Archive for April, 2009

Sharon Stone attends An Evening With Women

Apr 30 2009 Published by admin under Uncategorized

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Sharon Stone attended “An Evening with Women: Celebrating Art, Music & Equality.” 

The Los Angeles Gay & Lesbian Center presented a star-studded event and cocktail reception to benefit the Center’s Women services. The night honored lesbians and bisexual women who have made a contribution to the LGBT community.

The event was held at The Beverly Hilton Hotel and other guests included, Paris Hilton, Sarah Silverman, Cybill Shepherd, Eliza Dushku, Rose McGowan, Sharon and Kelly Osbourne, Jennifer Coolidge, Jane Lynch.

Photographs by Ginger Liu

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Patrick Wolf on new music and Tilda Swinton

Apr 21 2009 Published by admin under Band Interviews

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Patrick Wolf releases his fourth concept album “Battle;” a double album that has Oscar winning actress and UK avant garde filmmaker muse, Tilda Swinton, as the “Voice of Hope” narrator throughout the record. The album is released on Patrick’s own record label, Bloody Chamber Music, a bow to author Angela Carter, and is funded through Bandstocks.com; a revolutionary funding vehicle that allows fans to buy stocks in the album and to contribute to the financing of the music’s production and marketing, and as from this week is available to US fans.

I spoke to the twenty-five year old Sussex musician from his studio, located across from the London Tate Modern, who recently commissioned Patrick to perform a classical piece in celebration of Dutch artist, Daan van Golden’s, exhibition. Today, Patrick was working on the artwork for the album cover, as well as the set design and choreography of his new video.

Battle has two distinct takes on life and love, ones which reflect Patrick’s defining emotions of being alone and being in love. The first album, “The Bachelor,” is a celebration of the absolute love of solitude –to go anywhere and be anyone and to do anything. Despite this love of solitude, Patrick admits to a melancholy that sometimes goes hand-in-hand with being alone. “The first album is about loneliness. I would attend weddings in Spain and Ireland and I would always be the only bachelor. I was convinced I had the spinster gene.  But I enjoyed being single. It was only at traditional get-togethers that I felt this loneliness because other couples would see my aloneness as a failure. I felt that this loneliness was definitely a positive thing for me. The record is also very much a masculine point of view of solitude.”

The music reflects this melancholy. But Patrick fell in love after the first album and started writing the second on a totally different vibe. “I fell in love and this reflects two sides of the coin. It’s a happiness product of knowing your pain. The songs on the second album, “The Conqueror,” are definitely more upbeat.” Both records reflect a different kind of love. First is a love of solitude, the second is of falling in and being in the actual state of love with another person. “If the world ended today and I could be with only one person, that wasn’t from my family, I would be with my boyfriend. We have a romantic love that is not defined or dictated by practical and financial matters.” One of the upbeat tracks on the second album was born from a trip to LA for the Jimmy Kimmel show. Patrick met and had sex with a Satanist. His voyeuristic tendencies took over and he wrote “Vulture,” a thrashing Californian upbeat industrial techno sound with lyrics that identify with the Celtic and Pagan research he conducted for previous tracks.

US exclusive of new webisode featuring Patrick Wolf talking about Bandstocks and performing the song “Who Will…”

So how did he come to work with Tilda Swinton. “She is an icon in experimental art. America knows her as a Hollywood movie star but I haven’t seen any of her Hollywood movies. In the UK she is known for her work with Derek Jarman and Sally Potter, in films like Orlando, as well as, her own experimental art. I went to see her during a Q&A for her film, “Julia,” and I thought I’d just go for it and handed her a CD. Later she emailed me to say that she would love to act as a monologue performance artist with spoken word for my album.”

Patrick’s band is described as “a solid family” of instruments, programming, violinists, bassists, and a drummer –there’s a lot more musicians on this album –people he’s known for years. “I spent a year studying composition and this album has Brazilian rhythms, a big choir, and English marching drums –hence the name “Battle.” And was recorded in the city of “Battle” in east Sussex.

 

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The artist enjoys complete independence from major record labels and it’s no secret about his departure from record giant Universal. “Large record companies have a lot to offer in terms of money and power but artists are confined and they ultimately lose their artistic freedom. The record companies worry about offending the public. There’s little politics in music nowadays as there was when music and art questioned the establishment, as they did in the Punk and New Romantic eras, when artists really pushed the boundaries. Even the last time there was a gay movement in the UK was during the anti-gay legislation of Section 28 in 1988.” (The notorious legislation banning the “promotion” of homosexuality in schools). There’s still homophobia in the UK and record companies are wary to offend the conservative parts of UK society. For Patrick this meant his record company marketing him as the next Elton John. “Politics is pushing the boundaries of sound. My record company said they couldn’t control me and they wanted to get rid of me because I wouldn’t conform. Put it this way, how would you feel if you had a job where you weren’t allowed to quit, yet your boss could fire you and treat you badly if you didn’t conform. This is what happens to musicians all the time; look what happened with Prince.” Patrick was even less impressed with the record companies marketing efforts where they pushed him as a raver or the Village People. “My roots are in Bob Dylan and Jodi Mitchell. I didn’t want to be pigeon holed into being a gay performer just for gay audiences. I have a crossover audience. I sidestepped the stereotypical marketing. But then gay audiences were annoyed that my private life didn’t crossover into the writing and in my public life. They were annoyed I wasn’t Rufus Wainwright. Women love my show, so do straight boys. Gay musicians think they’ll lose their demographic if they broaden their audience. This isn’t so. The music transcends everything. Why should music be for one demographic? What if we found out today that Jodie Mitchell was transgendered? Would that change her music? Would the words take on a different meaning and lose their power? What if Madonna didn’t have her own identity or freedom to experiment and instead just cowed down to winning acceptance and more understanding. Buffy Saint Marie, Leonard Coen, and Nick Cave are honest and raw songwriters.  I’m a songwriter and producer with a confident sound and image who plays experimental noise music. We don’t live in a utopia but we can just be ourselves and be free.”

His parent’s influence on his music, although never realized at the time, is telling. But it wasn’t until he was much older that he realized that not everyone’s mother is a painter or father is a jazz musician –so or course it’s only natural that they have influenced him. His father was in the punk band, The Sniveling Shits, and his mother listened to Joni Mitchell, Kate Bush, and Miles Davis. “My mother played “Ariel” by Kate Bush. I don’t think she gets enough credit in the British music press. She’s always misplaced as ‘that singer who dances and screams.’ She was totally independent, universal, and creative. She has a specific sound and specific energy in her videos and in her live concert. I played “Hounds of Love” over and over. People say I sound like Kate or play the piano like Kate. It’s a wonderful comparison.” His family also plays a part in grounding him and at home he’s just “Patrick.” He was a teenage runaway and earned money from busking. But he returned home when his father had cancer. His father has fully recovered but at the time Patrick was writing songs to his father to form a paternal link. He was opening up to him in regards to being gay and he desperately wanted to identity with his father.

Next month sees Patrick perform at Heaven nightclub in London and Europe’s largest gay venue. At age 13, he performed on stage with the Lady Bunny Band and played air guitar. In his 20’s he released critically acclaimed albums, Lycanthropy, Wind in the Wires, and The Magic Position.

Patrick’s style is as unique as his music. “I wanted to wear Vivienne Westwood and Alexander McQueen but I was poor so I bought fabric from thrift stores and got out my sewing machine. I want to inspire individuality and for everyone to get out their sewing machines and just be yourself.” Of course, now he’s lucky enough to be able to commission new designers and is working with top fashion school Central Saint Martins, most recent graduates for their fashion show this year. Patrick also posed for world-renowned photographer, Mario Testino for equally renowned fashion icon, Burberry. “I loved working with Mario, he was hilarious. He was very sexual and was coming on to me for the shoot. He would say, “I want to tie you up, you are very sexy.” He did this to make me feel as sexual as possible, instead of looking like Zoolander. 

Ginger Liu

My article is posted in Culture Vulture

and LA.COM

and Beatcrave 

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Inglourious Basterds new clip

Apr 21 2009 Published by admin under "I Really Want to Direct"

 

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The Examiner

Quentin Tarantino appeared on American Idol on Tuesday to plug his much-anticipated World War ll epic “Inglourious Basterds” with a new clip that features Mike Myers as a British military mastermind who plots to destroy Nazi leaders. You may remember a British newspaper critic declaring that the film was possibly the worse film ever made after just seeing the trailer that featured Brat Pitt. The film debuts at Cannes and will open August 21 in the US.

Trailer: Inglourious Basterds

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Hannah Montana is top on Easter Weekend

Apr 21 2009 Published by admin under "I Really Want to Direct"

 

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Box Office News:

“Hannah Montana: The Movie” broke all of April’s box office records when it opened on Good Friday and proved once again that girls can drive box office success. By the end of the weekend the film grossed $34m and pushed “Fast and Furious” off the top.

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Vin Diesel is Fast and Furious

Apr 21 2009 Published by admin under "I Really Want to Direct"

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Vin Diesel’s welcome return to the Furious franchise bodes well for his global fans. The film is No.1 in Britain, Russia, Germany, Mexico, and Brazil. Diesel’s dip into soft guy hero in “The Pacifier” (2005) and character acting in “Find Me Guilty” (2006) could easily have ended his career but thankfully the man of unknown racial origin and gruff voice is back doing what he does best. His sixth outing as Riddick in “The Chronicles of Riddick: Assault on Dark Athena” is out later in the year.

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Seth Rogen in Observe and Report

Apr 21 2009 Published by admin under "I Really Want to Direct"

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Seth Rogen’s “Observe and Report” also didn’t fair as well as expected.  The R-rated black comedy, which also stars Anna Faris, probably suffered from a less than satisfying ending. Depression era movies aren’t noted for their down tempo. And yes folks, we are in a depression. So expect a lot of so-so endings to be changed this year for the “live happily ever after” fantasy that Hollywood is best at.

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James Franco and Mark Wahlberg will join Steve Carell and Tina Fey in “Date Night”

Apr 21 2009 Published by admin under "I Really Want to Direct"

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James Franco and Mark Wahlberg will join Steve Carell and Tina Fey in “Date Night.” The 20th Century Fox comedy revolves around a married couple that find themselves in harm’s way after a routine date night goes horribly wrong. Franco plays a dumb conman and petty criminal. Wahlberg plays a successful and buff securities expert who flirts with Fey’s character.

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Maggie Gyllenhaal to star in Nanny PcPhee sequel

Apr 21 2009 Published by admin under "I Really Want to Direct"

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Maggie Gyllenhaal is set to star in “Nanny PcPhee and the Big Bang,” the sequel to “Nanny PcPhee” (2005). Emma Thompson penned the script, is executive producing, and will reprise her role as a magic-wielding governess. The films are based on Christianna Brand’s “Nurse Matilda” books.

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Patrick Swayze’s film to open LA’s Jewish Film Festival

Apr 21 2009 Published by admin under "I Really Want to Direct"

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Patrick Swayze’s “Jump” will open the annual Los Angeles Jewish Film Festival on April 23. The film was shot in Austria and centers on the life of photographer Philippe Halsman who was accused of killing his own father. Swayze plays the lawyer defending Halsman. Swayze is expected to attend the premiere at the WGA theatre. We wish him good health.

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Obama and Clinton hit Hollywood

Apr 21 2009 Published by admin under "I Really Want to Direct"

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HBO Films has optioned Mark Halperin and John Heilemann’s not-yet-finished book, “Game Change: Obama and the Clintons, McCain and Palin, and the Race of a Lifetime,” about the behind the scenes look at the 2008 presidential election. It’s early days yet as to who will play the lead roles.

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