Monday, 2 September 2013

Sir Paul McCartney reveals new single and album

Sir Paul McCartney reveals new single and album

Paul McCartney 
 
 The album includes 12 new tracks
Sir Paul McCartney has announced details of a new solo album and shared a track from the record called New.
He told BBC 6 Music's Matt Everitt: "It's catchy, it's summery, it's a love song. I think people will recognise it as definitely me."
The album - also called New - will be Sir Paul's first solo album since 2007's Memory Almost Full.
Due for release in October, it features 12 songs on which he worked with producers Paul Epworth and Mark Ronson.
"The record is very varied. I worked with four producers and each of them brought something different," said Sir Paul.
DJ and producer Ronson is known for his work with a host of award-winning stars including the late Amy Winehouse, Lady Gaga and Lily Allen.
Improvisation "Mark's work with Amy [Winehouse] was sensational, so I knew he'd be good. He knows his music, he knows what he likes and the two of us together took the song and tried to put the maximum vibe into it.
"We had a lot of fun. He brought expertise, energy, enthusiasm and the odd laugh or two."
Sir Paul, who won his 17th Grammy Award earlier this year, described the first track, New, as "very positive".
"It's a love song but it's saying don't look at me I haven't got any answers. It says I don't know what's happening, I don't know how it's all happening, but it's good and I love you."
The former Beatle revealed that his collaboration with Epworth, who was responsible for Adele's Skyfall theme song, involved "improvisation".
"The tracks that are Paul's on the album weren't written. I didn't bring them in, which is my normal method," he said.
"[He] works completely differently. We went into the studio the first day I ever met him and he outlined [his] idea and said 'let's just make it up'.
"I just started knocking something out on the piano, he started drumming to it, and I stuck a bit of bass on it and we had the basis of the song worked out."
Other producers on the album include Ethan Johns, who has worked with artists including Ryan Adams and Kings of Leon, and Giles Martin, the son of Sir George Martin, the producer of almost all of The Beatles' records.
The album is due for release in the UK on 14 October and in the US on 15 October.

George Clooney film opens Venice festival

George Clooney film opens Venice festival

 
 
George Clooney and Sandra Bullock sign autographs on the red carpet
Oscar-winning actors George Clooney and Sandra Bullock have helped launch the 70th Venice Film Festival with their 3D sci-fi thriller Gravity.
The Hollywood duo were joined by the film's Mexican director Alfonso Cuaron at Wednesday's world premiere.
Shot in 3D, Gravity tells of two astronauts who are cast into deep space when debris destroys their shuttle.
Nicolas Cage, Matt Damon, Zac Efron and Scarlett Johansson are among the other stars expected over the next 10 days.
Italian director Bernardo Bertolucci heads this year's competition jury.
Star Wars actress Carrie Fisher and British film-maker Andrea Arnold are among those helping him decide which of the 20 titles in contention should win this year's Golden Lion award.
They include Terry Gilliam's dark fantasy The Zero Theorem, in which Damon appears alongside double Oscar-winner Christoph Waltz, and Johansson's Scotland-set sci-fi tale Under the Skin.
Joe, starring Cage as a violent ex-convict, is also in the competition line-up, as is Parkland, a historical drama set on the day President John F Kennedy was assassinated in 1963.
High School Musical star Efron forms part of its large ensemble cast, playing the doctor who examined JFK's body at the Dallas hospital that gives Peter Landesman's film its name.
For the first time, two documentaries are up for the Golden Lion: Errol Morris's The Unknown Known: The Life and Times of Donald Rumsfeld, and Sacro GRA, a film about Rome's ring road.
British hopes rest on Gilliam's film, Jonathan Glazer's Under the Skin and Philomena - Stephen Frears' fact-based film about an Irish woman, played by Dame Judi Dench, trying to locate the son she gave up for adoption in the 1950s.

George Clooney, Sandra Bullock and Alfonso Cuaron discuss Gravity
Bookmaker Paddy Power has ranked Philomena as second favourite to win the Golden Lion, behind Stray Dogs - the only Chinese language film in the competition.
"This year's festival favourites pack a powerful punch," said a spokesman. "We predict Stray Dogs however to have just a bit more bite than the rest of the pack."
Special awards will be presented this year to US director William Friedkin, Polish filmmaker Andrzej Wajda and the Italian writer-director Ettore Scola.
Clooney, Bullock and Cuaron attended a press conference for their film on Wednesday before attending its gala screening at the festival's Palazzo del Cinema.
Early reviews were fulsome in their praise, with the Hollywood Reporter describing it as a "jaw-dropping space thriller" boasting "breath-catching tension and startling surprise".
Variety's reviewer echoed those sentiments, saluting "a nervy experiment in blockbuster minimalism" that "offers in abundance the sort of eye-popping, screen-filling spectacle that demands to be viewed in a [movie] theatre".