Showing posts with label Scottish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scottish. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 8, 2017

Calvin Harris tops Forbes list of highest-earning DJs for fifth year


LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Scottish musician Calvin Harris ruled Forbes' annual list of electronic cash kings on Tuesday as he was named the highest-paid DJ for the fifth consecutive year, outpacing Dutch DJ Tiesto and newcomers The Chainsmokers.

Harris, 33, brought in $48.5 million between June 2016 and June 2017, with earnings from residencies in Las Vegas and festival performances as well as from producing pop hits such as his latest summer track, "Feels" with Katy Perry and Pharrell Williams.

Tiesto, who topped the list in 2012, earned $39 million and came in at No. 2, while The Chainsmokers earned $38 million, bolstered by the chart-topping success of pop hits "Closer" with Halsey and "Something Just Like This" with Coldplay.


The list, which also includes veteran French DJ David Guetta and German producer Zedd, highlights a lack of diversity in the DJ field, whose 10 highest earners were male and mostly white, from the United States or Europe.

Forbes said it compiles its annual earnings list from data gathered from Nielsen and touring trackers such as Pollstar and Bandsintown, as well as industry insiders and artists.

Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Steve Orlofsky

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Queen urges unity after Scotland rejects independence


EDINBURGH - Scottish leader Alex Salmond said Friday he would resign after losing an independence referendum that left the United Kingdom intact, while Queen Elizabeth II called for "mutual respect" among Scots following a divisive campaign.

Despite a surge in Scottish nationalist support in the final fortnight of the campaign, the anti-independence "No" camp secured a clear margin of 55.30 percent of the vote against 44.70 percent for the separatist "Yes" side.

After a campaign that inspired other break-away movements, especially in Spain's Catalonia, and opened a Pandora's box of demands for more autonomy across the United Kingdom, turnout was 84.6 percent -- the highest ever for an election in Britain.

British Prime Minister David Cameron said he was "delighted" and added: "Now the debate has been settled for a generation."

US President Barack Obama said he hoped to continue his country's "strong and special relationship with all the people of Great Britain and Northern Ireland".

Salmond conceded defeat and said he would be stepping down from his post and from the leadership of his Scottish National Party (SNP) in November.

"For me as leader, my time is nearly over. But for Scotland the campaign continues and the dream shall never die," he said at a press conference in Edinburgh.

David Torrance, Salmond's biographer, told AFP: "I can only assume he's tired and...that there's not really much he can do beyond this", adding that the Scottish leader will go down as "easily one of the most significant figures of the last 20 years" in British politics.

Many "Yes" activists had watched the result in tears, although Salmond urged them to take heart from the huge number -- 1.6 million -- who backed independence.

The queen appealed for Scots on both sides to set aside their differences, saying: "Despite the range of views that have been expressed, we have in common an enduring love of Scotland.

"I have no doubt that the Scots, like others throughout the United Kingdom, are able to express strongly-held opinions before coming together again in a spirit of mutual respect," said the queen, who is currently staying in her summer residence of Balmoral in northeast Scotland.

Despite her pleas, tensions simmered in central Glasgow as horse-mounted police were forced to separate hundreds of pro-union protesters and independence supporters in George's Square.

Three people were arrested and roads around the square were closed as police dispersed the crowd, although smaller groups later amassed in other areas of the city centre, chanting "Rule Britannia" and letting off flares.

- Britain maintains credit rating -

The result reassured many in the rest of Britain worried about the possibility of an impending break-up, including investors on the financial markets who pushed the pound to a two-year high against the euro as European stock markets rallied.

In response, ratings agency Moody's confirmed Britain's credit rating at "Aa1".

A "Yes" vote would have brought to an abrupt end a union between Scotland and England stretching back to 1707.

But while the UK survived, it could soon look very different.

The British government must now deliver on promises made in the heat of the campaign to give more powers over tax, spending and welfare to the devolved government in Edinburgh.

Cameron stood by the pledge on Friday, under which "Scotland gains almost everything except for full independence", said Emily St Denny, a politics professor at Stirling University.

The prime minister also promised a shake-up of the constitutional order with more local control for other parts of the UK, heading off demands from Conservatives and the UK Independence Party (UKIP) for England to be given more powers.

"Just as Scotland will vote separately in the Scottish parliament on their issues of tax, spending and welfare, so too England, as well as Wales and Northern Ireland, should be able to vote on these issues," he said.

Tony Travers, professor of politics at the London School of Economics, told AFP that Cameron's comments were pointing towards "a more federal version of Britain".

- 'Don't trust the Conservatives' -

In Edinburgh, independence supporters were sceptical about promises from the British government.

"I really, really hope it does but I doubt it. I don't trust the Conservatives at all," said Laura-Beth Salter, 30, a musician and music teacher who voted "Yes".

Salter said she thought Salmond's resignation was "a shame" but added: "It needs some young blood to keep it going".

Charlotte Darroch, one of many 16- and 17-year-olds who were allowed to vote in a British election for the first time, said the result of the vote was "just crushing, quite devastating".

But "No" supporter Louise Fleming, 21, who also lives in the Scottish capital, said she was "relieved".

"We can't expect everything to be great tomorrow but the right outcome has occurred," she said.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Andy Murray’s Wimbledon run inspired by LeBron James


LONDON – Andy Murray will focus firmly on Wimbledon semi-final rival Jo-Wilfried Tsonga on Friday, having cast a longing gaze across the Atlantic for title-winning inspiration from NBA basketball hero LeBron James.

Murray, looking to become the first British man to reach the Wimbledon final since Bunny Austin in 1938, is an avid follower of basketball and believes he can learn from James’ recent breakthrough NBA triumph with the Miami Heat.

Like Murray, James also spent years battling the critics who doubted his winning mentality.

“He came very close to winning quite a lot of times and winning this year for him was massive,” said Murray, who has now reached four successive Wimbledon semi-finals without being able to push on.

“I would say for me it’s a similar situation. I’ve been close a lot of times and not quite made it.

“There’s a lot of people out there that didn’t want him to win. There’s a lot of people that said he would never win. There’s a lot of people who said he never played his best in finals. In the fourth quarter of games he never steps up.

“Then you see how he played the whole of the Finals, the whole of the Playoffs. Sometimes it takes guys a bit longer than others.”

Murray, 25, knows what it’s like to reach Grand Slam finals — he was runner-up at the 2008 US Open and 2010 and 2011 Australian Opens.

But he has not been able to end Britain’s long wait for a men’s Grand Slam singles champion, a stretch which has now reached an agonising 76 years.

He is aware that there are plenty of opinions out there, from the media to former players, but he is confident he can block out any unsolicited advice.

“If you think too much about it, and you read the newspapers and you watch the stuff on TV that’s said about you, I think it would become far too much,” he said.

“But if you kind of shield yourself from it all and just get into your own little bubble, only listen to the people that are around you, then it’s something you can deal with.”

Murray is playing in his seventh Wimbledon and is a far more imposing figure than he was when as a scrawny teenager on his 2005 debut he took the first two sets off former runner-up David Nalbandian before losing in five.

Ever since that third round loss, Wimbledon has experienced regular bouts of ‘Murray mania’ amongst a desperate British public which has slowly taken the straight-talking Scot to its heart.

However, Murray admitted that it wasn’t love at first sight when he first experienced the All England Club with all of its fussy traditions.

“When I first played here I didn’t understand what it was like, and it still took a few years for me to understood how important this tournament was to me, how important it is to tennis, and also this country,” he admitted.

“I didn’t necessarily appreciate that the first time I played because you’re just a kid. It’s something new for you. You’re excited to play on Centre Court.

“But it’s not until I played a lot of matches there that I started to understand how special a court it was. I spent some time here during the year sitting on the court when there was no one else there just thinking what it was like.

“So it’s become more and more special to me the more years I’ve played.”

source: interaksyon.com