Monday, 30 June 2008

Wolfgang Reithofer

Wolfgang Reithofer   
Artist: Wolfgang Reithofer

   Genre(s): 
Other
   Easy Listening
   



Discography:


Kama Sutra   
 Kama Sutra

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 9


Orphicism   
 Orphicism

   Year:    
Tracks: 4


Meditation For Guitar   
 Meditation For Guitar

   Year:    
Tracks: 6


Esoteric - Gregorian Ceremonies   
 Esoteric - Gregorian Ceremonies

   Year:    
Tracks: 7


Celtic Runes   
 Celtic Runes

   Year:    
Tracks: 4


Alchemy   
 Alchemy

   Year:    
Tracks: 4




 






Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Michael Moore - Moore I Shouldnt Make Fahrenheit 911 Sequel

Controversial filmmaker MICHAEL MOORE confesses he shouldn't be allowed to make a sequel to his controversial documentary FAHRENHEIT 9/11 - because its plot is "toxic".

The Oscar winner has signed a deal to begin work on the follow-up to his hit film, and is currently offering the idea to foreign buyers at the Cannes Film Festival in France.

The original film took aim at the Bush government in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks in September 2001.

But Moore admits making another controversial documentary will be "risky".

He says, "It's something I shouldn't make, something that is dangerous."

The new movie will pick up where the last one left off, following Bush's plummeting ratings, the struggling U.S. economy and the ongoing war in Iraq.




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Monday, 16 June 2008

Aditya Chakrabortty on Utsavam, a new exhibition of music from across India

You expect ancestor worship to be an exotic thing, and the Sora tribespeople of eastern India don't disappoint. There are the men in red headdresses blowing crescent-shaped horns to summon the dead, the priestess clutching an axe for animal sacrifice. All is as promised by National Geographic. What you aren't prepared for, however, is heathenism's homely side.

The Sora's solemn gesture of reverence, for instance, is to unfurl a sturdy black brolly straight out of 60s Whitehall. While the shamaness enters a trance, children cluster around, still in their school uniforms. And before villagers dance with the spirits of long-gone relatives, they change into their best outfits.












The other revelation is the music. To wake the dead, the Sora assemble a peasant orchestra of oboes and drums. It is scratchy and raucous and fervent - surely, you think, an ancestor deserves something more stately? But no, this is the soundtrack - and the entire ritual has been caught on film for Utsavam, a new exhibition at London's Horniman Museum, of music from across India. Utsavam is full of such rarities - and goes some way to showing just how varied the country's culture really is.

Indian music in the UK is dominated by Bollywood and bhangra. Both are popular in India, but they aren't all the subcontinent has to offer. Those cliches about a billion people speaking dozens of languages and even more dialects are just as true of India's music: it has not one style of classical music but two distinct ones divided roughly by geography, and dozens of forms of folk music varying across regions. The Horniman showcases five provinces, stretching from the eastern Himalayas down to Kerala in the south-west; Utsavam's curators regret not being able to squeeze in more pit stops. "Each region is very different," explains Rolf Killius, who did most of the legwork for the exhibition. For example, rhythm becomes more important the further south one goes. "Even southern classical music is much more percussion-based," he says. "The melody is sometimes there just to support the rhythm."

Kerala's temple drumming is a good example. It's a big industry in the southern state - Killius cites one district in central Kerala with 60,000 residents, of whom 2,000 are professional temple musicians. Large festivals attract thousands of Hindu worshippers, convoys of elephants carrying shrines, and orchestras of up to 200 instruments, mainly drums. A single piece can take up to four hours, and is improvised from a rhythm known both to musicians and devotees - and one that gets ever faster. "By the end, the pilgrims are swaying ecstatically, and the drums are going, 'Brrrrrrrrrr ... '"

Such complex music has much in common with India's classical tradition, says Somjit Dasgupta, who plays the classical sarod, a stringed instrument held like a guitar. "I was taught folk - and that these divisions were made by scholars for easier classification." Even Indian film music used to feed off both classical and folk. "Up until the 50s, you had great composers who were influenced by all these types of music. Now the film industry doesn't want to know - and the discos only play noisy tunes that go, 'Da-la-la.'"

Or something like that. Music-lovers aside, peasant culture has long struggled to get respect outside villages. A classic Indian film from 1969, Days and Nights in the Forest, adroitly captures the traditional urban condescension towards country life. Directed by the legendary Satyajit Ray, it shows a group of Calcutta professionals on safari in search of aborigines similar to the Sora. When they meet the villagers, the result is mutual incomprehension. The city gents wander off to get drunk, ending up in the middle of a dark forest doing a dance they name the Tribal Twist.

The divide has only been widened by India's famous economic boom. The burgeoning middle class is definably urban; British notions of downshifting to arable isolation, with only a broadband connection for company, are yet to catch on. At the same time, the rural outlook is increasingly bleak. Agriculture - which still employs about half of all Indian workers - is in dire straits; every half hour a farmer in India commits suicide. Against that background, who wants to play or hear tales of rural life?

"Villagers nowadays feel increasingly ashamed of their culture and their simple instruments," says Killius. "And with television reaching the countryside, there's no need for farmers to do a performance of their own. They can see Bollywood song-and-dance routines more elaborate than any village recital. It's especially sad when you walk into a tiny village: someone brings out a little fiddle - and they play only filmi music."

When villagers emigrate to towns for work they often leave behind their musical traditions. The Jew's harp was once a staple instrument for the Monpa communities that border Tibet, but now it is nearly extinct - its low throb simply can't compete with urban noise.

Even bhangra, the one strain of Indian folk to thrive, has changed almost beyond recognition. It used to be a farmers' dance confined to the north-west region of the Punjab. Today it has migrated to city nightclubs - and is louder, coarser and more showbiz than any Punjabi farmer of the 50s would credit.

As the range of folk music narrows in India, so does what we get in the UK. "Every mela [community festival] here says it's showcasing Asian culture, but only plays bhangra and Bollywood," says Viram Jasani, a promoter of Indian music for over 30 years. "Other music of real beauty and history - both classical and folk - just gets lost. And because they never get to hear about the other stuff, UK venue owners assume it has no audience, and don't put it on."

So musicians can't find a marketplace, and audiences rarely hear new musicians. Since Indian music is not written down but passed on orally, an entire fragile tradition is under threat. "Folk is still there, but it won't be in 20 years," Killius predicts.

Such gloom is justified in some cases, but not all, suggests Dasgupta: "Even now, I come across beautiful folksingers in Bengal, housewives in the Punjab who sing traditional melodies ... There is still genuine folk music that people share and enjoy."

An example of that is in one of the Horniman's films. It shows the Keralan temple drummer Kuttan Marar teaching his children to play the centa drum, a heavy, shoulder-slung instrument. They sit on a bamboo mat outdoors with the girls behind, since only boys are allowed to learn. Every time the youngest throws up his drumsticks, his sisters rear back to duck a black eye. The boy looks about five, and pretty useless on the drums. But he seems to be having a high old time.

· Utsavam is at the Horniman Museum, London SE23, until November 2. There is a special Sitar Day on Sunday


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Tuesday, 10 June 2008

Twilight 22

Twilight 22   
Artist: Twilight 22

   Genre(s): 
Electronic
   



Discography:


Twilight 22   
 Twilight 22

   Year:    
Tracks: 10




The '80s electro outfit Twilight 22 was lED by computer/synth-wiz Gordon Bahary, but also featured contributions from lead isaac Bashevis Singer and co-songwriter Joseph Saulter. Bahary got his startle when he was invited to wait on the cracking Stevie Wonder during the recording of his 1976 greco-Roman Songs in the Key of Life (Bahary was only 16 years old at the time). Wonder invited Bahary to facilitate out on his following recording, 1979's Journey Through the Secret of Plants, for which the teen produced and programmed synthesizers. It was around this time that Bahary met Saulter through a mutual conversance (Herbie Hancock), patch Bahary was working on Hancock's Feets Don't Fail Me Now. Although Saulter was originally a drummer (playing in an Los Angeles-based outfit called Rhythm Ignition), it was his vocal skills that john Drew the most attention, leading to the formation of Twilight 22 in the early '80s. Their solitary single, "Electric Kingdom," was one and only of the seminal moments for electro, only their 1984 self-titled full-length for Vanguard was their last judge ahead ripping up shortly thenceforth. Both Bahary and Saulter went on to play on other artist's records, as well as production.






Four Big Brother Housemates Facing Eviction

Big BrotherFour housemates are facing the boot from the Big Brother house in the show's first eviction of the series for failing a secret task.


Mario Marconi and Stephanie McMichael were told to pretend to be a couple to hide Mario's real romance with fellow housemate Lisa Appleton. A fourth housemate, Luke Marsden, was also in on the secret.


Mario, 42, and Stephanie, 19, tied the knot on Sunday in what housemates were led to believe was a real wedding ceremony.


But after the wedding breakfast and a Champagne toast, Big Brother interrupted.


"The wedding is now over. Big Brother has a very important announcement - there is a secret couple living in the House. Housemates have one minute to decide who they think those two housemates are," he said.


Housemate Alexandra De-Gale had already said she contested the wedding as "a sham" and, after a group discussion, Michael Hughes announced they thought it was Mario and Lisa. The correct guess guaranteed that Mario, Lisa, Luke and Stephanie are up for the first eviction and will face the public vote.


"This has got to be the twist of the century," Michael exclaimed after the truth was revealed.


Mario and Lisa were delighted that they no longer had to keep their romance under wraps but Luke was unhappy about being up for eviction.


"The reason why we're on the chopping block now is because of Stephanie," he said.


Stephanie meanwhile jumped into the swimming pool still wearing her wedding dress and told housemates she had found the task so hard she had repeatedly cried in the diary room.




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Did Media Write Clinton Out Of Race?

A report by the Project for Excellence in Journalism has documented that during the last two months of the Democratic primary campaign in April and May, the television networks devoted more time to speculation about when Hillary Clinton would call it quits than about the candidates' positions on Iraq, the mounting price of gasoline, home foreclosures or the economy. Referring to the study, former NBC anchor Tom Brokaw told the Associated Press that it was "inappropriate" for journalists "to try to cut the process short. ... There was an awful lot of commentary disguised as reporting that gave the impression that people were trying to shove her out of the race." Apparently referring to the campaign coverage by the cable news networks, Brokaw blamed the decision to focus on Clinton's possible exit on the availability of "too much time and too little imagination."


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M. Saeed Chisti

M. Saeed Chisti   
Artist: M. Saeed Chisti

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Qari Sage Miran   
 Qari Sage Miran

   Year:    
Tracks: 3




 





Tone

Rundfunkchor Leipzip, Staatskapelle Dresden

Rundfunkchor Leipzip, Staatskapelle Dresden   
Artist: Rundfunkchor Leipzip, Staatskapelle Dresden

   Genre(s): 
Classical
   



Discography:


Haydn: Nelsonmesse Missa in Angustiis d-moll Hobs XXII:11   
 Haydn: Nelsonmesse Missa in Angustiis d-moll Hobs XXII:11

   Year: 1985   
Tracks: 12




 





Christian Bale Opens Up On Heath Ledger's Final Performance

Fleetwood Mac and Christine Perfect

Fleetwood Mac and Christine Perfect   
Artist: Fleetwood Mac and Christine Perfect

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Albatross   
 Albatross

   Year: 1977   
Tracks: 16




 





Rick Holmstrom

Eddie Murphy - Murphy Returns As Axel Foley

EDDIE MURPHY is set to reprise his role in police drama BEVERLY HILLS COP, according to U.S. reports.

The actor will team up with director Brett Ratner to return for the fourth installment of the franchise as Michigan detective Axel Foley.

It is hoped the film will be shot next year (09) in time for a 2010 release, reports industry publication Variety.

The first movie from the Beverly Hills Cop franchise was released in 1984, and grossed $316 million (GBP158 million) at cinemas worldwide.




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Gloria's Client: I Won't be D**ked Around

The woman who was jock blocked from the Bev Hills Hotel for dressing like a man was overcome by emotion as she explained the humiliation of getting s**tcanned from the can.
Gloria Allred: Click to view!







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David Oistrakh - violin, Inna Kollegorskaya - pian

David Oistrakh - violin, Inna Kollegorskaya - pian   
Artist: David Oistrakh - violin, Inna Kollegorskaya - pian

   Genre(s): 
Classical
   



Discography:


Widmung, Op.25 No.1 (arr: L. Auer)   
 Widmung, Op.25 No.1 (arr: L. Auer)

   Year: 1947   
Tracks: 1


Vocalise, Op.34 No.14 (arr:M. Press)   
 Vocalise, Op.34 No.14 (arr:M. Press)

   Year: 1947   
Tracks: 1


Entr'acte from    
 Entr'acte from "Raymonda", Op.37 (arr: K. Rodionov)

   Year: 1947   
Tracks: 1




 





Writers strike cost $2.7b