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July 29, 2009

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Michael Jackson - man and music Audio slideshow | BBC NEWS

Audio slideshow: Michael Jackson - man and music

Fans and contemporaries have been paying tribute to the king of pop - who has died at the age of 50. But what did Michael Jackson think of his own life and career?

Here - with the help of his music, and archive images from the days of the Jackson Five to the present - he reflects on his own vulnerabilities.


Audio from Harpo Productions - The Oprah Winfrey Show. Photographs from AP, PA, AFP and Getty Images. Slideshow by Paul Kerley. Publication date 26 June 2009.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Audio slideshow: Michael Jackson - man and music

Jackson doctor's phones 'seized'


Jackson doctor's phones 'seized'

Michael Flanagan of the DEA describes the operation

Police have searched the Las Vegas home and offices of Michael Jackson's doctor as part of a manslaughter investigation into the singer's death.

Dr Conrad Murray's lawyer, Edward Chernoff, said officials were looking for the star's medical records.

The search is the second in a week following a similar operation at the doctor's Houston clinic on 22 July.

Dr Murray, who was with Jackson and tried to revive him before he died, has not been named as a suspect.

In a statement, Dr Murray's lawyer Edward Chernoff said the warrant "authorised investigators to look for medical records relating to Michael Jackson and all of his reported aliases".

He added Dr Murray was present during the search of his home and assisted the officers, who seized mobile phones and a computer hard drive.

Toxicology results

Reports suggest the investigation around Jackson's death is focusing on his use of powerful painkilling drugs.

The Drug Enforcement Administration has been involved in the investigation because the agency licenses doctors to administer controlled pharmaceuticals.

Searches at the clinic and another site rented by Dr Murray in Houston, Texas, were carried out last Wednesday after a warrant was issued by a judge in the city.

Dr Conrad Murray
Dr Murray has already been interviewed twice by police

The warrant, filed in Harris County District Court, said authorities were looking for "items constituting evidence of the offence of manslaughter that tend to show that Dr Conrad Murray committed the said criminal offence".

Such charges against a doctor for the death of a patient are extremely rare and require authorities to show there was a reckless action that created a risk of death.

Items seized during the searches included 27 tablets of the weight loss drug Phentermine, a tablet of the muscle relaxant Clonazepam, two hard drives, notices from the Internal Revenue Service and a registration for controlled substances.

Police have said Dr Murray is co-operating in the investigation.

Paramedics were called to Jackson's Los Angeles mansion while Dr Murray was performing CPR on the singer on the day he died, according to a recording of a 911 call.

Speaking a few days after Jackson's 25 June death, Mr Chernoff, denied his client administered painkilling drugs that could have contributed to the singer's death.

An official determination of what killed Jackson will not be made until the results of a toxicology report are disclosed.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Jackson doctor's phones 'seized'

Lana Clarkson: B-movie actress | BBC NEWS|


Lana Clarkson: B-movie actress

Actress Lana Clarkson was found shot dead at the home of record producer Phil Spector in 2003.

Spector was charged with murdering the 40-year-old and, despite a 2007 mistrial, has been found guilty of her murder.

Lana Clarkson
Lana Clarkson wanted to be a famous actress, the trial heard

Born in 1962 in California, Lana Clarkson set her heart on making it in the tough world of Hollywood, with a dream of following in the footsteps of her idol Marilyn Monroe.

She carved out a career with small roles in American TV hits including The A-Team, Knight Rider and Who's The Boss in the 1970s and 1980s.

Her big screen debut came in Amy Heckerling's 1982 film Fast Times at Ridgemont High, which starred Sean Penn and Jennifer Jason Leigh.

But it was her association with legendary low-budget movie mogul Roger Corman that really put her on the B-movie map.

She described learning about the movie world under Corman as the "boot camp" of film-making.

Clarkson in 1987 film Amazon Women on the Moon
Clarkson appeared in 1987 film Amazon Women on the Moon

Clarkson's first starring role was in the cult sci-fi movie Barbarian Queen, produced by Corman.

The 1985 film, set during the days of the Roman Empire, saw Clarkson play one of three women who survive an attack on their village and decide to exact revenge.

She reprised her role in the 1989 sequel Barbarian Queen II: The Empress Strikes Back.

Clarkson's other film roles included the spoof Amazon Women on the Moon and fantasy Wizards of the Lost Kingdom II.

In 2000, she starred as Detective Jan Cooper in Richard Gabai's Vice Girls.

She played one of a trio of sexy vice squad cops who went undercover, wearing very little, to capture a killer.

"Her main motivation was to be known," according to playwright John Barons, who hired and fired Lana Clarkson shortly before her death.

"It's not like she wanted to be in Dostoyevsky and that she wanted to do Shakespeare. The passion was more to be a famous actress."

The court watching video footage of Lana Clarkson
The court was shown video footage of Lana Clarkson

But from the early 1990s onwards, her career consisted of small roles in a handful of films and occasional TV parts.

She kept the money coming in by appearing in numerous advertising campaigns, including slots for Nike, Mercedes and US retail chain Kmart.

Clarkson was also a regular volunteer at the Aids charity Project Angel Food, which delivers food to those disabled by HIV and Aids.

But she was down on her luck when she met Phil Spector while working as a hostess at the House of Blues club on Sunset Boulevard.

"I can't believe I'm borrowing clothes from my friends to work at a $9-an-hour job pulling out chairs for people I used to beat out for jobs," she told her friend Jennifer Hayes-Riedl. "It's horrible."

Ms Hayes-Riedl told the court during the first murder trial: "Her smile could light up a room."

But underneath, she "just crumbled", she said. "She was this sad, pathetic person who didn't have hope at all."

'End of my tether'

Both trials included time spent arguing over whether Clarkson really had given up on life, and could have been capable of suicide.

She sent letters to friends and a doctor in the months leading up to her death including the phrases "I'm at the end of my rope here" and "I was at the end of my tether".

She also wrote at one point: "This has been definitely the most difficult year of my life. My finances are a shambles and I am on the verge of losing everything."

But her mother told the court that her daughter had bought seven pairs of shoes for a new job just hours before she was shot.

She also identified a series of photos the actress had taken to seek work about a month before her death.

And in an e-mail sent the day before she died, Clarkson agreed to attend a birthday party for a friend's husband later that month. "Can't wait! Hugs & kisses, Lana," she wrote.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Lana Clarkson: B-movie actress

Spector Murder Wrap | BBC NEWS|






Spector found guilty of murder


The music producer Phil Spector has been found guilty of killing actress Lana Clarkson.

The 40-year-old died of a gunshot fired into her mouth while seated in the foyer of Spector's Los Angeles mansion.

Rajesh Mirchandani reports on the life and career of the eccentric recluse.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Spector found guilty of murder

Charles Manson - Phil Spector: Collaborate in Prison Request | BBC NEWS | BIGGEST STORY OF THE YEAR!

He [Phil Spector] is very worried that any association be made between himself and Charles Manson

Phil Spector

Phil

Phil Spector


Spector


'not doing

Phil Spector

great'

Phil Spector

Little more than two months since the US producer Phil Spector was sentenced to 19 years in jail, his publicist has said he's not coping too well.

The Wall of Sound pioneer was convicted of murdering actress Lana Clarkson at his home in May 2009, after a retrial.

"He's doing fair, at best, if not worse than fair. He's not doing great," said Hal Lifson about Spector's state.

Spector is currently residing in a medical facility at the Corcoran State Prison, central California.

The 68-year-old created some of the most memorable pop hits of the 60s for the likes of Ike and Tina Turner and The Ronettes.

"He's in a horrible situation with virtually nothing to do all day," explained Lifson to BBC 6 Music News, "Phil Spector was always a highly productive, creative person and now he's in a five by nine foot cell with no windows and maybe a half hour outside to walk around."

Not unexpectedly, Lifson said Spector's current existence is very limited.

"It's essentially solitary confinement," he said, "He doesn't have computer access, he only recently got a little TV.

"It's a terrible existence for a millionaire record producer who lived in mansions and most recently in a castle, a 35-room home.

"It's a huge, huge change of life for Phil Spector and a devastating turn in his life."

Manson approach

Meanwhile, Spector's publicist said he was "shaken" by a recent request from notorious convicted murderer, Charles Manson, for a musical collaboration.

Manson is in another maximum security section of the Corcoran State Prison.

He [Phil Spector] is very worried that any association be made between himself and Charles Manson
Hal Lifson, Phil Spector's publicist

The cult leader - who once worked with The Beach Boys - contacted the producer, who he revered as "the greatest who ever lived", via a note which he gave to a prison guard.

Lifson said Spector has no intention of responding to the message.

"Phil

Spector

has been very, very alarmed and scared at the notion of Charles Manson contacting him

for any reason," he admitted, "He is very worried that any association be made between himself and Charles Manson.

"He [Spector] mentioned that he used to get phone calls from John Lennon and Tina Turner and now it's Charles Manson calling, so he said, 'Go figure'.

"It was kind of a dark humour comment."

Spector is set to appeal in 2010 and if he fails at the state court of appeal, Lifson said Spector plans to go to the federal court of appeal in Washington.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Phil Spector 'not doing great'

George Russell June 23, 1923 - July 27, 2009

FOLLOW NICHOPOULOUZO http://www.twitter.com/mrjyn @mrjyn FOR MORE JAZZ BREAKING NEWS AND VIDEO

George Russell: June 23, 1923 July 27, 2009

George Russell was just seven years old when he walked on a stage for the first time and sang Moon Over Miami with Fats Waller. Growing up to be a respected muscian and theorist, he is said to have influenced Miles Davis and John Coltrane. Throughout his career, hes played with the likes of Benny Carter, Bill Evans, Art Pepper and Eric Dolphy. Russell died of Alzheimers Disease at the age of 86.--themusicsover
http://www.billytaylorjazz.net presents an excerpt from the 1958 tv program, "The Subject is Jazz," featuring George Russell's composition and arrangement, "Stratusphunk," with Bill Evans on piano...
http://www.billytaylorjazz.net presents an excerpt from the 1958 TV program, "The Subject is Jazz," featuring George Russell's composition and arrangement, "Stratusphunk," with Bill Evans on piano, Art Farmer, trumpet, Jimmy Cleveland, trombone, Gene Quill, alto, Ed Thigpen, drums.
JazzVideoGuy
For more on George Russell:
http://www.georgerussell.com

OR FOLLOW [::] HERE:
http://www.visualguidanceltd.blogspot...

~ NICHOPOULOUZO
Category: Music
Tags:
George Russell georgerussell georgerussell.com jazz R.I.P. Bill Evans billytaylorjazz Stratusphunk Art Farmer Ed Thigpen Gene Quill Jimmy Cleveland The Subject is Jazz 1958 TV JazzVideoGuy themusicsover Alzheimers visualguidanceltd Eric Dolphy John Coltrane Miles Davis twitter.com/mrjyn @mrjyn NICHOPOULOUZO mrjyn OBITUTWEET

George Russell (July 27, 2009) Respected Modern Jazz Musician « The Music’s Over

George Russell
June 23, 1923 – July 27, 2009

georgeGeorge Russell was just seven years old when he walked on a stage for the first time and sang “Moon Over Miami” with Fats Waller.  Growing up to be a respected muscian and theorist, he is said to have influenced Miles Davis and John Coltrane.  Throughout his career, he’s played with the likes of Benny Carter, Bill Evans, Art Pepper and Eric Dolphy.  Russell died of Alzheimer’s Disease at the age of 86.

Pete Drake - October 8, 1932 - July 29, 1988

Pete Drake
October 8, 1932 – July 29, 1988

Pete Drake was an in-demand Nashville producer and pedal steel guitarist during the ’60s and ’70s. In 1950, Drake formed an Atlanta based band that included Joe South, Doug Kershaw, Jerry Reed and Roger Miller. He later moved to Nashville where he played on hits by the likes of Bob Dylan, Lynn Anderson, Tammy Wynette, Joan Baez, George Harrison and Ringo Starr. While in Nashville he developed a unique device to play his guitar through – it was called a “talk box” and it would reach the masses in later recordings by Peter Frampton and Joe Walsh. Drake died of lung cancer on July 29, 1988. Pete Drake passed away of natural causes on July 29, 1988.

Literal Answers to Rhetorical Questions

Mr. Gradgrind's
Literal Answers to Rhetorical Questions

People commonly ask empty rhetorical questions that rarely receive any sort of sensible answer. When you have had your surfeit of poetical whimsy and are ready for some good, hard facts, come here to be set straight.

The world would be much improved if those engaging in windy musings were more often brought up short by a nice, sharp definition or a pointed rebuke. Even the fantastical William Shakespeare, asking himself "Shall I compare thee to a Summer's day?" goes on (admittedly at excessive length) to list a number of reasons for answering in the negative.

Of course, some questions are so ill-framed as to admit of no sensible answer. Example: Where have you been all my life? It so happens that this question has never been addressed to me; but if it were I should be at a loss to detail the many addresses at which I have resided and worked during the span of existence of some other person, even if I knew that person's precise date of birth. Such idle musings are best ignored.

However, one can learn much by discovering facts that provide satisfactory answers to questions one might suppose at first glance to be pointless. This page is devoted to the pursuit of such answers.


What is so rare as a day in June?

June having 30 days, it is clear that days in April, September, and November are precisely as "rare,"or as common, though they are slightly less common than days in January, March, May, July, August, October, and December. Days in February are the least common, of course, so it is nonsensical to consider June days as particularly rare.


Where are the snows of yesteryear?

If the question refers to the melted product of last winter's snowfall, the answer can sometimes be derived by analyzing the volume of water in the catch basins of dams located on streams downhill from the point of original snowfall. More precise measures may be taken of those snows that contribute to glaciers which move at regular rates ranging from a few centimeters to a hundred meters per year. The easiest place to locate such snow, however, is in the extreme arctic and antarctic regions, where, although snow is very rare and sparse, it remains satisfactorily frozen and fixed in place indefinitely.


How high the moon?

It varies between 356,000 and 407,000 km in distance from the surface of the earth, its average distance being 384,400 km.


What shall we do with a drunken sailor?

D. Kolb and E.K.E. Gunderson's study, "Alcoholism in the United States Navy" reports that attempts to prevent, diagnose and rehabilitate sailors suffering from alcohol-related problems are to a measurable degree superior to the older approach of simple hospitalization (published in Armed Forces and Society, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 183-194).


Who wrote the Book of Love?

René of Anjou, King of Naples 1435-1480, wrote and illustrated his Book of Love (Le cueur d'amours espris) some time after 1473 while living idly in Provence.


Tell me why the ivy twines.

Not all ivies do twine, of course: some are mere creeping vines. However, climbing ivies such as are commonly seen covering academic buildings maximize their exposure to light by using twining tendrils to affix themselves to other plants and objects in order to gain altitude and escape their shade.


Would you like to swing on a star?

There has been a good deal of research into the use of long tethers linking space probes which could use the gravitational differential between linked units closer to and farther from a massive object to generate both electrical and kinetic energy (see L. Johnson, B. Gilchrist, R. D. Estes and E. Lorenzini: Advances in Space Research, Vol. 24, No. 4, pp. 1055-1063 (1999). However, problems of scale and temperature make it unlikely that this technique will be applied to interstellar navigation any time in the near future; so you would be wise to limit your wishes to swinging from a planet.


How long has this been going on?

Data from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe produce an estimated age for the universe of 13.7 billion years, plus or minus a 1% margin of error.


What is to be done?

I find that the Filofax A5 System Organizer efficiently tracks my appointments with a minimum of fuss and is generally superior to the personal information management software products so widely touted by computer enthusiasts.


What's up, Doc?

Presuming that the doctor addressed is a physician, one must assume that the question refers to the identity of the topmost parts of the human body, in which case the short answer is the frontal lobe of the brain, the skull, the scalp, and--if any--the hair.


How are you going to keep them down on the farm after they've seen Paris?

Administered commodity prices resulting in an average profit per farmer of no more than $50,000 per annum should be adequate to discourage profligate trips to France.


Who's afraid of Virginia Woolf?

No one well informed, of course, since the writer in question died in 1941; but during her lifetime she was known to have a sharp tongue, and many persons had reason to fear her wit.


Where have all the flowers gone?

Generally the petals of the flowering parts of plants wither and fall off to decay in the surrounding soil while the remainder is converted into fruiting bodies. However, the blossoms of early-flowering fruit trees such as plums and cherries are particularly subject to the destructive effects of spring rains.


How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.

Though the poet neglects to enumerate them, providing instead a mere list, a simple inventory establishes that--if we omit the purely hypothetical posthumous final one--Elizabeth Barrett loved Robert Browning in precisely seven ways.

Literal Answers to Rhetorical Questions

The Chernobyl Poems of Lyubov Sirota (I'M OBSSESSED WITH CHERNOBYL SO NOW I'M OBSESSED [NOT SURE SO I DID BOTH] WITH LYUBOV -- HOT? HUHN?)


The Chernobyl Poems of Lyubov Sirota


During the ten years that I worked on my book, Nuclear Holocausts: Atomic War in Fiction, 1895-1984, I corresponded and spoke with experts from all over the world, and even traveled to the Soviet Union. In 1990 I found myself at a remarkable Soviet-American conference in Newport, Rhode Island, called "Facing Apocalypse II," where I met Soviet scientist and Chernobyl activist Dr. Adolph Harash. His impassioned attack on the authorities who allowed the disaster to happen and who then tried to cover it up or dismiss it as unimportant was in striking contrast to the tone of the rest of the Soviet delegation.

For me, the high point of Dr. Harash's speech was the reading of a poem by a woman who had been victimized by the explosion: Lybov Sirota. Director of a writing program for children near the Chernobyl Atomic Energy Station, on April 25th, 1986 she was seeking a breath of fresh air in the middle of that night, and went out on to her balcony in the city of Pripyat and watched the Chernobyl nuclear reactor explode in front of her.


The dead city of Pripyat

In the days that followed, she and her son grew gravely ill from heavy doses of radioactive contamination. To express her grief and rage, she turned to writing poems, and collected them in a small book entitled Burden.

It was published in Kiev, the city (now in Ukraine) where she had fled along with the other refugees from Pripyat. She later became involved in documentary films about the disaster and went to work as a film editor at the A. P. Dovzhenko Film Studio in Kiev.

However, repeated hospitalizations for fatigue and pain (typical results of radiation exposure) increasingly interfered with her work. She continued to write, mostly in Ukranian, but it was Dr. Harash's kind efforts which continued to spread word of her work.

I recruited American poet Elizavietta Ritchie to translate the poems and asked Dr. Harash to write an introduction to them, which in its turn had to be translated. It was fortunate that Both Lyubov Sirota and Dr. Harash know some English, for I know no Russian. Selections were read to music on the National Public Radio program Terra Infirma on April 1, 1992; the poem "Radiophobia" was published in the August 5, 1992 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association; one other poem was published in New York Quarterly, all the poems and a revised version of the introduction appeared in Calyx, Winter 1992/1993, and in Life on the Line: Selections on Words and Healing edited by Sue Brannan Walker & Rosaly Demaios Roffman (Mobile, Alabama: Negative Capability Press, 1992). "Your Glance Will Trip on My Shadow" was reprinted in A Fierce Brightnesss: Twenty-Five Yars of Women's Poetry, ed. Margaret Donnelly, Beverly McFarland, and Micki Reaman (Corvallis, Oregon: Calyx Books, 2002). One poem has been included in a major anthology from W. W. Norton: Perspectives from the Past: Primary Sources in Western Civilizations,Vol. 2, Second Edition, ed. James Brophy et al.

The article by Dr. Harash has also appeared in the Canadian magazine Woman's World.

My hope was to generate enough interest in her case to bring her and her son to the U.S. for a round of examinations and treatment by American doctors, combined with a series of public readings. However, I was not able to accomplish this.

As the months went by, she continued to grow sicker and weaker, and was at last unable to travel. Doctors told me that at this late date there would be little they could do for her anyway. She developed cataracts and a brain tumor, both probably caused by the radiation. She has been operated on repeatedly in Kiev, and spends much of the year in the hospital.


With Sasha before the disaster.

Fortunately her son Alex (nicknamed "Sasha") has done much better than his mother and was sponsored by Greenpeace International on a lecture tour in 1996. He has also visited the now-abandoned town of Pripyat and taken some moving pictures which you can view here. In the spring of 2000 he persuaded his mother to make her own pilgrimage to their former home, taking further pictures which you can also view here.

Sirota's most fervent hope is that her poems will continue to remind people of the need to prevent further tragedies like Chernobyl. To that end, the poems and Dr. Harash's article about her are made available on the Web, with the kind permission of translator Elizavietta Ritchie.

If you would like to correspond with Lyubov Sirota, you can write her at the following address:

orantas@i.ukr.net

Keep in mind, however, that she doesn't have the strength to keep up much of a correspondence and cannot answer all of her mail. However, it cheers her greatly to know that people around the world are reading her work.

On December 15, 2000, the remaining active reactor at Chernobyl was finally shut down. However, many reactors similar in design to the one that exploded are still in operation in the former Soviet Union.

This site led Mark Resnicoff to befriend Lyubov Sirota and her son, and to visit Chernobyl itself. To view his remarkable Web site report, profusely illustrated with photographs, go to http://nikongear.com/Chernobyl/Chernobyl_1.htm.

First mounted June 19, 1995.

Last revised February 22, 2008.


The poems in Russian (Cyrillic font required)
The Chernobyl Poems in Russian Transliteration
The Chernobyl Poems in English Translation

Information about Lyubov Sirota's book on the "Pripyat Syndrome."
Photos of Lyubov Sirota's return visit to the site of her disaster--her former home, Pripyat.
Sirota’s YouTube page containing videos of Pripyat.
Photos from the Abandoned city of Pripyat
Dr. Adolph Harash: "A Voice from Dead Pripyat"
An appeal from the author for international action (in English)
An appeal from the author for international action (in Russian)
International Annual Action: "The Saved Planet" (in Russian)

Related photos

Poetry of Ukrainian poet Vasyl Stus in Russian translation by Lyubov Sirota and Anatoly Tkachenko

Visit Lyubov Sirota's MySpace site at http://www.myspace.com/orantas.
Other recommended sites:

Ugo Persi's article about Sirota's poems (in Russian)

Pripyat.com

In Russian
Petition to make Pripyat a city-monument.


Paul Brians' Home Page

This page has been accessed times since June 6, 1997.

If you are linking to this page, please use this URL: http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/chernobyl_poems/chernobyl_index.html

The Chernobyl Poems of Lyubov Sirota

Japanese country and western singer - Toshio Hirano

Correspondent Julie Caine profiles Japanese country and western singer Toshio Hirano. Audio slideshow produced by Julie Caine. Photographs by Lenny Gonzalez.

EAT SAN NAKJI KOREAN LIVE BABY OCTOPUS

Bossnapped Best of the BBC | PRI's The World

Bossnapped
March 26, 2009 | download | permalink


The boss of US company 3M's French operations is a free man today. Yesterday, however, Luc Rousselet was imprisoned in his own office: the latest victim of a 'boss-nap'. That's kidnap...of your boss. This distinctly French phenomenon is a form of industrial action. Yesterday, BBC Radio 4's news show The World Tonight discussed the recent spate of boss-nappings with French journalist Ann Elizabeth Moutet. Our audio clip begins with World Tonight presenter Robin Lustig, and a scene-setting statement from the boss-nappers themselves.
Luc Rousselet leaving 3M's French offices todayLuc Rousselet leaving 3M's French offices today

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