Reports from Britain state that the orchestra will mimic playing to prerecorded music due to concerns about the weather and the shape of the performing venue -- a large, oval-shaped arena whose scale would apparently make a live-music performance tricky.
The ceremony, which is set to take place at the new Olympic Stadium, is being overseen by Oscar-winner Danny Boyle, who serves as artistic director for the massive event.
The London Symphony has reportedly recorded the music that is scheduled to be played during the July 27 ceremony. The Daily Mail reports that Boyle wanted the orchestra to perform live, but that he was overruled by the organizing committee for the Games.
When viewers around the world tune in for the ceremony, they can expect to see the conductor and musicians from the renowned orchestra going through the motions while a soundtrack plays.
This wouldn't be the first time that the mimicking of live music was used at an Olympics ceremony. In 2008, a mini-controversy developed during the Beijing Games when it was revealed that a 9-year-old singer lip-synced to the voice of another young girl whom officials had deemed less telegenic.
Similarly, at President Obama's inauguration, the musical performance by cellist Yo-Yo Ma, violinist Itzhak Perlman, pianist Gabriella Montero and clarinetist Anthony McGill played, unamplified, to a recording. The decision to use a recording was made over fears that the cold weather that day could damage the instruments.
RELATED:
Olafur Eliasson work rejected by London Olympics
Esa-Pekka Salonen to carry Olympic torch for London Games
Britain's Globe caught in conflict over Israeli theater company
Vauxhall Motors Launches New England TV Advert - The Auto Chanel
LUTON, UNITED KINGDOM - June 4, 2012: Today, Vauxhall Motors launched the sequel to their Home Nations football TV advert. ’Supporting a Nation’ features current members of the England Football Squad, football fans and Vauxhall staff from the Vauxhall Ellesmere Port production facility in Merseyside, the home of the Vauxhall Astra.
This new TV advert will air before the England versus Belgium friendly on 2nd June 2012 and subsequently around key fixture dates during the summer. The soundtrack ‘What a Life’ by Noel Gallagher’s band, ‘High Flying Birds’ is used again, a track which has become synonymous with football and was first used exclusively by Vauxhall Motors in the original Home Nations TV advert aired in September 2011.
The new advert focuses on the England team as they prepare for a major fixture. It reflects on how fans stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the players, supporting the team and bringing the nation together.
Ex-Liverpool and England legend John Barnes features in the Vauxhall advert and said; “As an England fan I share the same excitement that all fans feel before a big game. I really enjoyed standing alongside other England fans in the Vauxhall TV ad and can't wait to support the boys this summer in Poland and the Ukraine.”
The England players prepare to leave the dressing room ahead of a big match, Steven Gerrard pulls on his England shirt, a fan follows the same routine as he puts on his ‘Gerrard’ shirt and joins the line-up of fans. Joe Hart ties his boots as he sits – headphones on - listening to music. The line-up extends into a pub where fans meet their friends to watch the England match. The fan line-up extends into the tunnel where the players exit the dressing room to stand together with fans, all united. Scott Parker acknowledges the fans as the team turn and walk down the tunnel.
Commenting on the inspiration of the new Vauxhall Motors advert, Peter Hope, Marketing Director stated; “We wanted the advert to reflect the unity of the nation getting behind the England team and bring the players and the fans together”
“During a major tournament we all become football fans and as the England Team sponsor, we wanted to capture the emotion just before a major England fixture. “
McCann Erickson Birmingham developed the campaign for Vauxhall Motors under the creative direction of James Cross and Tim Jones. Explaining the premise behind the advert, James said, “The advertisement captures the excitement and anticipation a nation feels heading into an international football tournament, but it's not about being a die-hard football fanatic, it's about people everywhere showing support for their nation. This advertisement is a celebration of that. And it's this message of wide-ranging support that's true of Vauxhall as a brand.”
London loses in sale of app firm - lfpress.com
Toronto will reap the rewards of a promising hi-tech business developed in London.
And the sale of the company called Carbyn is a warning that the city needs to build a stronger tech community or it will lose more companies, a startup expert says.
Carbyn is working on cloud-based software for apps carried on mobile devices.
Owner Jaafer Haidar sold Carbyn to Synacor of Buffalo for $1.1 million. Synacor is shifting the core function of the business to a Carbyn office in Toronto. Carbyn’s London office that employs eight people will remain open.
Carbyn has had difficulty finding employees in London.
“We have not seen a lot of quality resumes here in London,” Haidar said. “It pains me to say it, but we may not be able to do it here.”
But Haidar said he plans to stay in London and invest the proceeds from the sale in new software he’s developing.
For technology observers, the loss of Carbyn is a blow, but the most important thing is that Haidar, forging a reputation as one of London’s most innovative software executives, is staying.
“It’s a concern, but with Jaafer the thrill is in the chase and in building. The most important thing is we still have a person like Jaafer here,” said John Pollock, director of BizInc, the technology incubator at Western University.
Jaafer also sold digital scrapbooking software to the craft company Michael’s for $1.5 million in 2010.
norman.debono@sunmedia.ca
London 2012 Olympics: Britain's greatest badminton player Nathan Robertson retires after missing selection for the Games - Daily Telegraph
But he had no qualms in admitting that Adcock and Bankier had simply been the best mixed doubles pair over the last 12 months.
“For neutral fans, it has been entertaining to see how the rivalry played out,” he said. “We had expectations going into qualifying but we didn’t just miss out in the end, we missed out by a long way.
“They fully deserved their place and I have already offered my support to the players and coaches in the build-up to the Games.”
Adrian Christy, Badminton England’s chief executive, said: “It is a sad day for the sport as he is arguably our greatest ever player, a one-off, super-talented individual.
“He is an infectious character and a brilliant role model. Our pool of talented players now need to aspire to his heights.”
Keeping in line with Christy’s view that former players should be rewarded for their services, Robertson is now likely to take up an ambassadorial role within the sport.
Robertson competed at the Sydney Olympics in 2000 before winning silver with long-time partner Gail Emms at the Athens Games in 2004.
Two years later, the pair won Commonwealth gold in Melbourne and then the world title in Madrid. He forged a partnership with Wallwork following Emms’ retirement at the last Olympics in Beijing.
London 2012 - Gay to return in New York - Yahoo! Eurosport
United States sprinter Tyson Gay will put aside the pain of a nagging hip injury and run his first race in nearly a year at this weekend's Adidas Grand Prix in New York as he scrambles to be fit for Olympic trials.
Gay will not race Jamaican world champion Yohan Blake in the featured 100 metres event, however, and will instead compete in a preliminary race at the Diamond League meeting.
"I still have a pain (in the hip area), but am managing it and I've got to get on with it," Gay told Reuters.
His Olympic trials are less than three weeks away, "and I've got to see where my body is," Gay said.
Although a pre-Olympic showdown with Blake, one of the favourites for the London 2012 Games, would be ideal, it would not be helpful to Gay at this point, the sprinter and his agent said.
"I am running in the B section because, competition wise, I am not ready yet," Gay said.
The separation will allow Gay to test himself without the pressure of racing the world champion, Gay's agent, Mark Wetmore, said from New York.
"It may not be ideal for everyone, with two athletes of that calibre in different races, but in an Olympic year we have to look after Tyson," Wetmore said.
"Blake, under the right conditions, could run 9.7. We don't know what Tyson can run. Hopefully he can have a great race and run 9.9."
Jamaican triple Olympic champion Usain Bolt has the year's fastest time at 9.76 seconds. His world record is 9.58 in 2009 with Gay the second fastest of all-time at 9.69 the same year.
The competition will be Gay's only race before the June 21-July 1 Olympic trials in Eugene, Oregon, where the 2007 double world champion will enter only the 100 metres.
"I am nervous (about New York) because I have high expectations for myself," Gay said. "I don't know what I can run, but my sprint coach (Jon Drummond) told me today he thought I could open decently."
Gay has not competed since pulling out of the 100 metres semi-final of the U.S. world championships trials in Eugene last June. He later had surgery on the hip and another procedure in March.
The often-injured 2009 world silver medallist only began sprint training three weeks ago.
"I usually open my season at a small meeting, but I decided in the past 48 hours to run in New York," he said.
London exhibit in DC opened tonight, timed to Queen's Diamond Jubilee, Olympics - Examiner
The whole world is watching London during Queen Elizabeth's Diamond Jubilee, and soon the Olympics, so it's a perfect time to see "Open City: London, 1500-1700", which opened tonight at Washington's Folger Shakespeare Library.
The free exhibit foreshadows the current fab four-day Diamond Jubilee in many ways, including centuries-old depictions and descriptions of St. Paul's Cathedral, where Queen Elizabeth will conclude her Diamond Jubilee celebrations on June 5.
Some comparisons can be made with the 1547 coronation of 9-year-old King Edward VI, who rode under a "golden canopy, dressed in silver and white velvet, amply garnished with rubies, diamonds, and pearls" to St. Paul's -- where "an acrobat slid down a rope anchored to the steeple...and performed tumbling exercises..."
An itemized bill from Great Britain's Office of the Revels shows charges for 46 tailors, some working "daies" and "nyghtes", to make elaborate garments for that royal event 465 years ago.
"We could have done this exhibition at any time, but we knew people would be paying particular attention to London this summer, and we wanted to show them 'our' London," said exhibition curator Kathleen Lynch, executive director of the Folger Institute.
"Their" London during the 200 year period between 1500 and 1700 experienced "explosive growth from a small, medieval city of 50,000 people, all within the city walls, to almost 500,000 people, one-quarter outside the walls," Lynch said in a walk-through today. She curated the show with Elizabeth (Betsy) Walsh, the Folger's head of reader services.
The exhibit traces the dramatic political, religious, and economic changes that reshaped London, from the dissolution of the monasteries, to plagues, civil wars, economic upheavals, to the rebuilding of the city after the Great Fire of 1666. The changes are tracked through three main gathering places—churches, theaters, and markets.
The earliest item is a 1493 edition of the "Nuremberg Chronicle", a world history, showing a woodcut of a "generic city", which the tome used to depict not only London, but at least three other cities.
"London wasn't worth its own woodcut," Lynch said with a smile, and then guided me to the exhibit's final map, showing "amazing growth in area, wealth, and power by 1690 when London is on the verge of creating a new empire."
The exhibit's story really begins when King Henry VIII broke from the Catholic Church in the 1530s and began the dissolution of the monasteries, most of which were headquartered in London. "Henry claims all wealth and property and doles it out to his cronies," Lynch commented, "while the City of London takes over charitable aspects like hospitals and orphanages."
Blackfriars, a Dominican monastery on the western side of the walled city, was turned into an "upscale residential community", with a renowned theater, and even the headquarters and warehouse for the Office of Revels, in charge of floats and other pomp for royal processions.
A mid-16th century Revels list of “moneye payd for stuf” cleared from a Blackfriars religious site, notes carting away “the great altar stone..." When Queen Mary, a Catholic, came to the throne, parishioners forced the Revels office to make restitution for the desecration.
Far more positive happenings in Blackfriars included performances of Shakespeare's "Othello", although written for the (less expensive and less intimate) Globe Theatre which opened in 1599, and Ben Jonson's "The Alchemist", among other major plays of the time.
One of the exhibit's most exciting items is Shakespeare's copy of the deed for a townhouse he purchased in Blackfriars. "We know that Shakespeare would have touched this; it's his copy, signed by the seller." Lynch said. The copy signed by Shakespeare, who was "known as a shrewd investor", is in London's Guild Hall Library.
Back then, both the seller's and the buyer's copy were made on one long piece of paper, and after the signing, the document would have been cut in two in wavy indentations. For verification of authenticity in any future transactions, the two copies would have to mesh exactly.
That explains the wavy indentures on the top of Shakespeare's deed, and on top of a much smaller contract near it, for a 9-year apprenticeship. Thus, the origin of "indentured", as in servitude. Would-be apprentices were "streaming into London, immigrants mainly from all parts of England," Lynch said, a main reason for the city's population explosion.
An exquisite engraving shows the coats of arms of all 60 chief trade and craft companies in London in 1596. At least half the men in London belonged to these companies through the 17th century.
Other highlights among the exhibition's some 100 items -- maps, diaries, books, letters, drawings, almost all from the Folger collection:
- A panoramic view of 1647 London by Wenceslaus Hollar, showing a flotilla along the Thames much like the June 3 Diamond Jubilee flotilla. Two decades after the etching was made, many of the buildings were destroyed by the 1666 Great Fire. The Hollar work has never before been exhibited.
- "Tittle-Tattle; Or, the several Branches of Gossipping", woodcut, circa1560–1600, depicts working women in the marketplace as mere "scolding sluts" in a derogatory poem and images.
- "Bills of Mortality" and other writings about the ravaging plague in 1965 and the Great Fire in 1966, which destroyed the greater part of London with the city walls. During 1665, there were 97,306 burials -- 68,596 due to the plague, "London's Dreadful Visitation".
- John Locke's "A Letter Concerning Toleration", 1689. Locke wrote, "Why are assemblies less sufferable in a church than in a theatre or market?" The Folger notes, however, that "Locke was not ahead of his time: he excluded Catholics and atheists from toleration."
One of the final items is the favorite of both curators Lynch and Walsh. A 1690 list of orphans and poor children -- educated for the British Navy at a math school built at the former Greyfriars monastery -- and their destinations, including New England, Virginia, and far beyond.
For more info: "Open City: London, 1500-1700". Free. On view from June 5 through September 30. Series of free talks on Mondays at 7 P.M., followed by a reception and viewing of the exhibition. Folger Shakespeare Library, 201 East Capitol Street, SE, Washington, DC, 202- 544-4600.
'Panda taxis' a hit on London streets - People's Daily Online
Millions of tourists flocking to London for the Olympic Games this summer can also learn more about China's giant pandas - not by visiting a zoo, but by taking a ride in one of London's iconic black taxies.
Black-and-white stripes have been painted on 30 taxis to mimic the look of a panda, and another 20 feature a cartoon panda in its natural habitat surrounded by bamboo. Both designs feature the slogan "Chengdu, hometown of pandas, spice it up".
Painting pandas on central London taxies is the latest campaign to raise awareness of the endangered Chinese animal. The campaign is jointly run by London Taxi Advertising and the Chengdu Association for Cultural Exchange with Foreign Countries in Chengdu, Sichuan province, which is home to more than 80 percent of the world's panda population.
London Taxi Advertising sales director Paul Tremarco came up with the idea in March, after realizing the great amount of attention that such a campaign can bring, especially during London's Olympics.
"Taxi Advertising is a great tool for getting a message across to a mass audience, and therefore increasing awareness of Chengdu as a tourist destination and encouraging visits to the city," he said.
The taxies selected for the campaign will pick up passengers at London's most popular destinations, including Piccadilly Circus, Buckingham Palace, Marble Arch and Trafalgar Square, from June 1 to Aug 31.
A London Taxi Advertising crew spent four days painting the two designs on the taxies. Since London Taxi Advertising does not own the taxies, Chengdu paid for the advertising space, according to Zhong Ying, an official from Chengdu municipal government.
Laura Hardy, a spokeswoman for London Taxi Advertising, said her crew has painted advertisements on London taxies for many clients in the travel sector, including Visit Malta, Sri Lanka Airlines and Arran Air.
"Most of our previous adverts featured iconic tourism places. But to paint a panda on a taxi is an innovative idea," she said.
Passengers who take the panda taxi rides can also enter a competition to win tickets to see Yang Guang and Tian Tian - two giant pandas that arrived at Edinburgh Zoo from Chengdu last December.
Tian Tian and Yang Guang are the first giant pandas to live in the UK for 17 years. They have received hundreds of visitors every day since their arrival.
The London Olympics is expected to attract an additional 5.3 million foreign tourists to the capital in July and August, according to organizers.
Angie Sham, an Australian, wrote on Faceook that the panda taxi is very cute, and said she fell in love with it at first sight.
The pudgy figure of the panda has been integrated into the taxi decor with the lights resembling the sparkling eyes of the animal. The images of the animal painted with the colors of the Olympic rings appear on the hood, roof and both sides of the cabs.
The final design for the panda paintings was selected by people around the world through social networking platforms including Facebook, Twitter and micro blogs.
The Chengdu Association for Cultural Exchange with Foreign Countries originally came up with six different designs, ranging from plain to rainbow-colored backgrounds. The top two designs were determined by a vote held on Facebook and Twitter.
According to the Chengdu association, the panda cabs will run in London for three months.
"Chengdu has held a number of panda-themed activities in recent years to promote itself and panda conservation," said Zhang Zhihe, chief of the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding.
In 2006, three delegations consisting of members of the Chengdu Association for Cultural Exchange with Foreign Countries and panda experts in the city spent more than 40 days visiting zoos with pandas in America, Europe and Asia.
During the "Earth Hour" initiative organized by the World Wildlife Fund in 2011, the giant panda "Meilan" served as the global ambassador and turned off a light to promote an energy-saving lifestyle, Zhang said.
Vauxhall Prince Henry Commemorates Winter Trial Centenary - The Auto Chanel
LUTON, UNITED KINGDOM – June 4, 2012: A 100 year old Vauxhall model has recently celebrated the centenary of the Swedish Winter Reliability Trial by retracing the steps of the original event.
The Prince Henry model, owned by Alisdaire Lockhart of Selkirk, was driven from Gothenburg to Stockholm and back again, closely following the 1912 route, completing 620 miles (nearly 1000kms). Lockhart shared the driving with Andrew Duerden, Vauxhall’s Archivist. Kay Mordza, of the Swedish Vauxhall Owners Club, who arranged the journey, partnered them on the event. The car never missed a beat and averaged over 40mph for the entire event (cruising at 55mph on open roads) and achieving 30mpg.
In 1912, Percy Kidner, Vauxhall’s Managing Director, drove the Prince Henry model. He was the fastest entrant on the event, but incurred penalty points by arriving too early at checkpoints. The 2012 team were able to visit many of the points from the original route during their journey. At Norrkoping they visited the Standard Hotel building where the original photograph was recreated.
Alisdaire Lockhart’s long and painstaking reconstruction of the Prince Henry model paid dividends during the event with a reliable and speedy performance from the vehicle. Lockhart also paid testament to Kidner’s 1912 endeavours:
“We were lucky to have decent, asphalt roads and good weather. Kidner had snow covered surfaces with extremely chilly conditions which make his achievements even more astonishing”
No comments:
Post a Comment