British label admits artist ripped off Kiwi musician


A British record label has removed from sale a track by one of its artists after acknowledging it was a rip-off of a composition by Wellington musician Rhian Sheehan.

Manchester-based Broken Bubble issued an apology to fans who had downloaded Japanese artist Sunnova’s track Silver Tear after Sheehan contacted the label and pointed out it was a blatant copy of his 2009 composition Standing In Silence Pt 2.

“I would have been flattered if he’d asked me for permission to use it and given me credit, but to use it without any mention or credit to the writer How very naughty,” Sheehan said.

Before the track was removed from sale, Sunnova, who was offering Silver Tear, off his new album Vermillion Eyes, as a name your price download, was roundly criticised on his Facebook page and accused of being a thief.

Sheehan, who was alerted to the “similarities” by a fan in Germany, said he had an “amicable” conversation with Broken Bubble who agreed to withdraw the track from sale.

“They seemed

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Moore success for Auckland singer


Matching her boyfriend and becoming the third straight Samoan winner was icing on the cake for Isabella Moore at the Lexus Song Quest last night.

The 23-year-old soprano from West Auckland took out the competition of New Zealand’s best young opera singers, two years after her partner Amitai Pati won the award.

Moore flew back from Wales for the event, having recently finished a Masters in Advanced Vocal Performance at the Wales International Academy of Voice.

She said it was overwhelming to take out the top prize – which includes a Study Scholarship of $15,000, and $10,000 cash.

“I was really happy with my performance and it was pretty nerve-wracking waiting to hear the name of the winner, but I’m absolutely thrilled.”

In 2009 the contest was won by Samoan singer Aivale Cole, before Moore’s partner Pati won in 2012.

Runner-up in this year’s competition was fellow Samoan Baritone Benson Wilson, who scored a $10,000 study scholarship and $8000 cash.

Christian Thurston from Rotorua took out third place.

Head judge Kathryn Harries said the standard of opera singers in the final was of an exceptional standard – and it was close among all six finalists.

She said Moore stood out for the combination of vocal technique, expressiveness and her x-factor.

The Song Quest has helped launch the careers of some of New Zealand’s leading opera stars including Dames Kiri Te Kanawa, Malvina Major and Jonathan Lemalu.

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– Stuff

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Lion Man becomes king of the screens


“Lion Man” Craig Busch has roared back onto TV screens around the world.

Busch’s new reality TV series, The Lion Man: African Safari, is being beamed into an audience of tens of millions in India, South Africa and parts of Europe on the Discovery Channel network’s Animal Planet.

The new show follows the Northland-based big cat handler’s initial foray into reality TV with The Lion Man show in the mid-2000s; which ran for three series and was shown in more than 100 countries around the globe.

The voiceover in Animal Planet’s official advertisement for The Lion Man: African Safari says: “His passion . . . to fight for the wilds. His mission . . . to hunt down poachers.

“Meet Craig Busch . . . a real life hero who will take you closer to the world’s most adorable but dangerous wild cats.”

The Discovery Channel is also promoting The Lion Man: African Safari on its website, with a bio for the show saying the series “features Kiwi farm boy Craig Busch, an experienced self-taught ‘wild cat trainer’, as he creates a haven for rare, endangered cats such as white Bengal Tigers, Barbary Lions and White Lions at a reserve near Johannesburg.

“Craig and a passionate band of animal-loving supporters heal desperately ill tigers, and attempt to track down unscrupulous rhino killers. He also seeks out like-minded animal experts and conservationists around the globe, including ‘Wolf Man’ Shaun Ellis, to help with his cause.”

Discovery Channel revealed that during the series Busch adopts and raises an orphaned white lion cub, named Jabula, and “lovingly hand-rears” several Barbary Lion cubs.

“Craig travels across the world to begin a long struggle of enhancing the bloodlines of these rare cats to bring them back from the brink of extinction,” the promotional material added.

There had not yet been any scheduling for The Lion Man: African Safari to be broadcast in New Zealand.

But the series has created headlines in many of the countries it is screening in, particularly India.

Hindi Television Post reported: “Busch will handle the king of the jungle with flair and courage. Founder of the Zion Wildlife Gardens, he is a self-taught wild cat trainer and has dedicated his life to the welfare and breeding of the big cats.

“The series will also showcase Busch heading on a new adventure, travelling to Africa on a mission to help save these animals.

“It documents Busch’s mission and a passionate band of animal-lovers who have been searching for missing cheetahs, heal desperately ill tigers and track down unscrupulous rhino killers.”

An article in the indiantelevision.com website said: “Craig has been travelling across the world to exchange the cubs [he raises], in order to enhance the blood lines of some of the rare cat [sic] and has helped to bring them back from the brink of extinction.

Working for over 30 years with these animals, his ‘not-so-easy’ job includes feeding lions almost four times a day, supervising their health, and managing a park spread over 500 acres of land.”

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Busch could not be reached for comment on The Lion Man: African Safari.

His New Zealand-based TV series The Lion Man was largely filmed at the then-named Zion Wildlife Gardens big cat reserve which Busch opened on the outskirts of Whangarei in 2002.

Sole directorship of the park was handed to his mother, Patricia, in 2006 after she raised loans to help pay off growing debts.

Craig Busch’s employment ended in 2008.

Zion Wildlife Gardens was put into receivership in July 2011.

Craig Busch returned to the park in early 2012 after a management change, with the tourist attraction being rebranded as the Kingdom of Zion. He was contracted to care for the big cats and run interactive tours for visitors. After returning, he spoke of his desire to kickstart his reality TV career in an exclusive interview with Sunday News.

“I am going to do filming for the rest of my life,” he said. “I didn’t use to like it when I first started years ago. But now I enjoy it. I think it is a necessary thing to actually help and educate and teach people around the world. If people can learn from that, that will actually put a smile on my face.”

KINGDOM OF ZION CLOSED TO PUBLIC

While overseas fans enjoy new TV show The Lion Man: African Safari, gates have been locked to the public at the big cat park that was the scene for much of the filming of Craig Busch’s earlier reality series The Lion Man.

The Ministry of Primary Industries – the Government department charged with overseeing safety and welfare standards and operating practices at New Zealand zoos – confirmed to Sunday News it had “ordered” the closure of the Kingdom of Zion to the general public.

“MPI is responsible for approving zoo containment facilities and their operators and auditing them to ensure the requirements of the approvals are met on an ongoing basis,” the ministry’s director, verification services, Chris Kebbell told Sunday News.

“Part of these responsibilities is to ensure that the animal enclosures meet approval requirements.

“MPI ordered the facility to be closed to visitors while work is undertaken around upgrading of the closures.”

Kebbell said the forced closure of the Kingdom of Zion would remain in effect until at least Thursday, when the “closure order will be reviewed” when officials return to the popular tourist attraction, on the outskirts of Whangarei.

Busch, who in 2012 was contracted to care for the big cats and run interactive tours for visitors at the Kingdom of Zion, did not return messages from Sunday News.

Busch’s partner, Suzanne Eisenhut – listed as the Kingdom of Zion’s director – also did not return messages from Sunday News.

The park’s website has an online tool offering tours from August 1.

– Sunday News

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Hobbit cast tease trailer, bloopers at Comic-Con


The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies launched a full-scale assault on Comic-Con.

The cast and crew from the final installment of The Hobbit trilogy showed off the first trailer for the fantasy film at the pop-culture convention, as well as a blooper reel from both The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit movies.

Stephen Colbert, dressed as the shaggy-haired character he cameoed as in The Hobbit, enthusiastically moderated the panel at the San Diego Convention Center.

The trailer conjured up for the audience of 6500 attendees gathered inside Hall H showed the dragon Smaug setting Lake-town ablaze, Cate Blanchett’s royal elf Galadriel kissing the forehead of Ian McKellen’s beleaguered wizard Gandalf and legions of elves and orcs racing into battle.

“It’s always great when you can kill off some main characters,” said director Peter Jackson, a fan favourite at Comic Con.

“You have the chance to do something powerful and emotional. We do get to kill a few of them this time around.”

“It’s not as comical as the first Hobbit movie. It’s getting closer to the tone of Lord of the Rings,” he added.

Jackson was joined by several cast members for the clebration of all things Hobbit, including Blanchett, Orlando Bloom, Elijah Wood, Evangeline Lilly, Luke Evans and Lee Pace.

“I was just grateful to get in this one. I thought my time was over in Middle Earth,” Oscar-winning Blanchett said about reprising her role as elf queen Galadriel.

Jackson added “we do get to see Galadriel lose it a little in this movie … she gets to kick Sauron’s arse a little bit.”

They were also joined by Benedict Cumberbatch and Andy Serkis, who portray the computer-generated Smaug and Gollum. Both actors imitated their fantastical characters when pressed by fans. When asked where he’d like Gollum to visit, Serkis joked “backstage with Stephen Colbert to see what he’s got inside his costume, precious.”

Cumberbatch plays two characters in the film – the dragon Smaug and the Necromancer, an iteration of villain Sauron.

“One is made of something vulnerable and one seems to be born out of everything that’s evil and difficult to pin down and kill,” Cumberbatch said.

Serkis, who has been a pioneer in the motion capture world for developing visual effects techniques that helped capture the character of creature Gollum in the Lord of the Rings and Hobbit films, said the film “basically changed the course of my life with such magnitude.” He will next be in the upcoming Star Wars films, most likely in a motion capture role.

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At the start of the panel, superfan Colbert introduced a lengthy blooper reel that highlighted several funny moments left on the cutting room floor during the 13-year history of the films. The bloopers mostly featured McKellen riffing on other actors, flubbing his lines and, in one instance, lifting Gandalf’s robe to show off a pair of white briefs.

The Battle of the Five Armies is set to debut December 17.

-with AP and Reuters

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West coming south but North is unlikely


Kanye West fans, rejoice: the self-proclaimed rap megastar is heading to New Zealand later this year.

The 21-time Grammy Award winner, who is bringing his YEEZUS tour to Australia for a five-city run in September, was strongly rumoured to be adding a New Zealand concert date, an industry source told the Sunday Star Times.

The source, who asked not to be named, said it was still unclear whether the 37-year-old rapper’s tour to this side of the ditch would take place before or after the Australian tour, which was scheduled to run from September 5-15.

Australian promoters Live Nation would not be drawn on the subject.

News of an imminent tour announcement is music to the ears of die-hard Kanye West fan Haley Crooks, who is a DJ at hip-hop and R&B station Mai FM.

Crooks set up a petition to get West to New Zealand when the Australian tour was announced in February, which has so far gathered 3000 signatures.

The singer-songwriter, who is known for hits like Gold Digger and All of the Lights, was a controversial character and the public had a range of views on his strong personality but his music sent powerful messages based on his views of world issues, she said.

Crooks, who was also a fan of West’s reality television wife Kim Kardashian and the couple’s 1-year-old baby North West, said she hoped Kardashian would also make the trip down under but she was not holding her breath.

Mai FM programme director Phil Bell, who had seen the rapper perform in New Zealand in the past, said West’s level of stardom had skyrocketed since he played Auckland’s St James Theatre back in 2006.

“He’s an enigma.

“I think that the intrigue level alone, let alone the fans of the music, would just make this the biggest thing for a long long time,” Bell said.

Regional facilities Auckland, the council-owned organisation that managed the city’s major facilities, said West coming to New Zealand would be a big boost, injecting as much as $5 million into Auckland’s economy.

But New Zealand promoters will have to prepare for the megastar’s outrageous dressing room demands. During a tour of the United Kingdom last year he wanted his dressing room carpet ironed and everything in his dressing room be replaced with white objects, including the walls, sofa and flowers.

A list of West’s dressing room demands from 2007 showed he also had to have a range of furniture, including a loveseat, a variety of snacks, specific shampoos and alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks but strictly no Coca-Cola.

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– Sunday Star Times

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Fifteen minutes with David Gray


You have reviewers saying Mutineers is your best album since 1998 multi-platinum seller White Ladder. Were you intimidated by your own success

Unquestionably that is true but it’s a bit more complicated than that.

The success of that album was a seismic event that changed everything. That level of fame leaves you in a hall of mirrors, you become self-conscious, it plays with your mind. I tried to hang on to that initial something which was pure. I was trying to define myself with all of this deliberate behaviour.

What is the point of differencebetween this album and your others

Working with (British producer) Andy Barlow was like letting someone in with a wrecking ball. My amount of vulnerability was overwhelming at the time. But it was a long time overdue, I got over myself.

How are you feeling about this album

I was trying to not turn into someone I didn’t want to be. The album is sonically, obviously different from my other work. It’s more embryonic stuff with a very contemporary edge.

It was a tumultuous rollercoaster in the recording process. It sounds like the moment something crystallised. There’s an extra crackle of excitement, a joy in seeing new vistas.

I knew I was somewhere I hadn’t been in a long time, it was a relief.

What do you think when you hear White Ladder now

I think that album sounds great. A year ago I heard it for the first time in a long time.

It has an authority about it, it captures a moment of escaping limitations, it’s a moment of it’s time. That’s what that record is.

Which musicians most inspire you

The old guard – Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, Tom Waits, Cat Stevens – he’s definitely had an effect on me. He’s very soulful and futuristic in his melodies. He’s a man of faith, Islam. It’s sort of the soundtrack of my life. Whenever I smell cigars, red wine, beer and leather sofas I always think of The Rolling Stones, The Beatles, Carole King. It takes me back to the 70’s when I was a little boy. And I loved Cat.

Are you a man of faith

I’m in the ranks of the faithless, I’m trying to choose the light.

You have said that your daughters don’t listen to your music, what kind of a father are you

I’m like a giant stormcloud that sweeps in off the Atlantic and into their cosy lounge. They ignore most of the things I say.

What do you think of New Zealand, will you tour here anytime soon

It’s a very laid-back place, I’ve been there twice. It seems to be in an oceanic trance. The nature is thrilling. Maybe I’ll do a Gandalf and go wandering. I have an idea to come back it’s just a matter of when. Australia and New Zealand will happen this time, I didn’t come down for my last record (Founding) unfortunately.

David Gray’s album Mutineers is out now.

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– Sunday Star Times

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Strong performances in The Dark Horse


REVIEW:

You know what they say – you wait ages for a decent Kiwi film to come along, and then four arrive at once.

With a handful more debuting in the New Zealand International Film Festival (some of which we may be lucky to see on wider release later), the industry looks to be in very rude health indeed.

The key selling points of this latest local fare are the central performances by one of our greatest exports, Cliff Curtis (the man of a thousand “foreign” faces for Hollywood’s purposes), and the nation’s favourite Boy, James Rolleston.

Sure, The Dark Horse is a feel-good true story of a broken man’s redemption through the game of chess – but ultimately it’s not the narrative which will affect you as much as watching these two sensational faces portray variations on harrowing and hope.

The real “Dark Horse” was Genesis Potini, a Gisborne man challenged by bipolar disorder and frequent hospital stays, yet blessed with an uncanny knack for winning at speed chess. In 2001, film-maker Jim Marbrook (Mental Notes) made an award-winning documentary about Potini, and 13 years later his story has been dramatised for the big screen by Wellington actor-turned-director, James Napier Robertson (who also wrote the script). The Dark Horse portrays Potini being released from care into the reluctant arms of family (his brother Ariki, played with silent heft by newcomer Wayne Hapi). Potini is introduced to us as quite literally a Rainman in a technicoloured raincoat, one of many striking visual flourishes in a beautifully photographed film. Inspired to join a children’s chess club, Potini vows to take the kids to Nationals up in Auckland – however, he must keep his own life on the rails if he is to keep his promise to these tamariki. Meanwhile, Ariki’s son Mana (Rolleston) is preparing to be patched into a gang on his 15th birthday. Tensions inevitably arise when the youngster is torn between two paths. The casting alone is a coup. Uncle Bully has gone a bit soft while the Vodafone boy is tougher than you’ve ever seen him, and both Curtis and Rolleston are consistently impressive as they balance intensity with credibility, uttering vulnerable dialogue with steely eyes. The supporting cast includes familiar faces from Outrageous Fortune and many a TV movie, and the children’s club is a charming bundle of larrikins (if rendered a little more outgoing and enthusiastic for the movies than real-life experience with disadvantaged youth would suggest).

The only pitfall of a based-on-truth story is of course the necessary adherence to fact. Narratively the story is a little undercooked at times, and some of the conflicts feel trite. Thankfully, the strong, authentic performances make this an often moving piece of cinema and uphold Potini’s remarkable legacy.

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Review: Deliver Us From Evil


REVIEW:

There doesn’t have to be big-name film stars in a horror movie to get me into the cinema, but unless the story otherwise promises a clever, innovative conceit (like the terrific horror parody The Cabin in the Woods) then the casting of actors I’ve rated highly in more general fare will get my hopes up.

With versatile Australian Eric Bana (Munich being my favourite of his showcases) and talented Venezuelan Edgar Ramirez, who has played both Che Guevara and Carlos the Jackal to accolades, even this based-on-truth story of an exorcism wasn’t enough to dull my expectations.

Alas, the only thing delivered by two hours of this turgid nonsense will be the new car Bana presumably had in mind when he signed on to the film.

Bana plays a New York cop whose paranormal ability to sense evil in the neighbourhood makes him a useful member of the force but a lousy husband and father (yep, cliches abound, including the old “I walk through the sewer every night, I don’t want to bring it home” chestnut). Embroiled in a series of sinister cases involving missing people, “crazy” behaviour (immediately identifiable by the audience as demonic possession, but alas diagnosed a little slower by those fine upholders of the law), he meets a local priest (Ramirez) whose ways are curiously unorthodox.

Together they must uncover evil deeds, but they’ll need to find a way to meet each other on the faith spectrum by sharing some background anecdotes first.

Writer-director Scott Derrickson has adapted the novel of this true story, and having dabbled already in exorcism movies (although my companion felt his The Exorcism of Emily Rose was superior to this), he’s clearly in his element.

He certainly knows how to craft the aesthetic – darkness and heavy rain paint it atmospheric throughout, and the photography is often fast-paced and intense with plenty of bird’s-eye (God’s eye) camera shots.

Ironically, it is lethargic editing in some key scenes which lets down the tension, and jump-scares are frequently undercut by the missing of a beat.

The couple of genuinely scary moments are undermined by a ridiculous night-time caper in a zoo and some heavy signposting, while Bana’s acting becoming more OTT as the minutes pass towards an underwhelming finale.

My advice is there are far finer exorcism movies in the “Classic” section of your video store, and they will “deliver you” of a lot less cash.

Deliver Us From Evil (R16) 118 mins

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– Sunday Star Times

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Bill Bailey a man of many colours


Listening to Bill Bailey reel off his list of pets is beginning to get exhausting.

“We have a few birds of all kinds of different hue, we have parrots and cockatoos and pigeons and starlings,” he is saying.

“We have tamarin monkeys, we have chameleons, snakes, an argentinian hornfrog, some fish, five dingoes, cats,” he pauses. “I mean it’s getting to the point where we’re going to have to move out, I think, and live in the garden, the place is too full.”

Bill Bailey the nature lover, the comedian, who lives in a house-turned-zoo. For fans of his whimsical comedy, the fact he has an unconventional love for exotic animals might not come as a surprise.

He’s eccentric even by comedic standards, and New Zealand and Australian audiences will be the first to hear Bailey’s new material when he tours here with show Limboland in November.

The star of Black Books and Never Mind the Buzzcocks was last here in 2012 with Qualmpeddler .

Since then, a lot has changed in the life of Bailey – and much of it has stemmed from his affinity for nature, he says down the phone from west London.

The last two years have seen Bailey trekking around the wilds of Borneo, filming Bill Bailey’s Jungle Hero with the BBC’s Natural History Unit.

The documentary tells the story of naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace, a victorian-era explorer who came up with the theory of evolution around the same time as Darwin.

“He was an extraordinarily courageous and brave man, and I happened to find out about him and became intrigued by his story,” Bailey says.

“I found out he came up with the theory of evolution independently of Darwin and hasn’t really got the same amount of historical credit for it. From that moment, I found myself traipsing around Indonesia, and since we produced the doco last year it’s taken on a life of it’s own.”

The series prompted an upswing of interest in the naturalist. In one of his most surreal moments, Bailey found himself unveiling a statue of Wallace at the Natural History Museum in London alongside one of his heroes, David Attenborough.

If it seems like an odd tangent for a comedian to take, but Bailey isn’t your average comedian.

His self-deprecating comedy is full of meandering stories, audiences following him down a circuitous route that doesn’t always end in a traditional punchline. Bizarre tales are punctuated with songs he’s written – he plays almost every instrument you can name – and delivered with a shake of his shaggy, half-head of hair.

(Sidenote: in 2007, fans began a petition to see him cast as a dwarf in The Hobbit. It was sent to producers, but did not gain traction.)

The boy from Keynsham, a tiny town in the west of England, began dabbling in stand-up in 1984. After years of touring, in 1996 he was nominated for the Perrier Comedy Award which launched him into his own BBC TV show, Is this Bill Bailey

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He began touring internationally in 2001, and this season has seen him include Europe on his schedule – from town halls in Latvia to theatres in Estonia.

But Bailey, now 50, says it never gets easy.

“It should be about trying something new, always. You know you’re trying an idea, a thought, telling a story, trying to have a view, trying to crystallise some idea you’ve had about life, try to impart a bit of wisdom you’ve learned along the way, and at the same time trying to make people laugh for a couple of hours. You should never make it easy for yourself and I try not to.”

Bailey’s answers are all like this: Contemplative and lengthy, with a

rhythm you could almost beat a drum to. On stage, some of his more surreal stories almost seem designed to baffle. How does he make sure that audience are with him

He laughs. “I suppose you’d hope that they are, and occasionally I’ll stop and say: ‘Are we all going the same way here’ I think the benefit of having done [this] for a number of years is that you are able to gauge that moment a bit better.”

With age has also come confidence, and while he has set pieces around which a show is grounded, he feels able to have fun with the audience. “More and more I’ve realised that I sort of start to let go a little bit, and just see where the show might take me.”

The rise of social media has also given Bailey the chance to engage with fans. While initially sceptical of Twitter, Bailey decided he needed a profile when he found no less than four impostors.

“I was on Twitter by default, really. I didn’t know much about it and then I investigated Twitter and I realised there was a fake Bill Bailey who was attracting a lot of interest and that just freaked me out,” he says.

“Then it turned out there was another one, and then in fact there were four fake Bill Baileys at one point.

“One of them dropped out, another one gave up, and the other two persevered for a bit, and then I thought I’m going to have to announce myself here and say ‘it’s me! I’m Bill Bailey!’ It was a very odd experience but I thought I had to, social media is a vacuum and if you don’t have a presence there then someone else will fill it.”

His new show, Limboland, explores the differences between how people think their life will turn out and the reality.

As always, it features songs: about the world, about the Ukraine, a country and western song played on a musical bible, and a downbeat version of Happy Birthday. The show, Bailey says, is reflective of where he finds himself.

“Limboland is this place we all inhabit that we never sort of expected – the gap between contentment and happiness, that kind of halfway stage.

“I guess I’m in that stage of life, a sort of transition. I was this sort of feckless, callow youth that used to do material about getting stoned with my mates, and now I sort of aspire to maybe do something else with a bit more thought. This documentary journey, this kind of year of Wallace really had this kind of deep effect on me, and perhaps that’s it, that’s what I’m in. I’m in limbo.”

In another life, Bailey reckons he would be a musician of sorts – or even a teacher. He realised the latter just a couple of days ago, while helping his 10-year-old son with the piano.

“He said ‘I’m having a bit of problem with this piece of music’ and I said ‘I can help you if you want’ and we spent an hour. I realised I kind of like teaching, and I like imparting things, and I realised that’s probably a great part of the stand-up stuff that I’ve done. I always try for there to be something in there that you can take away.

“As we were walking that night my son said, ‘Dad, you really are quite an awesome teacher’, and I thought oh! Suddenly that was one of the nicest walks I’ve had for a long time.”

You can catch Bill Bailey’s Limboland in Wellington on Saturday, November 1. It will also be travelling to Christchurch, Auckland, Hamilton and New Plymouth.

– Sunday Star Times

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NZTrio hits a nerve in China


After the concert, Ashley Brown spent the night in his hotel room fretting, nervously parting the curtains each time a car idled outside his window.

He expected to see men in dark coats silently tread inside to take him and his band mates away.

He knows it sounds silly now, but the NZTrio cellist wasn’t sure the musicians would make it back from their China tour anytime soon.

“I couldn’t sleep that night. The laws of what happens shifted. I had been so confident on our first five tours, now I wondered have we overstepped the mark

“I looked out the hotel window and imagined cop cars.”

Brown is speaking about the classical musical group’s tour of Cambodia and China in May where they performed cross-cultural collaboration O Cambodia.

They had performed the emotive piece before.

The music’s backed by dramatic imagery and language and voiced-over with the story of victims of dictator Pol Pot’s regime and the atrocities committed by the Khmer Rouge soldiers in the 1970s.

Stories of labour camps, of children seeing their father beaten with sticks and being taken away, never to be seen again.

Many of those who hear it break into tears but the response from officials at a Beijing music festival was quite different.

During a rehearsal for the planned concert, the first of a series organised for the trip, an official caught a glimpse of the Chinese words on the screen and “freaked out”.

Some Chinese audiences have made comparisons with the propaganda with which Pol Pot controlled the Cambodians to Chinese politics now, NZTrio violinist Justine Cormack said. “We suddenly thought, ‘oh my goodness, we’re doing something sensitive’.

“It’s a parallel story to the past 50 years in China, similar things happened. We’ve been to China six times now and this time we came away more aware of the country.”

China would have supported the Khmer Rouge regime at the time, pianist Sarah Watkins said.

“We were talking about the violent acts that reflected badly on the Khmer Rouge.”

It had never occurred to the group that the music, written by Kiwi composer Jack Body with input from Cambodian musicians, would hit such a nerve.

The piece was banned from the music festival but was restricted to university venues where it was accepted for educational and historic purposes.

Even then, the Chinese words had to be removed from the backing display.

Uniformed guards carrying rifles were posted at the doors.

“I actually thought we might be taken away as political prisoners, never to be seen again,” Brown said.

“We don’t know how lucky we are in New Zealand.”

Chatting with audience members after a concert in Phnom Penh, the musicians of NZTrio realised they were telling a new story.

An estimated 1.7 million Cambodians died of starvation, disease, overwork and execution under Pol Pot’s communist rule, leaving the country today with a median age of 24.

Many of the children and grandchildren of the regime’s victims know little of their country’s traumatic story.

Even in New Zealand, music teacher and composer Dame Gillian Whitehead has Cambodian students who say the music is the first they have learned of their history.

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“The history’s not being shared because Cambodian adults who remember don’t want to talk about it,” Brown said.

Half of those NZTrio performed to at the Goethe Institute in Phnom Penh were European expats. It was the easiest place to get into.

But despite their run-ins with protective officials, NZTrio are already planning to return.

Cultural performances are increasingly being accepted in Cambodia as part of a widespread effort to preserve the country’s 1000-year-old arts scene which has been on the brink of extinction.

As soon as a slot opens up in their schedule, NZTrio will be back.

“We want to take it to the regions,” Brown said.

“We feel a weight of responsibility to take that show back to what we hope will be many more audiences. It’s important.”

NZTrio don’t see themselves as activists – they are simply making the most of an opportunity.

The chamber trio is well-recognised for its level of engagement in its music.

The Manawatu Standard recently reviewed them as having “great panache and style, acute ensemble awareness and a great empathy with their music, in a performance characterised by sheer energy and vitality”.

The trio is looking forward to a New Zealand tour of the 2014 Loft Series which begins with Loft #1 Svelto at Auckland’s Q Theatre tonight and running until November 2.

– Sunday Star Times

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