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DUKAS_163256806_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Michael Umana from Colombia (with friend) watch a street performer in Covent Garden, London. 24/11/23
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DUKAS_163256797_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Street performer Richard Filby. Covent garden, London. 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_163256794_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
A Magician performs to an audience in Covent Garden, Westminster. London, 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_163256792_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Daniel the Magician, in Covent Garden, Westminster. London, 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_163256807_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Daniel the Magician performs to an audience in Covent Garden, Westminster. London, 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_163256796_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Daniel the Magician performs to an audience in Covent Garden, Westminster. London, 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_163256791_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Daniel the Magician performs to an audience in Covent Garden, Westminster. London, 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163256803_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Daniel the Magician performs to an audience in Covent Garden, Westminster. London, 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163256808_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Daniel the Magician performs to an audience in Covent Garden, Westminster. London, 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163256793_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Daniel the Magician performs to an audience in Covent Garden, Westminster. London, 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163256802_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Twins Hubert and Harold Pereira dance to some buskers in Covent Garden, Westminster. London 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_163256795_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Twins Hubert and Harold Pereira dance to some buskers in Covent Garden, Westminster. London 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163256846_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Twins Hubert and Harold Pereira dance to some buskers in Covent Garden, Westminster. London 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163256789_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Twins Hubert and Harold Pereira dance to some buskers in Covent Garden, Westminster. London 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163256805_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Twins Hubert and Harold Pereira dance to some buskers in Covent Garden, Westminster. London 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163256790_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Twins Hubert and Harold Pereira dance to some buskers in Covent Garden, Westminster. London 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163256804_EYE
'Out of tune and out of key': Covent Garden's buskers fight back against bid to silence them
Performers say Westminster council move to enforce licences and restrict acts' volume, staging and props threatens a centuries-old London tradition.
Westminster councillors will meet to discuss tightening the regulation of buskers. A system of licensing introduced in April 2021 has not stemmed the flow of complaints about noise and disturbance.
Most of the acts in Covent Garden don't have Westminster council’s perform licence; instead they self-regulate under the aegis of the Covent Garden Street Performers Association. They're proud of being part of a tradition that dates back centuries, at least to the days of Samuel Pepys and probably much further. They say Westminster is targeting them unfairly, as most complaints, they say, concern musicians in Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.
Hubert Pareira dances to a couple of buskers in Covent Garden, Westminster. London, 24/11/23
© Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_162264351_EYE
'I want to be safe': Israelis rush to obtain gun licences
Applications to bear arms fast-tracked amid feelings of insecurity after 7 October Hamas attacks.
In a gun shop in the West Bank, a salesman laid a collection of unloaded handguns on the counter and invited a group of men gathered around him to pick them up and see how it felt to squeeze the trigger. His advice was soundtracked by a staccato of automatic rifle fire from the adjacent shooting range, and the occasional rhythmic sound of shots from a handgun.
The gun shop, with its glass counters decorated with shiny spent bullet casings, sits within Caliber 3: a complex of firing ranges, a martial arts training room and a synagogue on the fringes of the Gush Etzion settlement, in the hills of the West Bank south of Bethlehem.
Israelis are seen at anti terror academy, firing range and gun shop Caliber 3, in the West Bank as they are trying handguns to purchase for the first time as a response to Hamas attack to the South of Israel on October 7, 2023.
© Quique Kierszenbaum / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_162264352_EYE
'I want to be safe': Israelis rush to obtain gun licences
Applications to bear arms fast-tracked amid feelings of insecurity after 7 October Hamas attacks.
In a gun shop in the West Bank, a salesman laid a collection of unloaded handguns on the counter and invited a group of men gathered around him to pick them up and see how it felt to squeeze the trigger. His advice was soundtracked by a staccato of automatic rifle fire from the adjacent shooting range, and the occasional rhythmic sound of shots from a handgun.
The gun shop, with its glass counters decorated with shiny spent bullet casings, sits within Caliber 3: a complex of firing ranges, a martial arts training room and a synagogue on the fringes of the Gush Etzion settlement, in the hills of the West Bank south of Bethlehem.
Yael Gat, 56, runs the anti terror academy, firing range and gun shop Caliber 3, in the West Bank; Israelis are purchasing hand guns for the first time as a response to Hamas attack to the South of Israel on October 7, 2023.
© Quique Kierszenbaum / Guardian / eyevine
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© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_162264353_EYE
'I want to be safe': Israelis rush to obtain gun licences
Applications to bear arms fast-tracked amid feelings of insecurity after 7 October Hamas attacks.
In a gun shop in the West Bank, a salesman laid a collection of unloaded handguns on the counter and invited a group of men gathered around him to pick them up and see how it felt to squeeze the trigger. His advice was soundtracked by a staccato of automatic rifle fire from the adjacent shooting range, and the occasional rhythmic sound of shots from a handgun.
The gun shop, with its glass counters decorated with shiny spent bullet casings, sits within Caliber 3: a complex of firing ranges, a martial arts training room and a synagogue on the fringes of the Gush Etzion settlement, in the hills of the West Bank south of Bethlehem.
Israelis are seen at anti terror academy, firing range and gun shop Caliber 3, in the West Bank as they are trying handguns to purchase for the first time as a response to Hamas attack to the South of Israel on October 7, 2023.
© Quique Kierszenbaum / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_162264354_EYE
'I want to be safe': Israelis rush to obtain gun licences
Applications to bear arms fast-tracked amid feelings of insecurity after 7 October Hamas attacks.
In a gun shop in the West Bank, a salesman laid a collection of unloaded handguns on the counter and invited a group of men gathered around him to pick them up and see how it felt to squeeze the trigger. His advice was soundtracked by a staccato of automatic rifle fire from the adjacent shooting range, and the occasional rhythmic sound of shots from a handgun.
The gun shop, with its glass counters decorated with shiny spent bullet casings, sits within Caliber 3: a complex of firing ranges, a martial arts training room and a synagogue on the fringes of the Gush Etzion settlement, in the hills of the West Bank south of Bethlehem.
Israelis are seen at anti terror academy, firing range and gun shop Caliber 3, in the West Bank as they are trying handguns to purchase for the first time as a response to Hamas attack to the South of Israel on October 7, 2023.
© Quique Kierszenbaum / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUK10086527_002
STUDIO - Music Supervisors
Music supervisors. They’re the music obsessives who choose those earworm tunes that make a show or a movie instantly recognisable. The right song in the right place can transform a scene from mundane to tear-jerking or deeply sinister, and the person responsible for working that audio magic is the music supervisor. With huge memory banks of tunes up their sleeves, the music supervisor introduces us to unknown bands that become favourites; to classical music never before contemplated.
Pictured : Sarah Bridge, 37, Three years after starting in the industry she was working with Johann Johansson in creating the heart-rending music that got The Theory of Everything an Oscar nomination for best original score. A big part of her job is to "connect with the characters", whether a teenage Stephen Hawking or the political activist played by Freida Pinto in Guerrilla.
© Danny North / Evening Standard / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 02056423
Sonderkonditionen! -
DUK10086527_001
STUDIO - Music Supervisors
Music supervisors. They’re the music obsessives who choose those earworm tunes that make a show or a movie instantly recognisable. The right song in the right place can transform a scene from mundane to tear-jerking or deeply sinister, and the person responsible for working that audio magic is the music supervisor. With huge memory banks of tunes up their sleeves, the music supervisor introduces us to unknown bands that become favourites; to classical music never before contemplated.
Pictured : Sarah Bridge, 37, Three years after starting in the industry she was working with Johann Johansson in creating the heart-rending music that got The Theory of Everything an Oscar nomination for best original score. A big part of her job is to "connect with the characters", whether a teenage Stephen Hawking or the political activist played by Freida Pinto in Guerrilla.
© Danny North / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 02056422
Sonderkonditionen! -
DUK10086527_004
STUDIO - Music Supervisors
Music supervisors. They’re the music obsessives who choose those earworm tunes that make a show or a movie instantly recognisable. The right song in the right place can transform a scene from mundane to tear-jerking or deeply sinister, and the person responsible for working that audio magic is the music supervisor. With huge memory banks of tunes up their sleeves, the music supervisor introduces us to unknown bands that become favourites; to classical music never before contemplated.
Pictured : Matt Biffa, 48, has worked on lms from Harry Potter to Paddington to current Channel 4/Net ix smash The End of the F***ing World, all with Marylebone-based Air-Edel Associates, for which he began answering phones two decades ago.
© Danny North / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 02056420
Sonderkonditionen! -
DUK10086527_005
STUDIO - Music Supervisors
Music supervisors. They’re the music obsessives who choose those earworm tunes that make a show or a movie instantly recognisable. The right song in the right place can transform a scene from mundane to tear-jerking or deeply sinister, and the person responsible for working that audio magic is the music supervisor. With huge memory banks of tunes up their sleeves, the music supervisor introduces us to unknown bands that become favourites; to classical music never before contemplated.
Pictured : Lucy Bright, 39, adores "the alchemy of putting music to picture, of capturing the emotion and heightening everything about the story". A er 10 years working in the music industry she was managing The Piano composer Michael Nyman when he asked her to use his music to create a new score for a lm — the Oscar-winning Man on Wire — that he didn’t have time
to do himself. Working closely with the lm’s music supervisor, she realised it was her dream job.
© Danny North / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 02056421
Sonderkonditionen! -
DUK10086527_006
STUDIO - Music Supervisors
Music supervisors. They’re the music obsessives who choose those earworm tunes that make a show or a movie instantly recognisable. The right song in the right place can transform a scene from mundane to tear-jerking or deeply sinister, and the person responsible for working that audio magic is the music supervisor. With huge memory banks of tunes up their sleeves, the music supervisor introduces us to unknown bands that become favourites; to classical music never before contemplated.
Pictured : Sarah Bridge and Matt Biffa whom both work for the Air-Edel Associates company. Bridge, 37, Three years after starting in the industry she was working with Johann Johansson in creating the heart-rending music that got The Theory of Everything an Oscar nomination for best original score. A big part of her job is to "connect with the characters", whether a teenage Stephen Hawking or the political activist played by Freida Pinto in Guerrilla. Biffa, 48, has worked on lms from Harry Potter to Paddington to current Channel 4/Net ix smash The End of the F***ing World, all with Marylebone-based Air-Edel Associates, for which he began answering phones two decades ago.
© Danny North / Evening Standard / eyevine
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STUDIO - Music Supervisors
Music supervisors. They’re the music obsessives who choose those earworm tunes that make a show or a movie instantly recognisable. The right song in the right place can transform a scene from mundane to tear-jerking or deeply sinister, and the person responsible for working that audio magic is the music supervisor. With huge memory banks of tunes up their sleeves, the music supervisor introduces us to unknown bands that become favourites; to classical music never before contemplated.
Pictured : Lucy Bright, 39, adores "the alchemy of putting music to picture, of capturing the emotion and heightening everything about the story". A er 10 years working in the music industry she was managing The Piano composer Michael Nyman when he asked her to use his music to create a new score for a lm — the Oscar-winning Man on Wire — that he didn’t have time
to do himself. Working closely with the lm’s music supervisor, she realised it was her dream job.
© Danny North / Evening Standard / eyevine
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STUDIO - Music Supervisors
Music supervisors. They’re the music obsessives who choose those earworm tunes that make a show or a movie instantly recognisable. The right song in the right place can transform a scene from mundane to tear-jerking or deeply sinister, and the person responsible for working that audio magic is the music supervisor. With huge memory banks of tunes up their sleeves, the music supervisor introduces us to unknown bands that become favourites; to classical music never before contemplated.
Pictured : Iain Cooke, 41, has worked on some of Britain’s most watched TV shows, The Night Manager, Waterloo Road, Call the Midwife, and two of the most in uential music documentaries of recent times, Supersonic and Oscar- winning Amy.
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NEWS - Uber verliert Lizenz in London
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The Uber app seen with a London Black Cab
Uber loses its licence to operate in London, UK - 22 Sep 2017
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NEWS - Uber verliert Lizenz in London
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The Uber app seen with a London Black Cab
Uber loses its licence to operate in London, UK - 22 Sep 2017
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NEWS - Uber verliert Lizenz in London
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The Uber app seen with a London Black Cab
Uber loses its licence to operate in London, UK - 22 Sep 2017
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All Six James Bonds To Feature At Madame Tassauds, London, Britain - 20 Aug 2015
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Mandatory Credit: Photo by Madame Tussauds/REX Shutterstock (4979393t)
Sculptor Sam Barbor is pictured working on the wax figure sculpt of Timothy Dalton, as Madame Tussauds London announces it will bring together all six Bonds for the first time in October. Dalton is featured as he appeared in the late 1980s in his two Bond appearances (The Living Daylights 1987 and Licence to Kill 1989).
All Six James Bonds To Feature At Madame Tassauds, London, Britain - 20 Aug 2015
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For the very first time, Madame Tassauds will bring together all six James Bonds in wax form. Five new Bonds will join the existing figure of Daniel Craig this October, the same month of the latest Bond film, Spectre.
Connery, Lazenby, Moore, Dalton, Brosnan and Craig will be at the legendary London attraction for a limited time before they are taken on a worldwide tour.
Guests are invited to see how they measure up to each 007 and pose with their favourite.
The Madame Tassauds sculpting team already had the measurements of Craig, Connery, Moore, Dalton and Brosnan from previous exhibitions, but the award winning team had to acquire George Lazenby's to complete the set. George Lazenby was happy to oblige and gave the team a sitting in February in Los Angeles.
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All Six James Bonds To Feature At Madame Tassauds, London, Britain - 20 Aug 2015
MANDATORY CREDIT: Madame Tussauds/REX Shutterstock. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Madame Tussauds/REX Shutterstock (4979393j)
Sculptor Sam Barbor is pictured working on the wax figure sculpt of Timothy Dalton, as Madame Tussauds London announces it will bring together all six Bonds for the first time in October. Dalton is featured as he appeared in the late 1980s in his two Bond appearances (The Living Daylights 1987 and Licence to Kill 1989).
All Six James Bonds To Feature At Madame Tassauds, London, Britain - 20 Aug 2015
FULL BODY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/quno
For the very first time, Madame Tassauds will bring together all six James Bonds in wax form. Five new Bonds will join the existing figure of Daniel Craig this October, the same month of the latest Bond film, Spectre.
Connery, Lazenby, Moore, Dalton, Brosnan and Craig will be at the legendary London attraction for a limited time before they are taken on a worldwide tour.
Guests are invited to see how they measure up to each 007 and pose with their favourite.
The Madame Tassauds sculpting team already had the measurements of Craig, Connery, Moore, Dalton and Brosnan from previous exhibitions, but the award winning team had to acquire George Lazenby's to complete the set. George Lazenby was happy to oblige and gave the team a sitting in February in Los Angeles.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Supermoon September 9th 2014 - 9 Sep 2014
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Mandatory Credit: Photo by Michael Zemanek/BPI/REX (4102800b)
Super moon seen above Off Licence shop in Hemel Hempstead tonight
Supermoon September 9th 2014 - 9 Sep 2014
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Flooding in Somerset, Britain - 06 Feb 2014
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Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue evacuating local residents from floodwater
Flooding in Somerset, Britain - 06 Feb 2014
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Flooding in Somerset, Britain - 06 Feb 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by London News Pictures/REX (3551577m)
Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue evacuating local residents from floodwater
Flooding in Somerset, Britain - 06 Feb 2014
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Flooding in Somerset, Britain - 06 Feb 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by London News Pictures/REX (3551577l)
Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue evacuating local residents from floodwater
Flooding in Somerset, Britain - 06 Feb 2014
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Flooding in Somerset, Britain - 06 Feb 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by London News Pictures/REX (3551577k)
Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue evacuating local residents from floodwater
Flooding in Somerset, Britain - 06 Feb 2014
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Flooding in Datchet, Britain - 10 Feb 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by London News Pictures/REX (3557243e)
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Flooding in Datchet, Britain - 10 Feb 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by London News Pictures/REX (3557243d)
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Flooding in Datchet, Britain - 10 Feb 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by London News Pictures/REX (3557243a)
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Flooding in Datchet, Britain - 10 Feb 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by London News Pictures/REX (3557243b)
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Ronnie Biggs Celebrating His 80th Birthday as a Free Man with His Son Michael Inside the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital, Norfolk, Britain - 08 Aug 2009
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Albanpix Ltd/REX (990803a)
Ronnie Biggs and Son Michael
Ronnie Biggs Celebrating His 80th Birthday as a Free Man with His Son Michael Inside the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital, Norfolk, Britain - 08 Aug 2009
Despite his evident poor health and diminished faculties, train robber and newly free man Ronnie Biggs still appeared in excellent spirits as he celebrated his 80th birthday from his bedside chair at Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital. Together with his loving and devoted son Michael, Ronnie (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
ZUSAMMENSTELLUNG: Posträuber Ronnie Biggs mit 84 Jahren gestorben
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The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is a British public service broadcaster headquartered at Broadcasting House in the City of Westminster, London. It is the largest broadcaster in the world, with about 23,000 staff. Its main responsibility is to p
BBC World Service, Aldwych.Credit: Newscast / eyevine
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The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is a British public service broadcaster headquartered at Broadcasting House in the City of Westminster, London. It is the largest broadcaster in the world, with about 23,000 staff. Its main responsibility is to p
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The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is a British public service broadcaster headquartered at Broadcasting House in the City of Westminster, London. It is the largest broadcaster in the world, with about 23,000 staff. Its main responsibility is to p
BBC Broadcasting House in London.Credit: Newscast / eyevine
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The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is a British public service broadcaster headquartered at Broadcasting House in the City of Westminster, London. It is the largest broadcaster in the world, with about 23,000 staff. Its main responsibility is to p
BBC Broadcasting House in London.Credit: Newscast / eyevine
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The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is a British public service broadcaster headquartered at Broadcasting House in the City of Westminster, London. It is the largest broadcaster in the world, with about 23,000 staff. Its main responsibility is to p
BBC Broadcasting House in LondonCredit: Newscast / eyevine
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The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is a British public service broadcaster headquartered at Broadcasting House in the City of Westminster, London. It is the largest broadcaster in the world, with about 23,000 staff. Its main responsibility is to p
Picture shows the BBC radio building in Portland Place.Credit: Newscast / eyevine
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Laureus World Sports Awards, Arrivals, London, Britain - 06 Feb 2012
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ben Cawthra / Rex Features (1583160p)
Novak Djokovic and girlfriend Jelena Ristic
Laureus World Sports Awards, Arrivals, London, Britain - 06 Feb 2012
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