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Posts Tagged ‘Lloyd’

Andrew Lloyd Webber wants to write ”solid love” song for Royal wedding

Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber has said that he would be ‘honoured’ to write an anthem for the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton. For the marriage of the Prince of Wales and Lady Diana Spencer, the Welsh composer William Mathias was asked to write a stirring anthem. And for their son”s marriage, Andrew Loyd [...]

15 Career-Ending Movies

Let’s delight in a little Schadenfreude as millionaires that got laid way more than we ever will tumble from their lofty heights because of poor artistic decisions.

Punj Lloyd units gets $180.6m Singapore contract

Sembawang Engineers & Constructors, a unit of India’s Punj Lloyd (PUJL.BO), said on Friday it has been awarded a $180.6 million waterworks contract by Singapore’s national water agency.
 
The waterworks project is scheduled to be completed by April 2013.
 
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Bono”s back injury costs insurers $18m

Rock band U2”s vocalist Bono”s back injury has cost his insurers 18 million dollars. According to the Sun, Lloyd”s brokers Robertson Taylor are the firm faced with settling the bill, reports the Daily Telegraph. The U2 frontman suffered temporary paralysis due to the back problem in May and had to cancel the 16-date US leg [...]

Did BP Keep Drilling Even Though It Had Lost Control of the Oil Well Much Earlier?

The New York Times noted yesterday: Even though it was more than a month before the explosion, the [Deepwater Horizon] rig’s safety audit was conducted against the backdrop of what seems to have been a losing battle to control the well. On the March…

Chris Brown Was Not Advised To Cry When Performing Tribute to Michael Jackson

It happened at the BET Awards held on Sunday night when Chris Brown abruptly broke into tears performing a song dedicated to his idol- Michael Jackson. Lloyd unveiled to Rap-Up.com on that day that it was he who advised Chris to cry and in such a way to show his real heart to the whole [...]

Meryl Streep ‘to play Baroness Thatcher in biopic’

Actress Meryl Streep is in talks to play Baroness Thatcher in a movie based on the former British prime minister”s life. According to the Hollywood Reporter, the biopic titled “Thatcher” will focus on the period immediately prior to the Falklands war. The film”s producers are also said to be lining up British actor Jim Broadbent [...]

Meryl Streep Magaret Thatcher Biopic

Meryl Streep is in discussions to play Baroness Magaret Thatcher in an upcoming biopic.Streep has been courted to reteam with her Mamma Mia! director for Thatcher, a big screen adaption of the life of the former British prime minister. According to The Hollywod Reporter, the film will be directed by Phyllida Lloyd and is [...]

Evening Crunch Crumbs

-Sad Times: The composer behind the Charlie’s Angels theme has died…. -Yum! Tasty greeting cards… -Oxygen has purchased the syndication rights to small screen hits Glee and Modern Family… -The Kardashians are bringing high-fashion to Sin City… -Did Lloyd tell Boo-Hoo Breezy to turn on the waterworks at the BET Awards? -Is a Bachelor’s Degree worh the $60K-$100K it’ll cost [...]

Goose On The Lake | 06.04-06.05 | Kentucky

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Mareo Speedwagon

Goose On The Lake Festival :: 06.04.10-06.05.10 :: Settle Lake :: Allegre, KY

Goose Creek’s Charlie Gearheart

Most festivals are pleasant distractions from our normal life, opportunities to check out multiple bands, get a little loaded, dance some and then depart with a commemorative t-shirt. But some fests are experiences that strike to the core of us, reminding us what’s good about human beings, especially creative ones that make the air vibrate with song. Goose On The Lake offered two days where kindness and happiness reigned and our better angels winged carefree and delighted.

Very quietly, this small gathering on a private farm in rural Kentucky has evolved into one of the coolest secrets in the summer festival season. Built around an annual celebration of country rock pioneers Goose Creek Symphony, this is a place where real musicians find audiences receptive and attentive to whatever is dished out because it’s done with real heart, blister-won skill and raw talent. And beyond the offerings onstage, Goose On The Lake had the chillest, wonderfully mature group of freak flag waving free spirits you’d ever want to find. Taken together, the music, bucolic setting and primo companionship carved out a little piece of heaven on earth.

Lloyd Settle

“I have the same dream all the old hippies have. I’m just doing something about it,” said Lloyd Settle, the host to Goose On The Lake along with Donna Settle, two of most hospitable folks on the planet. Weeks of land clearing and organizing go into making their farm ready for the 800 or so folks that roll in during the first weekend in June.

This year marked the fest’s 15th year, and Goose Creek Symphony’s 40th anniversary as a band. Diehards who’ve been rolling on the Creek since the early ’70s mingled with youngsters who likely picked up on them from their parents or perhaps one of the many shout outs from heavily influenced descendents like Yonder Mountain String Band, Railroad Earth, String Cheese Incident, Uncle Tupelo, Great American Taxi and many, many others. Goose Creek gives more codified critics’ darlings Gram Parsons and The Byrds a run for their money in terms of originality, vision and plain old execution. In their early days they opened for the likes of Stevie Wonder, Cheech & Chong and other ’70s luminaries, but despite denting the charts a few times, Goose Creek has remained largely a cult affair, though a fierce, exceedingly dedicated cult that includes numerous top flight musicians like Sam Bush, Vince Herman and Tim Carbone. There’s a strong sense of family and instant fellowship at the Lake simply because of the band that serves as its foundation. Super cool things tend to beget more super cool, copacetic things, and Goose Creek is as copacetic and super cool as they come – survivors and innovators to this day, music makers driven first by the music in their blood and everything else secondary behind it.

Benny Skyn

Music began on Friday afternoon with serious singer-songwriter find Benny Skyn. Standing solo with an electric guitar, a tough life written large in his body, Skyn has the lilt of vintage John Prine and the punkish feel of early Billy Bragg. Within a couple numbers it became obvious that he’s one of the most quotable, memorable lyricist to come along in a spell, dishing out doozies like, “All those intelligent things that you said won’t get this trash out of my head,” and telling black edged tales of men who get mean when you won’t take a sip of their liquor while thanking the Lord for the hard times (and meaning it, too). Skyn is a songwriter’s songwriter like Kristofferson or as he himself noted, “Singing songs written by Jesus and Tom T. Hall. Did you ever hear a Tom T. Hall song? It might make you wanna write a song, too.” Listening to Skyn made me want to pick up a guitar and find a song to thank him for the purity and grit of what he does.

Nashville’s The 5 Tones threw down a hard blues-rock gauntlet next, and the juxtaposition, like many this weekend, was sharp and exciting. There’s not a lot of acts on the bill but the quality of each cracks like a whip, drawing one’s attention quickly and continually rewarding it. Musicians are appreciated at Goose On The Lake, and that simple fact seemed to bring out the best in each performer. The sweat plastered t-shirts and contorted faces of The 5 Tones spoke volumes about the trio’s dedication to get right down to the ground water in their genre, digging ferociously with tangy harp, slicing guitar and a rhythm section that just didn’t quit. The encore cover of the North Mississippi Allstars’ “Po’ Black Maddie” is another clue to their sound, but these guys take it all the way out, separating themselves a good distance from the many who toy around in these dark waters. Kindred contemporaries include Super 400 and Rose Hill Drive, and as the next performer noted during their set, “They’ve got a Robin Trower Bridge of Sighs thing going on.” All good stuff and reasons to keep an ear bent towards The 5 Tones.

Dave Gleason

Dave Gleason and The Golden Cadillacs nailed the California country rock sound with an inviting personality and perfect ear for ancestors ripe for resurrection. They’ve got real affection for Merle Haggard, Buck Owens, Bob Dylan and “those strange but great Waylon Jennings records.” Few have a mastery of this genre like Gleason, who really groks country’s full sweep from oldies like Webb Pierce and Lefty Frizzell to modern greats like Dwight Yoakam and Rodney Crowell and everything in between. Suited up and looking like the full pros they are, this band slathered raw rock ‘n’ roll all over twangy-ass country and the mixture is just fuckin’ delightful. Seriously, if you’re having a bad time listening to these quality weepies and boot-scootin’ jumpers then you might want to drink moreÂ…or lessÂ…or something. Gleason sings with one of the most naturally appealing voices to emerge in the past decade, and the tear in his beer seems genuine. He feels this music in a way most of Nashville has forgotten, and one can feel the difference as his music washes over you.

Friday evening’s Goose Creek Symphony set was a hopping hodgepodge of deep album cuts and rarely played numbers, with most of the heavy hittin’ fan favorites saved for Saturday night. Friday was for connoisseurs, and as a 25-year hardcore listener seeing them play live for the very first time I was in hog heaven. That word ‘heaven’ keeps popping up simply because it hangs close to this gathering. Perhaps others’ vision of paradise is different than my own, but outside of the sweltering, hellishly humid southern heat, this is a pretty nice approximation of what at least one corner of heaven looks like in my mind. And you couldn’t ask for a much better soundtrack than the Goose, who started off with a patient, phenomenal reading of “Going Down The Road Feeling Bad,” which like many songs other bands have popularized sounds utterly new in their hands.

Goose Creek Symphony

“Think I’ll let my hair grow long, think I’ll grow a beard/ Think I’ll go out and smoke some pot and start acting weird/ ‘Cause I’ve always been a leader/ I ain’t ever been no backseater/ I’ll do anything but cut off my peter/ ’cause I want to be a rock ‘n’ roll star.” Thus begins “Number One Gravy Band,” one of many devastatingly enjoyable pieces trotted out this night.

What’s stunning is the band’s leader and chief songwriter Charlie Gearheart – as big and amazing a character as ever breathed life into this stupid, angry, rough world – is in his seventies and fellow original member/co-founder Paul “Pearl” Stradlin is no spring chicken either. The rest of the band is a mix of ages, some quite young, but all stellar players with clear dedication to knocking this music into the cosmos. Yet, Stradlin and Gearheart pitched in as hard as anyone, and neither this set nor Saturday’s were short affairs. They all seem powered by this music, which similarly eases invigorating sap into the listener. Folks looked positively lit up across the lawn as night fell, sunburnt flesh cooling as Goose Creek’s energy moved along the grass and into our limbs. Sure, strong corn liquor and pleasant smells in the air didn’t hurt, but the key ingredient was the songs and their sublime performances – subtlety is a huge factor in Goose Creek’s appeal and longevity.

Gearheart declared near the end, “We’ll end early enough for folks to get back to their tent and get some.” Afterwards, Lloyd announced, “If you think music can’t free people then take another puff!”

Backstage View by Dennis Cook

Saturday, the smell of KP’s Smokehouse filtered into the far reaches of the farm, luring one in like a cartoon hound lifted off the ground by the smell of food. Pulled pork sandwiches, rib eyes on a bun, bologna sandwiches and more fed the masses, and all served with a big smile. One rarely failed to make a new friend or grow to adore the proprietors a little more each time they ponied up to their table to slather on finger lickin’ sauces on meat that made me glad to be an omnivore. And the warmth and grinning sweetness of KP’s extended to the merch folks, security staff and everyone else charged with keeping this enterprise moving. Really, just about the kindest, nicest folks I’ve ever encountered at a fest anywhere; absolutely on par with my West Coast fave, Las Tortugas.

Many people floated on the large, private lake during the afternoon, paddling around and sharing brews and laughter on the water. Long before music started up again with two more fantastic sets by Benny Skyn and Dave Gleason and his boys, laughter and gently splashing water provided a charming backdrop to relaxin’ in the shade.

Frank Hudson

What drew a number of folks into the sunshine was the vintage acoustic snap of Mr. Frank Hudson, a renowned guitar picker who played with the likes of Merle Travis and learned his craft from the same old soul that taught Chet Atkins how to play. Mr. Hudson is pure class and was kind enough to let me sit at his heel earlier in the day before his set while he explained some of the nuances and history of the southern guitar style he practices. And he even offered me a pull from his small bottle of Old No. 7. Like I said, pure class. His set was like a great living jukebox full of wonderful songs like “Sunday Morning Coming Down.” It’s a deceptively simple thing he does, but the way he provides rhythm for his lead lines, in a sense accompanying himself and easing into songs with weathered grace is a wonderful thing to behold. Add in his seasoned stage patter – “Can you hear me? If you can hear me I’m playing too loud” – and Hudson proved a total crowd charmer and deservedly so.

Paul Burch & The WPA Ball Club were another surprise winner following Hudson, bringing in oodles of swing into country, folk and jazz inflected songs that touched on both American and English traditional music and then snatched it by the arm into modernity. Accordion, fiddle and Burch’s guitar danced continually, creating a much fuller sound than one might expect from a trio. With an inviting voice and a big songbook full of quality material, Burch and the WPA evoked the past in a way that makes it new.

Wanda Jackson

They were followed by a short set from Nashville’s Heath Haynes & The Hi-Dollars, who took us back to ’50s ground zero rock with real aplomb. A blur of happy energy, they came on with an 88-key, unruly guitar assault anchored by a rhythm section so tight it wouldn’t leak a drop. Bar band staples like “That’s All Right, Mama” and “Six Days On The Road” bucked with life when they played ‘em, and then they transformed into the backing band for Saturday’s other headliner, Wanda Jackson.

“Keep listening and eventually we’ll play one you like,” the vintage rock queen declared, and they pretty much walked the line throughout their enjoyable, oldies rich set. Jackson arrived in the 1950s with one of the most distinctive voices to ever hit rock ‘n’ roll, and she’s largely maintained it, though it sometimes took a bit to warm up or cracked occasionally. So be it; she’s rock royalty and still offered up good times decked out in the most fringe I’ve ever seen on one shirt and a simply classic wig. When she let out a still-girlish squeal on monsters like “Fujiyama Mama” and “Riot In Cell Block No. 9″ it raised your pulse a bit and reminded one how essential sex is to rock, which oddly didn’t jar against the welcome gospel pieces and Jesus-saved-me rap also included in her set.

The main attraction for most, based solely on the sheer numbers on the lawn and their hooting enthusiasm, was Goose Creek‘s fest closing set. Without exaggeration, this performance ranked with the best I’ve seen by any band, every bit the equal to the transcendent experiences I’ve had with the Grateful Dead, Radiohead, The Black Crowes and other giants. What Goose Creek share with this bunch is the same undeniable originality, sheer talent and resounding conviction. One can play music to entertain and shake a coin out of folks’ pockets, but for some it’s a calling and a privilege to get up on stages and make music. A strong sense of ritual infused this show, with sage burning and a low, percussion driven ‘ohm’ building into the first song proper, a stunning reading of “These Hills” from 2002′s I Don’t Know album followed by their theme song, “Welcome To Goose Creek.” In just two numbers one was struck by a sound forged over a lifetime, a music born from craggy, private places but delivered in a way that makes people dance away their troubles and rejoice in the now.

Goose Creek Symphony

The sensation of being present at a real happening only intensified as the set continued. “It looks like a good night out there. Might as well be,” quipped Gearheart, a master of verbal sleight of hand peppered with wisdom you can use. And all six guys up there with him exuded the same heartfelt dedication to creating something good and useful and sweet for folks. By set’s end I was certain that Goose Creek Symphony ranks amongst the best outfits rock has ever given us. They’ve got the chops, diversity and songbook to rival the mighty Grateful Dead, plus their harmonies are way better and they’re a whole lot less self-important about what they do (especially these days). ‘Down to earth’ is a common expression but this bunch really is earthy and blue collar as a tattered, beloved pair of Levi’s. But they’re also pretty goddamn brainy and culturally savvy, and there are sections that nail some of the same magic one finds in The Beatles or Pink Floyd – two obvious influences that Goose Creek weaves into their own music masterfully, as in the Wish You Were Here like rendition of “I Don’t Know” this night. The Goose can also get funky as fuck, and the low end generally swerves and pops with an unpredictable but right on time cadence. And somehow the fiddle fits into all of it. That’s a neat trick.

Watching the sweaty, dazed young faces along the rail it was clear this isn’t some nostalgia kick. This music has the power to directly connect to real music people, the sort open to the kind of blackly humorous, intricately woven yet rowdily delivered music that Goose Creek Symphony lays down. There were plenty of gray hairs like myself – freakin’ as well as our bodies allow – but the younger fans reveal the huge potential for this music to light up myriad lives. It’s right in front of us, waiting to lift your heels and twist your brain. And thankfully so is Goose On The Lake. Here’s to Year 16 in 2011 and many more for Goose Creek themselves.

See many more pics from this wonderful festival here.

JamBase | Kentucky
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“Entourage” Parody Highlights Nation’s Obsession With Cell Phones

In a hilarious parody of the HBO drama Entourage, caricatures of Vince, Eric, Johnny Drama, Turtle, Ari, and Lloyd highlight the necessity of cell phones.

Kamal Nath to seek Canadian investment, meet Indian-born ‘Warren Buffet’

Toronto, March 21 : India will woo Canadian investment in its infrastructure during the four-day visit of Minister for Road Transport and Highways Kamal Nath to Canada from March 23.
During his visit, Kamal Nath will meet Canadian International Trade Minister Peter Van Loan, Transport Minister John Baird, and corporate leaders to give further push to [...]

A Triumphal Night for Sandra Bullock and Jeff Bridges

Sandra Bullock had a punchline in her successful as well as long-standing career. The actress got a circuit for the awards. Her first Oscar was for her role in the film known as The Blind Side.
There was a stiff competition in the category of the best actress, among the pretenders for being the best actresses [...]

Christopher Lloyd Guest Stars On “Chuck”

Christopher Lloyd has been cast for a guest appearance on the popular NBC espionage comedy Chuck, Entertainment Weekly reports. Series executive producer Josh Schwartz broke the news on Twitter Monday. The Back to the Future star has landed the role of therapist who counsels Chuck when the pressures of the spy business become to [...]

Richard Lloyd: 3rd Stone From Marquee Moon

By: Ron Hart

Richard Lloyd by Godlis

“I’ve been in the public eye since 1975 and I have never once spoken about the fact that I knew Hendrix,” proclaims former Television guitarist Richard Lloyd. I’m speaking to the NYC punk legend about his recently released album of Jimi Hendrix covers, The Jamie Neverts Story (released September 1, 2009 on Parasol Records), which finds Lloyd setting fire to such Jimi staples as “Spanish Castle Magic,” “Ain’t No Telling,” “Bold As Love” and “Little Miss Lover,” which features Television drummer Billy Ficca behind the kit. “I got close enough to Jimi for him to sock me and to cry on me.”

We all know that Jimi Hendrix had his hands in a lot of pies (both literally and figuratively) back when he roamed the earth, as the rumors, innuendos and bootleg recordings of him working with everybody from Miles Davis to Mahavishnu’s John McLaughlin to members of Traffic to B.B. King to Jim Morrison can certainly attest. However, few could have called the existence of the guitar legend’s connection to the downtown NYC punk scene, albeit a good seven years before it even took off. But thanks to the friendship between Lloyd and his high school-age best friend, Velvert Turner, famous for being Hendrix’s sole guitar student, Jimi’s unexpected ties to CBGB have been confirmed through his roundabout acquaintance with Lloyd, whose own revolutionary, serpentine guitar style he created alongside frontman/guitarist Tom Verlaine in Television, has inspired nearly three generations of guitarists himself.

“Mr. Turner was an accomplished guitarist who crossed paths with Jimi Hendrix as a young teenager growing up in New York City in 1966,” stated the 2000 death notice in The New York Times for Turner, whose sole 1972 album, The Velvert Turner Group, is one of the great lost psychedelic soul albums of the era. “He was befriended by Hendrix, who recognized the young scholar’s passion for the electric guitar. The legendary guitarist served as a mentor to Mr. Turner, offering both guitar instruction and professional advice to the young musician.”

Unfortunately, at the time, few people believed that a poor kid from the inner city could have struck up such camaraderie with one of the most recognizable figures in rock ‘n’ roll, so Velvert’s claims of knowing Hendrix would often be met with laughter and doubt from skeptics. Except for Lloyd, whose chance meeting with Turner at a mutual friend’s house in Greenwich Village back in the summer of 1968 would eventually lead to his own brief acquaintance with Jimi.

“I was at somebody’s house and they said Velvert was coming over and that he claimed to know Hendrix,” Lloyd explains, “and that everyone should laugh at him because it was plainly impossible for a skinny black kid from Brooklyn to know Jimi Hendrix. And I said to myself, ‘Well, Jimi doesn’t live on Mars. He has to know somebody, why not this kid?’ So, I believed him and our friendship grew out of that.”

According to the very well written liner notes penned by Lloyd that accompany The Jamie Neverts Story, Velvert told the crowd that Hendrix was in town to play a show at The Singer Bowl, which, according to Lloyd, was “some place in Queens with a revolving stage.” Jimi used to book himself into various hotels around the city under a secret pseudonym, one that Velvert knew, and to silence his skeptics at the Greenwich Village apartment, he called the hotel he knew Jimi was at that day, the Warwick Hotel, and let the line ring and ring, passing the phone around the table to his naysayers until it got to Lloyd.

“On the second ring, I heard the phone being picked up and the unmistakable voice on the other end,” he explains in the notes. “It was Jimi saying, ‘Hey man, what’s up? Who’s this?’ I didn’t know what to say, so I said, ‘It’s Velvert, man!’ and handed the phone to Velvert who snuck away in the corner for a long, whispered conversation. In the meantime, the other guys were grilling me. ‘Was it really Jimi? What did he say?’ I told him I recognized his voice, and there was no mistaking it. It was Jimi.”

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I climbed down the stairs fearing that somebody might be waiting for me, but there was nobody in the parking lot except for Jimi who was sitting in one of his Corvettes. When he saw me he rolled down his window and called me over and asked for my hands. He began to caress them, weeping and apologizing for hitting me.

-Richard Lloyd

 

Photo by: Anders Torgander

Jimi Hendrix

As a reward for believing him, Velvert took Lloyd as his “+1″ to Hendrix’s concert out in Queens and the two became best friends shortly thereafter. And from there, whenever Turner would come back from his guitar lessons with Jimi, he would show the young virtuoso the chops he learned that day, helping Lloyd develop the unique style of playing he would soon craft as his own in Television.

“Jimi Hendrix didn’t teach guitar to people,” Lloyd states. “Only to Velvert. And Velvert passed on what he was doing with Jimi to me, because we were best friends and when he left Jimi’s place, he was only a couple of blocks from my house, so we would practice together.”

Lloyd himself would later experience his own private encounter with Hendrix after attending a secret club gig Jimi was playing while he was in town rehearsing for the New Year’s Eve shows at the Fillmore East that would make up the guitarist’s classic 1970 live album Band of Gypsys, which also doubled as the guitarist’s 27th birthday party. Lloyd was supposed to meet Turner at Salvation, a club in the West Village, and when the guitar prodigy never showed up Lloyd bought a ticket to the show and soon found himself sitting at a table with Jimi and his entourage after sneaking backstage. According to his liner notes, he wound up sitting right next to Hendrix at this table, who ended up drunkenly talking his ear off, confiding in Lloyd about how he felt trapped by his fame and his fears that he was only being used by people like some kind of a clown and how his handlers weren’t allowing him to fully explore what he wanted to on a musical level. Not knowing that Hendrix didn’t take kindly to compliments, Lloyd gushed about how much he loved his guitar playing and that he shouldn’t be so hard on himself, to which he was met with a trio of punches dealt by Jimi, only to find the guitarist waiting outside the club for him in order to apologize after Lloyd hid out in the club in fear of being beat up by members of Hendrix’s crew who thought he picked a fight with the guitar hero.

Richard Lloyd by Godlis

“I climbed down the stairs fearing that somebody might be waiting for me, but there was nobody in the parking lot except for Jimi who was sitting in one of his Corvettes,” Lloyd explains. “When he saw me he rolled down his window and called me over and asked for my hands. He began to caress them, weeping and apologizing for hitting me.”

For Lloyd, he sees the making of The Jamie Neverts Story, the title of which comes from a made-up code name Lloyd and Turner would use for Hendrix to conceal his identity to their nosy friends, as not just a tribute to his best friend but as an obligation to Velvert and Jimi for the gifts they had bestowed upon him as a guitar player.

“This is where I got a lot of what I do on guitar,” Lloyd, who teaches guitar himself these days and counts Wilco‘s Jeff Tweedy amongst his alumni, reflects. “I don’t think, either in Television or my own work, that anybody would have spotted a Hendrix influence. But I didn’t want one to show up. When I teach students, I teach them to play more like themselves. You’re gonna have to find your own voice on that guitar. What Hendrix and Velvert taught me is very, very important to me. Both of them are gone, and all I have is the memories. And the fact that I was around then, that’s why I feel like I owe them, as a payment of a debt, to cover some of Jimi’s songs, put it out and let some of that influence – that has always been there – finally show itself.”

JamBase | Electric Ladyland
Go See Live Music!


Cosco unit delivers M.V. Ocean Garnet bulk carrier to European buyer

Cosco Corporation (Singapore) says subsidiary Cosco (Dalian) Shipyard Co. has delivered a new build 92,500 dwt bulk carrier, the M.V. Ocean Garnet, to its European buyer.

The bulk carrier measures 229.2 metres long, 38 metres wide and 20.7 metres high. Classed by Lloyd’s Register, the M. V. Ocean Garnet, has a navigation speed of 14.1 knots and a continued voyage ability of 22,000 nautical miles.

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13 Most Dangerous Movie Stunts Done Without Stunt Doubles

If Hollywood is known for one thing, it would be how faked everything is. Movies sets are reduced to green screens, props, and some great acting. Today, stunts have been made to look real by professionals sitting behind a computer editing film for hours on end – but the art of the stunt has not been completely forgotten by some actors that feel the need to put themselves in harm’s way to make a great performance.

Cosco Corp (S) unit delivers M.V. Caesar to US buyer

Cosco Corporation (Singapore) says subsidiary Cosco (Nantong) Shipyard Co. has delivered its converted pipeline-laying vessel M.V. Caesar to its American buyer Helix Energy Solution Group on Nov 25.

M. V. Caesar, classified by Lloyd’s, is 17m high, 30m wide, and 210m long and its living quarter can accommodate about 220 persons.

Read more…

Andrew Lloyd Webber to audition dogs for The Wizard of Oz’’s Toto on TV!

English composer Andrew Lloyd Webber is set to audition dogs to look for the perfect canine to star as Toto in his new West End production of ‘The Wizard of Oz’.
Lloyd-Webber has confirmed he will audition dogs through the new BBC1 talent search programme.
Although the exact format of the dog auditions has not yet been [...]

Warne shocks TV bosses uttering ‘tw*t’ during live commentary

Legendary cricketer Shane Warne stunned TV bosses with the use of the four-letter word ‘tw*t’ during live commentary.
He stunned his fellow commentator David Lloyd when he used the four-letter word in the Sky commentary box at the Edgbaston Ashes Test, reports the Daily Star.
It happened after Aussie pace bowler Ben Hilfenhaus, 26, let the ball [...]