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In the music spotlight: Camper Van Beethoven

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NewsHubCountless people plow through grinding traffic to work in Chicago. The members of influential alternative rock band Camper Van Beethoven may not have to do so on a daily basis, but consider their plight. The veteran group has maintained a steady touring presence in North America despite considerable obstacles.
Drummer Chris Pedersen now joins his bandmates from his home in Australia, and violinist/guitarist Jonathan Siegel kisses his family goodbye in Sweden. Rock and roll is a traveling job, but these are among the toughest commutes in music. “And jet lag from opposite directions,” says Segel.
The members remain busy with their own projects, so collective work isn’t hampered by geographical separation. In a sense, it even helps. “Absence makes the heart grow fonder, so it’s always fun to get back together and play,” says Segel, whose own projects include new album “ Series of Nested Universes ” with improvisational psych-rock band Sista Maj.
Camper Van Beethoven is known for ambitious musicianship and absurd but sharp-witted and socially aware lyrics. Favorites include early single “ Take the Skinheads Bowling ,” “ Eye of Fatima ” from 1988’s “Our Beloved Revolutionary Sweetheart,” and “ It Was Like That When We Got Here ” from 2014’s “El Camino Real.” The band also recorded a popular cover of “ Pictures of Matchstick Men ” by Style Council, whose guitarist Rick Parfitt passed away in late December. “We’re losing so many people at this point,” says Segel. “We don’t usually stop between songs, so it’s hard to make dedications. The song itself is the tribute.”
Although violin and East European influences are elemental to Camper Van Beethoven’s sound, Segel has previously claimed that he doesn’t consider himself a proper violinist. “I’ve gotten away with it for so long that I’m actually starting to learn how to play it,” he says.
Camper Van Beethoven’s tour continues a regular partnership with Cracker. Members including Segel, bassist Victor Krummenacher, and guitarist Greg Lisher have played with Cracker in the past. David Lowery fronts both bands. “He has the ability to sing for three hours if he needs to,” says Segel. “It’s pretty intense.”
Segel says that there’s minimal competition with Cracker and maximum camaraderie, which stems from gratitude for simple survival within the industry. “When you consider that you’re in a band that’s able to play around the country in 2017, it’s like you’ve won the jackpot. Even if you’re not making a ton of bucks like the big pop stars, it’s very lucky.”
Jeff Elbel is a local freelance writer.

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80's pop singer Rick Astley coming out with his own craft beer

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NewsHubSinger Rick Astley is searching for a name for his own beer.
(Reuters)
You’re never gonna give up this beer.
Pop singer Rick Astley, best known for his 1987 hit “Never Gonna Give You Up,” is joining the craft beer craze and says he will soon be coming out with his own brew.
The 50-year old English musician, whose hit reached number one in 25 countries nearly 30 years ago, said he’s a big beer drinker and is currently seeking a fitting name for the new ale, reports the Irish Mirror .
THE TRUTH ABOUT BOXED WINE
“I enjoy a beer with friends and I’m hoping to sell my own brand soon,” Astley said.
“I’ve been working with the Mikkeller brewery in Copenhagen, which was founded ten years ago by a teacher who made his own beer at home. Mikkeller beer is quite experimental and they’ve been sending me various bottles to sample. ”
The singer explained that the brewery has a variety with ales with some being “quite fruity – one was a pear beer they make for a restaurant. ” His own beer is reportedly a fruity tasting pilsner.
Astley is just one of many famous faces who have tried their luck in the spirits industry.
Hip-hop star Jay Z has been involved with Armand de Brignac Champagne since its inception in 2006. Known as the “Ace of Spades,” the $300 bottle of champagne started appearing in the rapper’s videos.
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Singer Dave Matthews also has a wine, a collaboraton with New Zealand-born winemaker Sean McKenzie in 2011 to produce Dreaming Tree wines. And Grammy award-winning superstar Justin Timberlake launched his own tequila brand in 2009.

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Tomi Lahren tells rapper Wale to get her name right if he's going to diss her in new song

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NewsHubIf you’re going to call someone out in a song, at least get their name right.
Rapper Wale took a swipe at Blaze host Tomi Lahren in his new song “Smile,” mispronouncing her name as “Tammy Lauren. ”
“On behalf of Charlamagne I’m sure he ain’t trading sides/Maybe I should meet TomiLahren, I’ll Lauryn Hill her/Trainor, she miseducated anyway/Prolly hate the color of my face,” Wale raps in the song.
The rapper is referring to Lahren’s appearance on “The Breakfast Club” with co-host Charlamagne where they discussed politics.
Lahren tweeted at Wale in response to the song.
I understand what a diss track is. Pretty sure @Wale just didn’t research the correct spelling & pronunciation of my first AND last name..
Wale responded, “Ok Tammy,” to which Lahren said, “Ok Whale. ”
Lahren made headlines last year for her appearance on the “The Daily Show” host Trevor Noah where they spoke about the Black Lives Matter movement.
“When the Black Lives Matter movement is going out with signs saying ‘fry them like bacon, F the police,’ when they’re going saying ‘if you see a white person, target them,’ that is happening, Trevor,” Lahren said. “When that now becomes the narrative and you’re starting to loot, burn and riot, what did the KKK do? ”
After several days of back-and-forth, the feud seemed to end when Noah sent the conservative talk show host cupcakes.

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Music: Out of the darkness

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NewsHubMusic can mean different things to different people. For Anna Drubich, her compositional work offered a way to connect with her Jewish antecedents.
The now-Los Angeles-based 32-year-old composer was born in Moscow and, despite her Jewish genes, says there was not too much in the way of religion or heritage around in her formative years.
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“Although I was born Jewish, I was raised in a non-religious family and therefore working on Kaddish felt like rediscovering my origins and going back to my roots,” she notes.
Kaddish was given a glittering airing at the prestigious Vivacello, the International Cello Festival at the Tchaikovsky Concert Hall in Moscow, last November, with the support of the Genesis Philanthropy Group. The 11-minute work featured Drubich’s husband, Evgeny Tonkha, on cello, supported by Tibetan singing bowl, timpani and strings.
Drubich’s own hands-on introduction into the mystical and magical world of music took place almost a quarter of a century ago, when she began taking piano lessons at the age of eight. She studied under celebrated Georgian pianist Eliso Virssaladze at the Moscow Chopin Music College from 1998 to 2002, before spending six years at the University of Music and Performing Arts Munich, earning bachelor’s and master’s degrees in the process, under the aegis of Professor Franz Massinger.
Despite making good progress as a performing musician, a few years down the line Drubich opted for a change of professional tack.
“I decided that I would be happier composing music rather than playing at recitals,” she explains. The career move was prompted by a realization that were quite a few talented fish in the sea around her, and she didn’t particularly fancy swimming upstream for the rest of her working life.
“I was in a very prestigious competition which went on for something like a week. Every day there would be pianists playing from morning until the evening,” she recalls. “I played on the first day and, at some stage during the week, I decided I should probably go and listen to some of the other people in the competition.”
It was something of a rude wakeup call.
“The order of the pianists was alphabetic and I saw that there were lots of Korean pianists whose last name was Kim. I decided there were too many pianists out there, and it was really hard to play so well.”
The keyboard’s loss is our listening pleasure’s gain.
Drubich had a pretty smooth entry into the world of composition, helped somewhat by an important family connection.
“There is a very famous Russian composer called Isaak Schwartz – he wrote the music for maybe 100 movies. My father [Sergey Solovyov] is a filmmaker and they were friends, and they worked together. At some point I decided I would like to have some lessons with him. I used to go to his country house near St. Petersburg and spend the summer with him, talking about music – the symphonies of Brahms and Bruckner – and looking at the scores.”
That was an excellent kickstarter to Drubich’s writing career, which she followed up with formal studies in Germany. She eventually made it over to the States.
“I went to a festival in Aspen [Colorado],” she says. In fact, Drubich was one of a select group of just five young composers, chosen from around the world, to spend a month in Aspen studying and composing with major Hollywood composers Jeff Rona, David Newman and Jack Smalley.
Besides gaining from the Tinsel Town professionals’ experience and expertise, Drubich also received some career pointers.
“I met composers from Los Angeles and they said I should go there, because that is where the industry is based.”
At the time, Solovyov was working on a new Russian big-screen adaptation of Tolstoy classic novel Anna Karenina and needed a helping hand with the score.
“My father heard me playing some stuff on the piano and asked what it was. I was just improvising something. He asked me to come over to the studio and said he’d show me the video [of the movie] and that maybe I could improvise something for the movie. It was a lot of fun. Then he asked me to write something for a waltz scene.”
Drubich’s soundtrack-writing career was duly up and running, and she has also put together a score for a six-hour documentary about Russian Jewry, which was also supported by Genesis. She finds time to create works for concert settings too. She says the two fields are very different.
“Writing music for concerts is healthier,” she notes. “It is challenging but you know, sometimes the story of a movie can be bad.
It’s kind of interesting because you can write amazing music for a bad movie, and nobody will care about the music. But if you write music for a great movie people will say the music is amazing, It’s a kind of win-win situation,” she laughs. “With concert music you’re very naked. It’s more challenging. It takes so much longer to write a concert piece.”
Kaddish came about following a sad personal event.
“The mother of my husband died and, one night, I woke up and just realized I was going to write Kaddish,” Drubich recalls.
“Because of my husband it was obvious that the piece was going to be for a solo cello and orchestra. It doesn’t follow the text of the prayer, it is a concert piece.”
Even so, the religious undertones to the work are unmistakable.
“It has Jewish motifs. You could say it is Jewish music but it is actually concert music.”
It is an evocative work which conveys high emotion, as well as Drubich’s steadfast connection with her rediscovered roots.
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Review: Brahms' German Requiem by the Jerusalem Music Academy Choir

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NewsHubJERUSALEM MUSIC ACADEMY CHOIR
Brahms: German Requiem
Jerusalem Music Academy Hall, January 1
Two premieres of Israeli works were performed as curtain raisers by the Jerusalem Music Academy Chamber Choir, conducted by Stanley Sperber.
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Shahaf Aoda’s “A White Bird in the Black Night” is based on a poem by Nathan Sach who, terminally ill, already sees his life’s approaching end.
The work is appropriately mournful, though in a personal, not conventional or sentimental style. It sounds sincere in its appealing emotional restraint, and therefore makes a moving impression.
Neta Shahaf’s “Dawn, I beg you,” based on a text by Shlomo Ibn Gvirol, attempts to express his poetical-philosophical ideas mainly via polyphonic manipulations. Its intellectual approach nevertheless leads up to an intense climax, followed by a calm after the storm.
The main attraction was Brahms’ German Requiem, presumably to celebrate the New Year on January 1 in an appropriately mournful mood. Its performance by a choir consisting mainly of Academy students was an ambitious enterprise, considering the work’s emotional and musical profundity.
However, the performance was not only accurate but also conveyed the work’s message of consolation with audible identification and enthusiasm.
From delicate soft sounds leading up to a shattering fortissimo, with all the intermediate nuances, and incisive articulation of the text, the choir achieved an impressive performance.
Yair Polishook’s dark, resounding baritone and strong stage personality sounded altogether persuasive.
Ayelet Kagam’s bright, pure and immensely appealing soprano soared radiantly over the choir.
Pianists Irina Lunkevich and Bruce Levy did their best to substitute for an orchestra. However, even though Brahms himself wrote the two-piano version, it goes without saying that an orchestra would have been preferable. For a music academy that boasts a symphony orchestra the piano version was an amateurish choice.
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'Silence': Scorsese revisits issues of faith in haunting style

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NewsHubWhat beauty. What brutality.
What madness.
So many of Martin Scorsese’s films have explored religious themes, e.g., “Who’s That Knocking at My Door?” (1967), with its final scene in a Catholic church, to “Mean Streets” (1973) to of course “The Passion of the Christ” (1988), and even “Cape Fear” (1991), with Robert De Niro’s psychopath Max Cady covered in tattoos of Biblical passages about vengeance.
“Silence,” the movie Scorsese has been trying to get made for some 30 years, is a two-hour and 40-minute epic about faith.
Faith and how it inspires acts of miraculous, selfless sacrifice.
Faith and how it can be the main source of hope and redemption for oppressed peoples.
Faith and how it can be viewed as a threat to the very fabric of a nation.
Faith and how it can be warped to inspire acts of terrible, shocking, unspeakably cruel violence.
You’d be hard-pressed to find an actor who has done more heavy lifting, both physically and emotionally, in back-to-back films than Andrew Garfield.
In “Hacksaw Ridge,” Garfield was a conscientious objector in World War II who remained true to his faith even after enduring constant abuse in boot camp, dodging enemy fire during the battle of Okinawa and seeing his fellow soldiers killed and maimed all around him.
In “Silence,” Garfield gives the most compelling performance of his still-young career as Sebastian Rodrigues, a Portuguese Jesuit missionary in the 1630s who pleads with a senior priest (the always solid Ciaran Hinds) to send him and another young Jesuit, Francisco Garrpe (Adam Driver), to Japan in search of their mentor, Father Ferreira (Liam Neeson), who has gone missing.
There are reports Ferreira has publicly renounced his faith and has married a Japanese woman. Rodrigues and Garrpe can’t believe this is true — but that’s before the two young priests make their way to Japan and see for themselves how villagers are being rounded up, tortured and executed just for having converted to Catholicism. Just owning a tiny wooden crucifix is enough to get you killed.
With the help of the translator-guide Kichijiro (Yosuke Kubozuka), who is not to be trusted but keeps asking for forgiveness for his transgressions, Rodrigues and Garrpe hole up in a shack in a remote seaside village populated by a number of Catholics. The locals view the arrival of the two priests as nothing less than a miracle — but it also leads to an inquisition that rounds up three Catholic villagers and ties them to crosses in the water, where they will be drowned by the incoming tide.
This is one of many unforgettable sequences of suffering and sorrow, filmed with such force and clarity by Scorsese and his cinematographer Rodrigo Pieto, it’s difficult not to look away from the screen.
After Rodrigues is captured, the chief inquisitor (Issey Ogata) tells Rodrigues time and again all he has to do is publicly renounce his faith by stepping on a symbol of Christ, and Rodrigues will be free and there will be no further abuse of his fellow Catholic prisoners. As Rodrigues clings fiercely to his beliefs, he is reduced to a near-starving shadow of his physical former self, and he is forced to watch as the inquisitor and his men torture and kill Japanese citizens who have converted to Catholicism.
If Rodrigues will only apostatize, he can save himself and he can save others. Surely that path is the one his God would want him to take, but for a Jesuit priest in that time and that place and under those circumstances, it’s a monumentally, excruciatingly painful choice.
(Driver’s Francisco Garrpe disappears from the story for a long stretch as we follow Rodrigues’ journey — but when Garrpe resurfaces, it’s another shockingly powerful moment.)
When Ferreira (Liam Neeson, commanding) finally appears and we learn the truth about where he’s been all this time, it further serves Scorsese’s central theme about the conflict between adhering to one’s sacred vows and traditional beliefs and doing the right thing, the prudent thing, the moral thing, on a very pragmatic level.
It’s a conflict Scorsese has explored on various levels in films for nearly a half-century, and it has led to the creation of some unforgettable films, not the least of which is “Silence.”

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David Tennant’s film about RD Laing to tighten Glasgow Film Festival

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NewsHubScots actor David Tennant will move a shade down on this year’s Glasgow Film Festival (GFF).
The former Dr Who star will attend a shutting celebration on 26 Feb for a universe premiere of his latest film, Mad To Be Normal.
Also starring Michael Gambon and Gabriel Byrne, a film is about a life of Scots psychiatrist RD Laing.
The 13th festival opens on 15 Feb with a screening of Handsome Devil, starring Sherlock actor Andrew Scott. ‘Stunning performance’
GFF co-director Allison Gardner said: “I am so vehement to share a news about a good opening and shutting galas.
“Handsome Devil is a genuine crowd-pleaser with a joyous suggestion that creates it a ideal film to launch a festival.
“David Tennant gives an positively overwhelming opening as RD Laing in Mad To Be Normal and it seems usually wise that Glasgow should have a honour of hosting a premiere of a film about one of a city’s many complex, charismatic figures.”
RD Laing was seen as a radical when he set adult a medication-free village for psychiatric patients in London in a 1960s.
The film also facilities Elizabeth Moss who starred in Mad Men and Girl, Interrupted.
A documentary array about successful art author John Berger, patrician The Seasons in Quincy, has also been combined to a GFF report after his genocide on 2 January. Indy music
The outcome of a five-year plan by Tilda Swinton, Colin MacCabe and Christopher Roth in partnership with a composer Simon Fisher Turner, a documentary is done with 4 films on opposite aspects of Berger’s life and will be shown on 24 and 25 February.
The full festival programme is to be minute after in Jan though events already announced embody a live song opening involving Alex Kapranos and Stuart Braithwaite.
The ABC uncover will follow a special screening of documentary Lost In France, looking during a arise of Scotland’s eccentric song stage and bands such as Mogwai, Arab Strap and Franz Ferdinand.
The 2017 GFF programme also celebrates Canadian cinema and a purpose of women in thrillers.
Glasgow City Council personality Frank McAveety said: “GFF is a prominence on a city’s informative calendar.
“The opening celebration is always an sparkling event, heralding a commencement of 11 packaged days of film in a UK’s cinema city.
“It’s quite good to see that a famous Glaswegian will be decorated on shade for this year’s shutting celebration film.”

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Golden Globes: How Ryan Tedder tapped Stevie Wonder's DNA for the uplifting 'Faith'

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NewsHubStevie Wonder isn’t in the habit of making songs for movies — but when he gets around to it, the song makes an impact.
In 1985 he won an Academy Award for “I Just Called to Say I Love You,” from the Gene Wilder comedy “The Woman in Red.” In 1991 his soundtrack for Spike Lee ’s “Jungle Fever” topped Billboard’s R&B chart and led to several Grammy nominations.
Now, a quarter-century after his last Hollywood moment, Wonder is up for original song at Sunday’s Golden Globes with “Faith,” his and Ariana Grande ’s duet from the animated film “Sing.”
A zippy, Motown-style dance tune, “Faith” is as emotionally direct as “I Just Called” and as rhythmically nimble as “Jungle Fever.” Unlike the earlier songs, though, it wasn’t Wonder’s sole creation; “Faith” was co-written and produced by Ryan Tedder, the OneRepublic frontman who’s also known for his work with A-list pop stars like Beyoncé (“XO”), Adele (“Rumour Has It”) and Taylor Swift (“Welcome to New York”).
“Stevie doesn’t do other people’s melodies,” Tedder said in an interview this week. “And I think maybe one or two other people have ever told him what to do — like, ‘I need you to re-sing this, that’s not the right note.’”
As a result, no one was certain how things would go when Tedder gathered with Wonder and Grande — as well as executives from Republic Records and Universal Pictures — in a North Hollywood recording studio one evening last year.
“Halfway through the session, [Republic chief] Monte Lipman looks at me and goes, ‘Man, there was a greater-than-50% chance this could’ve been a disaster,’” Tedder recalled with a laugh.
Instead, he added, “it ended up in the top two or three sessions of my entire career.”
Just the pure joy of it. We were up till 3 in the morning. At one point I told Stevie, “You know, the first song I ever heard from you, when I was a kid, was ‘I Just Called to Say I Love You.’” He immediately busted out the song at the piano, and then for the next 20 minutes was basically doing any song me or Ariana would name that we liked.
Highly, highly, highly unusual. It just doesn’t happen anymore; it felt like it was 1975. But nobody’s gonna pass up a session with Stevie Wonder. He and I had been talking for a couple weeks leading up to it, so we’d gotten to be chummy, and we still are actually. I plan on doing some more writing with him here in the next couple months. But before he even agreed to do the song, he wanted to have a phone call and talk for like an hour to see if we had a good vibe.
He told me he’s been pitched so many concepts over the last 40 years and that this was the first one in a decade that made him want to step away from doing his own thing. I felt very honored.
Given the nature of what Stevie Wonder likes to sing about, I think even the title, “Faith,” played a role in it. The song is about love and spotting the X factor in somebody else and calling it out and lifting them up — those are all things that fit Stevie’s DNA.
That was the hardest part of the song to cut because it’s very contrary to what his instinct was on that section. I had this iPhone voice recording — it was just gibberish, but he loved the pocket of the melody that I had. And he was so committed to not veer off-course on that delivery; I’ve never seen anyone go above and beyond like he did to nail those eight bars. I think that’s why it feels young — he sounds like he’s 25 years old.
To me it came out of left field. I’ve known Justin since we were both like 20, and we’d been talking maybe two months before that song dropped about going in to write together. I believe we’re still planning on it. But this sounded so diametrically different than his previous two albums that at first I did a double take: “That’s not Justin!” But I think it was the song of the summer — a feel-good record kind of in the spirit of Pharrell’s “Happy.”
I’ve thought about this a lot, and here’s my theory: The reason animated pictures bring out the poppiest, gummiest, sing-songiest contributions from artists is because you get a hall pass to not be what people expect and to not take yourself so seriously. You get to go for it: What is the most singable, fun, effervescent record possible? You’re not gonna get that from someone’s standard 12-track album that they spent 15 months doing; it doesn’t work that way.
Me and OneRepublic, we get asked probably every two months to do a song for a film, and when I do, it’s almost like a weight is lifted off my shoulders. I don’t have to think about all the same things and criteria and rules — I just get to go write the biggest record I can that captures this moment.
And here’s the other great thing about it: If you swing for it big for a movie and it turns into a smash, great. But if it doesn’t? Hey, it was for a film.
Justin Timberlake isn’t the only other recognizable name in the running for this year’s Golden Globe for original song. Here are the rest of the nominees:
Tunes from animated Disney films like this acclaimed adventure about a Polynesian princess are proven awards-season favorites: Between 1991 and 1995, four Disney songs won Golden Globes, including “A Whole New World” from “Aladdin” and the title track from “Beauty and the Beast.” (Then again, “Frozen’s” inescapable “Let It Go” lost three years ago to a so-so U2 song.) “How Far I’ll Go” hasn’t become a standalone pop hit like those earlier cuts, but it’s gotten a boost from the monster success of “Moana” and from its connection to “Hamilton” creator Lin-Manuel Miranda, who wrote the song. ( Listen here .)
That winning U2 track in 2014 was produced by Danger Mouse, who’s back in the running this year for his atmospheric collaboration with Iggy Pop from Stephen Gaghan’s movie about a balding gold hunter played by Matthew McConaughey.
Damien Chazelle’s modern-day musical about a jazz pianist in Los Angeles has earned rave reviews as well as a fair amount of scorn from jazz experts who’ve criticized the film’s childlike ideas about the meaning of musical authenticity. “City of Stars,” by composer Justin Hurwitz and lyricists Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, mostly sidesteps that debate: It’s a wistful Broadway-style ballad whose naivete is kind of the whole point. ( Listen here .)
Certainly this year’s highest-profile nominee — it reached No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100 and was the biggest-selling song of 2016 — Timberlake’s bubbly electro-disco jam reteamed the pop singer with Max Martin, the Swedish studio savant who helped make him a star with ’NSync. ( Listen here .)
Casey Affleck talks about the way Kenneth Lonergan uses everyday language to convey deep emotion in “Manchester by the Sea. ”
For her role as Jackie Kennedy, Natalie Portman says, “It’s not a fashion story,” but the clothes do tell a story.
Joel Edgerton talks about staying truthful to the real-life story of “Loving. ”
Director Nicolas Winding Refn and composer Cliff Martinez discuss their “Neon Demon” collaboration.
“Manchester By the Sea” director Kenneth Lonergan discusses writing a quiet character and working with actor Casey Affleck to bring him to life.
“Manchester By the Sea” director Kenneth Lonergan discusses writing a quiet character and working with actor Casey Affleck to bring him to life.

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South Korea to form military brigade to remove North's leadership in war

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NewsHubSouth Korea will form a special military brigade this year tasked with removing North Korea’s leadership in the event of war as Seoul looks for options to counter its rival’s nuclear weapons and missiles, an official said.
The brigade will aim to remove the North’s wartime command and paralyse its function if war breaks out, according to an official from Seoul’s defence ministry.
The brigade was originally planned to be ready by 2019.
The official refused to say whether the brigade will train to execute pre-emptive strikes.
The plan was included in defence minister Han Min Koo’s policy briefing to Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn, who became government caretaker upon President Park Geun-hye’s impeachment over a corruption scandal.
North Korea conducted two nuclear tests and a series of rocket test firings last year in attempts to expand its nuclear weapons and missile programme.
Following the North’s latest nuclear test in September, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff announced plans to strengthen its ability to conduct pre-emptive strikes.
It also said a “Korea massive punishment and retaliation” system would use special forces and cruise missiles now under development to destroy areas where North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and the rest of the country’s decision-makers are located.
AP

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S. Korea speeds up creation of Kim Jong Un 'decapitation unit'

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NewsHubSeoul (CNN) South Korea is ratcheting up its rhetoric against Pyongyang with a new threat: Come at us, and we’ll cut off the head of the snake.
K. J. Kwon reported from Seoul and Joshua Berlinger reported and wrote from Hong Kong. CNN’s Chieu Luu contributed to this report.

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