Sisa | th

Sinn Sisamouth (Khmer: ស៊ីន ស៊ីសាមុត) (1935 - c. 1975) born in Stung Treng Province, Cambodia was a famous and highly prolific Cambodian singer-songwriter from the 1950s through the 70s. Widely considered the "King of Khmer music," Sisamouth, along with Ros Sereysothea, Pan Ron and other artists, was part of a thriving pop music scene in Phnom Penh that blended elements of Khmer traditional music with the sounds of rhythm and blues and rock and roll to make a Westernized sound akin to psychedelic or garage rock. Sisamouth is believed to have been killed under the Khmer Rouge regime. .
Urmas Sisask (born September 9, 1960) is an Estonian composer. One of the major inspirations for his music is astronomy. Based on the trajectories of the planets in the solar system, he created the planetal scale, a mode consisting of the notes C#, D, F#, G#, and A. Later, he discovered to his surprise that this was exactly the same as the Japanese Kumayoshi mode. Apart from choral works Urmas Sisask has written chamber, instrumental and orchestral music. He has developed his own, expressive language with an idiom closer to the old authentic church modes than to the tensions of...
Siiri Sisask (21. September, 1968) is Estonian singer and songwriter. She has also been engaged in acting. She is mostly singing her own creations. In October 2018, she candidated for the fashist party EKRE, claiming she mostly agreed with their opinions. EKRE is known for their openly racist, xenophobic and homophobic views. .
hellothisisalex is Melissa Creasey and Mark Prier, two new-school analogue kids from smalltown Ontario. Together, they write bizarre electro pop soundscapes infused with whimsy, non-linear narrative, and a love of pop music and experimental audio. In February 2001, they christened themselves 'hellothisisalex,' both a greeting and being (with both male and female reproductive organs, no less). Their music has been described as "simple, yet effective, and without any pretension" by Electroage, and as "fuzzy analogue tones and jaunty pop beats" by Ben Rayner of the Toronto Star. The music the duo write is primarily electronic, filled with raw analogue synths...