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Saturday, October 20, 2012

Waging Heavy Peace by Neil Young – review

Despite being surrounded from an early age by the usual trappings of advanced rock'n'roll hedonism, particularly after his album Harvest became the best seller of 1972, Neil Young has never been your average rock star, and this not your average rock star autobiography. There is a little bit of weed and cocaine – quite a lot, actually, but not flaunted, as it were, under the reader's nose – and some discussion of guitars and the occasional backstage tantrum, but rather more about his son Ben, who was born with cerebral palsy and is quadriplegic, and his own childhood polio and the brain aneurism that attacked him in 2005.

Young is a natural obsessive and a bit cantankerous, which makes an interesting combination. Unlike Bob Dylan, whose Chronicles: Volume One seemed intent on telling the real story, albeit with embellishments and occlusions, he seems uncertain of the core purpose of the project. Young stopped drinking and smoking shortly before starting to write, and it may be that the book represents a sort of displacement therapy. But those drawn over the last half-century to his high, strained voice and doggedly affecting ballads will find plenty here to flesh out their portrait of a man who prefers amplifiers with valves and cars with carburettors, and resents the way today's music is marketed "like a cool pastime or a toy, not a message to the soul".

Having grown up watching his father, a prominent journalist and broadcaster in Canada, tapping out columns for Toronto's Globe and Mail on a typewriter, he has declined to avail himself of a ghostwriter's services. His distinctly unplugged prose can plod along in an artless, ruminative sort of way, or it can – very occasionally – take wing. The style turns out to be as unpredictable a combination of awkwardness and grace as his music, lurching from sudden insights – "the muse has no conscience", he notes, meditating on his readiness to do the dirty work of firing colleagues who fail to meet his standards – to the occasional aside of such startling banality that the reader pauses, searching in vain for a redeeming irony: "California really is beautiful if you've never been there. It's worth a visit for sure." There are lots of exclamation marks, and even an "OMG", which sounds odd coming from the pen of a 66-year-old man.

He begins by describing the act of unwrapping a present from his wife, a rare piece of vintage switchgear for the elaborate model train set he keeps at his principal home, the Broken Arrow Ranch, in northern California (there are other homes in Hawaii and Malibu). He built the train set many years ago with Ben, who is now in his mid-30s. Many of the associated items – locomotives, carriages, accessories – are kept in display cases, whose windows Young carefully polishes.

A couple of pages later he is telling us about a pivotal moment in his life: his purchase of a 1953 Buick Skylark, a car he had desired since his childhood, after seeing one belonging to a friend of his father. "It was brand-new and made a large impression on me," he writes, "with its beautifully designed grille, tail-lights and an overall shape that featured a kind of bump or ripple in the lines at about the midpoint, accentuated by a chrome strip that mirrored it." The coveted Skylark became the centrepiece of a collection that eventually expanded to about 35 cars of character, many of which we meet at some point in his tale, as when he is taking his wife on a first date (baby-blue '49 Cadillac convertible), vainly searching for the location of the TV show 77 Sunset Strip on a first trip to Los Angeles from his Canadian home ('53 Pontiac hearse), or cruising the Hollywood Hills between recording sessions for his first solo album ('34 Mulliner-bodied Bentley coupe).

Soon he moves on to the two matters that seem to have become an even more pressing obsession, and on behalf of which the book occasionally turns into a propaganda vehicle. The first is an audio reproduction system called PureTone, with which he hopes to rescue the recording industry from the digitally compressed sound of the iPod. "Today, music is presented as an entertainment medium, like a game, without the full audio quality," he writes. The second is the Lincvolt, an old Lincoln Continental adapted to run on electricity and ethanol with the intention of demonstrating to auto industry sceptics that if such a beast can be turned into an ecologically neutral device, then anything is possible. The Lincvolt's job is to rescue the planet.

"I put in the money to do it myself," he says of his projects, "and do whatever I need to do to get the money, promise that I will deliver a record and get advances, anything I can do to get the cash to make something happen the way I envision it. So I get into a lot of trouble, although I also get a lot of things done."

His relationship with the digital age provokes his most interesting meditation on his first-hand experience of changes in a musician's relationship with his work and his audience. "Any experiment I try onstage is thrown up on YouTube, where people who think they know what I should be doing start shooting holes in it before it's even finished," he writes. "This is the single most daunting challenge the internet has provided, along with all the good things. The stage used to be my lab, where I could experiment in front of a live audience and see how it reacted and – more important – how I felt while I was doing it … Now I try to work things out in private while I develop ideas. That way I have a chance to present the first time to a large audience. Unfortunately, that is not as adventuresome for me."

None of this has much to do with David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash, the three musicians with whom, in the early 1970s, he toured and recorded as part of what was probably the most popular (and high-earning) band of its time. They are dealt with in a handful of pages that end with a crisp explanation of a break-up largely rooted in his discontent: "But then came the fame, the drugs, the money, houses, cars and admirers; then the solo albums … In the end, it became a celebration of ourselves, and there was no way to keep that going."

For all Young's engagement with serious issues, Waging Heavy Peace is not without its reminders that he achieved his celebrity during an easily satirised time of excessive reward and immoderate self-indulgence. When an aide calls to break the news that his beloved customised tour bus, known as Pocahontas, has caught fire and burnt out, he has its remains conveyed to his ranch and buried in a eucalyptus grove.


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World music: the globe-shaped vinyl record by Yuri Suzuki

"DJs are always arguing about which medium is better, vinyl or laptop," says designer Yuri Suzuki when I meet him in his studio in Hackney, a small room full of electrical parts, tools and shelves groaning under a weighty vinyl collection. "I wanted to make a point about music being something physical."

His latest work to make this point takes the form of a glossy black globe, clamped in a metal vice. It looks like a ball of dark matter, an oily orb held in suspended animation, something mined from the depths of space awaiting testing.

Suzuki presses a button and the orb begins to spin, emitting a crackly sequence of noises, as if the globe is channelling some garbled communication from a distant galaxy.

This is The Sound of the Earth, a spherical vinyl record. It is played by a stylus that runs longitudinally down the side of the globe, tracking a continuous groove that spirals around the circumference from pole to pole. On its journey, as it scans across the continents subtly inscribed on the black surface, it plays a surreal mashup of field recordings taken by Suzuki on his travels, along with fragments of national anthems and folk music from around the world.

"I'm always travelling," says Suzuki – just back from Sweden before jetting off to Belgium, followed by Oslo, Lausanne and Tokyo. "I take a dictaphone wherever I go, and this project was a way of bringing all these sounds together."

A film about The Sound of the Earth by Alice Masters

He has been working on the idea for the last three years, developing software that allows him to map the sounds on to the 3D surface, and recently devised a spherical track cutting machine with the help of engineers in Tokyo.

The project follows on from a series of works that play with the physical properties of music, an interest that came out of an accident with his laptop.

"A few years ago my hard drive crashed and I lost my entire 500Gb music collection," he grins, looking surprisingly liberated by the idea. "From then on, music held in physical objects seemed safer."

His graduation project from the Royal College of Art comprised a series of studies that looked at different ways of playing conventional records. Sound Chaser was a Scalextric track made from pieces of old vinyl, around which little stylus cars could run. His Finger Player allowed you to play records through a stylus strapped to your finger, letting users feel the sounds they were playing.

Since graduating in 2008, he has gone on to build everything from animation machines to dancing robots, as well as a room-sized contraption that put together a cooked breakfast from scratch.

"Each project is trying to educate people about the way things work," says Suzuki, although it seems that performance outweighs pedagogy in much of his work. As part of his current residency at the Design Museum, he has been developing an electronics kit for children in the form of an interlocking puzzle that explains the principles behind circuit boards, as well as a radio whose electronics are based on the layout of the London tube map.

So what's next?

"I get approached by really strange clients all the time, wanting really crazy things," he says, somewhat nervously. "Sometimes I wish I could fix on one direction."

I hope he doesn't. The power of Yuri Suzuki's work lies in his promiscuous appetite to cross disciplines – from electronics to film-making, performance art to education – using these multiple media to bring us his uniquely sideways view of the world.


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Thursday, October 18, 2012

Prophet TB Joshua: Doubts Over Miracles, Prophecies, Source Of Power And Other Activities

Prophet TB Joshua: Doubts Over Miracles, Prophecies, Source Of Power And Other Activities

Again, Prophet TB Joshua was in the news recently for another controversy. This minister and his organisation; The Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN) remain the most controversial Christian personalities in the world today. There are doubts over their emergence, miracles, prophecies, source of power and other activities.

In fact, every action of this prophet or any news from his synagogue is always received with suspicion by the Christian community, the media and even unbelievers. So, few weeks ago, when Adelaide Tawiah; the wife of the Ghanaian former premier league goalkeeper Richard kingson was reported to have confessed on a television programme organised by Joshua that she was a witch and was responsible for spiritually sabotaging her husband’s football carrier and also rendering him impotent, I knew it was going to be another ‘rain of bashes’ for the Arigidi-Akoko born self-styled preacher. Kingson who has previously played in the Premier League for Birmingham , Wigan and Blackpool, has failed to find a new club since being released from Bloomfield Road last year and has also lost his place in the Ghana national team.

The couple went to be prayed for and as the prophet was casting out the ‘evil spirit’ from Mrs Kingson, she fell down and began to confess, “I messed up Richard’s life ever since we got married. I used my evil powers to trouble his career, I’ve been working on him spiritually to the point he could not perform in bed,” Imagine that! On television! Before her husband and the congregation! Before the whole world! She has since denied being a witch or responsible for her husband’s misfortunes. She said she was spiritually manipulated by TB to make those confessions. She says she has been very supportive of her husband’s carrier and never worked against him. Kingson has also denied that his wife is a witch. But all these are coming late because the damage has already been done.

Remember this is the same woman who saved Kingson from shame in 2006 when she advised him not to take a $300,000 bribe to let in two goals during a match against the Czech Republic at the 2006 World Cup in Germany . This tempting amount was against the paltry sum of $8,000 that was the winning bonus for the match. She told her husband not to involve in such dirty deal because her love for him is not for money. She has also stressed that her husband knows how inspirational she has been to his goalkeeping career.

Prophet Temitope Balogun Joshua, fondly called TB Joshua is not new controversies. Remember, when Chris Oyakhilome visited him sometime ago. That singular action caused so much uproar in the Nigeria Christian circles and the media promptly feasted on it. The ‘vibrations’ from that crisis dictated the headlines for the major newspapers and magazines for so many weeks. The Nigerian Christians were confused.

Though they had permanently placed TB as a false prophet, but they didn’t know what to do with Chris Oyakhilome; who later claimed that he shares the same father-in-the- lord with TB, and was going to the synagogue to learn healing from the prophet. This shook the whole nation. Many ministers of the gospel reacted. People like Chris Okotie chided Oyakhilome and also began to dissect TB’s operations; describing him as a high occult manipulator. Trust him to use known and unknown words to drive home this point. It was virtually media a war between them. I still remember some of those headlines: ‘The War of the Chrises’, ‘Crisis of the Chrises’, ‘Oyakhilome Replies Okotie’, etc.

It was later that we were made to know that the publicity given to the Oyakhilome’s visits to the Synagogue was arranged by TB and his media assistants. The same people that did the ‘work’ are now saying so. Have you watched the video produced by one Bisi and Agomoh? Bisi said she was the head of TB’s media team and Agomoh, the former Deputy to the prophet. The pictures and the confession in this video are simply shocking, revealing, unbelievable and unprintable.

Nigerian Fake Pastors and Church Businesses Exposed- Video

They graphically, in details, with clips, pictures narrated how this man abuses women; whites, blacks, minors, choir members, sisters of same parents, wives of his workers and pastors, etc. Even Bisi confessed she was also mercilessly, thoroughly abused, used, manipulated and rendered useless by this man. She showed her pictures when she came newly to the synagogue and the ones while leaving to show how she was virtually turned into a ghost through sexual abuse and spiritual manipulation.

They also revealed how the so-called miracles and healings take place in the synagogue, how people are hired to do fake confessions, the media manipulations, how they arrange words of knowledge and wisdom, the source of the man’s power and influence, his hatred for true ministers of the gospel; how he marches on their pictures making powerful incantations against them.

They also talked about his hit squads, rituals, deceits, hatred for whites, love for money, etc. I mean on video. It is a must-watch. And remember these are his erstwhile confidants. Insiders! You will get very very angry in the spirit after watching the video. I watched it objectively, comparing it with other facts that I have. And if these things are fake, why have the producers not been sued for defamation up till now?? But are these men truly fake prophets or anti-Christ?

How do you know a fake prophet or a fake place of worship?? We will continue next week, God bless!


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The Bad Plus: Made Possible – review

Made Possible is at once vintage Bad Plus in its striking themes, nonchalant time-bends and full-on collective improv, and proof of this awesome ensemble's continuing evolution. All the tracks are originals, apart from the late drummer Paul Motian's poignant Victoria, and there's some limited, but telling, use of electronics. The opening Pound for Pound is a classic slow-burn, unveiled minimally by pianist Ethan Iverson before he starts answering the inquiries of his right hand line with his left, and winds up in a chord storm driven by David King's implacable drumming. Seven Minute Mind is a dazzling rhythm game for a walking ostinato stabbed and chipped at by repeating single notes. Sing for a Silver Dollar mixes an anthemic melody, abstract-improv bass from Reid Anderson, slow funk and a lyrical ending, while In Stitches is a meditation in broken chords that King quietly develops into a drum'n'bass groove. On the wild collective finale, the group wind up sounding as integrated in free-fall as the Necks.


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Wyclef Jean got a bike for his birthday! Let's get naked and celebrate!

Lost in Showbiz is now so used to reporting the unlikely ways celebrities chose to celebrate events in their lives it has become sadly jaded about the whole topic. It remembers a distant past, when it was slightly taken aback by the news that Hollyoaks' Jamie Lomas had spent his stag weekend handcuffed to a dwarf who had been blacked up and dressed like The A-Team's Mr T – blacking up a dwarf feeling a little like the kind of thing that might have passed for entertainment in a less enlightened era, eg about 1852 – but that was then.


So it was delighted this week to learn of two events that have restored a certain degree of WTF? to the celebrity celebration. First, we must turn to the 43rd birthday of rapper Wyclef Jean. He has, as you may already know, been having a rather testing time of it recently. A continuing New York attorney general's investigation has found financial improprieties at Yéle, the charity he set up in order to benefit Haiti. The forensic audit found that, of $3m of the charity's expenses, $256,580 went in illegitimate benefits to Wyclef and other Yéle board and staff members as well as improper or potentially improper transactions, including $24,000 for Wyclef's chauffeur services and $30,763 for a private jet that took Lindsay Lohan to a benefit gig that raised only $66,000. There was some good news: apparently the audit thought that it was "appropriate" for Wyclef to charge his own charity $100,000 for an appearance at a Monaco fund-raiser because that was his going rate.


Still, it's the kind of thing that might conceivably put a dampener on your birthday celebrations, so LiS was delighted to see that nothing could be further from the truth. Instead, the rapper marked the arrival of his 43rd year with a quiet dignity befitting a gentleman now entering middle age: by posing for a photograph naked, except for a pair of bikini briefs and what appears to be a slick of baby oil, astride a large Ducati motorbike. Of course, the carping voices were soon to be heard, loudly trumpeting the suggestion that tweeting a photo of yourself on your 43rd birthday astride a large motorbike, oiled-up and naked except for a bikini briefs etc etc was an action symptomatic of a man utterly devoid of any sense of taste or decency. To which LiS can only respond: his bikini briefs matched the stars-and-stripes pattern of his motorbike! What greater evidence of great taste – of aesthetic judgment – do you need? It also liked the accompanying message: "U can't keep a good man down! Keep a smile when they want you to frown!" Good for "u", Wyclef! Don't let "them" make you all "sadface" – say, with a load of gloomy stuff about how the Cité Soleil slum that Yéle was supposed to revitalise remains a slum, while employees of the charity managed to spend nearly $500,000 on food and drink and $375,000 on "landscaping" their office in one year alone! Get the baby oil out and celebrate!


But even the news of Wyclef's birthday celebration is cast into the shade by the saga of Jack Osbourne's stag do. This apparently took place in Las Vegas's Palazzo Hotel – so far, so normal. "I was kidnapped," reveals Osbourne. Well, of course you were. Let LiS guess: you ended up tied to a lamppost dressed like Wyclef Jean in his birthday photo? Apparently not. "My friends flew out some guys from counter-terrorism squadrons in the UK. I was tortured and waterboarded." Oh. Right.


Of course, Osbourne is entitled to celebrate the end of his bachelorhood in whatever way he chooses. Nevertheless, LiS respectfully suggests that if you want to spend your stag night being screamed at and brutalised, there's no need to fly in "guys from counter-terrorism". Simply do as some friends of Lost in Showbiz did, and walk through one of Blackpool's lairier streets on a Friday night in fancy dress, become embroiled in an increasingly frank "exchange of views" with some local gentlemen who seem a little the worse for drink, and enjoy the subsequent trip to casualty, concussion etc.


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Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Hear The D.O.T's new album And That

Reading this on mobile? Click here to listen

Over the last year or so, Mike Skinner and Rob Harvey (previously of underrated Leeds band the Music) have been making music together. This being a Skinner project, of course, the results have mainly been contained in a series of beautifully shot online video diary pieces. Until now, that is, because next week sees the release of And That, the pair's debut album.

Featuring guest appearances from Detroit rapper Danny Brown and Clare Maguire (You Never Asked) and a laidback Balearic vibe on the likes of opener And a Hero, the album contains a mix of dance production and classic pop songwriting.

Have a listen using the widget above and let us know your thoughts in the comments below.


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South African rapper Jub Jub found guilty of murder

One of South Africa's foremost hip-hop musicians has been convicted of murdering four schoolchildren while street racing, drunk and on drugs, through Soweto.

Molemo "Jub Jub" Maarohanye and his friend Themba Tshabalala were found guilty on four counts of murder and two of attempted murder after their speeding Mini Coopers ploughed into the children as they walked back from school in the Johannesburg township in March 2010.

"The death of the deceased was caused by the accuseds' reckless driving at high speeds while under the influence of drugs and alcohol," said the judge, Brian Nemavhidi. The pair could face life in prison.

A TV personality and music star, Maarohanye appeared emotionless as he heard the verdict, which was broadcast live on television. The mother of one of the victims passed out during the proceedings and had to be carried from the court.


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