Monday, 1 September 2008

Irma Thomas' new CD finds her in good company and at the top of her game



On "River is Waiting, " the John Fogerty-penned song that opens Irma Thomas' new "Simply Grand" CD, her vocalisation is as radiant as the lyrics: "The river is waiting, come get up up/A new day is coming, come rise up/We'll be sailing at first light, come gather/Set our course for the crossing together." She continues, "Gonna leave all my sorrows behind me, lift my face to a new day, I'm rising."



Three eld after Hurricane Katrina's floodwater devastated her home, night club and city, Thomas is clearly looking for to the future. At this degree of her career, 40-plus years removed from her best-known songs, she is well-established as an specially classy elder stateswoman of New Orleans rhythm & blues.



Her alto has big more luxurious with historic period and see. And her relentlessly overconfident attitude has persevered through a litany of hard times. That her 2006 album, "After the Rain, " won her first-ever Grammy was unfermented vindication.



For "Simply Grand, " Scott Billington, Thomas' longtime producer at Rounder Records, orchestrated a blueprint that is the opposite of orchestrated. Arrangements ar simple. Horns, a staple of cycle & blue devils records, are absent. Only acoustic instruments are secondhand. The stress is on Thomas and the xII assorted pianists she is paired with across the 14 tracks.






Some show more of themselves than others. On "River is Waiting, " Henry Butler makes a nifty small saloon-style solo detour, shadowed by Alfred "Uganda" Roberts' congas. A string quadruple dresses up Burt Bacharach's lush "What Can I Do, " with pianist David Torkanowsky, upright bassist James Singleton and drummer Raymond Weber laying down the foundation. The contributions of Singleton, a resolutely new jazzman, are especially vital.



Southwest Louisiana songwriter and keyboardist David Egan accompanies her on his "Underground Stream." Behind the hearty chorus, Weber and Roberts mold in bicycle-built-for-two. Jazz-pop genius Norah Jones takes a backseat on her possess "Thinking About You, " supplying her trademark piano as Thomas sings on top.



Louis Jordan's "Early in the Morning" doesn't fit as comfortably, disdain pianist Tom McDermott's lunge and parry and a sly reference to Thomas' now-defunct Broad Street nine the Lion's Den. For a woman purportedly mourning a man who has moved on, she enunciates a bit too deliberately.



So, too, on "Be You," a antecedently unrecorded song that Dr. John and Doc Pomus originally wrote with Etta James in mind. Another duo picnic with Dr. John, "If I Had Any Sense I'd Go Back," is also surprisingly underwhelming.



By contrast, she and keyboardist John Medeski of avant-jazz funk trio Medeski, Martin & Wood receive a darn on the old Allen Toussaint composition "Somebody Told You," which Thomas first recorded in 1962. It's impossible to tell which of the pair is having more than fun.



If there is a fault to "Simply Grand," it is that Thomas tends to inhabit a relatively good range. When she loses herself completely -- as during her legendary Sister Rosetta Tharpe tribute in the Blues Tent during the 2005 Jazzfest -- the results can be incendiary.



That, however, was non what this session was about. She comes nighest as she absolutely nails the slow-burn "Cold Rain." The Torkanowsky-Singleton-Weber triumvirate and backing vocalists Elaine Foster, Erica Falls and Charles Elam III bring the church behind her as she ratchets up to a big finish.



And less is non necessarily less. Her internal, after-hours vocals -- she sustains syllables in all the right places -- on "This Bitter Earth" could be the prettiest performance she's ever committed to record. She is simpatico with the delicate architecture erected by jazz patriarch Ellis Marsalis, his son Jason on understated percussion, and bassist Peter Harris.



To close "Simply Grand," Thomas joins Randy Newman on his ballad "I Think It's Going to Rain Today." As Newman sketches in the shadows around her, she sings, "Broken windows and empty hallways/Pale dead moon in a sky streaked with gray/Human kindness is flooded, and I think it's going to rain today." It is bittersweet and lovely, a long, slow and cheering exhale.

_________________________



Listen to music from "Simply Grand."












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Friday, 22 August 2008

August

In Austin Chick's August, Josh Harnett is having a forged day. As pre-9/11 dot com company hotshot Tom Sterling, he's seen his parents and tech nerd brother treating him with contempt, the girl he's pining for giving him the brush-off, and his startup Internet company blowing up in his side. Drinking morosely at a bar (or as morosely as Hartnett can fetch) he lashes out at a lad techie brigand who has just returned to the bar with a condemnatory, "Guys care you ain't got no vision, ain't got no passion, ain't got no soul." True enough. Tom is of course talk about himself but too, by extension, Hartnett's performance and Chick's film.


Chick's morals tale (a sort of insipid remaking of Force of Evil except with techno sharks instead of gangsters) is all semblance and pizzaz but mostly pizz and no azz. August deals with deuce brothers, Tom and Josh (Adam Scott), who alive large during the dot-com boom of '01, creating an in-the-moment start up called Landshark that is riding the top of the bubble with Joshua as the creative fashion designer of the site and Tom as the objectionable highfalutin plugger and occupant SOB. Much like the World Wide Widget society in the satirical musical How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying, there is no explanation given for what Landshark actually does; the company just is. But and so it isn't. Soon afterward the opening credits and five months after its inception, the company is in the toilet and Tom is struggling to keep up the appearance of succeeder for both the company and himself. But as in the Talking Heads song, they are both on the Road to Nowhere and somehow Tom has to come to grips with failure and regain his humanity, spell looking out for his brother and his unexampled family.


The film never happens. Chick depicts the company's meteoric heighten in an opening credits sequence and we never get a sense of the jubilance and half-baked riches of the deuce brothers as the party begins nor of the heady confidence trick atmosphere of that mad, insane blip in American business history when a guy and a figurer could sit in his basement and make millions. Instead of the harebrained, we get Insana -- Ron Insana, upon whose television register Tom struts his success like a Philadelphia pantomimer. Of course, Insana sets the proper tone of doom by asking, "Where will these guys be five months from

Tuesday, 12 August 2008

Christian Death

Christian Death   
Artist: Christian Death

   Genre(s): 
Metal
   Rock
   Metal: Industrial
   Rock: Gothic
   



Discography:


Lover of Sin   
 Lover of Sin

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 10


Scriptures   
 Scriptures

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 14


Pornographic Messiah   
 Pornographic Messiah

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 17


Ashes   
 Ashes

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 7


Rage of Angels   
 Rage of Angels

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 10


The Path Of Sorrows   
 The Path Of Sorrows

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 10


Iconologia   
 Iconologia

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 15


Jesus Points The Bone At You   
 Jesus Points The Bone At You

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 12


The Iron Mask   
 The Iron Mask

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 10


All the Love All the Hate part 1   
 All the Love All the Hate part 1

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 2


Sex and Drugs and Jesus Christ   
 Sex and Drugs and Jesus Christ

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 8


Atrocities   
 Atrocities

   Year: 1986   
Tracks: 10


Deathwish   
 Deathwish

   Year: 1984   
Tracks: 6


Catastrophe Ballet With Rhapsody Of Youth and Rain   
 Catastrophe Ballet With Rhapsody Of Youth and Rain

   Year: 1984   
Tracks: 13


A Catastrophe Ballet   
 A Catastrophe Ballet

   Year: 1984   
Tracks: 13


Only The Theatre Of Pain   
 Only The Theatre Of Pain

   Year: 1982   
Tracks: 16


The Best Of Mine   
 The Best Of Mine

   Year:    
Tracks: 66


Church Of No Return   
 Church Of No Return

   Year:    
Tracks: 1




The existence fathers of American boor stone, Christian Death took a relentlessly confrontational impasse against unionized faith and conventional ethics, with an appetency for provocation that made Marilyn Manson look like Stryper. Regardless of wHO was in the lead or acting in the mathematical group, Christian Death mark themselves up to shock, both in their group's more than noetic bent, they weren't higher up resorting to the calculated distastefulness of






Wednesday, 6 August 2008

Long Quits Barrymore Film After Split

Drew Barrymore's ex-boyfriend Justin Long has reportedly take leave a theatrical role in the actress' directorial debut Whip It - because he is static too bleak from their split to work aboard her. The pair parted ways earlier this calendar month (7Jul08), after dating for one year. And Long is still reeling from being dumped by Barrymore - and is non ready to return to work, according to E! Online. A source tells the web site, "He couldn't stand working with her and non being with her. He's too overthrow. "She dumped him. She was hot and cold. One minute she was in dear with him and the next she wanted to break up with him."

Bariatric Surgery Patients Have 65 Percent Lower Chance Of Complications At Top-Performing Hospitals: HealthGrades Study

� Bariatric surgery patients treated at highly rated hospitals have, on average, a 65 percent lour chance of experiencing serious complications compared to patients who undergo surgery at poorly rated hospitals according to a study released today by HealthGrades, the nations preeminent independent healthcare ratings organization. As share of the study, the quality ratings of hospitals performing bariatric surgery in 17 states became uncommitted today at www.healthgrades.com.




HealthGrades' third annual Bariatric Surgery Trends in American Hospitals study, which evaluated bariatric surgical outcomes at every hospital that performed them in 17 states, also found that the complicatedness rate for these surgeries continues to rise, increasing six percent from 2004 to 2006. One possible reason: depress volume facilities have higher complication rates.




Bariatric surgery is a general condition describing several types of weight loss procedures. HealthGrades study analyzed the outcomes of the most mutual, including traditional open surgical gastric ringway procedures as well as newer, less invasive procedures such as, "lap-banding" and laparoscopic stomachal bypass.




Complications associated with gastric bypass surgery accounted for the highest rise in complications, increasing 17 percent. Comparatively, complications from less trespassing laparoscopic surgical process increased by just more than one percent. Complications associated with bariatric surgical procedure include heart attack, kidney failure, stroke and post-surgical infections.




The HealthGrades study found a significant shift toward laparoscopic bariatric procedures. From 2004 through 2006, open stomachic bypass procedures declined by 81.82 percent while during the same time period laparoscopic procedures increased 418.86 percent.




Meanwhile, the sum up volume of bariatric surgical procedures in the U.S. continues to grow speedily. The American Society for Bariatric Surgery estimates that such surgeries have increased 1,431 percent in the net decade to more than 250,000 annually.




"The tremendous pas seul we ar seeing in quality among bariatric operating theatre providers underscores the grandness of pronto available timbre data to help consumers make a truly informed decision most where to seek care," said Rick May, MD, a senior physician adviser with HealthGrades and an author of the study.




Additionally, the third annual HealthGrades Bariatric Surgery Trends in American Hospitals study found that:





- A typical patient having a bariatric surgical procedure at a five-star rated hospital in one of the 17 states studied has on average, a 65 percent lour chance of experiencing matchless or more inhospital complications than at a one-star rated hospital and a 41 percentage lower chance than at a three-star rated infirmary during 2004- 2006.




- Five-star (top rated) hospitals performed nigh twice the volume of procedures compared to 1-star and 3-star facilities - an medium of 526 procedures from 2004 through 2006 compared with 266 and 283 respectively.




- Higher intensity was associated with fewer risk-adjusted complications. Facilities with an yearbook case book of 125 procedures had the last-place risk-adjusted complications. Facilities playing less than 25 cases per year had the highest pace of risk-adjusted complications.




- If all patients had received their bariatric surgical process procedure at 5-star hospitals (from 2004 through 2006), 5,one hundred twenty-five inhospital complications could have been potentially avoided in the 17 states studied.



HealthGrades Bariatric Surgery Ratings





HealthGrades' quality ratings for bariatric surgical procedure at item-by-item hospitals in 17 states were posted today to www.healthgrades.com as a free resource for consumers. Each hospital receives a lead rating based on their patient outcomes for bariatric surgery. Hospitals with above-average outcomes receive a five-star rating. Hospitals with fair outcomes receive a three-star rating, and hospitals with outcomes that are below average receive a one-star rating.




The study included a come of 154,451 bariatric inpatient operation procedures performed in 680 hospitals in 17 states from 2004 through 2006. The majority of procedures were performed in four states: New York, Texas, Pennsylvania, and California.




- 93 hospitals stand out as "best" performers (5-star rated)


- 263 hospitals were rated as "as expected" performers (3-star rated)


- 99 hospitals were rated as "poor" performers (1-star rated)




Individuals contemplating bariatric surgical operation will discover both lineament and cost information at http://www.healthgrades.com. In addition to the free hospital-quality ratings, Web site visitors can as well research surgeons who perform bariatric surgery as well as medical-cost reports that detail all of the costs, including out-of-pocket expenses, for the procedure.



Methodology





For this study, HealthGrades analyzed 154,451 bariatric procedures performed in the years 2004, 2005 and 2006. The states included in the study ar: Arizona, California, Florida, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin.




To produce accurate and valid comparisons of clinical outcomes at different hospitals with different patient characteristics, HealthGrades risk adjusted the data victimisation multivariate logistic regression to account for age, grammatical gender and underlying medical conditions that could increase the patient's jeopardy of deathrate or complication. The full study and individual hospital ratings for bariatric operating room and other procedures tin can be institute at hTTP://www.healthgrades.com.



About HealthGrades





Health Grades, Inc. (Nasdaq: HGRD) is the leading healthcare ratings arrangement, providing ratings and profiles of hospitals, nursing homes and physicians. Millions of consumers and many of the nation's largest employers, health plans and hospitals rely on HealthGrades' sovereign ratings, advisory services and decision-support resources to make healthcare decisions based on the quality and cost of upkeep.



HealthGrades



More information

Cablevision gets go-ahead on DVR

U.S. Court of Appeals says no infringement in service




NEW YORK -- A U.S. appeals court ruled that Cablevision Systems Corp. may go forward with its design to introduce a new digital video recording recorder service that film studios and television networks had aforementioned violated their copyrights.

Reversing a lower motor inn ruling, the U.S Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York aforesaid Cablevision's proposed new service "would not directly run afoul plaintiffs' exclusive rights to reproduce and publicly perform their copyrighted works."

Cablevision appealed a March 2007 opinion in which it helpless a battle to introduce a network-based DVR system, called Remote Storage Digital Video Recorder, or RS-DVR, which would allow subscribers to fund TV programs on the cable operator's computer servers.

By contrast, typical DVRs store programs on individual concentrated drives that are piece of customers' set-top boxes.

The appeals courtroom, in a written ruling, also aforementioned it was sending the case back to the U.S. District Court in New York for farther proceedings.

"This is a terrific victory for consumers, which will permit us to make DVRs available to many more people, faster and less expensively than would otherwise be possible," Cablevision COO Tom Rutledge said.

"We appreciate the Court's perspective that, from the standpoint of existing right of first publication law, remote-storage DVRs are the same as the traditional DVRs that ar in use today," he said.


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Thursday, 3 July 2008

Nervochaos

Nervochaos   
Artist: Nervochaos

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


Quarrel in Hell   
 Quarrel in Hell

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 10