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      Gisèle Pelicot announces she will publish a memoir

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 20 March

    The survivor of mass rape who became an international symbol of fortitude hopes ‘to convey a message of strength and courage’ in A Hymn to Life

    A memoir by mass rape survivor Gisèle Pelicot is due to be published early next year.

    Pelicot became known internationally last year when she waived her right to anonymity in a trial which saw her ex-husband found guilty of drugging and raping her, and inviting dozens of strangers to abuse her over nearly a decade.

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      Sofia Gubaidulina obituary

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 20 March

    Russian composer whose music expressed the deep, emotional mysticism that sprang from her religious convictions

    When the composer Sofia Gubaidulina, who has died aged 93, began to include overtly religious ideas in her concert music, it proved a provocative step to take in Leonid Brezhnev’s Soviet Union of the late 1960s. These ideas were expressed through titles and a kind of dramaturgy that she called “instrumental symbolism”. Switching from one instrument to another, or between different parts of the same instrument, she suggested extra-musical and even theological ideas, rather like an acoustic equivalent of the geometrical distortions and symbolism familiar from the icons of the Eastern Orthodox church that she loved so much.

    With works such as Introitus (1978) for piano and chamber orchestra and In Croce (1979) for cello and organ, she acquired a reputation in the world of non-official Soviet culture, inspiring for enthusiasts but irritating to the old guard of the Composers’ Union. She refused to be intimidated.

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      First trailer arrives for Paul Thomas Anderson’s collaboration with Leonardo DiCaprio

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 20 March

    One Battle After Another is inspired by Thomas Pynchon’s experimental postmodern novel Vineland and will also feature Benicio Del Toro, Alana Haim and Sean Penn

    Less than 24 hours after Warner Bros announced they had pushed back the release date for Paul Thomas Anderson’s new film to late September – with an eye, suggested pundits, on teeing up its star, Leonardo DiCaprio, for a second Oscar – a first trailer for One Battle After Another has arrived.

    The brief teaser foregrounds the characters played by DiCaprio and co-star Teyana Taylor, who are are seen avidly practising gun combat.

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      Steve Reich: ‘We all wish art could counter the direction of US politics. But it can’t’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 20 March • 1 minute

    Now 88, the minimalist composer has reissued his life’s work. He answers your questions about Bowie, the Grateful Dead, spirituality – and his complicated friendship with Philip Glass

    Why does minimalist music consist of so much repetition? Correllisflute
    The word “minimalist” was invented by Michael Nyman when he was more of a music critic than a composer, but the kind of music that I and people like me deal with has changes on a much smaller scale than people are used to hearing. The number of repetitions is the nature of the music. On my early pieces, such as It’s Gonna Rain or Piano Phase, everything moves so slowly. Some people will say: “To hell with it, I’m not listening to that,” but those who do experience a different kind of listening.

    Not only was David Bowie influenced by your work during his Berlin era , but also your Clapping Music is sampled on the hypnotic James Murphy remix of Bowie’s Love Is Lost (Hello Steve Reich Mix). What do you recall of your conversations with Bowie in 1978? McScootikins
    We played Music for 18 Musicians at the Bottom Line in New York, the first time we’d played it in a rock club. Afterwards, David Bowie came up and introduced himself and a photograph was taken, but really it was one of the very short post-concert conversations. It was the exchange of mutual admiration that really mattered. I was so delighted to see him there and he told me he’d heard us play the piece before, in Berlin. It was a nice coming together. The James Murphy remix is an odd combination that seems to work. Sometimes, you hear what people do with your music and think: “What have they done to me?” But that sounded really interesting. I wanted to hear it again.

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      Boulez: Livre pour Quatuor album review | Andrew Clements's classical album of the week

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 20 March • 1 minute

    Quatuor Diotima
    (Pentatone)
    Moments of stillness and animation, spareness and exuberance, are highlighted in a confident performance of a work started in 1948 – now finally with its fourth movement

    During his lifetime, “work in progress” became a familiar label in Pierre Boulez ’s list of compositions, as many of his pieces were subjected to repeated revision and elaboration over the course of his career. Most did eventually reach what Boulez regarded as a definitive state, but the one that remained in compositional limbo for the longest time was his only string quartet, which he had begun to plan in 1948 (the year of his Second Piano Sonata and the cantata Le Soleil des Eaux). For many years, only five of the projected six movements of what he called Livre pour Quatuor were performed (and recorded); the work only reached its final form after the composer’s death and almost 70 years after it was conceived, when in 2017 the composer Philippe Manoury completed the reconstruction of the fourth and longest of its movements.

    When planning the quartet, Boulez had taken Beethoven’s late quartets and Berg’s Lyric Suite as his starting points, not so much as models to follow but to react against, and the language of the Livre generates its energy from the tension between the ghosts of the classical forms and the pointillist total serialism that the postwar generation of composers had fashioned from the music of Webern and Messiaen. From the start, too, Boulez had envisaged it as a modular work, from which performers could select which movements to play, and in what order, with a title echoing the symbolist poet Mallarmé’s Livre, a book whose loose-leaf pages could be read in any order.

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      Turandot review – with high energy, mighty voices and delicacy, epic staging feels newly minted

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 20 March

    Royal Opera House, London
    Andrei Serban’s 1984 production of Puccini’s final opera is meticulously revived with Sondra Radvanovsky and SeokJong Baek both stellar in the central roles. In the pit, Rafael Payare brings care and lightness to the intricate score

    Andrei Serban’s 1984 production of Puccini’s final opera was a well-flogged warhorse by the turn of the millennium, hugely assisted by the global 1990s popularity of the aria Nessun Dorma . Revived only two years ago it returns again, part of a Puccini-rich season marking the centenary of the composer’s death (the event which left Turandot unfinished). But thankfully this staging is still far from showing its age.

    Instead Jack Furness’s meticulous staging, tightly choreographed by Kate Flatt, feels newly minted. When the blood red drapes at the front of the stage are ripped down in the opening bars, the oppressive ceiling-to-floor set looms over everything, severed head masks looking down. The action takes place amid shadowy watchers, seemingly indifferent to the heartlessness that pervades Turandot almost up to its sudden happily-ever-after end, which used the cut version of Franco Alfano’s 1926 completion.

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      Santa Fe clinic says Gene Hackman’s wife called them the day after police say she died

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 20 March

    The county sheriff’s office have confirmed that Betsy Arakawa made the phone call on 12 February disproving their initial belief that she had died a day earlier

    A private healthcare clinic in New Mexico has cast doubt on official findings about the timing of the death of Gene Hackman’s wife, Betsy Arakawa, claiming that she rang them on 12 February – the day after police say she died.

    Dr Josiah Child, the head of Cloudberry Health in Santa Fe, where the couple lived, told the Mail on Sunday: “Mrs Hackman didn’t die on 11 February because she called my clinic on 12 February.”

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      Flow review – Oscar-winning animation is a beautiful and painterly animal adventure

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 20 March • 1 minute

    The wordless aftermath of a global catastrophe sees a cat team up with other creatures in tremendously imagined apocalyptic vision

    Humans are nowhere to be seen and the animals have taken over in this gorgeous animated adventure that was the dark horse winner at last month’s Academy Awards . It’s a film full of wonders but not a single word of dialogue in the epic tale of one cat’s adventures after a flood of biblical proportions (presumably a catastrophic result of global heating). As visions of apocalypse go, it’s rather lovely: a world lush with nature, animals learning to get by together. (Charmingly, in his Oscar acceptance speech, director Gints Zilbalodis thanked his cats and dogs.)

    Our hero is a slinky black cat with expressive yellow eyes as big as saucers. You get the sense that this feline is more accustomed to the pampered lap of luxury than slumming it in the wild. Alone in the forest, he saunters into a wooden cabin that seems to be owned by an artist. Is this his old home? Where is his human? Then a huge wave crashes through the forest like a tsunami and the cat takes refuge on a clapped out sailboat. Like an ark without a Noah, the boat accumulates beasts: a friendly golden retriever, a mellow capybara, a petulant lemur and a secretary bird.

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      Keira Knightley at 40: her best 20 best films – ranked!

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 20 March

    Ahead of her 40th birthday next week, we look back over the 25-year big-screen career of the Oscar-nominated actor, from Atonement to Love Actually, Pride & Prejudice to Star Wars

    Knightley’s first big role was in this teen thriller, about four private school kids partying in a bomb shelter, where it all goes predictably haywire. It’s a horror, and not just for the sheer dominance of low-rise bootcut jeans. Even in its more hysterical moments, Knightley brings nuance to the posh-girl stereotype.

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