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Showing 1 - 25 of
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Last Rites (Paperback)
Ozzy Osbourne
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R470
R339
Discovery Miles 3 390
Save R131 (28%)
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Ships in 5 - 10 working days
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'People say to me, if you could do it all again, knowing what you know
now, would you change anything? I'm like, f*** no. If I'd been clean
and sober, I wouldn't be Ozzy. If I'd done normal, sensible things, I
wouldn't be Ozzy.'
Husband. Father. Grandfather. Icon.
1948 - 2025
At the age of sixty-nine, Ozzy Osbourne was on a triumphant farewell
tour, playing to sold-out arenas and rave reviews all around the world.
Then: disaster.
In a matter of just a few weeks, he went from being hospitalised with a
finger infection to having to abandon his tour - and all public life -
as he faced near-total paralysis from the neck down.
Last Rites is the shocking, bitterly hilarious, never-before-told story
of Ozzy's descent into hell. Along the way are reflections on an
extraordinary life and career, including his marriage to wife Sharon,
and what it took for him to return to the stage for the triumphant Back
to the Beginning concert, streamed around the world, where Ozzy
reunited with his Black Sabbath bandmates for the final time.
Unflinching, brutally honest, but surprisingly life-affirming, Last
Rites demonstrates once again why Ozzy transcended his status as 'The
Godfather of Metal' and 'The Prince of Darkness' to become a modern-day
folk hero and national treasure.
More than any rock artist since The Beatles, Radiohead's music
inhabits the sweet spot between two extremes: on the one hand,
music that is wholly conventional and conforms to all expectations
of established rock styles, and, on the other hand, music so
radically experimental that it thwarts any learned notions. While
averting mainstream trends but still achieving a significant level
of success in both US and UK charts, Radiohead's music includes
many surprises and subverted expectations, yet remains accessible
within a framework of music traditions. In Everything in its Right
Place: Analyzing Radiohead, Brad Osborn reveals the functioning of
this reconciliation of extremes in various aspects of Radiohead's
music, analyzing the unexpected shifts in song structure, the
deformation of standard 4/4 backbeats, the digital manipulation of
familiar rock 'n' roll instrumentation, and the expected
resolutions of traditional cadence structures. Expanding on recent
work in musical perception, focusing particularly on form, rhythm
and meter, timbre, and harmony, Everything in its Right Place
treats Radiohead's recordings as rich sonic ecosystems in which a
listener participates in an individual search for meaning, bringing
along expectations learned from popular music, classical music, or
even Radiohead's own compositional idiolect. Radiohead's violations
of these subjective expectation-realization chains prompt the
listener to search more deeply for meaning within corresponding
lyrics, biographical details of the band, or intertextual
relationships with music, literature, or film. Synthesizing
insights from a range of new methodologies in the theory of pop and
rock, and specifically designed for integration into music theory
courses for upper level undergraduates, Everything in its Right
Place is sure to find wide readership among scholars and students,
as well as avid listeners who seek a deeper understanding of
Radiohead's distinctive juxtapositional style.
Gioachino Rossini was one of the most influential, as well as one
of the most industrious and emotionally complex of the great
nineteenth-century composers. Between 1810 and 1829, he wrote 39
operas, a body of work, comic and serious, which transformed
Italian opera and radically altered the course of opera in France.
His retirement from operatic composition in 1829, at the age of 37,
was widely assumed to be the act of a talented but lazy man. In
reality, political events and a series of debilitating illnesses
were the determining factors. After drafting the Stabat Mater in
1832, Rossini wrote no music of consequence for the best part of
twenty-five years, before the clouds lifted and he began composing
again in Paris in the late 1850s. During this glorious Indian
summer of his career, he wrote 150 songs and solo piano pieces his
'Sins of Old Age' and his final masterpiece, the Petite Messe
solennelle. The image of Rossini as a gifted but feckless
amateur-the witty, high-spirited bon vivant who dashed off The
Barber of Seville in a mere thirteen days-persisted down the years,
until the centenary of his death in 1968 inaugurated a process of
re-evaluation by scholars, performers, and writers. The original
1985 edition of Richard Osborne's pioneering and widely acclaimed
Rossini redefined the life and provided detailed analyses of the
complete Rossini oeuvre. Twenty years on, all Rossini's operas have
been staged and recorded, a Critical Edition of his works is well
advanced, and a scholarly edition of his correspondence, including
250 previously unknown letters from Rossini to his parents, is in
progress. Drawing on these past two decades of scholarship and
performance, this new edition of Rossini provides the most detailed
portrait we have yet had of one of the worlds best-loved and most
enigmatic composers.
Veteran instructional coaches A. Keith Young and Tamarra Osborne
provide practical advice for trainers seeking high-leverage
strategies for successful professional trainings.How do you see
yourself as a trainer? Are you occasionally extraordinary, or do
you flail about a bit? Are you connected to a helpful community of
other trainers, or are you just starting out and feeling isolated
and alone in your job? Do your workshops end with thunderous
applause, or do you have nightmares about participants gazing into
the middle distance and leaving with little more than they started
with? Odds are, you've experienced multiple successes and
failures—and that's OK! Regardless of your starting point or
previous experiences, Training Design, Delivery, and Diplomacy
outlines the essential components you need to build a powerful
training program. Young and Osborne (coauthors of The Instructional
Coaching Handbook) present dozens of strategies to help both novice
and expert trainers avoid common (and not-so-common) training
pitfalls, enabling the design and delivery of powerful sessions
where folks walk away energized with new skills and understanding.
They also introduce valuable tips for engaging participants and
managing challenging behavior with diplomacy. Finally, they offer
guidance on building and maintaining an effective train-the-trainer
program and suggestions for conducting virtual activities in an
online setting. If you feel a bit lost in your own workshop
planning, this is exactly the little presentation skills book
you've been looking for!
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I Am Ozzy (Paperback)
Ozzy Osbourne
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R535
R478
Discovery Miles 4 780
Save R57 (11%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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"They've said some crazy things about me over the years. I mean,
okay: 'He bit the head off a bat.' Yes. 'He bit the head off a
dove.' Yes. But then you hear things like, 'Ozzy went to the show
last night, but he wouldn't perform until he'd killed fifteen
puppies . . .' Now "me," kill fifteen puppies? I love puppies. I've
got eighteen of the f**king things at home. I've killed a few cows
in my time, mind you. And the chickens. I shot the chickens in my
house that night.
It haunts me, all this crazy stuff. Every day of my life has been
an event. I took lethal combinations of booze and drugs for thirty
f**king years. I survived a direct hit by a plane, suicidal
overdoses, STDs. I've been accused of attempted murder. Then I
almost died while riding over a bump on a quad bike at f**king two
miles per hour.
People ask me how come I'm still alive, and I don't know what to
say. When I was growing up, if you'd have put me up against a wall
with the other kids from my street and asked me which one of us was
gonna make it to the age of sixty, which one of us would end up
with five kids and four grandkids and houses in Buckinghamshire and
Beverly Hills, I wouldn't have put money on me, no f**king way. But
here I am: ready to tell my story, in my own words, for the first
time.
A lot of it ain't gonna be pretty. I've done some bad things in my
time. I've always been drawn to the dark side, me. But I ain't the
"devil." I'm just John Osbourne: a working-class kid from Aston,
who quit his job in the factory and went looking for a good time."
Gloucestershire's strategic location straddling the Severn is
reinforced by Bristol's importance as a port. The Forest of Dean
and the Cotswolds are densely populated by prehistoric hillforts
and Gloucester, Cirencester and Winchcombe were important
throughout the Roman and Anglo-Saxon periods. The Normans built
substantial castles at Bristol, Gloucester and Berkeley, scene of
Edward II's murder, with many more of earth and timber. Many
figured in the conflicts between rival factions culminating in the
Battle of Tewkesbury. In the Civil War, Bristol underwent two
sieges and Gloucester another and one of the last battles, at Stow,
followed continuous skirmishing. The next centuries saw volunteer
forces established, formalised by the State by the end of
Victoria's reign, to counter threats external and internal. A
nascent aircraft industry would develop into aircraft factories and
airfields in the First World War with further development of
training and aircraft storage facilities for the newly formed RAF
during the inter-War period. Anti-invasion defences were
constructed in the Second World War, but the primary effort was in
logistics: bases for arriving US troops; RAF and USAAF training
airfields and depots; and communications facilities. This last
aspect, along with intelligence gathering, continued into the Cold
War and beyond.
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