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“30 Rock” earned 22 Emmy nominations

NEW YORK (AP) — Television comedy is Tina Fey’s world these days. Is there room for anybody else?
Fey and “30 Rock,” her series about the backstage world at a late-night network show, swept both the Emmys and Golden Globes in the past year, and she’s set up to do it again at this year’s [...]

Bruce Nilles: Stopping Blackstone Coal

Last week when we hit the 100th coal-fired plant abandoned or prevented in the U.S., someone asked me, “What’s next?” My answer came quickly:…

‘Family Guy’ Vies With Live-Action Sitcoms For Comedy Emmy

NEW YORK — More than most other Emmy categories, the nominations for best comedy series emerge as a clash of disparate contenders.

With the announcement of the 61st annual Primetime Emmy Awards Thursday, a familiar, knotty question rear…

Jim parsons nomination for Comedy Series

Nominees in major categories for the 61st annual Primetime Emmy Awards announced Thursday by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.
Drama Series: “Big Love,” HBO; “Breaking Bad,” AMC; “Damages,” FX Networks; “Dexter,” Showtime; “House,” Fox; “Lost,” ABC; “Mad Men,” AMC.
Comedy Series: “Entourage,” HBO; “Family Guy,” Fox; “Flight of the Conchords,” HBO; “How I Met Your [...]

Emmy nominations 2009

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Tina Fey’s urbane sitcom “30 Rock” received a leading 22 Emmy Award nominations Thursday, while the ’60s retro series “Mad Men” led the drama pack with 16 bids.
The shows were honored last year as best comedy and drama and have a chance to repeat the performance at September’s awards.
The TV movies [...]

2009 Primetime Emmy Nominations — List Of Nominees

FOX’s envelope-pushing comedy Family Guy made history at this morning’s 2009 Primetime Emmy Award nominations, live from Los Angeles, when it became the first animated series to be nominated for a Best Comedy trophy since The Flintstones earned the distinction back in 1961.

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

Tina [...]

Mike Ragogna: Thank God It’s Thursday: Oklahoma’s College of Rock with Scott Booker, Raphael Saadiq’s New Video, Rhino’s Digital 45s, More Woodstock, The Bee Gees, and Kimya Dawson

ACM@OCU So you wanna be a rock ‘n’ roll star? Well, built on the whole “School of Rock” phenomenon that has become many musically talented…

Eric Holder: We Haven’t Achieved Racial Equality Yet

Eric Holder could have had a career as a rock star if he never bothered to study law. The United States Attorney General stood centerstage in front of a sea of mostly other attorneys and members of the NAACP on Monday, July 13, as he gave the …

Levon Helm:Electric Dirt

By: Tim Dwenger

One of the great spirits of American music, Levon Helm, has returned with Electric Dirt (released June 30 on Vanguard Records), a stellar follow-up to 2007′s Grammy winning Dirt Farmer. Like Dirt Farmer, Helm’s new offering features a wide variety of cover tunes but this time the record showcases Helm’s return to songwriting on the bittersweet “Growin’ Trade.” The ballad, which he penned with former Bob Dylan guitarist Larry Campbell (who also produced the album), laments the plight of an American farmer who has been forced to turn his family’s cotton plantation into a pot farm in order to make ends meet. It’s a plight that is close to Helm’s heart as he grew up on a cotton farm in Arkansas in the 1940s and he’s immortalized it beautifully with this song.

From the get-go, the record shows that Helm’s still in fine form behind the kit and at the mic with a strong, horn-bolstered take on Garcia/Hunter’s legendary country shuffle “Tennessee Jed.” From there Helm and a top notch band of seasoned musicians launch into a guided tour of Southern musical history as elements of back porch blues, gospel and Dixieland seep into the arrangements of songs by the likes of The Staples Singers, The Stanley Brothers and Muddy Waters.

Though most of these arrangements were put together by Campbell, Helm renewed a partnership with another legendary musical name, Allen Toussaint, during the sessions for Electric Dirt. The pair had worked together back in the early ’70s when Toussaint was called into handle the horn arrangements for The Band’s 1971 New Year’s Eve concert (documented on Rock of Ages), and it’s clear he hasn’t lost a step either. His contributions to album closer “I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free” and a rollicking take on Randy Newman’s “Kingfish” are two of the standout cuts on the album.

Helm’s warbly tenor may be a little shakier than it was 40 years ago but it’s every bit as heart-warming and soul-wrenching as it was in his days with The Band. Electric Dirt is a powerful album that adds to Helm’s already monumental legacy and further cements his place as a true American musical legend.

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Björk: Voltaic DVD/CD/VINYL

BJÖRK’S MULTI-MEDIA VOLTAIC OUT ON NONESUCH RECORDS


Björk

Björk‘s Voltaic, a very special DVD/CD/VINYL recording, was released in the U.S. earlier this month by Nonesuch Records, full track listings are below. Voltaic is a lovingly packaged celebration of the past two years of activities surrounding Björk’s Volta — her critically praised sixth studio album, which came out in 2007.

Björk’s band on the Volta tour included Mark Bell (LFO) on computers and keyboards and Damian Taylor on keyboards and programming. Also featured were Chris Corsano (Sonic Youth, etc.) on drums and percussion and Jónas Sen playing piano, harpsichord and church organ. Björk’s all female Icelandic 10-piece brass section rounded out the group. A dynamic, grand live experience, the Volta tour has been acclaimed around the world and recorded on DVD for those who were not able to catch the band in a live setting.

Voltaic CD 1 – CD of songs from the Volta tour performed live at Olympic Studios
1. Wanderlust
2. Hunter
3. Pleasure Is All Mine
4. Innocence
5. Army of Me
6. I Miss You
7. Earth intruders
8. All Is Full Of Love
9. Pagan Poetry
10. Vertebrae by Vertebrae
11. Declare Independence

Voltaic DVD 1 – DVD of live concert performances

1. Brennio Pio Vitar – Live in Paris
2. Earth Intruders – Live in Paris
3. Hunter – Live in Paris
4. Immature – Live in Paris
5. Joga – Live in Paris
6. Pleasure Is All Mine – Live in Paris
7. Vertebrae by Vertebrae – Live in Paris
8. Where Is the Line – Live in Paris
9. Who Is It – Live in Paris
10. Desired Constellation – Live in Paris
11. Army of Me – Live in Paris
12. Bachelorette – Live in Paris
13. Wanderlust – Live in Paris
14. Hyperballad – Live in Paris
15. Pluto – Live in Paris
16. Declare Independence – Live in Paris
17. Pneumonia – Live in Reykjavik
18. My Juvenile – Live in Reykjavik
19. Vokuro – Live in Reykjavik
20. Sonnets / Unrealities XI – Live in Reykjavik
21. Mouths Cradle – Live in Reykjavik

Voltaic CD 2 – CD of remixes of Volta songs

1. Earth Intruders – Spank Rock remix
2. Innocence – Simian Mobile Disco remix 12″
3. Declare Independence – Mathew Herbert 12″
4. Wanderlust – Ratatat remix
5. The Dull Flame of Desire – modeselektor’s RMX for girls
6. Earth Intruders – lexx remix
7. Innocence – Sinden remix
8. Declare Independence – Ghostigital in Deep End Dance remix 12″
9. The Dull Flame of Desire – Modeselektor’s RMX for Boys
10. Innocence – Alva Noto Unitxt remodel 12″ version
11. Declare Independence – Black Plus mix
12. Innocence – Simian Mobile Disco dub remix

Voltaic DVD 2 – DVD of the Volta videos

1. Earth Intruders
2. Declare Independence
3. Innocence – Version 1 (winner)
4. Wanderlust
5. The Dull Flame of Desire
6. Innocence – David Saghiri
7. Innocence – Dimitrio Stankowicz
8. Innocence – Etienne Strubbe
9. Innocence – Juliet Himmer
10. Innocence – Laurent Labouille
11. Innocence – Mario Caporali
12. Innocence – Miko
13. Innocence – Misi Park & Pierre Khazem
14. Innocence – Christiano Leal
15. Innocence – Roland Matusek


Akron/Family 7” Vinyl Series

Akron/Family Announce Tour Dates, 7″ Vinyl Series and “Sun Will Shine” Vincent Moon Video


Akron/Family

As experimental folk outfit Akron/Family gears up for its North American tour, the band plans on releasing a series 7″ vinyls. For the band’s summer jaunt, the Slaraffenland horns will join the Family on stage to form the Akron/Family Big Band.

Soon to be released are a series of Akron/Family 7″ that will feature songs from the band’s most recent album, Set ‘Em Wild, Set ‘Em Free, and exclusive 7″ only tracks. These albums will be available at the band’s shows during the summer then will be made available at traditional record store outlets.

Akron/Family 7 Inchers:

7″ #1 – Everyone is Guilty/Total Destruction
7″ #2 – River/Morning on Michigan Ave
7″ #3 – Many Ghosts/??!

For a taste of how Akron/Family sounds with their newest touring band check out the performance of the Vincent Moon classic “Sun Will Shine” here:

The band’s tour leading up to the release of Set ‘Em Wild, Set ‘Em Free saw the group playing at select small, intimate venues across the county. The current tour will see Akron/Family playing larger stages including stops at several festivals.

Akron/Family tour dates:

07/22/09 Wed Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Cleveland, OH

07/23/09 Thu 10,000 Lakes Festival Detroit Lakes, MN

07/24/09 Fri The Bottom Lounge Chicago, IL

07/25/09 Sat Calgary Folk Festival Calgary, AB

07/26/09 Sun Calgary Folk Festival Calgary, AB

07/29/09 Wed Ghost Ranch Saloon Steamboat Springs, CO

07/30/09 Thu Sandbar Sports Grill Vail, CO

07/31/09 Fri Bluebird Theater Denver, CO

08/02/09 Sun All Points West Festival Jersey City, NJ

08/11/09 Tue Rock & Roll Hotel Washington, DC

08/12/09 Wed Cat’s Cradle Carrboro, NC

08/13/09 Thu The Earl Atlanta, GA

08/14/09 Fri BottleTree Birmingham, AL

08/15/09 Sat Grey Eagle Asheville, NC

08/28/09 Fri Outside Lands Festival San Francisco, CA

08/29/09 Sat El Rey Theater Los Angeles, CA

09/07/09 Mon Bumbershoot Festival Seattle, WA

09/08/09 Tue Bagdad Theater Portland, OR

09/10/09 Thu Talking Head Club Baltimore, MD

09/11/09 Fri Johnny Brenda’s Philadelphia, PA

09/12/09 Sat Kutshers Country Club Monticello, NY

09/14/09 Mon Jason’s Upstairs Hudson, NY

09/15/09 Tue Site: B Williamsport, PA

09/16/09 Wed Castaways Ithaca, NY

09/17/09 Thu Mohawk Place Buffalo, NY

09/18/09 Fri Lola London, ON

09/19/09 Sat Magic Stick Detroit, MI

09/20/09 Sun 21C Museum Hotel Louisville, KY

For more on Akron/Family check our recent live review here and recent album review here.


Mike Ragogna: HuffPost Review: Daughtry – Leave This Town

“I practiced this for hours, gone round and round, and now I think that I’ve got it all down…I’m not taking the easy way…

Sun Spin: Jackson Browne

CLASSIC ALBUM SPOTLIGHT RETURNS WITH A TOOL FOR LIVING THROUGH TOUGH TIMES

Now there’s a world of illusion and fantasy
In the place where the real world belongs
Still I look for the beauty in songs
To fill my head and lead me on

Some albums slip past our defenses, touching places we might rather have left alone, tender spots that never quite scab over. While perhaps not always consciously welcome, it is these albums that become the bedrock of our listening, informing our lives and offering cold comfort and understanding when both are in short supply in the “real world.” Jackson Browne‘s third album, Late For The Sky (1974) is such a marvel of unvarnished honesty flecked with romantic understanding, true empathy and poignant awareness of human frailty. The intervening 35 years have done nothing to diminish the instantaneous emotional zap this record produces when the needle hits the groove. All its quietude and wise-beyond-its-years resonance (he was just 25 when he recorded it) is preserved in music crafted with extraordinary attention to detail in every respect.

With angels sleeping beside him along hitchhiked roadsides, Browne wrestles with torn and empty dreams and how one goes on when their tank is empty. It’s a place all of us reach from time to time but few of us possess the acumen and insight to turn our own low tides into something that reaches other’s shores. Where it’s easy to lash out in such moments, blame someone else for our circumstance, Browne spreads it around, never sparing himself a healthy measure:

Now the things that I remember seem so distant and so small
Though it hasn’t really been that long a time
What I was seeing wasn’t what was happening at all
Although for a while, our path did seem to climb

Late For The Sky is one of the templates for the so-called California Country sound, where Nashville’s slick slide meets the sativa vibe of oceans, forests and dirty blue jean, long-haired thinking. The album is a direct descendent of what Gram Parsons was moving towards and a mighty influence on future generations, a less acknowledged but just as crucial instigator as Neil Young’s Harvest. In some ways, Browne is even more successful in marrying musical sophistication and grand scale to hyper-personal themes than Young’s early attempts on say his debut. The way the words, ideas and music intertwine here is breathtaking and never seems forced. Like the best sets, there’s an internal logic that ties everything into intricate knots, where each element is as it should be. Rock is generally a touch messier (and perhaps happily so) but artistry of this level brings to mind John Barth’s line, “In art as in lovemaking, heartfelt ineptitude has its appeal and so does heartless skill, but what you want is passionate virtuosity.”

Passion lies at the center of Late For The Sky, which examines relationships with clear eyes (“when you see through loves illusions, there lies the danger/ And your perfect lover just looks like a perfect fool”) and the individual’s place in the universe (“dreaming I can make it right/ if I closed my eyes and tried with all my might”). Track after track explicates some heart truth or thought stirred staring at night skies, alone and wondering. It is an exposed place for any writer and yet Browne sings in a sharp, strong voice of things usually held close to the chest, sharing of himself in a way that aids our own self-examination, his bravery perhaps, if we’re lucky, becoming our own. And always without undue sentimentality:

Everyone I’ve ever known has wished me well
Anyway that’s how it seems, it’s hard to tell
Maybe people only ask you how you’re doing
‘Cause that’s easier than letting on how little they could care

Frequently it is David Lindley‘s exquisite guitar work that speaks directly to these deep places in us, bypassing language to vibrate our soul with pure, emotion soaked sound. And he’s equally gorgeous and effective on violin (dig his soaring through closer “Before The Deluge”), but it’s most often his unbelievably powerful slide work that takes one’s breath away. The cry he unleashes at the beginning of “Farther On” is every bit the equal of Lightnin’ Hopkins or any other celebrated bluesman, but Lindley never falls back on blues cliches, forging a new language inside rock with his slicing poetry.

The whole core band – Doug Haywood (bass), Jai Winding (keys), Larry Zack (drums), Lindley (acoustic guitar, electric guitar, steel guitar and fiddle) and Browne’s own guitar and keys – is pretty damn together, playing with intuitive grace further amplified by tremendous backing vocals from Don Henley, Terry Reid, J.D. Souther and Dan Fogelberg. Long before he was cutting his own albums, Browne was a respected Los Angeles songwriter whose tunes had been cut by a host of late ’60s/early ’70s luminaries. Even at his young age, he was already a respected man about town, and the pros gathered around him here reflect that.

It would probably be enough to score a spot on Rolling Stone‘s 2003 list of the Top 500 Albums of All Time if it were just a king size bummer fest, but Late For The Sky turns on its heels midway. The second side positively skips, finding fortitude and black tinged jubilation that feels real, sustainable, genuine:

Walking slow down the avenue
Through my old neighborhood
Don’t know why I’m happy
I’ve got no reason to feel this good
Maybe it’s because I’m all alone
And I’ve got no place to go
And everywhere I look I see
Another person I’ll never know

I got a thing or two to say
Before I walk on by
I’m feeling good today
But if die a little farther along
I’m trusting everyone to carry on

What the last half seems to say is, “There’s life after the flood.” No matter what the world throws at you, no matter the hurt or confusion we currently feel, we heal, rebuild and move on. Browne’s subsequent career has continued to reflect these themes but they’ve never been more beautifully articulated than Late For The Sky, a bonafide classic to be sure.

Track Listing

Side One:
1. Late for the Sky
2. Fountain of Sorrow
3. Farther On
4. The Late Show

Side Two:
1. The Road and the Sky
2. For a Dancer
3. Walking Slow
4. Before the Deluge



Carlos Santana in Belgrade concert

Famed Mexican-U.S. rock musician and guitarist Carlos Santana played in front of a Belgrade audience on Saturday night. Santana took his tour to the Serbian capital while promoting his compilation album, dubbed Multi-Dimensional Warrior.

Rebecca Walker: The Untouchable Michael Jackson

We use his death, as we used his life, as a mirror. There is no room for Michael. It is still, tragically, all about us.

Balancing acts

Yoga, rock climbing and … fondu. Welcome to the Alpine health retreat where guests are told ‘too much purity can be boring’

I am half-way up a rock face and being told to position my bottom. “Lean back into it,” a cheerful voice bellows. “It’s just like sitting in an armchair.” I peer gingerly beneath me. I see a vertical drop. A harness is digging into my crotch. I reflect that, if Ikea made armchairs like this, they’d have gone bust long ago.

I try not to give into blind panic and remember what my instructors told me the night before. “Climbing is the lazy man’s way to enlightenment,” they said, smiling over cold meats and fondu. This sounded promising: I am unquestionably lazy and in dire need of enlightenment. “It’s about flexibility, balance and focus.”

There’s the catch, I realise, as I hover in mid-air, hands scrabbling and feet clinging to the minutest of ledges. I possess none of those qualities. I have never felt less enlightened. But this is no time for quibbling as the harness is about to cut off my circulation and I think vertigo may set in at any moment. I close my eyes and jump.

If my pre-climb pep talk was noticeably lacking in sporting machismo, that’s probably because my instructors are not your average gung-ho outdoor types. When not shooting up rock faces, Saskia Anley-McCallum runs an eco-chalet in the French Alps whose mission is to help you “tap into your source”. John Falkiner, her pony-tailed Australian cousin, may be a legendary mountain man who was the stunt double for two Bond baddies, but when he talks of climbing his buzzwords are poise, mental clarity and psychological strength.

Together, and with the help of several other like-minded souls, they have created a unique hideaway in the heart of the Haute Savoie where guests can sign up not only for mountain climbing but for yoga as well. My session on a top-rope is preceded by a morning doing the downward dog in the middle of forest-clad mountains.

New arrivals at La Source, the converted Savoyard farmhouse near Samoens which Saskia and her husband Duncan have transformed into a beautiful and spacious retreat, will realise one thing straight away: this is no ordinary hotel or Alpine chalet. I have been alerted to this by Saskia, who in an email describes it as a “crazy 21st-century commune”, and while avoiding the more terrifying implications of collective living, it does have an instantly welcoming feel unlike anywhere else I’ve ever stayed.

Guests tend to eat together every day in the airy, open-plan kitchen-cum-living room – healthy but hearty fare cooked by resident chef and naturopath, Leticia. Many people share rooms, and we are encouraged to take part in “karmic yoga” – a cunning device whereby everyone tries to do a daily chore or contribute in some way to the running of the chalet. I suspect this ancient spiritual guideline has been co-opted by Saskia as a means of getting more of the housework done. Well, why not? I do my karmic duty early one morning by fetching the fresh cows’ milk from the farmhouse next door, a crucial ingredient in the bowls of steaming porridge that are served up to everyone upon their return from morning yoga.

As La Source is situated in one of the most beautiful spots of Europe, it is no surprise that Saskia’s yoga and meditation classes take place outside, weather permitting. The group usually heads to Lac Bleu, an artificial lake in the Vallée du Giffre, and practises in the shadow of the mountains. Most of my fellow yogis have years of experience and more strength in one of their thighs than I have in my entire body. But Saskia adapts the movements for different abilities and, as an almost complete beginner, I don’t feel left behind. In fact, I rather enjoy it. By the end, I am nearly asleep. My kind of sport.

We head out one evening for a rustic Savoyard dinner of bread, wine and fondu – not very organic and not very healthy, but, in John’s words, “if you’re pure all the time it gets a bit boring”. While we eat I asked my hosts what motivated them to bring together two activities which, to an outsider, might seem incompatible. “It’s all the art of balance and movement,” John explains, his weathered skin betraying a lifetime spent outdoors. “Yoga is about attitude, concentration. Climbing is balance, effective power and concentration. The two complement each other perfectly.”

The next day, as I take my vertical baby steps on a rockface near Sixt-Fer-à-Cheval, I begin to see what he means. Working out how to manoeuvre yourself up a mountain requires total concentration and nerves of steel. Actually doing it requires you to have the same combination of bendiness and strength that it takes to perform sun salutations or shoulder stands. In both sports, you are in your own little world, and your success depends as much on the power of your mind as on the power of your body. That’s the theory, at least; in practice, I only made it 15 metres before having my armchair moment. But then there’s always next time.

Saskia’s big idea about La Source is that everything – the stunning location, the relaxed ambience, the wood-chip-fuelled hot tub – is geared towards helping guests get back in touch with nature and with themselves. Near the end of my stay she tells me of one guest, a Russian woman, who, within two days of returning to Moscow, chucked in her job and decided to become a mountain leader in Peru. I’m not about to do anything that drastic, but I have had a lovely time and go home feeling refreshed and markedly more tranquil. Does that count as tapping into my source? I’m not sure. But whatever it is, it feels pretty good.

• The next rock-climbing holidays run from 23 July, 8 Aug and 3 Sept, and cost €729 for seven days, inc breakfast, most dinners, yoga, lake trip and pick-up from Cluses station, but exc flights. Min four, max six people per course. Available through Responsible Travel (01273 600 030, responsibletravel.com/climbingandyoga). Rail Europe (08448 484 074, raileurope.co.uk) has fares from £168 return from London to Cluses inc sleeper.

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