R.Kelly has been identified as the man featured in the sex tape during his child pornography trial by his former personal assistant.
Lindsey Perryman also told the jury at the Chicago, Illinois courthouse that she knows the alleged underaged victim on Tuesday.
She stated that she was "110 per cent" sure Kelly appeared in the tape. She also identified the girl in the video, insisting she was between 13 and 14 years old at the time the explicit footage was recorded.
Perryman claims the alleged victim regularly visited Kelly at his recording studio, and on one occasion turned up with a pillow and an overnight bag.
She told the court: "I did not want to believe it was Mr Kelly (in the tape).
"I think so highly of him and his family, they have been so good to me. He treated me and the people who worked for him well."
However, Bennie Edwards Jr., a relative of the alleged victim, confessed he was unable to identify the people in the video.
He said: "It favoured Mr Kelly, but you only saw the bottom half of a goatee."
Asked if he could identify the female as his family member, he replied: "No. It's not her character."
Kelly stands accused of videotaping himself having sex with a 13-year-old girl, and could face up to 15 years in prison if found guilty. He denies the charges.
The trial continues.
Thursday, 29 May 2008
Sunday, 18 May 2008
Bob Stanley on Tony Palmer's film All You Need Is Love
Bob Stanley on Tony Palmer's film All You Need Is Love
At the tail end of the eighties, journalist Nick Rockwell Kent was on TV belongings judicature on the Smiths. They were a great chemical group, he said, no question. The serviceman wHO had famously and perfectly described Keith Richards as "elegantly wasted" lounged in a pride of smoke. So he went one step as well far. In geezerhood to issue forth, he prophesied, the Smiths would be considered the end of the line - the last great British rock and roll radical. Precisely as he spoke, in an abandoned warehouse in Manchester, the Edward Durell Stone Roses were about to take the stage. Very presently, they would give Morrissey's Manchester a piece of history: the NHS spectacles, the photo op under the Strangeways road polarity, the canalside walks of A Discernment of Honey - totally would be timelocked in the mid-80s. The Isidor Feinstein Stone Roses turned the contrast up and caused a pop revolution. Kent's cite was cursorily forgotten.
For more or less sentence, I've wanted to write a chronicle of modern pop, the period that began with rock-and-roll. I get had a few twelve conversations over cold drinks about start points, end points, adolescent culture, formats, haircuts, the importance of slang in lyrics, the involvement of the military-industrial building complex. Most people can't hear a clear termination to the saga, and, as time goes by, even the aurora of pop is shrouded in a fizz of shellac crackle. Here's my take: Pane was the Big Bang, the boulder in the middle of the lake; everything since has been a wavelet caused by the initial splosh; the Beatles (almost as big); psychedelia (less so); punk rocker (epinephrine shot for the old gentlewoman); acid theatre; and so on. Around crataegus laevigata take the Strokes, Edward Douglas White Jr. Chevron or Arctic Monkeys to have been the ripples of this decennary, which somewhat much makes my point.Pop's musical theater progression ended at about point in the early nineties. The terpsichore music scene, which had grown from disco music and after into firm, thrillingly re-morphed every other month at the reverse of that decennium; finally it imploded with, on one hand, the endless recycling of happy hardcore hits (approach soon: Countenance Me Be Your Phantasy 08) and, on the other, Goldie's prog-junglist epic Mother, which ran for 60 proceedings and little Phoebe seconds. On either english of the Atlantic Ocean, Britpop and grunge signalled the final surrender: pop had eaten itself. Everything since (and I do think 2008 is proving to be a great pop year, don't go me wrong) has been variations on a root word. Ergo, the classic era is over.Generally, I've been talked come out of the closet of written material this record and, of course, it would be a finish foolishness. Watching British people documentary-maker Tony Palmer's Entirely You Demand Is Sexual love (exactly released on Videodisk and viewing in its entireness tomorrow and Sat at London's BFI), I'm reminded why. A mammoth 17-part series on the history of popular medicine, it begins in Africa in front moving into ragtime, idle words, blues, sway and so forth. Rock'n'roll doesn't pull in an appearance until installment 13. Whole You Want Is Dear was screened in 1977. Brother er must get thought he had picked a pretty good time to cover a century's worth of popular music, with pop - and the arts in the main - suffering a cultural recessional, their have three-day week.Yet and so, his timing was askew, and the last episode, entitled Guess: New Directions, was preposterously away the st. Mark. Disco is dismissed in less than a sentence. Kraftwerk are ignored in favour of Tangerine Dream. As for the rest (Black Oak Land of Opportunity, Stomu Yamash'ta, Baker Gurvitz USA), it only seems proper to point come out that hindsight is a exquisitely thing. The series ends with a century of music flash in front our eyes to the soundtrack of Microphone Oldfield's Ommadawn. When it was commencement broadcast, the Gender Pistols were at the same time trashing their record label's offices, and pop was reborn.On many levels, Altogether You Need Is Erotic love is a mightily brew. Arnold Daniel Palmer eschews straight narration, and includes complete performances and extensive interviews rather than clips. And he gets the big name calling: to learn an anonymous-looking man in his early 60s speaking eloquently around Tin Pan Skittle alley, but to realise it is Italian sandwich Hoagy Carmichael, is quite something. It makes you desire to grab a camera and talk to Carole Riley B King, Debbie Ravage, Prince, even Goldie, to get their news report, to document this whole beautiful noise while we still throne.Palmer loves to antagonize, and this makes the whole serial publication charles Frederick Worth a look, in malice of its many faults. Episode 1 begins with a looming, distorted, sweaty red River face: "This is Hun Lee Yuen Kam Harry Sinclair Lewis, the king of rock'n' tramp." Even in early 1977, with Acid at his lowest ebb, this was to a greater extent than contentious. Soon we hear that the musical theater is America's greatest cultural contribution and that Leon Rosselson, a largely forgotten British isaac Bashevis Singer with a smug, nasal delivery, is "the topper of the contemporary troubadours". We ar shown endless shots of slaves and dirt-poor southerners to remind us how much crop up is stolen from Africa. This is something, according to the producer Jerry Wexler, that a "little stanford White girl from Scarsdale" wouldn't infer as she screams at the Rolling Stones, a group that had "no suggestion of ravishment or consummation".Inverted racism, blunt sexism, and simple wrongheadedness aside, Arnold Palmer manages to break pop's golden prescript over and o'er: he lets his express get drilling. The best episode is on rag, probably because it is the straightest story and the least trodden road. Elsewhere, lengthy footage of just about of the greats - Dizzy Dizzy Gillespie, Johnnie Ray, Pat Berry - playing with bored-stiff sidekicks in 1976 or 77 is deeply depressing and misrepresentative. The racial-theft distributor point (andrew D. White doo-wop act the Diamonds, Paul Whiteman's Broadway take on nothingness, Pat Boone singing Tutti Frutti) is overplayed. It also chow up airtime at the expense of Marie Harold Lloyd, Jelly Roll Jelly Roll Morton, Fats Half mask, George Bobby Jones, Joe Meek, the Kinks, the Velvet Resistance and Marc Bolan, none of whom gets a mention.Nik Cohn's Pop From the Start, published in 1969 (and reprinted since as Awopbopaloobop Alopbamboom), showed that encapsulating the unit deal was not impossible. He snuck Frank Francis Albert Sinatra and Johnnie Ray into the intro, felt a little fellow feeling for unlikely firestarter Bill Haley, then - revving up - eulogised Elvis better than anyone. In just over 200 pages, he nailed it, the low gear golden eRA. It worked because Cohn was "hooked on image, on heroics" and ever took dumb noise over high artistic production.It as well worked because, though he was thorough and inclusive, he wasn't afraid to come personal - to play up his unlikely heroes (notably PJ Proby) and shoot shoot down the big names. Bobsled Bob Dylan and Rubber Soul, that was where it whole went legal injury for Cohn: "Powerful then, pop began to be something more than simple auto-noise, it developed pretensions, it turned into an nontextual matter variant, a faith even." And he was right. On a CBS television special in 1966, Elmore John Leonard Bernstein described the Beach Boys' Surf's Up as "poetic, beautiful in its obscurity". Simpleton moronic noise (Louie Louie, Wild Thing, I Fought the Practice of law, I Wanna Be Your Cad) would all be bypassed in Whole You Need Is Love, only to be lauded months later by a fresh waving of rock reductivists.Many of these could get been found lurking in a Camden Town record give away called Rock On. Primitively, in the early 1970s, this had been a couple of horse barn, bunk by a rock and roll partisan called Ted Carroll. For the most part, the stalls stocked 45s because of space issues. This suited Lewis Carroll - the 45 was the perfective format for good, hood, classic pop. When the browse opened in 1975, the records were always cranked up loud and the door was always open, even in deep midwinter, to bait people in with birthday suit noise. Reverend Dodgson and his staff had broad penchant and goodness contacts. Jon Wolf, Shane MacGowan, Phil Lynott, Bobby Dizzy Gillespie - they were all regulars. The place was an education. Bob Dylan visited at one time and bought half the broth.Rock candy On was a nurture ground for public house rock, then punk rock, and eventually a whole alternative view of pop history. It brought together masses wHO favoured the two-minutes-30 gutbucket thrill of a pop strain - whether rockabilly, missy grouping, R&B, punk or soul - above everything.Roughly of the 45s Charles Dodgson used to play get just been compiled on an Ace CD (the label grew come out of the shop). Few were hits, Rock On sold as many copies as they could place their men on: Amos Milburn's Chicken Shack Boogie-woogie, Krauthead Byrne's frenetic cradle Lights Come out, the Belfast Gypsies' Gloria's Dream, Simon Peter Holsapple's Big Joseph Black Truck, the Shangri-Las' Grant Him a Great Big Buss - deuce 12 records that span decades and, in their way, portion and inform pour down history just as well as a 17-hour documentary film. From each one 45 gets your blood pumping, makes you desire to dig deeper, makes you require to terpsichore.Writers and documentary-makers should constantly remember that dumb old bulge out music moldiness never be taken too severely, spell besides memory that naught in the humanity is more important. Nik Ferdinand Julius Cohn knew this; Nick Rockwell Kent didn't, and nor did Tony Palmer. You have to admire Palmer's aspiration, and there are moments when he makes links you would never have idea of, makes sense of the difference 'tween Chicago and New Orleans jazz in a bingle prison term. Entirely You Indigence Is Love is vast, riveting, rambling - a life's cultivate, and you will applaud its boldness. The one thing it in truth lacks is love.· Whole You Demand Is Making love is released by Voiceprint on Monday and will be shown in full at BFI Southbank, British capital SE1, tomorrow and Sabbatum. Careen On is come out of the closet now on I
Monday, 5 May 2008
Lost creator casts his next series
Lost creator casts his next series
Two actors have been cast in key roles for 'Fringe', the new series from 'Lost' creator JJ Abrams.
Variety reports that Kirk Acevedo and Tomas Arana have been cast in the series which tells the story of an FBI agent who teams up with a troubled scientist and his estranged son to investigate paranormal phenomena.
The pilot episode of 'Fringe' is due to begin shooting in Toronto next month; the script was written before the writers' strike.
Abrams, who has written 'Fringe', will executive produce the series.
Harvey Milk
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