Monday, 11 August 2008

The man behind Shrek

When he sketched extinct the outsize stocky dead body of Shrek, in his book of the same title, the late William Steig never imagined his charming taradiddle about a benign, swamp-dwelling ogre would become a phenomenon.



After all, Steig only began to turn prohibited books for children at age 60. At the time, he was already a long-celebrated (and adult-oriented) cartoonist for The New Yorker magazine.



But children's literature turned out to be a natural progression for the fecund Steig � and a boon for young readers.



"This was non disconnected from the rest of his career," says Claudia Nahson, curator of "From The New Yorker to Shrek: The Art of William Steig," a 2008 demonstrate at the Jewish Museum in New York. (The traveling show is now in San Francisco, at the Contemporary Jewish Museum, through Sept. 7.)



"Steig loved children, he loved to write, he loved to draw," Nahson notes. "He said the secret to his winner was that he never really grew up."



Born in 1907, to Eastern European Jewish immigrants, the baseball-loving, Bronx-bred Steig mined his talent for drawing to help keep his kinsfolk during the Great Depression. He made his number one cartoon sale to The New Yorker in 1930, the start of his seven-decade least sandpiper at the magazine.



Steig's New Yorker output: more than 1,600 cartoons and 120 cover illustrations. He refined a witty, capricious visual style there, and you canful see its influence on such electric current New Yorker cartoonists as Roz Chast.



As Steig's obit in The New York Times assign it (he died in 2003 at age 95), his "squiggly" line drawings often pictured "satyrs, damsels, dogs and drunks." And his populace view was unsentimental just humane, playful, earthy and acerbic.



Fascinated by psychoanalysis, he also illustrated books by the controversial psychiatrist Wilhelm Reich, then created book-length collections of drawings as well as humorous sketches for cocktail napkins and greeting cards.



During the 1960s, a fellow urged Steig to come up with a storybook for kids. "He was reluctant at first," says Nahson, "because he didn't like to draw the same characters multiple times. He liked to draw something, then move on."



But beginning with the 1968 tome "Roland the Minstrel Pig" (around a lute-playing porker), Steig found an eager offspring audience for his fables � many of which featured beast characters, including "Doctor DeSoto" (about a dentist with a fox patient), and "Abel's Island" (about a mouse swept away in a storm).



Out of more than two dozen titles, Steig's most popular kids book today is surely "Shrek!"(The title, ironically, is a Yiddish word for fear or terror). The 1990 tome originated the story of a misanthropic, green-headed ogre befriended by a donkey and love by an ogre princess.



"Shrek is an anti-hero, and Steig constantly said the perfect torpedo is a flawed hero," says Nahson. "He constantly identified with the underdog."



When DreamWorks cherished to make a feature article film of the book, Steig agreed � and, in a Boston Globe interview, aforesaid he received $500,000 for the rights, less than he expected. (The first "Shrek" ultimately earned hundreds of millions of dollars, and spun off two moneymaking sequels.)



Intrigued with the figure, Steig "wrote notes to the producers, which I put in the museum show, sharing ideas he had for the script," Nahson explains. "The first of the 'Shrek' movies is genuinely the nighest to his work."



Lesser known films were made sooner of several Steig books ("Abel's Island," "Doctor DeSoto," "Pete's a Pizza"). But the immense critical and commercial response to "Shrek" (released in 2001), stunned the artist.



He even became a fan himself. Recounts Nahson, "Steig was selfsame old by then, in his 90s. But he went to see the movie and was asked his ruling. He aforementioned something like, 'It's plebeian, it's loathsome � and I love it!' "



Misha Berson: mberson@seattletimes.com










More info

Wednesday, 6 August 2008

Donna Regina

Donna Regina   
Artist: Donna Regina

   Genre(s): 
Indie
   Techno
   Experimental
   



Discography:


Northern Classic   
 Northern Classic

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 9


Slow Killer   
 Slow Killer

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 10


A Collection of Little Secrets   
 A Collection of Little Secrets

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 14


A Quiet Week In The House   
 A Quiet Week In The House

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 12




During their lengthy beingness that spanned several records and over a 10 of activeness, Cologne, Germany-based electronic-pop band Donna Regina was compared to St. Etienne, One Dove, and the Beach Boys. They also had songs remixed by the likes of Matthew Herbert, Mouse on Mars, M. Mayer, and Isolee. In the late '90s, the group coupled the Karaoke Kalk roll for the Pool EP and an LP called A Quiet Week in the House, both of which were released in 1999. Other discs for Karaoke Kalk -- 2002's Northern Classic, 2003's Late, 2005's Slow Killer -- followed. Lead singer Regina Janssen was likened to precisely about whatsoever breathy vocalist you tooshie consider of, including Sarah Cracknell, Dot Allison, and various French bulge out icons.






Thursday, 19 June 2008

New Kids On The Block re-ignite passions

On the set of NBC's Today show, fans screeched the names of their favorites: "Joey!" "Jordan!" "Donnie!"

Thursday, 12 June 2008

Alanis loves her lady lumps

ALANIS MORISSETTE loves her version of the BLACK EYED PEAS' hit tune My Humps
- as it was a welcome break from her own emotions.

The Canadian singer/songwriter released the down-tempo cover last year, with
over a million views in the first week it launched on YouTube.

And Alanis reckons the creation of her moody rendition was a therapeutic
experience.

The Ironic singer said: "I was in the studio with (producer) GUY
SIGSWORTH and he would say, 'What horse from the apocalypse are you
bringing in today, Alanis?' Because every song was this tsunami of emotions.

"So I said, 'I wish I could just write a really simple song - a song like
My Humps.' Then we had a pregnant pause, looked at each other, and said,
'All right, let's do it!'

"Within moments we were recording the piano version of it, and within a
week we were shooting the video in my garage here at my house."

Click here to buy music and videos from Alanis
Morissette

Click here to buy music and videos from Black
Eyed Peas

Friday, 6 June 2008

B Real

B Real   
Artist: B Real

   Genre(s): 
Rap: Hip-Hop
   



Discography:


The Gunslinger Part II   
 The Gunslinger Part II

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 19


The Gunslinger   
 The Gunslinger

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 18




With his work in the pioneering hip-hop group Cypress Hill, doorknocker B Real became something of a rap music fable for several reasons. Most immediately, his trademark riming style, featuring an hyperbolically os nasale skreak and a nothingness singer's acquirement at staying simply behindhand DJ Muggs' already sluggish beatniks, was one of the most instantaneously recognizable flows of the 1990s. Furthermore, B Real and his partners Sen Dog and DJ Muggs were the number one Latino rap music stars, ushering in a richly varied subgenre of rap that thrives to this day. Finally, Cypress Hill's fervent proselytizing on the subject of marijuana legalization both brought the topic to its highest world knowingness since the days of Cheech & Chong and paved the way for a generation of weed-happy bourgeoisie high gear school kids to discover and place with hip-hop to an regular greater academic degree than ahead. However, that B Real consequently is indirectly responsible in contribution for Kevin Federline should not be held against him.


Born Louis Freese in Los Angeles on June 2, 1970, Freese met Mellow Man Ace (Ulpiano Sergio Reyes) and his brother Sen Dog (%Senen Reyes) in high shoal in the mid-'80s, forming the triad that would eventually become Cypress Hill (named after a local resort in their South Gate hood) later Mellow Man Ace left to engage a successful solo career and DJ Muggs (Lawrence Muggerud) came in as producer and DJ. During this period, B Real and Sen Dog were involved in a local arm of ill-famed street gang the Bloods; B Real was snap in a drug-related incident in 1988, star both workforce to get out of the hoodlum life. However, those experiences formed the narration of the group's first album, 1991's Cypress Hill.


One of the start commercially successful gangsta rap albums, the record album was controversial contempt the trio's attempts non to glamorise gang life. 1993's Black Sunday was an instant hit due to the weirdly attention-getting exclusive "Insane in the Brain," and the same twelvemonth, the trio's share to the pioneering rap-rock soundtrack Judgment Night institute them working with bloke marijuana enthusiasts Sonic Youth, with whom Cypress Hill as well guest-starred in a classical Lollapalooza-parody episode of The Simpsons. Playing the actual Lollapalooza tour in 1994 and 1995, the banding added percussionist Eric Bobo (the word of legendary salsa drummer Willie Bobo) and pursued an progressively rock-oriented style on their eternally infrequent albums.


During this point, B Real as well created a hardcore gangsta side protrude, the Psycho Realm, cathartic 2 albums, 1997's The Psycho Realm and 2000's A War Story. B Real even teamed back up with Mellow Man Ace for the transitory Serial Rhyme Killers, which released one 12" undivided in 2002. Finally embarking on a solo calling, B Real released deuce reggaeton-influenced collaborative mixtapes, The Gunslinger and The Gunslinger, Pt. 2: A Fistful of Dollars, in 2006.






Thursday, 29 May 2008

Britney Spears Scores In 'How I Met Your Mother' Return

Britney Spears sealed the deal with co-star Neil Patrick Harris in last night’s episode of How I Met Your Mother.

The recovering pop mess reprised her role as love-struck receptionist Abby, following her successful guest spot on the US TV show in March.

The show's co-creator, Craig Thomas, was so impressed with Britney's performance second time round that the door has been left open for her to return next season

"She was better than the first time and I think fans will enjoy it because her return answers a mystery set up earlier in the series," he says via the Daily Mail. 

Britney also seems to be enjoying her new acting sideline, enthusing in a statement: "I had such a great experience the last time I was on the show that I couldn't wait to come back."

"Abby is going to have a lot of fun!"

Click to see Britney in action in How I Met Your Mother last night


See Also

Monday, 19 May 2008

Angelina Jolie - Thornton Congratulates Pregnant Jolie

Angelina Jolie - Thornton Congratulates Pregnant Jolie




ANGELINA JOLIE's ex-husband Truncheon