Wednesday 27 August 2008

Arts diary: Lend a hand for the pianothon

Britain's airwaves may presently be electrifying to the sound of amateur choirs, but the BBC is now preparing to celebrate another legal document central to amateur music-making - the piano. Pianists across the country are being invited to take part in one of five-spot eight-hour "pianothons" taking place in Manchester, Cardiff, Glasgow, Belfast and London in October. In what might just be the longest ever continuous talent show, participants of any standard can register to play for up to 10 minutes, either solo, or with one or two other performers. They crataegus oxycantha even try their efforts on the radio - Radio 3 will be broadcasting highlights later in October.







More information

Thursday 7 August 2008

ASK MICK LASALLE, Chronicle Movie Critic

Dear Mick LaSalle: In "WALL-E," the chief operating officer of the evil corporation BUY N LARGE (Fred Willard) stands at his podium (modeled to look precisely like the White House press room) with his head obscuring the core portion of the watchword BUY N LARGE, revealing something that looks like this: BU-RGE. My intellect filled in the blank right away - Bush, George. Am I the only individual who noticed this?


Marty Parker, Chico


Dear Marty Parker: I don't lie with, but you won't be the last now. Good catch.



Dear Mr. LaSalle: In an question about "Wanted," Angelina Jolie said something along the lines of, "If you knew what Hitler was going to do ahead he did it, would you get killed him?" It was to the effect that the movie was around "good bozo" assassins acquiring the "high-risk guys" before they struck. The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees goodwill ambassador is star in a movie that legitimizes pre-emptive strikes.


S. Baroudi, Rio de Janeiro


Dear S. Baroudi: Actually, the movie does a heap worse than that. What Jolie is referring to is what the assassins in the movie think they're doing. In fact, they're doing nothing so defensible as killing Hitler in 1920 or a handful of terrorists on Sept. 10, 2001. Despite what she says, the movie is not around the cleanup of monsters before they're up and running. Its message is far more dark and twisted. Thus, when St. Angelina spouts this cynical publicist gibber, the question to ask is this: Is she really kidding herself or is she deliberately trying to kidskin you?


Dear Mick: Your critical review of "Wanted" takes the risk of calling a morally reprehensible movie what it is. My good sense is that most mainstream critics have disowned this responsibility, thought process that their only duty is to state how well or poorly the film does on its own price. Taken to its limit, this philosophy is apparently immoral: "Coming up next on 'Entertainment Tonight' - our critic's list of the 10 greatest snuff films!" I'd love to see or hear some commentary from you on these issues.


Scott Miller, Graton


Dear Scott: A critic is ideally an expert at analyzing artworks (just as artists are experts at creating prowess through synthesizing emotion and experience). Critics are non moral regime. Any critic who starts making moral pronouncements runs the risk of infection of becoming a crank and a gas bag, and so I pot see wherefore critics would want to steer clear of that possibility. In my own case, I have never called a movie immoral, because that's outside my area. However I did call "Kill Bill," at least the first one, "pornography," and I did say that "The Strangers" used "cinema to ends that are objectionable and vile." But those, to me, ar just esthetical judgments. I mean, region of organism a critic consists of reporting what's there. To look at a film that consists of zero but murders and to react to it as if judgement a series of, suppose, Olympic dives, requires not only a moral disconnect but likewise a tolerant of self-willed distancing from a whole host of aesthetic considerations, like emotion, character and narrative. It's also region of criticism to look at what movies ar communicating, so as not to be blinded by mere spectacle. If you're reviewing "Wanted," it's simply part of the job to

Monday 30 June 2008

Gigs around town

BLONDIE
After a solo fling last year with her “Necessary Evil” CD, Deborah Harry returns to her more familiar post leading Blondie, which is celebrating the 30th anniversary of its landmark release, “Parallel Lines,” by performing the entire album. Tonight at the Cape Cod Melody Tent, Hyannis, 508-775-6630; tomorrow at South Shore Music Circus, Cohasset, 781-383-9850.
CUTE IS WHAT WE AIM FOR



The band name says it all. Sunday at 6 p.m. at the Middle East, Cambridge, 617-884-EAST.
ESKI ESKO
Pronounced ex-ee ex-oh, this local progressive six-piece (the new incarnation of what was previously called On Fire) marks the release of a new CD, “I Am Your Bastard Wings.” Caspian, Hooray For Earth and Taxpayer also perform. Tomorrow at the Paradise, 617-562-8800.
LUCY KAPLANSKY
A one-time singing partner of Shawn Colvin, Kaplansky’s charm lies in her calming, girlish vocal qualities and compelling interpersonal insights gleaned from her experience as a psychologist. Tonight at Club Passim, Cambridge, 617-492-7679.
LYRES
The Boston garage legends return. Tonight at the Middle East, Cambridge, 617-864-EAST.
MY BRIGHTEST DIAMOND/CLARE AND THE REASONS
Shara Worden’s disarming blend of classical styles with scratchy guitar and bits of electronica makes My Brightest Diamond a one-of-a-kind musical experience. Local bluesman Geoff Muldaur’s daughter Clare and her Brooklyn-based band, the Reasons, fill the opening slot with close harmonies and old-timey flair.
Tonight at Berklee Performance Center, 617-747-2261.
STEVIE NICKS
Maybe, as reported, the Fleetwood Mac songstress hasn’t changed her set list since last summer, but count on Nicks to switch shawls every so often. Sunday at Bank of America Pavilion, 617-728-1600.
PHIL LESH AND FRIENDS/LEVON HELM


Wednesday 25 June 2008

Don Henley

Don Henley   
Artist: Don Henley

   Genre(s): 
Rock: Pop-Rock
   



Discography:


An Eagle Out East   
 An Eagle Out East

   Year: 1990   
Tracks: 11


The End Of Innocence   
 The End Of Innocence

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 10


I Can't Stand Still   
 I Can't Stand Still

   Year: 1982   
Tracks: 11


Inside Job   
 Inside Job

   Year:    
Tracks: 13




Out of all of the Eagles, Don Henley had the most successful solo life history. After the chemical group broke up in 1982, Henley released his first solo album, I Can't Stand Still. Although it wasn't as successful as an Eagles book, the album performed respectably, launch the number ternion single "Unsporting Laundry" and exit gold. Building the Perfect Beast followed two old age by and by and naturalized Henley as a solo star topology in his have right. Featuring the Top Ten hits "Boys of Summer" and "All She Wants to Do Is Dance," as well as the Top 40 singles "Not Enough Love in the World" and "Sunset Grill," the album sold over two meg copies and stayed on the charts for over a year. Henley's third gear album, 1989's The End of the Innocence, was his most ambitious record book still, as well as his near commercially successful. The album sold over three meg copies and stayed on the charts for near triad eld, launching the strike singles "The End of the Innocence," "Heart of the Matter," "New York Minute," "How Bad Do You Want It?," and "The Last Worthless Evening." Henley reunited with the Eagles in 1994, embarking on a general tour of duty. The mathematical group released a live album culled from an appearance on MTV Unplugged called Blaze Freezes Over; the track record too featured a handful of new studio apartment tracks. Blaze Freezes Over was a major success, selling over 5 jillion copies by the summer of 1995. However, the mathematical group decided not to pursue whatever more projects together and Henley continued working on his fourth solo record album, at last issued in mid-2000 under the title Inside Job.






Monday 16 June 2008

Motel Connection

Motel Connection   
Artist: Motel Connection

   Genre(s): 
Ethnic
   Soundtrack
   



Discography:


Do I Have a Life?   
 Do I Have a Life?

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 12


My Darkside   
 My Darkside

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 3


Santa Maradona Ost   
 Santa Maradona Ost

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 12


P Samuel-Krakatoa Torino   
 P Samuel-Krakatoa Torino

   Year:    
Tracks: 1


Andata e Ritorno (cd2)   
 Andata e Ritorno (cd2)

   Year:    
Tracks: 10


Andata e Ritorno (cd1)   
 Andata e Ritorno (cd1)

   Year:    
Tracks: 11




Motel Connection are an Italian electronica and house jazz band from Torino, formed in 2000 by DJ Pisti and Subsonica's singer and bassist, Samuel Romano and Pierpaolo "Pierfunk" Peretti Griva. Motel Connection effectively kicked off their life history when director Marco Ponti asked them to compose the music for his 2001 make film Santa Maradona. The following year they released their number one album, Give Me a Good Reason to Wake Up, featuring eight-spot remixes from the film's soundtrack addition deuce fresh tracks, all sung in English. Among these was the arrive at single "Two," whose tV received all-encompassing airplay during 2002-2003. After a new soundtrack for some other Ponti film, 2004's A/R Andata + Ritorno, Motel Connection's irregular album appeared in 2006, under the title Do I Have a Life?






Wednesday 11 June 2008

Hutch Parker named chairman of New Regency

Will work with current chairman, CEO Robert Harper





Hutch Parker is leaving his post of vice chairman of Twentieth Century Fox to become chairman of New Regency alongside current Regency chairman and CEO Robert Harper.


Parker had been vice chairman of Fox since 2007, prior to which he was president. He joined the company in 1995 and oversaw the roll out of such hits as the "X-Men" trilogy, "Night at the Museum," "Borat," "The Day After Tomorrow" and "Dodgeball," among others.


Regency is hoping Parker will help take company to "new heights," which among other things will mean the creation of a bankable franchise. Regency, a production and finance company owned by Arnon Milchan in which Fox has a stake in, has had its share of hits in the form of the recent "What Happens in Vegas" as well as "Alvin and the Chipmunks" and the monster smash "Mr. and Mrs. Smith," but it has yet to master the art of the movie series. It's latest attempt, "Jumper," didn't get gain much height at the box office.


Amongst its upcoming releases are "Marley & Me," the adaptation of the best-selling novel starring Owen Wilson; "Mirrors," starring Kiefer Sutherland and directed by Alex Aja; and "Meet Dave," starring Eddie Murphy.


Parker will also be running the company's TV development and production as well as other media-related ventures. Shows Regency has produced include "Malcolm in the Middle" and "New Amsterdam."


Parker's move to Regency reunites him with a Fox co-hort, as Harper held the position of vice chairman at Fox Filmed Entertainment from 2004 to 2007.


There has always been a lot of cross-pollination between the two companies, with the latest move occurring last week when Sanford Panitch, who was president of filmed entertainment at New Regency, walked across the lot to head up newly formed Fox International Productions.










See Also

Sienna Miller and Rhys Ifans take a “break”

Rhys Ifans and Sienna MillerSienna Miller and Rhys Ifans have reportedly decided to “take a break”.


Miller is said to be struggling with the prospect of settling down, while Ifans doesn’t like the fact the actress going out on the town alone.


And tensions grew between the pair when Sienna was moved to tears over a picture of her ex-lover, Jude Law, kissing Rod Stewart’s daughter, Kimberly, and Rhys’ attempts to make her smile backfired terribly.


A source said: “Sienna and Rhys have been rowing a lot lately.




See Also

Tarakany

Tarakany   
Artist: Tarakany

   Genre(s): 
Pop
   



Discography:


Best Before   
 Best Before

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 1




 






Jailed American Idol star pregnant - report

It has been reported that former 'American Idol' star Jessica Sierra is expecting a baby in jail.
MTV News reports that the website TMZ.com quoted sources as saying that Sierra is on a pregnancy diet in the infirmary at Falkenburg Road Jail in Tampa, Florida.
Sierra was arrested on 2 December outside a bar near Tampa and is facing charges of disorderly intoxication, resisting arrest and violating parole.
The 22-year-old was the 10th place finalist on the fourth season of 'American Idol' in 2005.

AFTRA sends deal to members

SAG steps up the fight





AFTRA's national committee on Friday "overwhelmingly" voted in favor of the tentative primetime/TV agreement reached with the Alliance of Motion Picture & Television Producers last month. The contract now goes to its 70,000 members for ratification.


Earlier in the day, SAG leaders voted to try to torpedo that ratification vote, with its national executive board agreeing by a narrow margin to spend an initial $150,000 on a campaign to encourage dual card members to vote down the tentative AFTRA deal.


The SAG vote was taken during an in-person and video conference meeting with SAG's national executive board. One source put the vote at 13 in favor, 10 opposed.


SAG and AFTRA share 44,000 members, and SAG is looking to those members to vote against the AFTRA contract. Results are expected to be announced on or about July 7.


SAG's vote comes after president Alan Rosenberg and national executive director Doug Allen sent AFTRA a letter Thursday asking it to delay the member ratification vote. AFTRA refused.


"It has become clear over recent days of bargaining that the prospect of an immediate ratification vote on the proposed AFTRA Exhibit A contract is distracting the industry from seriously engaging on SAG's proposals and has the unfortunate prospect of interfering with SAG's ability to exercise its leverage for the benefit of all actors, members of either or both of our unions," the letter stated.


In response, AFTRA president Roberta Reardon and national executive director Kim Roberts Hedgpeth told SAG "in our view, delaying this process would not be in the best interest of our members. Nor do we believe there is anything about AFTRA's ratification process that would 'distract' either SAG or the industry from good faith negotiations or in any way be 'interfering' with the guild's negotiations with the AMPTP."


Sources say AFTRA board members were furious over SAG's letter, calling it "blackmail." They are also angry about their sister actor union's push to get members to vote down the AFTRA contract.


Sources close to SAG said the vote over the fight against AFTRA was divided between the West Coast members who are part of the "Membership First" faction, which received the majority, and East Coast members.


Said one member who attended the meeting: "Basically, it was all the Membership First people rabidly embracing this idea and the others opposing it, as predicted."


Asked about the campaign to sway AFTRA voters, Allen said: "We will be communicating the results of (our) analysis to our membership and will be educating SAG members about the impact of the AFTRA deal on our negotiations and on our effort to secure the best possible contract for actors."


SAG plans to hold a "solidarity rally" on Monday morning at its Wilshire Boulevard headquarters in Los Angeles. Susan Savage, a SAG board member and member of Membership First, has described it as an anti-AFTRA contract rally.


In an e-mail on Thursday, Savage encouraged members to vote down the AFTRA contract and also inferred that Tom Hanks and George Clooney had phoned Rosenberg to tell them that they supported SAG's position.


Hanks and Clooney denied the claim. A SAG spokesperson said Savage has since apologized for not being clear in her message, noting that Savage meant to say that Hanks and Clooney are in support of SAG's overall negotiations, not the anti-AFTRA contract initiative.


For 27 years, SAG and AFTRA had jointly negotiated the primetime/TV portion of their performers contract. But AFTRA voted to suspend the agreement and bargain on its own after more than a year of locking horns with SAG leaders over various issues.


AFTRA reached its tentative deal on May 28. SAG is in negotiations with the AMPTP; its deal expires June 30.


AFTRA's agreement includes a bump in actor rates over three years, jurisdiction over new media and retaining, for now, consent over the use of clips in new media for nonpromotional use.


In an open letter Friday to members, AFTRA negotiating committee member David Basche wrote the union "won a great contract," including a 10% increase in minimums over the contract term that was "far greater than the AMPTP wanted to agree to and were achieved only because we did not back down and stayed focused, calm and strong on the members' behalf."


"I think it's damn good, more than expected," he wrote, "and some of these increases are the first in almost a decade: Hard won and well deserved."



See Also

New Sondheim Musical Finally Opening This Fall, Directed by John Doyle

Photo: Getty Images

Playbill is reporting that casting notices have appeared for Stephen Sondheim and John Weidman's looonnnng-delayed musical Bounce, which is now scheduled to open at the Public Theater in October. The musical, about turn-of-the-century confidence men the Mizner brothers, has a checkered development history; Sondheim started working on it in 1996, and since then it's gone through two workshops, a legal battle with Scott Rudin, a roadblock from Roger Berlind, several different leading men, two different directors (Sam Mendes and Hal Prince), three titles (previously, Wise Guys and Gold!), and a modestly received premiere at the Goodman in Chicago. Nonetheless, a new Sondheim show in New York is always worth cheering about, especially when directed by the new king of Sondheim, John Doyle, whose revivals of Sweeney Todd and Company set the bar pretty high. We're officially excited!

Sondheim and Weidman's Bounce Will Bow at Public Theater This Fall [Playbill]



Gillian Anderson Expecting Third Child

Gillian Anderson is pregnant with her third child.

The former X-Files actress, 39, and her longterm boyfriend Mark Griffiths already have a 20-month-old son, named Oscar, together.

Anderson also has teenage daughter Piper, 13, from her first marriage to Clyde Klotz, who was an assistant art director on the hit sci-fi programme, reports People.

Hub jitterbuggers find '30s-inspired dance craze in full swing

You won’t find the music touted as the next big thing. Yet around Boston, the swing inspired by Count Basie, Duke Ellington and Woody Herman is still doing what it did back in the ’30s and ’40s when it was America’s sound: keeping the dance floors packed.
Today those floors are mostly in church halls, not swanky ballrooms. And swing dance die-hards who grew up with the music have been joined by new generations of spiffily dressed lindy hoppers and jitterbuggers who are as likely to have Bellevue Cadillac pouring through their earbuds as Gnarls Barkley. Like their elders back in the day, these new swing fans are drawn to both the music and the scene.
“There’s nothing better than dancing with a 20-year-old and then dancing with a 70-year-old,” said 30-something Mary Ann Hill of Back Bay, who goes to at least one swing dance event every week. “Where else can you do that?”



Hill and other swing enthusiasts find the action in spots such as St. James Armenian Hall in Watertown, St. Mary’s Orthodox Church in Cambridge and the Swing City event at Dormition Greek Orthodox Church in Somerville.
At those events, live bands often lead the party. Dance lessons are offered beforehand.
“The music is fabulous,” Hill said. “It’s nothing you can turn on the radio and hear.”
Olaf Bleck recently took over Swing City’s Friday-night tradition from founder Dan Mezrich, who had run the weekly event since 1994. At first glance, Bleck is an unlikely successor, being best known as founder of SalsaBoston Entertainment, which hosts salsa events around town.
“As a salsa promoter, I thought they were different but similar,” he said. “What it really boils down to is that when people discover partner dancing they get hooked. Young people get sucked into the whirlpool of partner dancing once they find out how interactive and social it is. Both swing dancing and salsa have that. It’s just fun.”
“I’ve been swing dancing for about two and a half years and I’m loving it,” Hill said. “Rarely do you have different generations coming together like this and having a fun time. I’ve never experienced that anywhere else in my life.”
The Compaq Big Band at Swing City, Friday at 9 at Dormition Greek Orthodox Church, 29 Central St., Somerville. Lessons at 7:30. Tickets: $15; 617-513-9841. Rocco & the Stompers at Boston Swing Central, June 13 at 9 at St. Mary’s Orthodox Church, 8 Inman St., Cambridge. Lessons at 8. Tickets: $12; bostonswingcoop.org. The Blue Suede Bopper, June 14 at 9 at St. James Armenian Church, 465 Mount Auburn St., Watertown. Lessons at 8. Tickets: $15;bostonswingdance.com.