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Star Wars : pas de sous-vêtements dans l’espace, l’étrange obsession de George Lucas sur la saga

Star Wars sans sa montagne de costumes et masques en tous genre, c'est comme le Yin sans le Yang, l'alpha sans l'omega. De là une étrange obsession de George Lucas, qui ne voulait pas voir de sous-vêtements dans sa saga !

Il existe de nombreuses anecdotes savoureuses sur les costumes de la première trilogie Star Wars. Par exemple celle concernant Peter Cushing, qui, souffrant atrocement des pieds, ne pouvait supporter de porter les bottes rigides de son personnage, le Grand Moff Tarkin, commandant de l’Etoile Noire. Il porta donc des chaussons dans la majorité de ses scènes; scènes qui furent filmées de façon rapprochées, sans montrer ses pieds !

Star Wars : la folle histoire du costume d'Obi Wan Kenobi, considéré comme perdu durant des décennies

L’une d’entre elles concerne une curieuse obsession de George Lucas, qui ne souhaitait pas voir de boutons ou fermetures éclaires sur les costumes de son film parce que c’était trop proche du style vestimentaire de la Terre. Une anecdote racontée par l’auteur Brandon Alinger dans son ouvrage sur les costumes de la saga.

Même les lunettes étaient proscrites; une règle à laquelle, pour la première fois, The Mandalorian fera une entorse, à travers le personnage du docteur Pershing dans la saison 2. Dans son One Woman Show baptisé Wishful Drinking, qu’elle adaptera plus tard en livre, Carrie Fisher raconta que George Lucas avait imposé la règle du “pas de sous-vêtements”. Et donc, la concernant, pas de soutien gorge pour elle dans l’espace sous le costume.

Lorsqu’elle lui demanda pourquoi, il lui répondit que l’absence de gravité dans l’espace rendait les sous-vêtements inutiles, et que la façon dont le corps se dilate dans l’espace aurait conduit son personnage à finir étouffé par la pression de son soutien-gorge… Comme la poitrine de la comédienne apparaissait trop sous son costume, l’équipe fut contrainte de la bander avec du ruban adhésif. Pas forcément la chose la plus agréable qui soit.

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7.3 magnitude earthquake hits Tonga, triggering temporary tsunami advisory

A powerful underwater earthquake struck Friday off Tonga in the southern Pacific, prompting authorities to issue a tsunami advisory that was later lifted. The U.S. Geological Survey said the magnitude 7.3 quake was centered 132 miles east-southeast of Neiafu, Tonga, at a depth of 15 miles. 

It predicted strong shaking but said the probability of serious damage or casualties was small.

The U.S. Tsunami Warning System initially issued a tsunami advisory, which is one step below a tsunami warning.

“There is no longer a tsunami threat from this earthquake,” said the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center at about 1:30 am.

Tonga’s meteorological service urged residents to move inland and boaters to move away from reefs.

“Please move inland immediately until further advised,” the service said on its Facebook page.

Seismic activity is fairly common around Tonga, a country with about 100,000 people spread across 171 islands.

An undersea volcano erupted in Tonga in January, killing three people, blanketing its main island with a thick layer of volcanic ash and shooting millions of tons of water vapor high up into the atmosphere.

AFP contributed to this report.

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Bande-annonce La Planète des singes 2024 : la saga à 1,7 milliard de dollars revient avec des images impressionnantes

La bande-annonce de La Planète des Singes : Nouveau Royaume, prochain long-métrage de la saga mythique, a été dévoilée ! Rendez-vous le 22 mai 2024 au cinéma pour découvrir ce nouveau chapitre de la franchise simiesque.

La Planète des singes : Suprématie, dernier volet de la licence mythique, a débarqué dans nos contrées il y a déjà 6 ans. En décembre 2019, après le rachat de 20th Century Fox par Disney, le studio annonçait la mise en chantier d’un nouvel opus de la saga : Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes. Le titre VF sera La Planète des Singes : Nouveau Royaume. C’est Wes Ball, auteur du Labyrinthe, qui s’est chargé de la réalisation de ce nouvel épisode.

L’acteur américain Owen Teague, 24 ans, a été choisi pour incarner le rôle principal de ce nouveau long-métrage. Il interprète un primate en performance capture, succédant à Andy Serkis qui s’était glissé dans la peau de César, héros de la dernière trilogie. Freya Allan (The Witcher) et Peter Macon (The Orville) sont aussi de la partie.

L’intrigue du film se déroulera bien dans l’univers de la saga précédente La Planète des singes, comme l’a indiqué 20th Century Studios / Disney l’an dernier. On retrouvera une toute nouvelle famille de héros plusieurs années après les événements de Suprématie.

Dans La Planète des Singes : Nouveau Royaume, certains groupes n’ont jamais entendu parler de César, tandis que d’autres ont déformé son enseignement pour bâtir des empires florissants. Dans ce contexte, un chef singe commence à asservir d’autres groupes pour trouver la technologie humaine.

Pendance ce temps, un autre primate, qui a vu son clan se faire enlever, entreprend un voyage pour trouver la liberté. Une jeune femme humaine devient la clé de la quête de ce dernier, bien qu’elle ait ses propres projets.

La Planète des Singes : Le Nouveau Royaume

De
Wes Ball

Avec
Owen Teague,
Freya Allan,
Kevin Durand

Sortie le

22 mai 2024

“La Planète des Singes est l’une des sagas de science-fiction parmi les plus emblématiques de l’Histoire du cinéma. Elle fait aussi partie des œuvres indélébiles de l’Histoire de notre studio. Avec La Planète des Singes : Nouveau Royaume, nous avons le privilège de perpétuer la tradition d’un cinéma empli d’imagination et porteur de réflexion, et il nous tarde déjà de partager avec le public la vision extraordinaire de Wes pour ce nouveau chapitre qui sortira en 2024”, avait déclaré Steve Asbell, président de 20th Century Studios.

Adapté du roman de science-fiction de l’écrivain français Pierre Boulle publié en 1963, le premier film mis en scène par Franklin J. Schaffner et porté par Charlton Heston est sorti en 1968 et est devenu l’un des plus grands succès de l’année, remportant un Oscar d’honneur du meilleur maquillage. À ce jour, la dernière trilogie a rapporté 1,7 milliard de billets verts à travers le monde. Avec La Planète des Singes : Nouveau Royaume, Disney tente donc de relancer la saga à succès. En France, les 3 films précédents ont attiré quasiment 10 millions de spectateurs !

La Planète des Singes : Nouveau Royaume débarquera en France le 22 mai 2024.

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Nouveau en streaming : rembourser ses dettes grâce aux jeux télévisés, cette dans cette nouvelle comédie feel good

Attention, les “Quiz Lady” débarquent ! Disponible sur Disney+, le film avec Sandra Oh et Awkwafina est une petite comédie divertissante, comme les Américains savent faire.

C’est dans une certaine indifférence que sort ce vendredi 3 novembre le film Quiz Lady sur Disney+. Cette comédie américaine devait à l’origine être produite par Netflix avant que le géant de la SVOD ne laisse la main au profit de Disney. Imaginé par Jen d’Angelo, à qui l’on doit notamment Hocus Pocus 2 (film le plus vu sur cette même plateforme), ce film est un petit divertissement sans prétention qui mise sur ses deux têtes d’affiche.

De quoi ça parle ?

Anne est une jeune femme brillante adepte de jeux télévisés. Elle se retrouve bientôt forcée de faire équipe avec sa sœur Jenny – avec qui elle a presque perdu contact et que les aléas de la vie n’ont pas épargnée – pour aider à rembourser les dettes de jeu de leur mère.

Quand de surcroît le chien d’Anne se fait enlever contre rançon, toutes deux n’ont d’autre solution que de se lancer dans un incroyable périple à travers les Etats-Unis avec une idée en tête: faire d’Anne la championne incontestée des émissions qu’elle affectionne tant afin d’obtenir l’argent qui leur fait défaut !

Quiz Lady

Sortie :
3 novembre 2023
|
1h 39min

De
Jessica Yu

Avec
Awkwafina,
Sandra Oh,
Will Ferrell

Spectateurs
2,2

Voir sur Disney+

Miss-Réponse-à-Tout

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Étoile montante de la comédie américaine depuis quelques années, la rappeuse/actrice Awkwafina y donne la réplique à l’adorée Sandra Oh, mais aussi à Will Ferrell, Holland Taylor, Tony Hale et Jason Schwartzman. L’ancienne star de Grey’s Anatomy enchaîne les projets ces dernières années. Depuis la fin de l’excellente Killing Eve, elle ne semble pas avoir trouvé quelque chose à sa hauteur.

Et qu’on se le dise avec Quiz Lady, l’actrice est clairement là pour s’amuser, pas pour faire l’étalage de ses talents. Son personnage âgé d’une quarantaine d’années est un pastiche des pseudo-actrices ratées qui n’ont jamais réussi à faire carrière. Avec ses faux ongles, ses faux-cils et ses rajouts capillaires colorés, Sandra Oh y est méconnaissable. Mais elle n’en oublie pas, même sur le ton de la blague, de militer pour dénoncer le racisme anti-asiatique.

Ne vous attendez pas à une comédie où vous allez vous poiler. Quiz Lady nous parle surtout de famille et de la relation ratée entre deux sœurs. Du déjà-vu en somme. Le dernier quart du film vient tout de même relever la barre et apporter un petit côté feel-good à l’ensemble.

Quiz Lady, à découvrir dès maintenant sur Disney+.

New Match & Segment Announced For Next Week’s WWE NXT, Updated Lineup

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A new match and segment have been announced for next week’s episode of WWE NXT.

On Sunday afternoon, WWE announced the addition of Ridge Holland vs. Joe Coffey, as well as a segment involving new NXT North American Champion Oba Femi for this coming Tuesday night’s show.

With that now known, featured below is a look at the updated lineup for the January 16, 2024 episode of the show.

WWE NXT Preview (1/16/2024)

* 20-Woman Battle Royal to crown number one contender for NXT Women’s Championship
* Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Classic Tournament: Edris Enofe & Malik Blade vs. Carmelo Hayes & Trick Williams
* Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Classic Tournament: LWO (Joaquin Wilde & Cruz Del Toro) vs. Chase U (Riley Osbourne & Duke Hudson)
* Lyra Valkyria & Tatum Paxley vs. Lola Vice & Elektra Lopez
* Ridge Holland vs. Joe Coffey
* Oba Femi addresses the NXT Universe

 

DoorDash Driver Delivering Pizza Robbed At Gunpoint: Palos Hills PD

PALOS HILLS, IL — A DoorDash driver was robbed at gunpoint Sunday in the 10200 block of 84th Terrace in Palos Hills, reports said.

The driver said he delivered a pizza order to two people, but they did not have enough money to pay for it. They both left but police said one of them returned and pointed a handgun at the driver. The man, later identified as Ronald D. Henderson, 19, took the DoorDash driver’s wallet, cell phone and pizza, reports said.

Henderson was identified and taken into custody. He was charged with aggravated unlawful use of a weapon by a felon.

Find out what's happening in Paloswith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The 19-year-old is formerly from Palos Hills, but recently relocated to South Holland, police said. Henderson is due back in court Feb. 2 at the Bridgeview Courthouse.


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A Mosaic of Music: Stereophile‘s Clarinet Quintet CD Page 4

A Conversation with Antony Michaelson
I first met Antony Michaelson in the summer of 1978, when he and a friend were manufacturing tube amplifiers under the Michaelson & Austin name. We stayed in touch as M&A folded, as Antony spent a brief period working in the US, and as he founded British audio manufacturer Musical Fidelity. Throughout the years, Antony wore his passion for the clarinet on his sleeve, and, having played chamber music with him several times, it had always been at the back of my mind that someday I would record him playing some of the music we both loved. I spoke with him many months after the Kansas sessions and asked him what it was about the clarinet that had first attracted him.

Antony Michaelson: It was just that I loved the sound. I loved the way the thing looked and I loved the sound it made.

John Atkinson: You started playing the instrument relatively late in life.

Michaelson: Very late. I was 14, but I took to it instantly. However, being a good Jewish boy, when I was 18 I ignored whatever level of talent I had and went into accountancy. This made me utterly ill, and eventually I was sacked. Then I got a business degree, which was a complete waste of time. Then I had six jobs in one and a half years of employment, because I just couldn’t settle. But finally I went to music college, where I studied with Keith Puddy and John McCaw.

Atkinson: You’re currently studying with Dame Thea King, who has recorded all the major clarinet works for Hyperion Records.

Michaelson: Yes. When I was doing the Mozart Clarinet Concerto record [recorded by Tony Faulkner in DSD and released in 1998 on CD on Antony’s Musical Fidelity label, MF018], I heard Thea doing a broadcast of a master class and I really liked her approach. I phoned her up but she was a bit leery; you know, who the hell was I? Nevertheless, she invited me to play for her. She ripped me apart, of course, really ripped me apart, but she did take me on. It was an epiphany. I can’t tell you the change it made in my playing. It was huge.

Atkinson: All the years I’ve known you, you’ve always been searching for a better clarinet. What instrument did you play at the sessions for Mosaic?

Michaelson: It was a Rossi clarinet. I used to play a type of clarinet called a “pre-war 1010,” which is a very English thing. The “1010” refers to the bore of the instrument, and they’re not made anymore. Well, there is one chap making them, but they’re just not the same as the pre-war instruments. I had some very careful measurements made, and there was a fundamental difference between the newer English-bore clarinets and my pre-war 1010 in terms of the wall thickness. Then I heard of this chap in Chile, Luis Rossi, who makes an English-bore clarinet. I had a long conversation with him. The guy’s a genius—apart from making amazing clarinets, he’s an amazing clarinetist. I got Rossi to make me a pair of clarinets to my spec, and they were better than my pre-war 1010. And that’s what I used on my concerto record.

Atkinson: But that wasn’t the clarinet you played on our recording.

Michaelson: No, that was one of the next pair I had made, from extremely old blackwood. Very old ebony. There were also a couple of changes to the tone holes that I wanted to make to improve the intonation.

Atkinson: For the Mozart and Brahms quintets you used a clarinet pitched in A, which plays a semitone, or half a step, lower than the usual B-flat instrument.

Michaelson: Yes, the A instrument produces a much more voluminous sound than the B-flat. The B-flat is much more brilliant and bright.

Atkinson: Many people will probably be surprised to learn how different clarinets can be. There’s the bore, the wall thickness, the tapering of the tone holes, the quality of the reeds…before you even start to play a note, it seems there’s as much to worry about as there is in a high-end audio system.

Michaelson: The clarinet is a very strange instrument. When you start playing it it’s all very, very easy, it all works easily. But once you start playing it properly, I reckon it’s getting on to be the hardest orchestral instrument there is to play. And there are more differences in clarinet sound, in my opinion, than there are in many other instruments. English clarinets are one thing, German clarinets are something else again, Viennese are something else again, and Eastern Europe is something else different again. And American clarinets…there are all sorts of weird things going on with the bore—they have “chokes,” lumps of wood designed to damp some of the vibrations, the resonances.

Atkinson: I remember the first time I heard the Brahms Quintet—the way the clarinet creeps in with that rising arpeggio at the very beginning raised goosebumps.

Michaelson: The Brahms is an extraordinary work. You’ve got this incredible richness of texture, and yet the most amazing economy of resource. If you look at the rhythmic and harmonic and melodic elements, there are very, very few. But Brahms marshals them and reuses them and restructures them and turns them upside down and inside out. The more you get to know about what he does…I just can’t believe the intellectual achievement of the work. Yet it has this wonderful unity—the way, at the very end of the fourth movement, you’ve got a wonderful recitative that leads inexorably back to the opening theme of the first movement. In the voicing and the patterns of that last movement, it’s so powerful!

NEXT: Page 5 »

ARTICLE CONTENTS

Page 1
Page 2
Page 3
Page 4
Page 5
The Mosaic Music
The Antony Michaelson Quintet
Blue Heaven Studios
Who was What, Where, & When

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Audeze LCD-5 headphones

Years ago, as a side gig with a friend, I started a small business importing and distributing high-end women’s garments from European makers: swimwear, hosiery, bodysuits, underwear. At the time, the consistent fit and finish, comfort, and manufacturing quality we appreciated was hard to find stateside.


I never thought I’d see these two interests—women’s undergarments and hi-fi—converge, until I started researching this review of the $4500 Audeze LCD-5 headphones, the company’s current flagship.


Sometime in the middle of the previous decade, Audeze was seeking a better way to make comfortable, high-performance ear cups. A well-connected packaging vendor learned about this project and took the Audeze design team to visit a small factory in “the OC”—Orange County, California—that uses thermo-forming machines to mold foam into contoured forms for use in, among other products, push-up bras. Turns out, the requirements for these two product categories are not all that different. A curvy path then led to Audeze’s process for making better-fitting, contoured earpads for superior comfort, seal, and sound. The LCD-5 features the most recent version of this high-tech ear cup concept. The whole LCD-5 is manufactured close by, at Audeze’s facility in Santa Ana, also in the OC.




The LCD-5’s black leather earpads are the softest I recall ever nestling on my ear. But there’s more to these earpads than meets the skin—they were “sculpted to eliminate resonance and absorption as much as possible,” Audeze’s Chris Berens told me in an email. Audeze refers to Chris as their “artist-relations guru,” reflecting the fact that, in addition to the audiophile market, Audeze does a good bit of business in the pro-audio sector as well: recording and mastering engineers and musicians in the studio. Audeze’s top-range ‘phones have a reputation for being sonically revealing yet nonfatiguing, snug-fitting yet comfortable, even for long listening sessions—characteristics that endear them to musicians (footnote 1), recording engineers, audiophiles …


… and doctors? In 2016, industrial-design firm BoomBang and researchers from UCLA’s Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior approached Audeze for help designing a headphone that could be used inside an MRI machine. It had to cancel noise effectively (those MRI chambers are loud), incorporate a microphone, and—most important—be transparent to the scanner and safe in a powerful magnetic field. Herb Reichert told this story in Gramophone Dreams #56, including his assessment of the civilian version of the resulting headphone, the Audeze CRBN. I heard it at CanJam, powered by one of the same headphone amplifiers I used in this review, the Linear Tube Audio (LTA) Z10e. Audeze is in the gaming sector, too. The company made headlines lately when it was acquired by Sony, mainly for their gaming headsets; Sony, of course, makes the PlayStation. Apparently, the Audeze Maxwell is a major hit among gamers.




The product

Audeze’s LCD-5 headphone arrived nestled neatly in a black aluminum travel case, similar in its dimensions to my oboe case with a similar suitcase-style handle and molded foam inserts to secure the ‘phone in place. The case provides protection, which is good, and it looks rather serious: I felt conspicuous when I took the LCD-5 to the radio station to monitor my weekly show on WAIF, feeling more secret agent than deejay.


The case has latches; there’s even a key. The matte-black finish is susceptible to scratching, but that’s okay: A scratched aluminum case shows the headphones have been in action.


The LCD-5 is the successor to the LCD-4, which John Atkinson reviewed for Stereophile and Tyll Herstens reviewed and measured for InnerFidelity. Like its predecessor, the LCD-5 uses planar-magnetic technology. Planar drivers must have a large surface area, sometimes resulting in a headphone that is heavy and clunky. Yet the LCD-5 weighs 420gm, a little less than a pound, one-third less than its predecessor. The Audeze website calls that weight “blazingly” low, and it is indeed low for a planar magnetic, though it’s still considerably heavier than some dynamic headphones.


The LCD-5 incorporates several technical improvements over the LCD-4. The 90mm diaphragm’s Nano Scale polymer diaphragm is 0.5 microns thick—much thinner than the previous Ultra-Thin diaphragm and said to be among the world’s thinnest.


The LCD-5 drivers use proprietary, single-sided Fluxor neodymium N50 magnet arrays and a voice-coil concept called Parallel Uniforce. The idea is to vary the width of the conductor to match, or counter, variations in the magnetic flux to achieve uniform force across the membrane. The secret sauce is Audeze’s process of etching the headphone’s particular voice-coil pattern into the conducting layer. “Each headphone model has its own unique voice-coil pattern, which is computer-optimized for the best relationship to the flux density of its magnet arrangement,” Berens said in an emailed response to my questions. “The LCD-5 pattern is by far the most advanced and complex” of all Audeze’s offerings. “The Parallel Uniforce voice-coil is a big part of increasing efficiency while reducing weight, since we were able to use roughly half the number of magnets compared to LCD-4 while keeping the impedance low to make the drivers relatively easy to drive,” Berens said. All this technology adds up to a transducer with a sci-fi–sounding name: Nano-Scale Parallel Uniforce.


With all their headphones, Audeze strives for a house sound. Their proprietary target graph is similar, but not identical, to the Harman curve.


In addition to those soft leather earpads, the enclosures’ other structure had material updates. The headband is made of carbon fiber. The yokes, grilles, and some internal parts are magnesium. Other internal parts, including the stator plates, are aluminum. The yoke rods are stainless steel.


Whether a headphone is sealed or open-back—the LCD-5 is open—the ear cup’s interior and its seal with the user’s head is an engineered space that needs to be optimized for the soundwaves moving inside it. The tapered design of the LCD-5 earpads minimizes contact area while maintaining a good seal. Their shape is said to reduce interior reflections. The LCD-5’s “Fazor” waveguides—another technology with a sci-fi name—are said to organize soundwave energy, reducing diffraction close to the ear.


With some headphones, the earpad cushions attach with clips or magnets, making them easy to remove and switch out. Some companies even provide a variety of earpads to let you fine-tune the sound. The ear cups on Audeze’s higher-end models are attached semipermanently because Audeze is unwilling to compromise sound quality (footnote 2). Besides, Audeze argues, Audeze headphone users change earpads only every three to seven years. When it’s time to replace the earpads, they’ll send you a kit for $125, with a new set of earpads and instructions. Replacement is straightforward and takes about five minutes, Berens said.


The LCD-5 ships with a slender, braided 2.5m cable that ends in a 4-pin, balanced XLR termination. A ¼” adapter is included. Directional, high-purity, continuous-cast copper strands guide the signal. The cable feels substantial—it is likely to hold up well—but it’s not heavy and it is quite flexible. Customers may, of course, replace it with an aftermarket cable. Upon connection, the cables lock securely into place with a click.


When it comes to headphones, I’m not an easy fit. Most headphones need to be set to the smallest/tightest setting to stay securely on my noggin. The LCD-5 fit my head and ears with what felt like a very good seal with a couple of notches left over.


One final, well-conceived detail: The cable-connection sockets are positioned farther back on the ear cups than on many other headphones, which helps keep the cables out of the way—farther from your hands and out of your face. The cable’s “Goldilocks” length worked well for me: long enough to let me roll a comfy office chair around, but not so long that the cable dragged on the floor or found its way under the chair wheels in the studio at the radio station.


Listening

I plugged the LCD-5 into my PS Audio Sprout100 integrated amplifier’s ¼” headphone jack for a few score hours of break-in time. Serious listening started with the Audeze sourced and driven by the Mytek Brooklyn Bridge DAC/streamer/preamplifier—the discontinued version, not the current one—playing tracks from my computer’s SSD via a USB connection. To listen balanced, I fed Brooklyn Bridge’s line output to the Mytek Liberty THX AAA HPA headphone amplifier, using the Liberty’s balanced XLR jack to connect the LCD-5. Later, I listened through a loaner LTA Z10e.


Whatever source/amplifier setup I used, aspects of the LCD-5’s signature sound seemed consistent: air, spaciousness, and openness combined with copious fine detail. The LCD-5 was plenty revealing. The LTA amplifier supplied more body, while the Mytek amplifiers enhanced detail. My guess is that most audiophiles would prefer the LTA, a pairing Audeze specifically recommended to me, though for studio use, something like the Mytek might be a better fit. It depends what you’re listening for, I guess.




The LCD-5 encouraged me to listen anew to corners of my music collection that had been gathering dust, including some old Y2K-era compilation CDs. I cued up a couple of tracks from DJ Pogo Presents Block Party Breaks – Classic Original Breaks and Rare Funk 45s (16/44.1 FLAC CD rip, Strut Records STRUTCD002), a collection of classic tracks whose grooves got (and still get) sampled on hip-hop tunes. Esther Williams’s “Last Night Changed It All (I Really Had a Ball),” the CD’s first track, kicked off the party with crisp percussion, disco-style strings, and a catchy chorus. The production’s individual elements were distinct, easy to hear—it’s clear why these ‘phones are popular among sound engineers. Next up, the fun, funky wah-wah groove on Badder Than Evil’s “Hot Wheels (The Chase),” which poured into my ears heavy and thick, infectious and irresistible. Next, I listened to Babe Ruth’s rendition of “The Mexican,” by Babe Ruth songwriter and guitarist Alan Shatlock, which originally appeared on the album First Base. I encourage you to listen then guess where the band is from (footnote 3). The revealing nature of the LCD-5 kept me listening, rapt, tuned in to track-to-track production variations. On all these tracks, the music sounded full-blown, spread out, spacious. Instruments expanded beyond the headphones—beyond my ears—in various directions.


Footnote 1: They seem to have a special affinity for guitarists: The LCD-5 publicity pack features photos of Julian Lage and Bill Frisell.—Jim Austin


Footnote 2: A graph provided by Audeze shows a significant reduction in low-bass output with clip-on earpads—but also significant changes in the treble, especially the presence region. See audeze.com/blogs/technology-and-innovation/why-we-use-adhesive-to-attach-earpads-on-our-upper-end-models.


Footnote 3: Babe Ruth was an English band founded in 1971. “The Mexican” was an early hit at discos. It is “considered influential in the early development of b-boying and hip-hop culture,” according to Wikipedia.

NEXT: Page 2 »

COMPANY INFO

Audeze
3412 S. Susan St.
Santa Ana
CA 92704
[email protected]
(714) 581-8010
audeze.com

ARTICLE CONTENTS

Page 1
Page 2
Specifications
Associated Equipment

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Déjà Vu Audio


On A Higher Note’s Philip O’Hanlon is typically seen at shows playing unusual records while entertaining attendees with his charming storytelling and Irish brogue. This was something different.


Brogue intact, O’Hanlon was operating Déjà Vu Audio’s room. No surprise there, as Vu is a major mid-Atlantic dealer, based in Vienna, Virginia. The room contained O’Hanlon’s Graham LS5/9 standmount loudspeakers ($7773/pair), a MoonRiver 404 Reference integrated amplifier ($5995) with a MoonRiver MM/MC phono stage module ($775). O’Hanlon played records on a minty fresh Garrard Model 301 turntable with a Triplanar tonearm and a Koetsu Rosewood cartridge. The Grahams were positioned in front of a huge pair of DIY floorstanders with two massive 18″ woofers and a 15″ horn. An equipment rack held a classic Western Electric amplifier.


This hybrid setup spanning decades did an excellent job playing records from O’Hanlon’s collection, including Ravi Shankar and Phillip Glass’s Passages and the Penguin Café Orchestra.


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Ce soir à la télé : noté 4,1/5, c’est l’un des meilleurs films de Tom Hanks

Chaque jour, AlloCiné vous recommande un film à (re)voir à la télé. Ce soir : les retrouvailles de Robert Zemeckis et Tom Hanks.

En 1994, Robert Zemeckis dirige Tom Hanks dans Forrest Gump – une collaboration fructueuse couronnée de 6 Oscars, dont ceux de la Meilleure réalisation et du Meilleur acteur. Six ans plus tard, les deux hommes se retrouvent pour Seul au monde.

Ici, Tom Hanks interprète Chuck Noland, un employé de FedEx qui se retrouve naufragé sur une île inhabitée après le crash de son avion. Pendant quatre ans, il tente de survivre et se lie d’amitié avec un ballon de volley-ball, qu’il nomme Wilson.

Envie d’un autre conseil TV pour ce soir ? On vous recommande le film pour lequel Valérie Lemercier a décroché le César de la Meilleure actrice !

Difficile de ne pas s’émouvoir devant cette étonnante robinsonnade pour laquelle Tom Hanks a donné de sa personne en perdant plus de 20 kilos et en se laissant pousser les cheveux et la barbe. Privé de partenaire de jeu, le comédien se surpasse dans cet exercice particulièrement difficile.

Seul au monde

Sortie :

17 janvier 2001

|
2h 23min

De
Robert Zemeckis

Avec
Tom Hanks,
Helen Hunt,
Nick Searcy

Presse
3,7

Spectateurs
4,1

Streaming

Sa prestation lui vaut ainsi d’être nommé à l’Oscar du Meilleur acteur. Si la prestigieuse statuette est remportée par Russell Crowe pour Gladiator, Tom Hanks est toutefois récompensé du Golden Globe dans la même catégorie.

Film réaliste, dur et poignant, mais aussi porteur d’espoir, Seul au monde est un succès à sa sortie. Il récolte 424 millions de dollars de recettes dans le monde, pour un budget de 90 millions. En France, 1,7 million de spectateurs sont allés le voir en salles.

Seul au monde de Robert Zemeckis avec Tom Hanks, Helen Hunt, Nick Searcy…

Ce soir sur 6ter à 21h05

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