Monday, 8 September 2008

Wonderwall Not Enough to Stop Oasis Attack

Never undervalue the determined vengeance of a Jay-Z fan.


Kidding by, Oasis guitar player and honcho songwriter Noel Gallagher was admitted to a hospital in Toronto Sunday night after a man rushed the stage and attacked the British rocker, departure him with a perchance fractured costa and suspected ligament damage.


The incident took place at Toronto's 2008 V Festival, in the middle of the group's performance of "Morning Glory."


As caught on video, a man rushed up from the back up of the stage and pushed a clearly unsuspecting Gallagher downcast onto his sound equipment.


The man then made a lunge toward Noel's bandmate and brother, Liam Gallagher, but is caught by security in front he's capable to make contact.



























Liam Gallagher attempted to reciprocate the attack on his and his sibling's behalf, simply was held back, and the assaulter dragged backstage, before he could do so.


According to the band's official site, Noel "fell heavily onto his proctor speakers" as a result of the attack.


After the incident, the performance was halted and the stage cleared. About 15 minutes later, the band returned to the crowd of 25,000 to finish out their set, with the injured Gallagher tattle the audience that the attack had added "a little hullabaloo" to the night.


The musician was taken to the hospital immediately after the concert, one of the last on their today potentially truncate North American tour, and the attacker, a man in his 30s whose name has not been released, was taken into police custody and is expected to be charged with assault.


A festival spokesman called the incident a "security breach" and a spokesman for the band seemed extremely accepting of the event.


"Oasis understand sometimes these things happen," he said.


It has, in fact, happened before.


Back in 1994, Noel was punched in the face during a gig in Newcastle when a dissatisfied fan jumped onstage. The night concluded with a full-blown hearing riot.


Just deuce dates on the face of it remain on Oasis' North American duty tour, with the next show scheduled to take place in London, Ontario, on Tuesday night. While the band has not yet cancelled the show, they have informed fans to keep tabs on their website, where they will announce whatever change of plans.


The wooden leg officially wraps in New York on Friday in front returning to the U.K.










More info

Friday, 29 August 2008

Gosh, We Hope We Love �Gavin & Stacey� As Much As Our Friends Tell Us We Will

Courtesy of BBC America



This morning we read the glowing Times review of BBC import Gavin & Stacey � "the most endearing comedy about love to come to television since the Manolos were packed up and put away" � and felt our interest piqued. Hmmm � this has potential, we thought. We glanced shyly at the L.A. Times for further assurance and found G&S called "a gem of a show." The more we read about this award-winning British sitcom � about two twentysomethings who "have spoken on the phone for six months when they consent to a blind date" � the more excited we got about a program we'd not yet previewed. Sure, we've had dalliances with a lot of television comedies before, but you never know � could this be the one?




Needless to say, we did the obligatory Facebook research. Even the main characters' friends seemed like people we'd want to spend time with, like Smithy, who the New York Times says "fears that Gavin may soon renege on their commitment to sample and rate every beer in the world." Yes, the show sounded like something we might actually stick with for the long haul, and by noon, we were cursing ourselves for not setting the TiVo and having trouble concentrating on insignificant things like the Democratic convention. Now the anticipation is absolutely killing us. Soon we'll find out if Gavin & Stacey is truly as wonderful as we imagine. (We haven't even picked out an outfit for tonight! We're thinking sweatpants and a T-shirt.)



But what if, what if it's not perfect? What if it's � boring? How did the title duo wait six whole months to find out if they were meant to be? We're going crazy after, like, five hours.



Review: 'Gavin & Stacey' [LAT]
English Lad, Welsh Lass and Cheeky Pals [NYT]









More information

Tuesday, 19 August 2008

Britney Spears Back With Billionaire Lover?

...more Britney Spears �

It might non be merely Britney Spears' career that is on the up � her love love also appears to be in recovery.


Friends of the singer � who is currently working on a new album � enounce that shutterbug Adnan Ghalib is ultimately out of the painting now that she has another dear interest in the cast of 44-year-old billionaire hosteller George Maloof.


The pair were snapped relaxing by the kitty in Cabo San Lucas in Mexico last week, and its claimed that Maloof has pledged to help Britney relaunch her music career.


"I�m sure George�s billions will come in very useful now that Britney�s padre is in control of her assets," a source tells The Daily Mail.


Brit's manager Larry Ruddolph recently shot down reports that the isaac Bashevis Singer is dating her bodyguard.


At least Maloof can't be accused of being in it for the money...

Saturday, 9 August 2008

Peter Case

Peter Case   
Artist: Peter Case

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


The Man with the Blue Post Modern Fragmented Neo-Traditionalist Guitar   
 The Man with the Blue Post Modern Fragmented Neo-Traditionalist Guitar

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 1


Peter Case   
 Peter Case

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 12




After disbanding the Los Angeles new wave/power pop radical the Plimsouls, Peter Case launched a career as an authoritative American singer/songwriter specializing in the flat-pick guitar elan and semiautobiographical stories of drifters delivered in a fib vogue. Born in the '50s and growing up in upstate New York, Case was elysian, like whatever number of edward Young work force of his generation, by Elvis Presley and the Beatles. He was also a fan of the tribe and megrims of Mississippi John Hurt, Leadbelly, and Woody Guthrie and as a teenager took to the troubadour's animation, playing coffeehouses and busking. He was discovered on the streets of San Francisco in 1976 by songster Jack Lee, with whom he collaborated in the Nerves, a short-lived simply influential business leader pop act. The confluence light-emitting diode to a be active to L.A. and the geological formation of the Plimsouls in 1980. After the mathematical group establish success with the business leader pop banner "A Million Miles Away," they called it quits and Case debuted with Dick Case for Geffen in 1986. It was a appeal of unmanageable tribe songs produced by T-Bone Burnett and included co-writes with Burnett and Case's humble gear married woman, Victoria Williams, along with performances by John Hiatt and Roger McGuinn. Case was among a fistful of bikers world Health Organization had been honing his acoustic songs in clubs, portion to launch the supposed "unplugged" motion. In 1989, he released The Man With the Blue Post-Modern Fragmented Neo-Traditionalist Guitar, at one time more with the process of choice musicians like David Hidalgo, Ry Cooder, and Benmont Tench. In a Rolling Stone question that yr, Bruce Springsteen cited Case as the songster he was listening to most at the time. For 1992's Six pack of Love, Case chucked the tribe esthetic for something more rock-oriented, just the accumulation flopped as did his radio link with Geffen. He regrouped and self-released Sings Like Hell, recorded with Marvin Etzioni in a Los Angeles living room in 1993. The enduringness of that tone ending earned him a new recording compact with Vanguard in 1995 and Case came on hard for Lacerate Again, his c. H. Best fructify of supererogatory songs about lonely losers since Blasphemous Guitar.


In 1996, the Plimsouls re-formed for some reunion shows and a recording session at the Epitaph Records studios; Kool Trash (Precarious City) finally proverb release in 1998, patch Case continued to tour and record as a solo work. In 1997, he hosted a weekly evening for songwriters at Santa Monica's reanimated Ash Grove tribe guild. In between cathartic deuce more records for Vanguard, Full Service No Waiting (1997) and Quick Saucer Blues (2000), Case curated a musical program for the Getty Museum in Los Angeles and performed Beatles songs at the Hollywood Bowl with Sir George Martin. In bound 2001, he compiled Avalon Blues, a protection to his hero, Mississippi John Hurt, featuring contributions from Lucinda Williams, Dave Alvin, and Steve Earle for Vanguard; it was nominated for a Grammy in the Best Traditional Folk category. That year he too self-released Thank You St. Jude, a collection of songs from his catalog recorded in solo acoustic arrangements with fiddle. In fall 2002, he released his ninth solo album, Beeline, which combines his rock-folk style with new rhythms and prepared guitar sounds. In 2004, Case historied 20 years as a solo creative person (and 10 years with Vanguard Records) with the exit of the compilation Who's Gonna Go Your Crooked Mile?, which featured highlights from his Vanguard catalog as well as trey new recordings. The bluesy Let Us Now Praise Sleepy John arrived in May 2007.






Tuesday, 1 July 2008

Doug Cameron

Doug Cameron   
Artist: Doug Cameron

   Genre(s): 
New Age
   



Discography:


Celtic Crossroads; The Uncharted Path   
 Celtic Crossroads; The Uncharted Path

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 15


Celtic Crossroads   
 Celtic Crossroads

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 15


Passport   
 Passport

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 10


Rendezvous   
 Rendezvous

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 11


Journey To You   
 Journey To You

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 9


Mil Amores   
 Mil Amores

   Year: 1990   
Tracks: 9




Doug Cameron is an excellent electric violinist world Health Organization so far has been substance to execute generally in the crosswalk and pop/jazz line of business. Growing up in New York, Cameron started on the violin when he was five-spot. He developed cursorily and was still in grammar school when he played in the Westchester Conservatory Orchestra and the New York State Youth Orchestra. He for the most part studied classical music up to high school (including starring a group called the Baroque Bums), then became interested in improvising and was particularly doting of the recordings of the Allman Brothers. Attending the University of Buffalo, Cameron often played in local clubs. One day Gregg Allman sat in and he was so impressed by Cameron that the violinist joined him for a tour and a recording. Graduating from college in 1978, Cameron settled in Los Angeles. Since then he has worked in the studios and with such musicians as David Benoit, George Benson, Earth, Wind & Fire, Doc Severinson's nuclear fusion reaction band Xebron, Jose Feliciano and many others. As a leader, Doug Cameron has emphasised instrumental pop in his music, recording sets for Spindletop (starting in 1986), Narada Equinox and Higher Octave.





RICKY SKAGGS & KENTUCKY THUNDER

Controversial lineup plagues Glastonbury fest








With three days to go before Glastonbury there are still tickets available, an unusual situation for the annual celebration of pop music which many people blame on this year�s controversial lineup.

Armed with wellington boots and enough toilet paper to last four days, 134,000 fans will pitch tents and share 3,000 temporary toilets on a 400-acre dairy farm in southwest England.

There they will hope to catch performances from the likes of Amy Winehouse, Leonard Cohen and Jay-Z over the three-day event.

�I would think in the 1990s there were occasions when it got to the point that tickets were still on sale at this moment,� said festival spokesman Crispin Aubrey.

�Certainly since 2001, when we introduced a new impenetrable fence it has sold out every year since then until now,� he added. �It�s been rather slow selling the last twenty thousand.�

The usual excitement that surrounds the festival, which started in 1970, has been overshadowed by U.S. rapper Jay-Z�s headline appearance.

�(Jay-Z) has caused a lot of discussion but we�ve had a lot of people who�ve said it�s a brilliant, brave decision to do something different,� Aubrey said. �We often try to have relatively mainstream people at the top of the bill, like Paul McCartney, and I think it was thought this year �let�s go for something different�, like a solo black performer.�

The festival�s cause was not helped when British rock royalty in the form of Oasis� Noel Gallagher weighed into the debate saying a hip-hop act was wrong for a festival whose roots are in guitar. Jay-Z responded earlier this month by dismissing the debate as �ridiculous.�

�If we don�t embrace what is new, then how do we progress?� he told BBC Radio.

Some traditional Glastonbury-goers are happy about the choice of Jay-Z, saying the backlash against him is unnecessary. 










See Also

Hollywood studios in a retro mood

NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - For those ready to move past the endless stream of dark dramas from fall 2007, get ready for a new barrage -- from the 1960s, the 1940s and the 1780s.


Studios are preparing to unleash a hailstorm of period movies -- in broad terms, films set in an era other than the current -- in the fall, at times turning the multiplex circa 2008 into a veritable cinematic museum.


The films range from large studio productions (Clint Eastwood's 1920s missing-child drama "Changeling" and Baz Luhrmann's World War II epic "Australia") to specialty releases (the mid-century Southern tale "The Secret Life of Bees" and the 1960s Catholic-school drama "Doubt").


They veer from costume dramas (the 18th century Keira Knightley quill-and-wig extravaganza "The Duchess") to political sagas (Ron Howard's "Frost/Nixon") to 1950s family dramas (the Sam Mendes-Leonardo DiCaprio collaboration "Revolutionary Road") to biopics (Gus Van Sant's "Milk") to yet more WWII throwbacks (Ed Zwick's "Defiance," Mikael Hafstrom's "Shanghai" and Spike Lee's "Miracle at St. Anna").


"It seems like Hollywood is merging with the History Channel," media critic Robert Thompson noted wryly.


Studios have a long tradition of producing movies set in previous eras, from epics like "Ben-Hur" to intimate stories like "The Ice Storm." But the latest wave of period movies is notable for several reasons.


These movies are coming all at once -- scores of pictures crammed into a period of just 10 or 12 weeks. The stakes and expectations for these movies also are higher because the overall number of fall specialty releases is expected to be down by as much as 25% from the nearly 70 titles released last year. And, maybe most critical, these period films are being released at a moment when questions linger from last season about whether the audience can find enough to identify with in fall releases.


That combination is enough to make some executives nervous. "It's a lot of period movies, and it's going to be a question of who'll be able to connect," said one high-ranking arthouse-studio executive releasing a period film.