PeachTree Music Group

Monday, March 11, 2013

3six5 Music Videos to watch 2013





























C-Side "Myspace Freak" video
















C-Side "Boyfriend/Girlfriend videos



C-Side is a rap trio composed of rappers Kenny Kold, Gator, and Bo-Q. Their single “Myspace Freak”, produced by Jazze Pha, written by Gator sold some 60,000 units independently but failed to chart nationally. The group’s follow-up single, “Boyfriend/Girlfriend” featuring Keyshia Cole written by Gator, peaked at number 72 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 42 on the Billboard Pop 100. A third single, "Let's Make a Movie", was released later in 2008. The group is currently signed to Atlanta based PeachTree Music Group and joint venture Nashville based label 1720 Entertainment. 17/20 and C-Side label mates Rissi Palmer and grammy nominee Jamie O'Neal.












* {{peachtreemusicgroup.com/c-side}}



17/20 RECORDS SIGNING ALSO CREATED A NEW VENTURE WITH ATLANTA’S PEACHTREE MUSIC GROUP



http://www.jeremiahint.com/press/2006/20060918_CSIDE_signing_releasephoto.pdf


ATLANTA’S 17.20 RECORDS SIGNS UP AND COMING LOCAL HIP-HOP TRIO C-SIDE THEIR PICK HIT SINGLE “MYSPACE FREAK” FEATURING JAZZE PHA READY
FOR IMMEDIATE RADIO AND VIDEO SERVICING

SIGNING ALSO CREATES NEW VENTURE WITH ATLANTA’S PEACHTREE MUSIC GROUP
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Photo: C-SIDE— L/R – Bo Q, Kenny Kold, Gator
ATLANTA, GA – September 18, 2006– Atlanta’s newest and most diverse record label, 17.20 Records, has entered into a joint venture deal with Atlanta-based Peachtree Music Group to release local Hip-Hop trio C-SIDE’s skyrocketing single MySpace Freak, featuring hit- making producer, Jazze Pha. 17.20 Records President/CEO Terry K. Johnson announced the deal today.
“We are excited to be in business with Antonio “Top Cat” Randolph (President/CEO Peachtree Music Group) and C-SIDE,” states Mr. Johnson. “Peachtree Music’s team brings a wealth of knowledge to the table and C-SIDE is a very creative group of guys who have big dreams and are making a conscious effort to have a positive impact. They’ve inspired me to help make their dream of success become a reality.”
C-SIDE, which stands for Creative – Superb – Individuals- Doing- Entertainment, has already generated a huge buzz on the internet with MySpace Freak. The group’s MySpace page, www.myspace.com/csideonline, has garnered an influx of over 240,000 hits with fans clamoring to hear their latest single. The group is comprised of South Carolina native Bo-Q; Chicagoan – Gator; and Atlanta resident, a hit-making producer in his own right, Kenny Kold. Kenny previously produced hit records for the leaders of the “snap music” movement, platinum-selling Southern rap group, Dem Franchize Boyz; Pimp C (UGK); and 12 Gauge.
C-SIDE teamed up with Atlanta’s hit producer, Jazze Pha, for the new mix of MySpace Freak, which will be hitting the streets of Atlanta and beyond this fall.
“C-SIDE is a group of guys who have a crazy knack for catchy phrases and choruses; on top of that they can really rap. They are a breath of fresh air from the South.”
“Ladies and Gentleman....C-SIDE emerges!!!”
Jazze Pha

About 17.20 Records
17.20 Records was established in 2004, inspired by the ideal of President/CEO, Terry K. Johnson to empower the dreams of Artists who possess not only undeniable talent, but integrity and heart. With music as the main focus, we are selective in both our business partners and the Artists we represent. Embracing diversity, we cover a broad spectrum of musical styles. We are passionately creative in the development of our artists...their music, performances, and their careers. In our endeavor to create great music, we strive to impress a positive influence on both our Artists and the world in which we live. 17.20 Records is firmly pointed toward the future dynamic evolution of the music industry. 17.20 Records Artist roster includes Hip-Hop trio C- SIDE; Country music artist Rissi Palmer; Pop music artist Rod Michael; and the hottest new band to emerge from the Caribbean, ELVIS WHITE.
www.1720records.com www.myspace.com/csideonline www.csideonline.com
For more information, please contact: Dawnalisa Johnson
17.20 Records
(770) 239-7531
dawnalisa@1720records.com








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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Featuring many key figures from Europe and the U.S..




http://youtu.be/gctdXaglWhY 



Featuring many key figures from Europe and the U.S., this is the first documentary film to look with scientific thoroughness at the world of Cultural Creatives. It shows that a great mass of people think differently from the way propagated by the media and promoted by the establishment. By the end of the film it becomes evident that this huge mass, were it to become aware of its power, could change the world. Because Cultural Creatives are unstoppable and their number is continuously rising, the values they champion could soon become core values for human civilization generally.

Cultural Creatives 1.0: The (R)evolution (trailer)



Cultural Creatives are emerging without anybody organizing their presence, without anyone seeking to create political power from their existence, and without any group having any interest in them. They are emerging simply because in real historical development the growth of human consciousness can not be stopped, no matter how much today’s establishments and intellectual elites try to ignore and even hide their appearance.
So they are all here, among and around us: 80 million Cultural Creatives in the United States and 120 million in Europe, all with a similar mindset — the citizens of a new world. They are the ones who are really preparing the future and its new social structures for us, and are doing so right now. They are the ones who anticipate the future as an astonishing opportunity never before available to mankind throughout the whole course of its history here on earth. Their message: The time is ripe to take the shaping of social life into our own hands.


Thursday, December 27, 2012

Bosnia and Herzegovina














twitter.com/PTMG2006
twitter.com/Antonio7opca7


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Sunday, January 15, 2012

Learning more about China. A beautiful place and people.

China-Business-Consulting


China



Great Wall of China



Shanghai China























Wednesday, April 13, 2011

PeachTree Music Group - Atlanta GA




PeachTree Music Group : Founded in 2006 and based in Atlanta, Georgia, PeachTree Music Group capitalizes on the expanding global entertainment market by focusing on the production and promotion of high-quality entertainment. The company has established itself as a key player in the industry, leveraging its expertise to deliver exceptional production values and successful promotional strategies.

The strength of PeachTree Music Group's management team lies in its unique blend of experience, creativity, savvy, and energy. Key individuals within PTMG are dedicated and well-prepared to drive success, ensuring the company continues to thrive in the competitive entertainment industry. Their collective expertise and commitment form the backbone of the company's ability to deliver high-quality production and promotional work.

The talented team at PeachTree Music Group, including key figures like Antonio "TopcaT" Randolph and Daimeial Michel, has come together to form an innovative company poised for future success. With their combined industry expertise and affiliations, along with a highly esteemed Board of Directors, PeachTree Music Group is positioned to emerge as one of the leading entertainment companies in the industry. Their collective vision and dedication are set to propel the company to new heights in the entertainment world.

Song Writer’s and Producer’s

PeachTree Music Group is a seasoned and talented production camp that operates under the PTMG umbrella. The company brings significant value to any record label through its productive presence and expertise. PTMG - PeachTree Music Group has established itself as part of a legacy of musical masterminds and behind-the-scenes innovators. Rather than seeking fame and fortune, the team has dedicated its time to learning the craft from the best in the business, honing their skills and contributing to the industry with a focus on excellence and professionalism.
PeachTree Music Group is a comprehensive production company, making it an ideal asset for any emerging company or venture. Unlike many others, PTMG offers a unique advantage with the expertise and discerning ears of true executives, producers, and engineers. This blend of skills ensures high-quality production and insightful industry knowledge, positioning PTMG as a valuable partner for successful ventures in the entertainment industry.

Peachtree Music Group (PTMG)

PeachTree Music Group is a multimedia entertainment company dedicated to providing profitable and positive audio and visual entertainment to a diverse, international audience. PeachTree is committed to delivering wholesome entertainment that maintains high quality and broad appeal without sacrificing commercial success. The company firmly believes that engaging and enjoyable content can be achieved while upholding a standard of excellence and integrity.








Friday, March 11, 2011

New-music-Dj-Pharris-feat-R-Kelly-Fabolous-Fat-Joe-Busta-Rhymes-The-Money



@antonio7opca7,@streetreadyent,@3-D,@DJPharris Ft. @MyFabolouslife, @Kelzodiac,@Busabusss & Fat Joe
Produced by: Daniel "3-DIGITAL" Dixon for DigitalBeatz.net
Co Produced by: Antonio TopcaT Randolph for PeachTree Music Group

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Michael Jackson warns of 2012 Illuminati


Michael Jackson warns of 2012 Illuminati

Deep Cover: Tommy Mottola Talks Working With Michael Jackson and Marriage with Mariah Carey

Bilal Khbeiz (1963, Kfarchouba) is a poet, essayist, and journalist. He regularly contributes to the newspapers Beirut Al Masa’Al Nahar, and to Future Television Beirut, among other publications and networks. Published poetry and books on cultural theory include Fi Annal jassad Khatia’ Wa Khalas (That the Body is Sin and Deliverance), Globalisation and the Manufacture of Transient EventsThe Enduring Image and the Vanishing World, and Tragedy in the Moment of Vision.

Michael Jackson Died for No Reason 

(and the Vampire that is His Life)

Bilal Khbeiz Issue #16 July 2009

Many American media outlets considered the possibility that the King of Pop’s death could have been a media stunt designed to promote the “comeback” concert scheduled for this summer in London. But what could have been a media stunt later became a possible homicide. In order to prevent further speculation, the media went to work correlating and double-checking the putative cause of death. Few went so far as to accuse Michael Jackson’s personal doctor of causing his patient’s untimely death by administering the wrong medicine; most decided to investigate the side effects associated with common drugs. Tylenol, the most widely used drug worldwide, was at the center of these media investigations (the stronger varieties of Tylenol contain Codeine, and have a long list of serious side effects). Other news networks followed developments surrounding the death of a forty-year-old woman, reportedly due to a Tylenol overdose. Michael Jackson’s sudden death needed a culprit in order for it to be justified in peoples’ minds, and Tylenol provided the perfect suspect due to its reach and ubiquity.

Meanwhile, the same media outlets that looked upon Jackson’s death with suspicion treated Neda Agha-Soltan’s death by the hands of the Basij in Iran as a fact. The Basij are known to be first-rate killers, and Neda is but one of their many victims, yet the Basij do not roam the streets of Los Angeles and New York City in search of their next kill. Who, then, is responsible for the death of Michael Jackson? It could only have been Tylenol: a lawless murderer, out of control.

Why is it so difficult to believe that Michael is dead? This question is intimately tied to his career. As is always the case with the death of a legendary figure in art or politics, the difficulty people have in accepting such death contributes to the immortality of the person in question. There are countless reasons for someone who has made it to the top to not take his own life, and Michael was at the top. Doctors were at his disposal the whole time, and he had unlimited access to medication. If there is no good reason for Michael to have died, then what could have killed him? The ultra-realists have a quick answer: he knew his grip on fame was slipping, and his creditors simply helped him off the cliff. He lived a life of abundance and spent more than he earned, even though he produced so much.

This view certainly has merit; celebrities die this way, their falls from grace haunt them at their greatest moments, and they begin to take sudden steps into the growing darkness around them. And when they retrace their steps back into the limelight, they are willing to expend whatever they have left in their possession to stay there.

Michael Jackson was one of these celebrities. He spent the last two decades of his life in freefall. During those years, he tried to invite attention to his private life and to his body. Many saw objectionable things in him despite the fact that he achieved unequalled fame as a black man in racism-plagued America. He even skinned himself, literally, to a point where he was more white than white. The boy who sang for the loss of his loved one seemed in his later years asexual. The consummate performer, a firecracker on stage, spent his last days in a pile of shaved skin and bone and the muscular remains of memories. Michael Jackson died with half a body, half a gender, and half a color. Who was he in his last days? Indeed.

It’s a tragic race to the top. Michael was, without a doubt, the greatest entertainer of his time. However, he was locked in a struggle with his own image: how could he transcend his own creation and conquer the summit he created for himself, with full knowledge of its perils? Can a sick horse outrun its younger, healthier self? Michael was more aware of his own obsolescence than anybody else in the business, and with that knowledge he was left with no choice but to transcend his body by pushing his act to its limit. He started his career as a musician, singer, and dancer, and ended up fragmenting his body into severed limbs, rendering himself unrecognizable to his audience. What is left of young Michael in this pile of humanity? Only he himself could have answered such a question. Piece by piece, he offered his body to the stage until he reached the point of no return. That was when he began to eradicate the remains of his former self, his memory: the idealized image of a beautiful black man, the innovative dancer (it’s rumored that he wore himself out during the rehearsals just before his death). Anything else that emerged from the mediasphere after his long sabbatical became, in the eyes of viewers, images of a dying man.

Did Michael Jackson die, or did his image? Let’s assume for a moment that his downward spiral was not preordained. He might not have foreseen the outcomes of his actions, but he was most certainly conscious of the alterations he was making to his body. It started with local surgeries, and ended up leaving him without evidence of a former self. Yet under extremely complicated medical, nutritional, and environmental conditions, this image could still breathe and move. This painted, surrogate self was whiter and skinnier than the body it represented. In a way, it managed to sustain a life that speaks and moves and shakes hands with world leaders and celebrities—a life that comes back to sing and dance.

He killed his body for his image, performing a true work of art. Had he not been captured by death and successfully ascended the stage, he would have assumed yet another image that was not his. We will not reference the many installation artists who have used their bodies as canvasses because none of them reached Michael’s Deleuzian relation with art. He succeeded in sealing off all his orifices, becoming an image that cannot nourish itself or breathe, or has perhaps discovered an alternative to life, one so far unknown to humans. There is more “art” in his image than flesh and bone.

Michael forced this rubble of image and human remains to survive on very little for years. It is those years that are at the center of the way images are studied from a Barthesian perspective, in the way they encapsulate eternity in a single frame. Who could have imagined, prior to Michael’s expensive experiment, that a dead man’s image could stay alive? Who could have imagined that a man might replace his body with an image that would then become a shrine, beckoning visitors for eternity?

Michael was the object of envy and admiration when he was on the rise. However, those sentiments dissipated as he began to perform his alienating physical transformations; people rejected the idea of him and the desire to emulate him in any way. And it remains likely that many will be similarly crowned the greatest artists of their time, but it is less likely that they will approach what he attained as an eternal image of the artist’s obsolescence.

People couldn’t believe that Michael was dead because there was no longer anything left of him upon which nature could take its course. This kind of death is so alien and rare that the only way of dealing with it is to imagine the impossibility of its occurrence. And if it did indeed take place, then it is not so different from destroying a Van Gogh at the Louvre.

Neda Agha-Soltan is dead because she lived her life with her body. Michael, on the other hand, was nothing but an image whose death could have been prevented by injecting it with some human blood.