President Obama may have escaped for the moment at least becoming the first U.S. chief executive to preside over a U.S. government default on its debts.
But he now holds the dubious distinction of becoming the first president on whose watch the nation’s debt was downgraded by a major credit-rating agency as Standard & Poor’s on Friday cut the rating on U.S. long-term debt to AA-plus from the highest level, AAA.
Lester William Polsfuss (June 9, 1915 – August 12, 2009)
Les Paul worked as a professional musician from his late teens, and was leading his own trio in New York City by the age of 21. After serving with Armed Forces Radio in World War Two, he became a staff musician with NBC radio in Los Angeles. His experimentation with guitars became a frenzy in the late 1940s, building the first solid-body electric guitar in 1946 and releasing a six-way overdub, “Lover,” which became a hit for Capitol, as did its flip side, “Brazil.” Les Paul’s sound was like nothing before it: fast, multi-layered, and deep.
He married the singer Mary Ford (born Colleen Somerset) in 1949, and together they recorded some of the biggest hits of the 1950s: “How High the Moon,” “Vaya con Dios,” “The World is Waiting for the Sunrise,” and “Mockin’ Bird Hill.” He overdubbed both his guitar work and her vocals, working almost exclusively in his home studio, using an 8-track tape deck he designed and built himself. Paul was a perfectionist, and his recordings sound better today than almost anything coming from major label studios of the same period. In fact, the legendary sound engineer Tom Dowd credited Les Paul for inspiring Atlantic Records to purchase one of the first commercially-produced 8-track recorders, on which many of the label’s best-known records were recorded.
Paul and Ford divorced in 1963, and he retired from recording except for an occasional appearance. He cut a solo (overdub) album for London, “Les Paul Now,” in 1968, and a collaboration with Chet Atkins in 1976. He returned to live work in 1984, appearing with a trio in New York City jazz clubs. In 1988, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for his influence as a player and engineer. He continued to perform live once at weekly, usually at the Iridium Club in Manhattan. His 90th birthday was marked by a tribute concert at Carnegie Hall featuring Eric Clapton and others. And in 2006, he set the record as the oldest performer to win a Grammy Award in a rock music category with his first new album since his work with Chet Atkins: “Les Paul & Friends: American Made, World Played,” which included Clapton, Peter Frampton, and Jeff Beck among his collaborators.
Recordings
* The Les Paul Trio, Glendale Records GL 6014
* Swingin’ South, CBS CL 1206
* Lover’s Luau, CBS CS 8086
* Warm & Wonderful, Columbia CS 8488
* New Sound, Capitol T-286
* Hits of Les and Mary, Capitol DT-1476
* Les Paul Now!, London Phase 4 SP 44101
* Les Paul & Friends: American Made World Played, Capitol CD Les Paul Carrier
In 1965, Paul went into semi-retirement, although he did return to the studio occasionally. He and Ford had divorced in December 1962, as she could no longer cope with the traveling lifestyle their act required of them.[citation needed] Paul’s most-recognizable recordings from then through the mid-1970s were an album for London Records/Phase 4 Stereo, Les Paul Now (1968), on which he updated some of his earlier hits; and, backed by some of Nashville’s celebrated studio musicians, a meld of jazz and country improvisation with fellow guitar virtuoso Chet Atkins, Chester and Lester (1976), for RCA Victor.
By the late 1980s, Paul had returned to active live performance, continuing into his 80s even though he often found it painful to play the guitar because of arthritis in his hands. In 2006, at age 90, he won two Grammys at the 48th Annual Grammy Awards for his album Les Paul & Friends: American Made World Played. He also performed every Monday night, accompanied by a trio which included guitarist Lou Pallo, bassist Paul Nowinksi (and later, Nicki Parrott) and pianist John Colianni, originally at Fat Tuesdays, and later at the Iridium Jazz Club on Broadway in the Times Square area of New York City.[34][35][36]
Composer Richard Stein (1909–1992) sued Paul for plagiarism, charging that Paul’s “Johnny (Is the Boy for Me)” was taken from Stein’s 1937 song “Sanie cu zurgălăi” (Romanian for “Sledge with Bells”). A 2000 cover version of “Johnny” by Belgian musical group Vaya Con Dios that credited Paul prompted another action by the Romanian Musical Performing and Mechanical Rights Society.[37]
For many years Les Paul would sometimes surprise radio hosts Steve King and Johnnie Putman with a call to the “Life After Dark Show” on WGN (AM) in Chicago. These calls would take place in the wee hours of Tuesday Morning following his show at the Iridium Jazz Club. Steve and Johnnie continue to honor Les on Tuesday Mornings at 2:35 AM with their segment “A Little More Les” drawing from around 30 hours of recorded conversations with Les.
The popular “Today” co-anchor ended her five-year run on Wednesday, telling viewers her decision to go is “right, but it’s hard.”
That decision was clearly hers alone. Seated beside co-host Matt Lauer, she has helped keep “Today” the audience front-runner among network morning shows. The 57-year-old Vieira has explained she wants to spend more time with her family.
Lauer called Vieira’s final day “a very bittersweet Wednesday morning.”
The broadcast made room for news about the nation’s severe-heat advisories and scandal-ridden Congressman Anthony Weiner’s Twitter woes. But throughout the show, tributes and highlight reels honored Vieira’s “Today” tenure.
Vieira wiped her eyes as she was serenaded by Carole King with a Vieira favorite, “You’ve Got a Friend.” Then, spontaneously, she led the “Today” gang across the studio to gather around King at the piano.
“It’s a hard one,” she said at the top of the show, which, despite being quite Vieira-heavy also managed to sprinkle in some actual news over the course of the first three hours. “Very mixed emotions. I know it’s right, but it’s hard.”
Joined by her husband Richard Cohen and the family dog Jasper, the whole Today show crew rallied together to say goodbye to Vieira, paying tribute to her throughout the morning with retrospective clips and a fair share of surprises.
First up, a surprise performance by Carole King, who sang one of Vieira’s favorite songs, “You’ve Got a Friend.”
“I don’t know what to say,” an already emotional Vieira said.
Thankfully, Lauer, Al Roker, Ann Curry, Kathie Lee Gifford, Hoda Kotb, Natalie Morales and the rest of the faces of Today did.
“It’s been a privilege working with you over these past five years. I know the folks at home have enjoyed starting their day with you as well,” Lauer said, ramping up to the biggest surprise of the morning—a technically and creatively impressive, continuously shot group lip-sync, in which every single member of on- and off-air talent wore I [Heart] Meredith T-shirts and serenaded her with Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin’.”
Sitting out on the Plaza with Matt, Ann and Al, the trio one by one paid personal tribute to her.
“I kept coming up with jokes and sarcasm,” Lauer told her, explaining his process of trying to think of what to say. “I realized it’s because I’m afraid that if I really tell you how I feel, I’m going to turn into a blubbering idiot. But it’s your last day, so a little blubbering.
“I adore you, and I have since the night we had dinner five and a half years ago. Your talent and your warmth and your generosity…your sense of humor I will remember most, you made me laugh every single day here, and I thank you for that. But the bottom line is this: I have marveled over the fact that someone who has talent as prodigious as yours, how small your ego is. You’ve taught us all how to be great teammates, and that’s the gift that I’ll take away from you. Thank you so much.
“I don’t want to go now,” Meredith laughed (and cried). “[But] I went upstairs and they changed the lock on my dressing room.
“Life is about changing. I love you all, you are the best bar none, it’s such a family and it’s really hard to leave a family, so I’m not going to say goodbye, at all…All of you I’m putting in my heart so I’ll never ever lose you. I love you so much.”
NEW DELHI: To protest the midnight crackdown on Ramdev and thousands of his supporters forcibly shutting their hunger strike, Anna Hazare said he will go on hunger strike again on June 8 at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi.
Voicing his concern over the midnight crackdown, Anna said he and other members of Lokpal drafting panel will boycott June 6 meeting with government. He also warned the government that if it does not take a lesson, a bigger agitation will be launched.
Speaking at a press conference in New Delhi this evening, Hazare said the midnight swoop is against the basic tenets of democracy. The Prime Minister Manmohan Singh must answer to the people of this country, he said.
Meanwhile, Anna said that the government is not serious about drafting an effective Lokpal Bill. The five civil society members of the Lokpal Bill drafting committee have decided to boycott the meeting of the panel on Monday in New Delhi.
The decision to boycott the meeting comes just a few hours after the crackdown by Delhi Police on Baba Ramdev and his supporters, who were protesting against corruption and the issue of black money, at Delhi’s Ramlila Ground on the intervening night of June 4-5.
Several civil society members and social activists have strongly condemned the crackdown on Ramdev and his supporters and their forceful eviction. Veteran Gandhian and Lokpal Bill drafting committee member Anna Hazare, whose four-day long fast in April against corruption forced the United Progressive Alliance ( UPA) Government to form the panel, called it an undemocratic action.
“What the government has done is a blot on democracy. There was no need for the Government to supress this movement and attack those protesting at midnight. It was not right to lathicharge the people at midnight Small children and women were brutally assaulted. The entire country should stand up as one and protest against this brutal and inhuman action,” said Hazare.
She and boyfriend Justin Bieber are in the first throes of their romance.
So perhaps Selena Gomez could be forgiven for forgetting to pack a change of clothes after spending the night at her boyfriend’s house in Canada.
The 18-year-old Disney starlet sported the same outfit this morning as last night as she left a residential house in Canada, thought to belong to a relative of Justin’s.
Wearing her hair up in a loose ponytail, the star wore the same baggy white and blue striped top, blue jeans and flip flops as she and her 17-year-old boyfriend headed out together.
However, later Selena managed to find a new outfit and changed into an sexy ensemble
She looked stunning in a black and white corset top, black shorts and ballet pumps as she and Justin headed out for a bite to eat.
Dressed casually in a white shirt and stonewashed jeans, the singer stopped to sign autographs for his young fans, with Selena alongside him.
Selena is in Toronto to visit Justin’s family and friends in his hometown of Stratford, Ontario.
The pair were later seen chatting animatedly in the local lunch spot before sharing a kiss.
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