Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
Jerome Isma-Ae
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Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi

DIVE ON 📷 OUT NOW!!!
Original Mix by: Frankie M & @LukeHunterMusic
Remix by: @JeromeIsmaAe
beatport.com/release/dive-o…

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Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi

Our guest tomorrow night is @JeromeIsmaAe, a Munich-born producer and label founder and one of the most distinctive voices in progressive house and trance.
Hear him on the Guest Mix tomorrow night from 7pm BST via @aboveandbeyond's YouTube or Twitch.

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Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi

@JeromeIsmaAe steps in with a new take on Begin Again, the @dennissheperd x Ayandra collaboration first introduced on The Next Generation.
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Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi

#UTB701 2. @dennissheperd & #Ayandra - Begin Again (@jeromeismaae Extended Remix) #ATTL UnleashTheBeat.lnk.to/UTBDIFM @diradio #UnleashTheBeat #EDMFestival

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Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi

Life magazine published this photo of Malcolm X holding an M1 Carbine in March 1964 after he received numerous death threats by the Nation of Islam for exposing Elijah Muhammed for having children with underage girls.
In March 1964, Life magazine published one of the most iconic photographs of Malcolm X: standing by the window of his Queens home, gripping an M1 Carbine rifle. He had just broken with the Nation of Islam after exposing Elijah Muhammad for fathering children with underage girls, and the organization he once served now threatened his life. The image symbolized not aggression, but vigilance, a man prepared to defend his family and his beliefs.
That same year, Malcolm was mentoring a young Cassius Clay, soon to be Muhammad Ali. The two had forged a close bond, with Malcolm guiding Ali through his early faith journey. But when Ali chose to stay loyal to Elijah Muhammad, their friendship fractured, a decision Ali would later call one of his deepest regrets.
After the rifle photo, Malcolm’s life accelerated. He founded the Muslim Mosque, Inc. and the Organization of Afro-American Unity, traveled to Mecca and Africa, and began reshaping his vision into a global human rights movement. But the threats only escalated. His home was firebombed in February 1965.
On February 21, 1965, just eleven months after that photograph, Malcolm X was assassinated at the Audubon Ballroom in New York, leaving behind a legacy of courage, transformation, and defiance.
© LIFE Magazine
#archaeohistories

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Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
Jerome Isma-Ae retweetledi
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