Thursday, 26 June 2008

Agyness Deyn 'Would Never Say Never To Music Career'

Supermodel Agyness Deyn has told Gigwise that she won’t rule out the possibility of launching a full time music career.



Deyn, who makes a special guest appearance on ‘Who’, the new single by Five O’Clock Heroes, said that she intended to “go with the flow”.



“You know, never say never – I’m just enjoying it,” she told Gigwise.



The singer’s collaboration with the band, with whom she is a long term friend, sparked a wave of publicity last week.



In addition to a number of television appearances, Deyn also joined the band for her first live public appearances at two venues in London.



On Tuesday she sang at a party held by the designer Henry Holland and last Friday she joined the band for four songs at Industry in East London.



In an interview with Gigwise, Five O’Clock Heroes frontman Anthony Ellis refuted claims from critics who said that the band were using the supermodel to gain publicity.



"No, it’s a song. They’re always gonna do that. There’s always gonna be someone.



“The music business is in a fucked up state at the moment, labels don’t’ do well at all and I think that, personally speaking, it’s always better to do collaboration, no matter happens, because you’ve got people from different creative fields,” Ellis said.



You can read Gigwise’s full and frank interview with Deyn and Five O’Clock Heroes HERE.



You can see pictures of their performance last Friday below.




See Also

Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Ashra and Michael Hoenig

Ashra and Michael Hoenig   
Artist: Ashra and Michael Hoenig

   Genre(s): 
Electronic
   



Discography:


Early Water   
 Early Water

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 1




 






Ira Stein

Ira Stein   
Artist: Ira Stein

   Genre(s): 
New Age
   



Discography:


Carousel   
 Carousel

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 10




Pianist Ira Stein debuted in 1982 aboard oboe thespian Russel Walder on the Windham Hill release Elements; apart from 1986's Transit, he otherwise exhausted the bulk of the decade confined to a series of Windham Hill collections as well as respective releases by labelmate William Ackermann. After reuniting with Walder in 1990 for Under the Eye, Stein resurfaced deuce long time later with the solo chamber jazz record album Luggage carrousel. Upon forming the Ira Stein Group with cellist Hans Christian and saxophonist Dann Zinn, he issued Spur of the Moment in 1994.





The Drill

Tuesday, 24 June 2008

Recording industry honours Jewel for 18 million in U.S. album sales

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Jewel has been honoured by the Recording Industry Association of America with a career milestone plaque commemorating sales of more than 18 million albums in the U.S.

Jenny Alves, RIAA's co-ordinator of artist industry relations, surprised the 34-year-old singer Thursday as she prepared to sign autographs at the Country Music Association festival.

"This is awesome. Thank you so much," said the singer, who also was scheduled to perform at the festival.

Jewel, whose full name is Jewel Kilcher, released a country album, "Perfectly Clear," on Tuesday. The lead single, "Stronger Woman," is No. 15 on the Billboard chart.

Perhaps best known for her pop and rock hits that include "Foolish Games" and "You Were Meant for Me," Jewel has sold 27 million albums worldwide since her 1995 debut.

She is touring with Brad Paisley this summer.

-

On the Net: http://www.jeweljk.com/

http://www.riaa.com/










See Also

Maya Azucena

Maya Azucena   
Artist: Maya Azucena

   Genre(s): 
R&B: Soul
   



Discography:


Junkyard Jewel   
 Junkyard Jewel

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 11


Mya Who   
 Mya Who

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 10




 






Jason Bateman Is Not One of Those ‘Actors’ Who Gets His ‘Acting’ All Over Everything

Photo: WireImage
"I am not one of those people who wrings his hands and tries to figure out how to play my character right and do a bunch of research and all that crap." —Jason Bateman [Times UK]

"This is a modern, in-your-face movie. This is not a TV movie period piece." —Quentin Tarantino on making the Poochie of World War II movies [BBC]

"This isn't Shakespeare, so we don't take ourselves too seriously." —Paul Walker on the fourth (!) installment of The Fast and the Furious, which we like to call 4 Fast 4 Furiousest [USAT]

"Well, it's like I say to Chris [Nolan], 'I'll probably be doing this in dinner theater somewhere in my fifties.' I won't knock it because who knows where I'll end up." —Christian Bale on the possibility of playing Batman in a future Justice League movie [IGN]

"I know George didn't believe in heaven or hell. Like death, they were just more comedy premises. And it just makes me even sadder to think that when I reach my own end, whatever tumbling cataclysmic vortex of existence I'm spinning through, in that moment I will still have to think, 'Carlin already did it.'" —Jerry Seinfeld [NYT]



"Netherland": a thoughtful tribute to post-Sept. 11 New York, cricket and friendship

"Netherland"



by Joseph O'Neill



Pantheon, 256 pp., $23.95



BOOK REVIEW |



In the novel "Netherland," Joseph O'Neill composes a hymn to post-Sept. 11 New York as a city that has always dealt in trauma and displacement while offering the analgesic of a million variations on the American dream.



The terrorist attacks drive Hans van den Broek, a Dutch-born oil-stock analyst, from his flat near Ground Zero, bust up his marriage and force him to find distraction in cricket and the schemes of a Trinidadian transplant named Chuck Ramkissoon.



Hans, who came to the U.S. in 1998 at age 30 by way of The Hague and London, narrates the two years he spent in New York after his British wife and their infant son fled back to the U.K. in late 2001. By accident, he discovers the city's active cricket scene and soon devotes to the sport of his youth the weekends he doesn't spend overseas with his family.



Chuck, a match umpire in his 50s, impresses Hans with an impromptu speech on what is and isn't cricket. The expatriate is soon drawn into the immigrant's hustling life — his kosher sushi restaurant, gambling racket, real-estate ventures and a plan to convert an abandoned Brooklyn airstrip into a cricket ground.



The story is told as Hans looks back from 2006, when he is reunited with his family, his memories spurred by learning that Chuck was murdered two years earlier. Knowing their fates by Page 3 doesn't spoil anything. O'Neill teases out the strange relationship of his two main characters as he jumps around in time, keeping suspense and pace perking along in a tale with scant real action.



O'Neill was born in Ireland, raised in Holland and worked as a barrister in London before moving to New York, where he has been a regular book reviewer for the Atlantic Monthly. He has written two previous novels and a study of his grandfathers' divergent politics. Even with the constraints of a first-person narrator in "Netherland," his prose is well-crafted and thoughtful without feeling forced, though occasionally Hans succumbs to homely images and tiresome bouts of self-pity.



It is of the city O'Neill sings most beautifully. Greenhorns and old boulevardiers alike will find themselves charmed. He rediscovers chestnuts like the casual sadism of the Department of Motor Vehicles, the colorful seediness of the Chelsea Hotel, the visual blare of Times Square, the crazed mammoth balloons of Thanksgiving Day. He unearths fresher treasures as well. O'Neill's take on the man who dances with a life-size mannequin in the subway snapped me back to the first time I saw them.



The book closes with Hans and family aboard London's giant Ferris wheel at day's end in 2006, where he recalls a ferry ride back to lower Manhattan before Sept. 11 and the way the setting sun made "a brilliant yellow mess" on the World Trade Center:



"It was possible to imagine that vertical accumulations of humanity were gathering to greet our arrival. The day was darkening at the margins, but so what? A world was lighting up before us ... a world concentrated most glamorously of all, it goes almost without saying, in the lilac acres of two amazingly high towers."








See Also

Dabrye

Dabrye   
Artist: Dabrye

   Genre(s): 
Rap: Hip-Hop
   



Discography:


Two/Three   
 Two/Three

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 20


Additional Productions, Vol. 1   
 Additional Productions, Vol. 1

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 8




Dabrye is one of the aliases of Tadd Mullinix, an Ann Arbor, MI-based producer wHO carven a recession in the IDM community with early 2001's Nictitation Makes a Face (released under his possess name), a misrepresented record album that blended a crazy sense of sense of humour with real emotion. Later that year, Mullinix unveiled Dabrye with One/Three, the get-go of a three-part series that skews fractured hip-hop production. Falling into a categorical underworld, tracks from One/Three enjoyed frequent rotation on tastemaker Gilles Peterson's BBC radio programme, and "Hyped-Up Plus Tax" was finally licenced by Motorola. Instrmntl followed on Scott Herren's (Prefuse 73) Eastern Developments pronounce in 2002. Singles "The Payback" (featuring a Prefuse 73 remix) and "Plot Over" (a collaboration with Jay Dee and Phat Kat) were respectively released in 2002 and 2004, and various remixes for other artists were compiled for 2005's Additional Productions, Vol. 1. Two/Three, featuring several invitee MCs, followed in 2006.





Gus Till

Thierry Robin

Thierry Robin   
Artist: Thierry Robin

   Genre(s): 
New Age
   



Discography:


Gitans   
 Gitans

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 15




The music of the domain is coalesced into the playing of star guitar player Thierry Robin. In addition to playing as a soloist, Robin has collaborated with Rajistani percussionist Hameed Khan, Breton guitar player Eric Merchand, Indian singer/dancer Gulabi Sepera, Yiddish accordionist Eddie Schaff, and Turkish percussionist Okay Temiz. Forming an 11-piece dance orchestra, Nao, with Moroccan, Kurdish, and Indian musicians in 1985, he composed music for French/North African nuclear fusion reaction band Jonny Michto, 2 long time later. He formed a trio with Merchand and Khan that combined Breton and northern Indian influences in 1989 and a Turkish/Kurdish/Breton nuclear fusion reaction group that he divided with Merchand and Temiz in 1993. Robin, wHO launched his life history in the mid-'70s by acting traditional music in western France, has remained eclecticist on his own albums. He recorded the Gypsy-influenced record album Gitans in 1993, with a ten-piece chemical group that combined Indian, Arabic, Flamenco, and French sept influences. While he recorded Le Regard Nu (the Naked Look) as an improvising soloist responding to nude models in the studio, Payo Michto was recorded live during a duty tour of France. Kali Gadji, released in 1998, features a heavy brass sound and combines influences of Arabic, Flamenco, and the Wassoulou music of Mali.






Altai Hangai

Altai Hangai   
Artist: Altai Hangai

   Genre(s): 
Ethnic
   



Discography:


Gone With The Wind  (Songs of Mongolian Steppes)   
 Gone With The Wind (Songs of Mongolian Steppes)

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 12


Meera Kahe   
 Meera Kahe

   Year:    
Tracks: 7




 





Panic At The Disco, Snoop Dogg launch MTV programme