Monday, 1 September 2008

Soaking Wet Hippies, Audience Dance Together at �Hair� Premiere

Photo: Michal Daniel




It's a bold move, staging an outdoor production of a musical that ends with the song "Let the Sunshine In," when summer thunderstorms are a constant threat. At last night's opening of Hair at the Delacorte � in a moment that seemed too poetic not to have been planned � the deluge came just as the chorus began. Inspired by watching two-plus hours of hippie dancing and groping, the soaking wet audience poured down from the seats and joined the party onstage, perhaps hoping everyone would get naked as they do at the end of the first act. Harvey Fierstein, though, was unimpressed. "Oh, honey. Been there, done that," he said when we asked him how he felt about staged nudity. "In 1972 I was in a show called Satyricon at La MaMa and we were all naked. I bent over with a jewel in my anus � that's back when we were young and had muscle control. We had a big orgy scene where we wore glow-in-the-dark penises and vaginas, but what we did was we took them off and held them up in the air while we actually had sex onstage. I don't know how you can get more naked than that." �Jada Yuan







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Friday, 22 August 2008

GZA

�Pro Tools� (Babygrande): A-

GZA�s 1995 debut, �Liquid Swords,� is so iconic that he�s presently performing the entire saucer on go (and in Boston at Harpers Ferry on Sept. 13). �Pro Tools� lacks the melodramatic continuity of that classic, but with exceptionally dark production from Bronze Nazareth, Tru Master, RZA and Mathematics, Wu-Tang�s flagship fibber comes as close as he ever so has to matching his freshman miracle. Download: �Alphabets.�







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Tuesday, 12 August 2008

Alex Sword and John Chevalier

Alex Sword and John Chevalier   
Artist: Alex Sword and John Chevalier

   Genre(s): 
Techno
   



Discography:


Hallucination   
 Hallucination

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 2




 






Wednesday, 6 August 2008

Mexican Music

Mexican Music   
Artist: Mexican Music

   Genre(s): 
Ethnic
   



Discography:


Prehispanic Mystic Rites   
 Prehispanic Mystic Rites

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 8




 





Rameses III

Disaster Medicine Ethical Guidelines Needed For US Health-care Professionals

�A new invited article in the August 2008 edition of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery calls on the U.S. medical community to develop a national consensus on ethical guidelines for physicians who care for patients, victims, and casualties of disasters such as hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, or terrorist attacks.


The article, authored by the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery's Ethics Committee Chair, G. Richard Holt, MD, MSE, MABE, MPH, calls for the establishment of a virtue-based, yet practical and ethical approach to medical care under extreme conditions. It also calls for the establishment of medical educate curricula that will prepare our nation's future physicians for disaster response.


Dr. Holt discusses the problems associated with disaster music, citing the unique necessarily and environments created by not only the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on New York City and the Pentagon, simply also the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, and the devastation the storm caused in New Orleans and the Southeast United States. According to Dr. Holt, the situation requires discussion ahead of time so healthcare workers are aware of the challenges they may

CQ's Armstrong Discusses Medicare 'Trigger' Bill, Health IT Legislation, Tobacco Regulation, Mental Health Parity Measure


Drew Armstrong, a wellness reporter for CQ HealthBeat, discusses House efforts to delay action on a Medicare "initiation" bill, health information engineering legislation, an FDA tobacco regulation measure and stairs toward passing mental health parity legislation in this week's "Health on the Hill from kaisernetwork.org and CQ."



According to Armstrong, House Democrats put a hold on a legislative process that would have forced them to take up Medicare legislation proposed by President Bush to slow spending. A preparation of the 2003 Medicare law requires the president to propose a nest egg measure if Medicare actuaries project that the syllabus will pull out a certain percentage of its financing from annual tax tax revenue. According to Armstrong, Democrats earlier this month approved Medicare legislating that rock-bottom Medicare outgo enough to meet the requirements of the trigger, but technically, the vizor was non considered below the induction law's requirements. Armstrong says lawmakers probable will possess to address the gun trigger again next year, as Medicare costs continue to rise.



Armstrong also discusses the House Energy and Commerce Committee's approval of a bill that would create loans and grants for physicians and hospitals to purchase health IT. The bill as well would want the federal government to begin establishing IT standards to insure the technology is interoperable. However, the legislation has been held up by privacy concerns, Armstrong says.



In addition, Armstrong says several House committees have compromised on a bill that would allow FDA to regulate baccy products and place rules on tobacco advertising simply that would not ban the sale of tobacco plant. According to Armstrong, it is expected that smoking rates would decline dramatically if the legislation is enacted. Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), wHO sponsored the legislation, aforementioned the House could vote on the bill this week.



Lastly, Armstrong discusses congressional action on mental wellness parity legislating, which would require insurers to provide the like level of coverage for mental wellness conditions as physical conditions. The Senate Finance Committee added the mental health parity voice communication to a larger tax package. Armstrong says lawmakers generally support both bills and the mental health parity measure should move along with the tax bill.




The complete audio version of "Health on the Hill," transcript and resources for further enquiry are uncommitted online at kaisernetwork.org.




Reprinted with kind permit from hTTP://www.kaisernetwork.org. You can vista the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for email rescue at hypertext transfer protocol://www.kaisernetwork.

Wednesday, 9 July 2008

Usher Sounds Off About Marriage, His Mom And The Challenge Of Being A Superstar Dad




In the July issue of Vibe, which hits newsstands nationwide next week, Usher expanded on some comments he made during his heated appearance on "TRL" late last month.

Usher's mom and former manager, Jonnetta Patton, figures heavily in the article: The singer addresses the circumstances under which she ceased to be his manager, scoffing at suggestions that he fired the woman he describes as "the total package" and "my everything."

"I love my mother — she's the only one I have," he said, pausing for a moment before continuing. "I decided to not fire, not get rid of, but to give [my mother] the ultimate compliment — to retire her to be a full-time grandmother. My mother and I decided to change her situation, together. There was a conversation. I didn't write her a letter or pink-slip her."

For her part, Patton noted in the article that she's still a very active executive. "I'm managing Natasha, an artist on Jive Records, a guy group called Kwiet Storm, and a solo artist, Dante," she said. "I started my own record label — JPat Records. I also manage [my younger son], producer JLack — he's signed to Usher's production company."

Of course, the public family battles surrounding Usher's marriage to his former stylist Tameka Foster last year — which took many by surprise when he announced his engagement almost offhandedly to MTV News in March, followed by a head-spinning on/off status before finally tying the knot early in August — also came up during the conversation. His mother apparently opposed the marriage.

"I hurt more than anything over these last two years when I felt my mother didn't really embrace my situation," he told Vibe. "That really hurt me."

"My mother is an aggressive person," he said. "She makes hard decisions, and she caused me to make a hard decision as well."

In the months since the wedding was first announced, gossip spiraled that Usher is being overly influenced by Foster. The rumors led him to send an open letter to People in which he said he was "happy, excited, completely clear and independent on [his] direction, feelings, decisions, and ... NOT BEING LED."

Usher said he now feels the letter may not have been the best move. "If for some reason, I [wasn't] dealing with a situation properly, it's not because I'm not applying the knowledge that you assume I have. It's because I'm just learning. The one thing [my mother] taught me to do is keep my mouth shut. I probably should've just never [wrote the open letter]. It was never intended to be retaliatory, I just felt like I needed
to say something. If I could go back, [I'd] just weather the storm."

As he did on "TRL," Usher took the opportunity to sound off on skeptics commenting on his marriage.

"Am I so much of a bad guy because I decided to get married? Am I so much of a bad guy [because once I got in the situation], I decided to stand for something, build a foundation, and think about my future?" he asked. "As a man, you would respect me for not turning my back on it. ... It can never be bad to have a foundation as a man — a black man — in a time when women are dying for men. Women have started to become lovers of each other as a result of not having enough men. Are you not studying the stories? Wake up! Black love is a good thing."

He also said he values the realness his wife brings to his life. "[Foster] will tell me. If something doesn't look right or she feels like it could look better, she'll say something.

"The swagger I possess now definitely comes from my wife," he continued. "And my son completes me. He changes my perspective on what life is, and what matters."

Usher also addressed married life in "Best Thing," a song he performed with fellow newlywed Jay-Z on his new LP, Here I Stand, which debuted at #1 on the Billboard albums chart earlier this month.

The Vibe article concludes with Usher addressing the challenge of being both a superstar and a new father. "It's not easy for anyone to create hit after hit," he said. "It gets harder because I don't want to be [in the studio]. I want to be in the house. These are the days of my son's life, these first three years. I want to be there.

"The challenge is having it all."






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