Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

Richard Wright

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008 12:03 am
caddyman: (Default)
I see from the BBC website that Richard Wright, founder member of Pink Floyd has died from cancer aged 65.



The obituary is here:

He joined his former bandmates, with the exception of Barrett, one last time at Live 8 in Hyde Park in 2005.

There has since been continual speculation that the group could reform to tour again.

But with Wright's passing, a hugely important chapter in the story of British music has closed. 



The Great Gig in the Sky 
(Wright) 4:44 

"And I am not frightened of dying, any time will do, I 
don't mind. Why should I be frightened of dying? 
There's no reason for it, you've gotta go sometime." 

"If you can hear this whispering you are dying." 

"I never said I was frightened of dying." 

Richard Wright

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008 12:03 am
caddyman: (Default)
I see from the BBC website that Richard Wright, founder member of Pink Floyd has died from cancer aged 65.



The obituary is here:

He joined his former bandmates, with the exception of Barrett, one last time at Live 8 in Hyde Park in 2005.

There has since been continual speculation that the group could reform to tour again.

But with Wright's passing, a hugely important chapter in the story of British music has closed. 



The Great Gig in the Sky 
(Wright) 4:44 

"And I am not frightened of dying, any time will do, I 
don't mind. Why should I be frightened of dying? 
There's no reason for it, you've gotta go sometime." 

"If you can hear this whispering you are dying." 

"I never said I was frightened of dying." 

close call

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008 02:48 pm
caddyman: (Doctor)
There is a feature in today’s Times - in the T2 insert – where in Russell T Davies is pimping his forthcoming book about his time on Doctor Who. A book which, incidentally, appears to be made up entirely of emails to and from someone called Benjamin Cook, who it seems is a journalist and sometime writer for Doctor Who Magazine. The link is here.

Two things spring to mind.

Firstly, we get a view of Rusty’s writing process, which boils down to: a) think of rough plot, b) think of a few scenes, c) have no idea how to link them, d) write nothing until deadline, e) panic furiously after deadline and write like mad, f) trust the ideas to gel into a coherent story.

I begin to see why his episodes are the weakest and why f) so rarely happens. Dear, oh dear, oh dear.

The second point that occurs to me is that even those who don’t like David Tennant’s version of the Doctor should be grateful that he vetoed one of Rusty’s stupider ideas. Apparently he (Rusty) had wanted JK Rowling to script an episode, but she politely declined. It then occurred to him that having landed Kylie for the 2007 Christmas Special, they would be hard pressed to get another guest star of a similar or greater level of fame. Well, B follows A, so it occurred to him that if JK Rowling wasn’t up for writing an episode, maybe she’d appear in one. A story where she is done over by a psychic alien and all her thoughts become reality. The Doctor then materialises on Earth in this JK Rowling world of magicians and sorcerers and has to sort it out.

Tenant, it seems, put his foot down and said ‘no’ – it would come across as a spoof, so the idea was shelved (worryingly, not ditched; just shelved.).

I sympathise with the thought of finding writing difficult, but really. I don’t do it for a living.

Doctor Who meets Harry Potter. Good grief.

close call

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008 02:48 pm
caddyman: (Doctor)
There is a feature in today’s Times - in the T2 insert – where in Russell T Davies is pimping his forthcoming book about his time on Doctor Who. A book which, incidentally, appears to be made up entirely of emails to and from someone called Benjamin Cook, who it seems is a journalist and sometime writer for Doctor Who Magazine. The link is here.

Two things spring to mind.

Firstly, we get a view of Rusty’s writing process, which boils down to: a) think of rough plot, b) think of a few scenes, c) have no idea how to link them, d) write nothing until deadline, e) panic furiously after deadline and write like mad, f) trust the ideas to gel into a coherent story.

I begin to see why his episodes are the weakest and why f) so rarely happens. Dear, oh dear, oh dear.

The second point that occurs to me is that even those who don’t like David Tennant’s version of the Doctor should be grateful that he vetoed one of Rusty’s stupider ideas. Apparently he (Rusty) had wanted JK Rowling to script an episode, but she politely declined. It then occurred to him that having landed Kylie for the 2007 Christmas Special, they would be hard pressed to get another guest star of a similar or greater level of fame. Well, B follows A, so it occurred to him that if JK Rowling wasn’t up for writing an episode, maybe she’d appear in one. A story where she is done over by a psychic alien and all her thoughts become reality. The Doctor then materialises on Earth in this JK Rowling world of magicians and sorcerers and has to sort it out.

Tenant, it seems, put his foot down and said ‘no’ – it would come across as a spoof, so the idea was shelved (worryingly, not ditched; just shelved.).

I sympathise with the thought of finding writing difficult, but really. I don’t do it for a living.

Doctor Who meets Harry Potter. Good grief.

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