BMW M235i Review

In the 80s if you wanted a fast 2 door BMW but couldn't afford or justify the M3, there would be a 325i Coupe on your drive, its front mounted 2.5L straight-6 punched 170 horses through the rear wheels in a package weighing the same as a modern day Mini ...

Heaven Adores You : An Interview with Nickolas Dylan Rossi

Interviewed by Stephen Mayne   Over a decade after his death in 2003, Elliott Smith’s memory lives on with many. Heaven  Adores You tells his story, focusing on the music that made him so beloved. Following the film’s  release last week, director Nickolas Dylan Rossi took the time to answer questions for us about  his debut documentary.    How did you first discover Elliott Smith?  I discovered Elliott's music in the 90s by living in Portland. First through Heatmiser, then by  watching him play solo. But like many people, I discovered his music by friends in Portland  sharing it widely.    Why did you want to make a film about him?  We wanted to make a film that really looked at the music of Elliott Smith and why it continues to  influence fans and other musicians today. He was a great artist who left us too soon. We wanted  to make sure that the next generations of fans of Elliott's music had something to reference  about his life and career.    Who do you hope to reach with the film?  I hope this film can satisfy the super fan as well as the uninitiated. Hopefully there’s enough of a  cohesive story of Elliott’s journey to find interesting to watch, but also a new found appreciation  for his process as a musician.     How long did it take to find the contributors and how keen were they to participate?  It’s sort of known that when Elliott passed away, not a lot of his friends wanted to talk to the  media about him, because the media really wanted to focus on the last couple of years of his  struggles instead of the bigger picture. They were very protective — and rightfully so — of their  friend. I’m not going to say it was easy to get people to talk to us-- it required a tremendous  amount of faith and trust on their part that we would make the film that we said that we would  make, which was to honour him and focus on the music that he made.    So is that why the film looks more at his music and the reaction others had to it rather than  the darker parts of his life?  The film is about Elliott's music. We really wanted to keep the focus there, and not on the more  sensational, tabloid aspects of his life that the media needlessly seems to want to focus on.    Were there any people you wanted in the film that you couldn't get to participate?  I think we were extremely lucky to get the support and the heartfelt stories from as many of  Elliott’s friends as we could. He seemed to touch so many lives that I’m sure there were many  more people we could’ve talked to. At the end, I think we’re grateful to have as many folks as  we did take their time to talk with us.     What impact do you think his growing fame had on him?  It’s hard to say because I wasn’t there with him, but I think he has an idea of what it’s going to  be like for him when he says, “I’m the wrong kind of person to be really big and famous...”    What is it about him that inspires such devotion?  ...

Kevin Pieterson

ECB set dangerous precedent by excluding Pietersen

Sport News 24/7 By David de Winter - Sports Editor @davidjdewinter  @TLE_Sport Well, what a busy couple of days it has been at the ECB headquarters.  I say busy but given the soap opera-esque goings-on at the ECB for the past two years it just seems like another day at ...

TLE

The Death of a Salesman: Review

By Jack Peat, TLE Editor  The possibilities that encapsulate the American Dream are oft dramatized but rarely grow old. It is an ideal that has arguably grown more relevant over time. The principles of the free market – boundless prosperity, success and the upward social mobility for the family and ...

TLE

Second Time Lucky for the SNP

By Max Bluer Thursday evening and the British general election’s exit poll has just been released; it accurately predicts massive gains for the Europhobic Conservative Party and the Scottish Nationalist Party – the driving force behind last year’s referendum on Scottish independence. That noise you heard when the news broke was ...

Live Review: Belle and Sebastian

By Adam Turner (AdamTurnerPR) 11.5.15, Methodist Central Hall, Westminster After floating around the stage for 90 minutes, dancing to the sound of his band's subtle, harmonious tones, Stuart Murdoch proved last night that he is still as classy and jovial a performer as he ever has been. The Glaswegian musician, ...

Modern black computer keyboard macro

Allsop launches first online-only auction for new build homes

By Bea Patel, Property Editor and Director of Shop for an Agent, the estate agent comparison site Allsop, the UK's market leader in commercial and residential property auction is set to change the landscape of purchasing new build and off plan properties globally. With over 100 years of industry experience, ...

TLE

Pai in the Sky

By Harry Bedford Connotations of Thailand tend to revolve around beautiful sun-drenched beaches, crystal-clear water and small bays surrounded by protective rocks and palm trees, but head to the mountains of Northern Thailand, near the Burmese border, and you’ll discover the quirky town of Pai. Ninety miles north of Thailand’s ...

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