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Celebrating Ronald Isley's Birthday With 15 Smooth Tracks To Soothe The Soul
Celebrating Ronald Isley's Birthday With 15 Smooth Tracks To Soothe The Soul

Black America Web

time22-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Black America Web

Celebrating Ronald Isley's Birthday With 15 Smooth Tracks To Soothe The Soul

Source: Jackson State University / Getty Noted as one of the greatest and most distinct voices in music, Ronald Isley is celebrating his 84th birthday today (May 21) with no signs of slowing down anytime soon. Ron Isley and the Isley Brothers stand as pillars of modern music, influencing countless artists and shaping genres for over six decades. Their sound, a seamless blend of soul, R&B, funk, rock, and pop, has left an indelible mark on the music landscape. The Isley Brothers began their storied career in the late 1950s, powered by their breakout hit 'Shout.' A raw, gospel-inspired anthem, it set the stage for their genre-defying approach to music. By the 1960s, they delivered hits like 'Twist and Shout,' which gained even greater fame with The Beatles' rendition. The group also saw success with Motown's 'This Old Heart of Mine (Is Weak for You),' showcasing their soulful balladry. The 1970s, a golden era for the band, brought their transition into funk and rock. Tracks like 'It's Your Thing,' 'Fight the Power,' and 'That Lady' epitomized their versatility and saw them topping charts. Their album 3 + 3 became a landmark for its genre-crossing sound and the expansion of their creative power. Ron Isley's unmistakable falsetto and smooth delivery became their calling card, anchoring every song with emotional depth. Their music influenced generations of artists. Hip-hop culture especially adopted the Isley Brothers' sound, with songs sampled by legends like Tupac, The Notorious B.I.G., Ice Cube, and Jay-Z. Tracks like 'Between the Sheets' and 'Footsteps in the Dark' became foundational samples in rap, further solidifying their relevance in new musical landscapes. Ron Isley, with his enduring charisma and adaptability, kept the group's legacy alive. Recent collaborations with artists like Beyoncé show their continued relevancy. Their longevity speaks to their ability to evolve while staying true to the emotional core of their music. The Isley Brothers aren't just a band; they're cultural icons. Their music, marked by innovation and soul, remains timeless, bridging generations and defining what it means to be legendary. And with the man known as 'Mr. Biggs' at the helm, it is guaranteed that their legacy will live on for generations to come. Celebrate Ronald Isley's Birthday with 15 Smooth Tracks Below! Celebrating Ronald Isley's Birthday With 15 Smooth Tracks To Soothe The Soul was originally published on Black America Web Featured Video CLOSE

New Insights Into Older Hearts
New Insights Into Older Hearts

New York Times

time15-02-2025

  • Health
  • New York Times

New Insights Into Older Hearts

It turns out that the Isley Brothers, who sang that 1966 Motown hit 'This Old Heart of Mine (Is Weak for You),' were onto something when they linked age to an aching and flagging heart. Heart disease, the nation's leading cause of death and disability, has been diagnosed in about 6 percent of Americans ages 45 to 64, but in more than 18 percent of those over 65, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Old hearts are physiologically different. 'The heart gets stiffer as we age,' said Dr. John Dodson, director of the geriatric cardiology program at NYU Langone Health. 'It doesn't fill with blood as easily. The muscles don't relax as well.' Age also changes the blood vessels, which can grow rigid and cause hypertension, and the nerve fibers that send electrical impulses to the heart. It affects other organs and systems that play a role in cardiovascular health, too. 'After age 75 is when things accelerate,' Dr. Dodson said. But in recent years, dramatic improvements in treatments for many kinds of cardiovascular conditions have helped reduce both heart attacks and cardiac deaths. 'Cardiology has been blessed with a lot of progress and research and drug development,' said Dr. Karen Alexander, who teaches geriatric cardiology at Duke University. 'The medications are better than ever, and we know how to use them better.' That can complicate decision-making for heart patients in their 70s and beyond, however. Certain procedures or regimens may not markedly extend the lives of older patients or improve the quality of their remaining years, especially if they have already suffered heart attacks and are contending with other illnesses as well. 'We don't need to open an artery just because there's an artery to be opened,' said Dr. Alexander, referring to inserting a stent. 'We need to think of the whole person.' Recent research indicates that some frequently used medical approaches don't pay off for older patients, while too few of them take advantage of one intervention that does. Here's some of what researchers are learning about old hearts: An implantable cardioverter defibrillator, or I.C.D., is a small battery-powered device that is placed under the skin and delivers a shock in the case of sudden cardiac arrest. 'It's easy to sell these things to patients,' said Dr. Daniel Matlock, a geriatrician and researcher at the University of Colorado. 'You say, 'This can prevent sudden cardiac death.' The patient says, 'That sounds great.'' In 2005, an influential study persuaded Medicare to cover I.C.D.s in patients with heart failure, even those without high-risk arrhythmias, and 'it just took off,' Dr. Matlock said. From 2015 through September 2024, surgeons implanted 585,000 such devices in patients' chests, according to the American College of Cardiology's registry. That's probably an undercount, as not all hospitals participate in the registry. But in 2017, among patients with nonischemic heart failure (meaning that the heart isn't pumping effectively but there is no blocked artery), another influential study showed that I.C.D.s did not reduce mortality for patients over 70. The device only prevented sudden cardiac deaths, the authors noted — and those occur more frequently in younger patients. Moreover, 'at 85 or 90, sudden death is not necessarily the worst thing that can happen,' Dr. Matlock said, compared to death from 'progressive heart failure, which can go quickly or last for years; it's unpredictable.' The wallop of an I.C.D. shock can also frighten and distress older patients, who often are unaware that the device can be deactivated with a computer. Cardiologists and researchers still debate how much I.C.D.s benefit older patients. But because cardiac drugs have grown so much more potent since 2005, a major multisite study is underway to determine, among patients at lower risk of sudden death, whether medications alone might now be more effective. Medications alone already appear to be at least as effective in treating older people who have suffered the kind of heart attacks not caused by a suddenly and completely blocked artery. (Technically these are referred to as NSTEMI, for non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction.) Half of these occur in people over 70, said Dr. Vijay Kunadian, a professor of interventional cardiology at Newcastle University in England and the lead author of a recent study in The New England Journal of Medicine. 'Older people often are underrepresented in research,' Dr. Kunadian said. 'There are a lot of preconceived biases.' So her team recruited an older-than-typical sample (average age 82) in which to compare the benefits of conservative and invasive treatment. Half of the 1,500 patients in the study began a regimen of cardiac medications that included blood thinners, statins, beta blockers and ACE inhibitors. The other half had more invasive treatment, starting with an angiogram (an X-ray of the blood vessels). Then, roughly half of that group received a stent or, in much smaller numbers, underwent bypass surgery. These patients were also prescribed the same kinds of medications as the patients who were treated with drugs alone. Over four years, the team found no difference in the patients' risk of cardiovascular death or a nonfatal heart attack. Although surgical risks generally rise with age, complications were low in both groups. Facing such situations, older patients and their families need to ask important questions, Dr. Alexander said: 'How is this going to help me, and what are the other options, especially if it's invasive? Is it necessary? What if I don't do this?' Dr. Kunadian agreed. 'One size does not fit all in this group,' she said. Invasive treatment did not benefit patients, but it didn't harm them, either. Still, Dr. Kunadian said, 'if they're very frail, living in a nursing home with dementia, with a number of other conditions, it's reasonable to say it's in their best interest to use medical therapy alone.' One intervention known to benefit patients with heart disease is cardiac rehabilitation: a program of regular, supervised exercise that significantly reduces heart attacks, hospitalization and cardiovascular deaths. But cardiac rehab remains perennially underused. Only about one-quarter of eligible patients participate, Dr. Dodson said, and among older adults, who could benefit even more, the proportion is lower still. 'There are barriers for people in the 70s and 80s,' he said. They have to show up at a facility to exercise, so sometimes 'transportation is a problem.' And, he added, 'people can get deconditioned or afraid of activity. They may worry about falling.' The in-person NYU Langone program involves three exercise sessions a week for three months, with nutritional and psychological counseling. Since enrollment among seniors had been disappointing, researchers tried replicating it with a remote program. They offered it to patients (average age 71) with ischemic heart disease (caused by narrowed arteries, which impede blood and oxygen flow to the heart) who had suffered a heart attack or undergone a stent procedure. Each received a tablet computer and broadband access so that they could undertake a rehab program at home. An exercise therapist checked in by phone weekly. At-home participation fell off over time, however. After three months, those assigned to remote rehab showed no greater functional capacity — measured by how far they could walk in six minutes — than a similar group who followed the usual care. Was that because seniors struggled with the technology? Or feared exercising with heart problems? Would working out in person, alongside others on treadmills and elliptical trainers, inspire more engagement? 'We need to figure out the delivery system that's most effective,' Dr. Dodson said. 'What's most motivating for older patients?' He'll be trying again.

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