Friday, 27 June 2008

Celebrity psychic loses lawsuit over Elvis's pre-Graceland home








MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Celebrity psychic Uri Geller and two partners have lost a federal lawsuit claiming the former owners of Elvis Presley's pre-Graceland house breached an EBay contract to sell the Memphis home.

Geller, who gained fame in the 1970s for his alleged power to bend spoons and other objects with his mind, and his partners bid $905,100 for the ranch-style home in a 2006 auction.

But the deal fell apart. Hazen said Geller's group altered terms of the real estate deal so that it was unacceptable. Geller said Hazen and Freeman reneged on the deal in order to sell it for more to Nashville record producer Mike Curb, who bought the house for $1 million.

On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Jon McCalla ruled that the EBay auction was more of an advertising vehicle than a binding sale.

Even if was a contract, the judge said, Geller and his partners breached it when they altered the closing terms after the sale.

"I'm relieved that this is all over," Hazen told the Memphis newspaper The Commercial Appeal.

Presley bought the four-bedroom, 278-square-metre house in 1956 with his early song royalties. The singer, his parents and grandmother lived there for 13 months before throngs of fans forced them to move to more secluded Graceland in 1957.

Curb plans to let Rhodes College use the home as part of a new Mike Curb Music Institute.

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Information from: The Commercial Appeal, www.commercialappeal.com










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Wednesday, 18 June 2008

Iron Maiden - Iron Maiden Stage Soccer Show During Power Cut


Heavy rockers IRON MAIDEN staged a show of soccer skills when a power outage stopped their Sunday night (15Jun08) show at Madison Square Garden in New York.

Fans like new couple Kate Hudson and Lance Armstrong watched as frontman Bruce DICkinson and his bandmates used the silence to kick a soccer ball about onstage.

The power cut killed the sound at the show, ironically in the middle of the song Powerslave, but the stage lights remained on.

Technicians worked on the power problems for 10 minutes until normal service was resumed and DICkinson joked his long-running feud with Sharon Osbourne was to blame, quipping, "Ah, the revenge of Sharon, the wicked witch of the west!"





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Tuesday, 17 June 2008

World War One movie to open Toronto film festival

TORONTO (Reuters) - A story based on the bloody trench warfare of World War One will open this year's Toronto International Film Festival, giving a somber and Canadian theme to the opening festivities.


Organizers said on Tuesday that "Passchendaele", starring and directed by Paul Gross, tells the story of an injured Canadian soldier who returns to the battlefields of Ypres after his brother signs up to fight.


Gross's own grandfather was a veteran of the war.


"It's quite a stirring film," said Cameron Bailey, co-director of the festival. "There's much of the film that's a pastoral romance, and then you go into the hell of the trenches of World War One. It's a big, sweeping, epic movie."


More than 15,000 Canadian soldiers were killed or wounded in the 1917 battle of Passchendaele, fighting in conditions that became synonymous with the worst days of a gruesome war of attrition.


Heavy rain turned the entire battlefield into a quagmire, and the Canadians fought from one shell crater to another under heavy fire. After the battle, nine soldiers were awarded the Victoria Cross, Canada's most coveted military medal.


The Toronto Film Festival, which rivals Venice and Cannes as the biggest in the world, traditionally opens with a Canadian film. The festival runs from September 4 to September 13


(Reporting by Janet Guttsman; Editing by Peter Galloway)



The importance of being Alanis

ALANIS MORISSETTE has felt heartbreak before, as anyone who's listened to her ripped-from-life songs knows. But last year's split with her fiancé, actor Ryan Reynolds, turned out to be the big one.

"I think it's the straw that breaks the camel's back," Morissette says. "It's having had too many of them. And I was a full-blown love addict, so it was like, 'I can't keep doing this, my body can't take it.' Breakups are a horrible thing for almost everybody I know. For someone who is a love addict, it's debilitating.

"I've been on a constant journey toward finally surrendering and hitting the rock bottom that I've been avoiding my whole life. . . . So this was a huge, critical juncture for me. Everything broke, and it was an amazing and horrifying time."




















Not surprisingly, you can hear all about it on Morissette's new album, "Flavors of Entanglement," due out today. While it touches on other themes, and isn't framed as a literal blow-by-blow account, the 11 songs describe knotty conflicts and the pain of separation.

"I miss your warmth and the thought of us bringing up our kids / And the part of you that walks with your stick-tied handkerchief," she sings in "Torch," dealing out vivid details in her distinctively conversational style.

But more of the songs -- "Not as We," "Moratorium," "Giggling Again for No Reason" -- are drawn from the prolonged aftermath of the breakup, a process leading to what she calls "the Phoenix rising."

"I entered into my own version of rehab. I went to therapy five days a week, I journaled, I had a lot of support from this incredible group of friends. . . . It was just really moment by moment, step by step, snail's pace . . ."

She also gutted and remodeled her Los Angeles house (one of her favorite forms of expression, she says, equal to making two or three albums), rode motorcycles, worked on a book and designed jewelry.

And made music, this time with English producer Guy Sigsworth, who helped her return on some tracks to an electronic dance style reminiscent of her records as a teen star in her native Canada.

While Morissette has been known for raw candor since her landmark 1995 album "Jagged Little Pill," parts of "Flavors" take it to a new level. This time she didn't need to call on the journals she usually uses as a catalyst, because the events were unfolding as she was working on the music in London and Los Angeles.

"There is an immediacy in that it was all written in real time," she says. "A lot of times I'll write in retrospect. These songs were written in the exact present moment as it was happening, so that may be something that's palpably felt on the record."

A lot of that immediacy also stems from Morissette's unusual method of lyric writing, which is pretty much stream-of-consciousness.

"Typically I go in the studio and whatever I'm contemplating that day will wind up being a song. I don't come in with lyrics. . . . I just go in and let it happen. . . .

"I don't change anything once we're done. I put all my energy -- and this also shows up in other areas of my life -- my energy goes into being ready. . . . With songwriting I spend a lot of time living life, accruing all these experiences, journaling, and then by the time I get to the studio I'm teeming with the drive to write."

Sigsworth, who has worked extensively with Björk and teamed with singer Imogen Heap in the group , says, "So many of my ideas about songwriting have been changed by working with her, because she works so fast as a writer and gets the raw statement of the song so precisely so quickly."

"She seems to just center on that focal point, the crisis issue at the heart of the song, and she gets it immediately," he says.

"There were songs where I would listen and be almost in tears and think, 'Where did this come from? There was nothing here this morning.' "

Shunning the limelight

Sitting in a dressing room at a Burbank rehearsal studio where she and her band are preparing for a long stretch of touring, Morissette, 34, doesn't seem like someone who's been to rock bottom.

Surrounded by exotic wall hangings she's brought in to decorate the bare space, the singer has the focused, upbeat manner of a life coach. She's looking forward to what she calls "the sensual experience" of being on the road, she's dating someone again, and she laughs easily.

This seems more like the prankster who created a sensation with her impromptu version and video of the Black Eyed Peas' "My Humps," which originated in the studio where she and Sigsworth were writing music. "I remember turning to him at one point and I said, 'God, I wish that I could write a really simple song, a song like 'My Humps.' So we just turned to each other, did it on piano really quickly, reinterpreted the harmony, and then within a week of shooting the video in my garage with my comedian friends, we put it up on You Tube.

"I thought maybe a couple hundred people would get a kick out of it. I didn't even think it would be on anyone's radar.

"The lyrics really have the light shone on them when they're balladized," she notes. "So there is something to be said about, 'Make him work work, make him work work work work work.'

"For me I always frame things that fit in with my philosophy, so how I framed that one was, 'Yeah, she's really good at receptivity, which is a decidedly feminine quality.' "

She has also finished shooting a lead role in “Radio Free Albemuth,” a science-fiction movie based on a Philip K. Dick novel -- one more public venue for a woman who isn't sure that's where she wants to be.

"To me the biggest irony of this lifetime that I'm living is that for someone who thrives in the public eye in the creative ways that I do, I actually don't enjoy being in the public eye," she says. "I feel like I'm a recluse in a famous person's body.

"But I love to entertain. . . . My vocation is to accrue all these experiences, to write about them, to get them out of my system, to not get sick, and then to share them publicly. So the sharing-them-publicly thing is that voice that constantly says, 'You have to share this.' I have this temperament of someone who just wants to yell 'No,' but it's what I'm here to do, so I keep doing it."

richard.cromelin @latimes.com

George Michael blasts UK politicians

Washington (ANI): English singer-songwriter George Michael believes that high-powered politicians drive the media to cover his and Britney Spears' private lives so that they may keep the "real news' off the front pages of the top newspapers. The pop superstar says that British newspapers often publish stories about him, and each time he wonders which big happenings such news items might have covered up. "In England I've probably had about 20 or 30 front pages in last two-and-a-half-years (and) what interests me is what else happened on those same days, and how much our government is getting away with day after day," Contactmusic quoted him as saying. "It's the perfect cover-up to every major story they don't want us to hear: 'What did Britney Spears do today? Where did George Michael fall asleep?'" he added.


Primal Scream and Elbow join forces to help new musicians

Primal Scream's Bobby Gillespie and Elbow's Guy Garvey are joining forces to help out new artists.

Ian Brown is also part of O2 Undiscovered too - a month of workshops to aimed at new musical talent.

The workshops will begin on May 2 at Manchester Academy. They provide access to a panel of seven experts: A&R, artist management, musician, producer, music lawyer, promoter, venue owner and music agent.

Each panel member will give talks, answer questions and provide advice to musicians or individuals wanting a job in the music industry.

Ian Brown, Embrace's Danny McNamarra and The Vaselines' Eugene Kelly are set to take part.

The O2 Undiscovered workshops will visit:

Newcastle Academy 2 (May 3)
Glasgow Academy (10)
Manchester Academy 2 (17)
Birmingham Academy 2 (24)
Bristol Academy (31st May)

People wishing to attend can register at O2undiscovered.co.uk.

Bill Watrous

Bill Watrous   
Artist: Bill Watrous

   Genre(s): 
Jazz
   



Discography:


The Tiger of San Pedro   
 The Tiger of San Pedro

   Year: 1975   
Tracks: 7




One of the finest bop-oriented trombonists of the yesteryear 30 years, Bill Watrous has had a lowly profile since moving to Los Angeles in the eighties despite leftover quite active. Possessor of a beautiful tone and noteworthy technique, Watrous has been always unnoted in jazz popularity polls of the yesteryear 2 decades. His founding father was a trombone player and introduced Bill to music. He played in traditional jazz bands as a teen and studied with Herbie Nichols spell in the military. Watrous made his debut with Billy Butterfield, and was one of the trombonists in Kai Winding's groups during 1962-1967. He was a busy New York-based studio musician during the sixties, on the job and recording with Quincy Jones, Maynard Ferguson, Johnny Richards, and Woody Herman; playing in the television system band for Merv Griffin's designate (1965-1968); and working on the staff of CBS (1967-1969). After playing with the jazz-rock chemical group Ten Wheel Drive in 1971, Watrous light-emitting diode his possess big band (the Manhattan Wildlife Refuge) during 1973-1977, recording two superb albums for Columbia. After moving to Los Angeles in the late '70s, Watrous continued working in the studios, appearance at jazz parties, playing in local clubs, and prima an episodic large lot. He has recorded as a leader for Columbia, Famous Door, Soundwings, GNP Crescendo, and with his late-'90s prominent stripe for Double-Time.






POPPERKLOPPER

POPPERKLOPPER   
Artist: POPPERKLOPPER

   Genre(s): 
Rock: Punk-Rock
   



Discography:


Learning To Die   
 Learning To Die

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 12


Keine Geheimnisse EP   
 Keine Geheimnisse EP

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 8


Alles Wird Gut   
 Alles Wird Gut

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 17


Wer Sich Nicht Wehrt   
 Wer Sich Nicht Wehrt

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 16


Kalashnikov Blues   
 Kalashnikov Blues

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 16




 





That Was the Week That Was

Larry McCray

Larry McCray   
Artist: Larry McCray

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   Other
   R&B: Soul
   



Discography:


Live On Interstate 75   
 Live On Interstate 75

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 12


Believe It   
 Believe It

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 11


Born to Play the Blues   
 Born to Play the Blues

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 12




If contemporary vapours has a longterm future as we boldly venture into the 21st century, it's identical likely that guitar player Larry McCray volition represent a revenant role in its on-going development. His first two albums, Ambition and Delta Hurricane, signaling both a strong commitment to the tradition and the imaginativeness to james Usher the writing style in exciting new directions.


McCray's number one influence on guitar was none other than his sis, Clara, world Health Organization toured regionally around Arkansas with her have combo, the Rockets. Clara never got to record her Freddie King-styled blues for posterity -- merely her little blood brother has at least partly made up for that omission. Larry followed Clara up to Saginaw, MI, in 1972. She turned him on to the joys of the three Kings (B.B., Freddie, and Albert), Albert Collins, and Magic Sam, and Larry added superheated rock licks (à la Jimi Hendrix and the Allman Brothers) to his armory as he began playing the local electrical circuit with his brothers Carl on freshwater bass and Steve on drums.


Working on General Motors' assembly line tenanted a great get by of Larry McCray's time after he finished high school. But he finally base sufficiency free hours to place together Ambitiousness, his 1991 debut album for Pointblank, in a Detroit friend's basement studio. The sensational congeal was a convincing crossbreed of blues, john Rock, and individual, McCray compounding the interrelated idioms in sizzling way. Suddenly, the compact pres Young guitar player was touring with label-mate Albert Collins. His 1993 Pointblank encore, Delta Hurricane, was a slicker affaire produced by ex-serviceman British blues genius Mike Vernon that McCray much prefers to his homemade debut. He followed Delta Hurricane with Climbin' Up in 1995 and Meet Me At the Lake in 1996. Innate to Play the Blues appeared in 1998. Conceive It was followed in early 2001.