Author of the article: Postmedia Staff
Publishing date: May 27, 2021 • 4 minutes ago • 1 minute read • Three Belleville police officers face a charge of assault causing bodily harm in relation to the arrest of a man in a restaurant in 2019. The charge was laid by the director of Ontario s Special Investigations Unit. Photo by Ashley Fraser /Postmedia
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The director of Ontario’s Special Investigations Unit has charged three Belleville police officers with assault causing bodily harm in connection with a 2019 arrest at a city restaurant.
The provincial unit, which investigates cases of death, sexual assault and other serious injuries involving police, announced the charges Thursday via a news release.
A reflection on loss: On his new album, Mark Schwaber looks back on the death of his mother
Guitarist and singer-songwriter Mark Schwaber has an introspective new album out, “Everything Around Me,” that he composed in the wake of his mother’s death. Image courtesy Mark Schwaber
Mark Schwaber, the former Easthampton guitarist and singer-songwriter now living in Greenfield, has a new album out that he composed mostly before the pandemic. CONTRIBUTED/MARK SCHWABER
On his new album, guitarist and singer-songwriter Mark Schwaber’s reflects on the loss of his mother. CONTRIBUTED/MARK SCHWABER
Published: 5/20/2021 1:06:14 PM
A good number of musicians, hunkered down at home for much of the past year during the pandemic, have used that enforced isolation to write and record new music, with some of the songs reflecting the strange turn life has taken since early 2020.
Fresh Air. He is a cultural critic who has been the editor-at-large at
Entertainment Weekly, and a film critic for
New York Magazine. His work has won two National Magazine Awards and two ASCAP-Deems Taylor Awards. He has written book reviews for
The New York Times Book Review and other publications.
Tucker is the author of
Scarface Nation: The Ultimate Gangster Movie and
Kissing Bill O Reilly, Roasting Miss Piggy: 100 Things to Love and Hate About Television.
Ken Tucker | Aspen Public Radio aspenpublicradio.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from aspenpublicradio.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Sunday, 16th May 2021 at 11:09 am
When she died in 2001, “Delia Who?” seemed a reasonable question. The obituaries described her as a forgotten pioneer, a “lost genius of British electronic music”. She was the woman who had used valve oscillators and magnetic tape to conjure the eerie howls of the Doctor Who theme, and made avant-garde electronica part of everyday life. But Delia Derbyshire’s name had never once appeared on the programme’s credits.
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There was a note of agony in her story, too. A Catholic girl from Coventry, she’d become an audio radical by detecting an experimental soundscape in the roar of the Blitz. She’d studied maths at Cambridge, been rejected by Decca Records on the grounds that women were not employed in recording studios, then found a home in the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, a dark suite of rooms at the end of a corridor in London’s Maida Vale. She’d flourished there, crafting hymns for robot revolutionaries and raising a shi