Tuesday, 9 September 2008

Scholar finds 'Beethoven's last piano work' in library



An Australian musicologist has discovered what he believes to be the last pianoforte work written by Beethoven.



Peter McCallum, associate prof of musicology at the University of Sydney, base the 32 bars of handwritten music while looking at one of the composer's sketchbooks in Berlin's state library. Most of his books have been studied in detail merely the terminal one has attracted less attention.


McCallum aforesaid that he didn't know instantly that it was a pianissimo piece because Beethoven a great deal used a chaotic sort of shorthand. "The sketchbooks ... are very difficult to read and need a bit of deciphering, just you can work it out if you look at it for long enough," he said.


McCallum said he believed the piece was written in October 1826, five months before Beethoven died.


"It's got a few little unusual sympathetic features which we don't normally companion with Beethoven," he said.


McCallum's pianist wife Stephanie secondhand her husband's transcription to make the first recording of the piece - Bagatelle in F minor � which lasts simply 54 seconds. McCallum aforesaid he believed the patch, although brief, was complete.


"I suspect if Beethoven had come to it as he very often did with these things he would have added more than because it's not very long," he said. reuters












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Saturday, 30 August 2008

How Will Christopher Nolan �Dark Knight��ify the Stupider Batman Villains?

Photo-illustration: Everett Bogue; photos: Getty
Images



The almost-certainly-untrue rumor that Cher is Christopher Nolan's "first choice" to play Catwoman in the follow-up to The Dark Knight � and Vulture's convincing concept art � point to a real problem that's going to face Nolan as he continues the enormously successful new-and-improved Batman franchise: How to shoehorn the more cartoonish villains of the comics into Nolan's realistic, crime-thriller universe? The idea of Cher as an aging Catwoman has its appeal, but also edges into fanwankery � not unlike Australian artist Josh McMahon's unintentionally hilarious attempts to imagine Nolanized versions of Harley Quinn and the Riddler.




While the Tim Burton�Joel Schumacher series comfortably situated outlandish supervillains like the Penguin and Poison Ivy in a bizarre universe that was art-directed to within an inch of its life, in Batman Begins and The Dark Knight Nolan has favored a more recognizable urban environment with actual, y�know, exteriors. He avoided flamboyant villains in Begins, and deliberately set up the Joker as an aberration in Knight � a psychopath whose face paint even freaked out his fellow criminals. But how many more times can comic-book grotesques be finessed in this way? Why would a woman dress up like a cat in the Gotham City of Dark Knight? Why would a guy wear a jacket covered in question marks? And could a short, chubby dork really take on Christian Bale�s high-tech Batman while wearing a monocle? How far can Nolan take his gritty conceit before, like poor Joel Schumacher before him, he edges the series into self-parody?





Earlier:
Latest Made-Up Rumors Suggest Cher Will Play Catwoman in Next Batman Movie






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Wednesday, 20 August 2008

Janet Jackson Helps 'Wardrobe Malfunction' Into Dictionary

...more Janet Jackson �

The phrase �wardrobe malfunction�, inspired by Janet Jackson�s open nipple, has been added to the English dictionary.


Jackson, who was performing during the SuperBowl's half-time usher, was left red-faced after her stage partner Justin Timberlake ripped open her bodice, revealing a breast.


More than 90 million people saw the live beam - and the term 'wardrobe malfunction' was coined.


It has now been entered into the latest Chambers English Dictionary, and of course is a favorite with Entertainmentwise!


See some of the best wardrobe malfunctions in our gallery here.

Sunday, 10 August 2008

Poor Overall Survival In Septa- And Octogenarian Patients After Radical Prostatectomy And Radiotherapy For Prostate Cancer

�UroToday.com - In the online payoff of European Urology, Dr. Claudio Jeldres and a group of international investigators addressed the overall endurance of septa- and octogenarians who underwent radical prostatectomy (RP) or radiotherapy (XRT) for prostate cancer (CaP). The Quebec Health Plan database was used to identify 6,183 workforce treated with RP or XRT for CaP between 1989 and 2000. The database contained no info on tumor stage or grade, PSA levels, or cause-specific mortality. The researchers controlled for the potential effect of CaP-specific fatality rate by playacting an analysis in a subset of individuals world Health Organization did non receive any secondary therapy.


Of the 6,138 patients long time 70 or older, 1,591 (25.7%) underwent RP and 4,592 (74.3%) were treated with XRT. The average actuarial survival for the entire grouping was 7.4 age. For the RP patients it was 12.1 years, compared to 5.7 eld after XRT. Analyses exploitation life tables identified 10-year survival probability at 38.5%. At 10 years after RP overall survival of the fittest was 59.3% compared to 30.3% afterwards XRT. The data suggested that 10 years after treatment, 83.6% of RP patients and 69.9% of XRT patients were absolve of secondary therapy. The risk of overall mortality was 2.1-fold higher in XRT treated patients. Androgen-deprivation therapy exerted a protective effect on endurance for XRT patients.


They reported that 62.5%, 44%, and 19.1% of RP patients ages 70-74, 75-79, and 80 or sr. survived beyond 10 eld. The percentages for XRT-treated men were 37.9%, 24.8%, and 9.4% severally.


The investigators concluded that in this study age group, 40% of patients wHO underwent RP and 70% of men who underwent XRT would not bear had equal life anticipation to make warranted attempted curative therapy.


Jeldres C, Suardi N, Walz J, Saad F, Hutterer GC, Bhojani N, Shariat SF, Perrotte P, Graefen M, Montorsi F, Karakiewicz PI

Eur Urol. 2008 Jul;54(1):107-17

10.1016/j.eururo.2007.10.038


Reported by UroToday.com Contributing Editor Christopher P. Evans, MD, FACS

UroToday - the only urology web site with original content written by world urology samara opinion leaders actively in use in clinical practice.


To access the a la mode urology news releases from UroToday, go to:
www.urotoday.com


Copyright � 2008 - UroToday



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Tuesday, 1 July 2008

Sean Combs - Combs Is Foxxs Favourite Party Animal


Rapper SEAN COMBS once saved actor JAMIE FOXX from embarrassment when he was almost turned away from an exclusive party.

Combs - famed for his lavish party lifestyle and annual boat parties at France's Cannes Film Festival - helped Foxx get into a bash when door staff failed to recognise him.

Foxx explains, "About 12, 14 years ago, I couldn't get into the party, and then Diddy swept past me like this Cristal-Bentley tsunami. He's a legend."





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Thursday, 19 June 2008

Strictly star blamed herself for affair

'Strictly Come Dancing' star Alesha Dixon has revealed that she blamed herself for her husband's affair.
The 29-year-old singer told Company magazine that she was devastated when she found out that her husband, rapper MC Harvey, was having an affair with singer Javine Hylton.
Dixon said: "It was like my whole world had just collapsed around me. I thought, 'what have I done to deserve this?'"
"I'm a big believer in karma, and I felt I must have done something to invite it into my life. I tried to take the blame."
The former Misteeq singer said she was also angry after recently discovering that former bosses had wanted her to shed some weight.
"I found out the other day that, a while ago, some old bosses asked someone to have a word with me about losing weight. It's disgusting."
She said: "I'm not overweight and I'm not skinny, so to tell me to lose weight - what kind of message is that to girls?"
Dixon also revealed that she put her wedding dress on eBay after her marriage fell apart.
"It turned out the person who bid for it was a hoaxer, so I took it off eBay and never put it back up," she said.

Friday, 13 June 2008

Neil Young has spider named in his honour

A species of spider has been named after Neil Young, after a university biologist discovered the insect in Jefferson County, AL.

Jason Bond of East Carolina University made the discovery in Alabama last year and established through DNA tests that the bug is a newly-discovered species. The spider is distinguishable from others in its genus through its genitalia.

This particular group of spiders is called 'trapdoor' as they live in burrows and build trapdoors at the burrow�??s entrance.

Bond named the bug Myrmekiaphila neilyoungi, after his favourite musician, and says naming a new species has strict rules that must be adhered to.

"As long as these rules are followed you can give a new species just about any name you please. With regards to Neil Young, I really enjoy his music and have had a great appreciation of him as an activist for peace and justice," reports the Associated Press.

Meanwhile, Young has been confirmed to play the Roskilde festival this July in Denmark.

--By our New York staff.
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