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Posts Tagged ‘lands’

Sarah Ferguson Lands Invite To Will & Kate Royal Wedding As Bride & Groom Enter Couples Counseling

The Original Fergie has reportedly turned down 28 offers from American TV networks to work as a commentator during the April 29 royal wedding of her nephew Prince William and his bride Kate Middleton. (This despite the Duchess’ crippling mountain of debt…) She can’t very well commentate on it if she’s a guest, which Britain’s [...]

GSLO Volt cases closer to launch, Apple blocks Sony reader app, iOS 4.2.6 lands

GSLO has announced that it has received the first shipment of Volt solar chargers for testing. The company says it will test them for manufacturing quality before they ship to users in the US. Apple has blocked the Sony Reader app from the App Store. The reason the app was blocked is that in-app purchases [...]

Dan Savage Lands Sex Advice Show On MTV

Acid-tongued advice columnist Dan Savage has inked a deal to bring his signature brand of sassy expertise on sexuality and sexual health to the airwaves of MTV. The still-untitled show, premiering later this year, will follow Savage as he answers questions about sex and relationships from a live audience during his routine speaking tours at [...]

PlayStation iOS app lands, PocketPro golf swing analyzer, Verizon iPhone subsidies to hit $5B

The official Sony PlayStation app has landed on the App Store for you to download. The app doesn’t allow actual gaming, but lets you keep up with online statuses, the activities of your pals, and check out your trophies. Golfers can soon get the PocketPro gold swing analyzer tool for the iPhone. The tool is [...]

WikiLeaks Boss Julian Assange Lands Book Deal

Australian whistle-blower Julian Assange — the man behind international secret-revealing website WikiLeaks, which let the world peek behind the curtain and see the inner workings of governments and financial institutions — is lifting the lid on his own life story. In an interview with Britian’s Sunday Times, Assange confirmed that he’s signed a $1.3 million [...]

NoseDial app, AppLink lands for Ford Sync, Space tech uses iPhone headphones to check heart rate

If you live where gloves are required when you go outside you have undoubtedly had a hard time using your iPhone at some point. A new app called NoseDial has surfaced that lets you dial your phone and navigate contacts using your nose. If you own a 2011 Ford Fiesta, you are the first to [...]

Unanimous 19th Amend lands in NA


ISLAMABAD – Terming the day a historic one, Chairman Parliamentary Committee on Constitutional Reforms, Mian Raza Rabbani Tuesday presented a report with regard to the proposed 19th amendment in the Constitution in the National Assembly.
“This is a unique moment in the political history of the country as two very important unanimously adopted constitutional bills are being presented before the House,” he said while laying the report. Rabbani said that when some of the articles of the 18th Amendment were challenged in the Supreme Court of Pakistan, some people were waiting for a clash among the institutions but the Supreme Court sent it back to the Parliament for a review. No political party has given a dissenting note on the 19th amendment, he added.
He congratulated and thanked the President, the Prime Minister, all political partiesÂ’ heads and the National Assembly Speaker for giving a free hand0 to the Committee, which made it possible for him to present a unanimously adopted report on 19th amendment in the House.
He said that all the constitutional institutions were functioning within their constitutional ambits and the political system in the country was strengthening day-by-day. He also paid tributes to the members of the Committee and said without their active cooperation, it was not possible for him to develop consensus with regard to the unanimous amendments.
Later, Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani congratulated the House on the presentation of the report with regard to the report on 19th amendment and a successful test of a ballistic missile Hatf-5.
He was of the view that the incumbent Parliament was the most independent than the previous ones and its seriousness and devotion to resolve the issues had shut the mouth of those who had been terming it a rubberstamp parliament.
Premier Gilani said that he had been a member of the parliament since 1982 to 2002 and he never saw such an independent parliament. “The last Parliament did nothing but only chanted slogans of ‘Go Musharraf Go,” the Prime Minister commented.
Congratulating the Chairman and members of the Committee and heads of the political parties, he said that the Parliament, politicians, media and judiciary were passing through an evolution and were turning more mature and strong.
“I compliment the role of Supreme Court for referring the matter to the Parliament for a review. The Judiciary has given highest respect to the Parliament and the Parliament has
reciprocated in the same manner,” he said.
PML-Q leader Riaz Pirzada said the ParliamentÂ’s maturity strengthened political institutions and the unanimous resolution had cemented the democratic system. Aftab Shaikh of PML-N said it was a historic day when the Committee had drafted a unanimous amendment, which would help restore the 1973 Constitution in its true form.
However, Kashmala Tariq of PML-Q (Likeminded) and Bahadur Khan Sehar of PML-Q and Nawab Yousuf of PPP said that the procedure of making new provinces in the country should be relaxed in the 19th amendment.
Meanwhile, Chairman Standing Committee on Religious Affairs Maulana Muhammad Qasim presented a report of the committee on ‘The Registration of Haj Bill, 2008’. The Bill provides for regulating, controlling and facilitating the business of Haj operators.
Earlier, responding to a calling attention notice, the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs said that Sikhs were not refused of visa to visit pilgrims on the occasion of their founderÂ’s day in Pakistan.
He said that he had checked the matter from Interior Ministry and there was no report of the refusal of visas to 300 Sikh pilgrims. The calling attention notice was moved by MNAs Shakeela Khanam, Rubina Saadat Qaim Khani, and others.
According to the draft of the report, it has been recommended that Judicial Commission would nominate judges and send its nominations to the parliamentary committee, that would have the authority to reject the same and send it back to the Commission for review. The Commission would again nominate other judges for appointment and would send it back to the parliamentary committee, that would send the nomination to the prime minister for appointment.
The channel said 26 amendments have been made in six articles of the Constitution. Two in article 81, one each in article 175 and 182, 12 in article 175A, two in article 213 and eight amendments made to article 246.
The areas surrounding Lakki Marwat and Tank will be considered Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) areas in this amendment.
Meanwhile, Minister for Law Justice and Preliminary Affairs Dr Babar Awan said on Tuesday that the government will table 19th Amendment in the National Assembly on Wednesday (today).
Talking to media outside the Parliament, he said the Ministry has prepared the 19th Amendment, the Federal Cabinet will approve it and it would be tabled in the National Assembly on Wednesday and will be approved during the ongoing session.
The draft of the amendment bill is likely tabled before the National Assembly tomorrow (Thursday) after its formal approval from the Federal Cabinet today (Wednesday).
The Chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Constitutional Reforms (PCCR) Senator Mian Raza Rabbani had tabled the report of the Committee before the National Assembly on Tuesday.
Sources in the Parliament informed The Nation that the draft of 19th Constitutional Amendment would be presented before the Federal Cabinet on Wednesday (today) for approval and once it was okayed by the Cabinet it would be tabled before the National Assembly on Thursday and is likely be passed by the Parliament the same day.
Agencies add: According a TV channel said 26 amendments have been made in six articles of the Constitution. Two in article 81, one each in article 175 and 182, 12 in article 175A, two in Article 213 and eight amendments made to article 246.
The areas surrounding Lakki Marwat and Tank will be considered Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) areas in this amendment.
Meanwhile, Minister for Law Justice and Preliminary Affairs Dr Babar Awan said on Tuesday that the government will table 19th Amendment in the National Assembly on Wednesday (today).
Talking to media outside the Parliament, he said the Ministry has prepared the 19th Amendment, the Federal Cabinet will approve it and it would be tabled in the National Assembly on Wednesday and will be approved during the ongoing session.

Speck offers holiday cases, Wozniak says Android will win, iAd lands in Europe

The holidays are here and if you still haven’t started decorating, you aren’t alone. Speck has some new cases for Christmas that will fit the iPhone 4 and iPhone 3G/3GS phones with Santa and snowmen decorations on them. The cases are about $30 and you can get them now. Apple’s Steve Wozniak has stated that [...]

Stamford Land’s 1H net profit after tax soars to $44.3m on favourable forex rate

Stamford Land Corporation, the operator of luxury hotels and developer of residential and commercial properties, says profit after tax increased 329.8% to $44.3 million for the half year ended 30 September 2010 (1HFY2011) from $10.3 million in 1HFY2010.

This was due to the favourable exchange rate for FY 2011 and fair value gains on investment properties. Hotels in Australia continue to perform strongly, with operating results for 2HFY2011 expected to be better than 1HFY2011.

Revenue fell slightly to $110.7 million in 1H11 from $111.0 million in 1H10.

NTA per share increased to $0.53 due to stronger A$ and NZ$ for investments in hotels and properties, with hotels conservatively valued at historical cost less depreciation.

A fair value gain of $47.3 million was recognised for the completion of Dynons Plaza in Perth.

{jcomments on}

Banned Satyajit Ray Sikkim film screened in Kolkata lands in copyright row

After nearly four decades, Satyajit Ray’s banned documentary ‘Sikkim’ was finally screened at the Kolkata Film Festival (KFF), only to be tangled in a copyright controversy. A Sikkim-based trust has claimed to own exclusive rights over the film, reports the BBC. The Art and Culture Trust of Sikkim (Acts) – an organisation promoted by former [...]

Keppel Land’s Alpha Investment Partners invests $275m in Seoul Square

Alpha Investment Partners (AIP), the wholly-owned real-estate fund management arm of Keppel Land, has made a structured investment of US$210 million ($274.9 million) in Seoul Square, Korea, under its US$1.2 billion Macro Trends Fund (AAMTF).

Located in the heart of the City Hall area, the 23-storey Seoul Square has a total rentable area of 1,429,509 sf of prime Grade A office space. The building has been substantially rebuilt. It features column-free spaces with luxury finishings and offers one of the largest office floor plates in Seoul.

Read more…

Fat of the lands

The bulging problem of obesity

ONE IN six adults in the 33 mostly rich countries of the OECD is obese (measured as a body mass index of 30 or more) according to a report published on September 23rd. The fattest countries are the United States and Mexico, where around a third of adults are obese. Britain’s adults are the biggest in Europe. By contrast, Asian OECD countries Japan and South Korea are the leanest. Governments will count the eventual cost: health-care spending on an obese person is 25% more than for someone of average weight. And the problem is not confined to the rich world. In rapidly developing countries such as China, Brazil and India obesity rates, though still low, are growing fast as the dietary habits of the ever-increasing middle classes change.

Outside Lands | 08.14-08.15 | SF

Words by: Dennis Cook & Eric Podolsky | Susan J Weiand & Josh Miller

Outside Lands :: 08.14.10-08.15.10 :: Golden Gate Park :: San Francisco, CA

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”28″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=110″);}); 8/14/10 – 8/15/10 @ Outside Lands Festival (San Francisco, CA) View Photos

Furthur’s John Kadlecik by Weiand

As the expression goes, third time’s the charm. Outside Lands, the biggest Bay Area summer festival, had things dialed in for year three. By trimming two stages, moving the main entrance and generally reorganizing the geography into a long, straight line between stages and tents, OL ’10 was more pleasant, less hectic and generally refined. Subtle changes throughout, including a better-informed staff and a never-ending dance tent, made for a fairly effortless, enjoyable atmosphere. With extensive wine offerings, Korean tacos and perhaps the finest coffee on earth, the Lands once again played to San Fran’s unique sensibilities, which were also reflected in a lineup that tapped local royalty (Furthur), genre defying oddities (Gogol Bordello, Garage A Trois), hipster gold (The Strokes, Phoenix), and rave faves (Pretty Lights, Bassnectar).

Perhaps the best compliment one can give a festival is that it’s thoughtfully assembled. An extra dash or three of care clearly went into the third installment of this growing summer fixture. There was less sound overlap between the stages than either previous year, and the programming moved closer to Bonnaroo’s science-like knack for putting the right bands in the right order on each stage in a way that plays to a certain sensibility, thus cutting down on nomadic wandering between stages, which is admittedly a real hike inside Golden Gate Park, even with the reduced number of stages. Corporate shilling was still strong but Outside Lands is set up in a way that one can largely ignore it and enjoy the bucolic setting – as long as they’ve brought plenty of layers and clothing options to contend with SF’s ever-changing weather, which offered flashes of sunshine Saturday, plenty of damp and largely moderate temps this year before really brightening up on Sunday.

What seemed like a keeper the first two years is now cemented as a pleasant fixture in one of the most singular (and challenging to master) settings for a music festival. Outside Lands is an ambitious yet easygoing affair, and thus a pretty fine fit for the quirky, outer fringe Bay Area. (Dennis Cook)

Saturday Highlights

1. My Morning Jacket :: 5:00-6:30 PM :: Lands End Stage

MMJ’s Jim James by Weiand

With the simple, direct announcement, “Tonight, I want to celebrate with you,” Jim James, omnichord in hand, struck up MMJ’s unique incantation, a mixture of bare skin intimacy and giant size rock spectacle. It’s a combination prone to blow up in lesser hands but MMJ has it sussed to perfection at this point, moving from eyelash flutter hush to sky climbing enormity with such skill and grace it leaves one a bit dizzy. Before “Golden,” James talked about playing a forested, disco ball strewn fest in Japan called Field of Heaven and how being in Golden Gate Park felt like Field of Heaven 2 or Revenge of Field of Heaven. The magic of the moment and specialness of place are rarely lost on MMJ, who excel at bringing the immediate world into focus with their highly romantic yet curiously barbed POV. The beauty of our shared time in such lovely surroundings, especially with MMJ providing the soundtrack, was not lost on many. With the best rock rhythm section from the south since Bill Berry put his sticks away, a colossally compelling frontman (often stalking the stage in a little black cape!), GIANT guitar gusto and one of the finest catalogues in the past 20 years, My Morning Jacket seized hold of the park. As James sighed, “I’ve been waiting for this moment for so long,” one felt a delightful shiver. The time between MMJ shows creates a lovely anticipation for the faithful, the next chapter devoutly wished for and appreciated with moist-eyed sincerity. One of the reoccurring themes in this band is it’s not only okay but essential to feel whatcha feel, and this performance had no lack of emotion, intensity or unflinching honesty. (DC)

Take 2
This band’s perfect blend of epic, crushing rock and Jim James‘ haunting, otherworldly falsetto never fails to deliver, especially on a big stage. Coming back after a big break from touring, one expected them to debut some new material, but their setlist was mostly identical to the 2008 tour (though they did debut a nifty new one called “Circuital”). No matter, they crushed every tune with reverb-laced majesty. Their huge, dreamy sound fit the gorgeous GG Park setting better than any band of the weekend, making them a perfect transition from afternoon into evening. (Eric Podolsky)

2. Wolfmother :: 6:30-7:20 PM :: Sutro Stage

Hands down, Andrew Stockdale and his band of Aussies stole the show on Saturday with the most consistently hard-rocking set of the day. Wolfmother made the most of their fifty-minute set, barraging the audience with song after song of feedback-laced, grungy, riff-laden rock and roll. Playing directly into the misty ocean breeze that descended on GG Park as the sun set, the band made the most of their short time slot by keeping their energy at a continuous peak of sonic mayhem. Ian Peres‘ crunchy Entwistle-like bass lines drove the band through their consistently great catalog, which included a short run through The Doors’ “Riders of the Storm” and a superbly reckless take on The Who’s “Baba O’Reilly.” Top Notch. (EP)

Take 2
With the best cover choices of the day, Wolfmother offered an indication that they aren’t competing with their contemporaries so much as rock’s giants. It’s what most young bands are aiming for but rarely boldly state outright like Stockdale and his new-ish four-piece lineup. What particularly impressed (and even surprised to a degree) is how well their originals stand up next to iconic radio staples like “Riders” and “Baba.” Stockdale has a bloody great set of furnace hot pipes and a gift for mimicry (Morrison and Daltrey have rarely been aped so well), and the quartet interlocks and slams with unified muscle. At this set, Wolfmother could not be ignored as they grasped and thrust at the large crowd, rock’s poking ‘n’ prodding essence kept vibrantly alive in a really enjoyable way. (DC)

3. Levon Helm Band :: 3:45-4:35 PM :: Twin Peaks Stage

Levon Helms by Weiand

“Thank you for all this loveliness,” croaked Levon towards the end of his band’s too brief, utterly satisfying set. Without question, what Levon and co. are doing is the closest thing to The Band that most of us that grew up after Winterland was shut down have experienced. The intertwining of American musics is complete and seemingly effortless with this huge band (10 people onstage by my count), and there’s a touch more growl and attack than one might expect. Levon is not a young man and his age is sometimes apparent, though not when the wind catches his back and he strums a mandolin or drums in a way that makes the years disappear. With an ace band led by Larry Campbell, Helm is keeping the flame lit for one of the cornerstones of rock ‘n’ roll as we know it, and it was a gift to be in his company for a short spell. (DC)

Take 2
Even though Levon’s voice was shot, his professional Americana band of veterans was a breath of fresh air in the middle of a day comprised of young, up-and-coming bands. His group’s sound was defined by its huge four-piece horn section, which gave all those classic Band songs a huge, refreshing sound. Highlights included Levon’s take on Dylan’s “Blind Willie McTell,” and a rousing NOLA two-step “All On A Mardi Gras Day” to close their too-short set. (EP)

4. The Whigs :: 12:00-12:40 PM :: Panhandle Solar Stage

With waves of befuzzed bass, air kicking guitar rattle and crisp, intense drums, The Whigs roared out of the gate, kicking off the day with nothing-held-back energy. They play in an almost archetypal fashion, looking and sounding just like a rock band should. There’s scads of testicular fortitude but also numerous lyrics that recall Thom Yorke at his pithy, prickly best (“I don’t need to kill anyone to prove I’m real,” “Somebody better come and speed up your heart ’cause it’s dying”). Swinging from cavernously thick, Sabbath-worthy crush (often with a downhill speed up near the end of tracks that was honestly exhilarating) to hooky pop to the softly psychedelic, The Whigs showed off their considerable chops and a songwriting acumen that thoroughly skunks most peers. Every track from this year’s In The Dark was stronger live, and by set’s end it was obvious that The Whigs have ALL rock’s fundamentals down cold. (DC)

5. Dawes :: 1:25-2:05 PM :: Panhandle Solar Stage

Touring behind one of the strongest debuts in years, this Southern California band is rapidly shaping up to be one of today’s finest, most striking bands, melding cherry influences like The Band, 70s California rock (Eagles, Jackson Browne, Neil Young, Linda Ronstadt), and heaping measures of barroom gusto and stadium-eyeing moxie. Vocalist-songwriter-guitarist Taylor Goldsmith and his highly in-tune compatriots exude the crackling vibe of the E Street Band in their early club days. Dawes has the same hungry energy about them and the same ceaseless need to connect with every person in the audience, no matter how big or small. Dawes has the talent, tunes and tenacity to achieve great things, and they were fueled by infectious confidence and road hardened tunes in GG Park. Looking around at the sizeable number of people belting out the “oh, oh, oh’s” on “Western Skyline” it was obvious I wasn’t the only one really feeling this band and taking their music into their heart. Only expect the number of faithful followers to grow with this band. (DC)

6. Gogol Bordello :: 3:05-4:05 PM :: Lands End Stage

Gogol Fans by Weiand

In many ways, Gogol Bordello’s MacGyver‘s stew of world musics just shouldn’t work. Fiddles and electric guitars and accordions and menacing moustaches, oh my! Watching them beneath their standard banner of a hand holding a slingshot ready to launch a red star, it became clear at Outside Lands that it’s a rugged, Clash-like undercurrent that stitches this crazy quilt together. They are a People’s Band, marching forward towards truth and love and other big, honorable things, and maybe throwing a steel toe into the shins of aggressors and money hoarders along the way. Often yelling, there’s actually a fair amount of substance inside their routine, where we’re reminded that we’ve only got today to live and not waste on looking backwards at “good old days” that never were. Gogol is also as entertaining as watching a clown car unload onto a water slide. Their energy and sheer gusto for life is endearing and inspiring, and their music ain’t half bad either. (DC)

Honorable Mention: Furthur

Never one to genuflect too deeply at the Grateful Dead altar, even in my 1984-90 peak mania, I’m still not totally convinced by Furthur. At Outside Lands, Bob’s singing was better than usual, and the band played with patient insistence, but it still smacked of guys chasing something that’s unattainable – i.e. raising the ghost of the Grateful Dead. I know these songs – well – and I know there are two guys from the Dead in their ranks but I can’t put my finger on what makes Furthur their own band and that’s what’s off-putting for me. If one is likewise trying to raise that ghost then this might be the best seance on offer today. I think from my perspective I’ll still go with Dark Star Orchestra, but this configuration of Dead veterans, Dead music aficionados and a drummer new to the whole thing are fine musicians all and it’s certainly not an unpleasant way to spend one’s time, especially if one adores this songbook. (DC)

Continue reading for Sunday Highlights…

Al Green by Weiand

While Saturday’s eclectic lineup proved somewhat jarring in its musical scope (Pretty Lights > Levon Helm > Furthur> The Strokes?), Sunday’s focus on soul/R&B/dance music proved more cohesive in the day’s flow. Likewise, the festival crowd’s lack of an identity on Saturday gave way to a looser, more vibey scene on Sunday, which saw the sun come out in GG Park for the first time in weeks. While Saturday felt like a series of concerts, Sunday felt like a real festival experience, with everyone grooving under the eucalyptus trees all day long.

My only real qualm with the very efficiently run urban festival would be the consistently short set times, which forced many bands to squeeze their acts into digestible introductions rather than a legitimate representations. This, when combined with the half-mile walk between stages and overlapping sets, meant you were lucky to catch 35 minutes of a band before having to walk another half-mile back to catch most of the next band you wanted to see. Regardless, there was nary a lull to be had all day, with nine straight hours of fantastic music.

With the huge number of overlapping sets, there were some tough decisions to be made. The toughest had to be the choice of catching Al Green in lieu of both Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros and Garage A Trois. This ended up being a somewhat regrettable choice, as the good Reverend seems to have reached the point in his career where he’s coasting on his own legacy. Al was all smiles and enthusiasm, but when it came to performing, he actually only sang about half of the time. The other half was stage banter, as he preached the merit of his own songbook and threw roses to the crowd. This complacency was easily forgiven though, as this was Al-fucking-Green, and Al Green can do whatever the hell he wants. He knew that most were there just to have said that they saw Al Green, and everyone forgave him when he skipped a verse in the middle of “Let’s Stay Together” to drink some Gatorade. Fantastic version of “Pretty Woman,” though. (Eric Podolsky)

Sunday Highlights

1. Mayer Hawthorne & The County :: 1:30-2:10 PM :: Sutro Stage

Mayer Hawthorne by Weiand

The most fun I had all day was dancing to the one band I had never heard of. Hawthore stole the day for me with his early afternoon set of tight-as-a-drum neo-soul. With a groove equally rooted in 60s Motown, 70s Philly Soul and modern hip-hop, Hawthorne and his band serenaded the crowd with their on-point, Temptations-style falsetto harmonies. In matching suits, the multicultural band delivered earnest, danceable love songs while avoiding both irony and sap, most notably in the slinky “Just Ain’t Gonna Work Out.” Hailing from Detroit, it is clear that Hawthorne has Motown in his blood. His voice is like a cross between classic Smokey Robinson and 70s Michael McDonald, in the best way imaginable. It is not often that a band’s performance finds me actively seeking out their catalog, but this music is so supremely likeable and original that it’s impossible to not be enthralled. (EP)

2. The Devil Makes Three :: 2:10-2:55 PM :: Twin Peaks Stage

By the time this trio from Santa Cruz, CA started their peppy afternoon set, the sun had fully emerged from its cloud shroud, which made for a happy country hoedown in the park. Comprised of banjo, guitar and upright bass, The Devil Makes Three can sure throw a party, thanks to their fantastic songwriting and bouncing, bluegrass basslines. Their sound carries a tinge of jug band inanity, which makes anthemic tunes such as “All Hail” sound like they potentially could have a kazoo in there somewhere, though they don’t. This set really felt like a festival, with the crowd dancing harder than I had seen all weekend. Lead singer/guitarist Pete Bernhard‘s vocals were rollicking and enthusiastic, and the group’s three-part harmonies really captured that “high and lonesome sound.” Cooper McBean‘s loping banjo playing had a cool compression to it, which made it sound like it was being broadcast on an old-time radio show. These guys surely won over a ton of new fans with their set, including this writer. (EP)

3. Janelle Monae :: 3:05-3:55 PM :: Sutro Stage

Who is Janelle Monae? The way this girl is performing people won’t be saying that for much longer. Her set was probably the most anticipated of the weekend, and for good reason. Unfortunately, her flight from Toronto was delayed and she took the stage late, cutting her already short time slot down to around 25 minutes. This was a minor tragedy, as she was simply electric. As soon as she stepped onstage, it was clear that this 24-year old girl is a star in the making. Boasting a perfect pompa-fro, Monae and her band let loose an abridged show of frantic, freaky-deeky hip-hop soul, a la Outkast/ Gnarls Barkley. Prancing around the stage like Andre 3000′s little sister, the pint-sized Monae showed off serious pipes and dance moves to match. Her three-piece band was somewhat of an accessory to the pre-recorded tracks that they played along with, but no matter, it was a performance and she worked it. The set peaked and ended with a funky take on “Tightrope,” in which Monae wailed and thrashed about on the drum riser in a cape. Monae’s music has that frantic, weird, Danger Mouse feel to it, and she can sing like Beyonce. In other words, expect to see this girl on MTV sooner than later. (EP)

Phoenix by Weiand

4. Phoenix :: 5:55-6:55 PM :: Lands End Stage

These guys probably attracted the most fervent young fans of the weekend, which crunched the pit with bodies and energy. Frontman Thomas Mars was acutely aware and supremely grateful of his audience, and responded with a balls-out rock star performance of festival-size proportion. Phoenix has so many catchy, infectious, utterly danceable rock songs that their live show is bound to be a great time. The band played (and nailed) them all with drummer Thomas Hedlund kicking some serious ass, though it was Mars who owned every minute of this show. His earnest, clear-eyed vocal delivery truly defines this band. It was eye-opening how good his voice sounded live, and his patented repetition of phrases was right in groove with the tunes. Mars seemed so genuinely happy and grateful for his audience that his rock star stage antics came across as endearing, where his amp climbing and stage diving worked and fed the show’s energy well. This was the most fun rock show I’ve seen in a long time. (EP)

5. Budos Band :: 7:40-8:25 PM :: Panhandle Stage

Playing at the tiny stage, the Budos Band were the sleepers of the weekend, and the intimate crowd that chose to forgo Kings of Leon for some real music were rewarded for it. Though their 45-minute twilight set was far too short to really get into the zone, the ten-piece band (four being percussionists) of Daptone fame laid it down for us in the park with strutting, hard-hitting instrumental Afrobeat funk. This was a heavy groove with a huge sound, with Jared Tankel‘s baritone sax was at the forefront of the polyrhythms rumbling our sternums with its low squawks. The music inspired a stomping, elephant-march dance party of a few hundred people as the sky darkened, and we got our ya-yas out, knowing the end of the weekend was upon us. (EP)

6. Chromeo :: 5:15-6:05 PM :: Twin Peaks Stage

Chromeo Fans by Weiand

Usually, DJ sets don’t really do it for me in a festival setting, as they’re better suited for a late-night club dance party, but Chromeo’s music is just so silly and fun that it translated very well to a sunny afternoon in the park. Their music is a straight tongue-in-cheek tribute to early-80s electro-soul, a celebration of robot rock, and a straight vocoder party. The duo, perched behind their keyboards with woman leg stands (think the lamp in A Christmas Story), played live guitar, keyboards and vocoder along with their backing tracks, and inspired the weekend’s biggest dance party in the process. Alternating Dave 1‘s sung vocals with P-Thugg‘s vocoder-enhanced vocals, Chromeo delivered clever lyrics about gettin’ it on atop layered funk. At one point, after a tease of “Money For Nothing” and somewhere in the middle of “Bonafied Lovin’,” some rowdies knocked the barrier fence down and gate crashed, inspiring cheers throughout the audience. There’s nothing like gettin’ down in the park with a few thousand other peeps to really make your day. (EP)

JamBase | Outside
Go See Live Music!


Outside Lands 2010 Preview

By: Dennis Cook
JamBase Associate
Editor

Outside Lands :: 08.14.10-08.15.10 :: Golden Gate Park :: San Francisco,
CA

For the third year in a row, Outside Lands will sprawl over the lush, rolling
landscape of iconic Golden Gate Park in a contemporized Golden State happening that
combines good music, fine wine and a distinctly West Coast sensibility. The organizers
wisely trimmed this from a three-day to a two-day festival and contracted the overall
hours a bit, too, starting later and ending earlier to accommodate the public
transportation needs of the vast majority of attendees. Once through the gates, this is a
classy, big city festival with quality headliners Furthur
(Saturday) and Kings of Leon (Sunday) alongside fest staples My Morning Jacket
(Saturday) and Nas & Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley (Sunday). This year will also introduce
the DJ/dance music Inspire area for those that must boogie, day or night. As for
the rest, we’ve cherry picked three sets from each day that should prick up your ears.

Saturday, August 14

1. The Whigs ::
12:00-12:40 PM :: Panhandle Solar Stage

There’s not a great deal of four-to-the-floor rock in this year’s assortment, with most of
the rollers tending towards alternative modern rather than bitchin’ Camaro in tone.
Athens, GA stalwarts The Whigs should set things on a fine trajectory for folks who start
their musical dance card with them on Saturday, peppering their more refined recent work
with messy outbursts full of flying hair, sweat and snarled spit as the music rips from
them in a fantastically real way.

</center

2. Levon Helm
Band
:: 3:45-4:35 PM :: Twin Peaks Stage

Seriously, what’s going on that could stop any serious music aficionado from spending a
little under an hour sitting at the heel of one of The Band’s co-founders and ostensibly
the spiritual keeper of that landmark group’s flame? No disrespect intended to anyone
else playing at this time but Helm is history. This is a time when many young people think
rock started with Nirvana and some of those bands their parents listen to. Levon helped
draft a blueprint that countless artists are still building upon, and while we’ve still
got the man it behooves us to give a listen whenever he hits a stage. Don’t be surprised
to see a gaggle of his fellow performers lurking in the wings during this set.

</center

3. Wild Beasts
:: 7:55-8:40 PM :: Panhandle Solar Stage

While most will be nestled into the Dead-y fog over at Furthur (7:25-9:55 PM – Lands End
Stage) or gettin’ popped NYC style at The Strokes (8:45-9:55 PM – Twin Peaks Stage), this emergent U.K. act
will be spinning webs of their own. Only two albums in and Wild Beasts have something of
their own brewing, and while it touches upon Echo & The Bunnymen, Stone Roses and other
countrymen past, their sound is flecked with original bits and an unforced swoon that’s
pretty dang neat.

</center

Sunday, August 15

1. Mayer Hawthorne
& The County
:: 1:30-2:10 PM :: Sutro Stage

The luscious strains of Curtis Mayfield, vintage Motown and Hall & Oates flow inside the
very easy to like grooves of Hawthorne and his large ensemble. This borders on nostalgia
but works nonetheless, maybe partially because Hawthorne looks all the part of a Buddy
Holly impersonator yet digs down deep for his heapingly satisfying blue-eyed soul.

</center

2. Garage A
Trois
:: 4:30-5:10 PM :: Panhandle Solar Stage

Four improvisational superheroes – Mike Dillon (percussion, muscle), Skerik
(saxophonics, general weirdness), Marco Benevento (keys, beard) and Stanton
Moore
(drums, mojo) – with ZERO fear and the curiosity of Peter Pan with a snoot full
o’ pixie snuff equals pure adventure music. Yes, Garage has compositions – some good
ones, too – but live all bets are off, no matter how many times one has seen them or
thinks they know what to expect. The unknown can be scary but it can also be way
cool. Garage A Trois is surely both.

</center

3. Social
Distortion
:: 6:55-7:45 PM :: Sutro Stage

Without always getting the name recognition they deserve, Social D has influenced a couple
generations of young rockers to do it hard, true and to tell their story, whatever
it may be. Mike Ness and co. are what punk looks like when it grows up but not
old. Go get an eyeful of the real deal amidst the tie-dye and yummy pinot.

</center

Outside Lands Schedule

Outside
Lands Info Guide

Outside Lands Official
Site

JamBase
2009 Outside Lands Review

JamBase | By The Bay
Go See Live Music!


Outside Lands: Hourly Lineup

HOUR BY HOUR SCHEDULE


Outside Lands Festival 2009 by Weiand

The hourly lineup for the 2010 edition of Outside Lands has been released. Check it out here. The complete artist
lineup
is available here.

The third annual Outside Lands Music & Arts Festival is taking place August 14-15, 2010 in San
Francisco’s
historic Golden Gate Park. Benefiting the San Francisco Recreation & Park Department and celebrating the four
pillars
of Bay Area culture – music, food, wine and technology — there is no other festival that honors its home city to such
an
extent, making Outside Lands one of the most unique and enjoyable events in the country.

To read the JamBase coverage of Outside Lands 2009, click here.


Outside Lands DJ Lineup

DJ’S AT INSPIRE BY HEINEKEN

Inspire by Heineken at Outside Lands brings you a line up of the best in progressive dance music. From
emerging
artists like J. Boogie, An-Ten-Nae and Motion Potion to Second Sunday’s very own Ben Doren with Michael Franti’s
guitarist J. Bowman or Heineken’s resident Isaiah Martin with live percussionist Mark D’Antonio and Dustin Hengle on
trumpet. As the sun goes down headliners Donald Glaude and DJ Dan promise to take it to another level as they are
so
known for time and time again.

Check out the full lineup below for Inspire by Heineken, a progressive music experience:

SATURDAY, AUGUST 14
DJ Dan
Kramer
Syd Gris
Motion Potion
An-Ten-Nae
Tal M Klein

SUNDAY, AUGUST 15
Donald Glaude

Isaiah Martin feat. Marc D’Antonio and Dustin Hengl
Ben Doren feat. J. Bowman
Jeffrey Paradise
Pigeon John
J. Boogie


Keppel Land’s target lifted to $3.07 by Macquarie

Macquarie lifts Keppel Land (K17.SG) target price to $3.07 from $2.31 after increasing RNAV estimate by 17% to reflect improved outlook for Singapore office sector, says Dow Jones.

New target based on smaller 15% discount to RNAV estimate vs 25% previously. Expects every 10% increase in office rents to boost RNAV by 4.7%. Notes towers 1, 2 of developer’s part-owned Marina Bay Financial Centre almost fully taken up, with tower three 54% pre-leased, while Keppel’s Ocean Financial Centre 63% taken up.

Read more…

Solar-Powered Plane Lands Safely After Night Flight

A celebration is underway in Switzerland as the first pilot to fly a solar-powered plane through the night lands safely. The project, Solar Impulse, also includes plans for a round-the-world flight. – The Solar Impulse HB-SIA, with pilot André Borschberg at its
controls, successfully landed Thursday morning in Switzerland after
flying through the night, a first-ever feat that was heralded by the
organization which built the plane at the École Polytechnique Fédérale
de Lausanne, as a major mil…


Outside Lands Announces Night Shows Lineup

LEVON HELM BAND, JIMMY CLIFF, HERCULES AND LOVE AFFAIR, & MORE

Another Planet Entertainment, Superfly Productions and Starr Hill Presents are excited to announce the lineup for the
Outside Lands Night Shows. For fans that haven’t had their fill of music after an incredible day in Golden Gate Park,
the festival has taken over four San Francisco clubs – The Independent, Mezzanine, Mighty and The Rickshaw Stop.
These clubs will host rare, intimate performances by the following artists: Levon Helm Band, Jimmy Cliff, Hercules and Love Affair, Tokyo Police Club, Freelance Whales and Pretty Lights. Also, the California
Academy of Sciences’ weekly event “NightLife” will be hosting a special Outside Lands event in partnership with the
San Francisco Recreation and Park Department on Thursday August 12. NightLife is an event where visitors can
enjoy music, science, entertainment and cocktails, while experiencing the California Academy of Sciences’ world-
class exhibits. The Outside Lands NightLife event will celebrate the festival and Golden Gate Park. Except for the
kickoff event at the California Academy of Sciences on Thursday, only Outside Lands’ ticket purchasers will have the
opportunity to see these night show performances. Tickets go on sale Wednesday, July 21at 10AM PST via www.sfoutsidelands.com. The complete Outside Lands
Night Shows schedule is below.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 12TH

California Academy of Sciences NightLife
Golden Gate Park

A Celebration of Outside Lands and Golden Gate Park

6:00PM

$12

FRIDAY, AUGUST 13TH

Jimmy Cliff
Mezzanine
9:00PM
$40

The Levon Helm Band
The Independent

9:00PM

$49.50

Hercules and Love Affair
Mighty
9:00PM
$17

Tokyo Police Club

Freelance Whales

Rickshaw Stop

9:00PM

$12

SATURDAY, AUGUST 14TH

Pretty Lights
The Independent

10:00PM
$30


Pretty Lights: New EP in July

CAMP BISCO, GLASTONBURY, OUTSIDE LANDS AND MORE ON SUMMER SCHEDULE

“The bombastic approach to music that Pretty Lights undertakes on the stage has lifted… him to a prestigious pedestal in the electronic music scene that few in their mid-20s could dream of.” – San Francisco Chronicle

Pretty Lights

Pretty Lights has set the ambitious goal of releasing three EPs in 2010. The second installment of the 2010 EP trilogy will see release July 29 (more details to be announced soon) with the third set for the late fall. Pretty Lights (aka Derek Vincent Smith) self-releases for free all his music through his website, with over half a million downloads and counting so far.

Pretty Lights will be making his way to Europe for a few more shows in June, including a stop at Glastonbury. After he returns Stateside, there are gigs at Camp Bisco, Wanderlust, Outside Lands and the North Coast Music Festival, as well as a special show headlining Red Rocks Amphitheatre on August 7. Red Rocks will feature two sets from Pretty Lights, including an exclusive downtempo set, and several opening acts including MiMOSA, Zion I, and Emancipator.

Pretty Lights U.S. Tour Dates

15-Jul Camp Bisco Mariaville, New York
24-Jul Evolve Festival Nova Scotia, Canada
30-Jul Wanderlust Festival Squaw Valley, California
7-Aug Red Rocks Amphitheatre Morrison, Colorado
14-Aug Outside Lands San Francisco, California
3-Sep North Coast Music Festival Chicago, Illinois
4-Sep Electric Zoo Festival New York, New York

Pretty Lights Tour Dates :: Pretty Lights News :: Pretty Lights Concert Reviews