Wednesday, 10 September 2008

Animator had golden touch for "Peanuts"

Bill Melendez, an Emmy-winning animator world Health Organization brought Charlie Brown and the "Peanuts" gang to blithe, thickheaded life on television and in films � and who helped keep them alive after the death of their creator, Charles Schulz � died Tuesday in Santa Monica, Calif. He was 91 and lived in Los Angeles.



Mr. Melendez's son Steven confirmed the demise, saying his father had been in declining health after a fall last year.



One of the few Hispanics in the job when he began his career in the thirties, Mr. Melendez was the only animator Schulz allowed to sheepherder his characters onto the screen. He did so in more than iV dozen TV specials, little Joe feature films, a curve of Saturday-morning cartoons and scores of commercials.



Mr. Melendez won sestet Emmy Awards, starting with "A Charlie Brown Christmas" (1965), the first "Peanuts" television special and still a holiday staple. From that program onward, Mr. Melendez also supplied the "voice," such as it was, of Snoopy.



His other "Peanuts" work, produced with his longtime collaborator Lee Mendelson, includes the specials "You're a Good Sport, Charlie Brown" (1975) and "Life Is a Circus, Charlie Brown" (1980), both of which received Emmys, and the feature films "A Boy Named Charlie Brown" (1969) and "Snoopy, Come Home" (1972).



After Schulz's death in 2000, Mr. Melendez animated several more than "Peanuts" specials, among them "Lucy Must Be Traded, Charlie Brown," first broadcast in 2003.



Jose Cuauhtemoc Melendez was born Nov. 15, 1916, in Hermosillo, in the Mexican state of Sonora. His father, a Mexican army cavalry officeholder who later became a general, was a amorous who gave his children Aztec names, Steven Melendez said. (Cuauhtemoc was a 16th-century Aztec ruler.)



Growing up, Jose drew everything in sight: horses, cattle, cowboys. In 1928, his female parent moved with him and his siblings to Arizona so they could memorise English. Jose, then around 12, was placed in a kindergarten class, a humiliation, his son aforesaid, that forced him to learn his new linguistic process in a hurry. The family by and by moved to Los Angeles.



As a youth man, Mr. Melendez aforethought to be an engine driver, but the Depression intervened. He held a series of odd jobs, including working in a lumberyard, before a friend persuaded him to show his drawings to the Walt Disney Co.



Disney suggested formal training; after Mr. Melendez studied concisely at the Chouinard Art Institute, Disney hired him in 1938. There he helped invigorate "Fantasia" (1940), "Pinocchio" (1940) and myriad Mickey Mouse cartoons. He also acquired a new name. After asking Disney to bill him as Cuauhtemoc Melendez, he was informed that his name was excessively wide for the credits and that he would hereafter be known as Bill.



In 1941, Melendez leftfield Disney after an animators' strike he helped coordinate. He united Leon Schlesinger Productions (by and by acquired by Warner Bros.), where he worked on Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and Porky Pig. He formed a studio, Bill Melendez Productions, in 1964.



Mr. Melendez and Schulz met in the late fifties over a Ford Falcon. Mr. Melendez had been engaged by the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency to bring forth an animated commercial for the railcar. Ford wanted to use "Peanuts" characters in the spot.




Schulz demurred until he saw Mr. Melendez's drawings. They were noteworthy for their fealty to Schulz's style; alternatively of embellishing the mirthful strip's flat figures and clean, uncomplicated lines, Mr. Melendez unbroken them much as they were.



Mr. Melendez's other work included the TV special "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe" (1979); he as well animated the specials "Garfield on the Town" (1983) and "Cathy" (1987), both of which won Emmys.



Besides his logos Steven Cuitlahuac Melendez, president of Bill Melendez Productions, Mr. Melendez is survived by his wife, the former Helen Huhn, whom he married in 1940; another boy, Rodrigo Cuauhtemoc Melendez, a retired backside admiral of the Navy; six grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.










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Sunday, 31 August 2008

Amy Winehouse Pulls Out Of Paris Concert

Amy Winehouse has pulled out of a concert that was due to take place in Paris, because the troubled isaac Bashevis Singer is suffering from illness.


Winehouse should have been performing at the Rock En Seine fete, but she was taken ill at her London home substance she was unable to even go forth the area to head out to France.


"Amy Winehouse was regrettably ineffectual to perform at the Rock En Seine present in Paris tonight, Friday August 29th, due to illness." A spokesman said.


"She was taken inauspicious at her house and wasn't able to travel to France for the concert."




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Thursday, 21 August 2008

Bloc Party - Bloc Party Aim To Beat The Leaks With Sneak Release

British rockers BLOC PARTY have astounded fans with a mouse album waiver.

In a entreat to avoid leaks, the band's new album, Intimacy, will be available as a download on Thursday (21Aug08) - more than a month before the release hits stores (28Oct08).

The group's last record album, A Weekend In The City, was dogged by online leaks - it appeared in cyberspace months before its official release.





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Monday, 11 August 2008

Favorite TV faces, favorite radio songs

"Lost" meets "Heroes," crossed with "Desperate Housewives," a little world TV and a tinker -- whathttp://www.latimes.version of "Mustang Sally," prompting an appreciative little boogie from a handful of those of a "Mustang Sally" vintage.


According to Grunberg, the band is lucky to manage two to iII rehearsals a month, only aided by an extra set of keyboards, a horn section, some musical accompaniment singers, a third guitar player and a bassist, the unit nonetheless offered up a liberal, tight sound, and the happy feet soon spread.


Panettiere stuck round during Garciahttp://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/music/http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/music/http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/music/'s number to bop around and lend some backup. From there came cameos from "Chuck" star Zach Levi, trading verses with Guiney on "The Letter," and and then "House" himself, Hugh Laurie, with a swingy rendition of "Such a Night."


It took a few numbers, merely the stage-adjacent squeals eventually reached a most regular consistency -- Laurie was rewarded with a round just for bugging his eyes.


But then, this is a work party that knows how to work a room. Hatcher riffed on some microphone trouble with, "I demand some bad, strong pipe fitter to help me extinct," and Denton got his share of audible reaction for slithering off his white oxford to do the twangy "Papa Loves Mama" in a grey tank top, showing off some clear biceps and a tattoo.


"Hehttp://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/music/http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/music/http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/music/'s in pretty good supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe," enthused one onlooker, "and he must be 40." (Actually, 45, according to the Internet Movie Database.)


At the end, Grunberg called it the bandhttp://www.latimes.

Wednesday, 6 August 2008

Kelly Joe Phelps

Kelly Joe Phelps   
Artist: Kelly Joe Phelps

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


Tunesmith Retrofit   
 Tunesmith Retrofit

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 12




Portland, OR-based acoustic/slide guitar participant and singer/songwriter Kelly Joe Phelps carved forbidden a growth niche for his euphony end-to-end the 1990s. Phelps was raised in Washington and well-read commonwealth and tribe songs, as well as drums and forte-piano, from his beginner. At first, he concentrated on free nothingness and took his cues from musicians like Ornette Coleman, Miles Davis, and John Coltrane earlier finding his true vocation as a blues instrumentalist in the late '80s, when he began listening to acoustic blues edgar Lee Masters wish Fred McDowell and Robert Pete Williams. He began singing as well and released his critically praised debut, Lead Me On, in 1995. Six original songs showcase Phelps' ability in the blues accent, but he too tackles, and does justice to, traditional numbers racket pool like "Motherless Children" and "Fare Thee Well." Phelps, as dextrous and creative an acoustic playground slide guitarist as you'll hear anyplace in the U.S., likewise made appearances on Greg Brown's album Further In, Tony Furtado's Roll My Blues Away, and Townes Van Zandt's The Highway Kind. In recent years, he's opened shows for B.B. King, Leo Kottke, Keb' Mo', Robben Ford, and Little Feat. He released his second gear album, Roll Away the Stone, in 1997, and followed it up with 1999's Radiate Eyed Mister Zen. Sky Like a Broken Clock, which appeared in 2001, exuded a sultrier tendency from Phelps; it's fellow traveller musical composing, the Beggar's Oil EP, was a critic's fave in 2002. Phelps was on fire; however, changes loomed ahead. He switched up his role from solo play to bandleader when it came to recording a fifth studio movement in previous 2002. Phelps wanted a hit orchestrated sound, so he collected guitar player Bill Frisell and bassist Keith Lowe as well as Zubot & Dawson's Steve Dawson, Jesse Zubot, and Andrew Downing (bass) for the recording of Slingshot Professionals; the album appeared in March 2003 and quick earned critical herald among indie critics. In 2005, Phelps released a live album, Tap the Red Cane Whirlwind, which was followed a year later by the studio apartment track record album Tunesmith Retrofit, released on Rounder Records.






Thursday, 19 June 2008

Dakini

Dakini   
Artist: Dakini

   Genre(s): 
Electronic
   Ambient
   



Discography:


Nada Masala (Cd2)   
 Nada Masala (Cd2)

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 8


Nada Masala (Cd1)   
 Nada Masala (Cd1)

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 5




 






Friday, 6 June 2008

Ashley Judd - Judd Depression Was Inevitable

Actress ASHLEY JUDD was primed for depression as a child - because she was left on her own while her mother, singer NAOMI, toured the world.

The Double Jeopardy star went public with her battle against depression after she entered a program at Shades of Hope Treatment Center in Buffalo Gap, Texas in February, 2006, and now she admits she has always battled the blues.

The actress says, "I had a very unsafe and unstable childhood about 10 months out of the year. I didn't have my normal, natural little-girl needs met. I was left on my own a great deal.

"There was a time when I skipped a whole week of school because my mum was on the road, I didn't have a ride and I'd gotten ashamed of calling friends.

"I had my first childhood depression at eight - severe, intense, hole-in-the-soul loneliness. No one noticed."




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