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Posts Tagged ‘Lindsey’

Lindsay Lohan E*Trade “Milkaholic” Lawsuit Settled

Looks like Lindsay Lohan will have a substantial nest egg to add to her commissary account when she returns to her cell at the Century Regional Detention Center on Friday. The actress has settled her $100 million lawsuit against E*Trade Financial Corp, who she accused of modeling a “Milkaholic” baby girl in their buzzed-about [...]

Lindsey Vonn Will Guest Star On “Law & Order” Season Finale

Olympic gold medalist Lindsey Vonn is taking the “Law” into her own hands with a guest spot on her favorite television cop drama. The stunning ski champ, 25, will guest star on the 20th season finale of NBC’s veteran crime show — and TV’s long-running scripted drama — Law & Order.
Vonn will appear as Alicia, [...]

Lindsay Lohan Needs Serious Help

Those who really care about Lindsay Lohan consider that the actress needs help, but unfortunately, she does not want even to listen about this. There is a professional who is supposed to be close to the actress said to TMZ that Lindsey does need help, if she does not get it soon, she may [...]

Lindsey Vonn “Law & Order” Guest Appearance

Rumor: Olympic gold medalist Lindsey Vonn is taking the “Law” into her own hands with a guest spot on her favorite television cop drama. The stunning ski champ, 25, is in chats to make an appearance on NBC’s veteran crime show — and TV’s long-running scripted drama — Law & Order, The National Enquirer claims.

Vonn [...]

Lindsey Vonn Pictures

Lindsey Vonn pictured in her Sports Illustrated Swimsuit
Lindsey Vonn is currently being pushed as the American face of the 2010 Winter Olympics, despite concerns over whether she will be able to ski at all because of injury. That was Vonn on the cover of Sports Illustrated’s Olympic preview issue, and she was also photographed for [...]

Lindsey Vonn Injured; Will She Ski In The Winter Olympics?

On Wednesday, Olympic-bound U.S. skiing star Lindsey Vonn revealed that she seriously injured her right shin during training last week and may be forced to skip some practice sessions at this month’s Winter Olympics in Vancouver.

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“I’m coming into these Olympics a lot more unsure [...]

Scarcity and globalisation: A needier era

The politics of global disruption, and how they may change

THE 1990s was “the age of abundance”, argued Brink Lindsey in a book of that title. Round the world, incomes were rising; capital markets were processing endless flows of money and investment; technological gains meant that ever more information was available ever more cheaply. And politics in the age of abundance, Mr Lindsey claimed, was all about values. In America this was the period of the “culture wars” over abortion and gun ownership; internationally, there was a huge expansion in concern over human rights.

The 2010s, it is sometimes said, will be an age of scarcity. The warning signs of change are said to be the food-price spike of 2007-08, the bid by China and others to grab access to oil, iron ore and farmland and the global recession. The main problems of scarcity are water and food shortages, demographic change and state failure. How will that change politics? …

Great American Taxi To Release Reckless Habits On 03/02

GREAT AMERICAN TAXI’S SECOND ALBUM, RECKLESS HABITS

DUE OUT MARCH 2 THROUGH THIRTY TIGERS

Great American Taxi

In the past five years, Great American Taxi has become one of the best-known headliners on the jam band circuit; their uninhibited sound a swinging concoction of swampy blues, progressive bluegrass, funky New Orleans strut, Southern boogie, honky-tonk, gospel, and good old fashioned rock ‘n’ roll. That loose, anything-can-happen feel is the hallmark of Reckless Habits, the band’s second album set to be released March 2, 2010, which was recorded in Loveland, CO with producer Tim Carbone (Railroad Earth).

When banjo player Mark Vann of Leftover Salmon died of cancer in 2002, the band lost momentum. Salmon singer/guitarist/mandolinist Vince Herman had a few rough years before joining keyboardist Chad Staehly for a superstar jam to benefit the Rainforest Action Group in Boulder in March 2005. “We put together a dream band of the best local musicians for a one-off gig,” Herman recalls. “It worked so well we had to do it again, and again, and again.” Thus, Great American Taxi was born. The band’s current lineup includes Herman, Staehly, guitarists Jeff Hamer and Jim Lewin, bassist Brian Adams, and drummer Chris Sheldon.

Great American Taxi has been compared with roots rockers like New Riders of The Purple Sage, Grateful Dead, Wilco, Uncle Tupelo, The Byrds, and Little Feat. Herman finds the comparisons flattering. “We’re definitely connected to all the acts in the country/rock spectrum, as well as the spirit of Gram Parsons and Woody Guthrie,” he says. “We want to address the issues appropriate to our times, while making music that gets people up and moving.”

“The band is a true democracy,” Staehly adds. “We tinkered with the tunes on the road, with everybody having input. In the studio, Tim would suggest ideas to make them sound bigger and brighter.” Carbone brought in the Black Swan Singers — Sheryl Renee, CoCo Brown and Shelly Lindsey — to add gospel flavored backing vocals. He also brought the Peak to Freak Horns — Justin Jones, sax; Nathan Peoples, sax; Dan Sears, trumpet; and Dave Stamps, trombone — for some New Orleans-style brass accents, as well as pedal steel player Barry Sless (Dane Nelson Band, Moonalice) and banjo man Matt Flinner.

The 13 tracks on Reckless Habits gleefully stretch the boundaries of American roots music with a nod to both tradition and the future. The title track, for instance — Staehly’s salute to Gram Parsons — is as country as it is rock, a rousing honky-tonk tune with Carbone’s fiddle and Sless’ pedal steel kicking up the sawdust on a Saturday night dance floor. The titles of several other Parsons songs appear in the lyrics, and there’s a definite Cosmic Cowboy vibe to the band’s expansive playing.

Staehly’s “American Beauty” tips its hat to the Grateful Dead, and features an extended jam. Herman’s “Cold Lonely Town” is a slow R&B tune that describes life during long Colorado winters. The Black Swan Singers add smoky doo-wop asides to Herman’s poignant vocals. Carbone has described its swampy laid-back vibe as “‘A Day in the Life’ meets Gram Parsons in the high desert.”

The CD will be housed in a die-cut package designed by artist Greg Carr, who designed Steve Martin‘s The Crow. “Greg has a picture of nuns smoking on the cover, wearing Reckless Habits,” Herman explains. “We want to give people something unique, so they won’t just burn it and pass it on.”

And finally, the band’s cryptic name refers to Herman’s unique skiing style. “A friend of mine once said I came downhill looking like a great American taxi — a large, lumbering object that’s totally out of control and coming downhill towards you faster and faster. It seemed to fit the band’s m.o., so we adopted it.”

Great American Taxi is currently on tour; dates available here.


Sat Eye Candy: Fleetwood Mac

A SMATTERING FROM ONE OF ROCK’S GREATEST SOAP OPERAS

We don’t really have a particular reason for choosing Fleetwood Mac this week. Maybe it’s just the gypsy in our soul, but here’s a handful of good ones from a band that’s made an awful lot of swell rock ‘n’ roll since 1967, no matter what the lineup might be.

Let’s jump off with a nasty classic from the early Peter Green led years, later covered by Jimmy Page and The Black Crowes during their short union.

Things changed radically in 1975 when Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks joined the Mac. Dark hued and driving, “World Turning” was an early collaboration between Buckingham and Christine McVie.

Speaking of heavy, this one penned at the height of intra-band squabbling, romantic and otherwise, is a model of restrained power with chorus full of stubborn strength. This version was captured during their 1977 tour of Japan.

Here’s Stevie and Lindsey doing acoustic renditions of “Landslide” and “Big Love” at their induction ceremony into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1998.

One name in Mac’s storied history lost to most outside their hardcore fan base is Danny Kirwan, who wrote some great tunes, played some pretty guitar, and sang with a pleasantly sweet ‘n’ sour tone. Here’s a cool Kirwan number from 1969′s Then Play On.

For some Fleetwood Mac enthusiasts, the songwriting department just hasn’t been the same since Christine McVie retired from the group in 1998 and took sumptuous slow burns like this with her.

As kiss-offs go, this is a contender for all-time pop champ. Just think of a lover that’s wronged you and belt it out!


Our Atlanta Personal Injury Lawyers Can Help You in Your Car Accident Case

Unfortunately, motor vehicle accidents are both common and dangerous. Due to the increasing number of cars, trucks, and motorcycles, the number of reckless drivers has gone up, putting everyone else on the road at a higher risk of injury or death. If you or a loved one has been injured in a car wreck caused [...]

“The Bachelorette’s” Ed & Jillian Deny Cheating Claims

The Bachelorette couple Ed Swiderski and his fiancee Jillian Harris are reacting to allegations made by two women, claiming Ed has been unfaithful.

INFPhoto
In an interview with Good Morning America Wednesday, Ed’s college sweetheart Lindsey Johnson confessed that she began dating the reality star again in February and he told her that his time on [...]

Michelle Schweiger Schecter: Empathy For The Devil

Hart Senate Office Building, Room 216 was the venue for a skirmish that at times got awfully mean. Judge Sonia came in earnest, her cards laid out on the table.

Sat Eye Candy: Bernie Worrell

HAPPY FREAKIN’ BIRTHDAY TO THE WIZARD OF WOO!!!

As much (and sometimes more than) George Clinton, Bernie Worrell has been the architect of the Parliament-Funkadelic sound, one of the late 20th century’s most permeating influences, stretching far beyond the corridors of “funk” or “soul” and into music as a whole. Tomorrow, Worrell turns 65 and we want the whole world to sing him a hearty “Happy Birthday.”

His work has touched the Talking Heads, Les Claypool and myriad others (including some REALLY nice work with the Eric McFadden Trio in recent years), and his creativity seems limitless and often unlike any other keyboardist in history. We offer up a tiny smattering of his work in celebration of his birth and encourage y’all to make your funk the P-Funk this weekendÂ…

Let’s jump on an insect and enjoy some quality improvising from Worrell, Warren Haynes, Will Calhoun (Living Colour) and Brett Bass.

While Parliament- Funkadelic is legendary for their sonic Viagra-like jams, it’s Worrell’s arrangements and horn charts that often provide much of the crispness and punch to their trademark sound. To wit, this ditty from Houston in 1976.

Most musicians would be super fortunate to be part of one massively influential band in their lifetime. Bernie Worrell has two, and though never an official member, his role in the Heads in the 1980s was pivotal. Here they are throwing sparks in Germany in 1980.

Bernie has a jester’s wit and a broad sense of play that he brings to the stage. For example, this craziness from back in the day, just one of the broad strokes he helped cook up that had P-Funk filling stadiums in the ’70s.

Worrell’s compositional sense can often be detected most clearly in later period Parliament like this wriggling salute to hitting it from the back, captured in rump-diddly-umptious style in 1981.

Dig this ultra-rare mix of musicians tearing up Creem’s “White Room.” The man keeps heavy company!

A vintage look at the boys at their start. Dig the juxtaposition of show host and this gaggle of super freaks.

No salute to Bernie would be complete without this Widescreen rock epic. This version is tinged with wonderful Pink Floyd patina, proof that Worrell is always listening to what’s happening around him. And then he ingests it for his own sustenanceÂ…and ours.

Things gets weird with this super nutty lineup, which includes Marc Ribot and Arto Lindsey on guitars. Play loud to scrape some paint off the walls.

Let’s boogie off into the weekend with our hands raised high and our spirits to match. Thanks for the music, Mr. Worrell. We think you’re the freakin’ bee’s knees, brother!

And don’t forget, you can eyeball video sweetness 24/7 with JamBase TV.