Wednesday 25 June 2008

Orchestral manoeuvre to give poorest children hope


Children as young as four from England's toughest estates will perform orchestral concerts under plans inspired by a Venezuelan programme which has transformed the lives of youngsters in that country's most violent slums.


The El Sistema initiative has used a network of orchestras to help 500,000 impoverished children avoid crime and drug abuse over the past 33 years.Now ministers hope a similar scheme can use music to stop youngsters from England's most deprived homes going off the rails.

Pupils as young as four will be in the £3m, three-year "In Harmony" programme, led by the cellist Julian Lloyd Webber. It will begin in three or four pilot areas within months. The project is based on the El Sistema initiative in Venezuela, which resulted in the formation of the Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra, and has been credited not just with transforming the lives of street children but the social cohesion of the country.

The Government has taken advice from Jose Antonio Abreu, the economist and amateur musician who founded the El Sistema programme in the 1970s. Children from the poorest backgrounds are given free music tuition by charismatic teachers. They are then brought together into orchestras and encouraged to play live in front of audiences from as early as four.

The Venezuelan orchestra has toured the world, and performed to wide acclaim at the Proms last year. Participants have gone on to successful international careers as professional musicians.

In England, leading orchestras and venues such as the Barbican in London will alsorun after-school music clubs and put on free concerts and master classes to try to tackle social problems by engaging children through music, Lord Adonis, the Schools minister, said yesterday, as "a powerful agent of social change". He added: "It teaches discipline and rigour, it raises hopes and aspirations, it is a source of pleasure and enjoyment and it also gives young people skills that will stay with them for life. Our new programme, In Harmony, will introduce children as young as four to the family of the orchestra. The programme is as much about building vital life skills as about developing musical talent. The sense of achievement – from the hard work of rehearsals to the successful performances in front of international audiences – is an important ingredient in what has made El Sistema such a force for social progress in South America."

The El Sistema programme has been credited with causing a reduction in school dropout rates, drug abuse and criminality among youngsters in Venezuela. British ministers have visited Venezuela to see the scheme in action, and a similar project has already started in Scotland.

Lloyd Webber said: "Music has the power to transform young people's lives. All children should have the right to experience music and I am excited and passionate about this new way of making that happen."

Leading venues in London, Bristol and Manchester will become after-school clubs with master-classes, free concerts and the chance for children to make CD recordings. The project is part of the government drive to ensure all primary pupils in England have the chance to learn a musical instrument for at least a year by 2011.










See Also

Wednesday 18 June 2008

Celebrities mourn Saint Laurent at Paris funeral

By James Mackenzie


PARIS (Reuters) - France said farewell to fashion designer
Yves Saint Laurent at a funeral on Thursday attended by
supermodels, film stars and President Nicolas Sarkozy.


Office workers and residents of nearby buildings leaned out
of their windows as police held crowds back near the Paris
church of Saint Roch where the ceremony was held.


Actress Catherine Deneuve, whose aura of refined elegance
was most closely associated with the designer, read a poem by
Walt Whitman, followed by a speech from Saint Laurent's
long-time partner and business associate Pierre Berge.


"You could have slid into fashions at times, but instead
you remained faithful to your own style, and you were quite
right, for that style is now everywhere, perhaps not on fashion
catwalks but in the streets of the whole world," Berge said.


Although Saint Laurent himself famously hated his own time
as a conscript in the French army, his coffin was greeted by an
armed honor guard, whose stiff military bearing contrasted
strangely with the elegant mourners mingling after the service.


Sarkozy sat in the front row of the church alongside his
wife Carla, a former model who used to strut the catwalk at
Saint Laurent's glamorous shows.


Hailed as one of the great couturiers of the 20th century,
Saint Laurent was part of a distinguished line of French
designers from Coco Chanel to Christian Dior who consolidated
the reputation of Paris as the fashion capital of the world.


A shy and reclusive figure in his later years with few
close friends, his rank in the fashion world could nonetheless
be gauged from the array of celebrities at Saint Roch, a church
traditionally associated with artists and musicians. 

Thursday 12 June 2008

Ferro Gaita

Ferro Gaita   
Artist: Ferro Gaita

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Rei Di Funana   
 Rei Di Funana

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 10




 





J-Live

Flare Up in 50 Cent House Hearing

50 CentA New York judge is all fired up over 50 Cent's suspicious home blaze.

State Supreme Court Justice Carol Edmead has prohibited the rapper from selling or otherwise disposing of...


UCLA organist Christoph Bull pulls out the stops with 'Organica'

CLAD IN jeans and a long-sleeved Von Dutch T-shirt, blond, blue-eyed Christoph Bull shucked his rock 'n' roll boots and got set to work. Nearby, Max Kaplan, a twentysomething student in a T-shirt, khaki shorts and flip-flops, whipped out his ax and got ready too.

Soon, the sounds of a clarinet-organ jam filled the air of the UCLA music studio. Bouncing on the pedals of a Noack mechanical-action pipe organ in his blue socks, as his hands flew across the multi-rowed keyboard, Bull traded licks with Kaplan, both clearly caught up in and relishing the improvised musical moment.

"It is important that you try a little bit of mixture -- of traditional and modern, of classical and contemporary," Bull told Kaplan and the other students, all from such nonorgan majors as saxophone, trombone and violin, with whom he would play this day -- sometimes in duos, sometimes in trios.




Such groupings might seem odd, but not to Bull, who insists that the organ is far more than a musical relic best left to churches and horror movie soundtracks. It's "back in vogue," says the German-born scholar-performer and UCLA faculty member, who is among those happy to pipe up to explain how and why.

Since coming to Los Angeles in 1990 -- after training in Mannheim, Germany, and at the Berklee College of Music in Boston -- Bull has played not just in cathedrals and concert halls but also at the Whisky a Go Go, the Viper Room, Cinespace and the Hotel Cafe. His fellow performers have included funk bassist Bootsy Collins, P-funk master George Clinton and violinist-composer Lili Haydn, with whom he opened for Cyndi Lauper.

Tonight, though, Bull will be appearing in more traditional surroundings -- UCLA's Royce Hall, where he will present the latest version of the show he has dubbed "Organica." In the UCLA Live presentation, scheduled to emphasize French organ masterworks and especially pieces in honor of the 100th anniversary of Olivier Messiaen's birth, he will be joined by mezzo-soprano I-Chin Feinblatt; artist Norton Wisdom; videographer Benton-C Bainbridge, who will create live images for projection; Catch Me Bird dancer-choreographer Nehara Kalev; and two other organists, Chelsea Chen and Maxine Thevenot.

"The music dictates my imagery, guides my hand," says Wisdom, explaining his paint-by-music role in the program. The "organ is like a symphony. It creates forms. It has an imagery that is very archaic and like the collective unconscious of the human race. It is inclusive of human feeling." The instrument "really mimics almost any human feeling and emotion, and that kind of depth" truly inspires him, he says, adding that Bull is on the "leading edge in both the rock 'n' roll and classical music communities."

Says David Sefton, the executive and artistic director of UCLA Live, for which Bull has performed "Organica" twice before, "I have always been open to a less-conventional approach to the organ, which is why Christoph and 'Organica' are a perfect fit. He brings a different kind of enthusiasm, a multidisciplinary and much more 21st century approach, which is not what you would expect to find from traditional organists." In audience terms, Sefton says, "You get more people when it is Christoph than a conventional classical recital or a straight organ repertoire."

Bull, 41, has twice been honored by the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers for his innovative programming. The "Organica" concept, he says, is "my creation. I started it nine years ago and trademarked it. I was playing a lot of rock on keyboard or piano in clubs with other musicians. Then I wanted to do an organ concert with the flow and feel of a rock concert. The idea is to present the organ in a fresh and colorful way."

As an instrument, Bull says, the organ "is modern and predates the synthesizer and electronic music." He tries to play it "with the spirit of a rock musician. In 'Organica,' there is a way of doing it. It is different every time I do it. Lots of innovation."

When it comes to technique and training, however, Bull has deep, traditional roots. He started as a pianist at age 5 but soon switched to the organ, partly because his legs were long enough to reach the pedals and "anything with black-and-white keys," he jokes, "fascinates me."

New World, new ideas

BULL'S education in his native Germany -- at the Heidelberg School for Church Music and the Freiburg Conservatory -- emphasized the conventional aspects of his instrument. "Germany has a good education system," he says. "But they only taught classical. I did not want to play only church music or pure classical music. I liked pop, rock and wanted to make my own music." So he decided to come to America, and he found the ideal destination at the Berklee school in Boston, where he could study not only organ but also composing, songwriting, recording, rock, jazz and music for film.

"He was already a musician when he came to us," says Berklee songwriting professor Jon Aldrich, who rates Bull among the Top 10 of the hundreds of students he has taught. "He was born with this art in his soul, brain and heart." Aldrich credits the conservatory with encouraging Bull's pop bent -- and with advising him to go to Los Angeles, a city that would welcome his eclectic aspirations.

As a result, Bull continued his studies at USC as well as the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago. Eventually, he became organist and music director at Blessed Sacrament Church in Hollywood and the German-language Christuskirche in Glendale. He now is organist of the First United Methodist Church, Santa Monica, and plays at churches around Southern California. Last year, he performed a recital at First Congregational Church in Long Beach, where the organist there, Mark Dickey, says of him: "It is unusual to find an organist who has been trained by good teachers but also likes to play the Beatles. He is a great improviser and turns this to fun. He did a little bit of Beatles in addition to his classical repertoire. A few people were surprised, but others were happy."

Dickey responded especially to Bull's modest, populist approach, he says, adding, "If people like Christoph do not help to get more people interested, pipe organs are going to die."

According to at least one expert who has seen "Organica" and knows the power of its massive instrument, Bull and his novel methods will help ensure that doesn't occur. Manuel Rosales, who with architect Frank Gehry designed the spectacular "French-fry" organ in Walt Disney Concert Hall and is that instrument's curator, observes: "Though the organ is the most exciting instrument, it has been marginalized. Many organists have become complacent. They do not want to learn new music, know what average people listen to and what young people want to hear. And that is where Christoph has come in and tried to energize his organ recitals with music that appeals to more than just the traditional organ crowd."

All the same, Bull plays a big role as a keeper of tradition as well. A few years ago, when one of the great new venues in Los Angeles for religious repertoire opened with a dazzling new instrument, he auditioned to be the organist for the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels. He was not picked. But he did catch the attention of UCLA, where the much-admired Thomas Harmon was retiring after 34 years as university organist.

"I was impressed with his excellent playing," Harmon says, speaking by phone from his home in Oregon. "His program was very innovative. I thought that he might be a very good way to put a new spark in the organ audiences at UCLA. And as I look in at what he does over the years, he very much stays in touch with the latest trends."

Indeed, Bull was hired as a consultant on Steven Spielberg's 2002 film, "Minority Report," with its key character of an organ-playing guard, and besides "Organica," he regularly employs Royce Hall's rumbling pipe organ for rollicking accompaniments to silent movies.

His technique in that role has won the praise of, among others, Times Music Critic Mark Swed, who after seeing the organist play in a white UCLA T-shirt and shiny red pants, likened the impish Bull to legendary organ showman Virgil Fox.

Swed noted that Bull, in showcasing Walther Ruttmann's "Berlin: Symphony of a City," mashed up a little Baroque, Mendelssohn, Rheinberger and Brahms to contribute "significantly to the mesmerizing depiction of a day in the life of a city. . . . 69 minutes of dramatically effective improvisation was no small accomplishment."

In addition, Bull has brought the art of improvisation to his repertoire of academic specialties. His students for those classes aren't organists but clarinetists, saxophonists and other instrumentalists who say they get a kick out of jamming with him in the small UCLA organ studio.

Chika Inoue, 20, a saxophone major, notes that "you can do a lot of sounds with organ. And this instrument goes well with saxophone and other wind instruments. The most exciting part is to improvise with him." For his part, Roger Bourland, who chairs the music faculty at UCLA, is gratified by the student interest that Bull has built. "He generates more interest in the organ," Bourland says. "I am surprised to see how students get excited once they get into the organ studio." That energy, he says, "could change their mind" about the virtues of the instrument.

For Bull, it's fascination like his students' with the possibilities of the pipe organ that promises a real future for it, because "especially composers [will] find it interesting and write for it. This will keep it alive.

"At my concerts," he says, "you will find people from all ages, young and old -- which is not the norm. I like old people, but the young people who normally do not go to an organ concert come to mine. And this is good!"

utku.cakirozer@latimes.com

REM joined onstage by Johnny Marr

REM were joined onstage by Johnny Marr and the co-producers of their 1983 debut album 'Murmur' as their world tour continued in North Carolina last night (June 10).

The band were joined at the Raleigh Walnut Creek Pavilion by Marr, as they have been for the last four dates on the tour, for a version of their 1986 single 'Fall On Me' during the encore.

Smiths guitar legend Marr's current band Modest Mouse are supporting on the US leg of the tour, along with The National.

REM had another surprise up their sleeves when they introduced Mitch Easter and Don Dixon for a version of 'Sitting Still', which appears on the aforementioned 'Murmur'.

The band, who have been playing wildly different sets on each night of the tour, performed songs from every one of their 14 studio LPs, as well as '1,000,000' from their 1982 mini-album 'Chronic Town'.

The set was:

'Harborcoat'
'Living Well Is The Best Revenge'
'Bad Day'
'What's The Frequency, Kenneth?'
'1,000,000'
'Man-Sized Wreath'
'Welcome To The Occupation'
'Accelerate'
'Seven Chinese Brothers'
'Hollow Man'
'Imitation Of Life'
'Houston'
'Electrolite'
'Walk Unafraid'
'The One I Love'
'Final Straw'
'Find The River'
'Let Me In'
'Horse To Water'
'Auctioneer (Another Engine)'
'Orange Crush'
'I'm Gonna DJ'
'Supernatural Superserious'
'Losing My Religion'
'Pretty Persuasion'
'Fall On Me'
'Sitting Still'
'Man On The Moon'

The tour continues tonight (June 11) at Washington Merriweather Post Pavilion.

REM headline the Oxegen Festival in Ireland on July 12 and T In The Park in Scotland on July 13 before playing the following stadium shows in August:

Manchester Old Trafford Cricket Ground (August 24)
Cardiff Millennium Stadium (25)
Southampton Rose Bowl (27)
London Twickenham Stadium (30)

To check REM ticket availability and get all the latest listings, go to NME.COM/GIGS now, or call 0871 230 1094..




Jun 17, 2008 at Zodiac @ Carling Academy, Oxford -
Aug 24, 2008 at Lancashire County Cricket Club, Manchester -
Aug 25, 2008 at Millennium Stadium, Cardiff -
More REM tickets

Cheju Mixes Latest Boltfish Recordings Showcase

The 5th installment in Boltfish Recordings' series of free mp3 downloads is a showcase mix of tracks from recent Boltfish releases, mixed by Cheju.


This mix was recorded live at the inSpiral lounge in Camden, London in January 2008, and has since received airplay on Fluid Radio in the UK and Digital::Nimbus Radio in the USA.


Tracklisting:


1. Zainetica - Daylight

2. Obfusc - Before We Lose Our Legs

3. Soutien Gorge - Madarka

4. Amorph - Childhood

5. Preston - Time

6. Z-Arc - 40 Microns

7. btb - Life to b#

8. Z-Arc - Refracted

9. Env(itre) - Echinus

10. 8yone - Gl�ck

11. btb - Building a Better Life Through Living

12. Preston - Dependo

13. btb - I Have Diagrams and Mushrooms

14. City Rain - Click Clack

15. Env(itre) - Wierarun


Grab it Here




See Also

Hilton searching for new best friend

Paris Hilton has inked a deal to star in a new MTV reality series which will follow her search for a new best friend.
Variety reports that the series is tentatively titled 'Paris Hilton's My New BFF' - the 'BFF' stands for 'Best Friends Forever'.
The series will follow 20 hopefuls as they try and prove that they have what it takes to join Hilton's social circle.
Ten episodes of the series are to be made and MTV is planning to show the programme in the fourth quarter of this year.

Newport Folk Festival expands lineup well beyond folk this year








Trey Anastasio probably wouldn't be confused with a folk act, even if the former frontman for the jam band Phish stepped on stage solo with an acoustic guitar.

The same goes for the Black Crowes, whose bluesy, guitar-driven rock would easily drown out the average acoustic troubadour.

But both acts are on the bill for the upcoming Newport Folk Festival, which this year features a genre-bending mix of marquee performers that draw big crowds but don't fit snugly under the traditional folk umbrella.

The lineup is a way for the venerable festival to stay relevant amid a glut of summertime concerts, while deepening the audience base for a tradition-rich event best known for the year Bob Dylan swapped his acoustic guitar for an electric one.

"If you just keep putting up the same lineup year after year that's safe, you start narrowing and your audience gets smaller and smaller," said Jay Sweet, an associate producer with the festival's new production company, The Festival Network.

The festival is scheduled for Aug. 1-3 in Newport, R.I.

The Black Crowes and Anastasio, performing a solo acoustic set four years after Phish dissolved, headline the Aug. 2 lineup. Jimmy Buffett, who is rooted in folk but is best known today as the bon vivant balladeer of carefree living, plays the following day.

Stephen and Damian Marley, sons of reggae icon Bob Marley, Cat Power and alt-country band Son Volt will also be there, along with Levon Helm of the Band, Jakob Dylan and more traditional folksters like Richie Havens, who performed at Woodstock in 1969.

A newcomer to the festival, Damian Marley said he sees parallels between folk and reggae and between his father's music and Dylan's.

"Folk music was kind of used as a voice to express against the system or what is society's norms," Marley said. "Reggae music has been used in that same way, to express the struggle of the people."

Anastasio said he was grateful for the chance to play Newport, which will be his first performance in a year and a half.

"The folk music definition has changed in this fast music world and musical styles are blending really quickly," Anastasio said in an e-mail. "It is forward-thinking and open-minded of the Newport festival to embrace different styles."

Dick Pleasants, who hosts a morning show on WUMB-FM, a Boston station specializing in folk music, said he saw nothing wrong with diversifying the lineup or trying to draw more fans but said it would be sad if the festival were to move away from its more traditional folk roots.

"I would hesitate necessarily to call it a folk festival anymore," Pleasants said. "But it could be the Newport Music Festival."

Sweet, in his first year as producer at Newport, said organizers weren't trying to break from the festival's storied legacy but wanted to revitalize the event through a lineup of artists with broad crossover appeal and the potential to excite the crowd. That's especially important as more music festivals sprout throughout the country.

The goal is to expose audience members to artists they're unfamiliar with, so old-time folkies drawn to, say, Havens or Gillian Welch could join legions of Phishheads at Anastasio's acoustic performance.

"I don't think you last this long unless you are continually helping artists, supporting artists who take risks," said Sweet, editor-at-large of Paste magazine, a music and film publication. "This festival has always been known as a place for artists to take chances."

He said tickets sales were slightly better than at this time last year and that he was hoping for a sellout - 10,000 fans a day.

Since 1959, the festival has hosted a who's who of folk performers and singer-songwriters, from Joan Baez, Pete Seeger and Peter, Paul and Mary to James Taylor, the Indigo Girls and Mary Chapin Carpenter. But it's occasionally offered less conventional selections, such as Janis Joplin, the Pixies, and last year, Tom Morello from Rage Against the Machine.

Dylan, who debuted there in 1963, memorably pushed the boundaries two years later when he took the stage with an electric guitar in a much-ballyhooed performance that drew jeers and is credited for helping break down the barrier between rock and folk.

This year's lineup gives a more expansive take of who and what can constitute folk music, which some fans and folk scholars say has always been loosely defined.

"The audience changes and time changes," said Paul Dube, a Rhode Island musician who books acts for a folk coffeehouse. "We can't just think of folk music as a songwriter sitting behind a guitar or piano singing original songs all night."

David Hajdu, a Columbia University professor and writer who has attended about a half-dozen Newport festivals, said the question of who should properly be classified as folk is as old as the genre itself. He said the festival has always been more a tourist attraction designed for mass appeal than a pristine showcase of traditional folk.

"It's not a scholarly academic festival. It's not like a university-funded and organized anthropological festival of folk music in the purist sense. It never has been," said Hajdu, author of "Positively Fourth Street: The Lives and Times of Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Mimi Baez Farina and Richard Farina."

Sweet said Newport fans have historically been open to new experiences, while artists who perform there understand the festival's traditions.

"Curiosity," he said, "is through the roof this year."










See Also

Shlomi Aber and Itamar Sagi

Shlomi Aber and Itamar Sagi   
Artist: Shlomi Aber and Itamar Sagi

   Genre(s): 
Techno
   



Discography:


Blonda   
 Blonda

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 3




 





Richard Clayderman