Inon+Beiser | it

Winona Ryder (born Winona Laura Horowitz; October 29, 1971) is an American actress. She made her film debut in the 1986 film Lucas. Ryder's first significant role came in Tim Burton's Beetlejuice (1988) as Lydia Deetz, a goth teenager, which won her critical and commercial recognition. After various appearances in film and television, Ryder continued her career with the cult film Heathers (1988), a controversial satire of teenage suicide and high school life, which drew Ryder further critical and commercial attention. She later appeared in Mermaids (1990) earning a Golden Globe nomination, in Burton's Edward Scissorhands (1990) and Francis Ford...
Winona is a woman without a past and a band with an infinite future. Their short story started when Winona met master musicians Craig Armstrong and Scott Fraser with a view to creating glacial European pop music in 2006. Memories of Winona's inception are inevitably hazy. There was a hotel bar up in the 12th arrondissement in Paris, an evening of considerable abandon in New York’s Metropolitan Club and an inspired saki session on a Shibuya side-street. Between cities and cigarettes, Winona became a reality. The union of these two softly-spoken Scotsmen , one the most significant film composer of...
Miikka Leinonen is a 27 year old producer living in Jyväskylä, Finland. He produces uplifting and progressive trance. His goal is to create beautiful harmonies and rich soundscapes, and mix them up with driving basslines and straight forward ass-kicking beats. Miikka's tracks has been released on labels like Five AM, ATCR, Alter Ego, Real Music, Inspired and Long Life Recordings, and he's been playlisted by many of the top DJs around the world. .
Maya Beiser is an American cellist who lives in New York City. She has an international career as a performer and recording artist. She was raised on a kibbutz in Israel by her French mother and Argentine father, and graduated from Yale University School of Music. The New Yorker magazine described her as a “cello goddess” and the San Francisco Chronicle called her “the queen of contemporary cello”. .