Chris Hemsworth’s biggest challenge


Chris Hemsworth says playing a female Thor could be his biggest challenge yet.

The Aussie actor spoke to Collider and other media at Comic-Con in San Diego, where he was prompted about Marvel’s recent decision to have a woman take over the role of Thor in the comics.

When asked whether he would consider playing the hammer-wielding hero if they decided to also change Thor to a female in the movies, Hemsworth said, “sure”.

“It could be my biggest challenge yet,” he joked.

“And maybe an Oscar award nomination I reckon.”

Hemsworth was at the fan convention for his part in the highly anticipated sequel Avengers: Age of Ultron, along with castmates Robert Downey Jr (Iron Man), Mark Ruffalo (Hulk), Chris Evan (Captain America) and Jeremy Renner (Hawkeye).

They debuted the first footage from the upcoming superhero sequel, including a comical scene where the gang try to lift Thor’s hammer from a coffee table, and a barrage of action shots with glimpses of the dangerous robot Ultron.

Hemsworth says although there’s a bigger threat and lots of action, writer/director Joss Whedon has kept all the spark and banter between the characters that fans love.

“That’s what makes it special. It is the humour and is the way these guys interact,” he says.

“They’re the most enjoyable scenes to film – not the action, it’s that stuff. It’s throwing it back and forth with those guys.”

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– AAP

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Heart leads with soul not vagina


The first women to front a hard rock band, Ann and Nancy Wilson, of 1970s band Heart, were pioneers.

How did they break into a male-dominated industry

“You cannot lead with your vagina,” says Ann Wilson down the phone from Seattle. “You have to lead with your soul.”

When Heart stormed the charts in the 1970s, the Wilson sisters led the band, wrote the songs and played the instruments too.

“It was a struggle just to be taken seriously. Back then women were disco divas or they were more cheesecake, kind of like it is again now.”

She describes fighting to be heard as an artist as a struggle.

“We had to push all the way and turn a deaf ear to a lot of sleazy comments. When we did that, then eventually people saw that we were different.”

With songs like Crazy On You, Magic Man, Barracuda, Straight On and more, the sisters and their band Heart have sold more than 35 million albums and sold out arenas worldwide.

Barracuda was written, Wilson says, after a “sleazy” moment backstage.

“It was written out of angst. Some sleazebag guy said something sleazy to me, and it really made me angry and offended me. My reaction was to go write the words to Barracuda.”

Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame last year, the sisters are heading to New Zealand over summer for a concert tour, performing with Foreigner and Three Dog Night in Queenstown.

“We are going to be rocking out,” Wilson says. “We’ll play some of the old hits and some newer stuff and some surprising covers. The whole band is coming, my son is coming along too.”

Almost 35 years after their first big hit, the Wilson sisters returned to the Billboard Top 10 in 2010 with Heart’s Red Velvet Car album.

In 2012, the sisters were asked to perform Stairway to Heaven as the finale to the Kennedy Centre Honours tribute to Led Zeppelin.

Their performance visibly moved Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones.

Wilson describes it as a “life moment”.

“That was so much fun and so deeply moving, because we really wanted to please them and they were pleased. Robert said to me afterwards that he usually hated it when people covered Stairway to Heaven, but he said that he actually liked our version.”

You’ll have heard Wilson’s voice at the movies, too, with her songs Almost Paradise from Footloose, Surrender to Me from Tequila Sunrise and Best Man in the World from Goldenchild.

Her sister Nancy composed and performed the scores to films, including the award-winning Jerry Maguire and Almost Famous.

What advice would she offer women new to the industry

“Don’t confuse your rear end with your talent,” Wilson says. “Just really work on being your best artistic self.

“A lot of young women don’t yet understand the difference between sexuality and feminism. They think that by going out there and being overtly sexual in place of doing something artistic, then they are showing their feminist power.

“I would say leave all that stuff outside the door and just be as good an artist as you can.”

The natural connection the siblings have has been an asset musically.

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“We have that family blend. We grew up playing guitar together, so it’s just a natural thing for us to be on stage together.”

Right now she has a notebook full of songs and is “casting her eye” around for a producer.

She has always written the same way. She starts with the lyrics and then goes in for the music.

“That’s harder for me. I end up taking my lyrics to Nancy, she’s really the musical half of the songwriting team.”

She and her sister experienced pressure to change their appearance in the 1970s and, over 40 years later, she doesn’t believe much has changed for women in the industry.

“Back at the beginning people wanted us to be different to the way we were, dress in a really sexy way, to be as sexy as possible.

“That was way more important than the lyrics or the chords or our performance.

“We always felt that was pretty wrong and insulting and missing the point, so we turned a deaf ear.”

When she is on stage she simply seeks to share a piece of her soul with the audience.

“Looking fab is only one corner of the sky when you’re an artist. It goes way deeper and higher – your art, your voice, your soul. For your soul to sing is just another form of sexuality.

“The thing that I enjoy the most about performing is the feeling of transcendence on stage, and when I can attain that that’s better than any party substance I ever came in contact with.

“It’s just the same feeling you have when you stand with someone and you feel each other give your hearts to each other, only it’s with a whole room full of people.”

THE DETAILS:

Heart, Foreigner and Three Dog Night play at Whitianga Waterways Arena on January 25, in

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Christchurch teen a rising star


Vicki Anderson talks to Christchurch teenager Maya Payne about recording in the same studio as Lorde, working with Grammy Award-winning producer Dru Castro in a garage and having her song played on the BBC.

Christchurch teenager Maya Payne is attracting international attention with her music.

The year 13 Burnside High School student says she has always been drawn to music.

“I started singing when I was 6, I started songwriting when I was 11. It has gone from there,” Payne says.

On March 7, GO ran a review of her single, Fragile, a song about youthfulness, which had a low-key release on the internet, and described Payne as “destined for greatness”.

That same day her dad, Matt Power, received a call from Paul McKessar from CRS Music Management.

McKessar, who manages top New Zealand band Naked and Famous, flew to Christchurch to meet Payne and in April she spent four days during her school holidays at Golden Age studios, where Lorde recorded her Grammy-Award winning album.

On the studio walls were Lorde’s awards, “50-odd Tui awards” and gold and platinum records from the likes of Bic Runga, Scribe, P-Money and Brooke Fraser. In amongst it all was a Silver Scroll award.

“I went into Golden Age with producer Josh Fountain [Kids in Space],” she says. “I spent a couple of days in there and I got some demos out of it. I’d never really been in a proper studio before, it was quite different for me. It has cool artwork and was quite a chilled environment.”

She recorded Fragile at the end of last year with United States-based Grammy Award winning recording engineer and producer, Dru Castro, while he was in Christchurch.

The connection came about through Payne’s vocal coach, Nathan Phillips and Elly Hanssen, of Moorhouse Dance Studios who had a connection with Castro from her time being a hip hop dancer in Atlanta. Phillips also manages The X-Factor finalists, Moorhouse.

Payne, 17, performed at his school, via the Majestic Church, for “two or three years”. She got involved in doing some Moorhouse Dance Studio productions and took part in her first show there at 15.

“They put on shows every couple of months, it is really fun. It is where I started to find myself as an artist,” Payne says.

“I wrote Fragile because Dru Castro was coming over from America and my singing teacher wanted me to have a song ready for that. I wrote it in a couple of days in my room.”

From there, she went to the CPIT Jazz School and met up with students who played on the track including Daniel Hitchens (guitar), Cameron Burnett (drums), Nick Dow (keys) and Joe Vaiese (bass). It was recorded by Barnaby Coxon at the jazz school studio before Payne and Castro took it into a garage studio to mould it.

“Yes we worked with Dru Castro in a converted garage,” Power laughs. “There was a bit of duct tape holding the mic in place.”

Payne didn’t end up using Castro’s original arrangements, describing it as “a bit too jazzy”.

She drove the song, having the final say on everything from key, to chord changes and the final mix. All the instrumentation on the album is performed – there are no samples.

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Her dad says she was “firmly” in charge and wasn’t fazed about altering the Grammy Award-winning producer’s ideas.

She now has a new vocal coach, Ravil Atlas, and says that stylistically, she’s a fan of music by Chet Faker and Broods.

“I think you feel the music more, because of the whole beats vibe. If you get the audience moving, you connect more and that’s the goal with my music, to get people connecting with it.”

From a humble internet release, Fragile went to No 1 on the RDU Top 10. Dan Aux from George FM picked up the track and made it his track of New Zealand Music Month. bFM Auckland playlisted the track, so did Kiwi FM and this week it has been playlisted on George FM.

It has also been selected to go on New Zealand On Air’s August Kiwi Hit Disc.

Payne said the song took on a life of its own, with requests coming in from a British producer and a Harlem-based rapper wanting to collaborate.

“I’ve been in touch with lots of different producers. One British producer, Someone’s Enemy, his name is Will Gibson, got in contact and did a remix. It got played on BBC over there, which was quite exciting.”

The remix was also included on a Mercedes Benz mixtape, which seeks to introduce 10 of the best new talents around the world every 10 weeks. According to Mercedes Benz it has a “couple of million downloads” a shot.

“I am noticing that a few DJs are now picking it up and it is getting played at some events in the United States,” Power says.

She is currently “totally indie” and managed by her dad but Power says he is talking with some “top managers” and while a large international label has shown “keen interest” he says it’s early days and the pair are simply taking one day at a time.

Payne is purely focusing on her music.

“My dad has been dealing with that, I haven’t really been involved in that stuff.”

She recently received two $10,000 funding grants from New Zealand On Air to record and make videos for her next singles Submerge and Falling.

“I got funding for my new demo, Submerge, and that is one of the songs I did in the Golden Age studio. It was exciting to get funding because now I can finish it and do a video with Candlelit Pictures.”

Her goal is to release an EP before the end of the year and she is in contact with different producers – mostly from New Zealand but also some from Britain – at the moment.

“It’s about finding the right one for me, it’s about experimenting. I hope to get the songs finished, hopefully by the end of the year, and see what happens from there.”

Her dad laughingly describes her as the “Singstar champion” of the family. “She won a talent quest early on at Redcliffs primary school, singing Vanessa Carlton’s A Thousand Miles,” he says. “I knew something was up then because I came into the hall where she was auditioning and thought they had the original track on, but then saw her up there singing.”

There’s an opportunity to take part in a large concert this summer and also the chance to take part in an industry showcase for Outward Sound.

Payne’s dream is to perform for people and to become an artist, and to write her own music, but most of all she wants her music to connect with people.

“That’s the dream.”

See mayapayne.bandcamp.com

– The Press

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RNZ news boss steps down


Radio New Zealand news boss Don Rood has stepped down after 31 years with the state broadcaster.

Rood said his position as Head of News had been disestablished and would be replaced with a new role, Head of Content, that would oversee content across news, current affairs, drama, features and music.

He decided not to apply for the new position but was coy on the reason why.

”That’s a story for another day,” he said.

Rood spent the past ten years as Head of News at Radio New Zealand.

During his time, the station remained committed to high standards of broadcasting and produced a number of fantastic journalists, he said.

”That’s why we’re number one.”

He was not yet sure what his next move would be.

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– Stuff

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Telecom Lightbox boasts 5000 hours of TV

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Adam Parore aims at bankrupting Sally Ridge


A business owned by former cricketer Adam

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What kids can learn from Harry Potter


Besides being a rattling good read, the Harry Potter novels may also help reduce prejudice towards gays, immigrants and refugees among readers, according to new research.

The Potter stories are littered with groups who suffer discrimination, from “mudbloods” (with no magical parents) to elves, goblins and “half-giants”. Much of the action revolves around Harry and his friends standing up for these minorities.

“Harry has meaningful contact with characters belonging to stigmatised groups,” say the researchers from a group of Italian universities. “He tries to understand and appreciate their difficulties … and fights for a world free of social inequalities.”

Setting out to test whether Harry’s epic battles against Voldemort – whose beliefs have frequently been compared to Nazism – might have a positive impact on Potter fans, the academics conducted three studies.

In the first, for six weeks they read selected excerpts from

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Harry Potter books make kids more tolerant


Besides being a rattling good read, the Harry Potter novels may also help reduce prejudice towards gays, immigrants and refugees among readers, according to new research.

The Potter stories are littered with groups who suffer discrimination, from “mud-bloods” (with only one magical parent) to elves, goblins and “half-giants”. Much of the action revolves around Harry and his friends standing up for these minorities.

“Harry has meaningful contact with characters belonging to stigmatised groups,” say the researchers from a group of Italian universities. “He tries to understand and appreciate their difficulties … and fights for a world free of social inequalities.”

Setting out to test whether Harry’s epic battles against Voldemort – whose beliefs have frequently been compared to Nazism – might have a positive impact on Potter fans, the academics conducted three studies.

In the first, for six weeks they read selected excerpts from

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The Dark Horse: An instant Kiwi classic


THE DARK HORSE (M)
Directed by James Napier Robertson

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The talented Mr Levinson


He’s got a Physics Phd in particle theory and has been a key crew-member for the likes of David Fincher and Anthony Minghella. As his new documentary Particle Fever prepares to screen to sell out audiences in Wellington and Auckland this weekend he talks to James Croot.

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