Sunday, December 31, 2006

Beatles finally get 'stamp' of approval in Britain

LONDON, England (Reuters) -- The Beatles are set to feature on British postage stamps for the first time, the Royal Mail said on Thursday. Some 37 years after the world's most famous pop group broke up, Britain's Royal Mail will release a set of six stamps on January 9 depicting iconic Beatles' album covers. The stamps "celebrate the Beatles' extraordinary cultural contribution to Britain," the Royal Mail said. The featured albums are "With the Beatles," "Help!," the groundbreaking 1966 album "Revolver," "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," "Abbey Road" -- with its famous photograph of the band walking across the street -- and "Let it Be," released in 1970 after the group disbanded. The Fab Four from Liverpool conquered the world in the 1960s, becoming the most successful pop group in history. John Lennon was murdered in New York in 1980 while George Harrison died of cancer in 2001. The surviving members are Ringo Starr and Paul McCartney, who is locked in a bitter divorce battle with Heather Mills.

Copyright 2006 Reuters.

© CNN

Rod Stewart honoured and overjoyed by his CBE

London, Dec 31 : The New Year is sure to start of on a good note for British rocker Rod Stewart, for not only is he getting set to tie the knot with fiancie Penny Lancaster, but he has just been honoured with a CBE. The 61-year old rocker learnt about the honour while holidaying with his family in Palm Beach, Florida and said that he was "overjoyed" by it. "It is a great honour and I am overjoyed. Although I am living in America, I am very proud to be British. We will be celebrating the good news later today," The Sun quoted him, as saying. Stewart's elder brother Don revealed that the singer was "chuffed to bits" by the honour. "Rod is chuffed to bits and will embrace the gong with open arms. In my opinion it is a bit overdue, considering all the other musicians who have been honoured over the years. He was beaming with pride when he shared his happy news with me," Don Stewart said. However, while frontrunners for a knighthood were former England soccer captain David Beckham and Beatles legend Ringo Starr, both men unfortunately didn't make the list, which also featured Zara Phillips, a name very familiar to the British monarch, for the lady in question happens to be her granddaughter. Zara Philips will be receiving an an MBE for services to equestrianism. It is the first time a senior royal has figured in the New Year list.

--- ANI


© ANI

Paul McCartney Shuts Down Heather: Locks Mills Out Over Art

Paul McCartney and Heather Mills McCartney's divorce is getting even uglier. The estranged pair are now reportedly battling over the art and other reports claim that Paul has shut down Heather Mills by locking her out of her house just days after Christmas. According to those reports Paul recovered $19.5 million worth of pictures, including paintings by Pablo Picasso and Pierre-Auguste Renoir were removed from a lodge house at the former Beatle's Sussex, England estate amid "security fears" for the works. Mills discovered the paintings were missing when she returned to the lodge as part of her Christmas and New Year celebrations, but was shocked when access codes had been changed. Photographs of Mills McCartney with her three-year-old daughter Beatrice were also reported to be missing. Police were called but no charges were filed. According to British newspaper The Sun, McCartney informed the former model of the removal by text message. Speaking to the UK Sun, a friend of Mills' said, "Heather is staggered. Several pictures including Renoirs and Picassos which have been hanging on the walls for months have been taken. "The police spoke to Sir Paul's security guards, who confirmed he had removed them. The Scotsman reports that McCartney is said to have been worried about security at the cabin while it lay empty, and took steps to protect it. He spent Christmas at home, and was joined by his children Stella, Mary, James and Beatrice, and four grandchildren, on Christmas Day. The report also claims that Paul has been incredibly lonely" since his marriage broke up.

© nationalledger

Mills blames Stella for Macca's art "raid"

London, Dec 31 (ANI): Heather Mills is furious that estranged hubby Sir Paul McCartney removed10million pounds worth of masterpieces from a lodge being used by her. However, the real object of Mills' ire is reportedly Macca's daughter Stella, whom she believes is the one who put the singer up to the "raid". A pal of Heather's said that the former model thinks that 35-year old Stella McCartney is the reason why Macca removed masterpieces, including Picassos and Renoirs, from a lodge used by her, amid security fears. "Heather thinks it's fairly obvious what's happened. Paul's spent Christmas with Stella, who is utterly worried about every penny her dad has. She is constantly going on at him over money and valuables, and it seems she's put him up to go back and take the paintings." The Sun quoted the pal, as saying. As for why Stella would put her father up to something like this, well it seems that not only can she not bear the thought of Mills being "anywhere near" things that Macca's late wife Linda was close to, but also because she is furious over Mills' claims that the legendary 'Beatles' singer hit his first wife. "Money is not the issue here. Stella cannot bear the thought of Heather being anywhere near anything of value or just sentimental value to her late mother Linda. Stella was so furious by the unfounded claims that her dad hit her mum, she is now hitting back," a family friend revealed. Meanwhile Mills' pals are claiming that Sir Paul had no business taking away the art pieces, for the couple's separation agreement gives Mills sole access to the lodge on the singer's Peasmarsh estate in Sussex, England. (© ANI)

Behind the music: 'Layla'

I've spent weekends in my garage, tinkering with my broken-down time machine. When I get it running again, you'll be the first to know -- I've got a big trip ahead of me. September 1970. Miami. Criteria Sound Studios. Guitar gods Eric Clapton and Duane Allman duel it out on one of the most enduring albums in the rock music canon: "Layla." Austin writer Jan Reid tells the story behind the song in the new book, "Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs by Derek and the Dominos." Maybe you know the saga already: searing guitar; excessive drug use; unrequited love; tragic endings. An aching confluence of rock and blues, "Layla" is a guitar masterpiece, one so out of its time it languished for more than a year before it caught fire on radio. Clapton was 25 when "Layla" was recorded. Allman was 23. A little over a year later Allman would be dead. Reid had a challenge considering that so many of the principal "Layla" characters are dead (producer Tom Dowd, Allman, bassist Carl Radle) or inaccessible (Clapton is writing his own book). Thank goodness for Dominos keyboard player and vocalist Bobby Whitlock. You knew, right, that "Layla" was inspired by Clapton's then-unrequited love for Pattie Boyd, who was married to George Harrison? And that Boyd also inspired Harrison's "Something" and Clapton's "Wonderful Tonight"?

Did you know it was the Dominos' drummer -- Jim Gordon -- who wrote and played and received the writing credit for the lovely piano coda? And that the very same Jim Gordon went mad years later and murdered his mother? And that he's serving a life sentence in prison? Did you know Duane Allman contributed the "Layla" guitar intro -- the very lick that is widely regarded as Clapton's signature? And did you know that this crank-it-up album was recorded using amps "the size of a cereal box"? Reid reminds us that the producer once remarked: "If anybody walked into that studio with squeaky shoes, we'd blow a take. That's how quiet they were."

BY BRAD BUCHHOLZ
© freep

Heather Mills wants four of Macca's homes

Heather Mills has demanded four of Sir Paul McCartney's homes as part of their divorce settlement, according to a report today. The former model has told her lawyers that she wants to fight for properties in London, Sussex, Los Angeles and New York. A secret 'shopping list' drawn up by Mills also reveals that she expects a lump sum of £50 million as well as an annual allowance, because she believes that her marriage to Paul destroyed her career. A source told the Sunday Mirror: "Throughout the marriage Heather told her friends and people she worked with that nothing good has come out of marrying Paul. She says before she met him she used to earn loads of money but being with him destroyed her earning potential." Another insider added: "Heather is living in dream land. She hardly earned millions before they got together. If anything, her profile and therefore earning potential escalated after she met Paul. Paul has spent years building up his property portfolio and he's not going to be giving up any homes he owns without a fight."

By Daniel Kilkelly
© digitalspy

McCartney locks Mills out of her home

PAUL McCartney is reported to have locked his estranged wife Heather out of her house just days after Christmas. According to newspaper reports, police in East Sussex were called last Thursday to McCartney's Peasmarsh estate after Mills McCartney triggered the burglar alarm at the lakeside log cabin where she has lived since separating from her husband. She returned to the cabin after spending Christmas with her sister Fiona and friends at her beachfront home, planning a New Year party. She apparently found that £10m worth of artwork, including paintings by Renoir and Picasso, had been removed and the alarm codes changed. Photographs of Mills McCartney with her three-year-old daughter Beatrice were also reported to be missing. McCartney is said to have been worried about security at the cabin while it lay empty, and took steps to protect it. He spent Christmas at home, and was joined by his children Stella, Mary, James and Beatrice, and four grandchildren, on Christmas Day. The couple's young daughter Beatrice has been caught in the middle of the divorce proceedings, which have been well documented since they announced their split in May. Mills McCartney has been staying in the cabin to allow Beatrice to see both her parents with as little disruption as possible. Mills McCartney bought a house near her husband's estate in May but she put the £625,000 property back on the market last month. Newspapers estimate that her legal fees are £250,000 to date and could amount to as much as £1m, although her friends have denied these figures.

Mills McCartney is thought to have a tumultuous relationship with her estranged husband's eldest daughter, fashion designer Stella McCartney, but a newspaper has also reported that an argument with his other daughter Mary came to blows at the log cabin in the summer. A source said: "It was a real punch-up. Paul had to break them up... It's not clear exactly what caused the fight but there was talk that it was something to do with the log cabin."

Stella McCartney is said to have been helping her father meet a new woman by introducing him to a friend who is apparently about the same age as 38-year-old Mills McCartney. Close friends said he liked the woman in question, and that he has been "incredibly lonely" since his marriage broke up.
CHRISTOPHER CLAIRE

© scotsman.com

Paul McCartney To Put On Quite A Show

Barring the success of the Beatles’ Love album, Paul has had a pretty unfortunate year. Too much time in divorce court will do that to you, especially when your ex-wife accuses you of trying to stab her with a wine glass, among other things. But let’s not go there for now. Instead, let’s gaze fondly upon the past, a place that Paul wishes to revisit to make a musical about his early life. According to E! Online, McCartney is working with his cousin, actress Kate Robbins, on a stage-adaptation of his classical composition Liverpool Oratorio. This piece, which he created in 1991, is his first venture into classical music and revolves around a character named Shanty (based on Paul) who grows up in Liverpool. This could be a great outlet for Paul to nurse a broken heart and focus on what really matters: music. He may not have anyone needing or feeding him at 64, but a new year is dawning and who knows what 65 will bring. Thanks to 'masterthes' for the tip.

© cinemablend.com

Saturday, December 30, 2006

A day in the life of a famous church fete

THE Liverpool church fete at which John Lennon first met Paul McCartney will be re-enacted to mark its 50th anniversary. On July 6, 1957 the two teenagers were introduced by their mutual friend Ivan Vaughan during the fete in Woolton. Now St Peter's church and neighbouring Bishop Martin CE primary school are hoping to recreate the meeting. Planning is still in the early stages. But vicar Kip Crooks said: "On July 6, the actual anniversary, there will be aser-vice of celebration of the Beatles, followed by a re-enactment of the dance where the two met. "The next day the school and church are running a fete along the lines of what it was like 50 years ago." The 1957 fete was held on the field now containing Bishop Martin CE primary. A 15-year-old Paul McCartney was in the audience when John Lennon performed with his skiffle group, The Quarrymen, at neighbouring St Peter's church hall. It was the start of a partnership that would change the face of musical history and create some of the 20th century's best-loved songs. Five years ago there was an outcry after the stage on which The Quarrymen played later that day was put up for auction. It was secured by the council and is now in storage at National Museums Liverpool which hopes to make it a feature in the new Museum of Liverpool on the Pier Head.

A recording of The Quarrymen's performance, made on a reel-to-reel tape, was bought by EMI for £78,000 at auction in 1994. On the tape was the unmistakable voice of Lennon, singing Elvis Presley's Baby, Let's Play House and British skiffle song Puttin' On The Style. Meanwhile, the church is also planning a three-day flower festival in June, organised by the Bishop of Liverpool's wife Sarah Jones, with arrangements on the theme of Beatles songs.

Seal of approval for The Beatles

NEW stamps planned by the Royal Mail in the coming months will feature the Beatles, famous British inventions, Army uniforms, and TV's longest running show it was revealed today. Stamps in January will feature Beatles album covers while others later in the year will include the abolition of the slave trade, underwater sea life, British inventions that changed the world, British Army uniforms and the centenary of the Scout Association. The Sky At Night, which has been broadcast for 50 years, will be one of the stars of the 2007 stamp programme.

Sir Patrick Moore, who has been presenting the show since the very first episode in 1957, has chosen six of his favourite celestial objects for the stamps, which will be issued in February. The diamond wedding anniversary of the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh will be marked in October. Julietta Edgar, head of special stamps at the Royal Mail, said: "Special stamps mark great moments, anniversaries and important cultural themes. They're miniature pieces of art and history rolled into one, and this year promises some really stunning images."

By Catherine Jones
© ECHO

Mills blames Stella for Macca's art "raid"

London, Dec 30 (ANI): Heather Mills is furious that estranged hubby Sir Paul McCartney removed10million pounds worth of masterpieces from a lodge being used by her. However, the real object of Mills' ire is reportedly Macca's daughter Stella, whom she believes is the one who put the singer up to the "raid". A pal of Heather's said that the former model thinks that 35-year old Stella McCartney is the reason why Macca removed masterpieces, including Picassos and Renoirs, from a lodge used by her, amid security fears. "Heather thinks it's fairly obvious what's happened. Paul's spent Christmas with Stella, who is utterly worried about every penny her dad has. She is constantly going on at him over money and valuables, and it seems she's put him up to go back and take the paintings." The Sun quoted the pal, as saying. As for why Stella would put her father up to something like this, well it seems that not only can she not bear the thought of Mills being "anywhere near" things that Macca's late wife Linda was close to, but also because she is furious over Mills' claims that the legendary 'Beatles' singer hit his first wife.

"Money is not the issue here. Stella cannot bear the thought of Heather being anywhere near anything of value or just sentimental value to her late mother Linda. Stella was so furious by the unfounded claims that her dad hit her mum, she is now hitting back," a family friend revealed. Meanwhile Mills' pals are claiming that Sir Paul had no business taking away the art pieces, for the couple's separation agreement gives Mills sole access to the lodge on the singer's Peasmarsh estate in Sussex, England. (ANI)

© ANI

Friday, December 29, 2006

Housewife Longoria fumes over Mills cameo

DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES star Eva Longoria is furious about reports HEATHER MILLS will appear in the TV show and plans to confront creator MARC CHERRY. Cherry recently revealed he'd love to audition the estranged wife of SIR PAUL McCARTNEY for a spot in the ABC series, saying, "If Heather Mills can act I'd be interested. It would be fascinating." But regular Longoria was livid when asked if Mills would appear in the next season, saying, "Oh God no. Not at all. That's crazy, it would be completely crazy. "If she did have a part I would be offended."

Dead woman was Beatle intruder

Investigators confirmed the 34-year-old woman found dead Dec. 19 inside an SUV north of Truckee had been arrested on a number of incidents, including charges of trespassing at former Beatle George Harrison’s Hawaii home, Nevada County Sheriff’s Lt. Ron Smith said. Cristin Joyce Keleher served four months in jail in 2000 for entering Harrison’s house without permission, eating a frozen pizza, and doing her laundry, according to the Associated Press. Keleher's frozen body and the body of Stanley Everett Merchant, 48, also of the Truckee area, were found inside a blood-spattered SUV parked along Old Highway 89, after authorities received an anonymous tip from a hiker who reported the suspicious parked vehicle. An autopsy completed Dec. 21 determined the cause of Keleher's death was a gunshot wound to the head. Keleher's body was identified by her fingerprint card which was on file at the Truckee jail, Smith said. From Keleher’s fingerprint file investigators were able to pull up ''a rap sheet on her that was a couple pages long,'' Smith said. While the Hawaii arrest was included in her record, there were no details to indicate why Keleher had been arrested for trespassing. ''It was a relatively minor charge,'' Smith said. While the incident is still under investigation, authorities said evidence indicates Keleher was shot outside the vehicle, then was placed inside the SUV, which was then driven about 100 yards. Sheriff’s investigators believe Merchant then lay down beside the body of Keleher and shot himself, also in the head. Two 12-gauge shotguns were found inside the vehicle next to Merchant’s body.

Evidence indicates the two had been staying together as a couple, Smith said. Investigators discovered a journal written by Keleher which indicated she and Merchant were looking for a place to live together in Truckee, he said. Smith said she had also told her parents of her plans to live with Merchant. There was nothing written in Keleher’s journal to indicate why the two of them were in the woods together, Smith said.

© sierrasun.com

Heather Mills claims Paul McCartney stole expensive paintings from her home


Police were called to the country estate of Paul McCartney Thursday night after his estranged wife reported the theft of paintings from the lodge they once shared. "We checked the premises, and spoke to Heather Mills (McCartney), and as a result it was found to be a civil matter between her and her husband," Sussex Police spokesman Paddy Rea said. "There's been no theft." Mills called police after discovering that paintings valued at an estimated 10 million pounds (Ђ15 million; US$19.5 million)s, including a Picasso and a Renoir, had gone missing, The Sun reported. The newspaper, quoting an unidentified friend of Mills McCartney, said that McCartney had taken the paintings and reprogrammed the estate's alarm codes, and informed her Thursday night by text message. McCartney and his wife announced their separation in May after four years of marriage and began divorce proceedings in July. They have a 3-year-old daughter, Beatrice, reports AP. Neither Mills' nor McCartney's representatives were immediately available for comment.


© Pravda

Paul McCartney's estranged wife calls police over missing paintings

LONDON Another twist in the Paul McCartney-Heather Mills McCartney divorce saga. Police say they were called to the former Beatle's country estate after Mills McCartney went to the lodge and discovered that several valuable paintings were missing. Police say it turned out to be a matter between the couple and that there was no theft. According to the Sun newspaper, McCartney removed the paintings from the lodge and reprogrammed the estate's alarm codes. He later informed his estranged wife by text message. The Sun says the paintings included a Picasso and a Renoir and are valued at an estimated 19 and a-half (m) million dollars. Copyright 2006 Associated Press

Thursday, December 28, 2006

An appreciation of George Harrison

Everyone has a favorite Beatle. Mine is George Harrison. Odd choice I know. Hardly anyone noticed Harrison while the Beatles ruled the musical world for eight years. Turns out George was a late bloomer. Harrison was only 26 when the Beatles broke up in 1970. If you were asked to predict the member of the Beatles who would enjoy the biggest success as a solo artist after the band broke up, hardly anyone would have chosen George Harrison. Harrison, the "quiet Beatle," was always in the shadow of the Paul McCartney, the cute one and the best singer, or John Lennon, the smart one, and even lovable Ringo Starr. Relegated to one or two songs on Beatles albums dominated by Lennon-McCartney tunes, Harrison's compositions were nothing more than album fillers for much of the Beatles run through the 1960s. Harrison was credited with writing just 22 of the more than 200 songs recorded and officially released by The Beatles during their eight-year reign. Harrison came up with an occasional gem ("Taxman," "While My Guitar Gently Weeps," "Here Comes The Sun") but of the Beatles' 27 No. 1 hits, Harrison's only contribution was "Something" from the "Abbey Road" album.

Harrison built up a stockpile of excellent songs in the late 1960s and finally got to share them with the world when the Beatles self-destructed as the decade came to a close. His 1970 triple-album "All Things Must Pass" went platinum and spawned several hit singles. It was No. 1 for seven weeks. To this day, it is still regarded by critics as the best solo effort by a Beatle and is included on most lists of the best albums of all time. His first post-Beatles single, "My Sweet Lord" was the No. 1 single for four weeks in the winter of 1970. It was followed by two other Top 10 hits from the album — "Isn't It A Pity" and "What Is Life." And there are a dozen other great songs on the album. Enlisting the aid of Ringo Starr and longtime friend Eric Clapton as well as Billy Preston and Dave Mason, Harrison surprised everyone with the depth of his first solo release, which contained 16 original songs along with alternate versions of songs and extended jam sessions.

In addition to the title track, "My Sweet Lord" and "What Is Life," stand-out songs include "Awaiting On You All," "Art of Dying" and "Hear Me Lord." Pop gems like "Wah-Wah" and "Apple Scruffs" rival anything the Beatles released. Although he dabbled with eastern mysticism from the days of "Sgt. Pepper," Harrison expressed a much deeper level of spirituality in "All Things Must Pass." While Harrison's lyrics can sometimes sound sanctimonious on their own, legendary "Wall of Sound" producer Phil Spector was brought in to create a sophisticated sound that often covers the awkwardness of the words. Harrison's voice, never his strong suit during his Beatles days, matured during the recording "All Things Must Pass" and a confident Harrison offered strong vocals on all of the album's songs. For a solo career that started with such promise, Harrison would never again duplicate the success of "All Things Must Pass" either commercially or artistically.

Harrison hit No. 1 again in 1973 with the single "Give Me Love (Give Me Peace On Earth)" from the album "Living In The Material World" but the record didn't sell anywhere near the copies of its predecessor and critical praise waned. The best song Harrison wrote in 1973 was "Photograph," which he gave to Ringo Starr for his self-titled album. With Harrison on guitar and backup vocals, "Photograph" became a No. 1 hit for Ringo in October 1973 and still holds up today as one of the catchiest pop songs ever. Harrison would release eight more albums in the 1970s and early 1980s to mixed commercial and critical success, occasionally cracking the Top 20. He would not have another major hit until "All Those Years Ago," his tribute to slain bandmate John Lennon, which peaked at No. 2 in 1981.

His last appearance on the pop music chart was "Got My Mind Set On You," a Jeff Lynn-produced remake of an early 1960s hit that the Beatles performed in their early days. Harrison's bouncy cover version went to No. 1 in the United States. Harrison returned to the spotlight one more time as a member of the super-group the Traveling Willburys, joining Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, Roy Orbison and Jeff Lynne to release two excellent albums. The group disbanded after Roy Orbison died. George Harrison lost his battle with cancer in 2001 at age 58. Unlike John Lennon's death at the hands of an assassin, hardly anyone thinks about George Harrison anymore. Five years after his death, we should recall the immense contributions George Harrison made to the world as a musician and a humanitarian.

''Life is one long enigma, my friend. Live on, live on, the answer's at the end. Don't be so hard on the ones that you love. It's the ones that you love we think so little of.''

— From the song "The Answer's at the End" by George Harrison

Tony Phyrillas
Columnist, The Mercury

"Everybody dreams of being rich and famous. Once you get rich and famous, you realize this isn't it. There's still something missing. It doesn't matter how much money or property or whatever you've got, unless you're happy in your heart. Unfortunately you can never gain perfect happiness unless you've got that state of consciousness that enables that. In the end, you're trying to find God."

— George Harrison


© webcommentary

Paul McCartney claims a financial loss during marriage

Paul McCartney has reportedly claimed he made a financial loss during his marriage to Heather Mills to dissuade Heather from fighting for a financial settlement through the courts. Paul, who is estimated to be worth around £750million, made his money before marrying Heather in 2002 and due to world tours and the like, he is claiming he didn't make any money during their four year marriage. According to the Daily Mirror, he has told her legal team that she could ''end up with nothing'' if she challenges him because of his lack of earnings. Divorce lawyer Caitlin Jenkins told the newspaper: ''It's a good tactic for Sir Paul - but also quite a high-risk strategy. Only about 10 per cent of contested divorce cases go down this route. Sir Paul is trying to persuade Heather's team to advise her to come to an agreement - by suggesting she could end up with nothing if the divorce goes to court. In essence, Sir Paul is showing her how bad it could be for her.''


CLICK HEADLINE FOR ARTICLE SOURCE

Beatles guitar goes under the hammer

The guitar used by George Harrison in the early 60s is expected to fetch more than £100,000 at an auction. The Maton M S 500 Mastersound goes under the hammer on November 30. It belonged to the Beatle in 1963, the year the Fab Four became famous and recorded their first album Please Please Me. A jacket with a strange history is also in the auction. It was made by Mick Jagger's brother Chris and sold to John Lennon for £60 in 1967. It is expected to fetch up to £70,000. (c) ITV News

McCartney working on stage show about his early life

Paul McCartney is collaborating with a cousin on a stage show about his early life, The Daily Telegraph has reported. Actress Kate Robbins was quoted as saying that she and McCartney were co-operating on an adaptation of the ex-Beatle's "Liverpool Oratorio." McCartney worked with Carl Davis to produce that work in 1991 to mark the 150th anniversary of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic. The Beatles grew up and first came to prominence in Liverpool. The stage version will feature a character named Shandy, based on McCartney, the newspaper said Sunday. It gave no indication when the show might be ready for the stage. Paul Freundlich, McCartney's New York-based publicist, had no immediate comment Thursday on the report. McCartney, 64, released his latest classic album, "Ecce Cor Meum (Behold My Heart)," in October. He and his wife, Heather Mills McCartney, 38, announced their separation in May after four years of marriage and began divorce proceedings in July. They have a three-year-old daughter, Beatrice.

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Authorities suggest Truckee man killed woman, then self

One of two people found dead north of Truckee has been identified as a woman arrested several years earlier on charges of trespassing at the Hawaii home of ex-Beatle George Harrison. Cristin Joyce Keleher, 34, often traveled by train between Truckee and her family's home in New Jersey, Nevada County sheriff's Lt. Ron Smith said Wednesday. Keleher served four months in jail in 2000 for entering Harrison's home without his permission, eating a frozen pizza and doing her laundry, according to the Associated Press. An anonymous call Dec. 19 directed Nevada County deputies to the area of California 89 and Hobart Mills Road, where Keleher and Truckee resident Stanley Everett Merchant, 48, were in a sport utility vehicle with gunshot wounds to their heads. Deputies said the case is still being investigated but evidence suggests that Merchant shot Keleher, put her into the SUV, drove a quarter mile and shot himself. Blood was found on the scene and a quarter mile from the vehicle, deputies said. Smith said Merchant and Keleher had prior arrests in addition to the incident at Harrison's home. "In Nevada County, we've had both of them in jail in Truckee, but it wasn't for anything serious," Smith said. Merchant and Keleher both worked odd jobs and Smith said evidence showed the two were living together in Truckee. CLICK HEADLINE FOR ARTICLE SOURCE

Beatles to appear on New Year stamps

Six Beatles album covers will appear on the first set of special stamps for 2007, the Royal Mail said on Thursday. "Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" and "With the Beatles" will be first-class, "Abbey Road" and "Help" will feature on 64 pence stamps while "Let it Be" and "Revolver" will be 72 pence. They will be issued on January 9. It will be the first time the Fab Four have featured on a set of Royal Mail stamps, which commemorate great moments, famous anniversaries and important cultural themes. CLICK HEADLINE FOR ARTICLE SOURCE

McCARTNEY REVEALS RUBBISH HOBBY

Former BEATLE SIR PAUL McCARTNEY refuses to fritter away his fortune on expensive antiques, preferring to pick out artifacts from other people's rubbish bins. The singer admits he's addicted to combing trash cans looking for leftovers, and boasts he's picked out a handful of gems recently - including a sailboat. He says, "I'm the kind of guy who doesn't like to see things in skips. I go past a skip and I'll say, 'I could use that. That's a cupboard, that's a nice bit of wood.' "I'll see a rubbish heap and see an odd bit of a bicycle or something and think, 'Picasso's Bull's Head'. I'll think, 'Interesting shape that,' because he used the bike seat didn't he. Only last night I saw some stuff in a skip and had to be pulled away.
"(Once) I found a white pillow case with a zip. It had paint stains on it from a house painter. I found a real sponge in the Caribbean too. So I rinsed it out and it went in the pillow case and I use that for washing the sailboat." CLICK HEADLINE FOR ARTICLE SOURCE

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

The Beatles - Love

Forget what you thought you knew about the Beatles, and embrace their latest attempt at greatness (despite half of them being dead) with Love. In case you haven’t had a glimpse of what's going on here, Cirque du Soleil has this show in Vegas, and the soundtrack is Love, which consists of 26 tracks of remixed, remastered Beatles classics. When they say ''remastered,'' they mean it. This album basically takes some lesser know Beatles' songs (all just as stellar as the better known ones) and integrates the music of each together to produce what I can best describe as a Beatle ''mash-up.'' Each song flows into the next as if the entire album is one long string of uninterrupted songs. Love is set apart from anything "Beatle-y" because of the way it's presented. It's the epitome of a greatest hits collection since the album starts off with early material and ends with the last works the group released. Although there is no new material on this album, there's plenty of the tried and true, mixed in a way that you'd recognize the songs' melodies, but you're never sure where it's going to lead or end, especially when you have one track flow from "Mr. Kite" to "I Want You" to "Helter Skelter" in a matter of four minutes time. It's a modernized version of the phenomena that swept the world forty years ago, and it works. Love is like being under the influence of drugs without ever having to actually do them, and the reason behind that is the psychedelic and experimental nature of the newfound weaved sounds created by producers George and Giles Martin.

Love is a testament of the genius that the Beatles displayed in combining such an interesting collection of the catalog in a different way for listeners of any age or persuasion. It’s definitely a trippy experience to hear the intro to “Blackbird” mold into “Yesterday” so smoothly before getting to “Strawberry Fields Forever.” Overall, the mere mood this album sets is enough to keep it in your collection for a long period of time, and one you'll pull out often.
Love


by Leah K. Baker
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Annie Leibovitz, up close and personal

For decades, Rolling Stone and then Vanity Fair have offered amazing pictures of the famed and fabulous — Annie Leibovitz's photographic map of the stars. Ever wonder what was on the other side of the lens? This is your chance to find out. The painstaking preparations. The makeup artists and stylists. The tall, bespectacled photographer, clicking away, wooing her subjects with patter: "Beautiful" ... "Fantastic ... "Thank you very much." It's all there to see in the PBS "American Masters" presentation, "Annie Leibovitz: Life Through a Lens," airing at 9 p.m. EST, Wednesday, Jan. 3 (check local listings). All that, and more. And less, too. More, in that the 90-minute documentary offers many, many celebrities who are happy to heap accolades on Leibovitz. There's Whoopi Goldberg and Arnold Schwarzenegger and Mick Jagger and Mikhail Baryshnikov and some extra-special surprise celebrities. Like Hillary Rodham Clinton: Leibovitz "has really been a major chronicler of our country, what we care about, what we think about," says the former first lady, current senator and probable future candidate for president. More, in that it follows Leibovitz's life, from a peripatetic childhood (her father was an Air Force officer, so the family moved a lot) to her blossoming interest in photography, to her work with magazines (there's a detour into a drug problem), to renown, and finally to motherhood and the death of her lover, intellectual Susan Sontag, and of her father.

It's all there in photographs. She draws no distinction between the pictures she is paid to take and those she takes of her loved ones. It's all her work, she says. We are treated to vintage films of Leibovitz in action in the 1960s and `70s, and of the Rolling Stone staff in its San Francisco offices, long ago. (We get a lot of the young editor Jann Wenner, and even more of the middle-aged Wenner — too much of a not-so-good thing.) We get less, in that the documentary — written and directed by her sister Barbara, and coinciding with a book and museum show on Annie Leibovitz's work — does a fitful job of explaining what it all means.

For all the words and images, there is little here that explains why she feels the need to photograph, and the origins of her talent. Yes, her mom took a lot of pictures of the family; yes, Leibovitz recalls being enthralled by the immediacy of photography. It's not enough. And, yes, we see plenty of globe-trotting, and photo shoots featuring George Clooney and Kirsten Dunst. Leibovitz is driven and exacting, and she works hard. She's immensely talented. The question is: Is it art? Not surprisingly, for the most part the answer is "yes."

There is, though, a designated scold: Vicki Goldberg, photo critic for The New York Times. She does not think Leibovitz's high-concept photos — Bette Midler in a bed of roses when she starred in "The Rose"; the Blues Brothers with their faces painted blue — are all that insightful. They're not narratives, she says; they're jokes. (Of course, this does not discredit them as magazine covers. They have great impact, the kind that would obviously inspire impulse buys on the newsstand.) More broadly, Goldberg has little use for the celebrity culture that Leibovitz documents, lionizes and propagates with her photography.

"She is the apex of the image culture that is so fixated on celebrity and she has catered to that. She has done it beautifully. But it's a shabby culture in the end," Goldberg says. In fact, for all the suggestions that Leibovitz's subjects can trace a direct line to the Medicis and others captured on canvas by great artists of the past, there is a crucial difference: Those celebrities commissioned their own portraits, for their own pleasure and for posterity. Leibovitz's pictures of folks like Tom Cruise and Demi Moore are commissioned by magazines, for the pleasure of readers. So, by proxy, they're commissioned by us. There is a lot to say about Annie Leibovitz and the cult of celebrity; perhaps it is unfair to fault this documentary for saying so little. It is, after all, a video personality profile, and if nothing else it does offer a look at a glamorous world, and the nostalgia of all those striking photographs: Remember the one with Whoopi Goldberg immersed in a tub of milk? The one with Christo all wrapped in paper?

And then there is her most famous photograph — John Lennon, naked and curled up next to a fully clothed Yoko Ono. Leibovitz took it for Rolling Stone just hours before Lennon's murder; the American Society of Magazine Editors named it the top magazine cover of the past 40 years. Second was a Vanity Fair cover of a very pregnant and very naked Demi Moore. The photographer was ... well, you can guess.

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Bono to be Knighted

On Saturday December 23, 2006 Britain announced that well known musician and humanitarian, Bono will be knighted. Even though Bono will be honored as a knight, he will not take on the title "Sir" which most of his comrades have such as, Sir Elton John, Sir Mick Jagger, Sir Paul McCartney. He will not carry the name Sir due to the fact that he is not a National of Britain or the Commonwealth of former British colonies. Bono is receiving this honor due to a variety of reasons. He is famously known as Bono, lead singer of acclaimed rock band U2. Releasing twelve studio albums and touring worldwide couldn't hold Bono back from pursing his other passion, humanitarianism. Bono is a well known advocate for the fight against AIDS in Africa. Some of the charities the band and him support are; Amnesty International, Greenpeace, and Make Poverty History. In doing all this good within his forty six years of life he is deserving of this official honor. Writer: Lindsey Peterson CLICK HEADLINE FOR ARTICLE SOURCE

MCCARTNEY MUSICAL ON THE WAY

SIR PAUL MCCARTNEY is writing a new musical based on his previous romantic relationships - with the show branded as a tribute to his late wife LINDA. The work will tell the story of SHANTY and MARY, a couple who manage to balance their romance with a busy work life, and is said to centre around the former BEATLE's experiences with first wife Linda and estranged partner HEATHER MILLS. But the musical has been besieged by setbacks following the MCCartney-Mills divorce battle. KATE ROBBINS, MCCartney's cousin, says, "Paul will approve every note as musical director. It has been delayed by divorce worries." The music of the new show will be based on MCCartney's first ever classical work THE LIVERPOOL ORATORIO, which was penned in 1991. MCCartney unveiled new classical album ECCE COR MEUM last month (NOV06), which is also dedicated to wife Linda who died in 1998. CLICK HEADLINE FOR ARTICLE SOURCE

Former President Gerald Ford dies at 93

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. - Former President Gerald R. Ford, who declared "Our long national nightmare is over" as he replaced Richard Nixon but may have doomed his own chances of election by pardoning his disgraced predecessor, has died. He was 93. The nation's 38th president, and the only one neither elected to the office nor the vice presidency, died at his desert home at 6:45 p.m. Tuesday. "His life was filled with love of God, his family and his country," his wife, Betty, said in a statement. Ford was the longest living former president, surpassing Ronald Reagan, who died in June 2004, by more than a month. Ford's office did not release the cause of death, which followed a year of medical problems. He was treated for pneumonia in January and had an angioplasty and pacemaker implant in August. Funeral arrangements were to be announced Wednesday. "President Ford was a great man who devoted the best years of his life in serving the United States," President Bush said in a brief statement to the nation Wednesday morning. "He was a true gentleman who reflected the best in America's character."

Former President Carter described him Wednesday as "one of the most admirable public servants and human beings I have ever known." Former President Clinton said, "all Americans should be grateful for his life of service."

Ford was an accidental president. A Michigan Republican elected to Congress 13 times before becoming the first appointed vice president in 1973 after Spiro Agnew left amid scandal, Ford was Nixon's hand-picked successor, a man of much political experience who had never run on a national ticket. He was as open and straightforward as Nixon was tightly controlled and conspiratorial. Ford took office moments after Nixon resigned in disgrace over Watergate.

"My fellow Americans," Ford said, "our long national nightmare is over. Our Constitution works. Our great republic is a government of laws and not of men. Here the people rule."

And, true to his reputation as unassuming Jerry, he added: "I am acutely aware that you have not elected me as your president by your ballots. So I ask you to confirm me with your prayers."

He revived the debate over Watergate a month later by granting Nixon a pardon for all crimes he committed as president. That single act, it was widely believed, contributed to Ford losing election to a term of his own in 1976. But it won praise in later years as a courageous act that allowed the nation to move on.

The Vietnam War ended in defeat for the U.S. during his presidency with the fall of Saigon in April 1975. In a speech as the end neared, Ford said: "Today, America can regain the sense of pride that existed before Vietnam. But it cannot be achieved by refighting a war that is finished as far as America is concerned." Evoking Abraham Lincoln, he said it was time to "look forward to an agenda for the future, to unify, to bind up the nation's wounds."

Ford was in the White House only 895 days, but changed it more than it changed him. Even after two women tried separately to kill him, his presidency remained open and plain. Not imperial. Not reclusive. And, of greatest satisfaction to a nation numbed by Watergate, not dishonest. Even to millions of Americans who had voted two years earlier for Nixon, the transition to Ford's leadership was one of the most welcomed in the history of the democratic process — despite the fact that it occurred without an election. After the Watergate ordeal, Americans liked their new president — and first lady Betty, whose candor charmed the country. In a long congressional career in which he rose to be House Republican leader, Ford lit few fires. In the words of Congressional Quarterly, he "built a reputation for being solid, dependable and loyal — a man more comfortable carrying out the programs of others than in initiating things on his own."

When Agnew resigned in a bribery scandal in October 1973, Ford was one of four finalists to succeed him: Texan John Connally, New York's Nelson Rockefeller and California's Ronald Reagan.

"Personal factors enter into such a decision," Nixon recalled for a Ford biographer in 1991. "I knew all of the final four personally and had great respect for each one of them, but I had known Jerry Ford longer and better than any of the rest. We had served in Congress together. I had often campaigned for him in his district," Nixon continued. But Ford had something the others didn't: he would be easily confirmed by Congress, something that could not be said of Rockefeller, Reagan and Connally. So Ford became the first vice president appointed under the 25th amendment to the Constitution. On Aug. 9, 1974, after seeing Nixon off, Ford assumed the office. The next morning, he still made his own breakfast and padded to the front door in his pajamas to get the newspaper.

Said a ranking Democratic congressman: "Maybe he is a plodder, but right now the advantages of having a plodder in the presidency are enormous." In 1976, he survived an intraparty challenge from Ronald Reagan only to lose to Democrat Jimmy Carter in November. In the campaign, he ignored Carter's record as governor of Georgia and concentrated on his own achievements as president. Carter won 297 electoral votes to his 240. After Reagan came back to defeat Carter in 1980, the two former presidents became collaborators, working together on joint projects.

"His life-long dedication to helping others touched the lives of countless people," Carter said Wednesday. "He frequently rose above politics by emphasizing the need for bipartisanship and seeking common ground on issues critical to our nation."

At a joint session after becoming president, Ford addressed members of Congress as "my former colleagues" and promised "communication, conciliation, compromise and cooperation." But his relations with Congress did not always run smoothly. He vetoed 66 bills in his barely two years as president. Congress overturned 12 Ford vetoes, more than for any president since Andrew Johnson. In his memoir, "A Time to Heal," Ford wrote, "When I was in the Congress myself, I thought it fulfilled its constitutional obligations in a very responsible way, but after I became president, my perspective changed."

Some suggested the pardon was prearranged before Nixon resigned, but Ford, in an unusual appearance before a congressional committee in October 1974, said, "There was no deal, period, under no circumstances." The committee dropped its investigation. Ford's standing in the polls dropped dramatically when he pardoned Nixon. But an ABC News poll taken in 2002 in connection with the 30th anniversary of the Watergate break-in found that six in 10 said the pardon was the right thing to do. The late Democrat Clark Clifford spoke for many when he wrote in his memoirs, "The nation would not have benefited from having a former chief executive in the dock for years after his departure from office. His disgrace was enough." The decision to pardon Nixon won Ford a John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award in 2001, and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (news, bio, voting record), acknowledging he had criticized Ford at the time, called the pardon "an extraordinary act of courage that historians recognize was truly in the national interest."

While Ford had not sought the job, he came to relish it. He had once told Congress that even if he succeeded Nixon he would not run for president in 1976. Within weeks of taking the oath, he changed his mind. He was undaunted even after the two attempts on his life in September 1975. Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, a 26-year-old follower of Charles Manson, was arrested after she aimed a semiautomatic pistol at Ford on Sept. 5 in Sacramento, Calif. A Secret Service agent grabbed her and Ford was unhurt. Seventeen days later, Sara Jane Moore, a 45-year-old political activist, was arrested in San Francisco after she fired a gun at the president. Again, Ford was unhurt. Both women are serving life terms in federal prison.

Asked at a news conference to recite his accomplishments, Ford replied: "We have restored public confidence in the White House and in the executive branch of government."

As to his failings, he responded, "I will leave that to my opponents. I don't think there have been many."

In office, Ford's living tastes were modest. When he became vice president, he chose to remain in the same Alexandria, Va., home — unpretentious except for a swimming pool — that he shared with his family as a congressman. After leaving the White House, however, he took up residence in the desert resort of Rancho Mirage, picked up $1 million for his memoir and another $1 million in a five-year NBC television contract, and served on a number of corporate boards. By 1987, he was on eight such boards, at fees up to $30,000 a year, and was consulting for others, at fees up to $100,000. After criticism, he cut back on such activity. Ford spent most of his boyhood in Grand Rapids, Mich.

He was born Leslie King on July 14, 1913, in Omaha, Neb. His parents were divorced when he was less than a year old, and his mother returned to her parents in Grand Rapids, where she later married Gerald R. Ford Sr. He adopted the boy and renamed him. Ford was a high school senior when he met his biological father. He was working in a Greek restaurant, he recalled, when a man came in and stood watching.

"Finally, he walked over and said, 'I'm your father,'" Ford said. "Well, that was quite a shock." But he wrote in his memoir that he broke down and cried that night and he was left with the image of "a carefree, well-to-do man who didn't really give a damn about the hopes and dreams of his firstborn son."

Ford played center on the University of Michigan's 1932 and 1933 national champion football teams. He got professional offers from the Detroit Lions and the Green Bay Packers, but chose to study law at Yale, working his way through as an assistant varsity football coach and freshman boxing coach.

Ford got his first exposure to national politics at Yale, working as a volunteer in Wendell L. Willkie's 1940 Republican campaign for president. After World War II service with the Navy in the Pacific, he went back to practicing law in Grand Rapids and became active in Republican reform politics.

His stepfather was the local Republican chairman, and Michigan Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg was looking for a fresh young internationalist to replace the area's isolationist congressman. Ford got twice as many votes as Rep. Bartel Jonkman in the Republican primary and then went on to win the election with 60.5 percent of the vote, the lowest margin he ever got.

"To his great credit, he was the same hard-working, down-to-earth person the day he left the White House as he was when he first entered Congress almost 30 years earlier," Clinton said Wednesday.

Ford had three sons, Michael, John and Steven, and a daughter, Susan. He was the last surviving member of the Warren Commission, which investigated the assassination of President Kennedy in 1963 and concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone assassin. After Ford's death, the U.S. flag over the White House was lowered to half-staff. The New York Stock Exchange held a moment of silence Wednesday in Ford's honor, while at Ford's presidential museum in Grand Rapids, a steady stream of visitors lit candles and lined up to sign condolence books about the former president.



Associated Press writer Harry F. Rosenthal

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British invasion

Britain's music invasion may have happened 40 years ago but the current crop of musicmakers from across the pond are still making major noise if the Top Ten concerts of 2006 in Toronto are any indication. Half of the artists on the list hail from England -- including The Who, who were part of the original invasion. Here's the best of what yours truly saw on the Toronto concert scene over the last 12 months: James Brown (Jan. 6, Casino Rama): An old-school soul revue was energetically delivered by the 72-year-old Brown who showed men three times his junior how to work the stage. Backed by an 11-piece band, Brown's vocal shrieks and trademark slippery dance moves were back in top form, after he underwent cancer surgery in December 2004. Before his untimely death on Christmas Day, the Godfather of Soul was scheduled to return to Casino Rama for two sold-out show on Jan. 5-6. Refunds are now available at point of purchase. STAGE BANTER: "You will not be able to relax because the funk will make you move!"-- James Brown Donald Fagen (March 13, Massey Hall): Steely Dan's singer-keyboardist embarked on the first solo tour of his three-decades-plus career and it paid off. The 58-year-old Fagen delivered an hour-and-50 minutes worth of polished, sophisticated jazz-pop with the help of a talented nine-piece band. Fagen "oozed a quirky charm and a genuine playfulness, hunched over his keyboards like a cross between Richard III and Quasimodo, (and) would raise either one or two fingers or a clenched fist dramatically to signal the end of each song."

STAGE BANTER: "I'm feeling groovy, baby."-- Donald Fagen

Coldplay with Richard Ashcroft (March 22, Air Canada Centre): The first perfect concert of the year -- rated five out of five -- featured an exciting Brit-pop matchup that doesn't get much better, although the Arctic Monkeys opening for Oasis earlier in the week at the same venue came awfully close.

Both Coldplay's Chris Martin and Ashcroft, formerly of The Verve, are riveting performers and didn't disappoint in the first of two sold-out shows. Coldplay, in their third visit to Toronto in less than a year, obviously felt comfortable in our city, too, filming both ACC performances for a DVD.

STAGE BANTER: "I'm a sweaty bastard." -- Chris Martin

Kris Kristofferson (March 26, U of T's Convocation Hall): The 69-year-old country-folk-rock troubadour made a rare live solo appearance before a sold-out crowd in support of his first studio recording of original material in 11 years, This Old Road. And while "his deep, husky voice and simple guitar playing may not rank among the finest, his stories and songs surely do. Not to mention the man's obvious heart, character and charisma."

STAGE BANTER:"I don't hate George Bush. He's just the hood ornament on a machine run by a bunch of right-wing ideologues going over a cliff." -- Kris Kristofferson

The Flaming Lips (April 4, Phoenix): Probably my favourite concert of the year. The irrepressible energy of Lips' frontman Wayne Coyne was infectious, whether he was swinging a lamp over his head, tossing confetti out of his goody bag, throwing a steady stream of large, multi-coloured balloons from the stage, operating a smoke machine, a streamer launcher, a tiny camera attached to his microphone or an animal noisemaker.

All this and dancers dressed up as either Santa Claus or green-faced aliens.

Some 23 years after forming, this Oklahoma pop-psychedelic group has never been more popular and for good reason: They're tremendous live performers. Another perfect score.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs (April 10, Kool Haus): Every once in a while a female frontwoman comes along in rock that makes you sit up and take notice. Karen O of dynamic Brooklyn avant-punk rock trio Yeah Yeah Yeahs is one of those women.

The compelling and stylish O (whose real last name is Orzolek) is a sight to behold, with her "long limbs, bowl-cut brunette hairdo, smear of bright red lipstick, and out-there stage makeup and extravagant clothes."

Otherwise, she sounds like Chrissie Hynde and jumps, skips and dances around the stage like a cross between Patti Smith, Debbie Harry and Siouxsie Sioux. Meanwhile, guitarist-keyboardist Nick Zinner and drummer Brian Chase sound amazing and are happy to let O's freak flag fly. Five outta five.

STAGE BANTER: "Sorry I've been kind of shy tonight. But I'm going to look you in the eye and say we really f-----g love you guys!" -- Karen O

Radiohead (June 7, Hummingbird Centre): The last time this British art-rock act played in Toronto was a massive show at Rogers Centre in 2003 when it was still called SkyDome. So you can imagine the excitement over seeing the critically acclaimed Oxford quintet in an intimate theatre setting during the first of two sold-out shows. "Radiohead's sharp-sounding musicianship and talent for creating an exciting, interesting atmosphere combined with the wealth of new tunes made those in the crowd feel as if they were witnessing something truly special. Both lead singer Thom Yorke and lead guitarist Jonny Greenwood were in particularly good form." Another night of musical perfection.

Pet Shop Boys (Oct. 11, Hummingbird): Whether it's an emotional, verging on operatic ballad, or a wildly campy, even dramatic dance anthem, British electro-dance-pop veterans Pet Shop Boys know how to deliver the goods live. "Singer Neil Tennant and keyboardist Chris Lowe treated an enthusiastic crowd to their astonishing, still vibrant 25-year-old catalogue" on a stage dominated by a screen that later revealed itself to be a rather inventive series of moving cubes. Backed by two male dancers, two male backup singers and one powerhouse female singer, Tennant wasted no time beginning what would become an elaborate parade of sequined costumes and hats that recalled almost vaudevillian musical splendour.

Noel Gallagher (Nov. 7, The Danforth Music Hall): Consider yourself blessed if you were lucky enough to get a ticket to this rare Noel Gallagher solo, mostly acoustic, concert. There was definitely a feeling of occasion as the Oasis guitarist-songwriter-and-sometime-singer, accompanied by Oasis guitarist-organist Gem Archer and drummer-percussionist Terry Kirkbride, played a rare show on his own to support the Oasis' best-of-collection, Stop The Clocks. Scalpers were getting upwards of $250 per ticket and before a note of music was even played, the often-hilarious, black-and-white rockumentary, Lord Don't Slow Me Down, filmed during Oasis' last tour, got its Canadian premiere.

STAGE BANTER: "There's no reason to shout out song titles. I have prepared a set list which I'm not going to deviate from." -- Noel Gallagher

The Who with The Pretenders (Dec. 4, Air Canada Centre): Truthfully, I was as skeptical as the next person about The Who still touring after endless farewell tours not to mention the absence of original bassist John Entwistle and drummer Keith Moon. Yet singer Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend -- now in their early sixties -- pulled off a "powerful and passionate" night of music. "Delivering their trademark moves, whether it was Daltrey swinging his microphone around or Townshend's signature windmill guitar playing and scissor kicks in the air." And of the current Who backing lineup, it was Ringo Starr's son Zak Starkey on drums who stood out with "some monster playing." Otherwise, enduring '80s act The Pretenders delivered a no-frills but polished opening 50-minute set with formidable frontwoman Chrissie Hynde still in top-vocal form at age 55.

STAGE BANTER: "This is the probably the favourite city of mine in Canada.... partly because when I used to drink, I used to have such a good time here." -- Pete Townshend

JANE'S FIVE CONCERT RUNNERS-UP OF THE YEAR

1. Oasis with the Arctic Monkeys (March 20, Air Canada Centre)

2. Beth Orton (April 6, The Carlu)

3. Sam Roberts (April 27, The Phoenix)

4. Arctic Monkeys (June 17, Kool Haus)

5. The Killers (Oct. 20, Kool Haus)

By JANE STEVENSON
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MCCARTNEY: 'MILLS WILL GET NOTHING FROM DIVORCE'

SIR PAUL MCCARTNEY has reportedly told HEATHER MILLS she will make nothing from their impending divorce - as he didn't earn any money during their four year marriage. The former BEATLE has issued his estranged wife's lawyers with the statement, and is hoping Mills will not fight the divorce in a courtroom - as he claims she would "end up with nothing". MCCartney, whose amassed fortune is rumoured to be around GBP300 million ($585 million), made his money before marrying Mills in 2002. He says he made a financial loss until 2006, after embarking on several world tours, according to British newspaper Daily Mirror. British lawyer CAITLIN JENKINS says, "It's a good tactic for Sir Paul - but also quite a high-risk strategy. "Only about 10 per cent of contested divorce cases go down this route. "Sir Paul is trying to persuade Heather's team to advise her to come to an agreement - by suggesting she could end up with nothing if the divorce goes to court. "In essence, Sir Paul is showing her how bad it could be for her." (c) contactmusic.com CLICK HEADLINE FOR ARTICLE SOURCE

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

Signed Beatles album cover — a gift for Harrison's sister - sells at auction for $115,000

NEW YORK: An album cover signed by all four Beatles as a gift for George Harrison's sister has sold at auction for more than $115,000 (€87,174). The sale, to an unidentified buyer, was believed to set a record price for a signed Beatles album purchased at a public sale, said Mark Zakarin, president of the online auction company ItsOnlyRockNRoll.com. The exact price, with the buyer's commission, was $115,228.82 (€87,347.50). Bidding began at $25,000 (€18,950). The copy of "Meet The Beatles," the band's first U.S. release on Capitol Records, was put up for sale by Harrison's sister, Louise. The sale was held Friday. Harrison wrote above his signature: "To Lou with love from 'Brother'!!" John Lennon's inscription read, "To Lou many love from John Lennon X." Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr expressed similar feelings when all four signed the album cover while aboard a train to Washington for a 1964 concert. CLICK HEADLINE FOR ARTICLE SOURCE

Classic rock rolls on

Since a reunion of surviving members — Jimmy Page, guitar, John Paul Jones on bass guitar, keyboards, and mandolin, and Robert Plant on lead vocals and harmonica — is unlikely, fans have found themselves drawn to a variety of acts currently recreating the Zeppelin live concert experience. One such act - cleverly titled ''Get the Led Out: The Ultimate Led Zeppelin Experience” — returns to Plymouth Memorial Hall on Friday after a sold-out show in March 2005. The Philadelphia-based band of professional rock musicians is dedicated to re-creating the music of Led Zeppelin. ''We present a live concert experience of Led Zeppelin. We're not impersonators so we don''t put on the dragon suit or blonde wigs,'' explained guitarist and mandolin player Paul Hammond by telephone last week. ''We instill ourselves and Zeppelin into our live shows, we’re just not as loose and improvisational as Led Zeppelin.'' Zeppelin may have seemed relaxed to some, but they are also widely regarded as innovators who never lost mainstream appeal. While the band is best known for being among the pioneers of hard rock and heavy metal, they also infused their sound with blues, reggae, soul, funk, jazz, classical, Indian, Arabic, Latin and country sounds. Hammond, 41, is quick to acknowledge Zeppelin’s lasting appeal.

“Their music is still as powerful today as it was back in the day. It is timeless. And while the fans can’t see the group in concert anymore, they can see us. We’re often referred to as the American Led Zepellin. We’ve even had people come back after one of our shows and tell us that they saw Zeppelin in the 1970s and we’re even better.”

While Get The Led Out may earn praise from its audiences, Hammond and his five fellow musicians know that they are merely recreating the work of legends.

“Paul Sinclair is our lead singer and so he does the vocals associated with Robert Plant. When he isn’t singing, Paul speaks about his love for Led Zeppelin. We all feel that way. The members of Zeppelin had the most amazing depth to their musicality, much like the Beatles. Our group has great musical versatility, too, from rock to classical. It is our own depth that makes us more authentic when we do Zeppelin. We’re professionals in our own right and while we play like rock stars, we don’t act like them. We don’t smoke or drink and we take very good care of ourselves. We take this whole thing very seriously.”

(Get The Led Out: The Ultimate Led Zepellin Experience” returns to Plymouth Memorial Hall, 83 Court Street, Plymouth, on Friday, Dec. 29. For tickets and information call 508-747-1340 or visit www.ticketweb.com Tickets are also available at all Strawberries locations.) By R. Scott Reedy

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James Brown's widow 'barred from family home'

James Brown's 36-year-old widow has been locked out of the home she shared with the soul legend, just hours after his death in hospital, she claimed yesterday. Tomi Rae Brown, the singer's fourth wife, says that she plans to fight in the courts to gain access to the mansion in Beech Island, South Carolina, after her late husband's lawyer and accountant barred her from entering. Mrs Brown told the Augusta Chronicle that she is not the legal owner of the property, but has lived there for ten years and has the right to live there with the Browns' 5-year-old son, James Jr. "This is my home. I don't have any money. I don't have anywhere to go," Mrs Brown said after kneeling and banging on the iron gate that was locked by security guards. Mrs Brown said she had been attending a retreat at a beach at the time of her husband's death in Atlanta on Christmas Day "The last thing he said to me was, 'I love you, baby, and I'll see you soon,'" she said. Brown pleaded guilty in 2004 to charges stemming from a fight in which he threw the former backing singer to the floor and threatened to kill her. He was fined $1,087. The music world yesterday paid tribute to the performer known affectionately as "Mr Dynamite" He was dramatic to the end — dying on Christmas Day," said the Rev Jesse Jackson, the civil rights activist who had been a friend since 1955. "Almost a dramatic, poetic moment. He’ll be all over the news all over the world today — he would have it no other way."

The rock’n’roll star Little Richard, another long-time friend, said: "He was an innovator, an emancipator, an originator. Rap music, all that stuff came from James Brown. A great treasure is gone." The Rev Al Sharpton, who toured with him in the 1970s and has imitated his bouffant hairstyle ever since, said: "James Brown changed music. He made soul a world music." Brown was in Atlanta for a dental appointment when he was admitted on Sunday to Emory Crawford Long Hospital with pneumonia. He had hoped to recover in time for New Year’s Eve, when he was scheduled to appear at the B.B. King Blues Club in New York. However, he passed away at about 1.45am local time on Christmas Day, with his friend and manager Charles Bobbit at his side. The star’s management firm said that he had "congestive heart failure as a result of pneumonia".

Born on May 3, 1928, the son of a petrol station attendant, he recorded more than 50 albums and had 119 singles in the charts. His influence on popular music for the past 50 years ranks alongside Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan and John Lennon. He was a charter inductee in 1968 into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, along with such legends as Presley and Chuck Berry. Brown’s eye make-up and fancy footwork onstage inspired Michael Jackson and Prince, while his rhythms and vocal style influenced singers from David Bowie to George Clinton. His songs have been reworked by Ice-T, Public Enemy and a host of other rappers. Trevor Nelson, a Radio 1 and MTV presenter, said: "It’s hard to imagine hip-hop being the force it is today without James Brown and all the grooves he has supplied." Mark Lamarr, the comic and Radio 2 presenter who had interviewed Brown at length, said: "There is not a more influential black artist in the last 50 years." Andy Peebles, the former Radio 1 DJ and Soul Train, presenter, said that he was a "one-of-a-kind never-to-be-repeated" talent. "He will be remembered not just for his musical ability or as a prolific producer of new songs, but also as a remarkable performer. There will never, and could never, be another James Brown."

Brown, who was married four times and fathered at least six children, had a troubled relationship with the law all his life. In 1988, high on PCP and carrying a shotgun, Brown threatened an insurance seminar next to his office in Augusta, believing its participants had used his lavatory. Police shot out his tyres after a high-speed chase. He was sentenced to six years for attempted murder and served 15 months in prison and 10 months in a work release programme.

Greatest hits

1956 Please, Please, Please

1962 Mashed Potatoes

1965 Papa’s Got a Brand New Bag

1965 I Got You (I Feel Good)

1966 It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World

1967 Cold Sweat

1968 Say it Loud, I’m Black and I’m Proud

1969 Ain’t It Funky Now

1970 Funky Drummer

1970 Get Up, I Feel Like Being a Sex Machine

1971 Make It Funky (Part I)

1972 Get on the Good Foot

1974 The Payback

1975 Sex Machine

1985 Living in America

By Times Online, and James Bone in New York
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A Book Publisher, Beatlemaniacs? Why Don’t You Do It on Your Own?

Maybe you thought the publishing world had exploited every bit of information about the Beatles, useful and trivial, in the Himalayan stack of books published since the group’s heyday in the 1960s: biographies both straight and gossipy, musical analyses, chronologies, as well as Beatles-theme novels. Guess again. Now, if mainstream publishers reject their work as too specialized, even the most Beatles-obsessed authors are finding audiences for their books by publishing them themselves. But don't even think the phrase 'vanity press.' Many of these self-published books are lavishly produced and packed with original research that makes them invaluable to Beatles scholars and collectors, and some have been startlingly successful through online sales. They range from meticulous descriptions of the Beatles’ recording process to multi-volume examinations of the group’s American releases, to evaluations of unreleased studio and concert recordings now on the bootleg market. Like indie rock bands rebuffed by major record labels, some of the self-published authors tried getting publishing deals before deciding to go it alone. But a growing number are saying: Why bother? Self-publishing, on top of giving the authors all the profits, gives them editorial and design control too, which they feel outweighs the drawback of having to research on their own dime rather than on a publisher’s advance.

“Everything I read seemed to suggest that self-publication would be a good idea,” said John C. Winn, the author of “Way Beyond Compare,” “That Magic Feeling” and “Lifting Latches,” a self-published series that offers annotated source information about all the Beatles’ known audio and video recordings, including interviews. “My books are targeted to a specific audience that I’m able to reach directly. Being a Beatlemaniac, I hung around with other Beatlemaniacs, and I knew where to find them and what they’d be interested in reading about.”

Some authors report surprisingly brisk sales. Published in August, “Recording the Beatles,” a 540-page study of the equipment and techniques used to make the Beatles’ recordings, has sold out its first run of 3,000 copies at $100 apiece. The authors, Kevin Ryan and Brian Kehew, have a second printing on order and plan a less expensive edition in 2007. Mr. Ryan and Mr. Kehew, who both work as producers and engineers, took a decade to research their book, which includes pictures and descriptions of every piece of recording and sound-processing equipment used at the Abbey Road Studios in London, as well as diagrams showing how the Beatles set up for particular recordings, and step-by-step analyses of how the songs were assembled. Bruce Spizer, a lawyer in New Orleans, began his work as a do-it-yourself Beatles author with a study of the fraught legal relationship between EMI, the Beatles’ British record label, and Vee-Jay, which licensed the group’s early recordings. His four sequels to “The Beatles Records on Vee-Jay” include books about the Beatles’ releases in the United States on Capitol and on their own imprint, Apple, each offering reproductions of cover art (including rejected designs), labels (including variations), correspondence and promotional materials. A final installment, “The Beatles Swan Song,” is due in March. He has also published “The Beatles Are Coming!,” about the band’s first visit to America, in February 1964.

All told, Mr. Spizer said, he has sold 37,000 copies of his six books, which have brought in more than $1 million since the first was published in 1998. But more important for Mr. Spizer, the books put him on the radar at EMI and Apple. When they released CDs of the Beatles’ albums in their American configurations (the original CDs follow the British album versions, which have different track sequences), they hired Mr. Spizer as a consultant.

“I could do this full time,” Mr. Spizer said. “But I’m keeping my day job. I like to say that as a tax attorney, I make $210 an hour, and as a Beatles publisher, I make $2.10 an hour.”

The books are part of a growing self-published library of must-haves for anyone fascinated with the Beatles’ music, released and unreleased. Others include Doug Sulpy’s regularly updated “Complete Beatles Audio Guide,” which sorts out the tangled bootleg market, and Chip Madinger and Mark Easter’s “Eight Arms to Hold You,” a catalog of every known live, studio, television and radio recording by the solo Beatles. (Full disclosure: I contributed a foreword, without compensation.) Mr. Madinger is at work, with Scott Raile, on a two-volume study of John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s work together, in which one book is a day-by-day chronology, and the other is a detailed sessionography.

“The goal is to answer any question you might have about their life and work together,” Mr. Madinger said of his Lennon project. One thing these books have in common is that they began as private research projects, not as book ideas, because the authors sought information that was not readily available. In some cases their Beatles research intersected with their day jobs. Mr. Ryan and Mr. Kehew, as musicians and engineers, became fascinated with how the Beatles and their production team created the band’s sound on disc. They began working separately, Mr. Ryan in Houston, Mr. Kehew in Los Angeles in the early 1990s.

“When I started writing and recording my own songs, I tried to make them sound like the Beatles’ records, but I couldn’t do it,” Mr. Ryan said. “So I wanted to know: What were they doing? What were their tools? Writing the book was a good excuse to contact people and ask questions.”

Mr. Ryan began traveling to Britain to interview EMI engineers and quickly learned that Mr. Kehew was covering similar ground. They decided to pool their resources.

“And it was great,” Mr. Ryan said, “because wherever our overlapping research agreed, it was corroboration; and wherever there were discrepancies, we knew we had to look more closely and figure out why.”

Eventually they interviewed just about everyone who worked on the Beatles sessions between 1962 and 1970, with a few notable exceptions: the former Beatles themselves; George Martin, their producer; and Geoff Emerick, their engineer from 1966 to 1969. Mr. Martin and Mr. Emerick have each written books about their work with the group.

“We found that the people who were a real gold mine were the ones who haven’t been asked about this every day of their lives,” Mr. Ryan said. “You’re asking them things they haven’t been asked before, and you’re getting fresh, undiluted responses that haven’t become simplified through constant repetition.”

Ms. Ono was taken with “Recording the Beatles” when she saw it. “Because I was lucky enough to have been there in some of the later sessions,” she wrote in an e-mail message, “I am happy that Kevin Ryan and Brian Kehew have done such a great job. It’s a strong magical and nostalgic trip for me.”

They were able to solve a few mysteries along the way. Collectors have long noted, for example, that the stereo and mono versions of “Help!” have different lead vocal tracks from Lennon. All 12 takes of the song recorded at Abbey Road circulate among collectors, and the vocal on Take 12 is in the stereo version. But the vocal in the mono mix is nowhere among them.

While collecting illustrations for their book, Mr. Ryan and Mr. Kehew found photographs taken during dialogue dubbing sessions for the film “Help!” at C.T.S. Studios in London. Some shots showed Mr. Martin, even though there was no reason he should have attended a dialogue session; others showed the group in a typical singing configuration, with Lennon at one microphone and George Harrison and Paul McCartney sharing another.

Each is holding a sheet of paper that, when magnified and reversed, showed the lyrics of “Help!” Clearly, the group remade the vocals at C.T.S., and because that studio’s equipment was incompatible with EMI’s, the mono version was mixed on the spot and handed over for use on the soundtrack.

“I think it’s a marvelous book; in fact it embarrasses my ‘Recording Sessions’ book,” said Mark Lewisohn, the British author whose 1988 book, “The Beatles Recording Sessions” (Harmony Books), was the first detailed examination of the group’s recording process, and whose other books, “The Beatles Live!” (Henry Holt) and “The Complete Beatles Chronicle” (Harmony), set the standard for serious Beatles research in the 1980s and ’90s.

Mr. Lewisohn has taken the more traditional publishing route. (His current project, a three-volume Beatles biography, is to be published by Crown, starting in 2009.) But he said he understood the attraction of doing it on your own.

“When you self-publish, you have the opportunity to be as indulgent as you like,” he said. “You can go into everything with a thoroughness that a conventional publisher would try to limit for reasons of cost.”

That said, self-publication forces authors to become fluent in budgeting, printing, copyrights, design and other details of getting their books into print.

“We did talk to some publishers, small and large,” Mr. Ryan said, “but I don’t think we were ever convinced that was the way to go. We had strong ideas about how the book should look, and about its content and organization. “Also,” he added, “Brian and I have both dealt personally with record company contracts in the past, and we could see a correlation between the world of publishing and the music world. In both cases, unless you’re going to sell a million copies of your product, you will never make a significant chunk of money. The publisher or record company takes the lion’s share and you get scraps.”


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Heather Mills 'frozen' out of Macca's Christmas party

Sir Paul McCartney's estranged wife Heather Mills was "frozen out" of the McCartney family Christmas. The Ex-Beatle organised a get-together at his country estate similar to those he enjoyed with late wife Linda. His entire family, including Beatrice, the three-year-old daughter he had with Heather, were welcomed at the veggie sit-down lunch. But Mills was banned from the bash. Sir Paul, 64, arrived at his 200-acre estate in Peasmarsh, East Sussex, on Friday and Beatrice came along shortly after with her nanny. It was Sir Paul's wish she should be surrounded by her presents on Christmas morning together with the rest of his family. On Christmas Eve, Sir Paul's son James and daughters Stella and Mary turned up with their partners and children. Even Sir Paul's step-daughter, also called Heather, was there as was Sir Paul's brother Mike and his family. "It looks as if everyone except Heather has been invited. But it is hardly surprising she has been frozen out," a security guard at the mansion was quoted by the Daily Mail, as saying. Heather, 38, who has been angling for a divorce payment of up to £100million, was seen earlier in the week in the nearby town of Rye. Sir Paul has a house there and it is believed, as part of the Christmas negotiations, he agreed to hand back the child after Boxing Day. "Sir Paul had reunions at Peasmarsh when Linda was here but Heather stopped those. The staff are overjoyed, it is like the good old days," an aide added. (ANI)

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Beatles voted Britain's all-time favourite band

London, Dec 26(ANI): Even several years after their demise, the biggest-selling group of the 20th century, the Beatles, has managed to remain immensely popular in Britain. The pop band has been voted among the best 100 things that happened to Britain. John, Paul, George and Ringo were named as Britain's all-time favourite band in an online survey. Original James Bond Sean Connery was voted top actor while the Aston Martin DB5 he drove in 1964 007 film Goldfinger was top sports car. Another Bond favourite, Dame Judi Dench - who plays M in Casino Royale - was the top actress, reports The Sun. Singer-songwriter Kate Bush, who in 2005 released her first album for 12 years, was named favourite female pop star in the poll of 1,120 people by website www.thebestof.co.uk, which recommends shops, restaurants and businesses. According to Best Of British boss Nigel Botterill, "The British way of life is unique and these are the people and the qualities that make it so."(ANI)CLICK HEADLINE FOR ARTICLE SOURCE

Global rush for Beatles hotel

LIVERPOOL'S new Beatles-themed hotel has had close to 2,000 enquiries about rooms almost a year before it is due to open and four months before staff are due to start taking bookings. Detailed artists’ impress- ions of the 110-room Hard Days Night Hotel went on public display at the launch of this year’s Mathew Street festival. Managers also launched a website and announced booking lines would open next April, ahead of the hotel’s expected opening some time in autumn 2007. But fans have proved Beatlemania is alive and well, and, four decades since the Fab Four’s first visit to Tokyo, around 1,000 Japanese fans have already emailed the HDN team to find out about booking a room. So far, around 50% of queries have come from Japan, around 30% from the US and 20% from Europe, mostly the UK, Holland and Germany. And it appears the four-star hotel may buck Liverpool’s trend as a weekend break destination as many fans are asking about staying for a full week. ''What's surprised us is the number of enquiries coming from Japan,” said Jonathan Davies, of developers Bowdena, which struck the deal to convert the former Central buildings on the corner of North John Street and Matthew Street. Also, we thought most of them would be coming for a weekend, but people are asking if they can book for a week.

Mr Davies said refurbish- ment work was on track for the hotel’s huge opening party in autumn 2007, although no date will be set for the event until next year. Two extra floors have been added to the building’s original roof, making it six storeys high offering magnificent views of the city, and a new wooden roof has been finished and clad in zinc. Mr Davies confirmed Bowdena was also locked in negotiations with the London landlord of the neighbouring Cavern Club to discuss whether plans for a tunnel between the two could go ahead. It was Bill Heckle, manager of the Cavern’s operators Cavern City Tours, who first conceived the idea for the HDN hotel more than a decade ago. Bowdena signed a £10m deal with CCT to refurbish the derelict Grade II-listed site in May 2005, after the plan won £2.3m European funding following a documentary about Mr Heckle’s struggle to have his dream turned into reality. Now a deal has been struck for specialist hotel con- sultants Hospitality Management International to run the operation. Mr Heckle, who also runs the Mathew Street festival, will maintain a non executive directorship of the business, and CCT will run an information kiosk in the hotel foyer.

Last year, John Lennon’s half-sister, Julia Baird, said she thought her brother would have approved of the design, which includes hanging a different original painting of the Beatles in each bedroom. The paintings, by American airbrush artist Shannon, will tell the story of the band – starting in the basement with depictions of the Quarrymen’s first gigs in the Cavern. It will finish on the hotel’s sixth floor with images inspired by the Beatles’ final live performance on the roof of Apple’s London studios in 1969. The hotel will also include conference and meeting facilities with a “Beatles twist”, an exclusive bar and four-star restaurant. Central Buildings were built in 1884. The huge office block was designed by Thomas C Clarke and has been noted for its grand colonnade of polished granite.


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Monday, December 25, 2006

'Godfather of Soul' James Brown dies

ATLANTA - James Brown, the dynamic, pompadoured "Godfather of Soul," whose rasping vocals and revolutionary rhythms made him a founder of rap, funk and disco as well, died early Monday, his agent said. He was 73. Brown was hospitalized with pneumonia at Emory Crawford Long Hospital on Sunday and died around 1:45 a.m. Monday, said his agent, Frank Copsidas of Intrigue Music. Longtime friend Charles Bobbit was by his side, he said. Copsidas said the cause of death was uncertain. "We really don't know at this point what he died of," he said. Along with Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan and a handful of others, Brown was one of the major musical influences of the past 50 years. At least one generation idolized him, and sometimes openly copied him. His rapid-footed dancing inspired Mick Jagger and Michael Jackson among others. Songs such as David Bowie's "Fame," Prince's "Kiss," George Clinton's "Atomic Dog" and Sly and the Family Stone's "Sing a Simple Song" were clearly based on Brown's rhythms and vocal style. If Brown's claim to the invention of soul can be challenged by fans of Ray Charles and Sam Cooke, then his rights to the genres of rap, disco and funk are beyond question. He was to rhythm and dance music what Dylan was to lyrics: the unchallenged popular innovator.

"James presented obviously the best grooves," rapper Chuck D of Public Enemy once told The Associated Press. "To this day, there has been no one near as funky. No one's coming even close."

His hit singles include such classics as "Out of Sight," "(Get Up I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine," "I Got You (I Feel Good)" and "Say It Loud — I'm Black and I'm Proud," a landmark 1968 statement of racial pride.

"I clearly remember we were calling ourselves colored, and after the song, we were calling ourselves black," Brown said in a 2003 Associated Press interview. "The song showed even people to that day that lyrics and music and a song can change society."

He won a Grammy award for lifetime achievement in 1992, as well as Grammys in 1965 for "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag" (best R&B recording) and for "Living In America" in 1987 (best R&B vocal performance, male.) He was one of the initial artists inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986, along with Presley, Chuck Berry and other founding fathers. He triumphed despite an often unhappy personal life. Brown, who lived in Beech Island near the Georgia line, spent more than two years in a South Carolina prison for aggravated assault and failing to stop for a police officer. After his release on in 1991, Brown said he wanted to "try to straighten out" rock music.

From the 1950s, when Brown had his first R&B hit, "Please, Please, Please" in 1956, through the mid-1970s, Brown went on a frenzy of cross-country tours, concerts and new songs. He earned the nickname "The Hardest Working Man in Show Business" and often tried to prove it to his fans, said Jay Ross, his lawyer of 15 years. Brown would routinely lose two or three pounds each time he performed and kept his furious concert schedule in his later years even as he fought prostate cancer, Ross said.

"He'd always give it his all to give his fans the type of show they expected," he said. With his tight pants, shimmering feet, eye makeup and outrageous hair, Brown set the stage for younger stars such as Michael Jackson and Prince. In 1986, he was inducted in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. And rap stars of recent years overwhelmingly have borrowed his lyrics with a digital technique called sampling. Brown's work has been replayed by the Fat Boys, Ice-T, Public Enemy and a host of other rappers. "The music out there is only as good as my last record," Brown joked in a 1989 interview with Rolling Stone magazine.

"Disco is James Brown, hip-hop is James Brown, rap is James Brown; you know what I'm saying? You hear all the rappers, 90 percent of their music is me," he told the AP in 2003. Born in poverty in Barnwell, S.C., in 1933, he was abandoned as a 4-year-old to the care of relatives and friends and grew up on the streets of Augusta, Ga., in an "ill-repute area," as he once called it. There he learned to wheel and deal.

"I wanted to be somebody," Brown said. By the eighth grade in 1949, Brown had served 3 1/2 years in Alto Reform School near Toccoa, Ga., for breaking into cars. While there, he met Bobby Byrd, whose family took Brown into their home. Byrd also took Brown into his group, the Gospel Starlighters. Soon they changed their name to the Famous Flames and their style to hard R&B. In January 1956, King Records of Cincinnati signed the group, and four months later "Please, Please, Please" was in the R&B Top Ten. Pete Allman, a radio personality in Las Vegas who had been friends with Brown for 15 years, credited Brown with jump-starting his career and motivating him personally and professionally.

"He was a very positive person. There was no question he was the hardest working man in show business," Allman said. "I remember Mr. Brown as someone who always motivated me, got me reading the Bible."

While most of Brown's life was glitz and glitter — he was the singing preacher in 1980's "The Blues Brothers" — he was plagued with charges of abusing drugs and alcohol and of hitting his third wife, Adrienne. In September 1988, Brown, high on PCP and carrying a shotgun, entered an insurance seminar next to his Augusta office. Police said he asked seminar participants if they were using his private restroom. Police chased Brown for a half-hour from Augusta into South Carolina and back to Georgia. The chase ended when police shot out the tires of his truck.

Brown received a six-year prison sentence. He spent 15 months in a South Carolina prison and 10 months in a work release program before being paroled in February 1991. In 2003, the South Carolina parole board granted him a pardon for his crimes in that state. Soon after his release, Brown was on stage again with an audience that included millions of cable television viewers nationwide who watched the three-hour, pay-per-view concert at Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles. Adrienne Brown died in 1996 in Los Angeles at age 47. She took PCP and several prescription drugs while she had a bad heart and was weak from cosmetic surgery two days earlier, the coroner said. More recently, he married his fourth wife, Tomi Raye Hynie, one of his backup singers. The couple had a son, James Jr.

Two years later, Brown spent a week in a private Columbia hospital, recovering from what his agent said was dependency on painkillers. Brown's attorney, Albert "Buddy" Dallas, said the singer was exhausted from six years of road shows. Brown was performing to the end, and giving back to his community. Three days before his death, he joined volunteers at his annual toy giveaway in Augusta, and he planned to perform on New Year's Eve at B.B. King Blues Club in New York.

"He was dramatic to the end — dying on Christmas Day," said the Rev. Jesse Jackson, a friend of Brown's since 1955. "Almost a dramatic, poetic moment. He'll be all over the news all over the world today. He would have it no other way." By GREG BLUESTEIN


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Yoko Ono's Ex-Driver Seeks Bail

The lawyer representing Yoko Ono's former driver on Wednesday (20Dec06) filed papers in a New York City court seeking his client's immediate release from jail. Koral Karsan, 50, is accused of threatening to release embarrassing tape recordings and candid photographs of Ono, the widow of John Lennon, and of threatening to kill her unless she gave him $2 million (£1.03 million). On Tuesday (19Dec06), he was indicted on a charge of first-degree attempted grand larceny and refused bail after being deemed a potential flight risk due to his Turkish immigration status and foreign ties. However, defence lawyer Robert Gottlieb yesterday argued Karsan is a low flight risk. Karsan could face up to 15 years in prison if convicted, writes the New York Post. (c) WENN / CLICK HEADLINE FOR ARTICLE SOURCE

Strawberry Fields Forever

On October 9, 1940 at Oxford Street Maternity Hospital, in Liverpool England, John Winston Lennon was born to Julia and Freddie Lennon. His mother and his Aunt Mimi raised him, while his father worked on a ship, leaving Julia and his son alone for months at a time. Between 1942 and 1944, John lived with his Aunt Mimi and Uncle George, but continued to see his mother on a regular basis. In July of 1946, John's father returned home and intended to take John to New Zealand to live with him. Julia was against the idea and announced that she wanted John to stay in England. John was given the option of whom he wanted to stay with. He chose to stay in England with his mother, and John continued to live with his Aunt Mimi, without seeing his father for the next 20 years. In July 1955, Julia started to visit John more frequently, and John's relationship with his mother grew very strong. During this period, Julia began to teach John how to play the banjo, and soon after he began to learn the guitar. On July 15, 1958, John's mother was brutally struck, and instantly killed, by a car driven by an intoxicated off-duty policeman. The incident profoundly affected John emotionally. Throughout the rest of his life, John was haunted by his mother's tragic and unexpected death that lead him to compose many songs such as "Julia" and "Mother". Alcohol and music then became a major part of John's life, as he attempted to comfort himself from his mother's death. He continued to live with his Aunt Mimi, who bought John his first guitar for only £17.

Over the years, John started many skiffle groups. But in late 1960, he started the foundation for the group that would change the course of music forever. This group, The Beatles, consisted of himself, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Pete Best. Their shows were held at various clubs throughout Berkshire, Hamburg, Liverpool, and included the Cavern Club, where their soon-to-be manager Brian Epstein later discovered them.

With the help of Brian, the Beatles auditioned at Decca Records on New Years Day of 1962. After being turned down by Decca Records, Epstein helped the Beatles with another audition at EMI Records with George Martin. The audition was a success and George Martin signed The Beatles to Parlophone, a division of EMI. However, George Martin decided that Pete Best was not right for studio recording, and decided to have him replaced by Ringo Starr.

During this time, Cynthia Powell and John decide to marry after it was discovered that she was pregnant. On August 23, 1962, John and Cynthia were married. On April 8, 1963, Cynthia gives birth to Julian Lennon; however, John was not able to see Cynthia or his son until two days later, because he was in London with his band.

For the last time, after literally hundreds of performances, on August 3, 1963, the Beatles headlined the bill at the Cavern Club. About a month later, the Beatles were invited to attend a Rolling Stones rehearsal, where Lennon and McCartney completed the composition of the Stones first hit, "I Wanna be your Man." In November of 1963, Brian Epstein booked the Beatles onto the Ed Sullivan show for February of 1964. The show was a complete success, with an estimated 72 million viewers, setting new records for entertainment broadcasting.

Back in the studio, the Beatles continued to record hit after hit and become the most popular group in history. Unfortunately, Lennon remarks on their success during an interview with Maureen Cleave in March of 1966 claiming the Beatles were, "bigger than Jesus." This statement nearly destroyed the Beatles and soon after they to decide to quit touring. Lennon later apologized for his remarks, but even the "London Catholic Herald" said his remarks, although arrogant, were "...still probably true". Despite not touring, the Beatles continued to experiment in the studio and began a new revolution in music. The release of songs such as "Strawberry Fields Forever" and the album "Sgt. Pepper" shocked unexpected fans with a dramatic change in the Beatles "sound".

John soon began to experiment rather heavily with LSD and became deeply immersed in the art world. In April of 1967, John Lennon attends a "psychedelic" event where he watches many artists perform. The many performers included Pink Floyd and Yoko Ono, whom he met on November 9, 1966 at an art exhibit preview. In May of 1968, John and Yoko became a couple after John invited her to his home. They made love after spending the night recording experimental music, which was later released as the "Two Virgins" album. Later that year on August 22, 1968, Cynthia filed for divorce on grounds of John's adultery. On March 20, 1969 John Lennon and Yoko Ono are married in Gibraltar, near Spain. Between March 25 and March 31, John and Yoko spent their honeymoon at the Amsterdam Hilton staging their famous "Bed-In" for peace. John Lennon stated, "We're staying in bed for a week, to register our protest against all the suffering and violence in the world."

On March 31, 1969, Yoko's film, "Rape (Film No. 6)", was premiered. John and Yoko attended a press conference for the occasion to appear inside a large white bag, and Bagism is born. In April 1969, John and Yoko began yet another campaign, "Acorns For Peace". In this event, they mailed acorns to world leaders asking them to plant the acorns for peace. In June of 1960, John and Yoko performed another "Bed-In" in Montreal, where they recorded John's "Give Peace a Chance" with the help of a few friends and visitors.

In April of 1970, Paul McCartney decided to leave the Beatles, and only more tension was built up between John and Paul. On December 8, 1970, Jann Wenner of Rolling Stone Magazine interviewed John. In this interview, John criticizes just about everything from himself to God. On May 28, 1971, Paul and Linda McCartney release their new, "Ram" album. This album contained obvious offensive messages to the Lennon's, which resulted in John's composition of the song, "How Do You Sleep?", a song aimed at insulting McCartney. "How do You Sleep?" was released on John's second solo album, "Imagine", on September 9, 1971. The title track of this album has become one of the most popular songs of all time, and more importantly, remains as powerful today as it was decades ago.

In late February of 1972, John and Paul met in New York and agreed to stop the public feuding. A few months later, the FBI believed that John was only staying in the country to upset the Republican National Convention. Soon after, deportation hearings are held against the Lennon's. John only upset the government more when he spoke at a peace rally in New York calling for an end to the Vietnam War.

On April 28, 1972, Apple releases David Peel & the Lower East Side's, "The Pope Smokes Dope", which was produced by John and Yoko, and contains "The Ballad of New York City- John Lennon/Yoko Ono".

Over a year later, in late April of 1973, John and Yoko move into the Dakota apartment building on the upper west side of New York. Years later, on October 7, 1975, a court appeals the deportation order against John. Only two days later, on John's birthday, Yoko gives birth to Sean Taro Ono Lennon. A few months later, John, helping Ringo, made his last appearance in a professional recording studio, for almost four years. Fortunately, on July 27, 1976, John was granted permanent residence in America and his immigration worries were over.

On September 25, 1980, Yoko met with Sean's bodyguard, Doug McDougall, to discuss an increase in security around the Dakota, due to John and Yoko's frequent leaves to the studio. However, they decided to put off solving the problem and scheduled another meeting for December 9, 1980. On the day of John's 40th birthday and Sean's 5th, Yoko has an airplane write "Happy Birthday John + Sean - Love Yoko", nine times in the sky. By this time, they have been working on a new album, "Double Fantasy", for several months, and it was almost ready to be released.

Meanwhile, in Honolulu, a mentally ill man checked out "John Lennon: One Day at a Time" from a public library, and became convinced that Lennon was a hypocrite. He became frustrated and decided that the solution to his mental instability would be to kill John Lennon. On October 29, this man flew to New York from Honolulu carrying a pistol, but no ammunition. He immediately visited the Dakota and returned there for five days straight. On November 11, he called his wife in Honolulu and admitted that he had been planning to murder John Lennon. She convinced her husband to fly home. But he returned to New York again December 5, after a short stay with his grandmother in Chicago. Lennon announced that he had spent the last five years as a happy, secure husband and father. A few days later, on December 8, 1980, around 5PM, John autographed a copy of "Double Fantasy" for this mentally ill man from Honolulu. The sick man, standing with an open mouth, appeared amazed that he had met John. John asked him, "Is that all you want?" All the sick man could reply was with, "Thanks, John". Hours later, this mentally ill man was still standing outside the Dakota. As John and Yoko returned home, the man called out, "Mr. Lennon." As John turned toward the voice, he was shot five times in the shoulders and back. He struggled to the security guard's office, and collapsed crying, "I'm shot, I'm shot." Police arrived immediately and put Lennon in the car to bring him to the nearest hospital, but when asked if he knew who he was, he could not reply. Ten minutes after the shooting occurred, Lennon arrived at Roosevelt Hospital. Unfortunately, the damage was extreme. John Winston Ono Lennon, having bled severely, was announced dead on arrival. Back at the Dakota, the mentally ill man from Honolulu had been arrested without a struggle. He had in his hand, a copy of "The Catcher in the Rye", a novel by J.D. Salinger. On December 10, 1980, John Lennon was cremated. A worldwide 10-minute silent vigil took place on December 14, 1980 at 2PM Eastern Time in John's memory.

By request of Yoko and Paul McCartney, the name of John's killer should not be repeated.
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