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British high streets under threat: lawmakers

Britain’s traditional city centre high streets, the main shopping thoroughfare, could be further threatened by planned out-of-town development laws, MPs warned on Saturday. Many British high streets – the heart of a town or city – are a shadow of their former selves thanks to thanks to giant

British economy sees record contraction

Britain’s recession-battered economy shrank in the second quarter of 2009 at its fastest yearly pace since records began, official data showed Friday. Gross domestic product (GDP) contracted by 5.6 per cent in the three months to the end of June, compared with the same period of last year,

Cultural Britain is flourishing

Beyond taxpayer-funded temples of establishment art, people are flocking to participate in festivals – and paying to do so

This is a tale of two cultures. Towering over Walsall town centre is an acclaimed icon of 20th-century architecture. There is another in Gateshead, another in Salford, another in Cardiff, another in Edinburgh, and many in London.

The Walsall art gallery is adorned with two sure signs of big art, a clutch of architectural awards and a clutch of deficits. Nothing embodied the extravagance of millennial Britain so much as the stupefying sums spent on large arts buildings, with little idea of what to put in them. One day they may yet lie like the Greek theatre at Palmyra, a silent ruin in an empty desert.

These monuments cost huge sums. The Sage Gateshead cost £70m, Salford’s Lowry Centre £106m and Tate Modern £134m. The British Museum’s new courtyard alone came in at more than £100m. Nor did anyone think of running costs. Within three years of opening, visitors to the Walsall gallery needed a £9 subsidy a head from local ratepayers and a further £2 a head from the Arts Council. At a capital cost of £21m it has stumbled from crisis to crisis, but at least houses the world’s most expensive Costa coffee bar.

The chief stimulus to the splurge was the national lottery, taxing mostly the poor to spend on mostly the better off, followed by the wild ambitions of the millennium. The dream of culture politicians was not art but buildings. Intense debate in the mid-90s was about whether lottery money should go into people or structures, into revenue or capital. Capital always won.

Politicians and private donors alike wanted something “lasting” – and with their names on it. Grants were denied to endowments for upkeep. So-called business plans were not worth their weight in paper, let alone the fees charged by their mendacious consultants. The lottery became a breeding ground for white elephants, the bills to be sent later to local councils or Whitehall. It was what Tony Blair, in a speech just two years ago, rightly called the “golden age” of arts support.

Now it is apparently over. A certain victim of the impending cuts is the Department of Culture, Media and Sport. Today’s Guardian carried news of a £100m “black hole” in the department’s budget. Under threat are such echoes of the glory days as Tate Modern’s new wing (£50m), the British Museum extension (£22m), and the British Film Institute (£45m for a project supposedly funded by the Imax cinema). The Royal Opera’s new Manchester outpost may also go. All these projects are said to be at risk.

Alan Davey, director of the Arts Council, predicts a “perfect storm … a spiral of decline”, with arts organisations so damaged that “it would take an enormous amount of money to get them going again”. Davey is clearly no enthusiast for the art of anarchy or for Bohemian garret culture. To the Arts Council, an artist not clothed in state ermine is like a BBC executive without his expenses, shamelessly “dumbed down”.

A survey by arts and business revealed that its member organisations now depend on state funding for 54% of their total income, with a further 13% received from private sponsors. A mere third comes from people actually enjoying art by buying tickets and shopping. Such an imbalance between direct and indirect income leaves institutions vulnerable to public spending cuts. As Anthony Sargent of the Sage Gateshead says, it is like being “on an island waiting for a hurricane to come. The rain hasn’t started but the streets are uncannily empty.”

His streets may be empty, but in the rest of cultural Britain they are not. Such grim faces and empty pockets are a million miles from this summer in Britain. Here are events and attendances booming as never before, abetted by a favourable exchange rate, families holidaying at home, young people with time, and old people with money.

From the vales of Glastonbury to the tent city of Hay-on-Wye, from Latitude to the Glade, from V at Weston to T in the Park, from Womad to Wychwood, from Reading to Leeds, festival promoters are having a year without compare.

Nor is this a phenomenon confined to popular music. Even London’s West End, the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre are posting record audiences. There are festivals for poetry, books, theatre, dance and music. There are “boutique” festivals and “no-VIP” festivals. There is this weekend’s eccentric Secret Garden Party in Cambridgeshire, which stipulates fancy dress. There is hardly a valley, meadow or disused airfield in Britain that is not hosting some event.

These events are not cheap. Latitude’s tickets are £60-£150. Winchester’s Glade clocks in at £115, Eastnor’s Big Chill at £145, and Knebworth at £157. Even Hyde Park’s supposed expanse of free repose charges £45 when occupied by Hard Rock Calling’s “pretend-fest”. Promoters such as Mean Fiddler and Virgin are not losing money.

Nor are these cultural manifestations all outdoor. The blockbuster festival of the year will again be Edinburgh, with a whole city as venue. Most of its 2,100 shows have no need of multimillion-pound architecture, just a church hall, garage or even a park. This month’s admirable Manchester international festival, likewise, used its city as locale. Brighton festival staged 300 shows in 33 different venues.

A conceit of ageing arts directors is to be erecting a structure, be it a theatre, concert hall or museum wing. They can thus consort with rich architects rather than dry curators or angry actors, building a memorial more eternal than any contribution they might have made to art. Time and energy go on inducing the government to give them money – with accusations of philistinism and no more party invitations should it be denied.

Museums’ elites rarely muddy their hands with tickets or charging. They boast their generosity while millions of pounds walk out of their door each year, with the taxpayer footing the bill. They are thus unable to benefit from the surge in attendance and ticket revenue now benefiting most visitor attractions.

Nemesis is at hand. Those who live by the state die by it. But big art and its custodians cannot get away with the plea that any threat to their overhead means doom to British culture. Davey’s identification of art with public money is as corrupt a thesis as that art must be free at the point of delivery.

Millions of people are this summer participating in what they regard as the arts with no aid from the state. That much of this is music and in the open air, rather than entombed in concrete, does not strip it of cultural value. As the sociologist of the public realm, Barbara Ehrenreich, wrote in Dancing in the Streets, such collective enjoyment “reclaims a distinctively human heritage, of creatures who can generate their own ecstatic pleasures out of music, colour, feasting and dance”.

It is truly encouraging that so many people, young and old, are finding goodness in the arts, unmediated by grandiose overheads and a grandiose state. Their art is consorting with nature and the city, and it is prospering.

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£100m hole threatens arts funding

Culture department accused of ‘hopeless management’ over budget shortfall

Funding of some of the most prestigious cultural grand projects in Britain is in jeopardy because a £100m black hole has been discovered in the budgets of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Whitehall sources disclosed tonight.

The scale of the department’s spending over-commitment could derail ambitious building projects such as the British Museum’s new exhibition wing, Tate Modern’s redevelopment, the British Film Institute’s film centre on the South Bank in London and the Stonehenge visitor centre.

The shortfall has emerged in the capital budget for the financial years 2009-10 and 2010-11. Senior arts sources today variously called the funding crisis “a cock-up” and “quite astonishing”. One source said: “It’s hopeless management. Everyone will blame the DCMS for being hopeless, and they are fairly hopeless, so it’s not unjustified.”

According to another source: “Financial directors of interested bodies received a letter saying they were £100m overspent on capital and seeking contributions from unspent capital money.”

The DCMS refused to comment on why it had got into a situation in which it had overpromised funds for capital projects by approximately £100m. However, it is understood that the problem was noted several weeks ago and is being addressed by ministers. A DCMS spokesperson said: “Our capital budget is currently overcommitted. Ministers are examining the reasons for this and looking for solutions. It is possible that difficult decisions will be needed, but none has been taken yet.”

A senior arts source said: “They will solve it by scrabbling around, and delaying things here and there. But my goodness, it’s no way to run a railroad.”

However, if critical funding was held up to get the DCMS out of financial trouble, major projects may be mothballed.

Tate Modern’s redevelopment, designed by the Swiss architects Herzog and de Meuron, would increase the size of the gallery by 60%. A £50m one-off grant from the government towards the £215m budget was announced by the then culture secretary, James Purnell, in 2007.

At the time, he said the grant would “act as a firm symbol of the government’s commitment to this amazing project”.

The plan had been to open the new building – which the Tate has described as the most important new building for culture in Britain since the British Library in 1998 and the Barbican in 1982 – in time for the London Olympics in 2012. Approximately a third of the required funding is in place, but the £50m from the government is now, like all capital projects, under review because of the DCMS’s problems. The government funding forms the bedrock on which private funds can be raised – itself an increasingly difficult task in the current economic climate.

The British Museum’s £135m north-western development, to which the government pledged £22.5m in 2007, would give it a 1,500 sq metre exhibitions space to replace the current temporary arrangement in the museum’s reading room. Today the project is due to receive a decision on planning consent. Niall FitzGerald, the British Museum chairman, said last week it would be a “catastrophe” if the museum failed to create a new exhibitions space. A spokeswoman for the museum said today that the DCMS overcommitment “doesn’t really apply to us. We secured our money in 2007 – and have only £8m outstanding.” But the urgent DCMS review is understood to encompass all capital projects, including those, such as the British Museum’s, to which the government has already made firm cash pledges.

In the longer term, the DCMS overcommitment could also affect plans to establish a base for the Royal Opera House in Manchester.

Stonehenge is due to get a £25m new visitor centre in time for the Olympics, partly funded by the DCMS, and the British Film Institute has £45m earmarked. That would go towards building a £166m film centre on the South Bank, aiming for completion in 2016, and replacing the current BFI buildings in London.

“The building we are in is no longer fit for purpose,” said a BFI spokesman. “It probably has about eight more years’ life in it. Beyond that we would be looking at no more cinemas, no more mediatheques, no more bars and restaurants … it has come to the end of its life and we cannot sustain ourselves on that site.” He called the situation with the BFI’s properties on the South Bank and elsewhere in London a “burning platform”.

The film centre, he said, would be “about giving film – the language and medium of choice for the 21st century – a proper home, helping Britain retain its competitive edge and providing a centre for the film industry”. He said the project was currently “being batted back and forth between the Treasury and DCMS. Everyone thinks it’s a great idea – but someone somewhere needs to press the button.”

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Tourists bowled over by £215 flights

British Airways and Qantas offer dramatically reduced tickets to Australia based on Ashes scores

Tourists bowled over by £215 flights

British Airways and Qantas offer dramatically reduced tickets based on Ashes first innings scores

Capitalising on an upsurge in national happiness following England’s victory over Australia this afternoon, British Airways and Qantas have teamed up to offer fares to Australia based on the first innings scores of the second npower test, with the number of seats determined by the amount of runs scored by the opposing team.

As Australia were all out for 215 in their first innings reply to England’s 425 on Saturday, both British Airways and Qantas will be giving away 425 flights to Sydney for £215 – an amazing reduction on a typical fare of £730. The offer is available tomorrow (21 July, 2009) on British Airways flights from 10am, and Qantas flights from 8am.

In the previous Ashes in 2005, British Airways offered 367 seats at £373 when Australia scored 367 runs for 373 against England in the final test. Flights were sold out within 30 minutes.

For terms and conditions please check each airline’s website from 21 July. For further information visit ba.com and qantas.com . Offer is subject to availability.

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British students in Chinese swine flu quarantine

A group of British students has been quarantined in China after four tested positive for swine flu, officials said on Saturday, as Georgia confirmed its first case and Singapore reported a first flu-related death.  The four confirmed to have the A(H1N1) virus have been hospitalised while theA group of British students has been quarantined in China after four tested positive for swine flu, officials said on Saturday, as Georgia confirmed its first case and Singapore reported a first flu-related death. The four confirmed to have the A(H1N1) virus have been hospitalised while the

A once in a lifetime show

Delicate works by artists from Fra Angelico to Leonardo to include loans from the Uffizi in Florence

The British Museum’s collection of Italian Renaissance drawings is so fragile that its masterpieces are exhibited only once in a generation.

Next summer a chance to see these delicate objects will finally come around, as the museum launches an exhibition, in partnership with the Uffizi in Florence, of works on paper by artists from Fra Angelico to Leonardo.

The 100 or so works will span the period 1400-1510 and artists including Jacopo and Gentile Bellini, Botticelli, Filippo Lippi, Mantegna, Michelangelo and Raphael.

About half of the works will come from Florence, and some have never been shown in the UK before. Bringing the drawings from Florence together with those from London, said British Museum director Neil MacGregor, will “together allow a different reading of draughtsmanship from the period. It will allow a new engagement with this part of the Italian Renaissance.”

In typical British Museum style, the message is “only connect”; for the museum will at the same time mount an exhibition of West African sculpture of the same period. Works from the kingdom of Ife – a powerful, cosmopolitan city state in what is now Nigeria that flourished from the 12th to the 15th centuries – will form the focus of an exhibition for the first time outside Africa.

“They are works of absolutely comparable quality [to the Renaissance drawings],” said MacGregor of the strikingly finely worked, naturalistic sculptures.

The exhibitions together form a counterpoint to the blockbuster Moctezuma exhibition, opening this autumn, which will also focus on the early 16th century – this time on the last Aztec emperor before Spanish conquest. MacGregor said Mexican colleagues had been “astonishingly generous” in loans to the exhibition, which include the ceremonial throne-cum-altar of Moctezuma.

Alongside elaborate Aztec skulls, the exhibition will also show a selection of contemporary Mexican skulls created for the Day of the Dead, the festival energetically celebrated in Mexico on 1 November. The British Museum will also celebrate the feast, and, according to MacGregor, “large quantities of sugar skulls, the delicacy of the Day of the Dead, are already on order”.

MacGregor, launching the museum’s annual review, reported on the British Museum’s next big step: its “north-west development”, a 11,000 sq metre exhibition space and conservation centre.

Two-thirds of the funds for the £135m extension are secured, and, according to British Museum chair Niall FitzGerald, the museum is “shovel-ready” to start work on building, pending trustees’ go-ahead and planning permission from Camden council, a decision on which is expected later this month. English Heritage, said a museum spokeswoman, are fully backing the plans for the extension.

The new space, designed by Graham Stirk of Rogers Stirk Harbour & Partners, Sir Richard Rogers’s practice, is planned as a replacement for the reading room in the museum’s Great Court as the venue for large-scale exhibitions such as those recently devoted to Hadrian and Shah Abbas. Permission to use the reading room as a venue for exhibition expires in 2012 and, warned FitzGerald: “If we don’t have another space for our exhibitions that would be a catastrophe.”

The government has pledged £22.5m for the development; about £30m will come from the museum’s reserves and the balance, MacGregor was “hopeful and confident”, is being found from private donors.MacGregor said that a key challenge for the museum was getting its collection out on the road. In the last financial year, 2,500 objects from the museum were seen in other UK locations.

Transporting objects, he said, was “technically safe – the limits are now ones of resources and making sure there are places that can receive them”.

Developing the museum’s online facilities was also crucial. “By the end of this year there will be 2m objects online – well ahead of any major institution in the world,” said MacGregor. “Making available free digital downloads of the highest possible quality is the natural corollary of free entry to the museum.”

It was a year of growth for the institution, with visitor figures for 2008 at 5.93m, making it the most popular visitor attraction in the UK.

A number of important gifts had been made to the museum, and new galleries created for the matchless Percival David collection of Chinese art, which has been lent to the museum in perpetuity. It is, said MacGregor, the most important addition to the museum collection since the Sutton Hoo treasure in 1942.

The world around 1500: connecting the British Museum’s exhibitions

In 1492, Christopher Columbus sails to the Americas.

In 1498, Vasco da Gama reaches India after rounding the Cape of Good Hope.

In 1492, the last Muslim ruler of Granada, Boabdilm, surrenders to Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain. In 1499, forced baptisms begin.

In 1502, Moctezuma becomes ruler of the Aztec empire (Aztec mask below); under him it reaches its largest size. In 1519, he and Cortés meet.

By the end of the 15th century, the kingdom of Ife in modern Nigeria begins to give way to Benin as a wealthy west African political and artistic centre.

In the early 16th century Benin sends an ambassador to Portugal; Portuguese missionaries are sent to Benin.

Somewhere between 1503 and 1507, Leonardo paints the Mona Lisa.

In about 1507, Raphael paints St Catherine of Alexandria, now in the National Gallery.

In 1513, Machiavelli writes The Prince.

In 1516, Rafael Perestrello, a cousin of Christopher Columbus, becomes the first European explorer to land on the southern coast of mainland China. The following year, the Portuguese send an expedition to try to set up trade relations with China in Guangzhou.

In the early 16th century, the Mughal empire begins its rise.

In 1503, Henry VII obtains a papal dispensation allowing his son Henry to marry his widowed daughter-in-law, Catherine of Aragon.

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Strasbourg diary

Dominic Hughes

The newly-elected European Parliament is holding its first session this week, with MEPs vying for political influence. Half are novices in the Strasbourg assembly, the rest have been re-elected.

The BBC’s Dominic Hughes is keeping a diary as he rubs shoulders with MEPs, gauging the mood as they settle in and forge new alliances. You can send in your comments using the form at the bottom.

Tuesday, 1225 French time

As expected the former Polish PM Jerzy Buzek has been elected as the new President of the European Parliament. He scored an overwhelming win – 555 vots to just 89 for the only other candidate, Eva-Britt Svensson from Sweden.

His election is interesting not least because it reflects the growing power of the new member states from Central and Eastern Europe in the EU. And Mr Buzek made reference to that in his acceptance speech, talking about the long journey Poland had taken to emerge from behind the Iron Curtain as a key player in the EU. It’s pretty amazing really.

I remember a conversation with my Dad in the mid-1980s when I asked him if he ever thought the Iron Curtain would fall. "Not in my lifetime," he said. It’s his birthday on Thursday and he’ll be 76. Just goes to show that even dads get it wrong sometimes.

Tuesday, 1120 French time

So the first session of this new Parliament has begun amid pretty chaotic scenes. To start with, journalists had to queue for ages in pouring rain at the press entrance to the Parliament as loads of people were waiting for temporary accreditation – part-timers! The BBC News Channel was waiting, so I flashed my badge and barged in I’m afraid.

Meanwhile outside the Parliament chamber hordes of camera crews and snappers were jostling for position as the new MEPs entered what’s known as the hemicycle, trying to get a shot as the members trooped in to vote for a new president. A few well-known faces appeared – Jose Bove for example, the French farmer who became the poster boy for the anti-globalisation movement and is now a freshly-minted MEP.

The first round of voting is now under way as I type, but everyone knows the former Polish Prime Minister Jerzy Buzek will emerge as the winner. How democratic is that

We’re also waiting to see what will happen with the British National Party. I’d be amazed if there was not some kind of statement or demonstration by a British MEP objecting to their presence in the chamber.

Here’s some unverified gossip: During preliminary meetings in Brussels over the past few weeks the BNP were given the cold shoulder in the canteens and cafes. And every time the BNP’s Nick Griffin tried to speak his microphone mysteriously went dead so he could never be heard. If it’s true, is this the right way to treat someone who is after all a democratically elected representative

Monday, 1830 French time

So here we are for a (shortish) week at the Strasbourg seat of the European Parliament to mark the first sitting of the new session. It’s a good five-hour drive here from my usual base in Brussels (don’t get me started on the insanity of the Parliament’s two seats in Strasbourg and Brussels) and over the past two years my cameraman colleague Patrice and I have developed a tradition of stopping for a hearty lunch of meatballs and chips at the Ikea on the Belgium-Luxembourg border. I then fall fast asleep to leave Patrice to drive on, accompanied by the sound of some light snoring.

European Parliament, Strasbourg

But now I’m here there’s plenty to get my teeth into. All 736 MEPs elected last month need to be sworn in; chairmen and members of the various parliamentary committees – where most of the real work is done – need to be agreed; and a new President of the European Parliament needs to be elected. I use "elected" in the broadest sense of the word in that it’s almost certainly going to be the former conservative prime minister of Poland Jerzy Buzek who will assume the parliament’s top job, in a stitch-up between the centre-right group, the European People’s Party (the biggest in the parliament), and the centre-left group, the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats. The latter will probably have one of their own take over the role half-way through the five-year life of this Parliament.

Plus, a new force makes its debut this week – the European Conservatives and Reformists Group gets its first outing, following the British Tories’ withdrawal from the EPP. Quite how influential they will be depends on how many committee seats and chairmanships they pick up this week.

And of course there is the small matter of the arrival of two newly-elected British MEPs from the British National Party. How will the generally liberal establishment here in Strasbourg deal with a party that many regard as racist How should they respond – engage and challenge or isolate and ignore What do you think I’ll be adding diary entries across the week and I’d love to hear your thoughts.


Your comments:

I hope our esteemed Euroleaders are reminded how much we hate their dictatorial tendencies whenever they see their two new colleagues. I do not personally think voting in wannabe dictators is a good way to do it though. I never thought I would see the day when the BNP got someone beyond councillor status. Tony Sweeting, Leicester, UK

Un-democratic body! This statement doesn’t add up! Why do we have Euro Elections The European Parliament does represent the voters’ wishes, better than in the UK where they still use the first past the post system.
foxyeric, brussels, belgium

I wonder how this new-look EU Parliament will handle another rejection of the Lisbon (Constitution) Treaty by the Irish electorate this coming October

How will it reconcile its dictatorial aspirations with the blatant democracy emanating from Ireland

The Constitution (Lisbon) Treaty is all about destroying democracy and the Irish really are now becoming just more than an embarrassment; they are an unwelcome hindrance.
Micheal Breathnach, Galway, Ireland

Why does no-one comment on the fact that the European elections have reflected the Eurosceptic feelings that most people in the UK (and other Euro countries) have

The only comments we get about the BNP and UKIP is that they are racial votes. Yet in most countries only the smaller parties reflect the scepticism that Europeans feel towards this nonsense and un-democratic body that makes its representatives waste money by moving from Brussels to Strasbourg etc.
Marijke Bevan, Tunbridge Wells, U.K.

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Airlines suffering ‘annus horribilis’

British Airways chairman Martin Broughton ruled out turning to its existing shareholders for cash, saying the time was not right for a rights issue

British Airways admitted today that it must raise its cash reserves if it is to survive the crisis sweeping the airline industry, following an “annus horribilis” in which it suffered a record loss.

At the start of its annual general meeting at the Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre in London, the UK national carrier said it would increase its liquidity levels by raising fresh capital from the City. BA also admitted its pensions deficit was higher than expected, adding to the pressure on the company.

“We believe it to be in the interests of our shareholders to look at options to increase our own liquidity. Our current liquidity is above our desired minimum of 15% of revenues. However, an extended economic downturn would be stretching,” said Martin Broughton, the chairman of British Airways.

But Broughton ruled out turning to its existing shareholders for cash, saying the time was not right for a rights issue.

He also referred to one of Queen Elizabeth II’s most famous sayings to sum up the last year.

“This has indeed been an ‘annus horribilis’ for the aviation industry,” Broughton said.

Angry staff congregated at the AGM to call on chief executive Willie Walsh to resign.

Inside the centre, Walsh emphasised the state of the crisis facing BA, which made a record pretax loss of £401m last year.

Walsh said “there has been a structural shift in our premium markets”, adding that expecting the business class market to return to its former state was “the road to oblivion”.

For years, business class travel has been a crucial part of BA’s revenue stream. But it has been ravaged by the global downturn.

“Corporate travel budgets have been cut back severely and consumers are determined to reduce their debt,” BA admitted.

Broughton admitted that BA’s pension deficit had increased since last September, when it was calculated at £1.74bn. The value of its two funds is currently being calculated, but BA today ruled out increasing its own contribution.

“In the past three years, the company has paid £1.8bn into the two schemes, in an effort to eliminate the deficit. It is a sobering thought that this level of contribution is far in excess of our cumulative profits, which have been £1bn, over the same period,” said Broughton.

“To make up the shortfall, the company and trustees will need to agree a revised funding plan after the actuarial review is completed.”

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Robert Plant awarded CBE

The former Led Zep frontman has been made a Commander of the British Empire. In your face Jimmy Page OBE!

Robert Plant was honoured as a CBE by Prince Charles in a ceremony at Buckingham Palace on Friday, letting the former Led Zeppelin singer finally one-up guitarist Jimmy Page.

While Page is a member of the Order of the British Empire, Plant now outranks him with his new title of Commander of the British Empire.

Plant didn’t seem to think this really mattered. “If we can remember each other’s phone number at this time in life it’s a miracle,” he said. “We’re still good friends, we both enjoy a rather dark sense of humour that comes, I think, from being on the wrong side of the tracks for all those wild years.”

Led Zeppelin have not played together since their one-off O2 Arena gig in December 2007. Though Page had tried to reunite the group for a tour with bassist John Paul Jones and drummer Jason Bonham, the late John Bonham’s son, Plant declined to join them. Instead, he is concentrating on an ongoing collaboration with American singer Alison Krauss.

Asked if a Led Zeppelin reunion may still be on the horizon, Plant pretended to be hard of hearing. “Sometimes I go a bit deaf in either ear, especially when people are talking nonsense,” he said.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Robert Plant awarded CBE

The former Led Zep frontman has been made a Commander of the British Empire. In your face Jimmy Page OBE!

Robert Plant was honoured as a CBE by Prince Charles in a ceremony at Buckingham Palace on Friday, letting the former Led Zeppelin singer finally one-up guitarist Jimmy Page.

While Page is a member of the Order of the British Empire, Plant now outranks him with his new title of Commander of the British Empire.

Plant didn’t seem to think this really mattered. “If we can remember each other’s phone number at this time in life it’s a miracle,” he said. “We’re still good friends, we both enjoy a rather dark sense of humour that comes, I think, from being on the wrong side of the tracks for all those wild years.”

Led Zeppelin have not played together since their one-off O2 Arena gig in December 2007. Though Page had tried to reunite the group for a tour with bassist John Paul Jones and drummer Jason Bonham, the late John Bonham’s son, Plant declined to join them. Instead, he is concentrating on an ongoing collaboration with American singer Alison Krauss.

Asked if a Led Zeppelin reunion may still be on the horizon, Plant pretended to be hard of hearing. “Sometimes I go a bit deaf in either ear, especially when people are talking nonsense,” he said.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Robert Plant awarded CBE

The former Led Zep frontman has been made a Commander of the British Empire. In your face Jimmy Page OBE!

Robert Plant was honoured as a CBE by Prince Charles in a ceremony at Buckingham Palace on Friday, letting the former Led Zeppelin singer finally one-up guitarist Jimmy Page.

While Page is a member of the Order of the British Empire, Plant now outranks him with his new title of Commander of the British Empire.

Plant didn’t seem to think this really mattered. “If we can remember each other’s phone number at this time in life it’s a miracle,” he said. “We’re still good friends, we both enjoy a rather dark sense of humour that comes, I think, from being on the wrong side of the tracks for all those wild years.”

Led Zeppelin have not played together since their one-off O2 Arena gig in December 2007. Though Page had tried to reunite the group for a tour with bassist John Paul Jones and drummer Jason Bonham, the late John Bonham’s son, Plant declined to join them. Instead, he is concentrating on an ongoing collaboration with American singer Alison Krauss.

Asked if a Led Zeppelin reunion may still be on the horizon, Plant pretended to be hard of hearing. “Sometimes I go a bit deaf in either ear, especially when people are talking nonsense,” he said.

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“Orgasm A Day” Campaign Directed At British Schoolchildren Sparks Controversy

The National Health Service of Britain has sparked controversy with their controversial sex education campaign promoting an orgasm a day:

A National Health Service leaflet is advising school pupils that they have a “right” to an enjoyable sex…

Pressure mounts on IOC as heavyweights gear up for bids

Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair may be best remembered for standing shoulder to shoulder with George W Bush over the Gulf War but in the sporting world it will be how he produced a dramatic late flurry of lobbying to gain London the 2012 Olympic Games.  His "table side" manner inFormer British Prime Minister Tony Blair may be best remembered for standing shoulder to shoulder with George W Bush over the Gulf War but in the sporting world it will be how he produced a dramatic late flurry of lobbying to gain London the 2012 Olympic Games. His “table side” manner in