Barca Campione de Europe

Diposkan oleh Agus Ariefandy Syuhada on Sunday, May 29, 2011


Barcelona 3-1 Manchester United: Messi & David Villa secure Champions League triumph on magical night at Wembley.

Catalans inspire as dominant display leads to possession control and chances galore as they record their fourth success in Europe's biggest club competition.

They first tasted European Cup success at Wembley in 1992 and now, 19 years later, Barcelona have lifted the trophy for the fourth time after a 3-1 victory over Manchester United in the Champions League final.

At the same scene as their first victory, when a Ronald Koeman strike beat Sampdoria, it was a happy hunting ground again as Pedro, Lionel Messi and David Villa secured the victory which sees the Catalans lift the trophy for the second time in three years.

United were unable to stop the passing machine that is Barcelona and gave up huge amounts of possession to their opponents, and although Wayne Rooney’s 34th minute strike put United level at half-time, they were outclassed in the second half as Pep Guardiola’s men strolled to victory.

The major surprise for the Catalans was Javier Mascherano starting in central defence alongside Gerard Pique instead of captain Carles Puyol, who was only fit enough for a place on the substitute’s bench. Eric Abidal, who had surgery on a liver tumour in March, came back into the starting line-up at left-back to cap a remarkable couple of months for the Frenchman.

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson kept faith with the side who won against Schalke in the semi-finals as Javier Hernandez started up front with Rooney. There was no place in the squad for Dimitar Berbatov as Michael Owen was preferred on the bench to the Bulgarian striker.

United began the game at a frantic pace, giving Barcelona no time on the ball with constant pressure all over the pitch and they were nearly rewarded in the fourth minute as Hernandez robbed Mascherano. The loose ball was played back to the Mexican by Rooney but his 20-yard strike was blocked by Pique at the heart of the Barcelona defence.

Six minutes later, United were nearly gifted a goal from their former centre-half Pique as a Ryan Giggs through ball cut the Barcelona defence down the centre. Hernandez raced towards goal but Pique recovered well to intercept the ball, although lack of communication with Victor Valdes nearly saw his back pass beat his advancing goalkeeper and gift an open goal to the striker.

Moments later, Barcelona were on the attack and inside the United penalty area with their first sight of goal. Not surprisingly, Messi was the architect, playing a neat pass into the feet of Villa but as the Spaniard was about to fire a shot towards goal he was superbly challenged by Rio Ferdinand.

The Catalans were starting to dominate possession and threaten United in every attack, and in the 16th minute they had a fantastic chance to open the scoring. Slow build up by Barca on the edge of the penalty ended saw Villa find Dani Alves on the right wing. The Brazilian’s low cross was met by an unmarked Pedro five yards from goal but he couldn’t guide his shot on target and his shot rolled wide of the post.

Chances were now coming thick and fast for Barcelona and they had three clear chances in the next 10 minutes. Two of them fell to Villa, the first from a Xavi pass but his long-range effort from the edge of the area was just wide of Van der Sar’s left-hand post. The Spaniard’s second chance came a minute later, again he was found by Xavi, this time on the right, where he made some room and fired a low shot which Van Der Sar was able to hold onto.

Messi had not been in any dangerous positions inside the United penalty area at this point but that all changed as he received the ball with space to run into. As the Argentine was about the get his shot away after beating two men with ease, he was superbly tackled by Vidic, a tackle that was timed to perfection and needed to be as otherwise he would have conceded a penalty.

United’s defence was being stretched with every Barcelona attack and in the 27th minute the Catalans broke the deadlock through the lively Pedro. Andres Iniesta and Xavi exchanged passes on the halfway line before Xavi raced forward and produced a sensational defence-splitting pass to find the forward on the edge of the penalty area, and he calmly slotted the ball past Van der Sar to give his side a deserved lead.

Barcelona were buoyant after dominating the majority of the half but that all changed as United got themselves back into the game as Rooney scored a fantastic 34th minute goal to breathe life back into the English side. After played a tight one-two with Michael Carrick before running at goal with purpose; he played another one-two, this time with Ryan Giggs, on the edge of the penalty area before firing the ball into the top corner giving Valdes no chance.

With the game racing towards half time, Barcelona had time to create one more chance and it was Messi who went within inches of giving his side the lead again. The forward skipped away from Vidic, leaving the United captain on the floor, and played a fantastic pass inside Evra for Villa but his low cross was just in front of the Argentine and the ball rolled out for a goal kick.

Barcelona began the second half as they had finished the first and were dominating possession but resolute United defending was just keeping them at bay. A wonderful ball from Iniesta released Alves behind the United defence, the Brazilian composed himself but his low shot was parried by Van der Sar and when the loose ball fell to Messi his shot was headed clear by Evra.

However, moments later no-one was able to stop Messi as he restored Barcelona’s lead with a long-range effort. The Argentine received the ball from Iniesta midway inside the United half, with no challenge coming he raced towards goal before unleashing a low shot from 25 yards which fizzed passed Van der Sar to give him a 53rd goal of the season.

Barcelona were now in total control, United struggled to keep possession and when they did string some passes together they were unable to create anything for Rooney and Hernandez to feed off. In the 65th minute, they opened United up again and it was Alves providing the threat down the left. He rolled a ball into Messi but his cheeky backheel was cleared off the line by Fabio’s last-ditch lunge.

Van der Sar was by far the busiest of the two goalkeepers as shots began to rain down on his goal, he first was able to watch as a long range Xavi strike swerved wide of goal and then the Dutchman held onto a piledriver from Iniesta.

The experienced keeper could do nothing about Barcelona’s third goal though as Villa curled a sublime shot past the Dutchman to extend the Catalans’ lead. United were their own worst enemies as they gave the ball away inside their penalty area to Sergio Busquets, he found Villa on the edge of the area and the forward curled his shot past the jump of Ferdinand and beyond Van der Sar for Barcelona’s third and his 23rd goal of the season.

United’s only real threat of the second half came with five minutes to play as substitute Nani cut inside and fired a shot just wide of Valdes’ goal. The sub received a ball from Rooney on the right wing, drifted past Abidal and hit a left-footed shot from 20 yards but Valdes was able to watch it go wide of his goal without ever looking concerned.

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Live : Watch Match final champions league Streaming TV

Diposkan oleh Agus Ariefandy Syuhada on Saturday, May 28, 2011


Barcelona - Manchester United Preview: Sir Alex Ferguson aiming for third Champions League win in repeat of 2009 final.

The newly crowned champions of Spain and England go head-to-head at Wembley with both clubs hoping to lift the European Cup for the fourth time in their history.

PROBABLE LINE-UPS

Barcelona (4-3-3)
Valdes; Alves, Pique, Mascherano, Puyol; Xavi, Busquets, Iniesta; Pedro, Messi, Villa.

Barcelona’s main selection dilemma will concern their defence where Eric Abidal, Adriano and Maxwell are all available again after injury or illness.

However, Pep Guardiola may opt to play the also fit-again Carles Puyol at left-back with Javier Mascherano filling in alongside Gerard Pique.

Manchester United (4-4-1-1)
Van der Sar; Fabio Da Silva, Ferdinand, Vidic, Evra; Valencia, Carrick, Giggs, Park; Rooney; Hernandez.

The Premier League champions have few injury problems, but Sir Alex Ferguson has decisions to make, particularly over who gets the nod at right-back, a position which the Da Silva twins and John O’Shea have shared this season. Fabio has been picked for the big games recently and looks favourite to start.

The Scot’s midfield selection will also prove interesting with Darren Fletcher vying with Michael Carrick for a place, particularly after missing the 2009 clash through suspension. Elsewhere, Ji-Sung Park, so often the man for the big occasion, may get the nod with Ryan Giggs and Antonio Valencia also hot favourites to start.

more info : Goal

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O2 comes top in broadband study

Diposkan oleh Agus Ariefandy Syuhada on Thursday, May 26, 2011


Mobile broadband provided by O2 loads webpages quicker than any other UK network, research by Ofcom has found.

The regulator carried out 4.2 million speed tests across the country.

It found the average download speed across all networks was 1.5 megabits per second (Mbps), rising to 2.1Mbps in better coverage areas.

The report said speed varied greatly depending on location, and that consumers should check coverage before signing up to tariffs.

Orange fared worst in the research with its average download speeds slower than any other network.

T-Mobile also came out slower than Vodafone, 3 and O2.

O2's chief technology officer Derek McManus said: "Our customers are seeing the benefit from the huge investment we have made in our network. We always aim to deliver the best network experience for our customers and these results are another indicator that we are doing just that."

Everything Everywhere - the name given to the partnership between T-Mobile and Orange - declined to comment on Ofcom's findings.

The report, carried out in conjunction with monitoring specialists Epitiro, ran from September to December last year and dealt with datacards and dongles, but not smartphones.

Ofcom said it hopes to run tests on smartphones soon.

As well as achieving success in the download speed tests, O2 also recorded a lower average latency than 3, Orange and Vodafone.

Latency is calculated by the time it takes for a data packet to travel from a user's PC to a third-party server and back again.

Ofcom chief executive, Ed Richards said: "This research gives consumers a clearer picture of the performance of mobile broadband dongle and datacards as consumers use these services to complement fixed-line services or sometimes as their principal means of accessing online services."

Usage rise

Consumer research showed that 17% of UK homes are now using mobile broadband to access the internet.

Of these, 7% use it as their only means of getting online - a 4% rise since 2009.

The research discovered the average download speed for consumers was 1.5 Mbps, which produced an average load time of 8.5 seconds for a "basic" webpage.

This compared to an average of 6.2 Mbit/s for fixed line broadband, Ofcom found.
However, in areas with good 3G coverage, Ofcom found the average mobile speed rose to 2.1Mbps, dropping to 1.7Mbps at the peak times of between 8-9pm.

On the whole, urban areas performed better than rural areas due to better 3G availability.

The report noted that coverage in cities was highly variable "with no guarantee of good performance" in city centre locations.

Hamish Macleod, chairman of the Mobile Broadband Group, told the BBC that he feels the report paints an unfair picture of mobile broadband by comparing it to fixed rate speeds.

"We recognise this is a useful exercise for Ofcom to do.

"Where I am at issue with Ofcom is the way they have made headline comparisons between fixed broadband and mobile broadband just by using averages.

"It's clear from the research that mobile broadband is a good service, that individual customers can either use it as a complement to fixed broadband or alternatively as a relaible stand alone service."

Mobile broadband speeds will remain well below that of fixed broadband speeds until the next generation of mobile coverage - 4G - is rolled out across the UK- a process is expected to begin in 2013.

Everything Everywhere will start the first public trial of 4G in September this year.

Consultation has begun into how the 4G network will be allocated to operators, with an auction due to open early next year.

more info : BBC
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Barcelona are favourites to win Champions League final

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Gary Lineker : Barcelona are favourites to win Champions League final against Manchester United.

Former Barcelona striker believes that Premier League giants need luck to get a positive result in London in the biggest game in European club football.

Barcelona are more likely to win the Champions League final on Saturday evening than Manchester United, according to former England international striker Gary Lineker.

The Spanish champions confront their English counterparts in the final at Wembley in what will be a repeat of the 2009 Champions League final. On that occasion Pep Guardiola’s side won 2-0, and former Barcelona striker Lineker believes that they will be favourites this time too.

"If Barcelona turn up, they win," Lineker told the BBC. " Barcelona have got to have a bad day for United to realistically have a chance. Either that or United get lucky." 

Gary Lineker also believes Barcelona’s class will negate United’s advantage of playing in England.

"The fact it is in England and they will probably get the vast majority of the support and it is 90 minutes, not two legs, gives them a better chance," explained Gary Lineker.

"But if they played ten times, Manchester United might win one or two of them, there would maybe be a couple of draws and Barcelona would win the rest."

source : Goal.com
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Whatever Happened to Phoebe Cates?

Diposkan oleh Agus Ariefandy Syuhada


This year marks the 65th anniversary of the two-piece bathing suit, commonly known as the bikini. Inventor Louis Reard called his creation a bikini in honor of America's first nuclear test in the Pacific, which took place near the Bikini Islands. According to an article from the BBC, the French engineer assumed that his scandalous new suit "would cause a similar explosion" once it hit the mainstream. It did.

Now the two-piece is everywhere, including, of course, Hollywood. Rare is the film that doesn't feature at least one bikini-clad starlet romping in the surf. Perhaps the most famous scene in which the bikini plays a starring role came in the 1982 comedy classic "Fast Times at Ridgemont High." Actress Phoebe Cates wears a red two-piece while lounging at her friend's pool after school. Though the film is nearly 30 years old, online interest in the iconic scene remains red-hot.

Over the past week, for example, Web lookups for "phoebe cates" jumped 17% and related queries for "phoebe cates today" also surged. Information on Cates's current whereabouts is surprisingly scant. One of Hollywood's brightest stars in the '80s, she hasn't appeared in a movie since 2001, when she had a role in "The Anniversary Party" opposite her "Fast Times" co-star Jennifer Jason Leigh.

Cates's absence from the big screen was a conscious decision; she wasn't forced out of Tinseltown or anything. She is married to Oscar-winning actor Kevin Klein (who also appeared in "The Anniversary Party"), and the couple has several children. The two met while phoebe cates was auditioning for a role in the 1983 hit film "The Big Chill." She didn't get the role (Meg Tilly did), but she did go on to appear in the mega-hit "Gremlins."

Today, phoebe cates focuses her energy on her business. In 2006, the actress opened a boutique in New York called Blue Tree. According to an article from ABC News, the shop specializes in "often unexpected" gifts. A Yelp reviewer calls the shop a "museum of cool."  

source :  the buzz log

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Obama makes case for 'essential' of Western Leadership

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American and British leaders in the world is "essential to the cause of human dignity," President Barack Obama make the big case Wednesday, including freedom and free markets in a speech to joint session of British Parliament.

"We must act and lead with confidence in our ideals, and faith to stay in the character of our nation," Obama said, even while adding they would "proceed with humility, and knowledge we can not dictate the state will result."

He argued that "the longing for freedom and human dignity" is "universal, and it beats in every heart."

And he linked this year's uprisings against regimes across the Middle East to the fall of Communism in Europe, of white minority rule in South Africa, and of dictatorships in Latin America and Southeast Asia, saying they reflect "a longing for the same freedoms that we take for granted at home."


He also contended that the rise of China, India and Brazil was linked to their acceptance of free markets on the British and American models.

Their ascendance does not mean that Western leadership is in decline, he insisted, saying: "The time for our leadership is now."

His aides billed the address as the centerpiece of his six-day trip to Europe this week.
British lawmakers greeted him with a standing ovation, and applauded his description of himself as the son of a Kenyan cook in the British army who had become president of the United States.

The speech caps a two-day trip to Britain that mixed pomp with politics.

Queen Elizabeth II hosted a state dinner for Obama Tuesday night, where he wore a white tie and tails, while a day later he and David Cameron rolled up shirtsleeves and served burgers and sausages to military service members and their families in the garden of 10 Downing Street.

The president and prime minister turned up the heat on Moammar Gadhafi in a joint appearance Wednesday, with the president saying that "ultimately" the Libyan leader will go.

The United Nations-endorsed mission to protect Libya's people from their leader means making sure Gadhafi "doesn't have capacity to send in a bunch of thugs to murder innocent civilians and threaten them," Obama said.

"I do think we have made enormous progress in Libya. We have saved lives. Gadhafi and his regime need to understand there will not be a letup in the pressure we are applying," Obama said.

But both he and Cameron said it will take time to reach a solution in Libya, which Gadhafi has ruled for 42 years. The nation seems to be grinding into a stalemated civil war.

"We may have to be more patient than people would like," Obama said.

Cameron refused to answer a journalist's question about whether the United Kingdom would send attack helicopters to bolster the military mission in Libya, but said: "We should be turning up the heat in Libya," and vowed to look at "all the options" for doing so.

Obama and Cameron were speaking on a wide range of topics at a news conference in a sunlit garden in London.

Before their meeting with journalists, the two leaders discussed policy in Afghanistan and Pakistan and the Israel-Palestinian conflict, among other issues.

Obama said America's relationship with Britain is "the strongest it has ever been" and said the two nations are committed to working together on global economic recovery and fighting the war on terror.

Cameron said the U.S. killing of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was "a strike right at the heart of international terrorism" and that Britain and the United States must work closely with Pakistan in the future.

"We can defeat al Qaeda," Cameron said.

Obama is in the middle of a six-day, four-nation trip to Europe that began in Ireland and will continue with stops in France and Poland.

On Tuesday the president and first lady toured Buckingham Palace and visited Westminster Abbey, where crowds that had gathered along the roads outside cheered their arrival.

Cameron talked up the two countries' closeness the night before the Obama visit officially began, calling the relationship "essential" and saying there is an "incredible alignment of views" between 10 Downing Street and the White House.

On a less formal note, Obama also joined Cameron in playing table tennis against two students during a visit to a local school. No details on the final score were made public, but the students won handily.

more info : CNN 
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Lionel Messi warns Barcelona over underestimating Manchester United

Diposkan oleh Agus Ariefandy Syuhada on Wednesday, May 25, 2011


Lionel Messi warns Barcelona over underestimating  Manchester United : Their achievements this season prove they can’t be very weak.

The 2010 Fifa Ballon d’Or winner is against any talk of the Red Devils not being up to the level of the Catalan giants, and is predicting a 'special match' at Wembley.

Barcelona forward Lionel Messi has warned against underestimating the strength of their Champions League final opponents Manchester United.

The Spanish champions take on their English counterparts in the final of Europe’s premier club competition at Wembley in London on Saturday evening in a repeat finale of 2008-09.

Two years ago Barcelona defeated United 2-0 in Rome, thanks to goals from Samuel Eto'o and Messi, and will once again start this year’s final as favourites.

Messi, though, believes that it will be unfair to write off Sir Alex Ferguson’s side, who won a record 19th title this campaign.

"They won the English championship and they are in the Champions League final,” the Argentina international said in a press conference on Monday. “They can't be very weak if they have achieved all that.

"It is a final, it is a special match given what is at stake. The good memory of Rome is behind us. This will be a totally different match. We are facing a very strong adversary, which has very good players."

He added: "I knew in pre-season we had a great team and had the chance to win everything again. I always feel we're going to win with the team we have."

Messi recalled his goal against United in the 2009 final, saying: "It was a beautiful feeling for what the goal meant to me, to the team and the fans. It's a beautiful memory.

"I hope to score again at Wembley. I hope to strike again but if not I just want to beat United and lift the Cup. I play every game as if it is my last, as if it is a final. I never want to lose."

He added: "I don't know how Manchester will play. They're a team used to having the ball and create chances. But we will try and play our game which is to keep the ball and create chances.

"The beautiful memories of Rome are already behind us. It's going to be a totally different game to two years ago.

"We are facing a great rival with very good players. It's going to be a finely-balanced match."

Messi also praised United striker Chicharito after an impressive first season at Old Trafford.

"Chicharito's become a hugely important player for United where he's scored so many important goals," he said.

"I played against him in the World Cup and he also scored against us.

"He's a very fast player, a very intelligent striker and adapted well at a great club like United in a short space of time."

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The 10 greatest Bob Dylan songs

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(Rolling Stone) -- The next issue of Rolling Stone -- on stands and in the digital archive on May 13th -- celebrates Bob Dylan's 70th birthday (happening on May 24th) by ranking his 70 greatest songs.

Bono, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Jim James and many other artists discuss their favorite Dylan tracks. "Every songwriter after him carries his baggage," Bono writes. "This lowly Irish bard would proudly carry his baggage. Any day."

Plus, check out our extensive bonus Dylan content, including classic Dylan interviews from the RS archives, his 20 greatest overlooked songs, a trivia quiz that might stump even most hardcore fans, and much, much more.

"Every Grain of Sand"

"Shot of Love," 1981

"It's like one of the great Psalms of David," Bono says about "Every Grain of Sand," the spellbinding ballad from "Shot of Love" that concludes Dylan's overtly Christian songwriting phase. Equal parts Blakean mysticism and biblical resonance, the song abandons the self-righteousness that plagued Dylan's religious work to offer a desperate prayer for salvation.

Shadowing Dylan on vocals is gospel great (and Dylan flame) Clydie King: "I get chills when I hear her just breathe," Dylan said. "Every Grain of Sand" taps into a moving humility ("Sometimes I turn, there's someone there, other times it's only me," he sings). As Bono puts it, "Dylan stops wailing against the world, turns on himself and is brought to his knees."

Dylan later described "Every Grain of Sand" as "an inspired song that just came to me.... I felt like I was just putting words down that were coming from somewhere else."

"Visions of Johanna"

"Blonde On Blonde," 1966

"Visions of Johanna" is a tour de force, a breakthrough not only for the writer but for the very possibilities of songwriting. An extended, impressionistic account of a woozy New York City night, rich in pictorial detail and erotic longing, the five long verses zigzag between Dylan's acute dissection of one woman, the tangible and available Louise, and his longing for an absent ideal. Johanna may not even be real.
But she is an addiction. "It's extraordinary," Bono once said. "He writes this whole song seemingly about this one girl, with these remarkable descriptions of her, but this isn't the girl who's on his mind! It's somebody else!"

Dylan's masterpiece of obsession -- written, ironically, shortly after his marriage in 1965 -- was a passion in itself. He debuted the song in concert in December 1965, to an audience that included ex-paramour Joan Baez and poet Allen Ginsberg, then played it every night on the 1966 world tour -- notably in the solo acoustic sets. A November '65 attempt to cut an electric "Johanna" with the Hawks (under the explicitly bitter title "Seems Like a Freeze Out") had run aground after 14 takes.

The Hawks were still too much of a bar band; the song's confessional complexity required poise as well as muscle.

In contrast, Dylan nailed "Johanna" on the first take in Nashville. The local session pros, supplemented by Robbie Robertson's crying-treble guitar, brought the right unhurried empathy to Dylan's vocal mood swings -- from a whisper to a howl at the moon in the same verse -- and unforgettable lyric images.

"I still sing that song every once in a while," Dylan said in 1985. "It still stands up now as it did then. Maybe even more in some kind of weird way."

"Mr. Tambourine Man" By David Crosby

"Bringing It All Back Home," 1965

As far as I can tell, the Byrds' recording of "Mr. Tambourine Man" was the first time anyone put really good poetry on the radio The Beatles hadn't gotten to "Eleanor Rigby" or "A Day in the Life" - they were still writing "Ooh, baby." But Bob's lyrics were exquisite. "To dance beneath the diamond sky with one hand waving free" - that was the line that got me. At the time of "Mr. Tambourine Man," I think he was finding himself as a poet. He was learning to be beautiful.


I had seen Bob back at Gerde's Folk City in New York years earlier. Everyone was talking about him. I saw him play and thought, "(Expletive), I can sing better than that. Why are they making all that fuss about him?" Then I started really listening. And I almost quit, right there. Truthfully, I think the Byrds were Bob's best translators. Bob did not envision this song the way we did it. When he came to the studio where we were rehearsing and heard us do "Mr. Tambourine Man," he was stoked. I think hearing our version was part of what made Dylan shift over to being a rocker. He thought, "Wait a minute, that's my song," and he heard how it could be different.

"It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)"

"Bringing It All Back Home," 1965

"I don't know how I got to write those songs," Dylan said in 2004, apropos of "It's Alright, Ma." "Try to sit down and write something like that. I did it once, and I can do other things now. But I can't do that."

Written in Woodstock in the summer of 1964, while his folk-scene compadres Joan Baez and Mimi and Richard Fariña were Dylan's houseguests, "It's Alright, Ma" is a transition from the politically minded lyrics that had briefly been Dylan's stock in trade to a broader vision of "life, and life only": Instead of pointing fingers at a particular flaw of culture, the song tears down the entire decrepit thing, declaring that all is vanity and hypocrisy and phony propaganda.

On a purely technical level, "It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)" is dazzling, with an incredibly complicated rhyme scheme and a melody that barrels along on two notes until the flourish at the end of each verse. The lyrics incorporate nods to Arthur Koestler (author of Darkness at Noon), the Book of Ecclesiastes and even Dylan's beloved Elvis Presley (the title is just a hair shy of Presley's line "That's all right, now, Mama"). It's always been a tricky song for Dylan to sing -- a snapshot of a particular moment in his artistic development, a jewel that he's lucky enough to own rather than a machine whose workings he understands from having built it. Talking about "It's Alright, Ma" in 1980, he described the difficulty of getting "in touch with the person you were when you wrote the songs ... but I can still sing it, and I'm glad I've written it."

"I Shall Be Released"

"Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits, Vol. 2," 1971

With its simple, evocative tale of a prisoner yearning for freedom, this rock hymn was part of a conscious effort by Dylan to move away from the sprawling imagery of his mid-Sixties masterpieces. "In '68 [Dylan told] . . . me how he was writing shorter lines, with every line meaning something," Allen Ginsberg once said. "And from that time came some of the stuff ... like 'I Shall Be Released'.... There was to be no wasted language, no wasted breath."


The result was one of Dylan's best-loved songs, first cut during the 1967 Basement Tapes sessions with the Band. The rough church of the organ and guitar frame Dylan's urgent nasal prayer, until Richard Manuel's keening harmony illuminates the chorus, like sunlight pouring through a stained-glass window. Years later, in the mid-Eighties, David Crosby sang that chorus to himself -- "Any day now, any day now/I shall be released" -- in his Texas prison cell, as he served nine months on drug and weapon charges. "I wrote it on the wall," he recalls. "It took me hours. But I did it. And I remember taking heart from it."

"All Along the Watchtower"

"John Wesley Harding," 1967

You could say that jokes and theft are the twin poles of Dylan's art, and this 12-line masterpiece about a joker (who believes he's being robbed) and a thief (who thinks everything's a joke) penetrates straight to the core of his work. "Watchtower" is among Dylan's most haunting tunes: Built around an austere arrangement and Dylan's spooked croon, it starts out like a ballad that's going to go on for a long while. But as soon as the joker and the thief get their opening statements, the song ends with an ominous image -- two riders approaching -- leaving listeners to fill in the blanks.

Jimi Hendrix's definitive reading of "Watchtower" is one of the few Dylan covers that has permanently affected the way Dylan himself plays the song. Hendrix started recording his cover within weeks of John Wesley Harding's release, fleshing out the song into something stunningly intense. "He played [my songs] the way I would have done them "He played [my songs] the way I would have done them if I was him," Dylan later said of Hendrix.

"Just Like a Woman"

"Blonde On Blonde," 1966

Dylan's finest ballad is not a love song. "Just Like a Woman" is a complex portrait of adoration and disappointment, written as vengeance but sung as regret. Dylan never revealed a specific inspiration for the woman indicted. (Dylanologists often cite Andy Warhol's star-crossed protégée Edie Sedgwick.) But the song is more about his own turbulent lessons in romance -- the giving, taking and leaving. It is also Dylan's first great country-rock performance. Dylan was making thunder and headlines onstage that year with the Hawks, but he cut this song with Nashville session cats who heard and heightened his tangle of rapture and despair. "There's a lifetime of listening in these details," songwriter Jimmy Webb said. "I still marvel at what an absolutely stunning piece of writing it is."

"Tangled Up in Blue"

"Blood On the Tracks," 1975

"[This song] took me 10 years to live, and two years to write," Dylan often said before playing "Tangled Up in Blue" in concert. His marriage was crumbling in 1974 as he wrote what would become the opener on Blood on the Tracks and his most personal examination of hurt and nostalgia. Dylan's lyrical shifts in perspective, between confession and critique, and his acute references to the Sixties experience evoked a decade of both utopian and broken promise. His plaintive vocal and the fresh-air picking of the Minneapolis session players, organized by his brother, David Zimmerman, hearkened to an earlier pathos: the frank heartbreak and spiritual restoration in Appalachian balladry. Dylan has played this song many different ways live but rarely strays from the perfect crossroads of this recording, where emotional truths meet the everlasting comfort of the American folk song.

"A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall"

"The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan," 1963

The greatest protest song by the greatest protest songwriter of his time: a seven-minute epic that warns against a coming apocalypse while cataloging horrific visions -- gun-toting children, a tree dripping blood -- with the wide-eyed fervor of John the Revelator. "Every line in it is actually the start of a whole song," Dylan said at that time. "But when I wrote it, I thought I wouldn't have enough time alive to write all those songs, so I put all I could into this one."

The threat of nuclear war was in the air at the time, as other songs from the Freewheelin' sessions -- including "Talkin' World War III Blues" and the anti-fallout-shelter rant "Let Me Die in My Footsteps" -- make clear. But this rain was abstract rather than literal. "It's not the fallout rain," Dylan said. "I just mean some sort of end that's just gotta happen."


"A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall" -- that "a-gonna" was the young Dylan's Woody Guthrie fixation popping out again -- began life as a poem, which Dylan likely banged out on a typewriter owned by his buddy (and fellow Greenwich Village dweller) Wavy Gravy. Dylan debuted the song at Carnegie Hall in September 1962, when he was part of a folk-heavy bill in which each act got 10 minutes: "Bob raised his hand and said, 'What am I supposed to do? One of my songs is 10 minutes long,' " said Pete Seeger, the concert's organizer.

"A Hard Rain" is the first public instance of Dylan grappling with the End of Days, a topic that would come to dominate his work. But the tumbling verses of "A Hard Rain" culminate not in catastrophe, but in Dylan describing his task as an artist: to sing out against darkness wherever he sees it -- to "tell it and think it and speak it and breathe it" until his lungs burst. "It's beyond genius," says the Grateful Dead's Bob Weir. "I think the heavens opened and something channeled through him."

"Like a Rolling Stone," By Bono

"Highway 61 Revisited," 1965

That sneer -- it's something to behold. Elvis had a sneer, of course. And the Rolling Stones had a sneer that, if you note the title of the song, Bob wasn't unaware of. But Bob Dylan's sneer on "Like a Rolling Stone" turns the wine to vinegar.

It's a black eye of a pop song. The verbal pugilism on display here cracks open songwriting for a generation and leaves the listener on the canvas. "Like a Rolling Stone" is the birth of an iconoclast that will give the rock era its greatest voice and vandal. This is Bob Dylan as the Jeremiah of the heart, torching romantic verse and "the girl" with a firestorm of unforgiving words. Having railed against the hypocrisies of the body politic, he now starts to pick on enemies that are a little more familiar: the scene, high society, the "pretty people" who think they've "got it made." He hasn't made it to his own hypocrisies -- that would come later. But the "us" and "them" are not so clearly defined as earlier albums. Here he bares his teeth at the hipsters, the vanity of that time, the idea that you had a better value system if you were wearing the right pair of boots.

For some, the Sixties was a revolution. But there were others who were erecting a guillotine in Greenwich Village not for their political enemies, but rather for the squares. Bob was already turning on that idea, even as he best embodied it, with the corkscrew hair Jimi Hendrix would later admit to imitating. The tumble of words, images, ire and spleen on "Rolling Stone" shape-shifts easily into music forms 10 or 20 years away, like punk, grunge or hip-hop. Looking at the character in the lyric, you ask the question "How quickly could she have plunged from high society to 'scrounging' for her 'next meal'?" Perhaps it is a glance into the future; perhaps it's just fiction, a screenplay distilled into one song.

It must have been hard to be or be around Dylan then; that unblinking eye was turning on everybody and everything. But for all the tirading, the real mischief is in its ear-biting humor. "If you ain't got nothing, you got nothing to lose" is the T-shirt. But the line that I like the best is "You never turned around to see the frowns on the jugglers and the clowns/When they all did tricks for you/You never understood that it ain't no good/You shouldn't let other people get your kicks for you."

The playing on this track -- by the likes of guitarist Mike Bloomfield and keyboardist Al Kooper -- is so alive and immediate that it's like you're getting to see the paint splash the canvas. As is often the case with Bob in the studio, the musicians don't fully know the song. It's like the first touch. They're getting to know it, and you can feel their joy of discovery as they're experiencing it.

When the desire to communicate is met with an equal and opposite urge not to compromise in order to communicate -- when those two things are in perfect balance -- is when everything happens with rock & roll. And that's what Dylan achieved in "Rolling Stone." I don't know or particularly care who this song is about -- though I've met a few people who have claimed it was about them (some who weren't even born in 1965). The real thrill for me was that "once upon a time" in the world, a song this radical was a hit on the radio. The world was changed by a cranky voice, a romantic spirit, somebody who cared enough about an unrequited love to write such a devastatingly caustic put-down.

I love to hear a song that changes everything. That's the reason I'm in a band: David Bowie's "Heroes," Arcade Fire's "Rebellion (Lies)," Joy Division's "Love Will Tear Us Apart," Marvin Gaye's "Sexual Healing," Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit," Public Enemy's "Fight the Power." But at the top of this dysfunctional family tree sits the king of spitting fire himself, the juggler of beauty and truth, our own Willy Shakespeare in a polka-dot shirt. It's why every songwriter after him carries his baggage and why this lowly Irish bard would proudly carry his luggage. Any day.

Copyright © 2010 Rolling Stone.

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Volunteers sought for 4G LTE trial in Cornwall

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Volunteers in an area of Cornwall are being sought to trial new high-speed 4G broadband as part of a joint project by Everything Everywhere and BT.

The trial, from September to December in South Newquay, will be focusing on offering broadband in expensive-to-reach rural areas.

It will be the first chance for UK customers to test 4G technology, which is set to roll out nationally by 2014.

UK networks will bid for use of the 4G spectrum early next year.

The auction will follow a consultation period that has already begun into how the 4G spectrum will be distributed among networks in the UK.

For the Cornwall trial, Everything Everywhere - the name given to the partnership of T-Mobile and Orange - and BT have been granted part of the 800Mhz spectrum for test purposes.

The spectrum is currently being used across the UK for analogue television but is in the process of gradually being switched off.

Black spots

The trial will act as an experiment to see if 4G LTE could provide a cheap solution to getting high-speed internet to places currently regarded as black spots with slow or no broadband connection.

LTE, which stands for Long Term Evolution, is a particular type of 4G system that allows data download speeds of 100 megabits per second while on the move, and faster speeds for stationary wireless connections.

This faster capability means that rather than providing physical cabling to less urban areas, BT will instead be able to use masts from Everything Everywhere to distribute its broadband wirelessly.

"Instead of building two networks, we're trying to do it with one," explained Emin Gurdeneli, VP of network services at Everything Everywhere.

"The customer will enjoy a broadband service at their premises, at their home etc, as if they had acquired it in the usual way. What will be different is our delivery mechanism."

The trial is being supported by Nokia, Siemens and Huawei, as well as the Cornwall Development Company.

People living in the St Newlyn East area of South Newquay have been asked to register their interest in the trial via a website. They will receive all the necessary equipment.

Half of the people in the trial will have their homes fitted with modified wireless routers, which will be able to pick up the area's 4G connection to give the household access to the internet.

The other half will be given 4G dongles with which to try out the connection on individual devices such as laptops.

'Next generation'

Speeds of uploads and downloads will be measured to determine the technology's success. Until now, 4G LTE's capabilities in the UK have been measured only in laboratory conditions.

Sebastien Lahtinen, from thinkbroadband.com, says money is a large motivator behind the trial.

"They're trying to avoid digging up the roads, so that removes the large cost of getting superfast broadband to those rural areas," he told the BBC.

He added that the 4G broadband could provide those in the trial with faster connections than most current fixed-line broadband customers.

"It has the potential to jump them into the next generation world."

However, the UK still lags behind other countries with its 4G rollout. Germany, Sweden, Japan and the US already have public 4G networks in use.

more info : BBC
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President Obama in the United Kingdom

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President Obama in the United Kingdom, Visit the focus shifted to politics.

Afghanistan and Libya are expected to feature prominently in the U. S. President Barack Obama and David Cameron meet for talks in Downing Street later.

As the focus of his state visit shifts to politics, Mr Obama will also address MPs and peers in Westminster Hall.

He and the PM are also due to drop in on a barbecue hosted by their wives for families of military personnel involved in joint UK-US missions overseas.
On Tuesday, Mr Obama praised the solidarity the UK had shown the US.
He was speaking at a banquet, in honour of his three-day visit, hosted by the Queen at Buckingham Palace.

He and wife Michelle also laid a wreath on the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior in Westminster Abbey and met the newly married Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.
At the evening banquet, the Queen gave a toast to what she called the "tried, tested and, yes, special relationship between our two nations".

She said: "I firmly believe that the strength of our links and many shared interests will continue to ensure that, when the US and the UK stand together, our people and other people of goodwill around the world will be more secure and can become more prosperous."

Mr Obama said the Queen was "a living witness to the power of our alliance and the chief source of its resilience".

He thanked the UK for its solidarity since the 9/11 attacks 10 years ago and in tackling the security threats that have followed, and also paid tribute to the UK's military forces for "standing shoulder to shoulder with the US for decades".

The banquet was attended by the prime minister, his deputy - Nick Clegg - Labour leader Ed Miliband and former PMs Gordon Brown, Tony Blair and Sir John Major.
Other famous names among the 170 guests included former athlete and politician Lord Coe, actors Tom Hanks and Kevin Spacey, actress Helena Bonham Carter, entrepreneur Sir Richard Branson and London Mayor Boris Johnson.

The Nato operation in Libya and ongoing tensions in the Middle East and north Africa are expected to be high on the agenda when Mr Cameron and Mr Obama meet in the morning in Downing Street.

Mr Clegg will also attend the talks, where the state of the global economy, counter-terrorism and the conflict in Afghanistan are also likely to feature.

After the meeting, the two men are expected to hold a joint press conference and drop in on the barbecue before heading to Buckingham Palace for a private lunch.
Later in the day, Mr Obama will give a speech on US foreign policy at Westminster Hall, an honour usually reserved for British monarchs.

The hall has seen speeches from a number of heads of state - most recently Pope Benedict XVI in 2010 - but Mr Obama will be the first US president to give an address there to both Houses of Parliament.

While the president gives his speech, his wife Michelle will travel to Oxford University where she will host an open day for pupils from the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson School in north London.

The visit is designed to encourage them to apply for further education.

Mrs Obama first visited the school in 2009 and was close to tears when she told the pupils: "We are counting on every single one of you to be the best that you can be."

In the evening, the Obamas will give a dinner at the US ambassador's residence, Winfield House, for guests including the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh.

Then on Thursday, the president and Mr Cameron will both fly to France for the G8 summit of leading industrialised nations in Deauville.

During his speech at Westminster Hall, Mr Obama is expected to say that the US has no closer ally in the world than the UK.

In a joint article in the Times on Tuesday, he and Mr Cameron described the relationship between the two countries as "not just special" but "essential - for us and the world".

Mr Obama also met Mr Miliband at Buckingham Palace on Tuesday.

The two men reportedly discussed the challenges facing "progressive politics" on both sides of the Atlantic, as well as climate change and the situations in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Libya.

source : BBC
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Andre Pirlo Now New Player in Juventus

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New Juventus signing of Andrea Pirlo: I'll never forget my time at AC Milan
Veteran Italy and expressed his gratitude to the San Siro club and said "beautiful adventure" for him.

Juventus new signing Andrea Pirlo has thanked AC Milan their support during his 10 years at the club.

The 32-year-old joined the former Italian and European champions on Tuesday on a three-year contract on a free transfer, after deciding not to renew his deal with AC Milan.

Andrea Pirlo joined AC Milan from Inter in 2001 and during his time for them won both the Serie A title and the Champions League twice.

The Italy international has now thanked everyone at Milan for their support in the past decade and is quoted as saying by Uefa.com: "I've spent ten wonderful years here, it's been a fantastic adventure with AC Milan.

"I want to thank everybody, including the club and the supporters. It's impossible to forget 10 years like the ones I have had here."

Andrea Pirlo contract with Milan ends this summer and his deal with Juventus will begin from July 1.

source : Goal.com

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