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Posts Tagged ‘Laura’

Former First Daughter Barbara Bush Gay Marriage PSA

The fight for marriage equality in The Empire State has gained an unlikely ally in former First Daughter Barbara Bush. The 29-year-old twin daughter of former President George W. Bush and his wife Laura stars in a new campaign that calls for the legalization of same-sex marriage in New York. “I am Barbara Bush, and [...]

Laura Linney Returning To Work For First Time After Dad’s Death

Actress Laura Linney will stand beneath the lights of Broadway tonight, for the first time since losing her beloved dad to advanced lung cancer over the weekend. Playwright Romulus Linney — whose work included stories set in Appalachia and tales about the Nuremberg trials — passed away at his home in Germantown, New York on [...]

Weekend Crunch Crumbs

-Gap is launching its Holiday campaign, which includes a series of charity-centered videos featuring Community actor Danny Glover and an assortment of other stars. The videos answer the question-if you could give anything in the world, what would it be? In the video, Donald speaks passionately about giving back to Community Connections, which offers mental [...]

Laura Ling Documentary Show “E! Investigates” Debuts In December

Laura Ling has signed on to host a new series for entertainment-centric cable network E!, The Hollywood Reporter said Monday. The former journalist with Al Gore’s Current TV Network will host a new E! series — E! Investigates — set to premiere in December. In the Spring of 2009, Ling and her Current colleague Euna [...]

Ben Harper Laura Dern Divorce

Two-time Grammy Award-winning musician Ben Harper filed legal documents to end his five-year marriage to Rambling Rose and Jurassic Park star Laura Dern on Friday, it has emerged. Harper reportedly cited “irreconcilable differences” as the reason for his split from the actress and claims that the couple have been separated since Jan. 2010. Friends of [...]

Robert Wyatt Reissues

AMAZING CATALOGUE RETURNS TO PRINT

Domino Records is set to reissue the landmark records of Robert Wyatt – one of the most distinguished, visionary, influential and singular catalogues in contemporary music. These reissues will be the first time many of these albums have ever been available on vinyl in the United States, and most of the titles have been out of print for several years.

Also, For The Ghosts Within, a new collaborative album by Robert Wyatt, saxophonist/composer Gilad Atzmon and violinist/composer Ros Stephen, is out November 9 on Domino. Hear the lovely opening track “Laura” below.

Robert Wyatt reissue release dates + original year of release:

November 2, 2010
Rock Bottom (1974)
Ruth is Stranger Than Richard (1975)
Nothing Can Stop Us (1981)
Old Rottenhat (1985)
Dondestan (1991/1998)

November 16, 2010
Schleep (1997)
EPs (CD only) (1998)
Cuckooland (2003)
Theatre Royal Drury Lane (2008)

Robert Wyatt Tour Dates :: Robert Wyatt News :: Robert Wyatt Concert Reviews


Dr. Laura N-Word Rant [AUDIO]

Dr. Laura Schlessinger has apologized for using the N-word eleven times in the span of five minutes during an on-air conversation this week with a caller she said was “hypersensitive” to racism.During the exchange on Tuesday’s show, Schlessinger said the woman who called herself Jade was too sensitive for complaining that her White’s husband’s friends [...]

Single Daniel Radcliffe ‘chasing girls’

Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe has revealed that he is having a tough time making small talk with the ladies. Radcliffe, 21, who is back to chasing girls after his split from long-term girlfriend, actress Laura O’Toole, also admitted that he finds dating to be quite nerve-racking as it is not something he is used [...]

Melissa Gilbert Broke Her Back

Melissa Gilbert is scheduled to undergo surgery for a broken back later this month.Gilbert, 46, recently wrapped the stage musical tour of Little House on the Prairie in which she played the character of Ma. As a child star in the ’70s and ’80s, Melissa starred as Laura in the television series of the same [...]

Jaleel White, “Family Matters’” “Urkel,” Accused Of Beating Baby Mama

Say it ain’t so, Steve! Former child star Jaleel White, best remembered for donning a daily uniform of glasses, highwaters, and suspenders as lovable TV nerd Steve Urkel, has been largely absent from the Hollywood scene since Family Matters left the air after nine seasons in 1997. However, the soft-spoken actor found himself staring into the [...]

Mumford, Marling Announce Two U.K. Dates

TWO COLLABORATIVE DATES WITH INDIA’S DHAROHAR PROJECT


Mumford & Sons

Mumford & Sons and
Laura Marling are pleased to
announce two very special collaborative live dates with India’s Dharohar Project next month.

The shows will feature live sets both individually and in collaboration with the Rajasthani folk collective that Mumford
& Sons and Laura worked alongside in Delhi, India back in December 2009 as part of the Soundpad exchange, and
sponsored by the British Arts Council.

The dates at London’s Roundhouse and Bradford’s St Georges Hall promise to be rare, one-off opportunities to hear
two very different musical cultures performing together live.

Mumford & Sons, Laura Marling and Dharohar Project play:

9 July @ The Roundhouse, London (iTunes Festival)
Tickets for this show are free, but allocated by lot only. Click here for more information.

12 July @ The St Georges Hall, Bradford.
Tickets are on sale from 9am Wednesday 16 June at this location.


Kourtney Kardashian Scott Disick TV Wedding Deal In The Works

From Luke and Laura to Charles and Diana, TV weddings net big ratings and even bigger money for networks. Now E!’s hoping to score a similar fortune with a Scott Disick – Kourtney Kardashian wedding live on the small screen. The stars of Keeping Up With The Kardashians and Kourtney & Khloe Take Miami are the [...]

Laura Bush, George “may have been poisoned”

Early copies of Laura Bush’s memoirs reveal her suspicions that the president and the American delegation may have been poisoned at the G-8 summit in 2007.

The New York Times reported that in her new memoir, “Spoken from the Heart,” former American first lady Laura Bush writes that at the 2007 Group of Eight summit in Germany doctors and the U.S. Secret Service investigated whether the American delegation had been poisoned.

Laura Marling | 02.06 | S.F.

By: Tom Reilly

Laura Marling :: 02.06.10 :: Swedish American Hall :: San Francisco, CA

Laura Marling

At San Francisco’s Swedish American Hall, the young and talented Laura Marling performed a fairly informal set of her poetic folk music to a sold out crowd of eager fans. Marling offered up several new tracks from her upcoming sophomore album, I Speak Because I Can (arriving March 23), as well as favorites from her 2008 debut, Alas, I Cannot Swim. She performed half of the show with members of opening act The Wheel and half on her own. Band or no, Marling filled the beautiful wooden hall with a very confident delivery.

Opening with a slew of new songs, Marling hit the stage and it was immediately evident that she has been on quite a journey since the English export’s first gigs in the U.S. back in 2008. The newer tunes are noticeably more mature, melodically and structurally. They seemed louder and thicker than the musing, cyclical ballads from her first album. Marling too seems more mature. Still accepting calls of “happy birthday” from the audience, the British folk darling had turned just 20-years-old only a few days prior to the San Francisco gig. Heralded as wise and beyond her years, even at 18, she now seems to have come into her own a bit more. I saw her take the stage at the Bowery Ballroom in Manhattan in late 2008 and she appeared very much the teenager with nearly bleach blonde hair; a British Taylor Swift of sorts. These days Marling appears much more a woman and has abandoned her golden locks for a more somber shade of dark brown.

After a quick hello and a remark that San Francisco was lovely and “full of cheesecake,” with her band behind her, she broke out four new songs for a welcoming audience. Lyrically not too much has changed, though her songs deal less with relationships or breakups than many of her peers. She employed phrases like, “No hope in the air/ No hope in the water,” and “Deathly afraid of living.” A sense of morbidity seems to run through the modern British folk scene and was certainly evident on her first record.

Laura Marling

Directing her audience to the band member performing a tongue-in-cheek, “dazzling” magic trick with a piece of rope and a metal ring, Marling took a minute to re-tune her guitar and then launched into her strongest number, “Ghosts.” She played the first verse and chorus on her own with vocal harmonies over, “Lover, please do not fall to your knees/ It’s not like I believe in everlasting love.” The band then kicked in all at once and delivered the song beautifully. Demonstrating a very well rehearsed group the song came to an abrupt and decisive end with one final “everlasting love” and was met with a huge cheer.

Now alone onstage Marling played “My Manic and I,” another favorite from her debut record. “Night Terror” followed with some extremely impressive whistling from the young singer replacing the violin on the studio version. Then, the only cover tune of the night, Neil Young‘s “The Needle and the Damage Done.” A song taught to her by her father, Marling explained her mother had thought she had written it herself until her daughter (then in her teens) explained it was a song about heroin addiction. Next up came the new single from the upcoming album, “Goodbye England (Covered With Snow).” It’s a really beautiful song and homage to the place she calls home. Written from the perspective of someone out on the road reminiscing about life back in England, she sings, “I never love England more than when covered in snow;” truly a great song and the best I heard all night.

Joined once more by her band, Marling then performed her anti-encore, saying she hates to leave the stage and rather just presumes that everyone would indeed like to hear one more. She closed out the set with the hidden track on her first album, “Alas, I Cannot Swim,” clearly an audience favorite with a good number of folks singing right along. The gig definitely got fans excited to hear the new album and showed that Laura Marling is a talented young lady, both on the guitar and vocally, but most importantly as a songwriter who is coming into her own.

JamBase | Folksy
Go See Live Music!

Laura Marling Tour Dates :: Laura Marling News :: Laura Marling Concert Reviews


How To Profit Helping People Become Famous – Interview With Laura Roeder

Make sure you look out for Laura’s cat – she features in this interview too.
Click here to download the audio-only MP3 [ 54 MB ]
This interview is a great story, which for many online entrepreneurs will seem very familiar – as it was for me.
Laura is young, but she’s not young in terms of how [...]

World’’s ‘’second pregnant man” to give birth to baby boy next month

London, Jan 27 (ANI): The world’’s second known “pregnant man” is set to give birth to a baby boy with his transgender husband next month.
Scott Moore and his partner, Thomas, were both born as girls. However, they underwent surgery and hormone treatments to change their sex.
While Scott, 30, is legally married to Thomas, he still [...]

You know this artist is broke when…

Q.: How do you know an artist is broke?
A.: When they borrow your (expensive) clothes and fail, on purpose, to return them.
Unfortunately aspiring designer Laura Dawson learned the hard away.
Ms. Dawson, who lent several pieces of her upcoming collection to former Destiny’s Child member Kelly Rowland, said the artist never returned them and although she [...]

Computer Registry Repair: Grab the Finest Registry Cleanup Software for your PC Posted By : Laura Tran

Your registry is the most vital part of the computer as it serves as the storage room for all essential information needed by various programs to function efficiently.

Albums of the Week: January 15-21

JamBase Albums of the Week | January 15-January 21, 2010

Spoon: Transference (Merge)

Three years following the so-so Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga, Spoon return triumphantly with what could very well go down as the best album of their careers. With Transference (arriving January 19), the Austin, TX-based band chose to produce themselves, resulting in a piano-driven classic that perfectly pitches frontman Britt Daniel‘s presumed desire to transplant Joe Jackson’s debonair new waver into Ray Davies’ Waterloo sunset. From the odd time signatures of opener “Is Love Forever?” to the Rundgren-esque balladry of “Goodnight Laura” to the Amy Heckerling teen dream rave-up “Got Nuffin,” this is a brilliant zigzag through one of the most genius minds in modern pop songwriting executed by some of indie rock’s most reputable elder statesmen. (Ron Hart)

Dave Rawlings Machine: A Friend of a Friend (Acony)

Gently massaged modern folk comes no better than this solo debut from longtime Gillian Welch foil. Rawlings has a pure, incisive voice similar to Johnny Irion, a lil’ on the sweet side, perfect for the material, which includes a heartrending “Cortez The Killer” melded to Conor Oberst’s “Method Acting” and a pile of rib-sticking originals. This taps into the bounce and innate gentility of folk music, pouring out music that’s cooling, refreshing, and quite satisfying, if somewhat orthodox. (Dennis Cook)

Vampire Weekend: Contra (XL)

Who would have thought that it would take the music of four well-to-do, boat-shoed preps from NYC to make the sounds of Paul Simon’s 1987 yuppie, world pop classic Graceland cool in the eyes of today’s indie rock youth brigade? For the follow-up to their heavily hyped 2007 debut, VW doesn’t stray from its successful formula so much as improve upon it. Songs like “Horchata” and “White Sky” smack of a band bristling with growth and experience without losing their distinct flavor. However, when these guys do take a few left-turns, particularly within the context of the surfed-out post punk of “Cousins” and the warm utilization of Auto-Tune on frontman Ezra Koenig‘s vocals on the dancehall-inflected “California English,” it goes to show these dudes aren’t one trick ponies, either. (RH)

Jim Campilongo: Orange (Blue Hen)

Simply stunning – an album instrumental music fans will likely quickly salute as a classic. Touching on the streams unleashed by Roy Buchanan, Les Paul, Jeff Beck, Wes Montgomery and Jimmy Bryant, Campilongo shows why he’s one of the most revered six-stringers alive here. The flexible, wholly engaging core trio of Campilongo, Stephan Crump (acoustic bass), and Tony Mason (drums) is cleanly captured by producer Anton Fier, and Leah Siegel offers fab vocal turns on inspired covers of The Stooges’ “No Fun” and the Stones’ “No Expectations.” Orange (arriving February 16) bursts with succulent playing and juicy compositions, an ear-snagging winner in every regard. (DC)

Gilded Palace of Sin: You Break Our Hearts, We’ll Tear Yours Out (Central Control)

England’s Gilded Palace of Sin might harbor a name that recalls the hazy California country rock of the classic album it was christened after, but once you dig into the gothic dustbowl dirge of this promising trio, you will hear far more Death Valley than Laurel Canyon. You Break Our Hearts, We’ll Tear Yours Out (released January 12), Gilded’s debut album on former Magazine/Bad Seeds bassist Barry Adamson’s Central Control imprint, harbors a flavor born of Nick Cave’s fixation with the American West and old Sergio Leone films, coupled with an arsenal of instruments including banjo, Theremin, glockenspiel, jaw harp, ukulele, music harp and computers underscoring a din of anthemic electric guitars. The results are akin to a UK version of Black Heart Procession, and offer promising signs of things to come from this exciting new band. (RH)

Goose Creek Symphony: Head For The Hills (Bo Records)

Long before there was slamgrass, nu-grass, etc. there was Goose Creek Symphony. Celebrating their 40th anniversary in 2010, these free spirited, under-sung folk-rock/Americana pioneers continue to introduce their sweet catalog to a new generation with this reissue of a 1975 ace. Goose Creek’s ability to weave together bardic threads with something slippery, earthy and lysergic is on full display on Hills, which offers up some of their best originals alongside clever takes on “Goin’ Down The Road” and “Will The Circle Be Unbroken.” The word “timeless” is used too liberally but this music feels as vibrant today as when it was cut. (DC)

Kanye West: VH-1 Storytellers (GOOD-Def Jam)

If it had aired in its entirety, Kanye West’s memorable performance on VH1′s Storytellers would have clocked in at three hours, which saw the Chicago rap wunderkind ramble on like a swaggered out Lou Reed circa Take No Prisoners and riffing on everything from God to Chris Brown to Radiohead. The CD version (released January 5) of this event whittles down the already truncated 90 minute broadcast (made available on the DVD portion of this two-disc set) to a solid hour. But luckily, the final track list concentrates heavily on material from Kanye’s vastly misunderstood 2008 existential Auto-tune masterpiece 808s and Heartbreak, which was still in the process of being recorded around the time of this show’s taping. Say what you will about this guy, but few entertainers in pop music today can spin this kind of gold out of their own emotional complexities quite like Kanye. (RH)

Corey Harris: blu.black (Telarc)

It’s alright for Harris to use the phrase, “The blacker the berry, the sweeter the juice,” but most of us should probably refrain. This highly Afrocentric release continues Harris’ Motherland thrust but in a less academic way than recently. These might be the most sugary tunes about slavery and social disconnection ever penned or produced. Harris has embraced his inner Soul Man (who dances with African, Jamaican and Americana partners here), and the results are surprisingly effective, though you may find yourself pulled out of the groove periodically if you’re a honky like myself. White guilt is a bitch. (DC)

Spacemen 3: The Perfect Prescription (Fire)

One of the great albums of the late 1980s gets the definitive edition it so richly deserves courtesy of UK imprint Fire Records as part of its critically acclaimed reissue series of the Spacemen 3 catalog. 1987′s The Perfect Prescription, long considered to be the influential English band’s finest hour, is presented here in a gorgeous LP-style package that tacks on a pair of instrumental b-sides to the original nine-song tracklist, along with a rich remastering job that really brings out the hallucinogenic pulchritude of the album, whose sound is said to have been constructed to parrot the cerebral highs and lows of an ecstasy trip. Any Spiritualized fans out there looking to get into Spacemen 3 for the first time, your best bet would be to start off with this marvel, which rings closest to the style Jason Pierce took with him to construct the massive beauty of his celebrated space rock outfit. (RH)

Major Stars: Return to Form (Drag City)

Boston’s premier psychedelic rockists turn a textbook music critic cliche into a monolith of electrifying riffery with their seventh album. The group’s second release (arriving January 26) since signing to Drag City and employing former LA Drugs frontwoman Sandra Barrett finds them streamlining their sound to craft their most accessible effort to date. Barrett’s blues mama howl provides the perfect foil for the group’s massive triple-guitar assault, which really comes into the fray on cuts like the near-eight-minute “Black Point” and the ferocious, UFO-esque “Run From Me Devil.” This is hard rock the way it was meant to be heard – hot, heavy and flanked by an uncompromising, foxy lady who can sing. (RH)

Oh No: Dr. No’s Ethiopium (Stones Throw)

Madlib‘s little brother might not be the hottest MC to rock the mic, but as a producer Oh No is closely gaining on the elder Jackson in his family as a talented beatsmith in his own right. As the follow-up to his 2007 instrumental effort, Dr. No’s Oxperiment, which saw the young Stones Throw lion pilfering grooves from old ’60s and ’70s psych albums from the Middle East, Dr. No’s Ethiopium finds the producer mining rare soul, jazz, funk, folk and acid rock from Ethiopia. He wound up with 36 tracks that find Oh No challenging both himself and the listener with intriguing blends and segues that blur the lines between urban and indigenous. Anyone looking for some new instrumental hip hop to bump on their desktop or in their car would be wise to invest in this eclectic mix, which puts a different spin on the indie world’s current fascination with the Dark Continent. (RH)


Meghnad Desai, Chetan Bhagat top authors this week

Meghnad Desai’s “The Rediscovery of India” climbed two positions to regain the No.1 spot in the non-fiction section of the bestseller list this week while “2 States: The Story of My Marriage” by Chetan Bhagat dominated the fiction category.
The top 10 in each category are:
Non-fiction
1. “The Rediscovery of India”
Author: Meghnad Desai
Publisher: Penguin Allen Lane
Price: Rs.699.00
2. [...]