Tuesday 24 June 2008

Tetsu Inoue and Taylor Deupree

Tetsu Inoue and Taylor Deupree   
Artist: Tetsu Inoue and Taylor Deupree

   Genre(s): 
Electronic
   



Discography:


Active # Freeze   
 Active # Freeze

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 14




 





Eric Aron

Sunday 22 June 2008

Sex Pistols: 'We were never punk, we bitterly reject it'

Sex Pistols have denied they are a punk band following their headlining performance at the Isle Of Wight festival last night (June 14).

Despite being so closely associated with the genre and the 1977 British "summer of punk", frontman John Lydon declared the band wanted nothing to do with punk moments after stepping off stage.

"We never liked the moniker 'punk' right from the start," declared Lydon. "That�s something like the press gave to us or attached to us. I�ve always, myself personally bitterly rejected it. I don�t like the term. It means in American, you know, Mr Big�s Bum boy in prison. I really don�t think any big fat Yank fancies my bottom!"

Lydon said though that he enjoyed playing his biggest British date in several years � "a thoroughly enjoyable gig. It�s nice to see the English amusing themselves as per usual � Sex Pistols stylie!" � he had a few words of warning for the country of his birth.

He told Virgin Radio: "Tony Blair's Britain! All right! An upper class twat teaching me working class values! Look what he's done! He took Britain to war! He took us to war right? He became George Bush's lapdog, and by association we're what? We're Yankee poodle pus? You know, we're like lap fodder for that?

"It's insane! And the only troops that did any good anyway over there was the Brits, as per usual, you know with our crappy outfits, and boots that don't fit, and water bottles that leak. You know! We're in Basra, in hardcore gaffs, and they sod off to you know, the centre of the city to open up a disco!"

However Lydon, who now lives in America, added he was not anit-American but, on the eve of his last visit Britain as president, he was just anti-Bush.

"I'm not anti-American, I live in America and the soldiers that are sent out there, they're coming back so distraught and so disillusioned by their government," he explained. "Don't hate Americans, hate, like most decent Americans, hate that government. Not the people, hate that government. All right?"

Live highlights of the band's set are being broadcast at Virginradio.co.uk.

Keep up with this weekend's (June 13-15) festival action as it happens on NME.COM. For news, pictures and blogs keep checking the NME.COM's Isle Of Wight Festival page and NME.COM's Download Festival page for live coverage from both sites.

Saturday 21 June 2008

Sidney Poitier pens letters to great-granddaughter in new book

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. - It all began when Sidney Poitier flew to Atlanta in late December 2005 for the birth of his first great-granddaughter.

"When I arrived at the hospital, I saw my great-granddaughter in her mother's arms," he recalled. "Directly behind her was my daughter, the baby's grandmother. Next to her was my former wife, who was the baby's great-grandmother.

"I saw that I was in a room of four generations. I would soon be 80, and Ayele was one day old. I realized that the time between us would be short. I decided I would write a book in the form of letters so I could cover everything that I've felt and learned, and talk to her about things that I don't understand."

The result is "Life Beyond Measure, Letters to My Great-Granddaughter." It follows his 1980 autobiography, "This Life," but is much more personal, with little reference to his movie career. The chapter titles tell of his concerns. Among them: "Me and God," "Battling the Demons," "People of Courage," "The World I Leave You."

"Life Beyond Measure" was a gruelling task for Poitier, who had to dig into his earliest memories, his relations with his parents, his sometimes wayward youth.

"I'm going to quit writing," he vowed, somewhat unconvincingly. "I was working eight to 10 hours a day on the book. I'm going to relax, find something else to do." Still, he talked about three more books he wants to write.

Poitier sat down for an interview in his comfortably cluttered house a few blocks from the Beverly Hills Hotel. "My wife collects knick-knacks," he explained.

He and Joanna Poitier live alone. Gone are the girls: Gina, Pamela, Beverly and Sheri from his marriage to Juanita Poitier, as well as Sydney and Anika, from the marriage to actress Joanna Shimkus.

At 81, Sidney Poitier seems little changed from his movie years. His hair is a bit thinner, and he has been forced to abandon tennis and golf because of a bad back. But he still stands tall, and his face is smooth.

"I retired from acting a long time ago," he remarked (his last film was "The Jackal" in 1997). "I had spent all that I had to spend in terms of creativeness. The work was organic, and I tried to make it organic for a long time. By the end of 56 movies . . . I found that I had spent it as honestly as I could, and I was obliged to myself to quit."

He still gets offers for films but he's not interested in working. He said he's playing the grandfather and the great-grandfather in his real life. He now has two great-granddaughters.

Poitier spent his early life in the Caribbean but he was born in the United States. His father and his six-and-half-month pregnant wife had gone to Miami to sell their tomato crop. Their mission over, they prepared for the trip back home. But Sidney was born, all three pounds of him. Survival seemed doubtful and his father found a shoe box for the burial. But Sidney, the youngest of nine children, did survive, and he was taken home to Cat Island in the Bahamas.

"The island is the same size as Manhattan," he remarked, "but it had only 2,500 population."

Poitier spent his first 10 and a half years on the quiet island with no school to attend.

"I have always been a learner because I knew nothing," he observed. "I didn't have an education and I couldn't read very well. I couldn't spell. I could barely count to a hundred. But I did have a curiosity. I looked at insects. I looked at birds and crickets. I looked at fish on the edge of the sea."

When Florida banned the import of tomatoes from the Bahamas, the family moved to Nassau where his father found other work. But there was a much larger world beyond island life. Sidney and his mother arrived at the busy Nassau harbour and he saw something that resembled a giant beetle. "What is that?" he asked his mother. "That," his mother replied, "is a car."

Poitier writes of an incident in his early teens. He fell in with a group of adventurous boys and they robbed a corn field one night. They were roasting their loot when the farmer saw the fire and called the police. The other boys' fathers raised the $8 bail money; Sidney's father didn't have the cash, and his son spent a night in jail.

Poitier quotes his father: "You need a stronger hand. You were born in America. The time has come for your mother and me to send you back." At 15, Sidney was sent to live with his brother Cyril in Miami. He didn't see his parents for another eight years.

Miami was totally different from Cat Island and Nassau. Poitier writes of "the searing shock of racism, segregation and the mistreatment of people on the basis of colour alone."

Poitier was 16 when he got off the bus in New York City and headed for Harlem. On the way he spotted a sign in a restaurant's window: "Dishwasher Wanted." He got the job and spent his evenings washing dishes at $4 plus change and his days looking for better jobs.

After a brief stint in the Army, he returned to job hunting and answered an ad: "Actors Wanted - American Negro Theater." He was briskly sent away but returned and got a job. He had found his lifetime work.

Poitier is an omnivorous reader and especially likes scientific works.

"I'm impressed by science," he remarked. "I don't very often read novels. I stay with what I see, what I've learned, what I try to understand."

In his letters to Ayele, Poitier expresses his concern for the planet.

"We all are obliged to do something for the universe," he said. "The universe is where we live; it's our home base. I believe that our greatest obligation is not to abuse it.

"My friends think I'm nuts. But this is the way I feel."










See Also

Qwel and Maker

Qwel and Maker   
Artist: Qwel and Maker

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


The Harvest   
 The Harvest

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 15




 






Ulrich Schnauss and Tdj Rome

Ulrich Schnauss and Tdj Rome   
Artist: Ulrich Schnauss and Tdj Rome

   Genre(s): 
Ambient
   



Discography:


Unpleasant Poems   
 Unpleasant Poems

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 8




 






Watson set to tour after recovery

Opera singer Russell Watson has announced that he will embark on a UK tour to celebrate his recovery from a second brain tumour.
The 41-year-old singer, who was recently forced to undergo a life-saving operation and radiotherapy, will perform 13 dates across the UK, including a homecoming gig in Manchester.
Watson is also currently writing a book, which he says he will use "to set the record straight and say my piece on a couple of things".
The singer recently posted a blog on his website which hinted that he would also be releasing a new album soon: "There are all kinds of other plans afoot that I don't think I can reveal yet. Album (cough)."

Frozen Tears

Frozen Tears   
Artist: Frozen Tears

   Genre(s): 
Metal: Heavy
   Metal: Death,Black
   



Discography:


Metal Hurricane   
 Metal Hurricane

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 10


Midnight Mists   
 Midnight Mists

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 4




 





The BBC throws open its music vaults to EMI

Rene Aubry

Rene Aubry   
Artist: Rene Aubry

   Genre(s): 
New Age
   Ambient
   



Discography:


Seuls Au Monde   
 Seuls Au Monde

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 14


Plaisirs D'amour   
 Plaisirs D'amour

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 13


Invites Sur La Terre   
 Invites Sur La Terre

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 14


Libre Parcours   
 Libre Parcours

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 13


Apres La Pluie   
 Apres La Pluie

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 12




 





Diddy feat. Mario Winans

Technotronic

Technotronic   
Artist: Technotronic

   Genre(s): 
Dance
   House
   



Discography:


Recall   
 Recall

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 12


Hey Yoh, Here We Go Maxi   
 Hey Yoh, Here We Go Maxi

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 4


The Greatests Hits   
 The Greatests Hits

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 15


Body To Body   
 Body To Body

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 11


Get Up Maxi   
 Get Up Maxi

   Year: 1990   
Tracks: 4


Pump Up The Jam   
 Pump Up The Jam

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 12




Of the many studio-based dance music projects which dominated the charts during the former '90s, few were so popular, or such an marvellous winner taradiddle, as Technotronic. Emerging from Belgium -- ne'er a musical hotbed in the first place -- the multicultural mathematical group helped push the cryptical bass grooves and crying beats of house euphony out of the club setting and into the pop mainstream; ironically, they did so largely by concealing behind the photogenic visage of an African-born style model world Health Organization, it was by and by revealed, did non tied do on their records. In reality, Technotronic was the brainchild of Jo Bogaert (tangible name Thomas de Quincy), an American-born philosophical system teacher world Health Organization relocated to Belgium in the late '80s in the hopes of mounting a career as a record producer. Bogaert's intention was to fuse house with rosehip skip, and towards that aim he sent demos of his work to a variety of rappers, including the Welsh-born MC Eric and a Zairean-born stripling named Ya Kid K (nee Manuela Kamosi), at the meter a member of the Belgian rap chemical group Fresh Beat Productions.


Technotronic's number one individual, 1989's "Pump Up the Jam," was a smash hit across Europe and eventually the U.S. While the record featured the raps of Ya Kid K, she was nowhere to be seen in the accompanying video, which or else featured Zairean-born style model Felly lip-synching the lyrics; small did fans realise that not only was Felly nowhere near the studio at the time the single was recorded, in the true she did not regular speak a word of English. She was also featured on the cover of Technotronic's debut LP, Pump Up the Jam: The Album, farther blurring the lines between truth and fiction; in the end, Bogaert admitted that Felly's services had been engaged strictly to build the grouping with "an double." When Technotronic toured in support of the 1990 hit "Pose Up! (Before the Night Is Over)," Ya Kid K and MC Eric were alone behind the microphone, and Ya Kid K was also rightfully featured in the song's video. The LP Head trip On This: The Remixes shortly followed, and in 1992 Ya Kid K went solo, albeit with Bogaert motionless in the producer's fanny; her debut album, One World Nation, scored with the impinge on "Be active This," originally a Technotronic abbreviate released as a individual subsequently finding success in a cosmetics commercial. The 1995 Technotronic return attack Hark back was not a success.





Motley Crue - Motley Crue File Lawsuit Against Manager

Jennifer Hudson: Call Me, Barack!

Jennifer HudsonAttention, Barack Obama!

Jennifer Hudson would love to hear from you. The Oscar-winning actress and singer from Chicago (yes, she still lives there) says she's ready to do what she...


Amy Winehouse Still Hospitalized, But Hopes To Perform Next Week




Despite being hospitalized since Sunday after a fainting incident at home, troubled British singer Amy Winehouse still plans to perform at a pair of shows in England next week. BBC News reported that the singer, who continues to undergo unspecified tests at a London hospital, is committed to taking the stage next Friday at London's Hyde Park for an all-star concert honoring Nelson Mandela's 90th birthday, and then performing at the Glastonbury Festival the next day.

"At present she still intends to perform at her two scheduled dates next week," a U.K. spokesperson announced on Friday. "However, the decision will be made entirely on the advice of her doctors and in her best interests. ... Amy has undergone more scans and tests today, and we are awaiting the verdict of her doctors."

Though her spokespeople have not said what is ailing the 24-year-old singer, they denied British tabloid reports that the singer is suffering from tuberculosis. "She had a serious chest infection, and it's routine to check for tuberculosis," a representative told the BBC. "She had a test — it was negative, and she's doing OK. But doctors are still trying [to find] out why she fainted."

Winehouse's U.S. spokesperson, Tracey Miller, said doctors have not yet determined what caused the chest infection, but they do not believe that it is serious. One possibility, she said, is that Winehouse is suffering from a slight case of pneumonia. Miller also said she did not know anything about reports in the British tabloids that Winehouse is suffering from an irregular heartbeat. Amid the medical drama, Miller said the singer — who has battled with drug issues in the past and has drawn concern for her fragile, rail-thin frame — is in "good spirits" and has been surrounded by family as the treatment continues.






See Also