Tuesday, 16 September 2008

Richard Wright 28 July 1943 - 15 September 2008



Today, there is much sadness in me. I have completely lost my interest in listening to any kind of music. For music has lost a legend and all the sad songs in the world won’t heal the pain.

Richard Wright, the keyboard player from Pink Floyd, Died yesterday of cancer. He was the founding member of the group and wrote music on every album apart from Final Cut.

My first experience of Floyd was back in the 80’s. It was the delicate sounds of thunder tour when I first got to see Floyd live on stage. It was love at first sight. The long intro for Shine on you crazy diamond, the female harmonies in The great Gig in the Sky, Gilmour’s guitar sounding album perfect, Nick Mason keeping every beat and Richard Wright’s keyboard skills blowing everybody away. What a night. I’ll never forget it.

Thanks Richard for the music. Thanks for the great memories. Thanks for influencing scores of musicians, but mostly, thanks for Pink Floyd. Your music will live long in the hearts of the fans.

I would like to write something beautiful that encompasses what was a wonderful career, but alas I have no words. So I’ll say what every other fan will say. Richard and Sid, Shine on you crazy diamonds.


Marky

Wednesday, 10 September 2008

Mitchell & Webb

The creators of the hilarious Peep Show series, and without a doubt, my favourite comedy duo at the moment. If your looking for sarcastic, cringworthy, adult humour, I give you Mitchell & Webb.

Monday, 8 September 2008

It's been nice.

Will the world end on Wednesday? Black Holes, Quarks, leptons and the Higgs Boson
Posted on September 8th, 2008
by Peter Davies in All News, Country News, Environmental News, France News, Odd News, Research News, Science News, Technology News

While the rest of us go about our daily business, maybe worrying about our mortgages, the elections or perhaps even global warming, the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) will conduct a multi-billion experiment that critics say could create a black hole right here on earth that will destroy the world. Unless an urgent appeal to the European Court of Human Rights by these worried scientists succeeds, the world’s biggest scientific experiment will fire up on Wednesday, September 10, 2008.
This bizarre experiment will use a massive (17 mile) donut shaped tunnel, deep underground and straddling the French and Swiss borders called the Large Hadron Collider to smash atoms together at around the speed of light. The purpose is to recreate the conditions that existed a fraction of a second after Big Bang – the birth of the universe – “to provide vital clues to the building blocks of life”, (Jonathan Petre, Mail on Sunday). They expect to generate sub-atomic particles never detected before, including the Higgs Boson, predicted by British Scientist Peter Higgs way back in the 1960s. The Higgs Boson is crucial to the theory of particle physics and current understanding of the structure of the universe.
The Large Hadron Collider even has its own rap (Rapping the LHC), written by Kate McAlpine, a physics graduate from Michigan State University who works in the press office at the CERN offices in Switzerland. “…Two beams of protons/ swing ’round/ Through the ring they ride/’til in the hearts of the detectors/ they’re made to collide!/ And all that energy packed/ in that tiny room/ becomes mass,/ particles created from the vacuum…” It’s pretty good.
But some scientists who are opposed to the experiment claim it may cause a black hole that could swallow the world. “The concern is that the moment we press the return key, the particle accelerator could create a black hole that might eat up the whole planet”. If a big enough black hole develops, the world will disappear taking us with it in an instant. Another worry is that a number of small black holes will develop and that these may join together over the coming months, wreaking increasing havoc with Planet Earth; causing earthquakes and breaking up the earth’s crust over time until the whole world is eventually destroyed. These threats have been discounted by the scientists at CERN, and by most physicists around the world.
Let’s hope the doomsayers are wrong and CERN are right! But if it all goes wrong, at least Zimbabwe won’t have to worry about Mugabe any longer…
END
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I live in a Pigeon loft in Glasgow. I fight dogs for food and mug cows for drink. Monkeys live in my beard. I have lived for centuries under my bed and only came out when they invented peanut m&m's. I understand everything.

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