BancoPosta

Music for TV and radio ad campaign in Italy comencing September 2017. Version of “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” interpreted and produced by Juan Cook. (Robert Hazard/Sony ATV)

Jungle Planet – worldwide release


RTVE – Spain’s national broadcasting network has presented ‘Jungle planet’, the new documentary series produced by Terra Incognita. Completely filmed in 4K format, the series travels the world in order to discover the most impressive forests and jungles on the Earth and offer a complete view of its fauna and biodiversity. The 26 episodes visit places such as Madagascar, Australia, California, Costa Rica, Canary Islands or Finnish taiga, among others. An opportunity to know the nature of the five continents.

Both Spanish as well as international soundtracks have been recorded at Imagine Sounds & Visions.

Pocoyo Playset App wins Kidscreen Summit Award

The US Hispanic network The Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network (HITN) and the Spanish producer Zinkia have won an award for the mobile platform Pocoyo Playset: Let’s Move.
The mobile platform was crowned best educational pre-school app during the recent Kidscreen Summit in Miami.Based on the animated series Pocoyo, the app was launched last year and has been recommended for preschoolers by the US Department of Education.Through a number of videos, games and activities, the app helps children to understand the human body and it how it works.

“In this way, children are able to improve their mobility skills, learn more vocabulary, listen and follow instructions, while they are having fun with Pocoyo,” Zinkia said.

As a standalone platform, the app is only available for iOS devices, but it is also integrated with the Pocoyo Playset app for Android mobile screens.

The Tricky Band


The Tricky Band is an animated music induction TV series for young children consisting of 28 episodes produced by 3de3 Animation. Mr Jackson: Juan Cook. Children’s voices: Elisabeth Gray. Voice recording: Imagine Sounds & Visions.

Cantamus – Hallelujah

Written by Leonard Cohen. Arranged by Juan L. Cook. Included in the album titled “Joy” by the Cantamus Girls Choir.

The Cantamus Girls Choir is a choir based in Mansfield, Nottinghamshire and consists of approximately forty girls aged between thirteen and nineteen. The choir was founded in 1968 by two married couples: Pamela (Director) and Geoffrey Thompson (Treasurer), and Sheila (Secretary) and Ivan Haslam (Tickets/CD A Junior Choir was added in 1992 taking girls aged 9, who graduate into the Senior Choir at an appropriate time.
Michael Neaum became the accompanist in 1976 and retired officially in 2006. Ann Irons joined as Assistant Director in 1976. Elaine Guy was a former member and became a Vocal Tutor in 1983. Joy Nicol became a Vocal Tutor in 1995 but died in 2010, aged 45. Philip Robinson was appointed an accompanist in 2006.[1] Notable titles are the Choir of the World title at the 1997 Llangollen Eisteddfod, Olympic Champions title at the World Choir Games in 2004 and 2006, and the Grand Prix award at the Riva de Garda Festival in 1996.
In December 2005, the choir recorded the EMI Album ‘Cantamus’ one track of which entered the UK Singles Chart with their cover version of “Everybody’s Gotta Learn Sometime”.[2]
In 2013 Pamela Cook died, and the baton was passed to Ann Irons with Elaine Guy as Assistant. Tributes from former students, associates and friends from all over the globe poured in, recognising her amazing contribution to their lives and to choral music generally. She was due to receive an honorary degree from Nottingham University but died before it could be awarded. This would have added to all her other awards – MBE, Fellowships of both Birmingham Conservatoire and the Royal Academy of Music, and many others. She is to be commemorated in Mansfield with her sculptured head to be displayed in the Palace Theatre and by the commissioning of a special choral work dedicated to her.
Cantamus’s major achievements were when the Senior Choir competed at the 4th World Choir Games in Xiamen, China in July 2006, winning two gold medals, and achieved the highest mark of the competition with a score of 89.13.[3] The choir gave its first public concert in 1968 since when more than 400 girls have sung with Cantamus.

www.cantamus.com
www.imaginesv.com