easy embedding of pre-recorded YouTube and Vimeo videos, live streaming creates new opportunities for real-time fan engagement. Bandzoogle now makes it easy to embed live and pre-recorded video...

Rock Paper Scissors - Bandzoogle - On the cusp of its 17th birthday, Bandzoogle's artist-first philosophy continues to show up and pay off for musicians’ digital presence

Long-lasting success and ethical approaches can go hand-in-hand in the music industry: just look at Bandzoogle. Founded by Chris Vinson, formerly a prominent bassist in Montreal’s alt-rock scene, the company has spent nearly 17 years helping a total of over 100,000 musicians build and manage their online presence. With tools for professional website building, promotion, and commission-free music and merch sales, Bandzoogle’s direct-to-fan model offers valuable resources for artists to thrive in...

Rock Paper Scissors - AmplifyX - AmplifyX bridges the financial gap between musicians and fans by letting supporters invest in artists like startups

AmplifyX provides a platform that enables people to invest in artists, funding their music and empowering them to retain their independence and control of their creative journey. The investors then have an alternative asset that returns royalty payments over the lifetime of the contract. AmplifyX is painting over a traditional ...

AmplifyX provides a platform that enables people to invest in artists, funding their music and empowering them to retain their independence and control of their crea...

Are You Being Too Direct? - Speakeasy Inc.

When you interact with your co-workers, you probably find yourself wishing that some people would just get to the point. You might also feel that some people give you the point and nothing but the point. Sure, you get the information you need, but sometimes that’s not enough.
In a situation where you must influence something or someone, as in selling a product or a point of view, being too direct can be a problem.
Most speakers don’t win over their audiences with just the cold, hard facts. Truly...

Facilitating Effective Communication Between Baby Boomers and Millennials - Speakeasy Inc.

Today's workforce encompasses a broader age range than any before it. Baby boomers are retiring later than previous groups, largely because of financial concerns, and their newest colleagues will soon comprise nearly half of the U.S. labor force. It's an unprecedented dynamic, and the first time that so many decades' worth of people have been, effectively, at the same stage of life.

The Rise of Video Interviewing - Expert Tips

There’s nothing like a digital twist to make job interviews a little more stressful. All of a sudden, you’re reduced from a full person to head and shoulders on a screen. When the stable, sterile environment of a conference room is gone, professionalism threatens to fly out the window. What should you do in this high stress situation?
Luckily, the answer is simple: everything you’d be doing anyway.
For the most part, the keys to video interviews and in-person interviews are about the same; it’s...

Music Journalism

I began writing for the music section of culture zine PopMatters in 2016, and occasionally write for other local arts publications. Below is an archive of my features, including reviews, premieres, and special sections.

Hamid Al-Saadi's 'Maqam Al-Iraq' Is Beautiful and Meaningful » PopMatters

Jazz musician Amir ElSaffar could not ask for a better start to his new Maqām Records label than what he’s produced on Maqam Al-Iraq. A series of performances by Hamid Al-Saadi, reputed to be the last living master reciter of the poetic Iraqi maqām repertoire, is both a finely crafted album and a priceless historical record. Al-Saadi honors centuries’ worth of tradition in his singing; ElSaffar honors Al-Saadi by accompanying and recording him. In doing so, both ensure that the oral transmission...

Brìghde Chaimbeul Expands the Smallpipes Realm » PopMatters

Sunwise, the new album by Scottish smallpipes player Brìghde Chaimbeul, begins with a drone. It features almost six minutes of that drone, a risky and utterly transfixing move that clears the way for Chaimbeul to march forth and pipe with wild abandon. What emerges is astounding work, Chaimbeul’s approach to the bagpipes as deeply rooted as it is innovative. Capable of exceeding exponentially their players in volume, endurance, breadth, and depth, bagpipes are instruments unique among winds for...

Garbage Imagine a Better Future on Excellent Album » PopMatters

Among the central pillars of the Garbage approach to music is an unflinching resolve. It comes through in music and lyrics alike, in songs about love, hate, sorrow, and struggle. Throughout the highs and lows of the last band’s three decades, it has been their hallmark, providing them with a structural integrity that has endured through all manner of sonic experiments.


The latest addition to the Garbage corpus, Let All That We Imagine Be the Light, emerges from this same principled core. It s...

Francis Bebey's Remarkable Legacy Shines on New Compilation » PopMatters

The creative innovator, intellectual powerhouse, and social commentator extraordinaire Francis Bebey left this world almost a quarter of a century ago. His legacy, though, has only grown. The plugged-in styles Bebey revolutionized so many decades before the notion of electronic music became mainstream hold up today as perhaps even more powerful in contemporary discourses of global music.


Well before categories like folk fusion and Afrobeats, and—if we must—”ethnic electronica”, Bebey was mak...

Pachyman Expands Dub Horizons on 'Another Place' » PopMatters

Too often, dub is used as a superficial shorthand for slowed-down, chilled-out, reverb-laden instrumental bonus tracks. I tend to encounter “dub versions” of songs tacked onto the ends of albums like musical petit fours, which can come across as a tropicalist trope with broad appeal; who doesn’t like a breezy beat, after all?


Other artists use dub as a backdrop–not as far off from early uses of the technique as a canvas for toasting–but in ways that seem less interested in engaging with the f...

Satomimagae Builds Dynamic Atmosphere on 'Taba' » PopMatters

Producer, performer, and composer Satomimagae’s new album Taba is a work of emergence. On it, she steps out of the introverted depths of pandemic isolation, moving more directly through the gauzy layers of sound she builds. The chrysalis is left behind, the wilder world open before her. It’s a journey gently taken. Taba never moves with too heavy a tread, but it covers a lot of new ground and sees her embrace the uneven with grace. It’s a fearless new installment in Satomimagae’s world-building...

JakoJako Tells Synthesized Vietnam Stories on 'Tết 41' » PopMatters

Modular synthesist and composer JakoJako’s new album Tết 41 begins looking outward. Opening track “Xin chào” (Vietnamese for “hello”) is a compilation of field recordings that convey a gently jubilant feeling: an ensemble of lively percussion plays in the distance, bamboo flute and zither sway to a much slower rhythm somewhere to the right, and voices of all ages and pitches fill the sonic ground. It’s a warm pastiche of the sounds of Tết, the Vietnamese Lunar New Year, which marks the beginning...

Elana Sasson's Persian and Kurdish Influences Are Captivating » PopMatters

Rarely is “beautiful” the most accurate or informative descriptor for anything, especially music. Even so, something is striking about In Between, the latest work from singer and composer Elana Sasson, that is hard to describe any other way. Sound, sentiment, and intent all work in exquisite aesthetic and affective concert here, the layering of these aspects giving the album multiple dimensions that are sincerely beautiful from start to finish. In Between is indeed a rarity, and Elana Sasson and...

Thaba Embraces South African Pop in an Artistic Triumph » PopMatters

Five years ago, duo Thaba emerged onto the global stage with cool electrosoul on Eyes Rest Their Feet. It was a bittersweet moment. Mere months before this debut, lead vocalist Khusi Seremane–half of Thaba, at the time–passed away after long-term health problems, leaving producer Gabriel Cyr with a host of unfinished pieces beyond the first album.


For December/Sedimonthole, Cyr assembled these musical fragments with the help of an international collective of players to continue Thaba’s work....

Tucson's XIXA Travel to the Aztec Underworld on 'XOLO' » PopMatters

The latest album from Tucson, Arizona-based rock group XIXA (each “x” sounds like a “ch”) is an intentionally dramatic outing. Over nine tracks, XOLO tells the tale of Arcoiris, a young girl guided by Xolo, a hairless Xoloitzcuintli dog, through the nine levels of Mictlān, the nine-level underworld of Aztec cosmology.


It’s a perfect story for XIXA, a band whose music has long drawn on styles and lore from across Latin America, where founders Brian López and Gabriel Sullivan locate their root...

'Renegade Queens' Celebrates Latin Jazz Scene Women » PopMatters

In his liner notes to Salsa de la Bahia Vol. 3: Renegade Queens, renowned San Francisco Bay Area jazz DJ and music writer Jesse “Chuy” Varela offers crucial context. “As you listen to the music presented here,” he writes, “understand that this compilation is as much a celebration of the Bay Area music community as it is these individual artists.” Of course, the community in question is no one thing. There are metaphorical acres between Haight Street hippies and Silicon Valley oligarchs. The arti...

Mali's Salif Keïta Sounds Inspired on Irrestible 'So Kono' » PopMatters

It’s not all that surprising that Salif Keita’s 2018 farewell album Un Autre Blanc was not the end of his recording career. After all, as Keita himself has explained over the years, music is his life, a path for which he gave up his standing in Mandinka royalty, a mode of expression through which he has found global renown.


It hasn’t been an easy road, and his deeply rooted relationship to Mali and Mandinka society remains complex–he was appointed as an advisor to the country’s ruling milita...

Kinshasa's Kin'gongolo Kiniata Debuts with Bold Grooves » PopMatters

Congolese band Kin’gongolo Kiniata’s name is a Lingala-language reference to the sounds of metal oil barrels being moved down the streets during the power cuts that marked 2000s Kinshasa. The group translates it as “the crushing sound”. In some ways, it’s apt; their dense grooves and bold sounds make for a hefty blend. All the same, the five members of Kin’gongolo Kiniata approach their music with care, translating into a finesse that is still fresh and layered.


From this balance of restrain...

Hüma Utku Embraces Shadows on Experimental 'Dracones' » PopMatters

Hüma Utku’s Dracones begins by locating its listeners in deep space, or perhaps deep waters: we are floating, drifting, surrounded by otherworldly drones and echoes. We hear cosmic resonances–alien life or whalesong?–that morph from hums to howls to cries and back over layers of vibrational haze. Voices are distorted, cello strings groan, and an electromagnetic lyre (Mihalis Shammas’s lyraei) shrieks. The life that rises from this futurist strangeness is pure and primeval.


“A World Between...

Iran's Farnaz Ohadi Reclaims Freedom Through Flamenco » PopMatters

There are no creative half measures for Farnaz Ohadi. She comes by it honestly. Born in Iran to parents with strong musical inclinations, she recalls her father playing reel-to-reel tapes front to back, over and over, of music from around the world. At the forefront of his interests was flamenco. A “life-affirming” trip to southern Spain made the historical connections between West Asia and Western Europe tangible for a then-teenage Ohadi, changing the trajectory of her life.


Ohadi has long s...

Raúl Monsalve Explores Vibrant Afro-Venezuelan Connections » PopMatters

Multi-instrumentalist Raúl Monsalve and band Los Forajidos are in ecstasy on the new album Sol. The group’s third full-length release features some of their highest energy to date. They make music in a vivid spectrum, jazz melding with funk and sprinkled with synthpop, all shaped by Monsalve’s home music scene of Caracas and his collaborators’ backgrounds.


Los Forajidos here include Egypt 80’s Mario Orsinet (drums), Lya Bonilla (vocals), Edgar Bonilla (keyboards), and Andrés Vela (saxophone)...

Florence Adooni's Astonishing 'A.O.E.I.U.' Is Electrifying » PopMatters

At the end of the title track of her debut album A.O.E.I.U., an ecstatic Florence Adooni rhapsodizes about music. It is many things, she says: the art of time, a metaphor for life, capable of generating cosmic meaning. It is “an ordinary exercise in unity”, the phrase for which the title stands. In Adooni’s case, though, ordinary is not a euphemism for dull. Instead, perhaps it’s shorthand for the idea of music as intertwined with everyday being, for groundedness and inclusivity. The exercise of...

Mdou Moctar Mourns with Sadness on 'Tears of Injustice' » PopMatters

With each successive album, since he realized his rock god potential on 2019’s Ilana (The Creator), Nigerien singer-songwriter Mdou Moctar has been bringing more heat. Last year’s Funeral for Justice was an electric firestorm of guitar skill and trenchant political critique. Where could he possibly go from there? The opposite direction.


Well, kind of. Tears of Injustice is a companion piece to Funeral for Justice, in which Moctar and his band perform stripped-down arrangements of each plugged...

Kaito Winse Tells Vibrant Burkinabé Tales on 'Reele Bumbou' » PopMatters

Tradition is alive for Kaito Winse, and it hasn’t aged a bit. Based in Brussels and originally from Burkina Faso, Winse performs musical and poetic traditions that have come to him through countless jeli ancestors. On sophomore release Reele Bumbou, he keeps his sound simple: his voice and a handful of acoustic instruments (mouth bow, talking drum, calabash, bells, flute), passing along history and knowledge with deep roots and ongoing relevance. This is not pop music in the lowest common denomi...

Creole Afro-Futurists Dowdelin Get Vulnerable on 'Tchenbe!' » PopMatters

In their first two albums, Lyon-based group Dowdelin tended toward neon hues and bouncy melodies in their music. Blending synthpop, jazz, and R&B styles, they’ve drawn on their experiences with cosmopolitan music scenes in France and the Caribbean to make thoughtful dance music with incredible hooks.


Their new album, Tchenbe!, is still a vibrant combination of sounds, but it’s shaded with a little more analog melancholy than past works. With a name translating to “hold on”, Tchenbe! sees the...

Sparks Fly on Jupiter and Okwess' Thrilling 'Ekoya' » PopMatters

Seeing Jupiter Bokondji and his band Okwess International perform is an invariably thrilling experience. No matter the venue, event, or continent, it’s sure that once Jupiter and Okwess take the stage, the sparks will fly in all the best ways. They play music called bofenia rock, a mix of traditional Congolese rhythms, funk, and rock and roll, and they have nonstop energy and a passion for positive and revolutionary messages.


Coming four years after the last album, Na Kozonga, Ekoya is yet a...

Vampisoul Reissues Violeta Parra's Brilliant Final LP » PopMatters

Perhaps no nueva canción singer-songwriter in Chile was more important than Violeta Parra. A movement with a broad definition from a region with a maybe even broader definition, nueva canción arose from the same confluence of revolutionary activist movements that spawned so many of the 1960s and 1970s” most important musical genres. Tied to progressive movements of Latin America and the Iberian peninsula, nueva canción emphasized local folk sounds. Indigenous instruments and melodies intertwined...

Legendary Ebo Taylor Creates a 'Jazz Is Dead' Album » PopMatters

The star of the 22nd installment of Adrian Younge and Ali Shaheed Muhammad’s Jazz Is Dead series, Ghanaian artist Ebo Taylor is pushing 90 years old and wearing it with pride. A prominent highlife performer since the 1950s and an early Afrobeat collaborator, Taylor’s artistic legacy has long been secure. Accordingly, Ebo Taylor JID022 (which he recorded at the age of 88) doesn’t come across as an attempt at revival or an after-the-fact tribute. Instead, it’s a celebration of Taylor, a genuinely...

Drummer Silvan Strauss Makes Cool Chill-Hop on 'Flukin'' » PopMatters

Drummer Silvan Strauss is clever about the ground he covers on sophomore release Flukin‘. The rhythms he lays down are smooth and straightforward, nothing terribly dense. On the contrary, his beats float, drift, and pulse through the ether. Everything is steady. Even so, this is no one-note album. It moves between fresh air and outer space, between electronic signals and acoustic strings and flutes, everything blended in barely tangible combinations. As an arranger and a collaborator, Strauss is...
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About Me

I am a freelance writer, radio programmer, and PhD candidate at Indiana University, Bloomington. I have experience in writing music criticism, features, and publicity; writing corporate guides and white papers; and academic writing/editing and copy editing.

My radio work includes audio production, session hosting, and feature writing for public and community radio stations. I have also worked with radio- and music-related archives.

On this site, you'll find links to my available online work. Contact me for more!