Friday, 27 June 2008

The Verve - No Mud At Glastonbury As Festivalgoers Arrive


The sky is grey over Glastonbury, but it is smoke rather than cloud which is blighting festivalgoers' view of the sun.

A blaze at a nearby scrapyard has sent a large plume of smoke into the sky close to the site.

Festivalgoers, arriving to otherwise good weather in Somerset, have not been told to leave although the BBC reports several roads have had to be closed.

Weather for this year's festival is expected to deteriorate as the weekend progresses, but for now at least there is little of the mud which has become a key part of the Glastonbury experience in recent years.

That mud, combined with controversy over some of the main acts, is blamed for the festival not selling out for the first time in years. Around 800 tickets remain unsold.

Tomorrow night's headliners include The Verve, Jay-Z and Kings of Leon.



26/06/2008 16:01:02





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Thursday, 19 June 2008

Ajay Atul

Ajay Atul   
Artist: Ajay Atul

   Genre(s): 
Ethnic
   



Discography:


Meera Kahe   
 Meera Kahe

   Year:    
Tracks: 7




 





Bade Ghulam Ali Khan

Saturday, 14 June 2008

Country group Alabama sues drummer for $200K

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. —

The drummer for the country group Alabama has been sued by his fellow band members, who say he was overpaid $202,670.


The lawsuit filed May 9 in the Circuit Court of DeKalb County, Ala., claims that in 2003 Mark Herndon was paid for his share of net merchandise sales during the band's "American Farewell Tour" before a final accounting was done.


The final accounting, the suit claims, found that "there were no net merchandise revenues as defined by the contract."


The lawsuit seeks to recover the money.


The four members of Alabama - Teddy Gentry, Randy Owen, Jeff Cook and Herndon - have not performed together live since the 2003 farewell tour. Band members did gather Saturday for the unveiling of a group of bronze statues in their honor in Fort Payne, Ala.


The lawsuit, which names The Group Alabama Inc. as the plaintiff, also states that Herndon has demanded a payment of $65,047 which represents his share of an advance against anticipated sales of the "The Last Stand" CD, which was recorded live during the farewell tour and is being sold by Cracker Barrel restaurants.


Alabama contends in the lawsuit that this amount and Herndon's share of any future earnings should be withheld until the full amount Herndon was overpaid for merchandise sales is repaid.


Attorney Robert G. Wilson, who filed the lawsuit, said he could not comment.


Members of the band and Herndon's attorney were not immediately available for comment.


Alabama was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2005. Their hits include "Tennessee River," "The Closer You Get" and "Song of the South."








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Sunday, 8 June 2008

Susan Aglukark names scholar in residence at University of Alberta

EDMONTON - The University of Alberta is enlisting some celebrity help to recruit students from Nunavut and the Northwest Territories.

The university has given renowned Canadian Inuit singer and songwriter Susan Aglukark a distinguished scholar in residence position.

She will be a mentor to aboriginal artists on campus, and will help build a joint native studies, recreation, sport and community health degree program.

Aglukark will also serve as a consultant to the Canadian Circumpolar Institute and plans to lobby both provincial and federal governments to increase funding to aboriginal students.

In a release, she says she's always had an interest in encouraging First Nation's people to pursue post-secondary education.

She will be housed in the Faculty of Native studies for three days each month starting July 1.





News from �The Canadian Press, 2008




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Friday, 6 June 2008

Jennifer Aniston - Aniston Builds Eco-friendly Home

JENNIFER ANISTON is following in the footsteps of environmentally-conscious actress JULIA ROBERTS by building an eco-friendly home, according to reports.

Roberts will become Aniston's new neighbour when construction is completed on the Malibu, California mansion, which will boast a solar heating system, drought-resistant plants and organically-made building materials in addition to its ocean view.

A source tells U.S. magazine Star, "Jen (Aniston) wants to help the environment and she has the money."




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Madonna back with sexy show

HERE’S MADONNA back doing what she’s best at...

Cavorting with JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE in a raunchy stage show that has the
whole world talking.

Madge performed in front of 2,000 people at New York City's Roseland Ballroom.

The Sun’s Showbiz Editor Gordon Smart was one of the lucky ones in attendance
and absolutely loved the show.

Come back tomorrow for his full review of the gig. And click the link below
for lots more pictures:
Buy Madonna's single and album at the Bizarre shop here.

AZ

AZ   
Artist: AZ

   Genre(s): 
Rap: Hip-Hop
   



Discography:


The Format   
 The Format

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 14




One of the legion thoughtful, literate gangsta rappers to come forth from New York during the mid-'90s, AZ ne'er garnered the attention of peers like Nas and Jay Z. Instead, he adage his debut album, Doe or Die, become a critical front-runner in late 1995 earlier his life history suddenly went downhill after such modest and ephemeral success. Critics and b-boys likewise far-famed AZ and his debut album for a literate approach to the gangsta life-style. Like his aforementioned peers Nas and Jay Z, AZ non only brought tidings to his rhymes simply as well an telling catamenia and delivery that farther set him aside from the flood of New York MCs fighting for survival in the crowded belt game. Unfortunately, disdain Energy or Die's quiet success, AZ stumbled in sequent old age, in conclusion marking a modern major-label kinship with Motown in the early 2000s.


Born in Brooklyn as Anthony Cruz, AZ number one came to the greater pat community's attention in a large way afterward his stellar performance on Nas' "Life's a Bitch" in 1994. Given AZ's similarity to Nas and the overwhelming reply to Nas' Illmatic record album, it was merely a matter of time earlier AZ would account a record book deal, a feat he accomplished in 1995. The resulting debut album, Energy or Die, shook the New York hip-hop vista as Nas' Illmatic and Mobb Deep's Infamous had through short earlier it. Like those albums, Energy Department or Die reveled in the street life -- hustling for cash, hawking drugs, crimson encounters, mandatory boasting, struggling daily just to keep up -- merely took a literate and thoughtful glide path to the ofttimes exploitative gangsta motifs. Furthermore, like Nas, AZ had Pete Rock crafting the beats, which south Korean won the young knocker instant credibility among the hip-hop community.


When holy Writ impinge on the street that AZ was an official appendage of the supergroup known as the Firm, his position only rose higher. Anchored by Nas, Foxy Brown, Nature, and AZ on the mics, with Dr. Dre and the Trackmasters on the beats, it would appear as if the group could do no faulty. The group's 1997 record album all over up being a surprise failure, though, buried under silly expectations and too much ballyhoo. But AZ's bad chance didn't hitch there. He returned a year after with his sophomore album, Pieces of a Man, an record album that came and went relatively unnoticed and uncelebrated. For the next few days, AZ became a forgotten describe. No thirster with a major-label concentrate, he managed to release the little-heard S.O.S.A. record in 2000. It didn't sell many copies or resurrect his career but rather re-affirmed the fact that he was indeed a gifted rapper whether the public and the industry treasured to notice it or not.


Inside a year's prison term, AZ secured a new major-label relationship with Motown, a label that had never had much, if any, success with rap artists. Still, the Brooklyn doorknocker wouldn't let the label's report defy him back, as he illustrated on 9 Lives, unofficially billed as his comeback album. Though wanting big-name production and employing a skimpy roll of guest rappers, the record album did vitrine AZ's lyrical prowess and his endurance, anchored by the sample-laced atomic number 82 unmarried "Problems." Aziatic from 2002 received positive reviews boilersuit and deuce long time later by the double magnetic disc career overview Decade 1994-2004.





Die Form

Loomer

Loomer   
Artist: Loomer

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Love Is A Dull Instrument   
 Love Is A Dull Instrument

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 13




 





Speed Network Garners Its Best Ratings Ever

EastEnders star missed Palmer & Owen

Former 'EastEnders' actress Natalie Cassidy has said that she missed working with soap stars Patsy Palmer and Sid Owen during their absence from Albert Square.
The 24-year-old star, who recently left her role as Sonia Fowler in the soap, told The Sun that she would have loved to be on set when the two stars returned.
Cassidy said: "It was frustrating they came back after I left. It would have been great to work with Patsy again."
Speaking about her own decision to leave the show, she said: "I feel like that door's closed now and I need to go and do other stuff."
However, the actress didn't rule out a return to the soap in the future, saying: "Bianca and Ricky have been gone for nine years. They've gone out, done their stuff and come back. Maybe in nine years I might go back."

R. Kelly jury up to 8 members

Jury selection in the R. Kelly trial reached the halfway point Tuesday as attorneys from both sides agreed on five more jurors.

The child pornography case now has eight jurors—five men and three women—who will decide the R&B superstar's fate. The eight are split evenly between black and white members.

The newest jurors chosen are a teacher's aide, a married man in his 40s, a criminal justice student, an investment firm compliance officer and a man with prior jury experience. They join three people selected after Monday's questioning.




















Before opening statements can begin, attorneys must settle on 12 jurors and four alternates to serve on the high-profile case. The trial, which has drawn international media attention, is expected to last several weeks.

Kelly, 41, is charged with 14 counts of child pornography stemming from a sexually explicit videotape that authorities say he made with a girl as young as 13. Prosecutors say the tape was made sometime between Jan. 1, 1998 and Oct. 1, 2000. Kelly has pleaded not guilty.

Dressed in a sand-colored suit and gold patterned tie, Kelly did not take an active role in jury selection for the second consecutive day. He appeared to be fighting to keep his eyes open as lawyers asked the same questions about presumption of innocence, the right to a fair trial and reasonable doubt.

Among Kelly's newest jurors, the investment banker fought hardest to be excused. He wrote on his questionnaire that his service would create a financial burden so severe, he would struggle to afford "food and water." He said Tuesday that his boss assured him they could work something out.

The man, who is white and sported an "Impeach Bush" button on his backpack, said he would take his jury duties seriously if picked.

"I would make sure I would hold myself to very high standards," he said.

Another man picked Tuesday suggested he would be a good juror based on his prior jury service in two civil trials. The man, also white, said he had not followed the case much.

Of the eight selected so far, only one seems to be wholly familiar with R. Kelly and his music. The panelist, a black woman who works as a teacher's aide at a local Catholic school, told the judge that her friends have discussed the case and are evenly split about the singer's innocence. Some believe Kelly's shown in the tape, while others don't believe it's him, she said.

The woman works at the Catholic school that once employed Rev. Daniel McCormack, who pleaded guilty last year to fondling five boys ranging in age from 8 to 12 inside the school's rectory.

McCormack's case was tried by Assistant State's Atty. Shauna Boliker, who is also the lead prosecutor on the Kelly case.

Another juror, a married culinary student who is black, recognized the names of two potential witnesses, but said he had not followed the case much since the singer's 2002 indictment.

"I don't know the facts yet," he said.

The panel's youngest member is a criminal justice student who wants to be a police officer. She has been in school for five years.

During questioning, she said she only knew one or two of the Grammy winner's "old songs." The singer, whose real name is Robert Kelly, did not appear offended.

Jury selection resumes Wednesday.

sstclair@tribune.com