Wednesday, 13 August 2008

Alex Marshall on the national anthems that do their countries proud

It is 8pm on a Tuesday evening, and I am busy annoyance the Olympic associations of various Caribbean countries by asking them which national anthem will play if one of their athletes wins amber in Beijing. "You want to know what?" asks the receptionist at the Meat Market - a butcher that happens to share the same telephone set line as the Virgin Islands Olympic Committee.

"I just now want to know if your athletes would heed to the US's anthem or that of the Virgin Islands."

"I don't bed, son," she says. "All I hump is we ain't gonna win no gold medal."

I have fatigued the last few weeks making calls like this because I have been trying to track down every single national anthem that mightiness be heard at this year's Olympics. All 205 of them. My plan was to listen to all the anthems - the subservient versions that you hear at the Olympics - with a music journalist's ear, and rank them; that way of life I would know wHO to barrack for. There is no other middling way to compare countries musically. National anthems ar the same the reality over - a short, classical piece meant to stir up pride. They have got to be boisterous and bombastic, with a tune simple enough that you can exclaim it whether drunk in a stadium, or drunk in social movement of the TV.

Little did I know that it would take a month to track down four hours, 26 minutes and 25 seconds of euphony, or that most of those tunes would be so tiresome I would have to limit myself to phoebe a day to diaphragm them putt me ofbrass for life. I also didn't carry the search to create in me an deathless hatred for both La Marseillaise (versions of which are put-upon by 7 countries) and God Save the Queen (used by three).

And what did I learn from all this? That there are only if a 12 anthems that are musically worth listening to - and that most of the countries these belong to do not make a hope of winning a gold in Beijing.

Anthems go back as far as the 1560s, when William of Orange's fellowship decided he needed a song, Het Wilhelmus ("The William"), to accompany his exploits scrap for Dutch independence against the Spanish. It is a peaceful song - calming, regular - with a voluminous melody. In short, it is everything an anthem shouldn't be, which is perhaps why no other country developed an anthem for a good two centuries. God Save the Queen was not performed until 1745, La Marseillaise until 1792, and what is now Germany's - music written by Haydn - until 1797.

With colonialism, anthems bed covering world- wide-cut, although nearly were not made official until the 1920s and 1930s. The first time they were used at the Olympics was 1924. But colonialism did non lead to every rural area adopting the hymns and military marches that pass on for anthems in Europe. Three other types developed: folk anthems based on traditional melodies; "the Arab fanfare", uncouth in Middle Eastern countries and consisting of little more than a trumpet flourish; and the Latin American "heroic anthems".

The last group ar by far the most fun. Most of them last over four transactions and are set out like miniskirt operas. They have a rollicking opening section, in which each part of the memorial tablet section tries to outplay the others, a melodramatic, meandering center section - oboes and flutes overtop - and an extraordinary finish.

All of which desktop is pretty irrelevant, as from hearing to 205 of them I accept realised there are actually just 2 types of anthem: the perfunctory, exanimate ones, and those that make the effort to be different. Shame that 190 light into the first group.

Antigua's, for model, is a school assembly tune, not an hymn, while Sri Lanka's sounds like a nursery rhyme. There ar dull military marches such as Malta's and Burkina Faso's, and dull hymns like Zambia's and Malaysia's. Whoever wrote them seemed to be aiming entirely for a tune bare enough that parents could teach it to their children on a recorder.

The other big disappointment with the majority of anthems is that no matter which country they come from, they good like they were written by a band leader from the Royal Navy. There are no cha-cha rhythms in Cuba's anthem, no lavishness guitars in Ghana's.

"There ar historical reasons for this," says Derek Scott, prof of critical musicology at Leeds University. "The UK's was the first real national anthem in 1745. And it was adopted by lots of other countries: Sweden, Germany, even Russia at one point. The idea developed that it was only the words that were significant in expressing national quality. The tune to God Save the Queen was seen as meaning 'national anthem' and the words were what made it appropriate to each country."

People know what a home anthem is supposed to sound like - a western military march - so they make sure theirs sounds the same. "Countries use of goods and services anthems to put themselves on the world stage," he says.

In malice of this, there are a handful of anthems that do stand stunned - either because they use non-western instruments, scales and tunes, or because they take a western anthem and then toy with it, making it solemn or funny, and entirely their own. Most of the "Stans" of central Asia have anthems that sound like they could non have fall from anyplace apart from former Soviet states. They trudge along in minor keys, filled with magisterial strings and booming drums, as if written to accompany armies clambering into battle.

Then there are Nepal's, Senegal's and Nigeria's, all of which make use of local instruments. Senegal's is even called "Strum your koras, strike your balafons" after the instruments that play it. Guinea's, a military marching, inexplicably has

a 10-second "polka break out" halfway through. Burundi's does a similar trick, turning into the soundtrack from a Bruce Lee plastic film for 10 seconds in front realising that perhaps it wasn't the best thought after all.

When you see tunes like these, which are really different and exciting - world music fans would be overlapping them up if they didn't bonk they were anthems - it makes you admiration why others do non follow their example. But will you actually listen any of these at the Olympics? Well, Japan's should

suffer several airings - see out, in particular, for Kosuke Kitajima in the 200m men's breast-stroke - but none of the others has actually won gold in either of the final two Olympics, so it's unlikely. "We only experience six athletes going to

Beijing and they didn't actually dispose," says a spokesman for Bangladesh's Olympic association. Surely, then, all the more reason to cheer them for their music.

Be Upstanding: The ten-spot best national anthems

Uruguay: National anthem

One of the most euphoric pieces of classical music I've ever heard. Banks of trumpets play crescendos to false endings - for five transactions. But somehow it works.

Bangladesh: My Golden Bengal

A wondrous anthem that sounds like it was written for a perambulation along the Seine. It really inevitably Jacques Brel. Which is probably non what the Bangladeshi composer had in mind.

Tajikistan: National anthem

Written when the commonwealth was part of the USSR, it sounds wish the music that plays in James Bond films when a Russian spy is nigh to disregard off Bond's manhood. It doesn't try to soar, but frighten, and it's all the better for it.

Mauritania: National anthem

A trip into the heart of the souk, albeit a menacing one. The melodic line is so unusual that most Mauritanian's can't sing along to it, so pretend it doesn't ingest any words.

Dominica: Isle of Beauty, Isle of Splendour

A simple, spiralling melody stuck on double for 47 seconds, just there's such movement and elegance to it. Don't confuse with the Dominican Republic's, which is wretched.

US Virgin Isles: Virgin Islands March

It's Mary Poppins! One of the few hems to literally displume out all the bells and whistles. This should be a soundtrack to a kid's film.

Senegal: Strum Your Koras, Strike Your Balafons

How can an anthem that name checks two local instruments in its rubric - a harp and a xylophone - be any less than brilliant? It's truly two tunes - the first twinkles, the second strolls. But both ar amazing.

Nigeria: Arise O Compatriots, Nigeria's Call Obey

Written in 1978 by the Nigerian Police Band, this should be an awful mar. Fortunately it features relentless afrobeat percussion, which makes any tune outstanding.

Nepal: Hundreds of Flowers

Adopted last year, when Nepal's House of Representatives threw out the old, western-style anthem. This ethnic music melody on strings and hand drums sounds care slowed-down bhangra. Shame it's probably unplayable by boldness, so unlikely to be heard outside Nepal.

Japan: May Your Reign Last Forever

Solemn. So much so, it'll own you thinking of everyone you've lost for its duration. Rarely does an anthem carry such weight.







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Wednesday, 6 August 2008

Cobra Starship Announce Details Of Upcoming North American Tour

Cobra Starship have revealed details on their forthcoming North American tour in support of their release �VIVA LA COBRA!.


Dubbed the �Sassy Back Tour�, the band will kick cancelled their dates in Buffalo, New York on October 7 and wrap up in Albany, New York on November 30.


Support for the circuit will come from Forever The Sickest Kids, Hit The Lights and Sing It Loud.


The tour dates are as follows:


Buffalo, NY, Club Infinity � October 7

Hartford, CT, Webster Theatre � 8

Philadelphia, PA, Trocadero � 9

Hampton Beach, NH, Hampton Beach Casino � 10

New York, NY, Nokia Theater � 11

Cleveland, OH, House Of Blues � 12

Detroit, MI, Majestic Theatre � 14

St. Louis, MO, Pop�s � 18

Kansas City, MO, Beaumont � 19

Denver, CO, Gothic Theatre � 20

Salt Lake City, UT, Avalon � 21

Vancouver, BC, Creation � 23

Las Vegas, NV, Jillian�s � 31

Anaheim, CA, House Of Blues � November 1

Phoenix, AZ, Marquee � 4

El Paso, TX, Club 101 � 5

Tulsa, OK, Cain�s � 6

Dallas, TX, House Of Blues � 7

San Antonio, TX, Scout Bar � 8

Houston, TX, House Of Blues � 9

Tampa, FL, Jannus - 11

Miami, FL, Revolution � 12

Orlando, FL, House Of Blues � 13

Atlanta, GA, Masquerade � 14

Charleston, SC, Music Farm � 15

Charlotte, NC, Tremont - 16

Richmond, VA, The National � 18

Baltimore, MD, Sonar - 19

Sayreville, NJ, Starland Ballroom � 20

Grand Rapids, MI, Intersection � 23

Toronto, ON, Opera House � 25

Montreal, QC, Club Soda � 26


Buy Cobra Starship tickets


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House Approves Bill Allowing FDA To Regulate Tobacco; Bill Would Ban Additives But Not Menthol


The House on Wednesday by a veto-proof 326-102 vote approved legislation (HR 1108) that would give FDA the authority to regulate tobacco plant products, the New York Times reports (Saul, New York Times, 7/31). The measure, introduced by Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), would allow FDA to bachelor of Arts in Nursing flavored additives, with an exemption for menthol seasoner (Yoest, Wall Street Journal, 7/31).



Some black anti-smoking advocates criticized the exemption, noting that many blackened smokers exercise metholated cigarettes (New York Times, 7/31). The National African American Tobacco Prevention Network withdrew its support for the bill because of the menthol exemption (Alonso-Zaldivar, AP/Florida Times-Union, 7/30).



Seventy-five per centum of black smokers role mentholated tobacco products. Menthol brands explanation for some 28% of the $70 billion U.S. cigarette grocery store.



It is thought that menthol and other additives might mask the cruelty of tobacco, which could make it easier for teenagers to begin smoke. Researchers likewise have questioned whether menthol plays a role in disproportionate rates of malignant neoplastic disease related to smoking among blacks. A recent study from Harvard University establish that some cigarette makers intentionally "manipulated menthol levels to appeal young multitude" (Kaiser Health Disparities Report, 7/31).



To earn support from the Congressional Black Caucus, a provision was added to the measure that mandates a scientific advisory committee survey the personal effects of menthol flavoring and issue a recommendation within one year. FDA too would have to produce an military action plan on the advertising and advancement of menthol and other cigarettes to young people, particularly those in nonage communities.



Lorillard Tobacco Company in a statement said it opposed the bill only "welcomes the provision in this pecker that calls for a scientific revaluation of menthol in cigarettes." Lorillard produces Newport cigarettes, the ahead menthol make. According to the company, research to date has not found that menthol cigarettes ar more dangerous or addictive than cigarettes without menthol, the Times reports.

More Bill Details, Legislation's Future

Under the measure, FDA would not be allowed to eliminate nicotine from tobacco products or ban all tobacco products, though it would be able to reduce amounts of nicotine if it thought doing so would benefit public health (New York Times, 7/31).



The Senate version of the bill (S 625) "face[s] some formidable obstacles in the Senate, including a mingy time inning in which to act," CQ Today reports (Armstrong [1], CQ Today, 7/30). The criterion, introduced by Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), has 56 co-sponsors in the Senate. Melissa Wagoner, a voice for Kennedy, said that they ar waiting for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) to take the broadsheet to the Senate floor (Armstrong [2], CQ Today, 7/30). Sponsors of the bill aforementioned they hope the Senate will consider the flyer after the August respite. Regan Lachapelle, a Reid spokesperson, said that programming decisions for September hold not yet been established (Armstrong [2], CQ Today, 7/30).



The Bush administration opposes the lawmaking, the Washington Post reports (Stein, Washington Post, 7/31). The White House, in its statement of government activity position, aforesaid that allowing FDA to regulate tobacco products could "lead the public to mistakenly conclude some tobacco products ar safe." The administration likewise said that the fees levied to pay for FDA rule of the products would amount to a "new tax that would be paid disproportionately by low-income individuals" (Armstrong [2], CQ Today, 7/30). White House officials too said the bill could affect international trade agreements by forbiddance some imported tobacco products (Washington Post, 7/31).



Most public health groups support the measure, according to the Times (New York Times, 7/31). Philip Morris USA supports the bill, but other tobacco companies oppose certain provisions (Simon, MediaGeneral/Richmond Times-Dispatch, 7/30).




Reprinted with kind permission from http://www.kaisernetwork.org. You fundament view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for email delivery at http://www.kaisernetwork.

Cee-Lo

Cee-Lo   
Artist: Cee-Lo

   Genre(s): 
Rap: Hip-Hop
   Other
   



Discography:


The Collection   
 The Collection

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 18


The One   
 The One

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 4


Cee-Lo Green... Is the Soul Machine   
 Cee-Lo Green... Is the Soul Machine

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 18


Cee-Lo Green and His Perfect Imperfections (Clean)   
 Cee-Lo Green and His Perfect Imperfections (Clean)

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 21




Multi-talented and flamboyant, Cee-Lo initially made a place for himself and his trademark crooning as section of pioneering Dirty South rappers Goodie Mob earlier he broke by in the early 2000s for a colorful solo route. Along with mate Atlanta rappers OutKast, Goodie Mob laid prohibited the figure for the Dirty South style during the mid-'90s, making good waves with their debut album, Soul Food (1995). Cee-Lo was an important member of the radical, often gibber the meat hooks to many of Goodie Mob's best songs (e.g., "Cell Therapy," "Soul Food," "Bootleg Ice"). But the group didn't last too long, and after a few releases over a five-year bridge, Cee-Lo split with Goodie Mob for a promising solo deal with Arista.


The deal came in the wake of Arista's success with OutKast's Stankonia (particularly the individual "Ms. Jackson"), not to mention the burgeoning neo-soul movement characterized by the likes of Alicia Keys, Jill Scott, and Macy Gray. Arista label head L.A. Reid no doubt sensed a luck of potential difference in Cee-Lo and gave him the green light to record a solo album. That album, Cee-Lo Green and His Perfect Imperfections (2002), sounded unlike anything else out in that respect -- unlike Cee-Lo's past work with Goodie Mob, unlike his neo-soul generation, and dissimilar pretty much anything else take out the weirder corners of OutKast's Stankonia album.


The album unsurprisingly ne'er took off commercially, despite some colorful furtherance on Cee-Lo's part (a wild video for "Closet Freak" and a belly-baring live term of enlistment), and the tattooed freehanded adult male went back the drawing dining table, returning in early 2004 with Cee-Lo Green Is the Soul Machine. This follow-up was just as free-spirited as Cee-Lo's debut only was a more than focused travail, anchored by some radio-friendly singles produced by megabucks hitmakers Timbaland ("I'll Be Around"), Jazze Pha ("The One"), and the Neptunes. It besides featured some gracious production by Cee-Lo himself. Interestingly, Arista released the album shortly later parting ways with Reid and besides afterwards experiencing tremendous, Grammy-winning success with OutKast's Speakerboxxx/The Love Below, an album (André 3000's half, at least) that sounded quite a bit like Cee-Lo's work.


In 2006, Cee-Lo enjoyed his greated success to date as half of Gnarls Barkley, a couplet likewise featuring producer Danger Mouse. "Crazy," the steer single from St. Elsewhere, the duo's debut album, was an inst hit in the U.K. and steadily rose to the top of the charts in the U.S. by the end of the summer. The critical herald and commercial winner of Gnarls Barkley awarded Cee-Lo the near attention he'd ever enjoyed in his life history to escort.





Yana Kay Vortex Involute

Liver Damage In Hepatitis C Patients Could Be Treated With Warfarin, Says Study

�The drug warfarin may help keep liver failure in thousands of citizenry with Hepatitis C, according to new research.





In a study published in the Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, researchers show that warfarin reduces the scarring on the liver caused by Hepatitis C. This scarring, or fibrosis, replaces normal liver cells and can lede to cirrhosis of the liver of the liver and ultimately liver failure.





Following the new findings in mouse models, the Imperial College London researchers are now embarking on a clinical trial of warfarin as a treatment for people with Hepatitis C, funded by the Medical Research Council (MRC).





There are an estimated 300,000 people in the UK with chronic Hepatitis C. The disease progresses much more than quickly in some patients than in others and around one in quintet of those infected will develop cirrhosis.





Treatment to net the infection is presently effective in only round 50 pct of patients and behind have considerable unpleasant side effects such as fatigue duty, nausea and depression. If this treatment fails, in that respect are no currently in effect therapies to slow the progression of fibrosis.





The new research looks at how warfarin affects the patterned advance of fibrosis in mice with inveterate liver injury. Warfarin is already victimized to forbid and treat blood clots in citizenry with artificial heart valves, deep nervure thrombosis, and a legion of other conditions.





A previous study by the same researchers demonstrated that in Hepatitis C, scarring of the liver accelerates in those patients who are prone to form blood clots. This led the researchers to believe that warfarin's anti-clotting properties power enable the drug to fight the disease.





The young study showed that treatment with coumadin significantly reduces the patterned advance of fibrosis in normal mice with chronic liver injury. It also shows that coumadin reduces the progression of fibrosis in mice with chronic liver injury and a genetic mutation known as Factor V Leiden (FVL), which causes fibrosis to progress at a much quicker rate than usual because it amplifies the body's clotting mechanisms.





Professor Mark Thursz, one of the authors of the study from the Division of Medicine at Imperial College London, said: "At the moment there are a dandy many the great unwashed with Hepatitis C world Health Organization have no treatment options left and it would transform their lives if we could prevent them from development liver failure. We ar looking ahead to seeing the results of our upcoming trial run in human race now that we've had such promising results in the trial in mice."





Dr Quentin Anstee, an MRC Clinical Research Fellow and the corresponding author of the subject from Imperial College London, added: "If we have positive results from the new

Friday, 11 July 2008

Photek

Photek   
Artist: Photek

   Genre(s): 
Electronic
   Drum & Bass
   Electronic
   Drum & Bass
   



Discography:


Terminus   
 Terminus

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 3


Solaris   
 Solaris

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 11


Form and Function   
 Form and Function

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 12




Though Goldie became the get-go virtuoso of jungle, the recordings of Rupert Parkes -- as Code of Practice, Aquarius, Studio Pressure, the Truper and Sentinel, but to the highest degree magnificently as Photek -- made him an easy piece for the style's most esthetic and intelligent producer. Working his way through street-level hardstep (on former productions for Certificate 18 and Street Beats) and laputan, subaquatic "dolphin" tunes for L.T.J Bukem's Good Looking label, Parkes eventually arrived at a well-grounded that pushed the bound of drum'n'bass from the dancefloor into the realm of breakbeat headspace; unlike to the highest degree jungle producers, Parkes has never DJed and seldom goes to clubs. His incredibly intricate rhythm scheduling -- ofttimes requiring weeks of reckoner homework -- and the unmissable aura of paranoid menace on recordings such as "The Hidden Camera" and "Flying saucer" exerted quite an influence on the return of dark-style drum'n'bass during the late '90s.


As a adolescent, Parkes listened to electro, techno and hip-hop as well as the more than free form side of idle words and fusion. Thanks to a sampler bought with a £2000 loan from the Trust of the Prince of Wales, he began producing tracks and first appeared on Paul Solomon's Certificate 18 Records with singles as Studio Pressure. He likewise recorded for Basement (as Sentinel) and Street Beats (the Truper) before initiating a series of 12-inch singles for his own Photek Records, which gave him credentials and lED to releases on Goldie's Metalheadz label and L.T.J. Bukem's Good Looking, as well as a remix of the Therapy? single "Loose."


Later Parkes had released more than 80 tracks of drum'n'bass on half a 12 labels, he was approached by Virgin and sign-language to a five-album deal with the label's Science imprint (provided he was allowed to stay on recording for other independent labels as well). Parkes' first freeing on Science was The Hidden Camera EP, which appeared in May 1996. The second Science single "Ni-Ten-Ichi-Ryu" displayed an increasing stake in applying the lessons of martial humanities to his programming (the deed is Japanese for "two swords, one technique"). Virgin compiled the latter two releases on 1997's Reduced instruction set computer Vs. Reward, and then released the debut Photek album Modus Operandi in September 1997. Much-hyped though little-praised, the album was followed by 1998's Shape & Function, a compiling including various original Photek Records tracks plus remixes and new tracks. During the next two years, Parkes focussed on his new Photek Productions label, and at long last released a second LP, Solaris, in 2000.





The Grateful Dead

Nicolas De Angelis

Nicolas De Angelis   
Artist: Nicolas De Angelis

   Genre(s): 
Instrumental
   



Discography:


Le Meilleur De La Guitare   
 Le Meilleur De La Guitare

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 23




With his delicate guitar playing and impressionist compositions, Nicolas de Angelis has helped to create a modern French romanticism. A classically trained musician, he's performed on pic loads by Michel Legrand and Jean-Claude Petit and in the recording studio with Yves Montand, Claude Aznevour, Michael Berger, Yves Duteil, Nilda Fernandez, Enzo Enzo, and Sylvie Vartan.


De Angelis has been every bit successful acting his own compositions. His debut album, Quelgues Noyes Pour Anna, was certified au a calendar month after its release in 1981. His tenth solo album, Les Plus Belles Melodies Religieuses a la Guitare, released in 2000, featured interpretations of what he called the "most beautiful religious melodies."


Born in Saint-Cloud, a benjamin West Parisian suburban area along the shores of the Reine River, de Angelis studied guitar at the Paris Academy from the years of ten-spot. Hailed as one of the modern engender of French romanticistic guitar players while silent in his teens, he was playacting in Parisian cabarets as an accompanyist for such French pop stars as Julian Clerc, Sylvie Vartan, and Fabienne Thibault before his eighteenth birthday.





NBC Lambasted For Handling Of Russert Death Report