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Posts Tagged ‘Stockholm’

A fare price?

The costliest cities for public transport

AN UNEXPECTED benefit of the recession for those lucky enough to keep their jobs may be a less crowded journey to work. So while the commute may be a bit more pleasant now, painful future fare increases are likely to compensate for lost revenue. But commuters and other travellers already suffer great financial pain in some cities. In Stockholm it costs $4.88 for a single journey of 10km on public transport, the highest cost in a study of 73 cities by UBS, a Swiss bank. London and Sydney are not far behind. But in Delhi it costs a mere $0.16 to make a similar journey.

Jerry Joseph | 08.28 – 08.30 | Montana

Words & Images by: Phil Santala

Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons :: 08.28.09 – 08.30.09 :: Banditos :: Virginia City, MT

Jerry Joseph :: Banditos 2009 :: Montana

It had been over a year, two weeks over to be exact, since Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons brought their signature “Way Too Loud” sound to Virginia City, Montana’s Banditos. For the fifth annual event the band had a few tricks up their sleeves, including a new soundman, plans to record a live album and a guest artist ta boot.

The soundman was Jeff Lord-Alge, who is no stranger to Jerry’s sound. Jeff has mastered the sometimes-confounding aspects of a Jackmormons show with brilliance. Songs like “War At the End Of The World” and “What I Lived For” really shined through and allowed the full range of Joseph’s singing to be appreciated. Even the rig Jeff packed in blew Banditos owner Scott Kelly away. “You should see the size of the fucking rig he hauled in here,” Kelly exclaimed on Friday night. The lights that Jeff also runs add just the right accents and textures to the setting. One might think that this contributes very little to the sound at the show, but Jerry seemed to appreciate the lighting. He even commented that “the lights sound great” between songs. Maybe it is a quid pro quo of sorts, where the lighting can ramp up the audience, and the audience can definitely ramp up the performers.

As an added treat for the live album, fans were blessed to have drummer Steve Drizos‘ wife Jenny Conlee-Drizos sitting in on keys for all three nights. Jenny was on loan to the Jackmormons from her main gig with The Decemberists. At times bassist JR Ruppel turned towards Jenny, walking her through some of the changes in a song.

Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons :: Banditos 2009 :: Montana

A year ago they debuted a new song here, “Wisconsin Death Trip,” as an acoustic number, and as they ripped the holy crap out of it with an electric version on Friday they showed just how far the song, and perhaps even the band, has come. Don’t take this the wrong way, but I haven’t always been a Jackmormons fan. I saw them several times between 1999 and 2002, including the Irish Times show that produced Mouthful Of Copper. After that I was definitely a fan. My extended “retirement” from concert attendance ended with a Jackmormons show in 2005. Between 2005 and 2006 I saw just under a dozen Jerry Joseph shows, and at times I felt as if I was just hanging on. Whatever they were doing then, it just wasn’t doing it for me. That all changed December 14, 2007, when I saw Jerry Joseph and Friends perform at Stella Blue in Ashville, North Carolina. I have consistently been impressed since then. No matter where he’s at or how big the crowd is, Jerry is not only pouring his heart and soul out onstage, but he seems to be enjoying himself, at times. It works and it works well with Stockholm Syndrome , with the Jackmormons, with The Denmark Veseys and even solo. Through songs about hurt and pain some catharsis seems to be taking place, some joy seems to be growing out of the pain. Jerry joked on Sunday, “When I think of weddings and babies I always play this song,” before “Ten Killer Fairies” which recounts the true story of a family being slaughtered by drug lords in Mexico.

When talking about the direction of the band Steve Drizos said, “Sometimes you can’t even drive it; you just hang on for the ride.” Joseph has become a master of melody, and his melodic evolution finds Jerry tinkering with his songs and enjoying himself more onstage.

Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons :: Banditos 2009 :: Montana

Last year, listening to some of Jerry’s songs was like hearing a static filled AM radio station. Friday’s songs were tight and concise. The solos were there, a cover of Widespread Panic‘s “Second Skin” was played and “Crime and Punishment” was slow, yet so moving. Still, it felt like Jerry was holding back the mad ramblings from various cover songs that he usually interjects into setlists. After the show I thought perhaps it had to do with licensing agreements for the live album or some such legal nonsense.

Saturday opened with “War At The End Of the World.” Fitting, since for some people Virginia City is as close to the end of world as one can get. Cell phones don’t work here. Internet? Just forget about it; even the hotel doesn’t have reception. “Pumpkin Time” may have been spurred by the placement of a wayward flip-flop by Jerry’s monitor, an event that caused some joking among the band. Closing out the second set was a recently added combination, “Chainsaw City” followed by The Cure‘s “Fascination Street.” The band preformed this pairing for the first time just after New Years 2008, and the combination works beautifully, with Jerry’s revision of The Cure tune not be missed.

“Spin City” > “North” > “Spin City” contained Saturday’s only example of the aforementioned “master of melody” approach with Lou Reed’s “Walk on The Wild Side” chorus being lightly inserted. The end of the second set was time for them to start rolling out the big guns. “North” turned into an all out slugfest. “Ask me if I give a FUCK,” barked the audience, drowning out even the reverberating amps. The pauses in this song have begun to take on a life of their own. They occur with greater frequency in more and more of the versions of “North.” Very few things represent a well-oiled band than a nice good old fashioned pause in the middle of a song. Panic’s “Walkin’” or “Good People” spring to mind as obvious comparisons.

Jerry Joseph :: Banditos 2009 :: Montana

Sunday was a different beast entirely. While the first two songs were slow, they contained more energy than the rest of the first set. A noticeably strapped down “Light Is Like Water” opened the evening, and I can only hope and pray that this version makes it on the live album. Goose-bumps rose on my arms as the song ended, just in time for the intro to “Alter In a Box” to send chills down my spine. The faintest, ghostly echoes of “All Along the Watchtower” ran along the extended intro to and resurfaced several time throughout. Rain and thunder began to poor down outside as lighting began to shoot out of amps. In a scene reminiscent of Jerry’s “Cortez The Killer” with Panic at Oak Mountain in 2002, I choose to dance in the rain. Maybe that is the sign of really good music – its ability to transport our thoughts back to long forgotten battlefields. Oak Mountain, for those who were there, was just such a place.

The final highlights of another “Good Sunday” in Virginia City were an all out mash-up in the second set. The rants during “New Psychology of Love” gave way to The Rolling Stones’ “Beast Of Burden” – a fitting combination to say the least. “Way Too Loud,” a Jerry original written with a little help from Bloodkin‘s Danny Hutchens was augmented with U2′s “Mysterious Ways.” “It’s alright, it’s alright, it’s alright,” coxed Jerry as he led us into a pockmarked, bone jarring, high speed race down the “Road to Damascus.” Closing out the second set, we slowed down a little for a sandwich of Neil Young’s “Comes A Time” with a “Mohawk” right down the middle. Finally, Jerry closed the cover laden Sunday performance with “Both Of You” split open with a very heavy rendition of the chorus of Eric Clapton’s “Let It Grow.”

The album is tentatively titled Live @ Banditos and will be Jerry’s sixth live album. It will be the second live album that the Jackmormons have recorded in Montana, Mouthful Of Copper being the first, back in 2002 at the now defunct Irish Times bar in Butte. While issues such as who will release it and when it will be released are still very much up in the air, one thing’s for sure: three nights in Virginia City provided more than enough material for a double (or triple?) disc release.

Jerry’s riding the crest of a high and beautiful wave between Stockholm Syndrome, his solo work and the Jackmormons. And those of you who did not make it to Virginia City this time, you’re running out of excuses. Virginia City, Banditos Bar and Jerry Joseph are a trifecta not to be missed. Walking around the bar before the show I overheard people discussing fly fishing on the Madison, and I bagged three 10,500 foot peaks that day. So, if you got to start budgeting now to head on up “North” and start “Shooting Up the Neighborhood” next year in Virginia City, DO IT!

Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons tour dates available here.

Continue reading for more pics of Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons in Montana…

JamBase | Montana
Go See Live Music!


Stockholm Syndrome | 09.06 | S.F.

Words by: Justin Gillett | Images by: Susan J. Weiand


Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06.09 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06 :: San Francisco

It’s interesting to see a band that rarely tours actually play live. Going into the show, concertgoers don’t know if what they are about to see will be a sloppy display due to infrequent interaction or a finely tuned act that simply lacks the ability to dedicate itself to the road due to band members’ conflicting schedules. In the case of Stockholm Syndrome, it’s undoubtedly the later.

Using the term super group to define the band almost seems cliche, but for lack of a better word that’s what the band is – a super group. What originally started as a collaboration between guitarist/vocalist Jerry Joseph (Jackmormons) and bassist Dave Schools (Widespread Panic), turned into a serious musical endeavor a few years back with the additions of lead guitar shredder Eric McFadden(EMT), drum wiz Wally Ingram and versatile keyboardist Danny Louis (Gov’t Mule). Even though the group rarely tours, a testament to how busy all the members’ respective main musical endeavors are, when Stockholm Syndrome does announce an off-hand set of dates, the shows are worth attending, if for nothing more than witnessing five musicians at the top of their game perform together. The musical backgrounds and styles of the five artists are quite different, although when playing together the collaborative rock monster that is created is truly remarkable, especially considering the band typically performs less than 10 dates a year. Stockholm Syndrome’s show at The Independent in San Francisco on Sunday night found the band in great form, performing as if the group lived on the road – which, in one way or another, they kinda do.

Dave Schools – Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06

Opening up the show was local San Francisco blues inspired rock outfit The Stone Foxes. With two guitarists, a bass player and a drummer – all sharing vocal duties – the band displayed an impressive command of the stage. Oftentimes sounding like a classic rock throwback act, the quartet’s sound was consistently driven forward with the solid, occasionally spastic drumming of Shannon Koehler and the steady, rarely faltering bass lines of Avi Vinocur. Even though all the musicians often sang together, they did not seem to be achieving any sort of refined harmonies. Instead, their vocals acted as contrasts to one another, which added to the group’s unique sound.

As Stockholm Syndrome arrived onstage and greeted the slightly older crowd, the band tuned up and launched into a massive set that would persist for the better part of two hours. Schools, playing without his stalwart Modulus Quantum six-string, opting to play a Modulus Funk Unlimited four-string instead, imminently lit up a smoke, one of the countless number he sparked during the show, and looked eager to kick off the evening’s musical ventures. While Stockholm songs are a vast departure from the Panic songs that Schools normally plays, his dominating bass lines are still extremely similar in nature. He’s proven himself a bass player that can perform in several musical contexts, yet still hold onto a characteristic semblance that makes all of his playing unique and unmistakable.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06 :: San Francisco

As the band got warmed up with its first few songs, attention shifted to Ingram’s diverse drumming. Attaching hand drums to his drum kit, Ingram occasionally tapped into a sound that deviated from the typically rock driven sound of the band. Apart from Ingram’s remarkable drumming, the songs proved that Stockholm really is the love child of Joseph and Schools. The other three musicians onstage played with as much dedication as Joseph and Schools did but occasionally it felt like they may not have invested as much heart into the songs as the noted guitarist and bass player have. The songs seemed to have been crafted by Joseph as singer-songwriter tunes, then as all the musicians in the band sear their brand onto the songs they morph into something completely different. But, the core of the songs is clearly Joseph’s lyrics, which prove above all else he is a talented storyteller.

At points during the show the two guitarists would harmonize their instruments during solos, which created an amazing sound that worked surprisingly well considering Joseph’s and McFadden’s vastly different approaches. Typically, when the band’s songs called for some sort of solo, McFadden would be the player to step up and deliver. His skill on the guitar was so impressive that it’s astonishing he doesn’t command more respect amongst serious six-string followers. His style is extremely flashy but McFadden displayed such dexterity while playing that his fellow musicians seemed to be in awe of him. His showboat style is no doubt bolstered because he looks like a bad ass when he plays, too. Sporting a sneer, thin dreadlocks and tattoo-covered forearms, McFadden just looks like a dude who plays a guitar really well.

Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.06 :: San Francisco

While many of the songs seemed to lack any sort of coherent “hook,” the extended jamming and improvisation more than made up for any sort of apparent lack of mainstream listening appeal. The band brought out several tunes that will appear on their forthcoming new album, which the band claims will drop soon. On some of these fresh songs, Joseph’s voice was extremely pronounced – a welcome change to some of the band’s songs that lacked a characteristic inflection. The song selection as the band neared the end of its set seemed to really capitalize off the musical diversity that Louis displayed behind his keyboards. Ranging from reggae to Texas rock, Louis’ knack for cross-genre competence really proved that he’s one of the more talented and severely underrated keyboardists on the circuit today.

After the unrelenting set concluded, the band bowed off the stage visibly stricken from the massive amount of musical movement all had taken part in. After the crowd cheered for a bit, they returned to the stage and launched into an extremely heavy two-song encore so intense that Ingram broke his snare.

Continue reading for Dave Vann’s pics from the previous night of Stockholm Syndrome in San Francisco…

Images by: Dave Vann

Stockholm Syndrome :: 09.05.09 :: The Independent :: San Francisco, CA

JamBase | Northern California
Go See Live Music!


The origin of diabetes: Don’t blame your genes

They may simply be getting bad instructions—from you

GENES are acquired at conception and carried to the grave. But the same gene can be expressed differently in different people—or at different times during an individual’s life. The differences are the result of what are known as epigenetic marks, chemicals such as methyl groups that are sometimes attached to a gene to tell it to turn out more of a vital protein, or to stop making that protein altogether.

Many researchers believe epigenetic marks hold the key to understanding, and eventually preventing, a number of diseases—and one whose epigenetic origins they are particularly interested in is type 2, or late-onset, diabetes. Juleen Zierath and her colleagues at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, are trying to find out how people develop insulin resistance, the underlying cause of type 2 diabetes. …

Jerry Joseph Live Album

Jerry Joseph Live Recording Announced

Virginia City, Montana at Bandito’s – August 28-30, 2009


Jerry Joseph

Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons featuring Jerry Joseph (guitar/vocals), JR Ruppel (bass/vocals) and Steve Drizos (drums) will make their triumphant return to Bandito’s in Virginia City, Montana on August 28-30, 2009 for three shows! This year the band will be doing something special, as they plan to record the run of shows for the next Jerry Joseph & Jackmormons live release Live @ Bandito’s. A lot more details will be announced soon, but all audio and video recording of these shows will be prohibited. Located in historic Virginia City, Montana, Bandito’s restaurant has been at home in the beautiful Wells Fargo Building since May 1999. Owners Amy and Scott Kelley, along with their top-notch staff, are known throughout the Northern Rockies for creating a place that not only serves up some of the finest food in southwestern Montana but legendary good times as well. Bret Mosley will be opening the Friday night show (8/28) and the Secret Powers will be opening on Saturday (8/29). Online tickets are available NOW!

It seems appropriate that Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons follow up their last live album, 2002′s Mouthful of Copper, recorded in Butte, MT, with a live album from Bandito’s in Virginia City, MT (another historic Montana mining town). Home of the largest placer gold discovery in America and the one time capitol of Montana, Virginia City truly was and is the wild, wild West. They hung the sheriff from his own gallows, Calamity Jane was a snot nosed kid on the streets, vigilantes took the law into their own hands and strung up their neighbors, fortunes were made and lost here… change the name of Virginia City to Deadwood and you’ve got a hit TV series on your hands.


If you’ve been lucky enough to catch a Jerry Joseph show at Bandito’s over the past five years, then you already know about the magic that the building evokes from the band as well as the unique Montana vibes that the city emanates. Don’t miss your chance to be a part of an historic live recording in one of the most distinct historic towns in the world.

Here’s JamBase’s take on last year’s run at Banditos.

Jerry Joseph and The Jackmormons Tour Dates

08/27/09 Thu Music on Main St. Driggs, ID

08/28/09 Fri Bandito’s Virginia City, MT (LIVE RECORDING)

08/29/09 Sat Bandito’s Virginia City, MT (LIVE RECORDING)

08/30/09 Sun Bandito’s Virginia City, MT (LIVE RECORDING)

09/01/09 Tue House Of Blues, Back Porch Stage Chicago, IL

09/19/09 Sat Bluebird Theater Denver, CO

09/23/09 Wed Rhythm Room Phoenix, AZ

Jerry will also be performing two shows with Stockholm Syndrome on September 5 and 6 at The Independent in San Francisco.

For a blast from the past, check our incredibly candid conversation with Jerry from 2002 “Passion and Pain” here: Part I and Part II.



Muse: The Resistance

British Trio Muse Unveil New Single, “Uprising,” Off

The Band’s Forthcoming Album, The Resistance, Due Out September 15


Muse

A glammed-up rock stomper, “Uprising” (check it below) is the first single from Muse‘s self-produced fifth studio album The Resistance, which will be released on September 15. Recorded in Italy, the album was mixed by famed audio engineer Mark “Spike” Stent, who is known for his work with U2, Depeche Mode, No Doubt, and Oasis, among many others. The single is the first new music from Muse since Black Holes and Revelations, which debuted at Number 9 on Billboard’s album chart in July 2006. Over the last few years, Muse – comprised of vocalist/guitarist Matt Bellamy, bassist Chris Wolstenholme and drummer Dom Howard – have played to sold-out crowds worldwide in support of Black Holes, which spawned modern rock hits “Knights Of Cydonia,” “Starlight” and “Supermassive Black Hole.”

In anticipation of their new album, Muse will perform at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards on September 13, two days before The Resistance is released in the U.S. In addition, the band will open select shows for U2, including two shows at Giants Stadium in New York, this fall.

Muse 2009 Tour Dates:

09/25/09 Fri Giants Stadium East Rutherford, NJ*

09/29/09 Tue FedEx Field Landover, MD*

10/01/09 Thu Scott Stadium Charlottesville, VA*

10/03/09 Sat Carter Finley Stadium Raleigh, NC*

10/06/09 Tue Georgia Dome Atlanta, GA*

10/09/09 Fri Raymond James Stadium Tampa, FL*

10/12/09 Mon Dallas Cowboys Stadium Arlington, TX*

10/14/09 Wed Reliant Stadium Houston, TX*

10/22/09 Thu Hartwall Arena Helsinki, FI*

10/24/09 Sat Hovet Stockholm, SE

10/25/09 Sun Oslo Spektrum Oslo, NO

10/26/09 Mon Parken Copenhagen, DK

10/28/09 Wed Color Line Arena Hamburg, GER

10/29/09 Thu O2 World Berlin, GER

11/01/09 Sun Le Galaxie Amneville, FRA

11/02/09 Mon Sportpaleis Antwerpen Antwerp, BEL

11/04/09 Wed Sheffield Arena Sheffield, GB

11/05/09 Thu Liverpool Echo Arena Liverpool, GB

11/06/09 Fri The O2 Dublin, IR

11/09/09 Mon SECC Glasgow, GB

11/10/09 Tue National Indoor Arena (NIA) Birmingham, GB

11/12/09 Thu O2 Arena London, GB

11/13/09 Fri O2 Arena London, GB

11/14/09 Sat Ahoy Hall Rotterdam, NL

11/16/09 Mon Lanxess Arena Cologne, GER

11/17/09 Tue Bercy Paris, FRA

11/18/09 Wed Hallenstadion Zurich Zurich, SWI

11/20/09 Fri Olympiahalle Munich, GER

11/22/09 Sun Halle Tony Garnier Lyon, FRA

11/25/09 Wed Zenith Toulouse, FRA

11/27/09 Fri Pavello Olimpic Barcelona, ES

11/28/09 Sat Palacio de los Deportes Madrid, ES

11/29/09 Sun Pavilhao Atlantico Lisbon, POR

12/01/09 Tue Zenith Limoges, FRA

12/02/09 Wed Zenith Dijon, FRA

12/04/09 Fri Palaolympico Turin, IT

*=Opening for U2



EBay working on alternative software for Skype

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — EBay Inc. is developing software it might use to continue running the online telecommunications service Skype if it cannot resolve a legal dispute with a separate company run by the service’s founders.
In a filing this week with the Securities and Exchange Commission, eBay said it has started developing an alternative to [...]

Hot Rize: From Old Grass To New Grass

By: Kathy Foster-Patton

Hot Rize original press shot
(L to R) Scap, Sawtelle, O’Brien, Wernick

Those were heady days, back in the ’80s, when Hot Rize toured across the country giving their all to make it as working musicians. Bandmates Pete Wernick (banjo), Nick Forster (bass), Tim O’Brien (mandolin) and Charles Sawtelle (guitar) came together in 1978 and toured until 1990. They continued to play together sporadically until Sawtelle passed away from cancer in 1999. His surviving bandmates brought Bryan Sutton on board in 2002 to play guitar with them in the scant performances that are today scheduled around their individual projects. In many ways, Hot Rize led the way in bridging the music of traditionalists to many of the progressive groups like String Cheese and Yonder Mountain String Band. Wernick, Forster, and O’Brien recently spoke about their history and what inspires them to play the few gigs that they currently schedule.

Hot Rize came together with a simple goal in the beginning. “The original idea for Hot Rize was that we were going to get together for the summer and just play some festivals,” Forster explains. “Tim had a record and Pete had a record and the idea was that we were going to get together and play tunes from those records and play some festivals and see what happens. 31 years later we’re still playing music together. It was a very easy commitment to make early on.”

O’Brien goes a little further to enumerate their goals at the time. “We wanted to play traditional bluegrass with our own stamp on it, but we wanted to try to fit into the genre and pay tribute to it, really,” he says. “We also wanted to explore other areas and one of those was doing a little bit of comedy with the Trailblazers and another was writing songs. We mostly walked inside the line of the bluegrass borders but we went outside it a little bit here and there.”

Wernick came up with the name for the group. “That was my idea to use the Hot Rize name; I take credit for that. Hot Rize was the secret ingredient in the Martha White flour, and Martha White was the sponsor for the Flatt and Scruggs television show,” he explains. “I had some names for bands tucked away in a file and I suggested the name and everybody said, ‘Okay.’ Normally it takes longer than that – sometimes it can take forever. The Martha White Company allowed us to print our t-shirts with no compensation. The one stipulation they had when I called and asked them if I could use the Hot Rize name, they said, ‘Keep the show clean.’”

The guys outfitted themselves in vintage ties and suits that they purchased from thrift stores. In a time when they could have gotten away with wearing t-shirts and jeans, they chose to dress up for the stage. Forster explains, “That was the tradition. That’s where bluegrass came from. Bill Monroe played in suits and ties and Ralph Stanley and the Osmond Brothers and Jim & Jesse. That’s what people did. Now it just happened that people of our generation didn’t. But we made a conscious decision to separate ourselves from the pack and it made it such that the older audience and the traditional bluegrass fans could look at us and say, ‘Oh, my, look at those nice young men and aren’t they good and don’t they look good in their suits.’ But if people looked closer they would see that we were wearing thrift store suits and we had old ’40s ties, big old wide silk ties that were a throwback. We were wearing vintage ties as an homage to the people who came before us. So there was a certain amount of tongue-in-cheek from the get-go.” Wernick adds, “Our ties were an indication that we’re not just carbon copies of the guys you’ve been watching. We’re winking at you a little bit while we do this.”

There was any number of contributions that made the Hot Rize sound unique, but Forster remembers the vocals with particular reverence. “Singing with Tim is a unique thing in my world” says Forster. “I get to sing with a lot of people on Etown and I have sung with lots of other people in other musical situations but I think it’s because we kind of grew up together and I became a better singer and I know Tim did too in the course of Hot Rize. He’s always been an amazing singer, just remarkable. Our duet sound, I think, is a distinctive part of what makes Hot Rize sound like Hot Rize.”

Hot Rize – Wernick, Sawtell, O’Brien

“We broke some ground, with Pete using the phase shifter [a device Wernick invented to morph his banjo sound] and me using the electric bass and Tim’s mandolin playing style and our songwriting and original material and Charles’ style of playing the guitar and the whole evolution of the show” continues Forster. “It was really ground breaking in a lot of ways. We brought a lot of people to bluegrass that otherwise may not have felt welcome. I’m really proud of that.”

Stringing one thought into the next, Forster was eager to talk more about the songwriting associated with Hot Rize.

“I think the challenge in bluegrass music is to write songs that fit the genre and that achieve some level of timelessness while still representing a new body of work. I think that was one of the strengths of Hot Rize. Tim, Pete, and I contributed a bunch of new material. Songs like Tim’s ‘Nellie Kane’ and I wrote a song called ‘Shadows in My Room’ and Pete’s ‘Just Like You’ and some others with that sort of classic bluegrass timelessness to them that were part of the modern bluegrass repertoire. I think that is a really important thing,” Forster observes. “If you look at all the original material that Hot Rize contributed over the years I think there’s a lot of those songs that really stand the test of time and they fit the older style but are touching on more contemporary ideas and more contemporary influence. We were really lucky that we had some fresh songwriting in the band, that we could contribute some new material that wasn’t sub-standard. Original songs are better if they’re good songs. I think that that’s a very distinctive thing that Hot Rize did. It comes from that same thing that we really did our homework. We loved listening to traditional bluegrass and really connected with it and respected it and it was natural to us as songwriters to start with that. I think almost any of [the songs are] memorable because you’re talking about not just nostalgia but these songs are kind of iconic. We started every show with ‘Blue Night.’ ‘Blue Night’ is a song that says to me, ‘Okay, this is Hot Rize.’”

Continue reading for more on Hot Rize…

 


We broke some ground, with Pete using the phase shifter and me using the electric bass and Tim’s mandolin playing style and our songwriting and original material and Charles’ style of playing the guitar and the whole evolution of the show. It was really ground breaking in a lot of ways. We brought a lot of people to bluegrass that otherwise may not have felt welcome. I’m really proud of that.

-Nick Forster

 

In their heyday, they had a grueling travel schedule. Forster itemized a typical day. “I’ll just give you an example of what our days were like. I was the principal bus driver; Frank [Edmonson, their sound man] and Charles both drove, but year in and year out I did most of the driving. I did almost all the driving pre-Frank. Charles did drive – we had different sleeping patterns, so Charles would do the morning driving and I would do afternoon and evening and nighttime driving. We were a very hard-working band so we would play a gig, sign autographs, sell a bunch of merch at the end and then unwind and pack up. A lot of times we carried our own PA system and put up our own PA. So we would pack up all the gear and load it into the bus and I would drive at night until I ran out of energy and that was oftentimes at 3 or 4 in the morning. Then Charles would wake up around 8 and he would drive in the morning and we’d go to a truck stop around noon and get some diesel fuel and breakfast. A lot of times we’d take showers in the truck stop and then drive on to the next gig and try to get there around 2 p.m., where we could do a load in and a soundcheck and get done with that by 6 so we could go and have dinner and then get back to play a long show, sign autographs and load up the PA and do the whole thing again.”

Hot Rize by Bill Smith

The bandmembers divided their tasks in accordance with each man’s strengths. Forster explains, “Pete, for example, had that logistics gene. He liked to solve the problems of traveling and worked closely with our agent when we finally got one. Charles was a sound guy so he really understood what it took to make things sound good – really helped us with microphone selection and making sure our sound was as good as it could be. I was focused more on driving and managing the merchandise and fixing stuff and crisis management. Tim was focused on material and getting new songs and keeping us full of good ideas about creative stuff. We really played on our individual strengths, both musically and in terms of personality. It was an incredibly dynamic group of smart, capable and talented people. I think it was a happy coincidence that we found each other.”

While everyone played their part in giving Hot Rize a chance, Forster credits Wernick with really getting the band going down the road to success.

“In our first year, we had only been together for about six weeks when we played at Telluride – the third [year of the] festival. We played on Garrison Keeler’s show after we’d been together for less than a month. A lot of that credit goes to Pete, who was our agent. Pete did all the booking and he really worked hard. Our goal was to make $100 a week. If we could do that we could keep the band together. That was basically it and he made sure that we did – and not a whole lot more than that. He gets credit for really seeing the potential for having an impact on the whole field of bluegrass. He fought hard to make sure that we kept going.”

O’Brien imparts a fond story about their booker. “We left Pete behind in a rest area once. Frank was driving and it was late at night and everybody was bedded down except for him. He had the graveyard shift and he pulled in to fuel and Pete got up after Frank got out of the bus, without seeing Frank or Frank seeing him, and went to the bathroom. Meanwhile Frank finished up and paid and got on his way. About 25 minutes later this flashing light pulls behind Frank and the cop pulled him over. The policeman comes up to the bus window and says, ‘You got a Pete Wernick on board?’ He says, ‘Yeah.’ The cop said, ‘Guess again.’” Forster sheepishly recalls one aspect of the story differently. “That was definitely my fault. I was driving then.”

Red Knuckles and the Trailblazers by Benko Photographics

Wernick has tale after tale of memorable events from their touring days. “When Hot Rize was in Sweden on our first European tour, the road manager was a pretty bizarre guy. He booked the tour based upon hearing our first record and he didn’t know anything else about us. He just listened to the record and booked us on a three-week tour and had us going to several different countries. We were relatively young guys visiting Europe for the first time [and] we just put ourselves in his hands,” says Wernick. “We were in Stockholm, I believe, and we played the show and then we asked about our accommodations and he said, ‘I have to work that out.’ So, basically, he didn’t have any place for us to stay and we were living pretty close to the bone and we didn’t have much money. So he says, ‘First we’re going to go to this party.’ Some of us got kind of tired so we find a table that they were serving food on and a couple of us went to sleep under that table. Basically this guy picked up a young woman there who ended us providing us accommodations. We just remember that he seemed to know he could do this and he trusted his ability to find it.”

Those who have been to a Hot Rize show know that a staple of their entertainment is their alter-ego band, Red Knuckles and the Trailblazers. Forster beamed as he discussed that aspect of their work.

“We all loved that kind of music. In the early days we played a lot of bars and when you’re playing nine-to-one in a bar there’s times when people are really ready to hear a Hank Williams or Bob Wills song. We loved that music so it was really great when we had an opportunity to bring the Trailblazers on into our show and have them come out and play that stuff. And they were pretty manageable people and they didn’t take up a lot of room on the bus. They were easy to get along with – low expectations.”

Wernick & Anastasio by Jeremy Stein

Wernick takes the discussion further, “Hot Rize has always had a duality aspect. One was that none of us was from the rural Southeast, yet we were singing the music from the rural Southeast and making it our own, redoing it from the inside as well as the outside. Yet we had all these other influences that made us different from a lot of the other bluegrass people. Then we had the whole Hot Rize/Red Knuckles duality. In some ways we’re hippies at heart.”

Looking at the current batch of progressive string bands it’s clear Hot Rize has been a major influence. That might not be obvious to the casual music fan, but as Forster explains, they’ve left their indelible mark.

“The agency that represented us was Keith Case. They represented John Hartford, Norman and Nancy Blake, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, New Grass Revival, and Brian Bowers, and at the time it was sort of like the hippier side of bluegrass,” Forster says. “We were associated, and rightly so, with the progressive side of things, bands that were jammers, bands that were interested in pushing the boundary and going for it in a new way. I think there was a really interesting crossover between being progressive and also being respectful of the traditions among all of those people. If you talk to the guys in String Cheese and YMSB and the progressive string bands, a lot of them will point to Hot Rize as a pretty significant influence. A lot of that has to do with geography but it also has to do with the place in time that we occupied. I think we really made a difference and made a mark. The greater musical community may or may not know that.”

Continue reading for more on Hot Rize…

 


It isn’t just about being fast, it isn’t just about speed, it isn’t just about energy. It’s about what’s behind the music and what’s behind the singing and what’s the emotional depth of a song and how can that be reflected in some way in the actual music.

-Nick Forster

 

Photo of Hot Rize by Nathan Rist

In 1990 the band members made the decision to go their separate ways and devote themselves to their individual projects. O’Brien explains, “I was feeling like I wanted to do something different. I felt we had really accomplished a lot of good things but I felt like I wanted to try some other things. It was really just time for me.”

Hot Rize in the 80s

Wernick believes they went out on a high point. “The first time IBMA gave away their main award for Entertainer of the Year, we got it. It was the last year for the band, so it was kind of like just in time. As we retired, the bluegrass community gave us their highest endorsement. That felt great.”

These days Hot Rize plays sporadically. There were only two shows on their calendar for 2009, both in Colorado, and the most recent this past Sunday at the RockyGrass Festival. “Hot Rize just does a few gigs when it’s a special occasion or when it’s been too long between shows together because we need to check up on one another,” O’Brien laughs. “We sort of grew up together and we need to check up every once in a while.” Forster elaborates, “There are two things. One is that we’ve recorded probably 150 songs or something like that with a pretty good percentage of that being unique material to us, either original songs or something we arranged and claim as our own and so for the most part none of us is playing. So, we’ve got this great body of material and it’s really fun to play those songs. Secondly, we have a thing. When we get together we do that thing and none of us gets that thing in a different context. Musically it’s great material and a musical interaction that’s really unique. Some of the other factors include schedule, logistics, and opportunity.”

Forster agreed that they could do more. “We could easily play more,” he says. “There are occasionally pressures to do more. There’s a bunch of places we could play where folks would love to hear us play, but I think we are all understandably focused on our own things and that’s the way it is right now.”

Hot Rize :: 1982

Those individual projects are many. Wernick plays in Flexigrass, Long Road Home, Pete and Joan Wernick, and conducts jam and banjo camps across the country. His activities are itemized on his website. O’Brien plays solo and with different bands and is producing a record for a songwriter from Salt Lake City, with another project involving an Irish band on tap for the summer. His website details his ongoing projects. Forster is focused on his radio show, Etown, and has been playing on numerous recordings. Etown can be found at etown.org.

When O’Brien reflects on what he learned from Hot Rize and from the Trailblazers he says, “You learn to make fun of yourself because that’s the only option. I learned that you take the music seriously and you work your hardest to do what you want to do, but you can’t take yourself too seriously. You need to loosen up every now and then. I learned how to work as a team with Hot Rize with what we had in our bag, what our available tricks were and how to use them. We grew together as a group and learned as we went along. It’s always been a fun part of my history, those 12 years with those guys, just amazing.”

“I don’t know how many relationships you’ve had that have lasted more than 30 years. So, in most people’s lives that is limited to the sphere of siblings. We’re kind of like that, we’re kind of like siblings,” Forster sums things up. “Charles was an absolute brother to all of us. Brian Sutton is doing a great job of fitting in and absorbing. Brian, lucky for us, grew up listening to Hot Rize. He’s got a great, dry sense of humor kind of like Charles did. So, he’s really a wonderful addition to our unit. But Tim and Pete and I have this bond that is unique in my life. I don’t have any other relationships like that with people with whom I was that close for that long. And that can be both good and bad, just like siblings. You have this enormous range of common experience. We did all this stuff together. We traveled all over the place. We had so much amazing, indescribable, weird stuff that happened with us uniquely together. That creates a pretty deep bond.”

Hot Rize by Chris Stone

“I was 22 when I joined Hot Rize and in some ways it was my first serious bluegrass band. I grew up with those guys and I learned a lot about music from those guys,” continues Forster. “A lot of the sensibilities and the things I came to appreciate about truth in music and what’s real and what’s soulful and what’s moving in music came from my time in Hot Rize. It was a broad mix of music, it wasn’t just bluegrass. Charles made these amazing mix tapes that would have Blind Willie Johnson, and others, like a really cool radio show. We would listen to these cassette tapes for hours as we were traveling. We would all make these mix tapes for each other for the road trips, but the ones Charles made were the most memorable. I learned a lot about soulful music. It isn’t just about being fast, it isn’t just about speed, it isn’t just about energy. It’s about what’s behind the music and what’s behind the singing and what’s the emotional depth of a song and how can that be reflected in some way in the actual music.”

“Nick and Tim and I have these deep connections and we’re like family to each other. It’s really hard to imagine what my life would be like without either of those guys,” Wernick says. “The Hot Rize band made a huge amount possible for me. It’s helped me to achieve dreams that were beyond dreams that I had. I never dreamed I’d be a professional musician. Every time I’ve ever gotten on stage with Hot Rize that music is exhilarating to play. I have a huge amount of respect for the other band members as people as well as musicians. I’m very grateful to have the opportunity to do my part in what we’ve been able to make happen as a group. It’s so neat that we’ve inspired kids, we’ve inspired bluegrass professionals, we’ve inspired writers, DJs, people who don’t even speak English. I consider myself lucky, but not lucky like I drew a lucky lottery number because I worked really hard to make a lot of this stuff happen, so it’s not just pure luck. But I’m also lucky it worked out because a lot of people work really hard and it doesn’t work out.”

“We won Entertainer of the Year from IBMA for good reason, I think, which is we really put on a good show” reflects Forster. “We always thought about that – trying to make an entertaining program for everyone. That included a lot of great music. We had original songs. The music was the first priority, but we thought about how we looked on stage and we thought about pacing and timing and what the setlist should be and the whole evolution of the Trailblazers as an adjunct and a part of our show was a really wonderful kind of coincidence in that it enabled what we were allowed to present to an audience to grow and expand. It was really pretty unique. A good Hot Rize show was a pretty entertaining evening and we were proud of it.”

JamBase | Right In The Skillet
Go See Live Music!


Porcupine Tree: Incident

Porcupine Tree Unravel New Album The Incident Due September 22


Porcupine Tree

Inspired by a flashing road sign that reduced a horrible traffic accident to the antiseptic phrase “POLICE-INCIDENT,” British prog act Porcupine Tree‘s front man Steven Wilson composed the 55 minute, 14-track song cycle as a reflection on other “incidents” reported in the media and news.

The different topics include – the evacuation of teenage girls from a religious cult in Texas, a family terrorizing its neighbors, a body found floating in a river by some people on a fishing trip, and more. Each song is written in the first person and tries to humanize the detached media reportage.

Personal incidents that profoundly affected Wilson, have also been included on the new album include a lost childhood friendship, a seance, his first love, and the day that he decided to give up secure employment to follow his dream of making music.

The new album is in typical Porcupine Tree fashion and as presumed the band ranges effortlessly between art-rock and acoustic psychedelica, prog, and metal. Listen to an album preview medley at the band’s MySpace page.

The Incident will also come with a second CD of four songs that developed from band’s writing sessions last year but which are conceptually independent from the set of songs on the first disc. It will also be released as a 5.1 surround mix and as a limited special edition that comes with two books of artwork related to the album encased in a slipcase.

Tour Dates:

09/15/09 Tue Moore Theatre Seattle, WA

09/16/09 Wed Roseland Theater Portland, OR

09/18/09 Fri The Warfield San Francisco, CA

09/19/09 Sat Club Nokia Los Angeles, CA

09/21/09 Mon House Of Blues Cleveland, OH

09/22/09 Tue The Vic Theatre Chicago, IL

09/24/09 Thu Terminal 5 New York, NY

09/26/09 Sat Electric Factory Philadelphia, PA

09/27/09 Sun House of Blues Boston, MA

09/29/09 Tue Metropolis Montreal, QC

09/30/09 Wed Queen Elizabeth Theatre Toronto, ON

10/08/09 Thu Leeds Academy Leeds, GB

10/09/09 Fri Hammersmith Apollo London, GB

10/10/09 Sat Colston Hall Bristol, GB

10/12/09 Mon Heineken Music Hall Amsterdam, NL

10/13/09 Tue Olympia Paris, FRA

10/14/09 Wed Ancienne Belgique Brussels, BEL

10/15/09 Thu Capitol Hannover, GER

10/17/09 Sat Aladin Bremen, GER

10/18/09 Sun Vega Copenhagen, DK

10/19/09 Mon Stockholm Globe Arena Stockholm, SE

10/21/09 Wed Ice Hall Helsinki, FI

10/23/09 Fri Sentrum Scene Oslo, NO

10/24/09 Sat Mejeriet Lund, SE

10/25/09 Sun Docks Hamburg, GER

10/26/09 Mon Huxley’s Berlin, GER

10/29/09 Thu Haus Auensee Leipzig, GER

10/30/09 Fri Lowensaal Nuremburg, GER

10/31/09 Sat Gasometer Vienna, AUS

11/01/09 Sun Petofi Hall Budapest, HU

11/04/09 Wed Alcatraz Milan, IT

11/06/09 Fri Estragon Bologna, IT

11/21/09 Sat Sa Bandeira Porto, POR

11/22/09 Sun La Riviera Madrid, ES

11/28/09 Sat Tonhalle Munich, GER

12/06/09 Sun Wulfrun Hall Wolverhampton, GB

12/10/09 Thu Manchester Academy Manchester, GB

12/11/09 Fri ABC Glasgow, GB


Ericsson buys Nortel wireless units for $1.13 bln

STOCKHOLM (AP) — Swedish wireless equipment maker LM Ericsson on Saturday said it had penned a deal to buy a majority of Nortel Networks’ North American wireless business for $1.13 billion.
The Stockholm-based group said the purchase is on a cash and debt-free basis and covers the older CDMA and newer LTE wireless businesses of [...]

Gregory Weinkauf: 2,000+ Words for the 2,000 Year Old Man: Mel Brooks Is Saluted by the Academy

Cloris Leachman aptly put it, “There is much that is serious about Mel Brooks. Inside that rapid-fire humor machine is a man with deep emotions, with a great capacity to care, and to love.”

Terrible beauty and beautiful terror

(Cert 18)

What do you do if you’re a young film director seeking worldwide recognition, but live in a small country with a language spoken nowhere else? Well, you could emigrate to America as several Scandinavian directors have done. But Lars von Trier, at 53 the oldest enfant terrible in the business, has a phobia about travelling. So after he decided to stay put in Denmark, his basic strategy was to make most of his movies in English, becoming, as it were, the dark side of Abba, and then turning his modest productions into big events by attracting public attention, creating gossip, causing outrage, provoking discussion.

Following those earlier self-publicists, Erich von Stroheim and Josef von Sternberg, he awarded himself an aristocratic “von” (though he must have been furious when the latest edition of Ephraim Katz’s Film Encyclopedia included the entry “von Trier. Lars. See SWEDEN”). He created news when he launched a cinematic movement Dogme 95 and he changes style with each movie: the last one released here, the business comedy The Boss of It All, was shot with a computer making decisions about lighting and camera movement.

In May, his latest picture, Antichrist, was called the most shocking movie ever to be shown at Cannes. When it opened in Stockholm last month, he gave an interview to the glossy Swedish magazine Filter in which he calls Ingmar Bergman a stupid pig (“ett dumt svin”). Well, Antichrist certainly isn’t a uniquely shocking film (Oshima’s Ai No Corrida, for instance, and Haneke’s The Piano Teacher were more troubling in their time).

It is, in fact, a gripping poetic allegory that follows Coleridge’s Kubla Khan and such pictures as Buñuel’s Un chien andalou and Louis Malle’s Black Moon in drawing directly on its author’s subconscious. Von Trier wrote it as a way of dealing with a deep depression and it’s clearly based on the mental turmoil of being brought up by parents committed to communism, naturism and atheism and his recent conversion to Catholicism. It’s also much influenced by the austere, deeply religious movies of Denmark’s greatest director, Carl Dreyer, whose Gertrud von Trier helped restore, and the mystical films of Andrei Tarkovsky, who made his final film in Swedish exile and to whose memory Antichrist is dedicated.

Shot on location in the forests of North Rhine-Westphalia, the film is set, so one infers from an address on an envelope, in the Pacific Northwest of the United States and it unfolds in four chapters, framed by a prologue and an epilogue. In the prologue, shot in slow-motion black and white, a married couple played by Willem Dafoe and Charlotte Gainsbourg make passionate love in the bathroom of their fourth-floor apartment. Their little son, Nick, opens the gate of his cot, sees the primal scene as he passes the open bathroom door and climbs on to a table beside a window, knocking over three figurines stamped “Grief”, “Pain” and “Despair”. It’s snowing outside and he falls from the window to his death in the street below, his woollen rabbit falling with him. The only thing on the soundtrack is an aria from Handel’s pastoral opera Rinaldo and the sequence has a terrible beauty.

The first chapter, “Grief”, begins with Nick’s funeral, the one time we see anyone other than his parents – who are never named, so I’ll call them Dafoe and Gainsbourg. Dafoe is a psychotherapist and he attempts to allay his wife’s guilt over the boy’s death by more or less taking her on as a patient. He tries to trace the roots of her fears and discovers that chief among them is the dark forest that surrounds their holiday cabin, which they call Eden.

She’d been there with Nick the previous year, working on a historical study called “Gynicide”, a word new to me and apparently used in the States by feminist critics to mean the destruction of women both by themselves and through the influence of men. She’d abandoned this book and later, when the couple arrive at Eden, Dafoe discovers the text with its medieval illustrations of witches being executed and dismembered.

The film opens like Nicolas Roeg’s Don’t Look Now. When the couple get to Eden for the next three chapters – “Pain (Chaos Reigns)”, “Despair” and “The Three Beggars” – it starts to resemble those eco-horror movies that followed in the wake of Hitchcock’s The Birds. Nature itself turns against the couple: animals (a fox who utters a couple of words as creatures do in fables, a miscarrying doe and a raven) and the very forest become a source of palpable terror.

The woman is suspicious of the therapeutic games her husband devises and even of therapy itself. We sense she feels she is a victim of both society and nature. The tension mounts in the confined, decaying cabin and escalates into terrible violence that involves the much publicised scenes of an attempted emasculation and a self-inflicted clitoridectomy. Starting with the title, which suggests some titanic conflict between forces of good and evil, Antichrist is full of religious symbols and biblical references. Central is the notion of Eden, of original sin and feminist problems with this creation myth, but there’s also the grindstone that Gainsbourg bolts to Dafoe’s leg (far more painful than hanging it round his neck) and her statement that “nature is Satan’s church”. And, of course, Dafoe is famous for playing Christ in Scorsese’s controversial The Last Temptation of Christ.

Like the films of Dreyer, Tarkovsky and Bergman, Antichrist is something to be experienced rather than understood, at least at a first viewing, and it concludes in the visionary epilogue on a tone of tragic tranquillity. It’s a solemn work perhaps, but forceful rather than hectoring, and is performed with an involving commitment and moral conviction by Gainsbourg (who won the best actress award at Cannes) and Dafoe. The cinematography is by Anthony Dod Mantle, the Danish-based British cameraman who did a remarkable job on a couple of Dogme movies, and received an Oscar for Slumdog Millionaire. Antichrist confirms that he is a cinematographer in the class of Sven Nykvist.

Vox pop

Roxy Holman
23, project manager

I was expecting a psychological drama, but it turned out to be more psychotic. I thought the elements of history woven in were interesting. But it’s quite hard to work out – I’ll still be thinking about it for months to come.

Ramir Oliveira
28, film-maker

I really liked it. There were some beautiful shots, and great performances from the two actors. I’d heard there was controversy over the violence, but I thought it all made sense within the film and wasn’t gratuitous.

James Cherry
27, projectionist

It was bewildering, but compelling. I’ve seen a lot of von Trier’s other films and this has the same vision – a really lucid dream world full of symbolism.

Joseph Harvey
32, teacher

It was beautifully filmed – very painterly. It was horrendous in parts and I had to look away a few times, but overall it was really interesting. I’m not quite sure what it all meant though.

Matthew McKinnon
38, film editor

The images were amazing but the characterisation was a bit weak. Von Trier’s scripts are normally very deliberate but this seemed more chaotic. It was well acted, and Charlotte Gainsbourg was incredible. Interviews by Philippa Lewis

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First swine flu wave may have peaked

Flu expert says cases could drop in next fortnight before virus returns in the winter
• Datablog: swine flu cases where you live

The number of swine flu cases in Britain may drop within the next two weeks before a return of the virus this winter, a flu expert said today.

Alan Hay, of the World Influenza Centre in London, suggested the first wave of illness may have already peaked but could not predict how far levels would fall in this phase of the pandemic.

His remarks came the day after the government said about 100,000 people in England caught swine flu last week, nearly double the figure for the previous week.

Hay told Radio 4′s Today programme: “I think we will see a peak in this country in the next week or two, if not already. It will reduce. We don’t know to what extent the level will drop down to a background level. We’ve seen in the US, although they peaked many weeks ago, that the level of infection in some of the states is still quite widespread.

“So it is a bit early to predict the trough that we will see before we see the virus re-emerge in this country.”

Hay, talking about the government’s response to the pandemic, said: “We’ve only really observed this over the last few weeks so, in terms of response, of course people could have done more sooner but that again might have raised greater alarm over the population.”

Current levels of flu infection were the highest since the 1999-2000 winter season. One of the differences was that swine flu appeared to adversely affect under-45s. “There is some information which suggests that people over the age of 60 or so may well have some immunity against the virus because of some prior exposure to a similar virus.”

Meanwhile, a 26-year-old pregnant woman who is critically ill with swine flu is undergoing specialist treatment in a Swedish hospital today because there are no spare beds at the UK unit.

The Scot was admitted to hospital in Kilmarnock, near Glasgow, last week where she was put on a ventilator because of an extreme reaction to the H1N1 virus. The specialist care team there recommended she received a procedure called extra corporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). This technique is used when a patient’s lungs are working poorly even with ventilation and high levels of oxygen. It involves circulating the patient’s blood outside the body and adding oxygen to it artificially. The national ECMO centre in Leicester has five beds but all are being used.

Under pan-European arrangements for sharing scarce medical resources, a bed was found in a similar unit in Stockholm. Robert Masterton, executive medical director of NHS Ayrshire and Arran said: “The family have been fully involved in this decision and support the referral. They have asked for privacy while they concentrate on the patient’s treatment and recovery.”

The government’s swine-flu diagnosis website for people in England was running smoothly today after an inauspicious launch yesterday. The service was suspended within minutes because it could not cope with the traffic, with 2,600 people trying to access it every second.

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Powell: Britain’s sprinters are ‘lazy’

• British rivals are living in comfort zone, says Jamaican
• Sprinter convinced he can beat Usain Bolt once again

Asafa Powell, the former 100m world record holder unseated by Usain Bolt, delivered a damning criticism of his British rivals on the eve of facing them at Crystal Palace tomorrow night, saying the reason they are not challenging for honours is because they are lazy.

Powell is due to contest the 100m at the London grand prix and says athletes in his native Jamaica have a greater motivation to succeed. “I’ve said over the years that British sprinters are very lazy and don’t really want to practise,” he said. “Maybe it’s comfort. In Jamaica, you have to work harder for what you want.”

The 26-year-old friend and rival of fellow Jamaican Bolt, who also runs in tomorrow night’s 100m, says life is harder on the West Indies island and that makes for tougher competitors than the British sprinters. “We have a different mindset,” he said. “You have to make a living out of it because you don’t get a living from anywhere else. You have to go out there and make something of yourself.”

Powell took a swipe at Britain’s leading 100m hope, the 23-year-old Simeon Williamson, who outpaced Dwain Chambers in the UK trials in 10.05sec. “Simeon came to Jamaica and from what I observed, he is a bit lazy,” said Powell. “He did well, though, and he made a lot of improvements. If he puts in the effort and the hard work, there is a lot more to come.”

Tomorrow night, Powell is confident he can repeat the performance that saw him beat the Olympic champion in Stockholm last July, Bolt’s last defeat. “I think I can really go out there and do something spectacular,” said Powell. “I just need to run my own race because if I do I will beat him and beat the field. I really want to be the king of sprints because I think I am.”

It is only 14 months since Powell was the 100m world-record holder with 9.74sec, but after Bolt’s performances – twice breaking the 100m world record in Beijing last year – Powell had been written off in some quarters.

He has been called a “choker”, plagued by psychological demons, and he admitted to “giving up” halfway through the last World Championships final in 2007 as he watched Tyson Gay pass him and finish in third place. Powell contests that accusation – “I don’t think I have a psychological problem,” he said, although he conceded that he will need to prove his mettle this summer with a big championship performance.

“I really have a point to prove but it can become a mental problem if you think about it too much, because every year I keep getting injured. I’m always injured and you have to block that out because it affects you when it comes to the major champs.”

This year the 26-year-old has been tormented by injuries – describing his season’s best time of 9.88sec in Rome two weeks ago as “running on one leg” – and he lists a catalogue of complaints. “My knees affected me a lot and I had a problem with my hamstring. I still suffer from this shoulder injury that I had surgery on last year. I’ve a lot of things I’m working on. I’m trying to get back. It’s mainly both knees and my left ankle.”

Despite the setbacks Powell has run under 10 seconds three times already this season. “That’s what keeps me going because I have all these injuries and I can go out there and run below 10 seconds. I know that when I’m healthy I’ll be a force to go up against.”

Powell says he will use tomorrow night’s to show just how fast he can run before the World Championships in Berlin next month. “It’s important to make a statement because you don’t want to go into Berlin not knowing what shape you’re in.

“If you’re going knowing you have run 9.6, 9.7 two, three weeks before, then you know you’re in 9.7 shape so it’s possible for you to go out there and win. But if you’re running 10 flat all the time you know that you’re chances are not that high.”

For Powell to beat Bolt tomorrow night, or in Berlin, he will need to get a good start. Bolt and Gay, leading the 100m rankings so far this year, are notoriously bad getting out of the blocks. But get off to a bad start, warns Powell, and that knowledge could prove a major distraction.

“Usain is not a good starter‚ so if you get out of the blocks and Usain is right beside you, you know that can be trouble for you. If you get out beside him, in your head it will register that you didn’t start well and that can throw off your race a bit. You just have to try and get out there and let him try and catch you.”

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Iceland submits EU membership bid

Ossur Skarphedinsson shakes hands with Carl Bildt on 23 July 2009 (Photo: Gunnar Seijbold/Regeringskansliet)

Iceland has formally applied to join the European Union, the Swedish government has announced.

Iceland’s Foreign Minister, Ossur Skarphedinsson, handed over the request to his Swedish counterpart, Carl Bildt, during a ceremony in Stockholm.

Sweden currently holds the EU’s rotating six-month presidency.

Last week, Iceland’s parliament voted to join the 27-state bloc. The bid must now be approved by the EU, after which Icelanders vote on it in a referendum.

"This is the day when I have the historic duty to hand in formally the Icelandic application to the European Union," Mr Skarphedinsson said at the ceremony in the Swedish foreign ministry on Thursday.

Mr Bildt said that having Iceland within the EU would enhance its "Nordic dimension". </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Pirates’ treasure

At the Borlange music festival

Newsnight’s Matt Prodger visits Sweden’s Peace and Love music festival in Borlange to investigate what it is about the Swedes that has put them at the heart of a raging debate about internet freedom.

For 24-hour party people a visit to the land of the midnight sun is a must. For one thing, the Swedes are serious when it comes to having fun – and at this time of year the sun never sets.

"The Pirate Party doesn’t want to be perceived as a bunch of computer hackers that just want to download the latest Angelina Jolie movie for free"

Katrine Kielos, Aftonbladet columnist

And so it is that I find myself at the Peace and Love festival in Borlänge long after bedtime, negotiating a sea of tents which stretches far into the blood-red glow of a night-long dusk .

I am here to try to find out what it is about Swedes that has put them at the heart of a raging debate about internet freedom.

It is estimated – but nobody really knows – that at least one in 10 Swedes swap music illegally via BitTorrent file-sharing websites like Sweden’s notorious Pirate Bay, and it is thought that in 2008, some 15m films were illegally downloaded here.

‘Sharing is caring’

Sitting in the shelter of a waist-high pile of beer crates I find my target demographic – a group of music-loving festival-goers.

Out of the five of them, three voted for the Pirate Party in this year’s European elections, helping to put a representative, Christian Engström, into the European Parliament.

Rick Falkvinge

Twenty-year-old Erik Lennermo explains why he voted for the Pirate Party.

"Civil rights. Everybody has a right of privacy for their own e-mails, SMS messages and phone calls. File-sharing is just a small bit of the whole cake."

His friend Daniel Gustavsson’s support for the Pirate Party is more straightforward: "I just care about the file-sharing," he says. "Sharing is caring."

Such views have propelled the country into what Swedish MP Camilla Lindberg describes as the biggest political debate for 20 years.

At its heart is a controversial law passed in parliament last year.

Known as the FRA Law, in honour of the Swedish electronic intelligence agency, equivalent to Britain’s GCHQ, it permits the monitoring of international phone calls, e-mail and internet traffic.

Some of the world’s most powerful computers will scan all cross-border e-traffic in real time for a quarter of a million trigger words and phrases that the security services believe warrant further investigation.

And it can be done without judicial oversight.

Anti-terror necessity

In the UK the Home Office recently put out to consultation proposals which would give GCHQ similar powers.

Erik Lennermo

Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt told Newsnight the law is directed not at file-sharers, but terrorists:

"I think we struck a clear balance between integrity… and security," he said.

"Take for instance a bomb blowing up in Stockholm or London – a lot of the electorate would ask me ‘What did you do [to prevent it]‘

"For a long time we haven’t seen such things in Sweden, and then it’s very easy to say we don’t need (the FRA Law). But I have to take a long-term responsibility."

Popular support

But that argument does not wash with Pirate Party founder Rick Falkvinge, who advocates reforming copyright laws to allow free file-sharing, downloading, and the right to copy everything from the latest Hollywood blockbuster to patented pharmaceuticals.

"The thing is you can’t just monitor some internet traffic," he told me. "In order to find out what you want to see you need to see all of it. It’s not about swapping music as such. It’s about the Big Brother society that is being set up using the excuse of catching file-sharers.

Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt

"We know where this road ends, even though each step of the way can be justified, because so many societies have been down it before."

To make the point, activists deluged Swedish parliamentarians with copies of George Orwell’s totalitarian satire 1984 ahead of last year’s vote.

Yet among MPs in the ruling coalition, only Camilla Lindberg of the Liberal People’s Party voted against the wiretapping law.

"Two weeks before the vote last year we had big demonstrations, 10,000 people here," she says, pointing at the parliament building in Stockholm.

"Each MP got thousands of emails… suddenly I realised I’m not the only one against this. It’s people from the left and right, young and old feel the same thing."

But why Sweden Part of it is, of course, the country’s technological prowess.

While Finland has Nokia, Sweden gave us Ericsson. Swedes enjoy some of the highest – and fastest – rates of connectivity in the world, a development that has been spurred by necessity because of the country’s sparsely populated geography.

Cultural differences

And then there is Sweden’s liberal culture, part of which is the principle of Allemansratten.

"Allemansratten means everyone’s right. It’s an important part of Swedish culture and identity," Katrine Kielos, a columnist on Sweden’s best-selling daily tabloid Aftonbladet, explained to me.

"We are going to put the record industry out of business… we are very much looking forward to that"

Pirate Party founder Rick Falkvinge

"It means that the law of trespass is very weak in Sweden, so you have the right to access somebody’s property in a way that is not possible in other countries."

Ms Kielos’ tutorial in Allemansratten came as we stood together on the roof of Sweden’s historic parliament building.

This would be trespass pretty much anywhere else in the world. Here, the only restriction on my Stockholm rooftop tour is a safety harness.

"The Pirate Party doesn’t want to be perceived as a bunch of computer hackers that just want to download the latest Angelina Jolie movie for free," she said.

"So they’re trying to frame this issue in the way of Allemansratten because this is something that resonates a lot in Swedish culture."

Political kingmaker

According to political analyst Stig-Bjorn Ljunggren if, as expected, the Pirate Party wins seats in the Swedish parliament in elections next year, it could well find itself the kingmaker between the country’s two established political blocs.

"You have two blocks in parliament: one green and red, and one blue. And if a third party comes into parliament they could choose which one of these two parties will form a government.

"They (the Pirate Party) will sell the post of prime minister to the party that gives most to them," he said.

On the roof of the parliament building

And the prime minister has not ruled out doing a deal with the party.

Some musicians and artists, like Abba’s Bjorn Ulvaeus, have spoken out against the Pirate Party, but few will go on the record because the debate is so explosive.

An exception is Alexandar Bard, a musician behind 100 Swedish top 40 hits, and latterly an academic specialising in the internet.

He says file-sharing is killing the Swedish music industry: "Six years ago Sweden was the third biggest producer of music in the world and last year we were only the ninth.

"So today in Sweden it’s impossible to get a recording contract because there are no record companies around to sign with. It means you can’t get paid for making music and you can’t get a budget to make music.

"File-sharing is not a big issue politically, it’s not like climate change or the environment. And the Pirate Party has turned it into a big issue to win votes."

But Pirate Party founder Mr Falkvinge is unrepentant.

"We are going to put the record industry out of business", he says. "And we are very much looking forward to that."

And like the Vikings of yore, the pirates’ philosophy has spread far and wide. Independent pirate parties have sprung up in dozens of countries across the world. It is now a global battle.

Watch Matt Prodger’s film in full on Newsnight on Wednesday 22 July 2009 at 10.30pm on BBC Two, then on the Newsnight website.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Cenk Uygur: What’s Wrong with the Media?

Two different articles came out today on healthcare reform. One is in Politico and the other is in The Washington Post. They both do two…

The Juan MacLean & Field Tour

The Juan MacLean and The Field co-headlining a full LIVE band U.S. Tour

Welcome back intelligent dance music, we’ve missed you. – Music OMH, February 2009

The Juan MacLean

After releasing the much anticipated The Future Will Come (due 4/21 on DFA Records), Juan MacLean and Nancy Whang take The Juan MacLean on the road this spring. Juan, Nancy and band will be playing tracks live from The Future Will Come, which Filter magazine described as “perfectly orchestrated and directed to achieve maximum mood and dance-ability.” If the weather doesn’t make you sweat, your dance moves will.

The Juan MacLean is co-headlining the tour with Stockholm’s Axel Willner, aka The Field (Kompakt). After breaking out of the “boy and his laptop” mold following a tour with !!!, Willner teamed up with friends – percussionist/bass player Dan Enqvist and multi-instrumentalist Andreas Söderstrom to see what they could accomplish playing together. Modernizing their kraut rock influences, The Field recorded Yesterday & Today, due out May 19 on Anti- Records.

Co-sponsored by Scion and Nooka Toys, this is one dance party you do not want to miss.
Speaking of Nooka Toys, The Juan MacLean will have their very own Nooka Nooka Toy designed by Mike Vadino, who also designed the album cover for The Future Will Come.

The Juan Maclean and The Field US Tour Dates:

05/21: Cambridge, MA @ Middle East Downstairs

05/22: Philadelphia, PA @ Pure

05/23: Washington, DC @ Black Cat

05/25: Atlanta, GA @ The Earl

05/27: Miami, FL @ Liv @ Fountainbleu

05/29: Austin, TX @ The Mohawk

05/30: Houston, TX @ Numbers

05/31: Lobbock, TX @ Cactus Courtyard

06/03: San Diego, CA @ Casbah

06/04: Pomona, CA @ The Glass House

06/05: Los Angeles, CA @ Avalon Hollywood

06/06: San Francisco, CA @ Mezzanine

06/07: Portland, OR @ Doug Fir Lounge

06/08: Seattle, WA @ Nectar Lounge

06/09: Vancouver, BC @ Richards on Richards

06/11: Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge

06/12: Denver, CO @ Beta

06/13: Aspen, CO @ Belly Up

06/16: Chicago, IL @ Double Door

06/17: Cleveland, OH @ Grog Shop

06/18: Toronto, ON @ Tattoo

06/19: Montreal, QC @ Les Saints