<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="http://xml.world-of-newave.info/dougray-scott.atom.xsl" media="screen"?>
<feed version="0.3" xmlns="http://purl.org/atom/ns#" xml:lang="en-us">
<title>Dougray Scott - World-of-Newave.info</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://answers.world-of-newave.info/dougray-scott.htm"/>
<author>
<name>World-of-Newave.info</name>
<url>http://www.world-of-newave.info/</url>
</author>
<modified>2008-11-21T13:29:11Z</modified>
<tagline>Latest news and articles about Dougray Scott</tagline>
<copyright>Copyright (c)2004-2008.§/Newave SARL. All rights reserved.</copyright>
<entry>
<title>{ARTS} - A single-minded Scott - Dougray Scott interview</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/arts/a-single-minded-scott-dougray-scott-interview-2008104385.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">Having learned to act watching his salesman father, Dougray Scott has been driven to do his very best on screen ? and on the fairways, writes Lee Randall</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/arts/a-single-minded-scott-dougray-scott-interview-2008104385.htm</id>
<issued>2008-10-02T01:00:00Z</issued>
<modified>2008-10-02T01:00:00Z</modified>
<author>
<name>News.Scotsman.Com</name>
<url>http://news.scotsman.com/arts/A-singleminded-Scott--Dougray.4549167.jp</url>
</author>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.world-of-newave.info/"><![CDATA[
<table cellspacing="4" cellpadding="0" border="0" style="margin:9px;">
<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/arts/a-single-minded-scott-dougray-scott-interview-2008104385.htm"><b>A single-minded Scott - Dougray Scott interview</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/arts/a-single-minded-scott-dougray-scott-interview-2008104385.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
<tr>
<td style="font:6pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;text-align:center;vertical-align:top;">&nbsp;</td>
<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">News.Scotsman.Com</span> - Having learned to act watching his salesman father, Dougray Scott has been driven to do his very best on screen ? and on the fairways, writes Lee Randall<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">	A single-minded Scott - Dougray Scott interview - Scotsman.com News {...} A single-minded Scott - Dougray Scott interview - Having learned to act watching his salesman father, Dougray Scott has been driven to do his very best on screen ? and on the fairways, writes <strong>Lee Randall</strong> {...}</blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> October 2, 2008, 1:00 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> October 2, 2008, 3:20 pm - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;56KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span>  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/arts/"><b>Arts</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
<br/>
]]></content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>{ARTS} -  Dougray Scott interview</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/arts/dougray-scott-interview-2008102593.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">Having learned to act watching his salesman father, Dougray Scott has been driven to do his very best on screen ? and on the fairways, writes Lee Randall</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/arts/dougray-scott-interview-2008102593.htm</id>
<issued>2008-10-02T01:00:00Z</issued>
<modified>2008-10-02T01:00:00Z</modified>
<author>
<name>News.Scotsman.Com</name>
<url>http://news.scotsman.com/arts/-Dougray-Scott-interview.4549167.jp</url>
</author>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.world-of-newave.info/"><![CDATA[
<table cellspacing="4" cellpadding="0" border="0" style="margin:9px;">
<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/arts/dougray-scott-interview-2008102593.htm"><b> Dougray Scott interview</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/arts/dougray-scott-interview-2008102593.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
<tr>
<td style="font:6pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;text-align:center;vertical-align:top;">&nbsp;</td>
<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">News.Scotsman.Com</span> - Having learned to act watching his salesman father, Dougray Scott has been driven to do his very best on screen ? and on the fairways, writes Lee Randall<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">	 Dougray Scott interview - Scotsman.com News {...}  Dougray Scott interview - Having learned to act watching his salesman father, Dougray Scott has been driven to do his very best on screen ? and on the fairways, writes Lee Randall {...}</blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> October 2, 2008, 1:00 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> October 2, 2008, 9:01 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;55KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span>  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/arts/"><b>Arts</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
<br/>
]]></content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>{EUROPE &gt; NEWSPAPERS} - Selina Scott takes Channel Five to employment tribunal over ageism claim </title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/newspapers/selina-scott-takes-channel-five-to-employment-tribunal-20081156931.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">Selina Scott is taking Channel Five to an employment tribunal over claims that it rejected her as a newsreader because she was too old. </summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/newspapers/selina-scott-takes-channel-five-to-employment-tribunal-20081156931.htm</id>
<issued>2008-11-21T10:25:18Z</issued>
<modified>2008-11-21T10:25:18Z</modified>
<author>
<name>Telegraph.Co.Uk</name>
<url>http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/celebritynews/3494832/Selina-Scott-takes-Channel-Five-to-employment-tribunal-over-ageism-claim.html</url>
</author>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.world-of-newave.info/"><![CDATA[
<table cellspacing="4" cellpadding="0" border="0" style="margin:9px;">
<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/newspapers/selina-scott-takes-channel-five-to-employment-tribunal-20081156931.htm"><b>Selina Scott takes Channel Five to employment tribunal over ageism claim </b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/newspapers/selina-scott-takes-channel-five-to-employment-tribunal-20081156931.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
<tr>
<td style="font:6pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;text-align:center;vertical-align:top;">&nbsp;</td>
<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Www.Telegraph.Co.Uk</span> - Selina Scott is taking Channel Five to an employment tribunal over claims that it rejected her as a newsreader because she was too old. <blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">Selina Scott takes Channel Five to employment tribunal over ageism claim  - Telegraph {...} </blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> November 21, 2008, 10:25 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> November 21, 2008, 11:37 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;46KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/">Regional</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/">Europe</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/">United Kingdom</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/">News and Media</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/newspapers/"><b>Newspapers</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
<br/>
]]></content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>{EUROPE &gt; NEWS AND MEDIA} - Kirsty Scott meets Robert Carlyle before the release of his new film, Summer</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/kirsty-scott-meets-robert-carlyle-before-the-release-20081129325.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">On screen, we expect Robert Carlyle to be a particular type of man: damaged and disenfranchised; the loser; the loner; the archetypal tortured soul. "These are the kind of characters that crop up time and time again throughout my whole career," says the 47-year-old Scot. "The question is whether they are pulled towards me or whether I am pulled towards them?"An answer of sorts came when Carlyle was sent a script for the 2006 BBC homelessness drama Born Equal. He says he felt his heart sink when he looked at the role picked out for him, a troubled ex-con trying to get his life back on track. "I thought, I've played this guy before, it's too similar. Then I thought about it. I thought, is there anything wrong with that? What's wrong with re-examining that? Going back to that person again, shooting it slightly differently."My first love is art and I see a lot of things in an artistic way. And this is like a series of self-portraits in a sense. This is painting an image of me on a different path, a different road. That's interesting. If that has to be my fate, I'm happy with that, to play these kinds of guys. A lot of the characters I play have problems, they are marginalised, they have serious psychological problems, problems with relationships, with childhood. These are big subjects, big subjects. You can't balk at work like that. As an actor, that's as good as it gets."And so it is with Summer, Carlyle's next project. Directed by Kenny Glenaan, it tells the story of two schoolfriends facing up to loss and disillusionment in middle-age. Carlyle plays Shaun, labelled a violent bully by the education system that cast him adrift, a man whose response to dyslexia was to crush his own hand in a vice. The role won Carlyle a Bafta Scotland best actor nomination, and the PPG award for best performance in a British film at this year's Edinburgh film festival. The jury called it a "flawless performance in a great, uncompromising film"."I'm 47. I understand Shaun," says Carlyle. "I understand that man. I don't have any regrets in my own life, but I can sympathise and empathise with this guy who wakes up and realises his life is past and gone and what has it been for?"We meet in Glasgow, Carlyle's hometown, where he lives with his wife, makeup artist Anastasia Shirley, and their three young children. We're not so very far from his birthplace in Maryhill. The hotel is just round the corner from his house, and so thickly carpeted you move without sound. He is in the lobby before you notice him, a slight figure in jeans and old leather, a scarf wound tight around his neck. Carlyle hopes people will see past the deprivation and frustration of Shaun's existence to a man sustained by a deep, abiding friendship and harbouring a hidden sense of self. He's always looking for what lies beneath, he says, even in the most unhinged of personas. "He has had a bad hand in his life, has Shaun; he has been dealt a bad fucking hand. He tries his best, he knows, shit, he shouldn't have crushed his hand. But in these films, even in Ken Loach's films, there's always a heart; there's always a human heartbeat behind it. Kenny is a bit like the spawn of Ken Loach, you can see that in his work. It is the people. They tell the stories."Loach gave Carlyle his first break, casting him in Riff Raff in 1991. Roles in Cracker, Trainspotting and The Full Monty followed quickly and made him a star. Summer, was filmed in Bolsover, not too far from Sheffield, where The Full Monty was set. As Gaz, unemployed steelworker turned stripper, he had been the heart of one of the biggest British films of all time.  "I had forgotten Bolsover is very close to Sheffield and Sheffield is the eye of the storm for me. I was like the fucking prodigal son. It was extraordinary; I felt I am actually theirs. That film, The Full Monty, was their film, therefore I'm their actor and I'm back home again." Carlyle was mobbed. Every day on set he was surrounded by kids, slapped on the back, asked for autographs. "It was a fucking great experience," he says.As with The Full Monty, Summer's backdrop is bleak (even if the story, ultimately, is not), that of a land and people hollowed out by industrial decline. "We were in the back of this one house filming," says Carlyle. "If you had said it was derelict and no one had lived there for a year I would have believed you. There was a family there. You could not see the fucking floor for rubbish. It was horrific. As a person, it reminds you of the shit that some people have to go through on a daily basis. It's all too common somewhere like Bolsover and well beyond that. There is nothing there for these people any more. You can't escape the politics. It's in the landscape. That's what the film shows, why these guys are here doing fucking nothing because all this was taken away. "I think it is one of the few locations that would have really, really worked for this film because of that backdrop, that background. Do you know, I used to think they were all fucking hills, these things - didn't realise they were slag heaps. It looks like a lunar fucking landscape. There are very few places like that that show the desolation, the emptiness."Carlyle grows animated, hands sketching what he witnessed. But that's as overtly political as he gets these days. Last year, it emerged that Carlyle had voted for the Scottish National Party in the 2007 Holyrood elections and he was dismayed to discover himself painted as something of a poster boy for the nationalists. "I voted SNP because of the war," says Carlyle. "I'm not someone who believes in wasting my vote. I looked at all the parties and thought, 'Fuck it.' At the time, even the Liberal Democrats were not saying enough for me in terms of the antiwar stuff. I was not hearing it. That was why I went that way. I don't know if I would go that way again. I don't like to get pulled into it. It's too easy for people to talk about this; he's this or he's that. I'm apolitical in that sense. I don't take a great deal of interest in party politics. Social politics interests me a great deal more." Where he is prepared to speak out is about Scotland's film industry, or lack thereof. He'd love to work more north of the border - it would mean he could go home to his kids every night - but the recent Stone of Destiny was Carlyle's first film in Scotland for 12 years, and it took a Hollywood director and Canadian money to make it happen.'We don't have a film industry here. I would argue that vehemently. An industry is something that feeds itself and grows. We make one film every 10 years that gets any kind of notice. You can't call that an industry. Over the past 12 to 15 years I have probably had about five or six scripts that have been Scots films shooting here. Not one of them has fucking happened. I don't know the answer to that. It's got to the stage now with my agent, if something Scottish comes in it has to be financed, otherwise I'm not going to read it because it depresses me."Part of the frustration comes from Carlyle's involvement in The Meat Trade, a darkly comic retelling of the exploits of Edinburgh's notorious grave robbers Burke and Hare. The screenplay is by Irvine Welsh; Carlyle, Samantha Morton and Colin Firth are all on board, and Antonia Bird is directing, but it has still been a struggle, he says, to try to get the film made in Scotland - production has now been postponed until next year. He's been luckier with another of his projects. A chance remark in a previous interview that he has always wanted to play Leonard Rossiter has led to an approach by a film company considering a biopic of the late comedian. "I love comedy, and he's a fucking genius. I would love to play him. And, would you believe, I get an email from a guy in London saying they were starting to make a biopic of Leonard Rossiter, so I'm going to see the treatment." After Summer, Carlyle will next be seen in a feature-length version of the cult US TV series 24. He spent part of the summer filming in South Africa with Kiefer Sutherland. The two have been friends since appearing together in the 2001 POW movie To End All Wars, and Sutherland had been trying for some time to get Carlyle involved in his hit franchise. 24 was everything that Summer isn't: big, showy, fast-paced. Carlyle, who plays agent Jack Bauer's best friend, had a ball, even though he is on record as saying the bigger the budget, the less a film is about."Something like 24 is enjoyable for an actor for entirely different reasons," he says. "What are you supposed to say? That it's not right to enjoy it? Why is that not right? Something like 24 is incredibly popular. Thirty to 40 million people watched it in the States. You have to take that. I don't have any snobbery about that."You know, I have never really approached them in different ways; big or small budget. The same honesty is required whether a film is big budget. I enjoy that. I'm fortunate in my career I'm getting the chance to do that, that I can play across the genres. I have got to be grateful for that."? Summer is released on December 5.DramaKen Loachguardian.co.uk © Guardian News &amp; Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms &amp; Conditions | More Feeds</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/kirsty-scott-meets-robert-carlyle-before-the-release-20081129325.htm</id>
<issued>2008-11-21T00:22:09Z</issued>
<modified>2008-11-21T00:22:09Z</modified>
<author>
<name>Guardian.Co.Uk</name>
<url>http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2008/nov/21/robert-carlyle-interview</url>
</author>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.world-of-newave.info/"><![CDATA[
<table cellspacing="4" cellpadding="0" border="0" style="margin:9px;">
<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/kirsty-scott-meets-robert-carlyle-before-the-release-20081129325.htm"><b>Kirsty Scott meets Robert Carlyle before the release of his new film, Summer</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/kirsty-scott-meets-robert-carlyle-before-the-release-20081129325.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
<tr>
<td style="font:6pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;text-align:center;vertical-align:top;">&nbsp;</td>
<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Www.Guardian.Co.Uk</span> - On screen, we expect Robert Carlyle to be a particular type of man: damaged and disenfranchised; the loser; the loner; the archetypal tortured soul. "These are the kind of characters that crop up time and time again throughout my whole career," says the 47-year-old Scot. "The question is whether they are pulled towards me or whether I am pulled towards them?"An answer of sorts came when Carlyle was sent a script for the 2006 BBC homelessness drama Born Equal. He says he felt his heart sink when he looked at the role picked out for him, a troubled ex-con trying to get his life back on track. "I thought, I've played this guy before, it's too similar. Then I thought about it. I thought, is there anything wrong with that? What's wrong with re-examining that? Going back to that person again, shooting it slightly differently."My first love is art and I see a lot of things in an artistic way. And this is like a series of self-portraits in a sense. This is painting an image of me on a different path, a different road. That's interesting. If that has to be my fate, I'm happy with that, to play these kinds of guys. A lot of the characters I play have problems, they are marginalised, they have serious psychological problems, problems with relationships, with childhood. These are big subjects, big subjects. You can't balk at work like that. As an actor, that's as good as it gets."And so it is with Summer, Carlyle's next project. Directed by Kenny Glenaan, it tells the story of two schoolfriends facing up to loss and disillusionment in middle-age. Carlyle plays Shaun, labelled a violent bully by the education system that cast him adrift, a man whose response to dyslexia was to crush his own hand in a vice. The role won Carlyle a Bafta Scotland best actor nomination, and the PPG award for best performance in a British film at this year's Edinburgh film festival. The jury called it a "flawless performance in a great, uncompromising film"."I'm 47. I understand Shaun," says Carlyle. "I understand that man. I don't have any regrets in my own life, but I can sympathise and empathise with this guy who wakes up and realises his life is past and gone and what has it been for?"We meet in Glasgow, Carlyle's hometown, where he lives with his wife, makeup artist Anastasia Shirley, and their three young children. We're not so very far from his birthplace in Maryhill. The hotel is just round the corner from his house, and so thickly carpeted you move without sound. He is in the lobby before you notice him, a slight figure in jeans and old leather, a scarf wound tight around his neck. Carlyle hopes people will see past the deprivation and frustration of Shaun's existence to a man sustained by a deep, abiding friendship and harbouring a hidden sense of self. He's always looking for what lies beneath, he says, even in the most unhinged of personas. "He has had a bad hand in his life, has Shaun; he has been dealt a bad fucking hand. He tries his best, he knows, shit, he shouldn't have crushed his hand. But in these films, even in Ken Loach's films, there's always a heart; there's always a human heartbeat behind it. Kenny is a bit like the spawn of Ken Loach, you can see that in his work. It is the people. They tell the stories."Loach gave Carlyle his first break, casting him in Riff Raff in 1991. Roles in Cracker, Trainspotting and The Full Monty followed quickly and made him a star. Summer, was filmed in Bolsover, not too far from Sheffield, where The Full Monty was set. As Gaz, unemployed steelworker turned stripper, he had been the heart of one of the biggest British films of all time.  "I had forgotten Bolsover is very close to Sheffield and Sheffield is the eye of the storm for me. I was like the fucking prodigal son. It was extraordinary; I felt I am actually theirs. That film, The Full Monty, was their film, therefore I'm their actor and I'm back home again." Carlyle was mobbed. Every day on set he was surrounded by kids, slapped on the back, asked for autographs. "It was a fucking great experience," he says.As with The Full Monty, Summer's backdrop is bleak (even if the story, ultimately, is not), that of a land and people hollowed out by industrial decline. "We were in the back of this one house filming," says Carlyle. "If you had said it was derelict and no one had lived there for a year I would have believed you. There was a family there. You could not see the fucking floor for rubbish. It was horrific. As a person, it reminds you of the shit that some people have to go through on a daily basis. It's all too common somewhere like Bolsover and well beyond that. There is nothing there for these people any more. You can't escape the politics. It's in the landscape. That's what the film shows, why these guys are here doing fucking nothing because all this was taken away. "I think it is one of the few locations that would have really, really worked for this film because of that backdrop, that background. Do you know, I used to think they were all fucking hills, these things - didn't realise they were slag heaps. It looks like a lunar fucking landscape. There are very few places like that that show the desolation, the emptiness."Carlyle grows animated, hands sketching what he witnessed. But that's as overtly political as he gets these days. Last year, it emerged that Carlyle had voted for the Scottish National Party in the 2007 Holyrood elections and he was dismayed to discover himself painted as something of a poster boy for the nationalists. "I voted SNP because of the war," says Carlyle. "I'm not someone who believes in wasting my vote. I looked at all the parties and thought, 'Fuck it.' At the time, even the Liberal Democrats were not saying enough for me in terms of the antiwar stuff. I was not hearing it. That was why I went that way. I don't know if I would go that way again. I don't like to get pulled into it. It's too easy for people to talk about this; he's this or he's that. I'm apolitical in that sense. I don't take a great deal of interest in party politics. Social politics interests me a great deal more." Where he is prepared to speak out is about Scotland's film industry, or lack thereof. He'd love to work more north of the border - it would mean he could go home to his kids every night - but the recent Stone of Destiny was Carlyle's first film in Scotland for 12 years, and it took a Hollywood director and Canadian money to make it happen.'We don't have a film industry here. I would argue that vehemently. An industry is something that feeds itself and grows. We make one film every 10 years that gets any kind of notice. You can't call that an industry. Over the past 12 to 15 years I have probably had about five or six scripts that have been Scots films shooting here. Not one of them has fucking happened. I don't know the answer to that. It's got to the stage now with my agent, if something Scottish comes in it has to be financed, otherwise I'm not going to read it because it depresses me."Part of the frustration comes from Carlyle's involvement in The Meat Trade, a darkly comic retelling of the exploits of Edinburgh's notorious grave robbers Burke and Hare. The screenplay is by Irvine Welsh; Carlyle, Samantha Morton and Colin Firth are all on board, and Antonia Bird is directing, but it has still been a struggle, he says, to try to get the film made in Scotland - production has now been postponed until next year. He's been luckier with another of his projects. A chance remark in a previous interview that he has always wanted to play Leonard Rossiter has led to an approach by a film company considering a biopic of the late comedian. "I love comedy, and he's a fucking genius. I would love to play him. And, would you believe, I get an email from a guy in London saying they were starting to make a biopic of Leonard Rossiter, so I'm going to see the treatment." After Summer, Carlyle will next be seen in a feature-length version of the cult US TV series 24. He spent part of the summer filming in South Africa with Kiefer Sutherland. The two have been friends since appearing together in the 2001 POW movie To End All Wars, and Sutherland had been trying for some time to get Carlyle involved in his hit franchise. 24 was everything that Summer isn't: big, showy, fast-paced. Carlyle, who plays agent Jack Bauer's best friend, had a ball, even though he is on record as saying the bigger the budget, the less a film is about."Something like 24 is enjoyable for an actor for entirely different reasons," he says. "What are you supposed to say? That it's not right to enjoy it? Why is that not right? Something like 24 is incredibly popular. Thirty to 40 million people watched it in the States. You have to take that. I don't have any snobbery about that."You know, I have never really approached them in different ways; big or small budget. The same honesty is required whether a film is big budget. I enjoy that. I'm fortunate in my career I'm getting the chance to do that, that I can play across the genres. I have got to be grateful for that."? Summer is released on December 5.DramaKen Loachguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">			Kirsty Scott meets Robert Carlyle before the release of his new film, Summer |				Film |				The Guardian	 {...} Robert Carlyle made his name with tough, violent and damaged characters. But it won't stop him appearing in 24 or playing Leonard Rossiter, he tells Kirsty Scott {...}</blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> November 21, 2008, 12:22 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> November 21, 2008, 12:56 pm - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;94KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/">Regional</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/">Europe</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/">United Kingdom</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/"><b>News and Media</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
<br/>
]]></content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>{EUROPE &gt; NEWS AND MEDIA} - England without Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard for Germany friendly in Berlin</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/recreation-and-sports/sports/football/news-and-media/england-without-steven-gerrard-and-frank-lampard-20081163527.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">Scott Parker and Jimmy Bullard replace injured midfield duo but John Terry   passed fit for friendly against Germany.</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/recreation-and-sports/sports/football/news-and-media/england-without-steven-gerrard-and-frank-lampard-20081163527.htm</id>
<issued>2008-11-17T14:05:53Z</issued>
<modified>2008-11-17T14:05:53Z</modified>
<author>
<name>Telegraph.Co.Uk</name>
<url>http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/international/england/3472448/England-to-face-Germany-without-Frank-Lampard-and-Steven-Gerrard-Football.html</url>
</author>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.world-of-newave.info/"><![CDATA[
<table cellspacing="4" cellpadding="0" border="0" style="margin:9px;">
<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/recreation-and-sports/sports/football/news-and-media/england-without-steven-gerrard-and-frank-lampard-20081163527.htm"><b>England without Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard for Germany friendly in Berlin</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/recreation-and-sports/sports/football/news-and-media/england-without-steven-gerrard-and-frank-lampard-20081163527.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
<tr>
<td style="font:6pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;text-align:center;vertical-align:top;">&nbsp;</td>
<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Www.Telegraph.Co.Uk</span> - Scott Parker and Jimmy Bullard replace injured midfield duo but John Terry   passed fit for friendly against Germany.<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">England to face Germany without Frank Lampard and Steven Gerrard: Football - Telegraph {...} Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard have both pulled out of England's squad for   their friendly against Germany in Berlin on Wednesday.  {...}</blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> November 17, 2008, 2:05 pm - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> November 18, 2008, 10:32 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;47KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/">Regional</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/">Europe</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/">United Kingdom</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/recreation-and-sports/">Recreation and Sports</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/recreation-and-sports/sports/">Sports</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/recreation-and-sports/sports/football/">Football</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/recreation-and-sports/sports/football/news-and-media/"><b>News and Media</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
<br/>
]]></content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>{SCIENCE &gt; ENVIRONMENT} - GNM sustainability report: The Scott Trust's charitable activities</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/science/environment/gnm-sustainability-report-the-scott-trust-s-charitable-20081158715.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">The Scott Trust Foundation is the umbrella organisation for charitable activities taking place under the direction of our owner, the Scott Trust</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/science/environment/gnm-sustainability-report-the-scott-trust-s-charitable-20081158715.htm</id>
<issued>2008-11-17T00:00:00Z</issued>
<modified>2008-11-17T00:00:00Z</modified>
<author>
<name>Guardian.Co.Uk</name>
<url>http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/nov/17/scott-trust-charitable-activities</url>
</author>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.world-of-newave.info/"><![CDATA[
<table cellspacing="4" cellpadding="0" border="0" style="margin:9px;">
<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/science/environment/gnm-sustainability-report-the-scott-trust-s-charitable-20081158715.htm"><b>GNM sustainability report: The Scott Trust's charitable activities</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/science/environment/gnm-sustainability-report-the-scott-trust-s-charitable-20081158715.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
<tr>
<td style="font:6pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;text-align:center;vertical-align:top;">&nbsp;</td>
<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Www.Guardian.Co.Uk</span> - The Scott Trust Foundation is the umbrella organisation for charitable activities taking place under the direction of our owner, the Scott Trust<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">			GNM sustainability report: The Scott Trust's charitable activities |				Environment |				The Guardian	 {...} </blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> November 17, 2008, 12:00 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> November 17, 2008, 10:13 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;70KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/science/">Science</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/science/environment/"><b>Environment</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
<br/>
]]></content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>{NORTH AMERICA &gt; WEATHER} - Short Term Forecast - Scott (Minnesota)</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/minnesota/weather/short-term-forecast-scott-minnesota-20081191118.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">
Short Term Forecast
Issued At:  2008-11-12T07:10:00
Expired At:  2008-11-12T09:15:00
Issuing Weather Forecast Office Homepage:  http://www.crh.noaa.gov/mpx/
</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/minnesota/weather/short-term-forecast-scott-minnesota-20081191118.htm</id>
<issued>2008-11-12T08:47:13Z</issued>
<modified>2008-11-12T08:47:13Z</modified>
<author>
<name>Weather.Gov</name>
<url>http://www.weather.gov/alerts/MN.html#MNZ069.MPXNOWMPX.071000</url>
</author>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.world-of-newave.info/"><![CDATA[
<table cellspacing="4" cellpadding="0" border="0" style="margin:9px;">
<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/minnesota/weather/short-term-forecast-scott-minnesota-20081191118.htm"><b>Short Term Forecast - Scott (Minnesota)</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/minnesota/weather/short-term-forecast-scott-minnesota-20081191118.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
<tr>
<td style="font:6pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;text-align:center;vertical-align:top;">&nbsp;</td>
<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Www.Weather.Gov</span> - 
Short Term Forecast
Issued At:  2008-11-12T07:10:00
Expired At:  2008-11-12T09:15:00
Issuing Weather Forecast Office Homepage:  http://www.crh.noaa.gov/mpx/
<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">300 Multiple Choices {...} </blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> November 12, 2008, 8:47 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;1KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/">Regional</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/">North America</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/">United States</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/minnesota/">Minnesota</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/minnesota/weather/"><b>Weather</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
<br/>
]]></content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>{NORTH AMERICA &gt; WEATHER} - Winter Weather Advisory - Scott (Minnesota)</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/minnesota/weather/winter-weather-advisory-scott-minnesota-2008114059.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">
URGENT - WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE
Issued At:  2008-11-11T09:33:00
Expired At:  2008-11-12T00:00:00
Issuing Weather Forecast Office Homepage:  http://www.crh.noaa.gov/mpx/
</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/minnesota/weather/winter-weather-advisory-scott-minnesota-2008114059.htm</id>
<issued>2008-11-11T11:40:09Z</issued>
<modified>2008-11-11T11:40:09Z</modified>
<author>
<name>Weather.Gov</name>
<url>http://www.weather.gov/alerts/MN.html#MNZ069.MPXWSWMPX.093300</url>
</author>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.world-of-newave.info/"><![CDATA[
<table cellspacing="4" cellpadding="0" border="0" style="margin:9px;">
<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/minnesota/weather/winter-weather-advisory-scott-minnesota-2008114059.htm"><b>Winter Weather Advisory - Scott (Minnesota)</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/minnesota/weather/winter-weather-advisory-scott-minnesota-2008114059.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
<tr>
<td style="font:6pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;text-align:center;vertical-align:top;">&nbsp;</td>
<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Www.Weather.Gov</span> - 
URGENT - WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE
Issued At:  2008-11-11T09:33:00
Expired At:  2008-11-12T00:00:00
Issuing Weather Forecast Office Homepage:  http://www.crh.noaa.gov/mpx/
<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">300 Multiple Choices {...} </blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> November 11, 2008, 11:40 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;1KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/">Regional</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/">North America</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/">United States</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/minnesota/">Minnesota</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/north-america/united-states/minnesota/weather/"><b>Weather</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
<br/>
]]></content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>{EUROPE &gt; NEWS AND MEDIA} - Sean O'Hagan talks to Scott Walker</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/sean-o-hagan-talks-to-scott-walker-2008117367.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">Scott Walker was an only child and a nomadic one. His father, a geologist, travelled throughout America and the young Noel Scott Engel never had time to settle for long in one place. Born in Ohio in 1943, he lived in Texas for a time and then in California. 'I never made friends that easily,' he says, sounding not at all regretful. 'I don't mind being on my own because when you're on your own a lot as a child, your imagination grows. That is still the case with me.'Wrapped up in his solitude, Walker can work on the lyrics of a single song for several years. On his last album, The Drift, a track called 'Cue' took six years to complete. 'It was the toughest song to write, but my most successful song lyrically,' he says, his mid-Atlantic tones soft but clear, his eyes half hidden beneath the peak of his ever-present baseball cap. 'It's sharp, it's angular, it all just chimes right. In that song, everything is exactly as I want it.' 'Cue', though, even by Scott Walker's recent standards, is a difficult song. The lyrics are dense and elliptical, the pace funereal and the atmosphere one of creeping anxiety. He delivers it in that doomy, semi-operatic tone that has long replaced the melodramatic flourish of his early solo albums. Featuring a chorus of wailing voices straight out of Dante's Inferno, it is not a song you would turn to for solace or uplift. It is, in fact, another of Scott Walker's musical excursions to hell. Can he appreciate why some of us find his later work wilfully impenetrable, too far out, in fact, to take in. 'Well, I never think that way,' he says, sighing. 'I think it sounds pretty normal so I'm kind of shocked when people say it's too much. For me,' he says, laughing, 'it's never far out enough.'  We are sitting in the bright, airy living room of his manager's spacious house in London's leafy Holland Park, the place where Scott Walker chooses to suffer through the few interviews he grants these days. While no longer as reclusive as he once was - Mojo magazine once called him 'pop's own Salinger' - he remains one of music's most famous loners. 'I'm not a recluse,' he says at one point when I ask him what he does when he is not making music. 'I'm definitely not that. I have friends and I go to dinner. I like people, but sometimes I can't wait to get away and be on my own again. I am solitary, though. I need to be for my work. That's the deal.'   Next week, he will break cover when the Barbican theatre hosts an ambitious series of concerts called Drifting and Tilting: the Songs of Scott Walker. The 70-minute programme will comprise eight songs taken from The Drift and 1995's equally challenging Tilt. Scott will be there each night, but not on stage, not singing. 'I'll help mix the live sound,' he says. 'I got spooked years ago about performing and never repaired the damage.' In his place will be a succession of guest vocalists including Jarvis Cocker, Damon Albarn, Dot Allison, Gavin Friday and classical baritone Grant Doyle. A 40-piece orchestra will also be in attendance alongside Walker's studio group and a contemporary dance troupe. 'It will be a tightrope walk,' he says. 'There is never enough time to prepare these things, but if it's going to be a train wreck, it will certainly be an interesting one. There will be one or two surprises, too.' Those surprises will not, alas, include performances of any of his older songs. There will be no 'Big Louise', in all its swooning sadness, no 'We Came Through' in all its galloping cavalry clatter, no 'Rosemary' or 'Jackie' in all their lovelorn glory. No Jacques Brel covers either, nor Walker Brothers hits. 'When we began discussing the event, it was taken as a given that Scott would not be singing and that none of his older work would feature,' says his friend and collaborator Michael Morris, co-director of Artangel, the arts company which specialises in ambitious, site-specific events. 'The performances will be dictated by the songs which are semi-operatic. The show will take the form of a semi-staged song cycle, almost like a lieder recital but a bit more dramatic. We're hoping,' adds Morris, 'that the audience doesn't clap between songs.'In person, Scott Walker does not look like a living legend. His clothes are casual - faded jeans, denim jacket, trainers - and his manner diffident but charming. Throughout the interview, he sits perched, thin and bird-like, on the edge of a huge, floral-patterned sofa as if, at any moment, he might take flight. He looks much younger than his 65 years but his eyes, when I catch a glimpse of them beneath that pulled-down baseball cap, have a flickering intensity that speaks of deep unease. It is hard to imagine that he was ever a heart-throb who induced mass hysteria. For a moment, though, back in the mid-Sixties, the Walker Brothers, who weren't brothers at all, were known as 'America's Beatles'.  'Oh, it was amazing at first,' he says, smiling, 'but a little goes a long way. I was not cut out for that world. I love pop music, but I didn't have the temperament for fame.'On their most famous song, and second No 1, 1966's 'The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore', he sang the prophetic lines: 'Loneliness is a cloak you wear, a deep shade of blue is always there'. He could have been describing his future self, both his personality and his music. The song was teenage heartbreak writ large and remains perhaps the most dramatic example of a certain strain of mid-Sixties pop melodrama, wherein everything - the music, the delivery, the production - was overloaded. It possesses what Johnny Marr would later describe as 'that gothic and beautiful gloom that was as much about England in the Sixties as was "Day Tripper"'.The group imploded in 1967, with Scott frustrated to the point of breakdown by the formula into which their songs had fallen. His aversion to fame, and the fan hysteria that came with it, sent him running for the hills. He spent a week in a monastery in 1966, and the following year, there were reports that he had attempted suicide. The Scott Walker who emerged on the solo albums that followed was a different kind of pop star, a crooner who veered between mainstream, Jack Jones-style balladeering and middle European angst. His hero was the Flemish chansonnier Jacques Brel, whose music he had been turned on to by a German Bunny Girl he had picked up at a party in the Playboy Club on Park Lane. 'I don't listen to Brel that much now,' he says, 'but in those days, hearing him sing was like a hurricane blowing through the room.' By 1969's Scott 4, on which his own songwriting finally came to the fore, his themes were darker and a quote from Camus graced the sleeve: 'A man's work is nothing but his slow trek to rediscover through the detours of art, those two or three great and simple images in whose presence his heart first opened.' The pop idol had metamorphosed into an arbiter of existential angst.  'It has always been a certain kind of European writer who has captivated me,' he says. 'It started when I was a drop-out from high school in California and read Sartre, who I don't care for much now, but back then he had a huge impact on my way of thinking about the world. And Kafka, of course. Those writers were my main sources alongside the European films I saw in the Sixties in an art cinema on Wilshire Boulevard, Bergman and Kurosawa and the like.' Those solo records have influenced several generations of pop mavericks from Marc Almond and David Sylvian in the Eighties to  the Divine Comedy a decade later. Jarvis Cocker is a fan and persuaded Walker to produce Pulp's 2001 album, We Love Life. Most recently, Alex Turner's other project, the Last Shadow Puppets, released their debut album, The Age of Understatement, which, despite its title, was a homage to Walker's orchestrated emotional melodramas.He wrote Scott 4, he says, 'on drink', and fell into depression when it failed to sell like its predecessors. 'I snapped,' he says. 'The pressure was everywhere and, in my crazy imagination, I thought, "I'd better keep doing this just to stay in the game."' In desperation, he reformed the Walker Brothers, and the band had chart success again with the single 'No Regrets'. But his heart was not in it, at least until they went into the studio to record Nite Flights, their valedictory album from 1978, on which he let loose the full force of his teeming imagination.At its centre is an extraordinary song called 'The Electrician', a symphonic ode to S&M that would not have sounded out of place on a Pasolini soundtrack. In the recent documentary film Scott Walker: 30 Century Man, an animated Brian Eno enthused about Nite Flights' sonic experimentation, while castigating the conservatism of most contemporary pop music. 'We haven't got any further than this,' he sighed. 'It's a disgrace.'  The album still sounds otherworldly and futuristic. After it, though, came six years of silence and, with 1984's Climate of Hunter album, the beginning of the enigma that is Scott Walker Mk3. Gone was the musical extravagance of old, replaced by a minimalist sound that bordered on ambience. Only half the songs had actual titles. On the first line of the opening track, 'Rawhide', he sang: 'This is how you disappear.' Then he disappeared again. Tilt was 10 years in the making, The Drift another 11. They both sound, in their emotional and tonal extremity, like nothing else in contemporary music.'A lot of what I do is waiting,' he says. 'I begin always with the lyrics and they seem to take some considerable time. They have become more angular of late and now come in blocks of words. It's just a different way of writing. When I see the page and the lyrics, I see soldiers in a field. There's a lot of white space which represents me in a sense. It's an abstract way of putting it, but I see it that way visually.'His songs, he says, are clear to him, but he does not like having to explain or analyse them. He admits, though, that his recent music requires a certain amount of effort and patience from the listener. 'I try to avoid cliché. I want to make it sound like nothing I have ever heard before,' he says, his low Californian drawl still detectable after a 40-year exile in Europe. 'All that guitar-based rock stuff - I just feel like I've heard it before so many times. It goes on and on and never seems to end. It's just the same narrow ground being worked over. It would drive me mad to have to work within those parameters.'   So he has gone the other way - into texture and dissonance. The music he makes with strangely tuned strings and off-key piano chords, is, he says, 'always dictated by the lyrics', which tend to be obscure and, at times, wilfully nonsensical. His songs often seem to be haunted by the darker narratives of the last century, by war, disease, displacement and genocide. 'Cue', for instance, seems to be about a bacterial plague carried by the 'flugleman' of the song's subtitle, a viral pestilence that spreads 'through the dormant wards and nurseries... in the lung-smeared slides and corridors'. In the documentary, the most revealing insight into his work comes from his orchestrator, Brian Gascoigne (brother of Bamber), who says: 'He believes, and I take issue with this, that to convey a very strong emotion in the music, you have to be feeling it when you're making it. That couldn't be true because the people who are playing Bruckner and Mahler every night would be basket cases... after three of four hours in the studio, he is a basket case because he lives the thing with such emotion.' How would Scott Walker describe his singular artistic sensibility? 'Essentially, I'm really trying to find a way to talk about the things that cannot be spoken of,' he says. 'I cannot fake that or take short cuts. There is an absurdity there, too, of course, and I hope that people pick up on that. Without the humour, it would just be heavy and boring. I hope,' he says, once more, 'people get that. If you're not connecting with the absurdity, you shouldn't be there.' Scott Walker's late music, in its evocation of anxiety and horror, may, as Michael Morris suggests, be more comparable with the paintings of Francis Bacon than with any musical contemporary. His songs, if they can still be called that, are as far from the drift of contemporary pop as one could possibly imagine. 'Oh, I have long since stopped worrying about fitting in in any way,' he says, laughing. 'I'm an outsider, for sure. That suits me fine. Solitude is like a drug for me. I crave it.' Why, though, does it take so long to make a record, write a song? 'A certain amount of it is about making it difficult for myself. I'm not interested in traditional narrative, say, or in having pat endings to the songs. I want the sense in my music of a constant moving forward into an open future.' Of late, though, his music often seems to be drifting towards the last final, awful silence. 'Perhaps,' he says, 'perhaps.' Does he ever, I ask, miss the old days, when his songs lasted three minutes, had verses and choruses and were easier to write? He laughs. 'Not really, no. I mean, back then, I could write a song like "Big Louise" in an evening. That would be good sometimes and, you know, I would do that if the lyrics demanded it.' Could he ever see that happening again? 'No. I write a different kind of song these days. There's not a lot of harmony and there aren't the thick textures I used to use. It's generally just big blocks of sound, raw and stark. A big emotional noise.' Another silence. 'Essentially, I am attempting the impossible over and over, trying to find a way to say the unsayable. For some reason,' he says, laughing, 'that just seems to take a lot longer.' ? Drifting and Tilting: the Songs of Scott Walker is at the Barbican, London EC2 from Friday November 14 to Sunday November 16Scott Walker: A lifeBorn Noel Scott Engel in Hamilton, Ohio, in January 1944. Learns to play bass and under the name Scotty Engel cuts a few singles that flop.1964 Forms the Walker Brothers in LA with John Maus and Gary Leeds. Move to London and chart No 1 with 'Make It Easy on Yourself'.1966  No 1 with 'The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore'.1967 The Walker Brothers split. Scott releases four solo albums in three years. 1975 The Walker Brothers reunite for three albums. 1984 Solo album, Climate of Hunter, critically acclaimed.1995 Releases album Tilt2000 Curates the Southbank Centre's Meltdown festival. 2006 Album The DriftA documentary Scott Walker: 30 Century Man, is released.Pop and rockguardian.co.uk © Guardian News &amp; Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms &amp; Conditions | More Feeds</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/sean-o-hagan-talks-to-scott-walker-2008117367.htm</id>
<issued>2008-11-09T00:04:28Z</issued>
<modified>2008-11-09T00:04:28Z</modified>
<author>
<name>Guardian.Co.Uk</name>
<url>http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2008/nov/09/scott-walker-interview</url>
</author>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.world-of-newave.info/"><![CDATA[
<table cellspacing="4" cellpadding="0" border="0" style="margin:9px;">
<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/sean-o-hagan-talks-to-scott-walker-2008117367.htm"><b>Sean O'Hagan talks to Scott Walker</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/sean-o-hagan-talks-to-scott-walker-2008117367.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
<tr>
<td style="font:6pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;text-align:center;vertical-align:top;">&nbsp;</td>
<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">Www.Guardian.Co.Uk</span> - Scott Walker was an only child and a nomadic one. His father, a geologist, travelled throughout America and the young Noel Scott Engel never had time to settle for long in one place. Born in Ohio in 1943, he lived in Texas for a time and then in California. 'I never made friends that easily,' he says, sounding not at all regretful. 'I don't mind being on my own because when you're on your own a lot as a child, your imagination grows. That is still the case with me.'Wrapped up in his solitude, Walker can work on the lyrics of a single song for several years. On his last album, The Drift, a track called 'Cue' took six years to complete. 'It was the toughest song to write, but my most successful song lyrically,' he says, his mid-Atlantic tones soft but clear, his eyes half hidden beneath the peak of his ever-present baseball cap. 'It's sharp, it's angular, it all just chimes right. In that song, everything is exactly as I want it.' 'Cue', though, even by Scott Walker's recent standards, is a difficult song. The lyrics are dense and elliptical, the pace funereal and the atmosphere one of creeping anxiety. He delivers it in that doomy, semi-operatic tone that has long replaced the melodramatic flourish of his early solo albums. Featuring a chorus of wailing voices straight out of Dante's Inferno, it is not a song you would turn to for solace or uplift. It is, in fact, another of Scott Walker's musical excursions to hell. Can he appreciate why some of us find his later work wilfully impenetrable, too far out, in fact, to take in. 'Well, I never think that way,' he says, sighing. 'I think it sounds pretty normal so I'm kind of shocked when people say it's too much. For me,' he says, laughing, 'it's never far out enough.'  We are sitting in the bright, airy living room of his manager's spacious house in London's leafy Holland Park, the place where Scott Walker chooses to suffer through the few interviews he grants these days. While no longer as reclusive as he once was - Mojo magazine once called him 'pop's own Salinger' - he remains one of music's most famous loners. 'I'm not a recluse,' he says at one point when I ask him what he does when he is not making music. 'I'm definitely not that. I have friends and I go to dinner. I like people, but sometimes I can't wait to get away and be on my own again. I am solitary, though. I need to be for my work. That's the deal.'   Next week, he will break cover when the Barbican theatre hosts an ambitious series of concerts called Drifting and Tilting: the Songs of Scott Walker. The 70-minute programme will comprise eight songs taken from The Drift and 1995's equally challenging Tilt. Scott will be there each night, but not on stage, not singing. 'I'll help mix the live sound,' he says. 'I got spooked years ago about performing and never repaired the damage.' In his place will be a succession of guest vocalists including Jarvis Cocker, Damon Albarn, Dot Allison, Gavin Friday and classical baritone Grant Doyle. A 40-piece orchestra will also be in attendance alongside Walker's studio group and a contemporary dance troupe. 'It will be a tightrope walk,' he says. 'There is never enough time to prepare these things, but if it's going to be a train wreck, it will certainly be an interesting one. There will be one or two surprises, too.' Those surprises will not, alas, include performances of any of his older songs. There will be no 'Big Louise', in all its swooning sadness, no 'We Came Through' in all its galloping cavalry clatter, no 'Rosemary' or 'Jackie' in all their lovelorn glory. No Jacques Brel covers either, nor Walker Brothers hits. 'When we began discussing the event, it was taken as a given that Scott would not be singing and that none of his older work would feature,' says his friend and collaborator Michael Morris, co-director of Artangel, the arts company which specialises in ambitious, site-specific events. 'The performances will be dictated by the songs which are semi-operatic. The show will take the form of a semi-staged song cycle, almost like a lieder recital but a bit more dramatic. We're hoping,' adds Morris, 'that the audience doesn't clap between songs.'In person, Scott Walker does not look like a living legend. His clothes are casual - faded jeans, denim jacket, trainers - and his manner diffident but charming. Throughout the interview, he sits perched, thin and bird-like, on the edge of a huge, floral-patterned sofa as if, at any moment, he might take flight. He looks much younger than his 65 years but his eyes, when I catch a glimpse of them beneath that pulled-down baseball cap, have a flickering intensity that speaks of deep unease. It is hard to imagine that he was ever a heart-throb who induced mass hysteria. For a moment, though, back in the mid-Sixties, the Walker Brothers, who weren't brothers at all, were known as 'America's Beatles'.  'Oh, it was amazing at first,' he says, smiling, 'but a little goes a long way. I was not cut out for that world. I love pop music, but I didn't have the temperament for fame.'On their most famous song, and second No 1, 1966's 'The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore', he sang the prophetic lines: 'Loneliness is a cloak you wear, a deep shade of blue is always there'. He could have been describing his future self, both his personality and his music. The song was teenage heartbreak writ large and remains perhaps the most dramatic example of a certain strain of mid-Sixties pop melodrama, wherein everything - the music, the delivery, the production - was overloaded. It possesses what Johnny Marr would later describe as 'that gothic and beautiful gloom that was as much about England in the Sixties as was "Day Tripper"'.The group imploded in 1967, with Scott frustrated to the point of breakdown by the formula into which their songs had fallen. His aversion to fame, and the fan hysteria that came with it, sent him running for the hills. He spent a week in a monastery in 1966, and the following year, there were reports that he had attempted suicide. The Scott Walker who emerged on the solo albums that followed was a different kind of pop star, a crooner who veered between mainstream, Jack Jones-style balladeering and middle European angst. His hero was the Flemish chansonnier Jacques Brel, whose music he had been turned on to by a German Bunny Girl he had picked up at a party in the Playboy Club on Park Lane. 'I don't listen to Brel that much now,' he says, 'but in those days, hearing him sing was like a hurricane blowing through the room.' By 1969's Scott 4, on which his own songwriting finally came to the fore, his themes were darker and a quote from Camus graced the sleeve: 'A man's work is nothing but his slow trek to rediscover through the detours of art, those two or three great and simple images in whose presence his heart first opened.' The pop idol had metamorphosed into an arbiter of existential angst.  'It has always been a certain kind of European writer who has captivated me,' he says. 'It started when I was a drop-out from high school in California and read Sartre, who I don't care for much now, but back then he had a huge impact on my way of thinking about the world. And Kafka, of course. Those writers were my main sources alongside the European films I saw in the Sixties in an art cinema on Wilshire Boulevard, Bergman and Kurosawa and the like.' Those solo records have influenced several generations of pop mavericks from Marc Almond and David Sylvian in the Eighties to  the Divine Comedy a decade later. Jarvis Cocker is a fan and persuaded Walker to produce Pulp's 2001 album, We Love Life. Most recently, Alex Turner's other project, the Last Shadow Puppets, released their debut album, The Age of Understatement, which, despite its title, was a homage to Walker's orchestrated emotional melodramas.He wrote Scott 4, he says, 'on drink', and fell into depression when it failed to sell like its predecessors. 'I snapped,' he says. 'The pressure was everywhere and, in my crazy imagination, I thought, "I'd better keep doing this just to stay in the game."' In desperation, he reformed the Walker Brothers, and the band had chart success again with the single 'No Regrets'. But his heart was not in it, at least until they went into the studio to record Nite Flights, their valedictory album from 1978, on which he let loose the full force of his teeming imagination.At its centre is an extraordinary song called 'The Electrician', a symphonic ode to S&M that would not have sounded out of place on a Pasolini soundtrack. In the recent documentary film Scott Walker: 30 Century Man, an animated Brian Eno enthused about Nite Flights' sonic experimentation, while castigating the conservatism of most contemporary pop music. 'We haven't got any further than this,' he sighed. 'It's a disgrace.'  The album still sounds otherworldly and futuristic. After it, though, came six years of silence and, with 1984's Climate of Hunter album, the beginning of the enigma that is Scott Walker Mk3. Gone was the musical extravagance of old, replaced by a minimalist sound that bordered on ambience. Only half the songs had actual titles. On the first line of the opening track, 'Rawhide', he sang: 'This is how you disappear.' Then he disappeared again. Tilt was 10 years in the making, The Drift another 11. They both sound, in their emotional and tonal extremity, like nothing else in contemporary music.'A lot of what I do is waiting,' he says. 'I begin always with the lyrics and they seem to take some considerable time. They have become more angular of late and now come in blocks of words. It's just a different way of writing. When I see the page and the lyrics, I see soldiers in a field. There's a lot of white space which represents me in a sense. It's an abstract way of putting it, but I see it that way visually.'His songs, he says, are clear to him, but he does not like having to explain or analyse them. He admits, though, that his recent music requires a certain amount of effort and patience from the listener. 'I try to avoid cliché. I want to make it sound like nothing I have ever heard before,' he says, his low Californian drawl still detectable after a 40-year exile in Europe. 'All that guitar-based rock stuff - I just feel like I've heard it before so many times. It goes on and on and never seems to end. It's just the same narrow ground being worked over. It would drive me mad to have to work within those parameters.'   So he has gone the other way - into texture and dissonance. The music he makes with strangely tuned strings and off-key piano chords, is, he says, 'always dictated by the lyrics', which tend to be obscure and, at times, wilfully nonsensical. His songs often seem to be haunted by the darker narratives of the last century, by war, disease, displacement and genocide. 'Cue', for instance, seems to be about a bacterial plague carried by the 'flugleman' of the song's subtitle, a viral pestilence that spreads 'through the dormant wards and nurseries... in the lung-smeared slides and corridors'. In the documentary, the most revealing insight into his work comes from his orchestrator, Brian Gascoigne (brother of Bamber), who says: 'He believes, and I take issue with this, that to convey a very strong emotion in the music, you have to be feeling it when you're making it. That couldn't be true because the people who are playing Bruckner and Mahler every night would be basket cases... after three of four hours in the studio, he is a basket case because he lives the thing with such emotion.' How would Scott Walker describe his singular artistic sensibility? 'Essentially, I'm really trying to find a way to talk about the things that cannot be spoken of,' he says. 'I cannot fake that or take short cuts. There is an absurdity there, too, of course, and I hope that people pick up on that. Without the humour, it would just be heavy and boring. I hope,' he says, once more, 'people get that. If you're not connecting with the absurdity, you shouldn't be there.' Scott Walker's late music, in its evocation of anxiety and horror, may, as Michael Morris suggests, be more comparable with the paintings of Francis Bacon than with any musical contemporary. His songs, if they can still be called that, are as far from the drift of contemporary pop as one could possibly imagine. 'Oh, I have long since stopped worrying about fitting in in any way,' he says, laughing. 'I'm an outsider, for sure. That suits me fine. Solitude is like a drug for me. I crave it.' Why, though, does it take so long to make a record, write a song? 'A certain amount of it is about making it difficult for myself. I'm not interested in traditional narrative, say, or in having pat endings to the songs. I want the sense in my music of a constant moving forward into an open future.' Of late, though, his music often seems to be drifting towards the last final, awful silence. 'Perhaps,' he says, 'perhaps.' Does he ever, I ask, miss the old days, when his songs lasted three minutes, had verses and choruses and were easier to write? He laughs. 'Not really, no. I mean, back then, I could write a song like "Big Louise" in an evening. That would be good sometimes and, you know, I would do that if the lyrics demanded it.' Could he ever see that happening again? 'No. I write a different kind of song these days. There's not a lot of harmony and there aren't the thick textures I used to use. It's generally just big blocks of sound, raw and stark. A big emotional noise.' Another silence. 'Essentially, I am attempting the impossible over and over, trying to find a way to say the unsayable. For some reason,' he says, laughing, 'that just seems to take a lot longer.' ? Drifting and Tilting: the Songs of Scott Walker is at the Barbican, London EC2 from Friday November 14 to Sunday November 16Scott Walker: A lifeBorn Noel Scott Engel in Hamilton, Ohio, in January 1944. Learns to play bass and under the name Scotty Engel cuts a few singles that flop.1964 Forms the Walker Brothers in LA with John Maus and Gary Leeds. Move to London and chart No 1 with 'Make It Easy on Yourself'.1966  No 1 with 'The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore'.1967 The Walker Brothers split. Scott releases four solo albums in three years. 1975 The Walker Brothers reunite for three albums. 1984 Solo album, Climate of Hunter, critically acclaimed.1995 Releases album Tilt2000 Curates the Southbank Centre's Meltdown festival. 2006 Album The DriftA documentary Scott Walker: 30 Century Man, is released.Pop and rockguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">			Sean O'Hagan talks to Scott Walker |				Music |				The Observer	 {...} In a rare interview, Scott Walker tells Sean O'Hagan why he's happy to be a loner {...}</blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> November 9, 2008, 12:04 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> November 9, 2008, 10:43 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;89KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/">Regional</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/">Europe</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/">United Kingdom</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/"><b>News and Media</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
<br/>
]]></content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>{EUROPE &gt; HEADLINE LINKS} - Ros Scott named Lib Dem president</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/headline-links/ros-scott-named-lib-dem-president-20081194013.htm"/>
<summary type="text/plain">The Liberal Democrats have elected Baroness Ros Scott as the new party president.</summary>
<id>http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/headline-links/ros-scott-named-lib-dem-president-20081194013.htm</id>
<issued>2008-11-08T16:06:15Z</issued>
<modified>2008-11-08T16:06:15Z</modified>
<author>
<name>News.Bbc.Co.Uk</name>
<url>http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/7717659.stm</url>
</author>
<content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.world-of-newave.info/"><![CDATA[
<table cellspacing="4" cellpadding="0" border="0" style="margin:9px;">
<tr><td colspan="2" style="font:bold 12pt Arial;vertical-align:top;"><a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/headline-links/ros-scott-named-lib-dem-president-20081194013.htm"><b>Ros Scott named Lib Dem president</b></a> <sup style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;">{<a href="http://articles.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/headline-links/ros-scott-named-lib-dem-president-20081194013.htm" target="_blank">new window</a>}</sup></td></tr>
<tr>
<td style="font:6pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;text-align:center;vertical-align:top;">&nbsp;</td>
<td width="100%" style="font:9pt Verdana,Arial,Sans-serif;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;font-variant:small-caps;">News.Bbc.Co.Uk</span> - The Liberal Democrats have elected Baroness Ros Scott as the new party president.<blockquote style="background:#FAFAFA;border:1px dotted #E6E6E6;font:italic 10pt Times New Roman;padding:9px;">BBC NEWS | UK | UK Politics | Ros Scott named Lib Dem president {...} </blockquote><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Published:</span> November 8, 2008, 4:06 pm - <span style="color:#808080;">Indexed:</span> November 9, 2008, 10:46 am - <span style="color:#808080;">Page Size:</span>&nbsp;48KB</div><div style="font:8pt Verdana,Arial;vertical-align:top;"><span style="color:#808080;">Category:</span> <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/">Regional</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/">Europe</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/">United Kingdom</a> &gt; <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/">News and Media</a> &gt;  <a href="http://www.world-of-newave.info/regional/europe/united-kingdom/news-and-media/headline-links/"><b>Headline Links</b></a></div></td></tr></table>
<br/>
]]></content>
</entry>
</feed>