Monday, 30 June 2008

Maggie Reilly

Maggie Reilly   
Artist: Maggie Reilly

   Genre(s): 
Pop
   Retro
   



Discography:


Starcrossed   
 Starcrossed

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 12


There and Back Again   
 There and Back Again

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 15


Elena   
 Elena

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 16


All The Mixes   
 All The Mixes

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 11


Midnight Sun   
 Midnight Sun

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 13


Echoes   
 Echoes

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 12


Save For A Rainy Day   
 Save For A Rainy Day

   Year:    
Tracks: 12




Best known for her prolonged coaction with renowned electronic composer Mike Oldfield, vocaliser Maggie Reilly was born in Glasgow, Scotland in 1956. She began her performing life history during the early 1970s as a member of the local blues band Joe Cool; later on renamed Cado Belle, the group's self-titled debut LP was issued in 1976. An EP followed a yr later, only Cado Belle dissolved before long later, with Reilly turning to session work on before signing on with the trio Riotous Assembly. She met Oldfield in 1979, and a yr later contributed vocals to his record album QE2; they collaborated on tierce more projects -- Five Miles Out, Crises and Uncovering -- before Reilly made her solo debut in 1984 with a cover of the classical "As Tears Go By." She spent the latter half of the decennium focusing on raising a family, reverting to music only intermittently, including a 1989 reunion with Oldfield on his album Earth Moving; ultimately, in 1992 Reilly issued her debut solo LP Echoes, followed a class later by Midnight Sun. Elena appeared in 1996.






Tuesday, 24 June 2008

DJ Don Cannon

DJ Don Cannon   
Artist: DJ Don Cannon

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


The Best Of Classic   
 The Best Of Classic

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 15




 






Monday, 23 June 2008

David Hykes

David Hykes   
Artist: David Hykes

   Genre(s): 
New Age
   



Discography:


True To The Times   
 True To The Times

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 8


Windhorse Riders   
 Windhorse Riders

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 9


Current Circulation   
 Current Circulation

   Year: 1986   
Tracks: 4




The act of David Hykes focuses on a few throat vocalizing traditions, including Mongolian and Tuvan. In 1975, he combined this singing descriptor and the harmonic series, and five-spot age later founded his Harmonic Awareness praxis in meditation. While Hykes was born in New Mexico in 1953, he grew up in the Northwest and lived in N.Y.C. from the mid-'70s through the late '80s. Beginning in the humanities in execution and as a movie maker, Hykes eventually affected toward musical composition and instruction speculation. He has recorded nigh ten CDs with his Harmonic Choir.






What's on

POPBic Runga, one of our most successful singer-songwriters, is performing her beautiful, haunting pop music on one night only at the SkyCity Theatre as part of the NZ Music Month series, which includes a show by Hollie Smith on May 30. Bic's first solo album, Drive, debuted at number one on the New Zealand charts and she has since become one of our highest-selling artists.Bic Runga - SkyCity Theatre, Auckland Central, tickets $70 from TicketekCLASSICALChinese-born violinist Chuanyun Li returns for his second New Zealand visit next week. Li has toured extensively in China, Japan and the United States and has collaborated with such orchestras as the Rotterdam Philharmonic, Detroit Symphony, Hong Kong Philharmonic, Queensland Symphony, China National Symphony and Singapore Symphony. He also plays Wellington and Dunedin. Chuanyun Li - Genesis Energy Theatre, TelstraClear Pacific Events Centre, May 28, 8pm, This just in - SOLD OUT




THEATREDisaffected. Alienated. Angst-ridden. The same descriptions always seem to be ascribed to the day's youth. Eric Bogosian's play Suburbia was written in 1994 before being made into an independent film by Richard Linklater in 1996. Fourteen years on, it is still relevant. Next week, audiences will be treated to the first New Zealand production, performed by the student-run Stage2 Productions.Suburbia - Maidment Theatre, May 22 until May 31, Tickets $18. Phone (09) 308 2383OPERAPuccini's La Boheme gets a facelift courtesy of the NBR New Zealand Opera. This production sees a vibrant team rejuvenate the classic. La Boheme is the second most-performed opera in the United States with its engaging story of youthful rites of passage, the proletarian struggle against poverty and the artist's quest for integrity keeping audiences captivated since its first performance in Italy in 1896. La Boheme - Aotea Centre, May 29-31, June 3, 5, 7QUIZ A world record attempt is always exciting. Combine that with the opportunity to get together with a few mates, have a few drinks, and test your general knowledge and you've got yourself some great entertainment. At New Zealand's Biggest Quiz Night you have the chance to become a Guinness world recordholder. The winning team gets $4000 with all other proceeds going to the Rotary Club of Auckland's TYLA project.New Zealand's Biggest Quiz Night - ASB Showgrounds, May 24, 7pm, register at www.quiznight.co.nzAFRICANThe 52-strong Soweto Gospel Choir returns with a new show, African Spirit, that blends traditional and popular African gospel and contemporary classics. Since forming in 2002 the group has had a number one album on the Billboard chart, two Grammys, and a support slot for the Red Hot Chilli Peppers. Much of the proceeds go to the Aids orphanage they set up in 2003.

Sunday, 22 June 2008

Jennifer Lopez performs at autistic students' graduation

NEW YORK — Students at a Staten Island, New York, elementary school for autistic children sure like the way Jennifer Lopez moves.



Teacher Kathy Amati and a paraprofessional showed the video for Lopez's "Let's Get Loud" to the students at P.S. 37. The children liked it so much, they wanted to watch it every day.



They learned the lyrics and the dance moves from the video.



With their teacher's encouragement, they wrote to Lopez, hoping for pictures or an autograph. Instead, she asked to come to their graduation.



On Tuesday, the singer-actress performed "Let's Get Loud" for a group of eight 10- and 11-year-olds at their graduation ceremony.








See Also

Ballet’s Damian Woetzel on Harvard, His Final Performance, and Retirement

Photo: Bruce Weber
It's difficult to believe that City Ballet senior principal Damian Woetzel has been dancing for a quarter of a century. Whether mugging in Fancy Free, leaping through Prodigal Son, or gliding across the floor in Carousel and Double Feature, Woetzel exudes an effortless grace and Everyman charm that makes him seem eternally young. Today marks his last performance before official retirement from the stage, but it won't be the last we see of him — ever since Woetzel graduated from Harvard's Kennedy School of Government and started the Vail International Dance Festival two years ago, the dance world has projected great things for his future, perhaps a gig as the next great company director. Woetzel spoke to Vulture about his stint at Harvard, his decision to walk away from the stage, and (most important) what comes next.

When did you start thinking about retirement?
When you become a professional dancer, there's an inevitability that the career is not forever. My dad was a professor, so it was very much at the forefront of our conversations at age 15 — the words, "Well, what will you do when…" were very much heard even then. There's lots of ways to answer that when you're 15 years old, but most people at that point say, "I'll worry about that when I get there." There was a point where the dancing was just all-consuming, and then it was about producing my own groups and performances, and then it was going to Harvard, and now I've run the summer festival in Vail for two years … the decision to retire is such a hard one, and like most things with me, it's been sort of organic.



So going to Harvard wasn't expressly retirement-related…
Not exactly, no. It was definitely an opportunity I seized to make my world larger. I wanted to be able to open up the choices that would be available to me, and it seemed an obvious way to do that. Whether it's having my own foundation or cultural diplomacy or something in education — being able to make interventions in lots of different ways that are not necessarily dance-specific.

How different did you find it from the dance world?
Time management was such an interesting dilemma! I knew exactly how long it took me to do everything in my life, and then suddenly I didn't. I know how long it takes me to get ready to do Tchaikovsky Pas De Deux, how long the rehearsals have to be, whereas writing my first paper analyzing the leadership of the Bay of Pigs? How long was that going to take?

Were you surprised by all the attention your enrollment received?
Well … yes and no. The media attention that came as a result all actually happened after I'd been going for a year, so I was undercover for quite some time. So did I expect it? Not really. And yet, I guess … I had a great class with Adam Thomas from Newsweek on media and public policy, and it made for a good story!

It seems your public is expecting something showstopping from you after retirement…
At this point, the challenge is to exercise discipline and not be hasty. It took me some time to decide where I really wanted to dance, you know? I looked, I listened, I took classes, I asked questions, I read. So I have this opportunity to go back to that fork in the road and do it again, and the Kennedy School certainly gave me endless numbers of roads I may walk down part way or all way.

So what ultimately made now the right time to walk away from dancing? You’re still in such great shape…
I always wanted to be a dancer who walked away from the table feeling good. Looking back, I sort of decided for real a year ago that this would be the right time. It coincided with the Jerome Robbins Festival, which to me meant a lot as a full-circle thing, because Jerry was the reason I joined City Ballet. Celebrating Jerry — it just made good sense to me. I still have some little performances to do in the summer, and if there are interesting projects, it's conceivable I'll dance a little bit more, but the real work as a dancer I think comes to an end June 18. —Rebecca Milzoff


Midlake

Midlake   
Artist: Midlake

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


Trials Of Van Occupanther   
 Trials Of Van Occupanther

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 11


Bamnan and Slivercork   
 Bamnan and Slivercork

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 12




 






Lethal Bizzle Accuses Download Fans Of Racist Pelting

Lethal Bizzle has accused some fans who pelted him with objects at the Download Festival this month, of being racist.


Some members of the audience threw bottles and yoghurt at the rapper during his performance, which has led to Bizzle posting a blog message on The Guardian website, saying:


"If I had found it at the beginning of the set, I'm not sure I would have carried on. It was a banana skin, thrown at my feet as I played last weekend's Download festival. On the outside, someone had written "Bizzle you black cunt". I couldn't believe my eyes."


The grime artist added, "If you want to send out a message about music, fair enough. But what the fuck is the point of bringing in my skin colour?"


The post goes on to say the attack was pre-meditated, as he writes: "I found a message board thread with over 100 posts, all of them talking about when I was going to get bottled. By the time I left for the festival I was fully aware that my booking was a problem."


Lethal does go on to stress that he doesn't feel all the festival fans were racist, just a few who attended: "I wouldn't say there was a racial element to what most people were doing, I really wouldn't."


"I know the history of Download and that it's really central to the metal scene, that the fans are passionate and protective of their music. And the weird thing was that by the end I had got most of the crowd on my side! I'd showed a lot of balls and I gained respect - 90% of the people there applauded me off. But then I found the racist stuff and my mood totally changed."




See Also

Pols get an earful at radio royalty hearing

Nancy Sinatra: 'It's a simple need for fairness'





WASHINGTON -- It was hard to tell whether Wednesday's examination of a proposal setting up a royalty for songs aired on traditional radio was a congressional hearing or a music festival as performers ranging from R&B group Dru Hill to Latino torch singer Adassa turned the House Judiciary Committee room into a stage.
The hearing on the issue was postponed for hours as lawmakers cast floor votes on other issues, but it managed to capture the committee's imagination as performers pushed the lawmakers to support the Performance Rights Act.
Nancy Sinatra told the House copyright subcommittee that the legislation would undo a wrong that was long supported by her father, Frank Sinatra.
"It's not about me, and it's not about my dad," she said. "It's a simple need for fairness."
While the support of Sinatra and other musicians is important, the legislation got an unexpected boost from the White House as the Commerce Department gave its support for the legislation.
Broadcasters, however, oppose the legislation contending that the promotional authority of radio broadcasts more than compensates performers.
Commonwealth Broadcasting president and CEO Steven Newberry told lawmakers that the promotional value airplay gives performers what amounts to $1.4 billion a year.
"It is not broken and not in need of fixing," he said of the system.

Square One

Square One   
Artist: Square One

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Wukker Man   
 Wukker Man

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 1


Netball Girls   
 Netball Girls

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 1




 





Sag, AFTRA Debate The Debate

Amy Winehouse 'recovered' after hospital visit

Amy Winehouse has recovered from fainting yesterday (June 16), her spokesperson has explained, after spending the night in hospital.

Yesterday, Winehouse was admitted to hospital after collapsing in her London home.

Today (June 17), her spokesperson told BBC News that the troubled star "quickly recovered" and is set to return home.

Her father Mitch Winehouse said his daughter had been asked to go to hospital "as a precaution".

New Big Brother Housemate Causes Paranoia

A new Big Brother contestant entered the house on Friday and has provoked massive paranoia already.
Handsome 25-year-old Stuart Pilkington joined the show to replace expelled Alex De-Gale, but the housemates already suspect he may be some kind of mole.
Luke has commented, “He knew all of our names far too fast. He's on a mission,” with Rebecca adding, “I think he is really nice, but I am just a bit paranoid."
However, Dale is simply gutted he has a new rival for the affections of Jennifer.
He moaned, “Big Brother have done it deliberately to slap a big d*** in my face,"  reports The People.
Jennifer herself is feeling the pressure, exclaiming, “I feel like I can't talk to the poor bloke without Dale thinking stuff. Dale, you're not my boyfriend!"
Property developer Stuart himself confirmed he received a baptism of fire when he entered the house on Friday night, saying, “It's not how I expected it to be, to be fair. What a bizarre first night. It was like a bad atmosphere when I came in. You all seem paranoid.”