Archive | May, 2009

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Daryl Runswick @Media Factory

Posted on 20 May 2009 by lsentino

Daryl Runswick in Droves

Daryl does everything.

And for him, everything means one hell of a lot. No-one has straddled the jazz, pop and classical worlds as he has. Famed composer, arranger, performer, singer, pianist, bass player, guitarist, broadcaster, producer and teacher, he has appeared with everyone from Elton John to Pierre Boulez to Ornette Coleman to Simon Rattle to Sarah Vaughan to John Cage.

His music has been played by the BBC Symphony Orchestra, in the opera house, and by the Mercury Award and Grammy nominees Zero7. Throughout his multiple careers Daryl has been moving toward a synthesis of the improvising skills of jazz with the more complex structures of contemporary concert music, a radical new sound world with massive musical and emotional range.

He is world famous as a composer, bass and keyboard player and singer, and as a member of the London Jazz Four, one of the biggest draws on the London jazz scene in the ’70s; for his times playing double bass in the London Sinfonietta, the Fires of London and the Nash Ensemble; for his 12 years with Cleo Laine and John Dankworth, first as bass player, then as a keyboardist; for his 100-plus arrangements and compositions for The King’s Singers; and for his time as tenor with Electric Phoenix, the avant-garde electric vocal group for whom he wrote eight major works.

In his one man show he sings (contemporary classical, free improv, scat, pop songs, jazz), plays keyboards and spins in electronics from a laptop.  Plus, he plays two customised bass guitars, a high-strung fretless ‘alto’ and a very high ‘piccolo’ which he plays like an electric guitar.  The show is funny, shocking, jazzy, avant-garde and always immediate and accessible.

Daryl Runswick arrives at the University of Central Lancashire’s Media Factory on Saturday 23rd May. A must-see for all music lovers.

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The only guide you need for the best summer ever!

Posted on 15 May 2009 by Andy Halls

The sun is out, the flights are booked, the bags are packed, but don’t rush off on your holidays just yet! 

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New acts in the 53 Degrees pipeline

Posted on 07 May 2009 by lsentino

It’s that time of the year again where deadlines are nearly all done with and there’s a lovely instalment of the student loan left to spend frivolously. Well you could do a lot worse than go to our very own 53 Degrees over May as a host of the hottest musical talent in the country are set to take the stage by storm.

Seemingly fighting an uphill struggle after the demise of much loved pop-punksters Busted, Charlie Simpson transformed himself into the frontman of ‘post-hardcore’ outfit Fightstar and has earned credibility through a string of critically acclaimed albums. They have just released their latest record ‘Be Human’ to rave reviews and stop off at 53 on May 1st with In Case Of Fire and Lazuro supporting.

May 8th will bear witness to the NME Radar Tour with rising star La Roux headlining. Having just reached number 2 in the charts with ‘In For The Kill’ which has the disco groove of The Knife fused with the androgynous quirk of The Eurythmics. The supporting bill is set to include Italo-Disco revivalists Heartbreak and The Chapman Family’s unadultered rawness.  Magistrates were a band that PR1 nominated as one of our ‘Ones To Watch’ and if there’s any justice singles ‘Make This Work’ and ‘The Inbetweens’ will soon see them getting the recognition they richly deserve.

The King Blues take to the stage on the 10th with a new single ‘Save The World, Get The Girl’ and a lofty reputation- described by Kerrang as “the most exciting live band in Britain”- it seems that this is a can’t miss opportunity to see them in such an intimate setting.

Similiar sentiments apply to Imelda May who has shared stages with the likes of Diana Ross, Elton John and The Supremes. However this time the sassy, burlesque-influenced singer is only accompanied by her band and an impressive catalogue of songs including latest single ‘Johnny Got A Boom Boom’.

The 18th May sees 53 Degrees launch its triple attack on the senses with The Sunshine Underground, Friendly Fires and Pendulum all arriving within eleven days of each other.

Having elevated themselves from a bustling Leeds music scene, The Sunshine Underground delivered one of the finest albums of 2006 in the shape of ‘Raise The Alarm’ which spawned dancefloor fillers ‘Put You In Your Place’, ‘Commercial Breakdown’ and ‘Borders’.  Over the past few weeks the band have released demos of forthcoming songs for their new album including the fantastic ‘Coming To Save You’ which suggest they have lost none of their enthusiasm or spark and this undoubtedly rates as one of the most fascinating gigs hosted at 53 Degrees all year.

Friendly Fires have just been announced as a support act for Blur’s massive Hyde Park gig and who’s to argue with Damon Albarn’s taste in music. Certainly not us, and one listen to their eponymous debut album is more than enough to appreciate their sound. Whether it’s the incessant bombast of ‘On Board’ or the showcasing of an impressive pop sensibility on breakthrough hit ‘Paris’. Last time the boys came to Preston it saw singer Ed McFarlane jump in to the audience on the appropriately named ‘Jump In The Pool’.

As if that wasn’t enough, the only act threatening to take The Prodigy’s crown as masters of the dancefloor, Pendulum, arrive on the 29th May to close proceedings with a flourish. After the successful transition from underground adulation to commercial success with ‘In Silico’, Pendulum have become one of the most sought after live acts in the country. The gig, which is bound to sell out, will see 1500 people crowded into the confines of 53 Degrees raving to a set consisting of ‘Granite’, ‘Propane Nightmares’ and the frenzied rush of ‘Slam’. Unmissable.

And that’s not even everything, SeYes and Whole Lotta Led are two of the finest tribute acts around and with an army of devotees promise to deliver a standout homage to their respective artists. Mobo winning act N Dubz bring their terrifying popular urban sound and even more terrifyingly popular headwear to our fair venue on June 6th.

 After rescheduling the date to June 11th Paolo Nutini stops off ahead of the follow-up release to the double platinum selling ‘These Streets’.  Expect hits such as ‘Jenny Don’t Be Hasty’ and ‘Last Request’ to be mixed up with forthcoming releases from the 21 year-old’s new record.

Also recently announced are the Utah Saints and bringing with them their Summer of Love Rave at student night Promo, and the Bounce Heaven Bank Holiday Special along with a host of comedy performances at Stand and Deliver, 53 Degrees promises to be the hottest venue in town for the last term.

Tickets can be bought at the SU Reception without a booking fee with an NUS card and remember that all profits go straight back to you, the students. For more details visit www.53degrees.net

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Cure for Champagne Socialism’s 23 year hangover: The red pill or the blue pill

Posted on 03 May 2009 by admin

Opportunity, fairness and equality. This was the core ethos when New Labour came to power in 1997.

 

Blair promised that everyone in Britain will be given a fair chance to succeed and Brown promised to eliminate the ‘boom and bust’ culture. But a surge of wealth and opportunism had to come at a price.

 

Fast forward 12 years and we’re deep into a recession, a culture of overspending and over borrowing has left the country in economic hangover and the people in charge seem oblivious to it all. We’re experiencing the bust morning after the boom night before.

 

Forecasts have even been made, predicting it’ll be the year 2032 until the debt levels return to a sustainable level. It’s probably because the phrase “green shoots of recovery” is tossed around so casually that when signs of them actually do appear; we tend to play it down as more hot air from politicians. Instead, given the severity of the recession, the public want to see an economic orchard emerging before they believe the worst is over.

 

Admittedly, Gordon Brown is a far less media savvy Prime Minister than his predecessor at number 10 and neither is he videogenic in comparison to Blair. It tends to be the armchair political commentators who feel the need most to vent spleen at the Brown believing he single-handedly caused this economic downturn.

 

George Osborne didn’t even manage to take a break from his routine tongue lashing of Labour to actually try and present a substantial alternative to Darling’s list of proposals in his budget response. The message was focused on what The Tories would have done to avoid the recession and what errors the Government have made in trying to bring about economic recovery.

 

It seems as if the opposition are trying to milk votes without presenting an alternative to this mess. If either of the two major opposition parties had an actual plan then why didn’t they create some kind of mock-budget to show how they would provide an alternative solution.

 

When a nation becomes disenchanted with their government, the tendency is to assume that the grass is always greener on the other side. Perhaps we’re supposed to take that literally now that The Conservatives have ‘reinvented’ themselves with an eco-friendly image. Such tactics have included; the new Conservative party logo of a scribbled tree and David Cameron’s laughably contrived bike rides to work…whilst having his shoes and brief case chauffer driven behind him ! Yet Cameron felt compelled to berate The Chancellor’s car scrap scheme for its miniscule carbon footprint!

 

However, it was Liberal Democrat’s Treasury Spokesman Vince Cable gave the most sober interpretation of the budget. He asked voters not to dwell on the past and even told politicians to “Stop the childish bickering over whose to blame.”

 

Quite a bold, yet humbling statement from Cable, given he was the one who’d been constantly warning The Government about a potential recession years beforehand. He could have quite easily spent 5 minutes preaching “I told you so”.

 

Instead he outlined a realistic road to recovery. Cable mentioned that the government could spread the burden of tax more fairly rather than taxing low and average earners. He also fingered out the legal tax dodgers living in tax havens saying: “British tax payers pay through the nose while the Union Jack flies above many of the world’s tax havens.”

 

It’s just a shame that Britain’s archaic first past the post voting systems means that the Lib Dems never get fairly represented in parliament to help mitigate the bi-partisan bickering between Labour and The Tories. The often forgotten third party had received 25% of the total votes in the 2005 general election but received 10% of parliamentary representation. Meanwhile in the same election, Labour received 35% of the total votes but managed to hold onto 55% of the overall seats.

 

When the last Conservative government began to look tired in  the mid-nineties, the media took it’s usual pot-shot but it was ultimately Blair’s vision, leadership and PR skills in a new age of rolling news which helped him formulate a strong manifesto to appease voters from both the left and right.  Now that The Daily Mail, The Express and Telegraph have their tongues firmly sewn into Cameron’s trousers and The Sun flirting with the idea more and more, support is being rallied behind an visionless alternative with no solid policies.

 

David Cameron just tells the public that if The Conservatives got in power, the road to recovery would be long and hard… just as Labour as tells us. It’s not unsurprising of him to lack answers when he is inept at asking questions. Every Wednesday he phrases the questions in exactly the same way at PMQs, always beginning.

 

“Will the Prime minister admit…” or if he’s feeling adventurous: “Will the Prime minister confirm…”

 

This is his standardised set-up of closed-down questions in an effort to expose Brown’s stubbornness by not answering questions in a straight manner on Labour’s failures. Shame that Cameron doesn’t practice what he preaches whenever he’s asked by journalists… Will Mr. Cameron admit that he has taken cocaine?

 

When Cameron won the leadership contest in 2005 he promised an end to ‘Punch and Judy’ politics. Even at the time, most took this statement with a pinch of salt and The Tories reaction to the budget has augmented the taste of the sodium based condiment (at least in my mouth) even more.

 

Brown has in fact eliminated the textbook recessions of the past which always came with high inflation and high interest rates. It’s quite obvious that The Conservatives are taking the ‘kick ‘em while they’re down’ approach rather instead of outlining a clear vision of the road to recovery, as this would include taxing the wealthy and invariably upsetting their own core voters!

 

 

By Nick Townsend

 

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Northern Irish students set for free post-grads

Posted on 02 May 2009 by Richard Horsfall

The Northern Ireland Assembly is set pay students at one university to continue into post graduate studies covering both tuition and living costs. 

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Campus protest sparks freedom of speech debate

Posted on 02 May 2009 by Andy Halls

A campus protest at the University of Nottingham has sparked a freedom of speech campaign on the internet. Continue Reading

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International Students to face 50% increase in visa fees

Posted on 02 May 2009 by Katie Doyle

A recent announcement has said that all students from outside the European Union are to be charged an extra £50 for visas.

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One in 10 students missing out on bursaries

Posted on 02 May 2009 by Jenna Fordie

Students from low-income families are failing to claim bursaries and scholarships from their universities, according to an official report.

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About Pluto

Pluto is the independent student newspaper of the University of Central Lancashire. We are run by a team of student volunteers headed by the Students' Union's Media Officer. If you've got a story or would like to write for Pluto contact sumedia@uclan.ac.uk.