Monday, 8 September 2008

Wein works to preserve the Newport festival legacy

NEWPORT, R. I. �

For the first time since he founded the Newport Jazz Festival, George Wein didn't have to sign whatsoever checks or worry around how the fickle weather might affect the bottom line. Instead, his biggest concern at the late festival was whether he could maintain up on piano with his Newport All-Stars band during their set on the main stage that preceded performances by Herbie Hancock and Sonny Rollins.


But though the 82-year-old Wein sold his festival production company last-place year, he is silent very much a strength in producing jazz events, not only working to preserve the Newport festival's legacy only even starting a new concert series at Carnegie Hall's Zankel Hall in memory of Joyce Wein, his wife and stage business partner for nearly half a century.


"I have no problem on the job. ... As long as I can breathe, I will be involved with Newport because that to me is the holy grail of malarkey festivals," said Wein, interviewed behind the main stage at Fort Adams State Park during last month's festival. "The image of Newport relates so strongly to what I've created all these years that I will never let that go. ...


"There's one burden that I have been relieved with greatly. ... I don't pick up the losses, I don't worry about profits. So I enjoy the fete for what it is," said Wein, sporting a madras patchwork quilt cap and speaking with a classifiable Boston accent.


Wein, a jazz pianist-turned-impresario, was running Boston's Storyville idle words club, when Newport socialite Elaine Lorillard walked in one night and invited him to present some jazz to liven up the summer social season. Wein complete up putt the affluent Rhode Island seaside ithiel Town on the popular cultural map by organizing what would be the world's first outdoor jazz festival in 1954 with such luminaries as Billie Holiday, Lester Young, Dizzy Gillespie and Ella Fitzgerald.


Wein would go on to create such former landmark cultural events as the Newport Folk Festival, the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and the Playboy Jazz Festival, eventually establishing his have company Festival Productions Inc. that produced jazz events around the world.


But final year, Wein decided to sell his company, while staying on with the new owners, the Festival Network LLC, focusing his attention on the deuce festivals he feels closest to - Newport and the JVC Jazz Festival New York - an event he created under different sponsorship in 1972, a year after gate-crashing rioters forced the Newport festival to be canceled until its return in 1982.


Wein has already started booking adjacent year's festivals, working with their new artistic director Jason Olaine, Festival Network's vice chief Executive for programming.


"I think of George as a prof because he's got facts and figures and all the historic knowledge in his brain," said the 40-year-old Olaine, who antecedently worked as the aesthetic director at Yoshi's jazz club in San Francisco and as a producer at Verve Records. "He's been here since the beginning so he knows what ... artists the audiences are looking at for. .... When George wants someone, they're in. I think it's my character as the new artistic director to shake things up a little bit ... but not stray likewise far away from a formula that's been working."


When Olaine had one last slot to fill for Sunday's closing concert, he asked Wein to perform with his Newport All-Stars - a festival tradition dating back to the '50s. Olaine insisted that the festival's founder perform on the main Newport stage rather than unitary of the two smaller stages.


Wein's sooner Newport All-Stars bands had featured musicians who were more his contemporaries and comfortable with the pre-1950s swing fashion he grew up playing. But at Newport, his All-Stars lineup featured 2 up-and-coming jazz stars - bassist and singer Esperanza Spalding, the youngest member at 23, and Israeli clarinetist-saxophonist Anat Cohen - as well as two distinguished veterans, the various guitarist Howard Alden and drummer Jimmy Cobb, the last surviving musician from Miles Davis' 1959 "Kind of Blue" album.


"I enjoy a festival but there's still naught like acting with musicians that you develop a family relationship," said Wein. "I got to maintain on my toes to play with these kids because they want to wail when they go up at that place. ... and believe me it's a challenge."



Wein now is putting together a different Newport All-Stars band for a Nov. 4-9 booking at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola at Jazz at Lincoln Center that will feature a vet front-line with tenor saxophonist-flutist Lew Tabackin and trumpeter Randy Sandke.


Wein realized early on that he'd never be the greatest jazz pianist afterward hearing Art Tatum, only he ascertained his true calling as an impresario while still a college student in 1949 when his bandleader, clarinetist Edmond Hall, asked him to negotiate a raise with a reluctant Boston club owner and he complete up producing concerts himself.


Wein hasn't lost his warmth for producing. In September 2007, he organized an all-star benefit concert at Boston's Symphony Hall with Herbie Hancock, Branford Marsalis. Roy Haynes, Joe Lovano and other jazz stars to found a scholarship fund for promising young jazz musicians at the Berklee College of Music named afterward his wife who died of cancer in 2005.


Wein recently proclaimed that he will be producing a concert series in pureness of his wife, which he hopes will get an annual event on the Carnegie Hall calendar.


"I wanted to do that because some people intellection when I sold my company that I'm not active, but I'm just as active both with my company and on my own," Wein said.


The three concerts for the 2008-9 season will feature the Dominican-born pianist Michel Camilo wHO melds jazz with Afro-Cuban rhythms (Nov. 13);

Friday, 29 August 2008

Prince Bans NHS Dentist From Covering His Songs

Andrew Bain, an NHS Dentist, has been barred from including a extend Prince's 'Purple Rain' on his upcoming debut record album.


Bain �realised his dreams� earlier this year when he submitted an operatic version of the song to SonyBMG. The record label sign him instantaneously due to his unique blend of pop and opera.


But it seems Prince has been less impressed with Bain's cover and has asked for it to be removed from his debut album.


In a statement, the tooth doctor said he was saddened by the news, adding: �Without 'Purple Rain' I wouldn�t be where I am today."


The album, which is due to be released next month, will placid feature covers of songs by David Bowie, ABBA and Brian Adams.




More information

Sunday, 10 August 2008

Jyri Rosenfeld

Jyri Rosenfeld   
Artist: Jyri Rosenfeld

   Genre(s): 
Blues
   



Discography:


Fab Four, 4ever! Blues Museum (CD2)   
 Fab Four, 4ever! Blues Museum (CD2)

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 14


Fab Four, 4ever! Blues Museum (CD1)   
 Fab Four, 4ever! Blues Museum (CD1)

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 16




 






Tuesday, 1 July 2008

Lily Allen gets 'Naughty' on new album

Lily Allen has revealed new details about her highly anticipated forthcoming album.

The singer said that the tentative title for the follow-up to her highly successful 2006 debut is 'Stuck On The Naughty Step'.

�??In England, when kids are naughty, they get sent to sit on the naughty step,�?� she explained. �??Like a timeout, you know? I feel like I�??m stuck in a hole where people say, �??Lily, you�??re bad. Go think about what you�??ve done.�??"

Allen has been working on the new album in Los Angeles with producer Greg Kurstin of the Bird And The Bee.

"I haven�??t drunk the whole time I�??ve been here in LA, and I�??m up every day at 8,�?� she told Rolling Stone.

Talking about the recording sessions, Allen explained: �??Greg builds the chords up and I just sing along and make up the words. And then once you�??ve got the bare song, we decide which way we�??re gonna go with the production.�?�

The singer admitted to feeling insecure about the way her new album will be received.

�??I�??m really scared about what people are going to say,�?� Allen said. �??I don�??t know why. Some people will like it and some won�??t. If people hate it, then I�??ll just try something else.�?�

--By our Los Angeles staff.
Find out more about NME.

Wednesday, 25 June 2008

BIG BROTHER: Alex Targeted By Vandals

Big Brother bully Alexandra De-Gale has become the target of vandals after being prematurely axed from the show for 'threatening behaviour'.

BB's most unpopular housemate EVER is currently in hiding at a hotel after a vandals daubed 'fake', 's***' and 'bitch' on her BMW.

In a second attack, her Croydon home was pelted with stones and eggs, windows were smashed and more abusive graffiti was keyed on her car.

A police spokesperson confirmed: "We have received reports of criminal damage and are investigating."
Alex was sensationally booted out of the house after boasting to Darnell that she would seek revenge against housemates in the outside world.
Channel 4 accused the mother-of-one of “repeatedly breaking the programme’s rules” by behaving in “unacceptable and intimidating manner towards fellow housemates”.
In a post-exit interview with Davina, Alex insisted she was simply being "assertive."

Tuesday, 24 June 2008

George Michael Teeses His Fans

George Michael, Dita Von TeeseGeorge Michael feels real good with Dita Von Teese by his side.

When the British pop singer launches his 25 Live tour tonight in San Diego, he'll also debut a new video during his...


Saraya

Saraya   
Artist: Saraya

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


When The Blackbird Sings   
 When The Blackbird Sings

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 11




 






Monday, 23 June 2008

Backstreet Boys - Doroughs Dad Dies


BACKSTREET BOYS star HOWIE DOROUGH is in mourning after his father died in his sleep.

Hoke Dorough was diagnosed with lung and brain cancer earlier this year (08).

The pop star and his bandmates scrapped shows in South Africa so that Dorough could be with his father.

In a statement, the singer says, "Our family just wants to say thanks for all your prayers for my father, Hoke Dorough. His strong will helped him to fight cancer for the past three months.

"I was blessed to be able to spend the last month with him and create some memories that I will take with me forever.

"Unfortunately, within the last few days he took a turn for the worse. He passed away Sunday morning peacefully in his sleep and is no longer suffering."

Howie adds that his father spent his final week returning to his native Georgia with his son and family members.

Dorough recalls, "My family and I rented a RV and took him to his hometown in Georgia where he had a family and high school reunion of over 50 people.

"He held on (for) the whole trip and had an amazing time, bringing things back full circle."





See Also

Gubaidulina, Sofia

Gubaidulina, Sofia   
Artist: Gubaidulina, Sofia

   Genre(s): 
Pop
   Classical
   



Discography:


Sonata For Double Bass and Piano (Berio)   
 Sonata For Double Bass and Piano (Berio)

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 1


Astreja- Music From Davos   
 Astreja- Music From Davos

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 4


Stufen (1972-1990)   
 Stufen (1972-1990)

   Year: 1990   
Tracks: 1


Hommage a T.S. Eliot, For Octet and Soprano   
 Hommage a T.S. Eliot, For Octet and Soprano

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 7


Viola Concerto   
 Viola Concerto

   Year:    
Tracks: 1


Seven Words, Silenzio, In Croce   
 Seven Words, Silenzio, In Croce

   Year:    
Tracks: 13


Offertorium   
 Offertorium

   Year:    
Tracks: 8


Detto II For Cello and Chamber - Misterioso For Percussion   
 Detto II For Cello and Chamber - Misterioso For Percussion

   Year:    
Tracks: 2


Concordia   
 Concordia

   Year:    
Tracks: 10




 





Minnie Driver expecting her first child

Mahavishnu Orchestra

Mahavishnu Orchestra   
Artist: Mahavishnu Orchestra

   Genre(s): 
Jazz: Fusion
   Instrumental
   Jazz
   



Discography:


Between Nothingness and Eternity   
 Between Nothingness and Eternity

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 3


Visions Of The Emerald Beyond   
 Visions Of The Emerald Beyond

   Year: 1975   
Tracks: 13


Inner Worlds   
 Inner Worlds

   Year: 1975   
Tracks: 10


Vision Of The Emerald Beyond   
 Vision Of The Emerald Beyond

   Year: 1974   
Tracks: 13


Apocalypse   
 Apocalypse

   Year: 1974   
Tracks: 5


The Lost Trident Sessions   
 The Lost Trident Sessions

   Year: 1973   
Tracks: 6


Birds Of Fire   
 Birds Of Fire

   Year: 1972   
Tracks: 10


The Inner Mounting Flame   
 The Inner Mounting Flame

   Year: 1971   
Tracks: 8




One of the premier spinal fusion groups, the Mahavishnu Orchestra was considered by to the highest degree observers during its premier to be a rock lot, but its sophisticated improvisations actually set its high-energy music 'tween rock-and-roll and jazz. Founder and leader John McLaughlin had late played with Miles Davis and Tony Williams' Lifetime. The original lineup of the group was McLaughlin on electric guitar, violinist Jerry Goodman, keyboardist Jan Hammer, electric bassist Rick Laird, and drummer Billy Cobham. They recorded three intense albums for Columbia during 1971-1973 and then the personnel office changed completely for the instant version of the group. In 1974, the band consisted of fiddler Jean-Luc Ponty, Gayle Moran on keyboards and vocals, electric bassist Ralphe Armstrong, and drummer Michael Warden; by 1975 Stu Goldberg had replaced Moran and Ponty had left. John McLaughlin's dual interests in Eastern faith and playing acoustic guitar resulted in the lot break up in 1975. Surprisingly, an effort to revive the Mahavishnu Orchestra in 1984 (exploitation Cobham, saxophonist Bill Evans, keyboardist Mitchell Forman, electric bassist Jonas Hellborg, and percussionist Danny Gottlieb) was unsuccessful; one Warner Bros. album resulted. However, when one thinks of the Mahavishnu Orchestra, it is of the original lineup, which was very influential throughout the seventies.






Diamanda Galas

Diamanda Galas   
Artist: Diamanda Galas

   Genre(s): 
Trance: Psychedelic
   Vocal
   Industrial
   Alternative
   Avantgarde
   



Discography:


La Serpenta Canta (CD 2)   
 La Serpenta Canta (CD 2)

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 8


La Serpenta Canta (CD 1)   
 La Serpenta Canta (CD 1)

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 7


Defixiones: Will and Testament (CD 2)   
 Defixiones: Will and Testament (CD 2)

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 9


Defixiones: Will and Testament (CD 1)   
 Defixiones: Will and Testament (CD 1)

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 8


Schrei X   
 Schrei X

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 24


Scheri X   
 Scheri X

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 24


The Sporting Life   
 The Sporting Life

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 11


The Divine Punishment - Saint Of The Pit   
 The Divine Punishment - Saint Of The Pit

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 7


Vena Cava   
 Vena Cava

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 8


The Singer   
 The Singer

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 10


Plague Mass   
 Plague Mass

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 10


Masque Of The Red Death (CD 2) - You Must Be Certain Of The Devil   
 Masque Of The Red Death (CD 2) - You Must Be Certain Of The Devil

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 8


Masque Of The Red Death (CD 1) - Divine Punishment - Saint Of The Pit   
 Masque Of The Red Death (CD 1) - Divine Punishment - Saint Of The Pit

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 7


You Must Be Certain Of The Devil   
 You Must Be Certain Of The Devil

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 8


You Must Be Certain Of Devil   
 You Must Be Certain Of Devil

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 8


The Litanies Of Satan   
 The Litanies Of Satan

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 2


The Divine Punishment   
 The Divine Punishment

   Year: 1986   
Tracks: 7


Malediction and Prayer   
 Malediction and Prayer

   Year:    
Tracks: 12




A ferociously confrontational van performing artist noted for her bawling, four-octave vocal range, Diamanda Galas was born and elevated in San Diego, California. The daughter of Greek Orthodox parents, her singing was roundly discouraged, although her prowess as a classical piano player was nurtured; finally, her strict upbringing resulted in a reckless, drug-fueled early days prior to her ingress into the University of California's music and visual liberal arts syllabus.


Galas made her playing debut in 1979 at France's Festival d'Avignon, which light-emitting diode to an invitation to accept the lead role in composer Vinko Globokar's politically-charged opera Un Jour Comme un Autre. In subsequent solo performance-art pieces like Wild Women With Steak Knives and Tragouthia apo to Aima Exon Fonos, Galas further honed her unequalled, smashing vocal style, elysian by the Schrei ("scream") opera house of German expressionism (a bod employing a system of four microphones and a series of echoes and delays).


Galas made her recorded debut in 1982 with The Litanies of Satan, a provocative put to work comprised of a outspoken adjustment of a verse form by Charles Baudelaire. After the prison-themed performance piece Panoptikon (documented on a self-titled 1984 release), she began development a trilogy of albums known collectively as The Masque of the Red Death; released independently betwixt 1986 and 1988 as The Divine Punishment, Saint of the Pit and You Must Be Certain of the Devil, the three records catalogued Galas' litany against the AIDS epidemic, which claimed her blood brother, dramatist Philip-Dimitri Galas, in 1986.


With 1990's The Singer, she made her outset elusive advances into the realm of pop music; reprising some of the same creed material which snaked through The Masque of the Red Death, the track record too featured her covers of Willie Dixon's "Insane Asylum" and Screamin' Jay Hawkins' "I Put a Spell on You." 1993's Vena Cava, an a cappella cause, preceded 1994's The Sporting Life, a collaborationism with previous Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones. A track record of Galas' 1994 receiving set work Schrei X followed in 1996, in tandem bicycle with her number one rule book collection, The Shit of God. She returned two years later with Malediction and Prayer.






Silent film "In the Land of the Head Hunters" returns to Moore after 94 years

In 1914, a unique Northwest film made its world premiere simultaneously at the Moore Theatre in Seattle and the Casino Theatre in New York. A vision of life among the Kwakwaka'wakw tribal communities in British Columbia, it played briefly in theaters before disappearing from view.



Now, 94 years later, it's back: "In the Land of the Head Hunters," the only feature-length film made by acclaimed photographer Edward Curtis (1868-1952), returns to the Moore Tuesday night in a fully restored print, complete with live orchestral accompaniment and a post-screening dance performance. The evening is co-presented by the Burke Museum, Seattle International Film Festival and Seattle Theatre Group.Curtis, who was based in Seattle for much of his life, primarily devoted his long career to photographing Native Americans in the western U.S. and western Canada. Many of those now-iconic photographs appeared in his landmark 20-volume book series, "The North American Indian." Aaron Glass, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of British Columbia who is one of three executive producers of the restored film, described the books as "a monumental photographic salvage project." Curtis, like many others at the time, thought that Native people would soon disappear — "if not physically, then at least culturally and linguistically," said Glass. He traveled and visited tribes for several decades, taking photographs and recording stories, songs and other information.



"In the Land of the Head Hunters" was made as a commercial enterprise, Glass said. "[Curtis] made it in the hopes that it would make money in order to help fund his book projects, which he saw as his serious life's work."



The film is a silent melodrama that intertwines a love triangle, a series of aboriginal battles and excerpts from Kwakwaka'wakw ceremonial performances. (The title was sensationalized for commercial purposes.) Curtis filmed it primarily in two B.C. locations, from which he drew his all-Kwakwaka'wakw cast: Fort Rupert, a community at the north end of Vancouver Island, and Blunden Harbor, a village (now uninhabited) on an inlet across from Vancouver Island.



With a commissioned score by composer John J. Braham, the completed film opened in New York and Seattle. Though records are sketchy, it appears to have been released in a few other North American cities, but didn't seem to catch on with audiences.



"Basically, after a couple of years, the movie had made no money and was no longer being distributed," Glass said. In 1924, Curtis sold his copyright and print of the film to the American Museum of Natural History in New York, which was interested in the film from an anthropological standpoint.



From there, the story of "In the Land of the Head Hunters" takes a mysterious turn. The Museum of Natural History has no record of the film, and no trace of it was seen until 1947, when a film collector in Illinois was given a few damaged reels from a friend, found in a theater trash bin. He didn't know what the film was, but gave it to the Field Museum in Chicago, thinking it might be of interest for its Northwest Coast collection.



And there it sat, until art historian Bill Holm (now art professor emeritus of the University of Washington and the Burke Museum) and anthropologist George Quimby (director of the Burke from 1968 to 1983) undertook the first restoration of the film. Quimby, a former curator at the Field Museum, brought the "Head Hunters" print with him when he moved to Seattle, and he and Holm worked on the project for a number of years, finally releasing a restored version in 1974. The restoration included significant changes to the film, which was incomplete and assumed to be the only existing print, and a new soundtrack (of sound effects and songs by Kwakwaka'wakw members) as the original score was presumed lost.



The current restoration came about because of two significant discoveries. Glass, working on his dissertation, discovered the sheet music for Braham's original score at the Getty Film Institute, and the UCLA Film and Television Archive found in its vaults some reels labeled "Edward Curtis" that turned out to be sections of "Head Hunters." These reels, in original nitrate, were of special interest because they retained the elaborate color tinting Curtis had intended. (The Field's version had been transferred to black and white.)



What will unspool at the Moore on Tuesday (after its world premiere at the Getty in L.A. last week) is, says Glass, closer to what audiences in 1914 saw. The current restoration is "three-quarters Field Museum and one-quarter UCLA, but the tinting and toning is extrapolated for the whole thing. It's not meant to simulate color film; it's more like hand-tinted old photographs. What we've restored are the original title, original intertitles (some of which we had to reconstruct), the original color as much as we can approximate it and the original score."



"In the Land of the Head Hunters" will screen at the Moore accompanied by Braham's original score, performed by a small orchestra made up of local musicians and led by Owen Underhill, conductor of the Turning Point Ensemble in Vancouver. After the screening, the Gwa'wina Dancers will perform a routine based on the dances in the film (at times presenting a version more true to tradition than that shown in the film). The group, a professional ensemble whose members represent many of the 16 tribes of the Kwakwaka'wakw, will also discuss their ancestors' participation in the film with the audience.



Moira Macdonald: 206-464-2725 or mmacdonald@seattletimes.com








See Also

Katharine McPhee

Katharine McPhee   
Artist: Katharine McPhee

   Genre(s): 
Dance: Pop
   



Discography:


Katharine McPhee   
 Katharine McPhee

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 12




Though Taylor Hicks' far-out soul made him 2006's American Idol, second best Katharine McPhee's definitive good looks and part and affinity for traditional pop made her a warm challenger throughout the season. In fact, she was matchless of the first semifinalists to make it to the final 12. A native of Sherman Oaks, CA, McPhee began singing at age two. Her mother, Patricia McPhee, is an established vocalizer in her have right-hand, playacting and recording as Peisha McPhee. She helped Katharine develop as a vocalizer and gave her more formal preparation than many American Idol hopefuls experience. Though McPhee panax quinquefolius and acted passim her childhood and senior high school age, she began pickings singing more in earnest in college, attention Boston Conservatory as a musical house major. After iII semesters, however, she leftfield for Los Angeles to auditory modality for film and telly work. McPhee scored roles in the film Crazy, a musical around Hank Garland, and an MTV series, You Are Here, which didn't make it to the gentle wind. She as well appeared in productions of Annie Get Your Gun and The Ghost and Mrs. Muir earlier auditioning for American Idol in 2005.


Once McPhee made the last 12, her performances of songs such as "Somebody to Watch Over Me," "Come Rain or Come Shine," and "Smuggled Horse and the Cherry Tree" made her i of the favorites of American Idol judges and viewers. After the American Idol season ended, McPhee was signed by show divine Simon Fuller's 19 Recordings Limited label and released her first base individual, Somewhere Over the Rainbow/My Destiny; it became the second gear best-selling individual of 2006. That summer, after bouts with bronchitis and laryngitis, she joined the rest of the finalists and Hicks on the American Idols LIVE! go and also toured with Andrea Bocelli, world Health Organization appeared on American Idol as a guest approximate. McPhee began recording her self-titled debut album in the fall, working with collaborators such as Timbaland's production married person, Nate "Danja Hand" Hills, Chad Hugo of the Neptunes, and ballad maker Kara DioGuardi. "Over It," which was written by the songwriting team of Billy Steinberg, Josh Alexander, and Ruth-Anne Cunningham, arrived a few weeks before Katharine McPhee was released in early 2007.