From: owner-idealcopy-digest@smoe.org (idealcopy-digest) To: idealcopy-digest@smoe.org Subject: idealcopy-digest V7 #341 Reply-To: idealcopy@smoe.org Sender: owner-idealcopy-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-idealcopy-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk idealcopy-digest Friday, November 26 2004 Volume 07 : Number 341 Today's Subjects: ----------------- [idealcopy] john peel tribute night [Alistair Tear ] [idealcopy] [OT] Raindogs photographer [Bart van Damme Subject: [idealcopy] john peel tribute night Just so... BBC Radio 1 is to pay tribute to the late John Peel with a night of live music from the Maida Vale studios where the DJ's legendary Peel Sessions programmes were recorded. Steve Lamacq will host John Peel Night on Thursday December 16, kicking off at 7pm with a one-hour documentary celebrating the influential broadcaster's career and life. The documentary, Teenage Dreams So Hard to Beat, takes its title from Peel's favourite song, The Undertones' Teenage Kicks, and the band is among those paying tribute in the documentary. Other musicians whose lives and careers were changed by Peel contribute to the documentary, including Orbital, The Cure, New Order, Supergrass, Robert Plant, Underworld, Siouxsie Sioux and The Buzzcocks. Following the screening of the documentary, every studio at Maida Vale will be taken over as many of the bands Peel championed perform and talk about the man and the music he liked. There will be live music from Underworld, The Wedding Present, Melys, Steveless, Trencher, Hefner, Stuart Murdoch, Graham Coxon and Nina Nastasia with other bands to be confirmed. Between 11.30pm and 1am, DJs will take over with sets by Dynamite MC, Alex Patterson, Dave Clarke, Hixxy and Coldcut. Lamacq said: "Many of the bands and DJs who are coming down are part of Peel's extended musical family - and everyone's been terrifically helpful and enthusiastic in organising the show. "I'll be anchoring the night but there will be guest DJs crashing the decks and people wandering in and out. We want it to be pretty spontaneous in honour of the great man ************************************************************************* The contents of the e-mail and any transmitted files are confidential and intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. Transport for London Street Management hereby excludes any warranty and any liability as to the quality or accuracy of the contents of this e-mail and any attached transmitted files. If you are not the intended recipient, be advised that you have received this e-mail in error and that any use, dissemination, forwarding, printing or copying of this e-mail is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error please notify postmaster@Streetmanagement.org.uk. This footnote also confirms that this email message has been swept for the presence of computer viruses. ************************************************************************* ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 25 Nov 2004 06:48:41 -0800 (PST) From: Fergus Kelly Subject: [idealcopy] Brighton Rock Brighton gig pics below... variable quality owing to most of them having been taken on an automatic camera (with sporadic focus), and some were taken on a disposable camera (darker, and very grainy) http://www.flickr.com/photos/55867717@N00/sets/ 43060/ Fergus __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Read only the mail you want - Yahoo! Mail SpamGuard. http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 25 Nov 2004 19:10:40 +0100 From: Bart van Damme Subject: [idealcopy] [OT] Raindogs photographer For those interested in Tom Waits & photography: there's an exhibition of Swedish photographer Anders Petersen here in Groningen. Good stuff! Bart ======= Swedish photographer Anders Petersen came across the place at the end of the Sixties and for nearly three years would spend most of his days and nights near the tables, benches and dance floor where life was lived to the full. His debut book Cafi Lehmitz - as dark, wild and rugged as the place itself - was published in 1978. It instantly made his name as a passionated chronicler of unruly daily life. The cover-image of the book would in 1985 be used by Tom Waits for his LP Rain Dogs. Cafi Lehmitz was located near the Reeperbahn in Hamburg, Germany. Open for most of 24 hours, it was frequented by sailors and stokers from all corners of the world. By merchants, dockers and cabdrivers. By prostitutes, striptease dancers and pimps. By poets, small time criminals and other night-revellers. One thing they had in common: they were given the cold shoulder by 'respectable society'. http://www.noorderlicht.com/eng/gallery/current/index.html ------------------------------ End of idealcopy-digest V7 #341 *******************************