Thursday 12 August 2010

Top 50 Bands

Earlier this year, I started to collate information from my iPod and from my last.fm accounts to find out exactly what I'd been listening to. The result was a list of bands and the grand total of songs I'd listened to, and so here is a list of my top 50 bands from approximately the last 5 years...


Steely Dan 1494
Elton John 949
Frank Zappa 886
Yes 853
Paul Simon/Simon & Garfunkel 816
The Beatles 797
Pink Floyd 782
Supertramp 712
Rush 668
Genesis 641
Stevie Wonder 543
King Crimson 527
Air 513
The Who 503
Robyn Hitchcock/Soft Boys 499
Jethro Tull 477
Led Zeppelin 422
Neil Young 388
Brian Eno 384
Fleetwood Mac 375
Sparks 375
David Bowie 362
Gong 342
Richard Thompson 339
Kraftwerk 327
Super Furry Animals 322
George Harrison 322
Peter Gabriel 318
Lou Reed & The Velvet Underground 312
Jon Anderson 291
The Clash 287
Dire Straits 271
Elvis Costello 270
The Rolling Stones 262
Nobou Uematsu 253
10cc 251
Fleet Foxes 249
Talking Heads 248
Vangelis 248
Smashing Pumpkins 246
Bob Dylan 246
Van Morrison 239
Adam And The Ants 221
The Flaming Lips 206
The Doors 201
Divine Comedy 195
The Pixies 192
Donald Fagen 185
Magnetic Fields 175
Jimi Hendrix 167


Surprisingly, for a group I had never listened to before prior to 2005, Steely Dan (aka Walter Becker and Donald Fagen) top my chart by some distance. This is partly due to the fact that I listened to one album after another, and ended up buying their entire back catalogue of classic albums from between 1972 and 1980, from "Can't Buy A Thrill" to "Gaucho". Their 1976 album, "The Royal Scam" is a particular favourite, although 1977's "Aja" is also very impressive. Donald Fagen also features at #48 in the chart, thanks solely to his 1982 solo album "The Nightfly".

Elton John has always been a favourite, and in particular I listen to his earlier material from 1969-1976. Thanks largely to the fact that I've listened to Elton John for many years, he features very strongly in this chart, although I didn't expect him to be quite so high in the chart as #2! In recent years, "Captain Fantastic and The Brown Dirt Cowboy" (1975) has featured strongly, but "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" (1973) and "Tumbleweed Connection" (1971) remain firm favourites.

Another relative newcomer to my iPod has taken the #3 spot, Frank Zappa. Thanks again to my friend Stefan Gabriel, I had the chance to listen to alot of Zappa's back catalogue and ended up buying several albums. While Zappa albums are typically a mixed bag of the sublime and the ridiculous, the sheer volume of his work means that there are many, many individually great songs, and hence my Zappa playlist on my iPod features many songs from multiple different albums. As a result, the playlist count for Zappa has been very high in the last few years. My favourite Zappa albums are "We're Only In It For The Money" (1968) and "Sheik Yerbouti" (1979).

Up and coming interests in the last year or so have been Rush, Led Zeppelin, Robyn Hitchcock, The Flaming Lips and Jethro Tull - all of these bands are on their way up the chart, while some of the old favourites/big names such as Pink Floyd, Supertramp and Yes are still holding their own and are unlikely to be shifted from the top ten any time soon! It's also quite funny that my first favourite band ever - Adam And The Ants - are still in my Top 50! Must be getting nostaligic in my middle age! Anyway, I'll hopefully update this as time goes by, so stay tuned!

Wednesday 11 August 2010

Chris's Interests - Formula One

Formula One, or F1, or Grand Prix, has long been my favourite sport. I have watched it ever since I can remember, although to my shame, I have still never made it to an actual race! I would also be lying if I said I could remember much about Grand Prix races I saw as a kid, but I do remember watching the races as often as I could, and keeping track of the World Championship by writing the results in my notebook or even saving them onto tape on my Commodore 64!. Still, that hasn't stopped me from loving the sport since a very early age, and F1 has always had some sort of influence on my life, from getting me into driving games as a kid, to hogging my Sunday afternoons as an adult! But as a child of the 1970's, one of my most enduring memories of Formula One is not the races the drivers, the cars,  the teams or even the circuits - but the voice behind it all, Murray Walker!

Gilles Villeneuve, 1981
As a kid, I had a small (1/43) model of Gilles Villeneuve's Ferrari, and  1/18 scale models of Ayrton Senna's 'Camel' sponsored Lotus and Michele Alboreto's Ferrari, as well as a Tyrrell of some description as well. In later years, I bought a few model F1 cars, including Schumacher's Ferrari and Hakkinen's McLaren. Some of my most enduring memories are not of individual races, but of drivers and their various cars... the Prost/Senna partnership at McLaren, Hakkinen and Coulthard's partnership, also at McLaren, and more recently, Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso's partnership (if you can call it that!) at McLaren and now also Hamilton and Button at, erm, McLaren. Come to think of it, I reckon that probably makes me a McLaren fan!

Ayrton Senna, 1985
Of course, it is difficult to say that any particular driver is or was my favourite. Unlike football or some other sports, F1 allows you to support many different people to some extent or other at the same time, and for a variety of reasons... drivers shift teams, teams come and go out of form etc., and there are always the legends of the past who's legacy will never be forgotten. Indeed, the sport itself has changed, not to mention the technological advances that make the cars so very different to those of the past, even if they do still bear an external resemblance... but with that in mind, it is hard to think of a driver who had more of an impact on the sport than Ayrton Senna, who is regularly cited as the greatest driver of all time - even by Michael Schumacher. Of all the races that live long in the memory, Imola 1994 is undoubtedly the most infamous, claiming the lives of both Roland Ratzenberger and Ayrton Senna. Senna carried an Austrian flag on board his car as a mark of respect for Ratzenberger, only to be killed himself during the race. Senna was the last F1 driver to be killed, however, showing how much safer the sport has become, no doubt partly as a result of this tragic weekend in 1994.

Lewis Hamilton, World Champion of 2008
Of recent times, there is one stand-out moment for me, which was Lewis Hamilton's title win in 2008. The last race of the season was held in Brazil, and Hamilton, who has missed out the world title by a single point in 2007, needed to finish atleast 5th if Felipe Massa won the race. Massa did indeed win, and Hamilton had fallen behind to 6th with just a couple of laps left. Amazingly, it started to rain and the driver infront of Hamilton, Timo Glock, was slowing down dramatically as he didn't have the right tyres on. Hamilton stayed calm and passed Glock on the final turn of the final lap to move up into the 5th position he needed to deny Massa the title, and become World Champion for the first time. I felt very sorry for Massa, as he could have (and possibly should have) claimed the title for himself, and infront of his home fans too, which would have been an amazing spectacle. Indeed, Massa's family thought he had won the title, and celebrated wildly before a sombre looking Ferrari mechanic told them that infact Hamilton would be champion, by virtue of the last second pass on the final turn. Still, Hamilton deserved it too - not least because he came so close in 2007, but also because he had come back stronger in 2008 and had performed well all year.

Nowadays, I enjoy watching the races as often as I can, and hope sometime in the near future to make it to a race or two, either Silverstone here in the UK, Spa in Belgium, Suzuka in Japan, or perhaps even Melbourne, Australia... I'm delighted to say that Sam enjoys watching F1 already, too!

A history in computer gaming - The Machines Pt. 3

The Playstation 2
After the success of the Playstation, I naturally wanted to upgrade to the Playstation 2 when it came out, but I restrained myself until after I had finished my Ph.D studies and bought one with my first pay cheque from my first post-doctoral job in 2002. The PS2 was also a DVD player, and it saw alot of use. The highlight of the PS2 for me was Gran Turismo 3, and subsequently GT4, as well as the (in)famous Grand Theft Auto games 'Vice City' and 'San Andreas'. Between these games, not much else got much of a look in.

The Playstation 3
It would be another 5 years until the release of the next generation consoles, and the advent of the Playstation 3, which would be the first (and only) console or computer that I bought on the day of release. Sporting wireless internet connectivity, Blu-ray technology, and a 60 GB hard disk drive, the PS3 was intended to be far more than merely a gaming device, and so it has transpired. I probably spend atleast 50% of my PS3 time watching Blu-ray films, and a fair amount of time using the PS3 player as a web browser, image storage device and music player. The rest of the time, however, is dedicated to playing games. Currently, my favourite title for the PS3 has been WipEout HD - a futuristic racing game from Studio Liverpool (funnily enough, the same people that made Formula One - the first PS1 game I played). Other titles include Motorstorm, Gran Turismo 5: Prologue, Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare, Grand Theft Auto IV and Final Fantasy XIII - all of these games have amazing graphics and promise many hours of playability, both online and offline.

The Xbox 360
Winter 2009, and there were a number of excellent deals on rival consoles to the PS3, and so I ended up getting an Xbox 360 as my birthday present from my family. Facing stiff competition for my time from the PS3, it was never likely to be the centre of attention, but it did have one distinct advantage, and that was the game Forza Motorsport 3. Forza is a Gran Turismo clone from Microsoft, but it is an excellent game in its own right. Given that the game came bundled with the console, it seemed like too good an offer to refuse. The offer was so good infact, that my sister bought one (complete with FM3!) as well! And that brings us to the end of the trip through my gaming machine history... almost....

Ghosts and Goblins (1985)
Final Fantasy XIII (2010)
.... I can't remember exactly when my parents first bought a Commodore 64 and gave it to me for my Xmas/birthday, but it must have been around 1983 or 1984. It is scarcely believable how much home gaming machines have changed in that 25 years or so period, coming from basic block graphics and programs  of around 100 Kb that you would load on a tape deck in about 5 minutes, to the amazing photorealism of today's games, with tens of GBs of data per disc. But despite the tremendous gulf in technology, even those basic C64 games from the early-mid 1980's are still fun to play today, and there are C64 emulators available for the PC that allow you to do just that. In some ways, some of the giant, time-consuming behemoths of games that exist nowadays are too clever for their own good - demanding that you commit 30 hours of your time just to get anywhere with the story (like Final Fantasy 13, pictured on the left). Still, if this is the difference 25 years can make, I can't wait to see what the future holds for computer gaming.

At the 2010 Edinburgh Comedy Festival

Scottish Falsetto Sock Puppets
The Edinburgh Festival started with a bang this year, and my sister Carolyn and I have already seen a whole bunch of shows, and in my case, all of them comedy! We started last Wednesday with the Scottish Falsetto Sock Puppet theatre, an original one-man/two-handed show that put up to date and hilarious new twists on some well known songs, e.g. Eric Clapton's classic 'Layla' became 'Vuvuzela', in homage to the droning horns that dominated this years 2010 World Cup Finals in South Africa. Carolyn and Dad also went to see Russell Kane the following night, and then we saw Andrew Bird at the Pleasance Dome (aka Potterrow) on Friday. 

Steven K. Amos
Arj Barker
On Saturday, we had a double-bill of shows lined up, with Steven K. Amos (left) at the Pleasance Grand earlier in the night, followed by The Best Of The Fest preview show at the Assembly Rooms. This was the second year in a row that we've been to see Steven K. Amos and he didn't disappoint, although the crowd filed out with the poor man still standing on stage, and he looked slightly miffed about it too! The Best Of The Fest show started after midnight and ran until about 2 am! The show was hosted by Lee Nelson, and featured Carl Barron, Arj Barker (right), Jimeoin and Terry Alderton. We managed to get seats in the front row, but luckily avoided being picked on by the comedians! It was a terrific night of entertainment, and the 'Best Of The Fest' tag was thoroughly deserved!


Kevin Bridges
Last night, Carolyn, Dad and I joined Uncle John, Grant and Gemma to go and see Kevin Bridges, a fast-rising star of the UK comedy scene. Renowed for his west of Scotland style of dry humour, his set flew by but was incredibly funny. I'd seen him on 'Live At The Apollo' before, but he seemed to connect with the audience last night and generally appeared more relaxed and on better form than I've seen him before. At only 23 years old, Bridges admits that he doesn't have a whole lot of experiences to draw his comedy routine from, but that didn't seem to stop him delivering a fluent and hilarious show, which had everyone wondering where the last hour had just gone.


All in all, it may have been a hectic few days, but it has been worth it to make the most of the fact that we have the best international festival in the world right on our doorstep. The Edinburgh Comedy festival always attracts some of the best new comedians who go on to become household names. The only regret was that our cousin Richard and his family couldn't make it to Edinburgh to join in the fun, and we all wish Richard the best of luck and medical science in the coming days and weeks in his brave fight with cancer.

Tuesday 10 August 2010

Gaming - Gran Turismo

Gran Turismo by Polyphony Digital
Gran Turismo is a driving simulator and racing game for the Sony Playstation. The series began in 1997, and the fifth full iteration of the game (GT5) is due for release later in 2010. Here's a little bit about my experience with the game over the last 13 years!

Gran Turismo for the Sony Playstation
I bought both GT and GT2 for the Playstation, and while I considered them better than the competition, I didn't play them much. It was only with the release of GT3 that I became a true fan of the game. After I had completed my studies in 2002, I bought a Playstation 2 and Gran Turismo 3. I completed the game, and then the long wait for GT4 started! That game wouldn't arrive until 2005. GT4 changed the way I played the game, since although the PS2 could not be played over the internet, it was possible to connect PS2's together in a network (a LAN) and race with other people, rather than having to race against the computer all the time. 

A GT4 LAN (I'm at the end here!)
In 2006, I attended my first GT4 LAN party, organised by members of the Gran Turismo forum, GTPlanet, where I was a regular member. LANs normally involved either one or two banks of 6 Playstation 2s being manually connected together, each one with a steering wheel and occasionally complete with a full driving rig. Racing against real people instead of artificial intelligence requires considerably more discipline and respect for the opposition... take a computer opponent out and nothing happens. Wreck the race of the guy sitting next to you at a LAN, and you might find yourself in trouble!

Photorealistic graphics in Gran Turismo 5
In 2008, the first taste of GT5 became available in the form of GT5: Prologue, which was the first Gran Turismo title for the Playstation 3. GT5: Prologue was also the first GT title to be playable online, and the first title to feature more than 6 cars on the track in any single race. GT5 is due for release in November 2010, and promises to be the most comprehensive and detailed driving simulator made to date. As well as all the features of previous GT games, such as an extensive collection of cars, tuning, and photomode, GT5 promises to feature many new aspects such as the ability to share video footage of races via YouTube, a full online mode, day/night transitions, damage modelling (a famous omission of the series so far!) and possibly also the ability to either create or modify tracks. Stay tuned for plenty of updates regarding my progress in GT5 in later posts!

Science - A brief history of Dr. Chris (et al.)

Analysis of the ROA spectra of proteins, 2002
My first experience with scientific research was as a Ph.D student with Prof. Laurence Barron FRS at the University of Glasgow between 1999 and 2002. My Ph.D work involved collecting the ROA (Raman optical activity) spectra of proteins and developing a computer program to analyse the spectra in an attempt to determine the 3D structural type of the proteins. As well as my Ph.D thesis, I co-wrote a number of papers that were published in scientific journals. The image on the right shows the 'result' of my work, with each point on the graph representing a different protein - and in turn, about one week of my life as a Ph.D student!
Copper binding site of the amyloid beta peptide, 2004

After my Ph.D, I went to work at Queen Mary, University of London with Dr. John Viles from 2002 to 2005. During this time, I was mainly studying a protein involved in Alzheimer's Disease, the amyloid beta peptide. In 2004, we published a paper on the structure of the copper binding site of the peptide in the Journal of Biological Chemistry.

EPR studies of the strength of copper binding to Abeta, 2009
As a result of this work, I stayed on with another group at Queen Mary and I studied a protein involved in the porphyrin biosynthesis, HemN , while continuing to work with the Viles group. Some work I had started in 2005 but didn't get published at the time was finished off by another Viles group member, Claire Sarell. As a result of her Ph.D project, the work was eventually published in the journal Biochemistry in 2009, some four years after it had started!

Raman spectroscopy of intracellular nanoparticles, 2010
After a brief stint lecturing the 1st year undergraduate course "Heredity and Gene Action" at Queen Mary in 2008, I left London and came back to Glasgow to work in the Bioelectronics Research Centre, based in the Department of Electronics and Electrical Engineering. The project involves using Raman spectroscopy to study individual cells using microfluidic devices. In 2010, my colleague Siri and I published our first paper from this project in the journal Analytical Chemistry (see also this post!).


Science - Supermassive black hole?

Stars near the galactic centre are believed to be orbiting a supermassive black hole called Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*)   (from Gillessen et al., The Astrophysical Journal, 692:1075–1109, 2009)
Based on observations made between 1992 and 2008, a group led by Reinhart Genzel in Germany have found the best evidence yet that there is a supermassive black hole lurking at the centre of our galaxy, the Milky Way. By watching the movement of 28 individual stars, it is possible to see that they share a common point around which they all orbit. But perhaps most interestingly, one such star (so called 'S2') was observed to complete a full orbit around the central point - the first time such an event has ever been recorded. From the speed and shape of the orbit of this star (and the others), it was determined that the central point must be relatively small, but with a mass equivalent to around 4 million times that of the Sun.

A history in computer gaming - The Machines Pt. 2

The Atari ST home computer
After the Commodore 64 departed, our family got an Atari ST, with a whole new bunch of features - a built-in floppy disk drive, a mouse, a printer and a Windows-based operating system. Mum was able to use it as a fully fledged word processor and even started her own company, Swift Type. The ST was a powerful computer renowed for its processing power, and my cousin Richard (who also had an ST) began to learn programming on it, which would later lead to a career in computer programming. I, on the other hand, used it mostly for gaming! My top games were Super Hang-On, International Karate + and Leaderboard (a golf game).

The original Sony Playstation console
Once the Atari ST had out-lived its usefulness, it was sold to one of Carolyn's friends and the era of computer gaming for me came to an end. I went off to university and it would be about 7 years before I would own a computer of any description. 

Shortly after I finished university, I got a Sony Playstation gaming console for my birthday. At the time, I had been out of computer gaming for so long, it felt like a strange thing to get, but it would pave the way for most of my future gaming activity. My first game was Formula One, but the most memorable and enduring games were Gran Turismo and Gran Turismo 2, Final Fantasy VII and Crash Bandicoot. FFVII was the first computer game I ever completed, and Gran Turismo would later become the focus of my gaming activity!

Packard Bell PC
Only when I had completed my studies and started my Ph.D at Glasgow University did I feel the need to buy a PC - mostly because I needed it for my work (as a word processor and for data analysis), but also so I could access the internet at home for the first time. I chose a Packard Bell PC and my flatmate Jorge Chaumer and I set up internet access in our postgraduate student apartment in Glasgow. I didn't use it for games much, but Jorge and I used to play Microsoft Golf all the time. It was around this time I discovered Hoyle Board Games, Sim City 2000 and Lux (a Risk-like game for the PC).

Monday 9 August 2010

Album Review: Simon & Garfunkel - Bookends (1968)



Simon and Garfunkel - Bookends (1968)

One of my favourite albums, I bought this album back in 1991, and still never tire of listening to it. At only 29 minutes long, it's the shortest album in my entire collection - but this album is the epitome of quality over quantity. Aside from the strange, spoken-word track 'Voices of Old People', this album is simply flawless, and for such a short album, it's packed with classics. "Mrs. Robinson", "A Hazy Shade of Winter", "Old Friends", "America" and "At The Zoo" were all hits. 

On top of that are more hidden gems: "Fakin' It" is almost the album's definitive song (and my favourite!), and even just the title sums up what this album is all about. "Save The Life Of My Child" kicks the album off on a tense and slightly surreal note, which segues into the opening strains of the epic "America" (almost a precursor to their massive hit, 'The Boxer' from 'Bridge Over Troubled Water') "Punky's Dilemma" lightens the tone of the album slightly, before the final trilogy of amazing songs, "Mrs. Robinson" (written for their soundtrack to the film, 'The Graduate', the bleakly brilliant "Hazy Shade Of Winter" and the funny but slightly tense "At The Zoo"... 

A history in computer gaming - The Machines Pt. 1

Left: Dataman; Right: Cave Man
My first 'computer' was a Dataman, a handheld computer that let you play various number games either by yourself or with two players. After that, we got a Cave Man, which was the nearest thing to having an arcade machine in your home (at the time, anyway!). I used to love going to amusement arcades whenever we were on holiday, or when we went to somewhere like Portobello beach, where I would play 'Pole Position' and later, 'Out Run' - both driving games...

Commodore 64 complete with tape deck
Sometime in the early-mid 1980's, my parents got me a Commodore 64 computer for Christmas. My friends had a variety of different computers... Ross had a Commodore Vic 20, Stuart had a Sinclair ZX Spectrum, Ian had an Acorn Electron, and my cousins Richard and Grant had an Amstrad CPC464. The Commodore 64 used to load up games using an external tape deck. Some of the most memorable games were 'Ghosts and Goblins', 'Pitstop II', 'Olympic Skier', 'BC's Quest For Tires', 'Hungry Horace' and 'Jet Set Willy'. The Commodore 64 provided years of fun, but eventually it was replaced... but nowadays, it is possible to play these games using a C64 simulator on a PC!


Chris's Interests - Classic Games!


Me, playing Subbuteo on my Mum's dinner table.
Games have always played a big part of my life, and they still do. This picture, from about 1983-4, shows me playing Subbuteo on the dinner table! Other games that I used to play as a kid were Risk, Careers, Game of Life and the famous role-playing game, Dungeons and Dragons (D&D). When we moved to Winton Terrace in 1986, we had a double garage where I kept my snooker table, which used to double up as a gaming table. There, my friends Ross, Stuart, Ian, Lee, Paul and I used to play D&D... unfortunately, once we reached a certain age, it became difficult to play the game for long without laughing. One night, Ross's character found himself confronted by a donkey. He asked me, the Dungeon Master, if the donkey could speak the same language as him, so I checked the rule book... and it did! We both burst out laughing at the idea of a talking donkey (bearing in mind this was long before Shrek!) and the game finished... and to my memory, we never played it again. One of my favourite memories was a board game that my cousin Richard and I made ourselves called Tour De France, which we made by merging the real board games 'Grand Prix' and the war game 'La Belle Alliance' (a Napoleonic War simulation!).

Dungeons & Dragons - Basic Rules Players Manual. 
Nowadays, most of the games I play are on gaming consoles, such as Gran Turismo on the Playstation, Forza Motorsport on the Xbox, and Lux on the PC. I still play board games with some gaming friends, as well as playing poker with my old school friends from time to time!

Chris's Interests - Astronomy


Astronomy is a hobby of mine and the planet Saturn was the first planet I saw through my telescope. Ever since my Grandad gave me his monocular when I was a kid, I've been looking at the stars in the night sky, even if the Scottish weather sometimes makes it difficult. Soon after that, I got a book on Astronomy so I could begin to learn the names and locations of some stars, and eventually I was able to find my way around the night sky without having to look at the book! Nowadays, there are plenty of free pieces of software available on the internet or even on your mobile phone that shows you what the night sky looks like at any particular time. Ever since the launch of the Hubble Space Telescope, our view of the cosmos has changed forever. Sadly, it is not possible to get such a good view of the universe from a simple telescope based in your own back garden. Fortunately, with websites like NASA's Astronomy Picture Of The Day and Hubblesite.org, it is easy to find amazing pictures and keep up to date with all the new discoveries being made about our universe. But there is nothing like being able to look at the cosmos for yourself!

Chris's Interests - Climate Change


Climate change is a topic I am very interested in. Over the past few years, public interest in this topic has grown massively. But while there is alot of information available on the internet and in the scientific literature, much remains unknown about the way our planet's climate system works. As a result, many people remain skeptical that there is anything unusual going on, or that even if there is, that human activity is not playing a significant role in altering the Earth's climate. My opinion is that the evidence does point fairly conclusively to human activity playing a significant role in affecting the Earth's climate, but that we currently don't know enough about what the future effects might be. The graph shown above is an up to date measurement of global surface temperature, taken from NASA's climate change website. As well as this, other 'key indicators' are presented that show that climate change is indeed happening, although some uncertainty remains as to what the causes are, and what the effects might be.

Uncle Chris publishes a paper in Analytical Chemistry!


After working in London for six years, I came back to Scotland to work at the University of Glasgow in 2008. A few months after I started, my friend Siri joined the same group and we started working on a project together. It involved looking at nanoparticles inside cells using laser light, in a technique known as Raman spectroscopy. We wrote a couple of papers, and submitted them to scientific journals. Today, 9th August 2010, our first paper appeared in print on the website of the American journal, Analytical Chemistry.

Favourite Movies Of All Time v. 1.0 (Aug, 2010)

The Monty Python team on the set of "Life Of Brian" in Tunisia, 1978
Front (L-R):- Michael Palin, John Cleese, Graham Chapman, Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones; Back:- Eric Idle


1. Monty Python's Life of Brian (Terry Jones)
2. Annie Hall (Woody Allen)
3. The Deer Hunter (Michael Cimino)
4. The Big Lebowski (The Coen Brothers)
5. 2001: A Space Odyssey (Stanley Kubrick)
6. Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King (Peter Jackson)
7. One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (Milos Forman)
8. A Clockwork Orange (Stanley Kubrick)
9. The Exorcist (William Friedkin)
10. King Kong (Peter Jackson)
11. Local Hero (Bill Forsyth)
12. Boogie Nights (Paul Thomas Anderson)
13. The Shining (Stanley Kubrick)
14. Trains, Planes & Automobiles (John Hughes)
15. Moulin Rouge (Baz Luhrmann)
16. Le Fabuleux Destin d'Amélie Poulain (Jean-Pierre Jeunet)
17. The Fisher King (Terry Gilliam)
18. The Killing Fields (Roland Joffé)
19. Trainspotting (Danny Boyle)
20. The Blues Brothers (John Landis)


Here's a list of my favourite films of all time. It's already changed quite a bit since I first wrote the list a few years ago, and it will no doubt change many times over the next few years. I will also speak about some of these films in more detail in future posts as film reviews. There is a fair amount of comedy films in this list, and not a great deal of what you could call 'proper cinema'! I can safely say I have seen most (if not all) of these films atleast 10 times each, with some (like the top three) being watched atleast double that amount! At the time of writing, I am trying to expand the number and type of films I watch, but at the same time, I have always been the type of person who likes watching old favourites over and over again!

WikiWonderWall: #1 - Salvador Dalí

Salvador Dali


This is the first post in the WikiWonderWall series, where I'll post a link to the Wikipedia page of something I am or was interested in. Dali was always my favourite painter, mostly because I was fascinated by his ideas and the originality of his work. It is hard to say what my favourite Dali painting would be, but 'The Hallucinogenic Toreador' (1970) would have to be close. 'Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee around a Pomegranate a Second Before Awakening' (1944) and 'Galacidalacidesoxiribunucleicacid' (1963) are also favourites.

The Hallucinogenic Toreador, 1970


 


Yes






I discovered Yes when I was about 14 - I used to listen to a radio show called "Alan Freeman's Saturday/Sunday Rock show", and I first heard the song 'Roundabout' from Fragile (1971). It turned out that my Uncle John had lots of Yes albums, so I got to listen to the whole album before deciding on buying the CD. I remember thinking that it sounded kind of 'old', but I loved it anyway. I then bought Close To The Edge (1972) which is still one of my favourite albums of all time. The Yes Album (1970) was next for me, and the track 'Starship Trooper' became a favourite. The next two albums I bought were Relayer (1974) and Tales From Topographic Oceans (1973). While 'The Gates Of Delirium' (from Relayer) was great, it took a while to enjoy the rest of the album. I never really got into 'Tales...' much, but I still like the first song, 'The Revealing Science of God'. Going For The One (1977) is the last of the great Yes albums for me, and it contains one of their best tracks, the 15 minute long epic 'Awaken'. I also bought Yessongs (live album), the Yesyears boxset, Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe, and Union, with Yessongs being the best of that set of albums. Of the six albums mentioned here, I have bought four of them on CD for a second time (as remastered editions), and so I have bought more Yes albums than any other artist! As well as that, I also recommend 'Olias Of Sunhillow' by Jon Anderson and 'Fish Out Of Water' by Chris Squire.


Welcome!

The idea behind this blog is to create an online archive of material for Sam's future reference.