Buzz
David Nice
No one's saying that the mezzo of the moment, glamorous Latvian Elina Garanca, isn't a very class act indeed when it comes to high-quality opera, song and even zarzuela. But she didn't revert to the Age of Aquarius too successfully in this ill-advised TV show appearance, clearly not having visited Hair when it was on in London. The only protest here might have been from the hapless spectators. And the look makes Kiri as Michael Jackson on her Blue Skies album cover seem dignified. Below, Elina Garanca sings "Aquarius" from Hair {youtube}MMMe9gp1b4o {/youtube} So let's be fair, and see Read more ...
Kieron Tyler
Don Kirshner in 2007
The death of Don Kirshner on 17 January at age 76 is a reminder that although the age of the New York-based song factory seems to be long gone, pop is still about the backroom. Where would Lady Gaga be without a producer/songwriter like Red One? What Kirshner established with his music publishing company Aldon went way beyond getting songs to the performers. He set a template that still resonates through pop.Music publishers don’t have pop-star glamour or rock-star chic. Headline-grabbing bad behaviour is often confined to contractual wrangling. Back in the Fifties and Sixties – before The Read more ...
Adam Sweeting
Tom Waits: Bringing hope to the homeless
Tom Waits is releasing his poem, Seeds on Hard Ground, in a limited-edition "chap book" format (a chap book being a pocket-sized booklet popular in the 17th and 18th centuries). It will be available exclusively through his website in a collaboration with ANTI- Records, with the aim of raising funds for homeless services in his region of northern California and bringing attention to a growing homelessness problem in today's difficult economic circumstances. The poem is available to read in its entirety here.The poem is described as "a long lyrical ballad in the voices of those who walked Read more ...
Russ Coffey
Go4: Still angry after all these years
A freezing winter of discontent, a Labour party hell-bent on making itself unelectable, controversial warmongering and record levels of inequality. It may sound like yesterday’s papers but these themes were also addressed by iconoclastic post-punk artrockers Gang of Four in the late Seventies and early Eighties, more than 10 years before the Manics brought agit rock to the masses. Next Monday Gang of Four release Content, their first original album in 16 years.With their dance-friendly bass mated to Wilko Johnson-style guitar, Gang of Four were famously an influence on acts ranging from Read more ...
fisun.guner
'Powerless Structures, Fig. 101': Elmgreen & Dragset's rocking-horse winner
The title may suggest it’s a difficult conceptual work, but Powerless Structures, Fig 101, by Nordic duo Elmgreen & Dragset, had appeared to win the popular vote for the Fourth Plinth from the outset. And rather than being difficult, it is, in fact, an immediately appealing and cheekily uplifting image of a boy riding his rocking horse. It was unveiled by Mayor Boris Johnson earlier today as one of two winners of the Fourth Plinth commission for 2012 and 2013. The second winner is German artist Katharina Fritsch’s Hahn / Cock (pictured below), which will see a giant cock in Read more ...
Adam Sweeting
Steve Buscemi in 'Boardwalk Empire', having it large in 1920s Atlantic City
Sky hasn't generally been synonymous with top TV drama, but its new channel, Sky Atlantic HD, is aiming to change that. Launching on 1 February, the channel has been built around Sky's deal with the American HBO network, which means viewers will get access to the entire history of The Sopranos, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Six Feet Under, Sex and the City and The Wire.New HBO product such as Treme (about New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina) and the Prohibition-era gangster series Boardwalk Empire (starring Steve Buscemi and with a pilot episode directed by Martin Scorsese) will Read more ...
Ismene Brown
A European Literature Brainstorming meeting is being held on 25 January in London involving publishers, editors and critics from the UK books industry who took part in the EU trip to Brussels I reported on earlier this month, to take forward the ideas and needs that were generated. The idea is to get more people in different countries able to read other nations' best books.Booksellers, publishers, poets, critics, festival directors, literary editors and librarians were among the group who want to discuss generating more liaison between them and other European countries’ books industries. Read more ...
Peter Culshaw
Jessie J from Essex has won the BBC Sound Of 2011 Poll, voted by 160 artists, DJs and other tastemakers approved by the BBC. From its launch in 2003 when 50 Cent topped the poll, it has had a remarkable knack of predicting and being a catalyst for pop success.Women have now topped the poll for five of the last six years – Jessie J (pictured, left) follows in the footsteps of Corinne Bailey Rae, Adele, Little Boots and Ellie Goulding (Mika won in 2007), leaving hotly tipped dubstep crossover act James Blake and goth-indie band Esben and the Witch, both tipped by theartsdesk in the dust. Read more ...
Ismene Brown
The specialist book supplier Dance Books is finally closing up, due to the ill health of its longtime proprietor. David Leonard’s little shop long embellished Cecil Court, one of the alleys of literature off Charing Cross Road, London, until 10 years ago he moved out to a former bakery in Hampshire focusing on publishing Dance Now, the last serious dance magazine of ideas, and mail order books retail.Though Dance Now closed two years ago, the company has continued and says it will continue to publish and distribute specialist dance volumes, which currently range from creative insights into Read more ...
David Nice
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart gets the full-works treatment
...your true love might do worse than bung over a brace of concertos. Which is what BBC Radio 3 is doing on "piano day" as it nears the halfway mark of its 12-day Mozart marathon. Is it a good idea? Does any composer, even Bach, stand up to the complete treatment, hour after hour?Well, the main point is that people are talking about it, which has always been Radio 3 supremo Roger Wright's brief in previous projects (the Beethoven experience included popular downloads of the symphonies that broke all records, so to speak). More than a little Mozart is, of course, good for the health, as Read more ...
Jasper Rees
'It's a face, that's for sure': Pete Postlethwaite on his natural features
Pete Postlethwaite, who has died from cancer at the age of 64, was an extremely amicable man whom Hollywood had down as a lugubrious baddie. It happened in Aliens 3, in The Usual Suspects, in The Lost World: Jurassic Park.You could see Hollywood's point. His greying itinerant preacher's hair flailed behind him wildly. His green irises blazed bright around pupils the size of pinpricks. And then there were the cheekbones jutting beneath them. "They are quite whopping, aren't they?" volunteered their owner when I met him. "Who was it said, 'He looks like he's got a clavicle stuck in his mouth Read more ...
Veronica Lee
Fans of BBC Three’s Lip Service have been given an extra seasonal gift in the form of confirmation by the BBC that a second series has been commissioned. The Glasgow-based drama about a group of twentysomething lesbians and their intertwined lives was created by Harriet Braun, who said she was delighted to be working again with Laura Fraser, Heather Peace, Ruta Gedmintas and the rest of the cast. “I am incredibly happy to be given this opportunity to take the characters forward and to allow all of our loyal viewers a chance to get to know them even better,” she said. “I've got some great Read more ...