Friday, 5 September 2008

Iconic Stones logo sold for �51,000




Mick Jagger's lips have made the Victoria and Albert Museum's lasting
collection.






The Rolling Stones' famous tongue and lips logo has been snapped up by the
London institution for just under �51,000 at an auction in the US.



The pop art design was created by bookman John Pasche in 1970 and was partly
elysian by the distinctive shape of the Rolling Stones' frontman's mouth. The
persona was first used on the Stones' Sticky Fingers album and has been in
continuous use by the band ever since.



Sir Mick approached the Royal College of Art in London in 1969 to avail him
find a design student afterward being discomfited by the bland designs offered by
their record label Decca Records.



He visited Pasche's degree render, which lED to discussions for a logo and other
forge for the Stones' have label, Rolling Stones Records, after the group's
narrow ended with Decca in 1970.



Victoria Broakes, promontory of exhibitions, V&A Theatre and Performance
Collections, aforementioned: "The Rolling Stones' Tongue is one of the first examples
of a group using branding and it has become arguably the world's most famed
rock logotype.



"We ar delighted to have acquired the original artwork, especially as it was
designed at the Royal College of Art right here in South Kensington by a
student who exploited to call the V&A's collections for inspiration.



"We are selfsame grateful for the Art Fund's keep in helping us acquire this
exciting addition to our collections."



The Art Fund, the UK's independent art charity, contributed half the price of
the piece.



David Barrie, film director of the Art Fund, said: "This iconic logotype, first used on
the Stones' Sticky Fingers record album, is one of the most visually dynamic and
innovative son ever created.



"Designed in the UK by a British artist for matchless of the country's nearly
successful groups of all time, it's wonderful that it has now set up a
permanent home in London, where the band was in the beginning formed."



Meanwhile, admission charges at the Institute of Contemporary Arts Gallery
(ICA) in London have been scrapped, it announced today. The first show to be
disengage will be the ICA Auction Exhibition, which opens on September 11. The
gallery was founded in 1947 and its exhibitions over the years make been
controversial.














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Thursday, 7 August 2008

Gemma Hayes

"This is a sung that I co-wrote with Gemma Hayes, who is shamefully unsigned," Counting Crows frontman Adam Duritz aforementioned before launching into the band's new track "Washington Square Park" in figurehead of an intimate audience at the Apple Store in New York's Soho.

Indeed, Hayes had given Duritz the impressive piano line to the song, which is a highlight on the Crows' new Geffen set, "Saturday Nights/Sunday Mornings."

"After a gig, we all went back to our hotel and I sat down and played this line on a piano that was there in the lobby," Hayes says. She previously opened for the rock troupe in the United Kingdom and Ireland. "I just told Adam, 'Here, you can have it. I've had it for too long, so I'm obviously not going to do anything with it.' "

The Irish singer/songwriter has made famous friends, too, like My Bloody Valentine's Kevin Shields, who invited her to play at the MBV-curated All Tomorrow's Parties festival Sept. 21 in upstate New York. Shields and such songwriters as Paul Noonan can also be heard on Hayes' self-released album, "The Hollow of Morning," due May 2 in Ireland and May 5 in England.

The album, produced by David Odlum, is Hayes' third full-length and the first since her parting from Virgin in the United Kingdom. "I learned a lot from going from an indie subsidiary to being a major-label artist. It's all about the people you have backing you. I have a lot of ideas now of how [releasing an album] should go," she says.

Hayes also hopes it will be her first wide release in the United States, the country she calls her second home. Though she released her Mercury Prize-nominated "On My Side" in 2003 in America on a limited basis, she hopes to attract labels to the impressive and delicate effort here by touring major cities this summer.





More info

Monday, 30 June 2008

The Great Kat

The Great Kat   
Artist: The Great Kat

   Genre(s): 
Metal: Heavy
   Rock
   Rock: Guitar Virtuoso
   



Discography:


Rossini's Rape   
 Rossini's Rape

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 4


Beethoven On Speed   
 Beethoven On Speed

   Year: 1990   
Tracks: 16


Worship Me Or Die   
 Worship Me Or Die

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 11




 






Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Actor Andre Braugher returns to a very familiar 'Hamlet' in New York








NEW YORK - If not for a twist of fate many years ago, Andre Braugher would likely be an engineer right now.

A very intense engineer, but an engineer nonetheless. It didn't happen only due to a chance encounter he had with Shakespeare while as an undergraduate at Stanford University.

The director of a student production of "Hamlet" begged Braugher to fill-in for the role of Claudius when the original actor bowed out just before the debut.

Braugher, perhaps best know for his role of a Baltimore police detective in the acclaimed 1990s TV show "Homicide: Life on the Street," had just three days to learn his lines. When he finally hit the stage, he was ready to abandon his old life.

"I had a mid-life crisis at 19. I just had to do this," says Braugher, now 45. "I found an emotional immediacy and resonance and joy in being on stage."

Braugher, the product of an all-boys Jesuit high school in Chicago, found there were some added benefits to a life as an actor that engineering couldn't match.

"People clap and they go out and have parties afterward and its full of vivacious young women," he says, laughing. "Otherwise, it's just you and your slide rule and your T-1 calculator in the library."

His career trajectory forever changed. Braugher became a drama major and later got a master's from The Juilliard School. He then embarked on an Emmy-and Obie-winning career that has led him back this summer to where it all began: As Claudius in "Hamlet."

He co-stars in the Public Theater's free Shakespeare in the Park series, opposite Michael Stuhlbarg in the title role, Sam Waterston of "Law & Order" fame, Lauren Ambrose of "Six Feet Under" and Margaret Colin, currently on TV's "Gossip Girl."

It's Braugher's first time on stage in a dozen years and his sixth Shakespeare in Central Park, following appearances in "King John," "Much Ado About Nothing," "Measure for Measure," "Twelfth Night" and "Henry V," for which he won a 1997 Obie in the title role.

"Shakespeare has always been a great love of mine," he says during an interview on a bench in, appropriately enough, the park's Shakespeare Garden. He is dressed in jeans and an untucked, button-down shirt, his hair going slightly grey.

"It's like that fantasy we always have of going back to meet up with your old lover and it's all still the same," he says. "Well, I've met up with my old lover and it's just as delicious as it always was."

Since his film debut in "Glory," Braugher has had a varied career, appearing on screen in films such as "City of Angels," "Duets," "Primal Fear," the recent remake of "Poseidon" and Spike Lee's "Get on the Bus." He recently was in "The Mist" and portrayed Gen. Hager in "Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer."

On the small screen, he's been in the doctor saga "Gideon's Crossing" and two short-lived series - "Hack," opposite David Morse, and "Thief," which earned him an Emmy in 2006. He just appeared in the A&E miniseries "The Andromeda Strain."

"He is one of the most gracious and brilliant actors I've ever worked with," says Oskar Eustis, the Public Theater's artistic director who is helming "Hamlet."

"He analyzes the text like nobody's business. He is generous, he is commanding. I mean he's just the cat's pyjamas, that's who Andre Braugher is."

Perhaps Braugher's best work was as Baltimore detective Frank Pembleton in the cult show "Homicide." His searing portrayal of a cop was as breathtaking as Michael Chiklis' Vic Mackey on "The Shield."

Over six seasons, Pembleton was a brooder, a philosopher and a master interrogator, one who could make even innocent men confess. When Braugher wanted to spice up his character, he persuaded the producers to let him suffer a debilitating stroke.

Braugher left the show in 1998 - it struggled on without him just one more season - with an Emmy and high hopes. Since then, the work hasn't always seemed commensurate with his talent.

"You have to live in the world that you're in. You have to play with the hand that you're dealt," he says. "I think I'd be willing to do almost anything - I'd be willing to pursue any great role - but then again, I do want to put food on the table."

The offer to return to Central Park this summer to rekindle his love of "Hamlet" was easy to accept. Braugher makes his home nearby in South Orange, N.J., with his actress wife Ami Brabson - they met at Juilliard and she played his spouse on "Homicide" - and their three boys.

"It's one of the greatest texts in the English language. Period," Braugher says. "When you think about how much commentary has been written about characters in the history of the world, it's Jesus followed by Hamlet."

His Claudius is a tortured man, a king with a chestful of clanking medals who has usurped both his brother's throne and wife, yet seems genuinely horrified to see things spiral so out of control that bodies pile up on the stage at the end like chord wood.

"This wouldn't be one of the greatest pieces in English literature if he was simply a goon," he says. "Shakespeare is wonderful in that way. You can't just put you finger on anybody and say, 'Oh, he's evil, he's good.' You have to make up your own mind."

Up next for Braugher is a role in "Passengers" with Anne Hathaway and a TNT comedy series with Ray Romano he hopes will be picked up. He also hopes to produce a film based on Ron McLarty's book "The Memory of Running," in which he will star. "I want to start creating opportunities for myself that haven't been readily available," Braugher says.

Asked to recall that first fumbling "Hamlet" at Stanford, Braugher says he has no regrets about the way his life changed, even if his father was a bit miffed that their engineering son returned a drama student.

"It turned out well," he says. "I'm one of the most fortunate men on Earth because of that. I'd rather be here than any other place else in the world right now."

-

On the Net: http://www.publictheater.org










See Also

Monday, 16 June 2008

New Film Club for Over 55s

Axis Ballymun and Dublin City Council's Arts Office, in association with The Irish Film Institute and Access Cinema, are launching a new monthly Film Club for the over 55s
'The Pictures' commences this month with the classic comedy 'Some Like It Hot' and will show one screening per month of all genres of films in the Axis Arts and Community Resource Centre in Ballymun.
The season continues with three other films: 'About Schmidt' on Monday 18 February at 2.30pm, 'The Swingin' 60's' on Monday 31 March at 2.30pm and 'The Painted Veil' on Monday 28 April at 2.30pm.
For further information contact Axis on 01 8832100.

Tuesday, 10 June 2008

James Bond - The Things They Say 8523


"I've never been asked to do JAMES BOND and I have a better body (than DANIEL CRAIG)." DUSTIN HOFFMAN on his 007 dreams.





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Lily Allen: ‘My behavior is not embarrassing’

Lily AllenLily Allen has denied reports she was thrown off a yacht party in Cannes — and insists her behavior is what you’d expect from a normal 23-year-old.


The ‘Smile’ singer took her My Space blog Friday to “respond to things I read about my self in the press.”


She says, “For the record I was not thrown off any body’s yacht in Cannes, occasionally I drink wine with lunch and yes I swim topless , this in my book is not embarrassing behavior.


“I’m 23 years old it’s not my fault if photographers follow me everywhere and need a story to print with their pointless pictures.”




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