Wednesday 20 August 2008

Edinburgh festival classical music review: Chant Wars

The achiever of the polyphony strand at last year's festival had many assuming that the initialise would be repeated. Instead the programing has gone off on a somewhat different stable gear. This year's early evening series, once again in Greyfriars Kirk, presents five concerts of traditional music from across Europe and the Middle East, and ties in with the festival theme of the European frontier.












Among the programmes of euphony from the Ottoman courtyard, liturgical music from the eastern churches and Corsican songs, this concert from vocal ensembles Dialogos and Sequentia was probably the most familiar for the Edinburgh audience. The subject of Chant Wars was the efforts made by the emperor butterfly Charlemagne and his successors to standardise the musical practices of the European church - an aspiration driven as much by the desire to consolidate the empire as to ensure the purity of liturgical chant.

Any programme made possible by research grants from Harvard University sounds impossibly dry, but the concert was presented as a performance rather than an academic exercise. For those in the audience who weren't experts in the liturgical music of the early middle ages, the differences between Old Roman, Galician and Frankonian chant were more than a slight vague. But there was enough audible variety in the programme to preclude it from becoming repetitive.

Given the dearth of surviving sources for this repertoire and the embryonic nature of musical notation during the geological period, reconstructions of this music are more than hypothesis than solid fact. But the husband-and-wife team responsible, Katarina Livljanic and Benjamin Bagby, have managed a enchanting reimagining of the music of the era. The fluidity of Bagby's bardic improvisation - familiar to anyone wHO saw his Beowulf at last year's festival - is peculiarly effective in conjuring up a sense of how this music might once have sounded.







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Sunday 10 August 2008

satanic malfunctions

satanic malfunctions   
Artist: satanic malfunctions

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


I've just had about all i can take. 7   
 I've just had about all i can take. 7

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 13




 





Zeraphine

Tuesday 1 July 2008

'Secret Agent Clank,' 'Hot Shots Golf' keep PSP humming








The PlayStation Portable has been around for three years, but the machine you might buy today is far different from the one you'd get in 2005. Sony is continually tinkering with the thing in big ways (introducing a lighter, slimmer model in 2007) and small (any number of regularly issued firmware updates).

You can do a lot more on a PSP than just play games and movies. You can make phone calls through the Skype service. You can access web pages. You can listen to music, through downloads or Internet radio. You can connect to device to a TV in order to play games on a bigger screen. A GPS device is on the way.

So the PSP is multi-talented, but it doesn't do any one thing quite as well as dedicated devices do. It's still, first and foremost, a game machine. Its game library continues to grow, and while it doesn't have as diverse a selection as the Nintendo DS, its AAA titles look spectacular.

-"Secret Agent Clank" (Sony): Here's the second PSP spinoff of Sony's great "Ratchet & Clank" franchise, which the High Impact Games studio has successfully shrunk to fit a 4.3-inch (11-centimetre) screen. Clank, the robot half of the duo, is the star this time, and his droll wit is as charming as ever.

Ratchet has been falsely imprisoned, so the tuxedo-clad Clank's on a solo mission to clear his pal's name. As usual, there's a robust assortment of clever weapons and gadgets, like exploding cufflinks and bow-tie boomerangs. Some sequences reward stealth, but it's usually more fun to fight than sneak. There are also sections where Clank dances, pilots a speedboat or tries to get the brain-dead Gadge-Bots to do his bidding, so there's plenty of variety.

The animation is very good, about even with the PlayStation 2 "R&C" games, and the story is endearingly silly. I did miss the repartee between the two leads, but the cowardly Captain Qwark makes the most of his cameo. "Secret Agent Clank" doesn't have the depth of its parent series, but its fast-paced levels are well suited for portable play. Three stars out of four.

-"Hot Shots Golf: Open Tee 2" (Sony): With the "Hot Shots" series, developer Clap Hanz has turned the usually sluggish game of golf into one of the zippiest video-game sports. The original "Open Tee" was the most addictive of the PSP's launch titles, and the follow-up is just as satisfying.

The ultra-simple swing system involves pressing the X button three times: once to start, once for power, once for accuracy. You can learn more precise techniques as the game progresses, although I did miss the advanced swing mechanism introduced in "HSG: Out of Bounds" on the PlayStation 3. You can also improve your power, accuracy and spin by completing tasks in the game's challenge mode.

Success also lets you unlock 12 courses and 12 characters, and there are dozens of items to collect as you roam the fairways. You can finish nine holes in about 10 minutes, but you'll always be tempted to start just one more round as you search for an elusive accessory. "Open Tee 2" is the best portable golf game on the market, and I suspect I'll be carrying my PSP around a lot more because of it. Three stars.

-"R-Type Command" (Atlus): "R-Type" is one of the all-time great outer-space shoot-'em-ups, but this spinoff is a much more laid-back tactical game. You start each level by placing an assortment of spaceships on a hex-filled grid; the objective, generally, is to reach a particular spot on the grid or to destroy your opponent's flagship.

Strategy lovers will eat this up, but others may find it baffling thanks to a complete lack of tutorials or any other onscreen help. The battles are well-balanced, though, challenging yet fair, and patient players will come to appreciate the versatility of the spacecraft.

But patience is the key. "R-Type Command" moves very slowly, and battles take half-an-hour or more. The levels do get repetitious, and the opponent's artificial intelligence sometimes takes forever to complete its turn. If you're nostalgic for the frenzy of classic "R-Type," you'd be better off rejecting this "Command." Two stars.










See Also

Thursday 26 June 2008

Lichens

Lichens   
Artist: Lichens

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


The Psychic Nature of Being   
 The Psychic Nature of Being

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 3




Lichens was the solo improv project of Chicago composer Robert Lowe, antecedently known as the bassist with artistry stone combo 90 Day Men. A product of the Kansas City country, Lowe signed on with 90 Day Men in 1996, only prior to their relocation from St. Louis to Chicago; when the grouping went on hiatus following a European circuit supporting its 2004 disc Panda Park, Lowe channeled his energies into his long-simmering solo pursuits, appearance as Lichens at that summer's Arthur magazine-sponsored Million Tongues Festival and self-releasing a limited edition CD-R, R. Brown. Looping wordless vocals and avant-folk fingerpicking to create otherworldly sheets of deep-listening drone pipe, Lowe before long charmed the attention of Kranky Records co-owner Bruce Adams, and in the autumn of 2005 the tag released Lichens' official debut, The Psychic Nature of Being.






Sunday 15 June 2008

50 Cent's Gift To Kilmer

Rapper-turned-Hollywood star 50 CENT treated new co-star VAL KILMER to a $100,000 (GBP50,000) car, after the pair became pals on the set of their new movie.
The pair hit it off while shooting Streets of Blood together in Shreveport, Louisiana, and bonded over their love of vintage cars.
And Kilmer was stunned when the rapper handed over the keys to a 1965 Chevy Impala, from his extensive fleet of vehicles.
50 Cent's producing partner Randall Emmett confirms to In Touch Weekly, "Val was shocked. 50 is an amazing guy and incredibly generous."









Wednesday 4 June 2008

Double success for Take That at the Brits

Take That, Arctic Monkeys and the Foo Fighters were among the acts that triumphed at last night's Brit Awards in London.
Take That claimed the award for Best British Live Act, fighting off competition from the Kaiser Chiefs and Arctic Monkeys.
The group also picked up the award for Best British Single for their hit 'Shine'.
The Arctic Monkeys, who initially built up a steady fan base on the Internet, won the awards for Best British Group and Best British Album.
Foo Fighters, who could not attend the ceremony, claimed the awards for Best International Group and Best International Album.
Pop singer Kylie Minogue picked up the award for Best International Female, while newcomer Kate Nash claimed the Best British Female award.
The award for Best British Male went to DJ and musician Mark Ronson, while rapper Kanye West topped the Best International Male category.
The award for Best British Breakthrough Act went to Mika and the Critics' Choice Award was presented to newcomer Adele.
Former Beatles star Paul McCartney, whose performance closed the show, was presented with the award for Outstanding Contribution to Music.
There were also performances on the night from Amy Winehouse, Mark Ronson, Leona Lewis and Kylie Minogue.
Speaking after receiving her award, Kylie Minogue said: "I'm all overcome. This is so incredible."
Amy Winehouse also used to the show to send a message to her husband Blake Fielder-Civil, who is currently in jail. After her performance, the singer said: "Make some noise for my husband, my Blake."
The awards ceremony was presented by Kelly, Jack, Sharon and Ozzy Osbourne.
Check out all the style from the red carpet in our Brit Awards gallery here.

Sunday 1 June 2008

Tommy Lee Jones taking on Hemingway project

CANNES (Hollywood Reporter) - Tommy Lee Jones is taking on the work of Ernest Hemingway, signing on to adapt, direct, produce and star in the writer's posthumously published novel "Islands in the Stream."


Morgan Freeman and John Goodman also are in discussions to board the film, which follows a 1977 version starring George C. Scott.


"Islands" centers on the various life stages of a reclusive male painter named Thomas Hudson before, during and after World War II, after he moves to the Bahamas. Like many Hemingway characters, Hudson, who in the tale has a stint working for the U.S. Navy and also endures a series of family tragedies, leads a complicated emotional life that he hides behind a stony exterior.


The book was published in 1970, nine years after Hemingway killed himself. He actually broke off a piece of the novel and turned it into a novella that became 1952's "The Old Man and the Sea." Jones co-wrote the script with Bill Witliff ("The Perfect Storm"). The project will be presented to buyers at Cannes on Sunday.


The Hemingway adaptation marks Jones' sophomore directorial effort, after the Mexican mystery "The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada."


"Islands," which is set for an estimated $30 million budget, will shoot in Puerto Rico, with production not scheduled to start until March.


Reuters/Hollywood Reporter