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Patterson Hood: Murder & The Family Man

By: Kayceman

Patterson Hood

A few years back I did a panel with Patterson Hood. The topic was Music Journalism, and while everyone knows Hood as the passionate leader of the Drive-By Truckers, he’s also a hell of a writer and has dabbled in journalism, hence his seat at the table. More than anything that was said that afternoon, what I remember was Hood bouncing his brand new baby daughter on his knee as he spoke.

Although I was supposed be illuminating prospective writers on how to form a pitch and what the proper follow-up protocol with an editor is, I was deep inside my own head trying to come to terms with Patterson Hood the family man. Is this the same guy who crushes bottles of Jack Daniels onstage, sweats all over the front row and sings about death, incest, war and all the other creepy things crawling around in the shadows?

Clearly it is, and as you get to know Patterson better, you realize this is what makes him who he is. He’s not a Rebel Flag waving cartoon character or Southern stereotype. Not even close. He’s complex, deep and fiercely intelligent. He’s been singing about “the duality of the Southern thing” for more than a decade, but it’s on his new solo album Murdering Oscar (and other love songs) (released June 23, 2009 on Ruth St. Records) that we get a complete picture of the duality of Patterson Hood.

With half the songs coming from his pissed-fucking-off younger days of 15 years ago and the other half from the calmer father of today, the unique circumstances behind the recording of this album allow us a very intimate and relatively complete view of the man. But unlike a “Best Of,” which could also give one album the opportunity to tell a life-spanning tale, Murdering Oscar maintains continuity and has that album feel, not a cut-and-paste sample platter.

In between touring with the Truckers and working on their next studio album (due in 2010), finishing up the Live From Austin, TX CD/DVD (released July 6, 2009 on New West) and the upcoming September release of The Fine Print (A Collection Of Oddities and Rarities 2003-2008), as well as the album and tour with Booker T., Hood found time to finish Murdering Oscar. The majority of the basic tracks were cut as a trio featuring Hood, DBTs drummer Brad Morgan and bassist David Barbe (who also co-produced the album with Hood). Oscar was filled out by Truckers bandmates Mike Cooley (guitar), Shonna Tucker (bass) and John Neff (pedal steel/guitar) as well as Don Chambers and Centro-matic‘s Scott Danbom (keys/fiddle) and Will Johnson (guitar).

Calling from his studio while hard at work on the aforementioned upcoming Truckers album, Hood offered us the better part of his morning as we both downed a pot of coffee and discussed Murdering Oscar, his difficult childhood, bouts with depression and thoughts of suicide, divorce, the transition from Jason Isbell to John Neff and Jay Gonzalez in the DBTs, George Bush, recording with his dad, and of course, his precious daughter Ava Ruth Hood. Like he sings on “Goode’s Field Road”: “I’ve always been a family man deep down…”

JamBase: Murdering Oscar is a mix of songs from about fifteen years ago and some that are more recent, is that correct?

Drive-By Truckers

Hood: Yeah. I moved to Athens in the spring of ’94. I wrote a bunch of songs including the title cut, and I didn’t have a band or any studio time or any money so I made a cassette in my apartment of these songs and called it Murdering Oscar (and other love songs), and I stumbled across a copy of that cassette ten years later when I was about to take some time off from I guess “The Dirty South” tour. The Truckers were about to take a little bit of time [off]. I was having a daughter. And so I stumbled on those songs and I really thought they had held up and ended up kind of being inspired. But my life had changed drastically in the intervening ten years. And so I really liked the songs but I didn’t necessarily feel that way anymore, so I kind of wrote some answer songs to it and then recorded it right around that same time, January of ’05, right before my daughter was born. I was planning on putting it out that year and then because of music business bullshit reasons it never happened, so it’s just now coming out.

JamBase: The album has a lot of continuity to it. It doesn’t sound like an album of songs from fifteen years ago and songs from today. How did you make those fit, both sort of in temperament and vision but also just in the sound and sort of how you presented them?

Hood: I’m very much the same writer, although in a lot of ways I’m a real different person, if that makes sense. So, the points of view are pretty different from song to song. Like sometimes I would have the old song right next to the new song. I did that actually on several points in the sequence, like “Screwtopia” right before “Granddaddy.” That’s about as opposite a take on having children as you could possibly have. When I wrote “Screwtopia” I was just getting divorced and I was ten years, eleven years away from having my first kid, and at that time probably didn’t really picture ever wanting to have one. I was pretty much the opposite of marital bliss, and so the sentiment of the song is kind of snotty or shitty a little bit, but I like the song a lot. And I wrote “Granddaddy” right before my daughter was born and it’s probably the sweetest thing I’ve ever written, even though I think it probably still has a little bit of my sarcasm. But it’s definitely my nicer side. I liked having those two songs right next to each other in the sequence. Usually on a Truckers record, so often Cooley and I write about the same things, and from usually pretty different points of view, sometimes even extremely different points of view, so it’s almost like I kind of simulated the same thing, just on my own.

Continue reading for more on Patterson Hood…

 


I started writing really young and that’s how I kept from doing something really stupid or more self-destructive than just trying to kill myself with partying. I could have easily been a lot worse than that, but I had the writing. It was my outlet, where it all came out.

-P. Hood

 

You write some ruthless songs and paint some creepy-ass characters. We’ve spoken a number of times over the years and you’re always very sincere, very nice and easy to be around, but there’s clearly a very dark side that you’re able to either conjure or draw on. I’m wondering where does that dark side come from? You said you are happier now and you are much more at peace. It sounds like life is good for you. So, do you have to conjure that? Do you have to pull it out of somewhere, or is it just sort of waiting in the wings somewhere?

Patterson Hood

It’s pretty much in the wings. I mean I keep it at bay, you know. I definitely try to be a nice, decent person to be around. I don’t want to sit around and be gloomy all the time or anything like that. I’m not really gloomy. I’ve got more of a really black, dark sense of humor more than anything. But I went through a lot of really fucked up periods in my life where I was very unhappy, either internally or externally or both, and pretty depressed a lot of the time as a kid. I had a pretty weird [childhood]. My school years weren’t necessarily happy ones, and particularly the younger ones, and so I’ve probably got a lifetime’s worth of dark shit in some back corner that I can [call on]. But generally that was my way of dealing with it even as a kid. I started writing really young and that’s how I kept from doing something really stupid or more self-destructive than just trying to kill myself with partying. I could have easily been a lot worse than that, but I had the writing. It was my outlet, where it all came out. And I’m generally drawn to kind of creepy, fucked-up stories, too. I guess there is that continuity in my writing; I’ve always kind of had that side. But usually, particularly if I’m in a pretty creative period, most of it gets out there and so I’m not walking around being an asshole all the time. I would really hate that. I generally like people.

How important were the Murdering Oscar sessions to bringing Neff back in full time [to Drive-By Truckers]?

I think it led directly to it. And I can tell you the exact moment was when he did the part on “Screwtopia.” I remember when he did that I was like, “You know, I’d really, really like him to play on the next Truckers record and start playing with us [again].” It’s kind of funny because ironically, that was one of the few things that we could all agree on at that time, because that wasn’t a particularly great time in the band’s history. There was definitely at least two camps going on in the band and the two camps weren’t necessarily seeing eye-to-eye, and John [Neff] coming in and playing with us was the one thing that everybody could agree on.

Do you find that there’s a thematic thread that kind of runs through Oscar, something that makes it so cohesive?

Patterson Hood by Matt Pence

Absolutely. It’s the yin and yang of family attachment. The title sounds kind of tongue in cheek because I’m not necessarily known for writing love songs and so there’s a certain amount of sarcasm in the title. But it is true, too. I mean it’s kind of like a nod and a wink but it’s also true. You could break it down to where each one of those stories in its own way has at least a second meaning that could be construed as a bit of a love song, “Heavy and Hanging” probably being the one that’s stretching it the most, but in some ways that was a little bit of my love song to Nirvana. I moved to Athens the week that Cobain killed himself and I was a huge fan. And I was a huge Replacements fan before that. And so that was like, wow, this band finally kicked the walls down and got to actually do what all these bands before ‘em had tried to do and not been able to, that whole run of great kind of pop bands but that had songwriting that kind of transcended that. There’s a whole genre of those bands and none of ‘em ever found success. And finally this band did and they kicked down the doors and they had a number one record and it destroyed ‘em. Or something destroyed ‘em.

At that time you didn’t know really quite what it was, and dealing with all of that, and having gone through my own pretty borderline suicidal shit not long before that, it definitely fucked with me. And that was a big part of the songwriting of that whole group of songs. All those songs were written in like a three-month wake after that. Revisiting and coming back and writing the second half of the record in late ’04, early ’05, that was a pretty different point of view. I was having the first taste of something. I certainly felt successful. I mean, I don’t know, I may not have been. We’ve never been on the top of charts or any shit like that but I feel like we’ve been wildly successful. And that was kind of just starting to sink in, that, “Wow, we actually pulled this off. We get to do this.” Around that time, I was having a daughter, and just married my beautiful wife and got a house. A house! I was homeless three years ago. Now I live in a fucking house, and we own it. Kick ass! So that’s the point of view I wrote the second half of the record from, and when I say second half I mean not literally, the songs are all mixed in.

You mentioned “Heavy and Hanging,” which I really enjoy, and you talked about the bouts with depression and trying to conquer that. I’m curious, how have you sort of gotten past it, because obviously you have?

P. Hood by D. Vann

I think I was just lucky. My writing, having an outlet for it [was essential]. It’s gotta go somewhere, and sometimes that isn’t even enough, but I was lucky that I was able to make it be enough on my end. That and knowing that it would kill my grandmamma. I mean those were the two big things. It was like I couldn’t do anything to hurt her and I was lucky. That was enough.

Another aspect of this album that was a big deal for you was recording with your dad. What was that like?

It was fantastic. I’d always wanted to. At the same time I wanted it to be the right [project]. It’s the kind of thing that if it didn’t work it would really suck. It’s not like if the chemistry don’t click, well, then you have a beer and that’s it. When it’s your dad it’s different. It’s expected to work. And we had once tried to work together, years and years earlier, back in ’89. We recorded a Christmas song together for like a benefit thing and it was fine, but it wasn’t the same thing. And years earlier he was gonna produce an EP of Adam’s Housecat, my old band, and we had a disagreement like 20 minutes into it and he ended up walking out of the control room and not coming back until we finished. So, punk rock was our generation gap, and that happened when I was about in junior high school, which is, of course, the right age for something like that to happen. So, working on this project kind of got us past that.

Continue reading for more on Patterson Hood…

 


It’s the catharsis. It’s that moment when it completely kind of goes off the rail, whether it ends up landing on the wheels or not, is the moment that I treasure about the show.

-P. Hood

 

Photo by: Susan J. Weiand

What does your dad think now?

Patterson Hood by JPW
alabamaasswhuppin.com

He loves it. He’s thrilled. He’s a proud papa now. And the fact that it was hard earned just makes it that much nicer. He totally gets what we’re trying to do and what we’re doing, and he’s thrilled that we’re having a good run with it. We’re actually gonna get to play together in July [Ed Note: show is Friday night - 7/24]. His band [The Deacons] is opening for my band, so the Truckers are playing back home in Florence at this old theater where I used to go see Walt Disney movies as a kid. And dad’s band’s gonna open the show, so that’ll be a blast. Another first!

You mentioned the Bush years and post-9/11 and I think the effects of bad politics and hard times in America clearly resonate in your music very frequently, but now with Obama and with a little bit of hope and with a daughter, does it affect the way you write?

I’m sure it does. It’s too early to tell how but I’m sure it will [affect the songwriting]. I think our music is very political but it’s always on a personal level. There’s never, hopefully never, any big grand political statements. But politics affect people’s life, and much more than people want to admit. I think in the last few years that may be the one positive part of Bush’s legacy. It’s kind of taught people that it actually does matter who you vote for, and that you don’t really want to vote for an idiot. You want to give the keys to someone who can drive, you know? Or else you’re wrapped around a telephone pole.

If you step back from your career now and you look at the Truckers – playing bigger rooms and selling more albums, you did this record with Booker T. and with Neil Young on it – things are probably better than ever. Does that sort of alter where you set your sights now? Do you have new goals, bigger goals, different goals, anything like that?

They’re not that different. I mean yeah, now I want to be able to keep my house and I want to keep working my job that I love and not have to go work another job, so there’s that slant on that end of it. But as far as artistically, it’s been the same goal. I want to continue making good records and interesting records, and some may be better than others and some may try things that fail, and that’s okay. If we get around to making a really bad one, I just hope it’s for that reason, and I hope at some point in time we try something that just fails and therefore the record doesn’t work, as opposed to just trying to make a polished, slick version of the same record over and over. That would be the failure to me.

Absolutely. You gotta fail to be great.

Patterson Hood

We’re so fortunate for our business model because the first real success any of us ever had in our lives came as a result of trying something really ridiculous. I mean the most ridiculous thing I ever did in my entire life is the thing I’ll probably be known for when I’m dead, if I’m still remembered at all. I mean what’s more ridiculous than Southern Rock Opera? And we knew it at the time, but because of that it’s like whenever there’s the tendency to play it safe we can always say, “Well, actually playing it safe didn’t really work for us.” The safest record we ever made’s probably A Blessing and a Curse, and that’s nine out of ten Truckers fans’ least favorite, and it’s probably my least favorite. I’m not in any way badmouthing that record because it’s got “World of Hurt” and “Space City” on it, and those are two of my very favorite songs of our entire run of all this. But overall, if I had to pick a least favorite album we made, it’s A Blessing and a Curse.

You guys make amazing records, but originally it was standing there watching you guys do your thing live that sort of split my head open and made me a believer, so to speak. And to this day, every time I see you guys you all leave it out there every time and there’s a real catharsis going on. I see it in the band and I feel it in the crowd, and it affects people’s lives in a lot of ways. So what does the live thing do for you, as the performer?

Oh, it’s all of that! It’s just exactly what you said. That’s why we do it. It’s the catharsis. To me the measure of a good night versus a bad night isn’t how tight we are or how well we play. There might be that night where we really did play good, you know, that’s cool. That’s always good, but it’s the catharsis [we're after]. It’s that moment when it completely kind of goes off the rail, whether it ends up landing on the wheels or not, that I treasure about the show. To be honest, that’s probably why Cooley and I have played together for so long, because he’s out there, he’s the one who drives the Trans Am and he’s gonna see how fast he can make that curve every time, without fail, and with no regard whatsoever for the outcome. Having that on stage every night, no matter what, is a real thrill to me. I love it, and that encourages the rest of us to do the same and to follow suit. But it’s not like he has to twist arms or drag us kicking and screaming. There have definitely been points in time in our history where there’s been a more play-it-safe minded faction at work for him to rebel against, and that’s probably made for some interesting times, too. But right now is a real extra-good time because it’s just clicking. It’s just a magical time. And you know, Jay Gonzalez [keys] started playing with us I believe about a year ago now, maybe slightly over a year ago, and it was almost like a piece of a jigsaw puzzle we didn’t even realize was missing until he was there. It’s been really good.

Is Jay gonna be around for the long haul as a full member of the band?

Yeah. I don’t see him going anywhere. He’s a huge part of this next record we’re working on, and he’s co-writing it, too, so it’s great.

Are there any details about the album that you can share? Anything at all, whether it’s an album title, to what it’s sort of about, to where your head is, anything like that?

All I’m saying is, because it’s too early to know exactly how it’s gonna all end up, but we cut 25 songs in 25 days and now we’re trying to figure out how to whittle it down to a more manageable length. It definitely rocks harder than any record we’ve made since Alabama Ass Whuppin’ [2000]. It’s pretty rock solid. It’s got more of the big rock songs and less of the quieter moment songs than say the last album did, or even the last couple albums have. I think it was time for that. I was ready for that. I was ready to make a record that pretty much came out guns blazing.

Drive-By Truckers tour dates available here.

JamBase | Dirty South

Go See Live Music!


Vic Chesnutt Album: w/ Fugazi & Godspeed Guys

Vic Chesnutt’s At The Cut Out September 22


Vic Chessnutt

At the Cut, the latest effort from Athens, GA-based singer-songwriter Vic Chesnutt, is due September 22 on Constellation Records. A collaboration with Fugazi‘s Guy Picciotto and members of Godspeed You! Black Emperor and Silver Mt. Zion, At the Cut is the follow-up to Chesnutt’s 2007 collaborative recording, North Star Deserter.

Recorded by former Arcade Fire member Howard Bilerman at Montreal’s Hotel2Tango studio, At the Cut focuses on themes of cowardice, courage, mortality, tenacity, defiance, mourning and memory. The opening track, “Coward,” reflects the broad stylistic range of contributors on the album, the songs spans the musical spectrum from classic Vic Chesnutt solo acoustic tracks to the sweeping walls of noise and snarling, angular guitars trademarked by his many collaborators.

In the 19 years since Chesnutt’s debut album, he has made his mark by collaborating with a wide range of artists including Michael Stipe, Bill Frisell, Elf Power, Widespread Panic and the Cowboy Junkies. Hailing from rural Georgia and confined to a wheelchair since an automobile accident at the age of 18, Chesnutt has released 15 critically acclaimed records; been covered by a number of artists on the tribute album Sweet Relief II: Gravity of the Situation including R.E.M., Smashing Pumpkins, Madonna and Sparklehorse.


Benefit For Nuçi’s Space: Win VIP Tix for Voodoo

Rock N Raffle for VIP Voodoo Tix to Benefit Nuçi’s Space


Widespread Panic

A new website featuring an online contest for the chance to win a VIP experience at Voodoo Music Festival 2009 in New Orleans was recently launched at rocknraffle.com. The contest offers fans a chance to win the VIP experience with each $1 donation made to Nuçi’s Space, a support and resource center dedicated to promoting the emotional, physical and occupational well-being of the music community. The contest will close on September 30 and one lucky winner will be chosen October 2 to receive:

-Airfare: two round trip airline tickets courtesy of AirTran Airways from anywhere AirTran flies in the continental United States to New Orleans.

-Accommodations: three-night stay at the New Orleans Marriott, the official hotel of Voodoo Fest.

-VIP Treatment: Two LOA Lounge (VIP) Voodoo Fest passes with swag from Widespread Panic and the Drive-by Truckers and special side stage viewing access for the Widespread Panic performance as well. VIP tix also includes: reserved parking in the LOA parking lot, line free entrance, raised viewing area, complementary classic New Orleans lunch buffet with signature drinks daily, complementary dinner buffet with Bourbon Street style drink specials nightly, continuous full bar service, exclusive live performances and private bathrooms.

Nuçi’s Space was founded in 1999 by the Phillips family of Atlanta in memory of their son and brother who committed suicide in 1996 after a long battle with depression. Nuçi was a talented musician and a promising student at the University of Georgia in Athens. Having lived through the course of Nuçi’s illness, the family recognized the need for obstacle free, user-friendly ways of treating and supporting those who suffer from depression and other such disorders. Nuçi’s Space provides a variety of services for musicians who are often uninsured including professional therapy and medical care as well as professional services including several sound-proof, low cost rehearsal rooms.

Proceeds from Rock N Raffle will aid Nuçi’s Space in their mission to prevent suicide by providing obstacle-free treatment for musicians suffering from depression and other such disorders, as well as to assist in the emotional, physical and professional well-being of musicians. Rock N Raffle was created with the help of the Drive-By Truckers, Widespread Panic, and Plexus Web Creations, all long-time, loyal supporters of Nuçi’s Space. 100% of the proceeds from the online contest will benefit Nuçi’s Space.

To enter the contest and support Nuçi’s Space, go to rocknraffle.com. For each $1 donation you make, your name will be entered into the grand prize drawing that will take place on October 2, 2009.

For details on the 2009 Voodoo fest go to thevoodooexperience.com/2009.

And for coverage of the 2008 Voodoo Experience, go here.


Michael Phelps won ESPY Awards

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Michael Phelps won a leading five ESPY Awards, including male athlete of the year, ending the five-year reign of Tiger Woods, who earned his record 22nd trophy Wednesday night.
The 14-time Olympic gold medalist also collected trophies for record-breaking performance, championship performance, and male Olympian while sharing the best moment award as [...]

The New Up: Summer Tour

REST OF COUNTRY GETS CHANCE TO ENJOY SAN FRAN TREAT

The New Up by Josh Miller

Wrapped in effusive female fronted melodies, darkened by whirling guitars while juxtaposing hard-hitting 00s alternative with psychedelic overtones, The New Up announces summer tour dates in August and September, including Austin, Houston, Cleveland and Portland, in support of the August 18th release of the Better Off EP.

Having played with such artists as The Burning Brides, Jon Langford and Mike Watt, the first EP of the series, Broken Machine, received national recognition where it charted on the CMJ Top 200. Music critic Dennis Cook (Pitchfork, Signal to Noise, JamBase) deemed them “a post-Radiohead group, full of mutated pop hooks, absinthe guitars, smartly wrangled chaos and undisguised beauty and feeling. But, there’s little in the way of influences, even Radiohead’s, that you can pin down exactly… What they’ve made is their own.”

Backed by sincere musicianship inspired by Chicago roots and San Francisco surroundings, The New Up’s influential evasiveness illustrates a dichotomy of urban darkness and Midwestern sincerity, highlighting their equal fascination with nature and urban chaos. Headquartered at their San Francisco home, endearingly named The Pleasure Pad (where the band rehearses and records), members ES Pitcher (vocals, guitar), Noah Reid (guitar, vocals), Hawk West (flute and automation), Dain Dizazzo (bass) and Drew Bertrand (drums) began recording a series of three EPs in the spring of 2008. After lying down the basic tracks at Hyde Street Studios with Jaimeson Durr (Franz Ferdinand, The Killers, Handsome Boy Modeling School), they began layering additional tracks at The Pleasure Pad, where they could explore by recording flute lines in bathrooms and trying odd mic placements in closets – without the pressure and financial constraints of a traditional studio.

For more on The New Up check out this recent show review.

Tour Dates

8/21/2009-Bottom of the Hill, San Francisco
8/22/2009-Cellar Door, Visalia, CA
8/23/2009-Viper Room, Los Angeles
8/24/2009-Soda Bar, San Diego, CA
8/26/2009-Red Eyed Fly, Austin, TX
8/27/2009-Rudyard’s, Houston, TX
8/28/2009-Vinos, Little Rock
8/29/2009-Preservation Pub, Knoxville, TN
8/31/2009-Caledonia Lounge, Athens, GA
9/1/2009-Somewhere Else Tavern, Greensboro, NC
9/2/2009-Alley Katz, Richmond, VA
9/3/2009-Outback Lodge, Charlottesville, VA
9/4/2009-The Red and the Black, Washington DC
9/5/2009-Trash Bar, Brooklyn
9/6/2009-Cedar’s Lounge, Youngstown, OH
9/7/2009-Now That’s Class, Cleveland, OH
9/8/2009-The Robin Hood, Kent, OH
9/9/2009-Carabar, Columbus, OH
9/11/2009-The Dark Room, Chicago
9/12/2009-Cactus Club, Milwaukee
9/17/2009-Zebra Lounge, Bozeman, MT
9/19/2009-Tonic Lounge, Portland OR


Athens, Nicosia worried over Turkish plans

A decision by Ankara to authorize its TPAO to prospect for oil beyond Turkish territorial waters fueled diplomatic angst in Athens and Nicosia. The Turkish Petroleum Corporation (TPAO) was authorized to explore off the coast of Cyprus.

Arianna Huffington: Sunday Roundup

Following in the hoofsteps of President Bush’s 2006 State of the Union call to fight the creation of “human-animal hybrids”, Sen. Sam Brownback this week introduced legislation outlawing “part-human, part-animal creatures, which are created in laboratories, and blur the line between species.” The bill has 20 co-sponsors, all but one of them — Mary Landrieu — Republicans. Minotaurs, centaurs, mermaids, and satyrs everywhere vowed to vote Democrat. No word on whether Michael Steele plans to woo these diverse human-animal populations with a combination of fried-chicken, potato salad, and young men from Athens (reportedly the Minotaur’s favorite). Elsewhere, John McCain delivered the most dizzying quote of the week, spinning Sarah Palin’s resignation thusly: “I don’t think she quit. I think she changed her priorities.”

Regulators Shut Banks In Calif., Georgia And South Dakota

WASHINGTON — Regulators on Friday shut two banks in California and two smaller banks in Georgia and South Dakota, boosting to 57 the number of federally insured banks to fail this year.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. was appointed …

Sandcity at the Olympic Park

For two months now, the Olympic Park has been living with its sand sculptures. Despite the rain and the odd storm, they are still standing. But they are only made of sand…

 

Ephemeral heroes
The two giant sculptures were created as part of the Heroes exhibition at The Olympic Museum in Lausanne until 13 September. Because of the material used to make them, they symbolise the fact that the glory and fame of the athletes celebrated in the exhibition can be as ephemeral as a castle made of sand…

 

Seventy-five tons of sand…
Seventy-five tons of sand were needed to produce these statues. They were created by Dutch sculptors who specialise in these kinds of works, which they create on beaches or in supermarkets. Once the subject is sculpted, it is sprayed with a mixture of water and glue, which holds the whole thing together.

 

… for two giant sculptures
There are two of these statues. The first, standing 2.5m tall, represents the great Michael Phelps, whose achievements in Beijing last year (eight gold medals) astounded the world. The second, 5 metres high, pays tribute to sports heroes from various eras. These include the Greek Spiridon Louis, the first Olympic and marathon champion, in 1896 in Athens; boxer Muhammad Ali; the German skater Katarina Witt, who made her name with her unforgettable Carmen; and the man who is now the greatest tennis player of all time, Switzerland’s Roger Federer…

 

The statues will remain on show until 13 September, when the Heroes exhibition closes. On that day, the public will be invited to destroy these magnificent, but rightly ephemeral creations…
 

 Find out more about Sandcity and their amazing compositions.

Tevez completes move to Man City

Carlos Tevez

Manchester City have confirmed the signing of former Manchester United striker Carlos Tevez, who will hold a 1400 BST news conference on Tuesday.

The Argentine, 25, left Old Trafford last month and will sign a five-year deal following a medical.

City depart for a three-match tour of South Africa on Wednesday.

"It’s terrific news," said boss Mark Hughes. "He’s an international of the highest class who possesses all the attributes to help drive us forward."

Hughes added: "This is yet another deal that shows the commitment of the owner to make this club the very best it can be."

Tevez, who will wear the number 32 shirt at Eastlands, spent a season with West Ham before joining Manchester United on an extended loan deal in 2007.

His move to Old Trafford ended a long-running saga following complications with West Ham’s registration of the player.

"He is not only outstanding technically but he is a reliable goal scorer"

Mark Hughes

The Premier League has ratified all the paperwork regarding his move to Eastlands having been assured City have sole registration of the striker.

Tevez, the only player to win the South American player of the year award three seasons running, won the Olympic gold medal with Argentina in Athens in 2004.

He was at Old Trafford as Sir Alex Ferguson’s side lifted successive Premier League titles, becoming a crowd favourite as he scored 34 goals in 99 league and cup starts.

Tevez will become one of a select band to have joined both Manchester clubs and he could re-visit his former club at the Old Trafford derby on 19 September.

"He is not only outstanding technically but he is a reliable goal scorer and someone who will contribute fully to the team ethic," Hughes added.

"He gives us another exciting, attacking dimension."

PHIL MCNULTY’S BLOG

"Is he better than what City currently have Can they afford him Yes, and most emphatically yes."

United said in June that they were willing to pay the £25.5m to turn the striker’s two-year loan move into a permanent five-year deal but Tevez decided to move on.

Speaking after Tevez’s decision to leave Manchester United, the player’s advisor Kia Joorabchian said: "He has to sign the next five years with a club he believes has got ambition to go forward in the Premier League, a club with history and one that really wants to achieve things."

Argentine international Tevez scored 15 goals last season but was often on the bench for key games and was wary of not getting enough first-team football ahead of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

Manchester City’s summer spending so far has seen them sign striker Roque Santa Cruz from Blackburn for £18m and Aston Villa midfielder Gareth Barry for £12m.

But a proposed bid for Barcelona striker Samuel Eto’o fell through – even though reports suggested the club was willing to make the Cameroon international the highest-paid player in the world, earning £250,000 per week.

There have also been rumours that Chelsea captain John Terry is on Manchester City’s wish-list, although Stamford Bridge boss Carlo Ancelotti insists the England defender is not for sale at any price.

Arsenal striker Emmanuel Adebayor is understood to be in talks over a move to Eastlands.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Greek police flatten migrant camp

By Malcolm Brabant
BBC News, Athens

Riot police stand behind a burning road block during clashes in central Athens, 7 July

Greek riot police have led an operation to demolish a makeshift camp housing illegal immigrants in the western port city of Patras.

The camp was used by migrants hoping to smuggle themselves onto ships bound for Italy and Western Europe.

Its closure is more proof of Greece’s tougher stance on illegal immigration.

The camp had been a source of tension with many Greeks who regarded it as a major eyesore for themselves and for tourists arriving from Italy.

‘Terrorising migrants’

About 100 riot police escorted bulldozers into the camp before dawn.

They levelled scores of cardboard and plastic hovels.

Only a makeshift mosque and a tent used by volunteer doctors were left untouched.

The camp in Patras had been in existence in some form or another for 13 years.

A few months ago, it accommodated about 1,800 people, mainly from Afghanistan.

But that number had dwindled to about 100 following large-scale arrests and also because the port authorities had made it nearly impossible to get on board ferries to Italy.

The early morning operation was described by Red Cross officials in Patras as "terrorising" the migrants.

One worker said it was designed to send a message to all illegal immigrants that they had no future in Greece.

‘Migrant threat’

The conservative government in Athens has started taking tougher measures against the so-called "clandestines" in recent weeks, especially since the success of the right-wing nationalist Laos party in the European parliamentary election.

A new law has been passed which makes deportation easier.

Greece has been criticised internationally for its handling of would-be asylum seekers.

But recently the EU Justice Commissioner, Jacques Barrot, acknowledged that the "uncontrollable flow of immigration" posed a major threat to the equilibrium of Greek democracy.

The clampdown in Patras will push some migrants into the hands of traffickers in Athens and Italy who are demanding up to $8,000 (£4,940) for passage out of Greece.

Others have given up trying to catch a boat to Western Europe and have headed for Greece’s land borders with Bulgaria and the former Yugoslav republic of Macedonia.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

‘King of the mile’fulfils his destiny

Athens. The name alone conjures images of ancient ruins and mythical gods. But for Hicham El Guerrouj, mention the Greek capital and the Moroccan is transported back, not to a time when Zeus and Poseidon ruled, but to 2004, a time when the city hosted the Summer Olympics; a time when he, an Arab,Athens. The name alone conjures images of ancient ruins and mythical gods. But for Hicham El Guerrouj, mention the Greek capital and the Moroccan is transported back, not to a time when Zeus and Poseidon ruled, but to 2004, a time when the city hosted the Summer Olympics; a time when he, an Arab,


‘King of the mile’ fulfils his destiny

Athens. The name alone conjures images of ancient ruins and mythical gods. But for Hicham El Guerrouj, mention the Greek capital and the Moroccan is transported back, not to a time when Zeus and Poseidon ruled, but to 2004, a time when the city hosted the Summer Olympics; a time when he, an Arab,Athens. The name alone conjures images of ancient ruins and mythical gods. But for Hicham El Guerrouj, mention the Greek capital and the Moroccan is transported back, not to a time when Zeus and Poseidon ruled, but to 2004, a time when the city hosted the Summer Olympics; a time when he, an Arab,

Tea Leaf Green Tour

Tea Leaf Green “Around The Bend Tour”


Tea Leaf Green

While veering through some of the Summer’s hottest festivals, Tea Leaf Green has picked some spots to bring their rock ‘n’ roll prowess during their “Around the Bend Tour.” With stops in all corners of the U.S., Tea Leaf Green will be pulling through starting August 20 at San Diego’s Wave House, then to L.A.’s famed Troubadour on August 21, and finish the short California jaunt in San Francisco at Outside Lands Festival.

They’ll then head to the Northeast for stops in Troy, Syracuse, Buffalo, and Pittsburgh. The tour will end in the Southeast corner – with shows in Birmingham, Athens, Charlotte and finally Charleston – where the band wowed packed houses early in the year.

Tickets for Tea Leaf Green’s “Round the Bend Tour” are on sale now!

Fans purchasing two or more tickets through Tea Leaf Green’s Ticketing Page will become eligible to win the first run of a limited edition poster designed by Josh Clark — commemorating the band’s Summer Tour — which will also be signed by the band.

‘Round the Bend Tour

07.12.09 Masontown, WV @ All Good
07.24.09 Detroit Lakes, MN @ 10,000 Lakes Festival
07.25.09 Detroit Lakes, MN @ 10,000 Lakes Festival
08.07.09 Denver, CO @ Dancin’ in the Streets

08.08.09 Denver, CO @ Dancin’ in the Streets (Late Night CounterClarkWise show)

08.14.09 Ozark, AR @ Mulberry Mountain Harvest Festival
08.16.09 Ozark, AR @ Mulberry Mountain Harvest Festival (Saturday Late Night show)
08.20.09 San Diego, CA @ Wave House
08.21.09 Los Angeles, CA @ Troubadour
08.22.09 San Francisco, CA @ Cafe Du Nord (Trevor Garrod solo show w/ Big Light)
08.28.09 San Francisco, CA @ Outside Lands Festival
09.02.09 Troy, NY @ Revolution Hall
09.03.09 Syracuse, NY @ Westcott Theatre
09.04.09 Buffalo, NY @ Erie Canal Harbor (w/ The Wallflowers)
09.05.09 Millvale, PA @ Mr. Smalls Theatre
09.09.09 Birmingham, AL @ WorkPlay Theater
09.10.09 Athens, GA @ 40 Watt
09.11.09 Charlotte, NC @ Neighborhood Theatre
09.12.09 Charleston, SC @ The Pour House w/ Gaslight Street

Purchase tickets and learn more about the contest through Tea Leaf Green ticketing here.



The premier event

How can we keep the Olympic Games as a premier event? This is one of numerous questions that will be debated at the Olympic Congress in Copenhagen between 2 and 3 October 2009, where approximately 900 delegates will get together to shape the future of the Olympic Movement. The recent successes of the Olympic Games in Athens, Turin and Beijing will allow the IOC to reflect on lessons learned and to find even better ways to position the Olympic Games.
 
 The athletes are at the heart of the Games, and at the end of the day it is their outstanding performances that are remembered. Mexico City 1968 with Bob Beamon’s historic jump; Grenoble 1968 with Jean-Claude Killy’s triple medal win; Munich 1972 when Mark Spitz became a legend; Montreal 1976 with Nadia Comaneci’s perfect tens. Not forgetting Eric Heiden, Carl Lewis, Hermann Maier, Björn Daehlie and most recently Shaun White, Usain Bolt and Michael Phelps. It’s these performances and memorable Olympic ceremonies that drive the IOC, Organising Committees, National Olympic Committees and International Sports Federations to work hard to provide the most adapted environment in which to compete and perform. The Copenhagen debate will strive to provide solutions to make the Olympic Games stronger and even more enjoyable. Enjoy watching all the highlights of previous Games in this video.