Sunday 31 August 2008

Glasgow's music scene recognised with rare honour from Unesco



It is nigh two decades since Glasgow was crowned European City of Culture. The rest of the world may have sneered but Clydeside was about to give other urban centres approximately the earth a lord class in how the arts could help ease the choppy passage into the post industrial age.



Today Glasgow is revelling in its latest laurels as it is named a macrocosm centre of music by Unesco, the United Nations cultural establishment.


News leaked out, sweetly enough, in the beating cultural middle of its old rival at the Edinburgh Fringe during a visit by the Unesco director general Ko�chiro Matsuura.


Announcing the initiative, portion of the Creative Cities Network, he said: "We at Unesco believe that culture non only makes an economic contribution, it provides meaning, and a sense of identity and continuity that is constitutional to the life of all societies".


Mr Matsuura will make the journey west to confirm the selection at a civic receipt later today. The official announcement testament elevate Glasgow alongside the previous recipients Seville, and Bologna, home of the composer Rossini.


The former ship building capital has long notable its unique ability to produce the very best in musical talent. In the public of popular music, few cities, excluding perhaps Liverpool or Manchester, can claim to receive churned out quite such a glittery array of stars.


In the 1960s, Lulu topped the charts at the tender age of 15 with "Shout", and now aged 60 is still playing. In 1970 there was the Sensational Alex Harvey Band and in the 1980s there was Orange Juice and Del Amitri.


Today Franz Ferdinand, Travis, Belle and Sebastian and most of late Glasvegas get confirmed the city's musical heritage.


The yearly Celtic Connections festival has become an acclaimed fixture in the folk and traditional music calendar, lottery fans from around the world.


The Glasgow Royal Concert Hall opened to coincide with the Capital of Culture class, replacing the St Andrew's Hall which was destroyed by fire in 1962. Since then leading outside orchestras get played there including the Moscow State and the Vienna Philharmonic. Glasgow now bills itself Scotland's "classical powerhouse" as home to the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, Scottish Opera, the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and the National Youth Orchestra.


Scotland is nowadays the solely nation in the public with deuce Unesco Creative Cities. Edinburgh became City of Literature in 2004.


The title is expected to bring a major hike up to tourism and job when events begin in 2009. It comes with a high-voltage delegation travelling to Unesco's Paris military headquarters earlier this summer to deliver a 50-page document outlining the case for Glasgow.


The dossier pointed out that in a typical week the city would host 127 music events, with the music industry worth an estimated �74.6m to the local economy employing 2,922 people.


The bid received the support of Prime Minister Gordon Brown and the Scots fiddler Nicola Benedetti.












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Thursday 21 August 2008

Jackson Browne sues McCain, RNC over song in ad

LOS ANGELES �

Jackson Browne doesn't want John McCain running on anything fueled by his lyrics. The singer-songwriter sued McCain and the Ohio and national Republican committees in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles on Thursday, accusing them of victimization his song "Running on Empty" without his permission.


The lawsuit claims the song's use was an violation of his copyright and will lead people to conclude he endorses McCain. The suit says Browne is a lifelong openhanded who is as well-known for his music as for organism "an counsel for social and environmental justice."


The advertising mocks Democratic presidential prospect Barack Obama's contention that if U.S. drivers got regular tuneups and drove on properly inflated tires, they could save the same amount of fossil oil that would be gained by seaward drilling. According to the suit, "Running on Empty" plays in the background of the ad criticizing the remarks.


Robert Bennett, chair of the Ohio party, said the ad was pulled when Browne objected. He called the causa a "big to-do just about nothing."


McCain spokesman Brian Rogers disavowed the ad, expression it wasn't a product of the Republican presidential candidate's campaign.


Browne's lawsuit contends the Ohio Republican party released the ad on behalf of McCain and the RNC. The RNC did non return a phone shout seeking comment.


The suit notes that former musicians, including ABBA and John Cougar Mellencamp, possess asked McCain to stop using their work.


Browne's attorney, Lawrence Iser, called the ad's habit of the song "reprehensible."


The 59-year-old singer claims his reputation has already been damaged and is seeking more than $75,000 in damages.


Browne released "Running on Empty" - the song and an record album by the same diagnose - in 1977. According to the lawsuit, the album has sold more than 7 million copies.


Browne's financial success has aided Democratic candidates over the years. Campaign finance records show he contributed $2,300 to Obama's presidential campaign utmost year and $2,000 to the Illinois senator's campaign coffers in 2004.


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On the Net:


http://www.jacksonbrowne.com/










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Monday 11 August 2008

'Sienna Miller Is Not A Homewrecker'

...more Sienna Miller �

Friends of Sienna Miller let been defending the actress against allegations she is a homewrecker by stating that the man she is currently involved with, Balthazar Getty, had split up from his wife a long time before she started seeing him.


The actress became romantically linked to the billionaire shortly afterwards ending her romance to Rhys Ifans, and many have since accused her of being responsible for the end of Balthazar�s marriage to his married woman Rosetta.


However, friends close to Sienna claim this is absolutely fictional. One informant tells New York Post: "She and Balthazar met through friends and he was already separated from his wife� He'd been sleeping on friends' couches for sextet months.


"It's just annoying that all this misinformation is out in that location. He should've announced his separation a lot originally than he did - she was always told he was separated.


As for those lewd photos of the couple lounging on an Italian beach erosion very slight, the source adds: "His mother and her mother were the ones session next to them. Balthazar is in LA with her today and he's speaking to Rosetta and going to [his old address] to see his children. Sienna has been hanging out with his family all week.


"Please. Sienna and he are in love. They're living together in LA. Everyone knows about her and accepts her."

Wednesday 6 August 2008

Halle Berry Files Criminal Complaint Against Paparazzi

Halle Berry has filed a deplorable complaint against a paparazzi photographer who� conducted a “selfsame blatant and invasive tresspass,” her attorney aforementioned Friday (July 25).
Photos of Berry and her four-month-old daughter, Nahla Ariela Aubry, circulated on the meshing and were published in Life & Style and In Touch magazines, claiming the photos were taken while she was “out and about in Los Angeles.”
Berry released a statement to The Associated Press saying, �The paparazzi have departed too far. [Gabriel] and I have always remained that we would never sell baby photos or otherwise overwork her in any way.
“I get long since come to terms with the fact that choosing a career as an actress has made me a public figure, merely my infant has made no such choice, and unless and until she does, I will do everything I can for the sake of her safety and well-being to keep her out of the public eye.”
She adds, “I mean to do everything I can to make sure the photographer who lawlessly intruded into my place is criminally prosecuted.�
A rep for the magazines told the AP that they licensed the pic from “an established picture agency,” and “are non aware on that point was anything improper in the pickings of this image.”
Evan Spiegal, Berry’s lawyer, explained that a criminal complaint had been filed against Fame Pictures over the pic, however, the company has agreed to have the photo removed from circulation.
A spokesman for the paparazzi agency said, “It was a inadequate decision to put those pictures out in the first place because they were taken on private property. I think she�s completely in the right to protect her child.�
Photo courtesy of Sony Pictures.