Saturday, 26 April 2008

David Gest in hospital with chest pains

David Gest in hospital with chest pains



Former 'I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here' star David Gest is being treated in hospital after complaining of chest pains and respiratory problems.
The 54-year-old star was taken from his London home to a private hospital in the early hours of this morning.
A spokesperson for Gest said: "At 5.30am, David Gest was admitted to hospital, after suffering from severe chest pains and respiratory problems."
"David is stable and receiving the best medical attention. We are awaiting a further update from doctors."





Dark Inversion

Dark Inversion   
Artist: Dark Inversion

   Genre(s): 
Rock: Sympho
   



Discography:


The Land Of The Dead Warriors   
 The Land Of The Dead Warriors

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 9




 





Ric Ocasek

Oscar winner Crash becomes TV series

Oscar winner Crash becomes TV series



The Oscar-winning film 'Crash' is to become a TV series.
The drama will be shown on the Starz web in the US this year and the film's music director, co-writer and producer, Apostle Paul Haggis, and co-writer and producer, Bobby Moresco, ar among those involved in the new exhibit.
This is entirely the moment sentence a motion-picture show which has north Korean won the Charles Herbert Best Picture Academy Award has been turned into a TV serial publication: 'In the Heat energy of the Night' was the first gear.
Commenting, Haggis said: "I'm very happy that Lionsgate [the show's co-producer] and Starz have decided to get 'Crash' into a series. Ironically, my initial impulse was to pose the material in a arrange for television. I am thrilled it's coming full circle and can't wait to see how it expands and transforms."
Production on the 13-episode first series is set to commence in the spring.
Haggis' newly film, 'In the Valley of Elah', is presently in cinemas. Read the review here.





'We are just dancing fools'

'We are just dancing fools'




THE B-52s - Funplex
***1/2
THE party started with the scream of a lobster going into a pot of boiling
water.

When The B-52s rode in on the crest of the New Wave scene in 1979, no one had
heard or seen anything quite like them.

They came from Athens, Georgia, the same college town as REM, but headed to
New York to find their feet in the same crowd as Blondie and Talking Heads
at clubs like Max’s Kansas City and CBGB.

Their debut hit Rock Lobster was deeply silly but has there ever been a better
opportunity to get up and dance so insanely?

They wore outlandish costumes, the two women sporting towering beehives that
make Amy Winehouse look vaguely normal. The tacky DayGlo colours of their
record covers also helped them stand out from the crowd.

After continued success through much of the Eighties, a long pause in the
Nineties and a full-on return to touring in recent years, they’re back with
their first studio album in 16 years, Funplex. In typical B-52s style, it’s
a high energy summons to the dancefloor with the emphasis firmly on fun.

The album has a glossy, contemporary sheen, helped no doubt by the sonic
mastery of New Order producer Steve Osborne. But there’s also plenty of
trademark B-52s weirdness including one song about sex in outer space in the
distant future.

All of the original line-up bar the late Ricky Wilson remain, including his
sister Cindy, fellow singers and lyricists Kate Pierson and Fred Schneider
and the man who writes most of the music, Keith Strickland.

When I meet Kate (latest hair colour pink) and Keith (hardly a line on his
face and not a grey hair in sight) at a West London hotel, they tell the
band’s story with much humour and affection, starting naturally with the
lobster.

First, Kate gives me a private rendition of the lobster’s screech (sounding a
bit like Little Britain mental patient Anne these days) before explaining it
was inspired by another prime exponent of weird sounds, Yoko Ono.