Thursday, 26 June 2008
Link Wray
Artist: Link Wray
Genre(s):
Rock
Discography:
The Original Rumble Plus 22 Other Storming Guitar Instrumentals
Year: 2004
Tracks: 23
Original Swan
Year: 1995
Tracks: 31
Link Wray may never come into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, simply his donation to the voice communication of rockin' guitar would still be a major one, even if he had ne'er walked into another studio apartment after cutting "Rumble." Quite simply, Link Wray invented the power chord, the major modus operandi of modern rock guitarists. Listen to whatever of the tracks he recorded 'tween that landmark instrumental in 1958 through his Swan recordings in the early '60s and you'll try the blueprints for grievous metal, thrash, you key it. Though rock historians incessantly like to draw a overnice, clean agate line betwixt the ill-shapen galvanizing guitar work that fuels early vapours records to the late-'60s Hendrix-Clapton-Beck-Page-Townshend crime syndicate, with no stops in 'tween, a nimble spin of whatever of the sides Wray recorded during his prosperous decade punches holes in that theory proper quick. If a direct line canful be traced forrard from a disastrous blues musician crankin' up his amp and playing with a long ton of fierceness and aggressiveness to a cy Young white hombre doing a mutated form of same, the line points straight to Link Wray, no competition. Pete Townshend summed it up for more than guitarists than he believably completed when he said, "He is the king; if it hadn't been for Link Wray and "'Rumble,'" I would have never picked up a guitar."
Everything that was handed down to today's current craw of headbangers from the likes of Led Zeppelin and the Who potty be traced back to the guy from Dunn, NC, wHO started out in 1955 transcription for Starday as a fellow member of Lucky Wray & the Palomino Ranch Hands. You see, back in the early '50s, it was a different ball game altogether. Rock & undulate hadn't suit a national event in the United States yet, and if you were edward Young and andrew D. White and wanted to be in the music business, you had deuce avenues for possible calling moves. You could be a pop-mush balladeer like Perry Como or a bushwhacker isaac Bashevis Singer like the tardy Hank Williams, and that was around it. With country music all around him as a youth in North Carolina, the selection was obvious; Wray united forces with his brothers Vernon and Doug, forming Lucky Wray & the Lazy Pine Wranglers, later ever-changing the band name to the spiffier-sounding Palomino Ranch Hands. By the end of 1955, they had resettled out-of-door of Washington, D.C., and added Shorty Horton on basso. With Link, Horton, and brothers Doug and Vernon ("Lucky," named after his gaming fortunes) handling drums and lead vocals respectively, they fell in with some local songwriters, and the results made it to vinyl radical as an EP on the local Kay label, with the rest of the sides being leased to Starday Records downward in Texas.
Simply by 1958, the music had changed, and so had Wray's living. With a lung wanting from a bout with tB during his stint in the Korean War, Link was advised by his doctor to lease brother Vernon do all the vocalizing. So Link started stretch out more and more than on the guitar, coming up with one subservient afterwards another. By this fourth dimension, the band had sweated down to a trinity, and changed its key out to the Ray Men. After a abbreviated flirting as a stripling beau ideal -- changing his key out to Ray Vernon -- the third base Wray chum became the group's producer/manager. Armed with a 1953 Gibson Les Paul, a dinky Premier adenylic acid, an Elvis sneer, and a smutty leather jacket, Link started playacting the local record hops round the D.C. surface area with disc jockey Milt Grant, world Health Organization became his de facto manager. One night during a typical localize, says Link, "They treasured me to play a promenade. I didn't know whatever, so I made nonpareil up. I made up "'Rumble.'"
"Grumbling" was earlier issued on Archie Bleyer's Cadence judge back in 1958, and Bleyer was ready to make it on it when his girl verbalised fervour for the primitive instrumental, locution it reminded her of the rumble scenes in West Side Story. Bleyer renamed it (what its original title was back then, if whatever, is now confused to the mists of time), and "Rumble" jumped to telephone number 16 on the national charts, despite the fact that it was banned from the radio in several markets (including New York City), becoming Wray's theme song tune to this day. But despite the success and ill fame of "Gang fight," it sour out to be Wray's only spillage on Cadence. Bleyer, under attack for putting out a record book that was "promoting teen bunch war," precious to clean Link and the boys up a bit, sending them down to Nashville to cut their side by side session with the Everly Brothers' production team vocation the shots. The Wrays didn't see it that elbow room, so they immediately struck a carry on with Epic Records. Link's followup to "Rumble" was the pound, uptempo "Rawhide." The Les Paul had been swapped for a Danelectro Longhorn model (with the longest neck ever manufactured on a production line guitar), its "lipstick subway" pickups qualification every note of Link's powerfulness chords well-grounded like he was strumming with a atomic number 50 tin chapeau for a break up. The beat and vaporous bleb of it all was enough to get it up to number 23 on the national charts, and every kid world Health Organization wore a black leather jacket crown and owned a hot rod had to have it.
Simply a pattern was emerging that would proceed throughout lots of Wray's early career; the powers that be figured that if they could step him down and dress him up, they'd sell fashion more records in the steal. What all these producers and criminal record execs failed to actualise was the simplest of truths: if Duane Eddy twanged away for andrew Dickson White, teen America, Link Wray played for juvenile overdue hoods, unembellished and simple. By the end of 1960, Wray launch himself in the mucho-confining position of recording with full orchestras, doing shlock like "Danny Boy" and "Claire de Lune." But when these gems failed to chart as well, dealings with Epic came to a close down, and by years' end, Link and Vern formed their possess mark, Rumble Records.
Rumble's trio solitary issues included the original version of Wray's next big run into, "Jack the Ripper." If "Grumbling" sounded like pack war, then "Jackass the Ripper" sounded like a high-speed railcar track, which is exactly what it became the moving picture soundtrack for in the Richard Gere version of Breathless. Link's ampere was recorded at the end of a hotel stairway for maximum echo effect, piece he pumped riffs through it that would go the seeds of a zillion metal songs. After kicking up racket locally for a duo of years, it was sledding through another catamenia of disk jockey spins when Swan Records of Philadelphia picked it up and got it nationwide aid. Certainly Wray was at his to the highest degree prolific during his incumbency with Swan, and label president Bernie Binnick gave Link and Vernon pretty often free draw rein to do what they wanted. Turning the menage chicken coop into a crude, three-track studio, the Wray menage fagged the succeeding decennium recording and experimenting with sounds and styles.
At least at present they could deliver the goods -- or die -- on their possess footing. Most of these sides were chartered out as one shot deals to a trillion microscopic labels under a variety of name calling like the Moon Men, the Spiders, the Fender Benders, etc. What fueled this period of maximum creative thinking is open to contend. A fate of it had to do with the fact that Link and the boys honed their particular brand of rockin' mayhem functional some of the grimiest joints on the face of the major planet when these tracks were cut. When Swan label headman Binnick was questioned as to how he could progeny such wild ass material, he would smile, throw his custody up in the line and read, "What commode you do with an brute like that?"
As the new decennary dawned, Link Wray's sound and image were updated for the hipster market. Wray's career fortunes waxed and waned passim the '70s, a muddle of albums in a laid-back style doing little to enhance his reputation. After a stint financial support '70s rockabilly revivalist Robert Gordon, Wray went solo again, pickings nigh of Gordon's band (including drummer Anton Fig) with him. But if the studio apartment sides were a mo spotty, (Wray recorded several albums in the '80s backed by nil more than a fumbling brake drum machine), he noneffervescent could pack a impact live, and his rare forays on the stages of the universe spreadhead the message that rock & roll's original idle guitar valet de chambre unruffled had plenteousness of gas left in the cooler.
Wray married and moved to Denmark in 1980, recording the digress album for the foreign market, and throughout the 1990s he was still able of burly on a guitar and making it sound nastier than anyone in his sixties had a right to. And his back catalog got a lot attention in the '90s when the stain gyration off, with several young, coxa guitarists citing Wray as an influence, and his early work continued to be reissued under various imprints. He recorded deuce new albums for Ace Records, Shadowman in 1997 and Burry Wire in 2000 and toured up until his death in Copenhagen on November 5, 2005.
Comedian George Carlin dies at 71
Wednesday, 25 June 2008
Lawyers for Queen Latifah, 38, said in a lawsuit filed in Manhattan federal court on Wednesday (June 18) that California-based Perfect Christmas Productions had breached her contract.
The actress - real name Dana Owens - claims she is owed US$275,000 for her cameo appearance in the film.
‘The Perfect Holiday’, which Owens also produced, was released in December 2007. It starred Terrence Howard and Gabrielle Union.
The lawsuit said Perfect Christmas Productions was believed to have been paid several million dollars by third parties for ‘The Perfect Holiday’, which was originally known as Perfect Christmas’.
Photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures.
The Human League
Artist: The Human League
Genre(s):
Rock: Pop-Rock
Rock
Dance: Pop
Discography:
Secrets
Year: 2006
Tracks: 16
Original Remixes and Rarities
Year: 2005
Tracks: 14
Dare - Love and Dancing
Year: 2003
Tracks: 12
The Golden Hour Of The Future
Year: 2002
Tracks: 20
Crash
Year: 1986
Tracks: 10
Hysteria
Year: 1984
Tracks: 10
Love and Dancing
Year: 1982
Tracks: 8
Dare!
Year: 1981
Tracks: 10
Travellogue (Remastered)
Year: 1980
Tracks: 17
Reproduction (Remastered)
Year: 1979
Tracks: 17
The Very Best Of (CD 2)
Year:
Tracks: 11
The Very Best Of (CD 1)
Year:
Tracks: 17
Romantic?
Year:
Tracks: 10
Octopus
Year:
Tracks: 9
 
Conor Oberst announces new UK shows
Tuesday, 24 June 2008
Helene Phillips: The Dynamic Force Behind Dance
visionary with an incredible talent for keeping her body of work
passionate, committed, and most importantly, "real." From performing to
choreographing, to directing, she has contributed to some of the world's
most acclaimed productions!
Helene's credentials speak for themselves.
Beginning in the 1980's, Helene Phillips was quickly named one of the
top dancers of her time. She was one of the original "Solid Gold" dancers
as well as lead dancer in such movies as "Stayin' Alive" with John
Travolta, "Dr. Detroit" with Dan Akroyd, and "Going Berserk" with John
Candy.
This experience opened up many doors for Helene whose career rose to
new levels starting with assistant choreographer on the film, "A Chorus
Line" featuring Michael Douglas. From there, she quickly segued to calling
all the shots on Michael Jackson's 3D film "Captain EO" and working with
Madonna on her "Who's That Girl" world tour.
As a choreographer Helene Phillips was nominated for an Emmy for her
work on "Papa's Angels" starring Scott Bakula and Cynthia Nixon.
Her film, television, and commercial credits are numerous including the
Holiday K-Mart spots with Rosie O' Donnell and Penny Marshall, "Spelling
Bee" starring Charlie Sheen and Anna Faris, and "Mafia" starring Jay Mohr
and Christina Applegate.
Helene Phillips has staged many "live" shows with a line up of stars
as: Eric McCormick, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Thelma Houston and Lesley Ann
Warren.
Some of her music videos are: Karyn White's "Love the Way you Love me,"
Jack Wagner's "Weatherman Says" and the very popular "Walk the Dinosaur" by
Was Not Was. People magazine's review of the video said Helene's
choreography made "insanity fun and sexism sexy."
Bursting with energy and sensuality from the core of her being, Helene
Phillips unlocks an overflow of creative enthusiasm that is contagious!
This year, Helene is going to change the landscape of entertainment.
She is working on a "live" show that internationally is being referred to
as "Revolutionary" and "serving up sexy like never before"!
See the Helene Phillips video.
(http://www.ballantinesbiz.com/forbidden/HelenePhillipsVideo.html)
For more information on Helene Phillips and her upcoming projects,
please contact Cara Morrissey at Ballantines PR.
Cara Morrissey
Ballantines PR
cara@ballantinespr.com
Tel: 310 454 3080
Cell: 310 499 3033
http://www.ballantinespr.com
See Also
Andreas Kremer and Thomas Pogadl
Artist: Andreas Kremer and Thomas Pogadl
Genre(s):
Techno
Discography:
LeichengGĂ‚¤nger (FORM 10-003)
Year: 2002
Tracks: 2
 
Silent Stream Of Godless Elegy
Artist: Silent Stream Of Godless Elegy
Genre(s):
Metal: Death,Black
Metal: Doom
Metal: Gothic
Discography:
Osameli (EP)
Year: 2006
Tracks: 8
Relic Dances
Year: 2004
Tracks: 8
Themes
Year: 2000
Tracks: 12
Behind The Shadows
Year: 1998
Tracks: 12
Iron
Year: 1996
Tracks: 12
 
Celebrities, artists design new versions of plastic ponies for charity
PROVIDENCE, R.I. - The stars of ABC's "Boston Legal" are taking a break from the lives of their oversexed, ego-driven characters to channel sunshine and rainbows.
William Shatner, James Spader and Candice Bergen are among the celebrities and artists who have agreed to design some new versions of My Little Pony, the plastic toy that has captivated girls since the 1980s.
Pawtucket-based Hasbro Inc. will auction the special ponies for the Give Kids The World charity as part of a celebration of the toy's 25th anniversary.
The pastel-coloured ponies - with names like Rainbow Dash and Daybreak - usually sport decorations on their hindquarters, often of hearts, balloons or stars. The celebrities and artists were given blank, 46-centimetre versions of the usually 10-centimetre-tall ponies to decorate, Hasbro spokesman Dan Benkwitt said.
Other designers include Grammy-winning singer LeAnn Rimes, 1980s teen idol Deborah Gibson and actor Danny Aiello, known for his roles in "Moonstruck" and "Do the Right Thing."
Artists designing ponies include illustrator Catalina Estrada from Spain, New York graffiti artist-turned-designer Claw Money and Japanese manga artist Junko Mizuno.
A pony designed by Estrada was expected to be unveiled at a collectors' fair this weekend in Providence, Benkwitt said. The others will be unveiled during a gallery event in Manhattan in September, when they also will be auctioned.
Benkwitt said Bergen and Aiello agreed to design ponies because of their support of the charity that provides vacations at central Florida theme parks for children with life-threatening illnesses and their families. Bergen then got the cast members of "Boston Legal" involved.
See Also
Cachao Y Su Conjunto
Artist: Cachao Y Su Conjunto
Genre(s):
Other
Discography:
Descarga Guajira
Year: 2005
Tracks: 9
 
Andy C and Shimon
Illustrator Tasha Tudor dead at 92
Children's book illustrator Tasha Tudor, whose whimsical drawings of country outings, gardens and family life in rural New England echoed her own picturesque lifestyle, has died. She was 92.
Tudor, who illustrated such classics as "Little Women" and "The Secret Garden," died Wednesday at her home, surrounded by her family and friends, according to a statement posted on her Web site. Her death was confirmed by Atamaniuk Funeral Home in Brattleboro, which was handling the arrangements.
"She was ahead of her time, but she lived in the past," said Jill Adams-Mancivalano, a longtime friend.
Tudor, who quit school after eighth grade, wrote or collaborated on nearly 100 children's books after making her debut with "Pumpkin Moonshine" in 1938. Besides "The Secret Garden," she illustrated "The Night Before Christmas" and wrote books of her own, including "Corgiville Fair."
Her home in this southern Vermont town was a replica of a 19th-century New England homestead, replete with antique utensils, tiny windows and doorways of varying sizes. In later life, she burnished her reputation among fans with her gardening, weaving and sewing exploits.
She made her own clothing - fashioned after 19th-century apparel - and raised Nubian goats for their milk.
Adams-Mancivalano, whose family farm in nearby Wilmington hosted open-to-the-public birthday parties and other events in which Tudor held forth with fans, called her a witty, engaging homebody who loved to insert friends, family members and little details of her own life into her work.
"Just to watch her draw - the detail and the whimsy that she had in her later life was just incredible. I asked her about that one time, how her work has evolved, and her comment to me was, 'Well, my eyesight is starting to fail, and I don't have the perfection I used to,' so she'd add more stuff."
Her family said an online memorial on her Web site was open for fans to share their feelings and memories of her. The address is http://www.tashatudorandfamily.com.
See Also
Jimi Hendrix - Hendrix Guitar To Be Auctioned
The guitar that JIMI HENDRIX set fire to at the London Astoria in 1967 is to be put up for auction.
It is thought to be the first guitar that the ELECTRIC LADYLAND star sent up in flames, an act that would go on to become his trademark, reports Uncut.
After being in storage for 40 years, the 1965 Fender Stratocaster is to go under the hammer this summer.
Hendrix's former manager Tony Garland remembered the event, saying: "When I arrived there was a discussion about setting fire to his guitar.
"So I went and got some lighter fuel and let them do what they wanted to do.
"Jimi was sensational. I can still remember the way his hands moved across the strings. People can do the notes... it's how you play them, the individual."
Showbiz Spy has reported that Jimi's cousin Riki recently broke his pelvis and punctured a lung after falling from scaffolding.
23/06/2008 10:06:46
See Also