Sunday, 24 August 2008

Police Have Close Shave At Their Last-Ever Concert. By Kurt Loder













NEW YORK � Sting marked the end of the year-and-a-half-long Police reunification tour Thursday night by shaving off his enlistment beard before the marveling eyes of a sold-out house at Madison Square Garden. I think that's what was going on anyway.


After an hour of vintage hits, the bassist and his accumulation of salt-and-pepper facial scrub left the microscope stage � along with bandmates Andy Summers and Stewart Copeland, of course � to wait the traditional audience demand for an encore. After a few minutes, the big television screen supra the phase blinked back on, and we saw Sting, right away fetchingly bare-chested, stretched kO'd in a backstage composition chair piece two women with electric clippers set about abuzz off the famous beard. Out front, the crowd together watched in something like wonder. You could feel their hopes rise afterwards the women reduced the foliage to a small stubble and snicked cancelled their trimmers; and you could finger them lessen again when one of the amateur barbers tight a large handful of shaving cream onto Sting's face and the process continued, this time with razors. I thought to myself, "People will pay to witness anything."


The unanimous ritual took less clip than one might have feared, although more than one would have favourite, and when it was over, the band returned and played for another half minute. After cl shows, they were in top variant. (I would personally make up money to watch Copeland geniusing around on drums in an otherwise vacate room.) The 18,000-some people on hand � who stayed on their feet through the whole concert � loved it loudly.


There was one other unusual moment. It had come in the first place, when, in the midriff of a song, three girls stepped out onto the side of the stage and began shimmying with empty. These were not the sort of dancers unmatched usually sees disporting themselves behind singers who aren't actually telling. No, these were intelligibly civilians. And when they were coupled by deuce boys entrance from the other side of the stage, it became clear that they were all offspring of the stars. It was very sugared. When the song all over and the kids scampered away, Sting stepped to the microphone and aforesaid, "Between us we must have 21 children." Then he aforementioned � and this was the unusual part � "We've been on tour for 30 years." I don't know what anyone else made of this, but I wondered to myself, "What, uh, does he mean by that?"







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Wednesday, 6 August 2008

Neuropharma Reports Last Results On Its Research In Alzheimer's Disease

�Neuropharma, Zeltia's subsidiary, devoted to the
research and development of innovative drugs for the treatment of
neurodegenerative diseases, reported new results in the International Conference
on Alzheimer's Disease, held in Chicago (USA) on July 26-31, 2008.




Dr. Gomez-Isla, Head of Section of Neurology at the Hospital Santa Cruz y San
Pablo, and scientific consultant of Neuropharma, reported in the symposium "Animal
and cellular models" the efficaciousness results of NP-12 in a

Friday, 27 June 2008

Bob Dorough, Bill Takas and Friends

Bob Dorough, Bill Takas and Friends   
Artist: Bob Dorough, Bill Takas and Friends

   Genre(s): 
Pop
   



Discography:


Clankin'on Tin Pan Alley   
 Clankin'on Tin Pan Alley

   Year:    
Tracks: 9




 






Thursday, 19 June 2008

Shy Child

Shy Child   
Artist: Shy Child

   Genre(s): 
Pop
   



Discography:


Noise Won't Stop   
 Noise Won't Stop

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 11




Pete Cafarella (keyboard, vocals) and Nate Smith (drums), both early members of El Guapo, formed Shy Child just now after the 2 moved to New York City. Cafarella had likewise antecedently worked with composer Anthony Braxton, patch Smith had played drums with Touchdown (Troubleman Records). The duo's outset track record, Please Consider Our Time, was granted right release by Montreal's Grenadine Records in 2002, with the Humankind EP following in former 2003. After a brief circuit of Japan in other 2004, Shy Child recorded Matchless With the Sun with producer Chris Zane (Les Savy Fav, Calla), which was released on Say Hey Records in October 2004.






Thursday, 12 June 2008

New Coldplay Album Exceeds Demand For Leona Lewis's Debut LP

Coldplay's new album, 'Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends', looks set to break pre-sale records ahead of its release later this week.



Fans have been ordering a copy every minute at peak periods on one retailer, with current pre-sales outnumbering the rest of the current top-40 combined.



The band's fourth album, which has been produced by Brian Eno and Markus Dravs, is released on Thursday (June 12th).



According to Play, the album has so for received 20% more pre-sales than Leona Lewis – the current recorder holder – had at the same point with her debut album 'Spirit'.



"People talk about the death of the music industry, but this proves that the right title can still break records," said Helen Marquis, the company's head of music.



"We have not seen an album pre-order to quite these levels before,” she added.



'Viva La Vida' was preceded by the single 'Violet Hill', which was downloaded 2million times when it was placed on the band's website for one week at the end of April.



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Friday, 6 June 2008

Lily Allen's TV show fails to attract viewers

Lily Allen's new talk show failed to attract a significant number of viewers, when it aired as part of BBC3's re-launch on Tuesday night.
The pop singer has turned TV presenter with 'Lily Allen and Friends', yet the high profile TV show attracted just 255,000 viewers, around 2% of the audience share according to reports.
The first night guests were Hollywood actor Cuba Gooding Jr and comedian David Mitchell.
Despite the figures a spokeswoman for the digital channel said: "It's a solid start for the show. It's only the first one but it performed really well with the 16-34 age group."
Some audience members were reported to have walked out of the recording because they were so bored.
But Allen, 22, wrote in her MySpace blog: "The audience were great, standing in a hot studio for two hours watching me fluff my lines is not my idea of fun, but they seemed to enjoy it."
She continued: "Due to it being the first show we've done, we ran over a little and naturally a small number of the audience had to catch the last trains back to wherever they came from."
Allen recently suffered a miscarriage and said she was "trying to get back to normality after what has been a rocky start to the year".

Thursday, 29 May 2008

X Factor winner to take on America

Leona Lewis' Number One album 'Spirit' is to be released in the US in the spring.
Billboard reports that the album will be released in the US on 8 April.
Lewis' 'Bleeding Love' video will premiere on American VH1 on 4 February.
The US version of 'Spirit' will feature two new songs: the Akon-written 'Forgive Me' and 'Misses Glass', written and produced by Madd Scientist and RockCity.
Read the review of 'Spirit' here.