The film director David Lynch is a curator of the American face. Think of a male lead in a Lynch production and you probably think less of an actor's name – these would include Justin Theroux, Balthazar Getty, Kyle MacLachlan and the late Harry Dean Stanton – and more of a family resemblance. Dark and handsome, though not in an obvious fashion. The nose possibly bruised from a fight. The hair apt to be slicked back, as if styled in an imagined 1950s scenario.
The phrase “Lynchian” has become a bit of a cliche – generally meaning a piece of art in which there is a certain domestic unease – but when it applies to the director’s choices about what we hear, it has a couple of useful applications. There’s his use of sound design – from throbbing air conditioners and ambient machine hum, to the wind in the trees. More accessibly, perhaps, there’s also his affection for the reverberating plushness of the record productions of the 1950s and early 1960s.
The keening melancholy of a Roy Orbison ballad like In Dreams is an obvious starting point. Probably the definitive "Lynchian" song, however, comes not from the 1950s but the late 1980s – and Chris Isaak's magnificent Wicked Game, which featured on the soundtrack of Lynch's movie Wild at Heart. Isaak, very much the owner of a Lynch sort of face, later appeared as an FBI agent in the Twin Peaks prequel, Fire Walk with Me. The director creates a world full of references and callbacks – and likewise calls back the collaborators who instinctively get it.
It was probably the opening scene of the 1986 film Blue Velvet when it became obvious how Lynch's use of music was helping him to unlock American archetypes. The movie opens on a man who collapses by his white picket fence, suffering a stroke, while the film's haunting title song (a 1963 hit for Bobby Vinton) still plays in the background. The song fades and is replaced by the slurping and sucking of bugs feasting in the soil.
It is in this ecology of a pristine surface with something sinister beneath that Lynch thrives, and to which he always returns. Twin Peaks (1990-91), a television series conceived by Lynch and writer Mark Frost focused on an apparently wholesome community surrounded by spectacular forest scenery. When homecoming queen Laura Palmer is found murdered however, FBI Special Agent Dale Cooper, (Kyle MacLachlan) investigates – and discovers that the town is in fact a confluence point for dark forces, illegal activity and unexplained phenomena. The town's shifting moods were measured in its music, which could change effortlessly from light to dark, from the kind of quirky synthesizer jazz that may still be playing in the lounge of some forgotten Cincinnati business hotel, to a stirring synthetic melancholy.
Lynch himself has released two solo albums of strange "modern blues", and they are an interesting adjunct to his body of work. In Twin Peaks, though, music is indivisibly part of the whole. There's a guileless and charming sequence in the meandering second season in which motorcyclist James Hurley plays Just You, an eerie guitar ballad reminiscent of Orbison, while Laura Palmer's cousin Maddy and her friend Donna provide backing vocals. At the Roadhouse, the town's occasionally sinister nightspot, meanwhile, one flabbergasting scene happens during a set by Julee Cruise, a singer whose tender whispering was first used in Blue Velvet.
As the band plays, Agent Cooper becomes mesmerised. The band cease playing, the crowd freeze in their dancing, and Cooper receives a vision from a kindly giant, warning him that the evil that lurks in the town has once again stirred. "It is happening again," the giant says.
"It is happening again…" were key words in the pre-promotion of the new Lynch/Frost series: Twin Peaks: The Return. In the show, we journey with Agent Dale Cooper back to present-day Twin Peaks after his 25 year imprisonment in the "Black Lodge" – a journey where he is forced to contend with his own evil doppelganger, the diametric bad to Cooper's good. It's also happening again at the Bang Bang Bar – as the Roadhouse is now more prominently named.
These days this isn't only a local bar, it's a hip, edgy nightspot where a band plays in every episode. Here Lynch is the promoter, booking acts who reflect his aesthetic back at him. Right now you can buy two very good albums from the series. Twin Peaks: (Music from the Limited Event Series) collects all the tracks from the bar, from the industrial rock of Nine Inch Nails to an enchanted performance of Just You by James Marshall, the actor who performed it 25 years previously.
There is some lovely music on here. But in the same way as you wonder what Marshall might have been up to since he was last in a Lynch production, you also wonder what life holds outside of the hermetic Lynch system for some of the bands here – is the gift of being “Lynchian” a gilded cage, outside of which a band’s reverberating arrangements won’t play with quite the same drama?
You could never say that of the other release, Twin Peaks (Limited Event Series Soundtrack). The 25 years since Twin Peaks last aired have not dimmed the beauty of Badalamenti's compositions, to which six new pieces are added – the music is as indivisible a part of what the show is as are the score of Jaws or Psycho.
Twin Peaks: The Return is not without Lynch's love of humour and non sequitur but its central implication – that a government nuclear experiment; the petrochemical industry and big tobacco lie at the root of BOB, the evil entity in Twin Peaks, and implicitly under American society – leads us on a necessarily dark journey.
In the latest series itself, there are silences where formerly there would be Badalamenti's quirky jazz breaks. When music does appear – as Krzysztof Penderecki's Threnody to the Victims Of Hiroshima does during the eighth episode, to score a four-minute montage of the 1945 Trinity nuclear test – it is staggering, and terrifying. Even among his many extraordinary hours, this episode is Lynch's most nightmarish and extraordinary hour – as if he has finally isolated the moment on where it all went wrong with modern life, the ultimate sinister revelation under its apparent normality.
The series works on you cumulatively and a little magically, evidence slowly gathering about the director’s likely intention. It seemed completely in keeping with this that when I imported the MP3s of these albums into iTunes, the song which began playing was not the first scheduled track, but a later song by Eddie Vedder, lead singer of the rock band Pearl Jam.
When Vedder stops by the Bang Bang Bar to play the song on the acoustic guitar in the final episode, it's nothing of the kind. The song is not romantic or reverberating, a big retro production number. Instead, Out Of Sand is scruffy and earnest, more Neil Young than David Lynch. It imagines Vedder as a traveller on the road, much as Agent Cooper has been. He's trying to do the right thing, the wrong one at his heel like a doppelganger.
The song is conscious of passing time, the sand moving through the hourglass. “Right roads not taken, futures forsaken…” Vedder laments, passionately. “It’s gone…” he concludes. “I am who I am…”
It’s a mature and philosophical song, and it’s probably not overcooking things to suggest that Lynch hears in it not just a man on the road, but something of America’s journey in the past 70-odd years.
Boundless possibilities have narrowed to a single track. Grave decisions have been made. This is where we are. But even if we can’t change the past, perhaps we can still learn from it.
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Read more:
Album review: Twin Peaks gets a twist as Xiu Xiu puts a fresh spin on Angelo Badalamenti’s classic score
10 of the most anticipated new television shows of 2017
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SPECS
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MATCH INFO
Osasuna 1 Real Madrid 4
Osasuna: García (14')
Real Madrid: Isco (33'), Ramos (38'), Vázquez (84'), Jovic (90' 2)
Company%20Profile
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Keane on …
Liverpool’s Uefa Champions League bid: “They’re great. With the attacking force they have, for me, they’re certainly one of the favourites. You look at the teams left in it - they’re capable of scoring against anybody at any given time. Defensively they’ve been good, so I don’t see any reason why they couldn’t go on and win it.”
Mohamed Salah’s debut campaign at Anfield: “Unbelievable. He’s been phenomenal. You can name the front three, but for him on a personal level, he’s been unreal. He’s been great to watch and hopefully he can continue now until the end of the season - which I’m sure he will, because he’s been in fine form. He’s been incredible this season.”
Zlatan Ibrahimovic’s instant impact at former club LA Galaxy: “Brilliant. It’s been a great start for him and for the club. They were crying out for another big name there. They were lacking that, for the prestige of LA Galaxy. And now they have one of the finest stars. I hope they can go win something this year.”
Fixtures (all in UAE time)
Friday
Everton v Burnley 11pm
Saturday
Bournemouth v Tottenham Hotspur 3.30pm
West Ham United v Southampton 6pm
Wolves v Fulham 6pm
Cardiff City v Crystal Palace 8.30pm
Newcastle United v Liverpool 10.45pm
Sunday
Chelsea v Watford 5pm
Huddersfield v Manchester United 5pm
Arsenal v Brighton 7.30pm
Monday
Manchester City v Leicester City 11pm
More on Turkey's Syria offence
UAE SQUAD
Goalkeepers: Ali Khaseif, Fahad Al Dhanhani, Mohammed Al Shamsi, Adel Al Hosani
Defenders: Bandar Al Ahbabi, Shaheen Abdulrahman, Walid Abbas, Mahmoud Khamis, Mohammed Barghash, Khalifa Al Hammadi, Hassan Al Mahrami, Yousef Jaber, Salem Rashid, Mohammed Al Attas, Alhassan Saleh
Midfielders: Ali Salmeen, Abdullah Ramadan, Abdullah Al Naqbi, Majed Hassan, Yahya Nader, Ahmed Barman, Abdullah Hamad, Khalfan Mubarak, Khalil Al Hammadi, Tahnoun Al Zaabi, Harib Abdallah, Mohammed Jumah, Yahya Al Ghassani
Forwards: Fabio De Lima, Caio Canedo, Ali Saleh, Ali Mabkhout, Sebastian Tagliabue, Zayed Al Ameri
Water waste
In the UAE’s arid climate, small shrubs, bushes and flower beds usually require about six litres of water per square metre, daily. That increases to 12 litres per square metre a day for small trees, and 300 litres for palm trees.
Horticulturists suggest the best time for watering is before 8am or after 6pm, when water won't be dried up by the sun.
A global report published by the Water Resources Institute in August, ranked the UAE 10th out of 164 nations where water supplies are most stretched.
The Emirates is the world’s third largest per capita water consumer after the US and Canada.
England v South Africa schedule:
- First Test: At Lord's, England won by 219 runs
- Second Test: July 14-18, Trent Bridge, Nottingham, 2pm
- Third Test: The Oval, London, July 27-31, 2pm
- Fourth Test: Old Trafford, Manchester, August 4-8
BEETLEJUICE BEETLEJUICE
Starring: Winona Ryder, Michael Keaton, Jenny Ortega
Director: Tim Burton
Rating: 3/5
What are the GCSE grade equivalents?
- Grade 9 = above an A*
- Grade 8 = between grades A* and A
- Grade 7 = grade A
- Grade 6 = just above a grade B
- Grade 5 = between grades B and C
- Grade 4 = grade C
- Grade 3 = between grades D and E
- Grade 2 = between grades E and F
- Grade 1 = between grades F and G
Gulf Under 19s
Pools
A – Dubai College, Deira International School, Al Ain Amblers, Warriors
B – Dubai English Speaking College, Repton Royals, Jumeirah College, Gems World Academy
C – British School Al Khubairat, Abu Dhabi Harlequins, Dubai Hurricanes, Al Yasmina Academy
D – Dubai Exiles, Jumeirah English Speaking School, English College, Bahrain Colts
Recent winners
2018 – Dubai College
2017 – British School Al Khubairat
2016 – Dubai English Speaking School
2015 – Al Ain Amblers
2014 – Dubai College
THE SPECS
Engine: 2.0-litre 4-cylinder turbo
Power: 275hp at 6,600rpm
Torque: 353Nm from 1,450-4,700rpm
Transmission: 8-speed dual-clutch auto
Top speed: 250kph
Fuel consumption: 6.8L/100km
On sale: Now
Price: Dh146,999
Company%20Profile
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CONCRETE COWBOY
Directed by: Ricky Staub
Starring: Idris Elba, Caleb McLaughlin, Jharrel Jerome
3.5/5 stars
COMPANY%20PROFILE
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MATCH INFO
Burnley 1 (Brady 89')
Manchester City 4 (Jesus 24', 50', Rodri 68', Mahrez 87')
'THE WORST THING YOU CAN EAT'
Trans fat is typically found in fried and baked goods, but you may be consuming more than you think.
Powdered coffee creamer, microwave popcorn and virtually anything processed with a crust is likely to contain it, as this guide from Mayo Clinic outlines:
Baked goods - Most cakes, cookies, pie crusts and crackers contain shortening, which is usually made from partially hydrogenated vegetable oil. Ready-made frosting is another source of trans fat.
Snacks - Potato, corn and tortilla chips often contain trans fat. And while popcorn can be a healthy snack, many types of packaged or microwave popcorn use trans fat to help cook or flavour the popcorn.
Fried food - Foods that require deep frying — french fries, doughnuts and fried chicken — can contain trans fat from the oil used in the cooking process.
Refrigerator dough - Products such as canned biscuits and cinnamon rolls often contain trans fat, as do frozen pizza crusts.
Creamer and margarine - Nondairy coffee creamer and stick margarines also may contain partially hydrogenated vegetable oils.
Company%20Profile
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Ruwais timeline
1971 Abu Dhabi National Oil Company established
1980 Ruwais Housing Complex built, located 10 kilometres away from industrial plants
1982 120,000 bpd capacity Ruwais refinery complex officially inaugurated by the founder of the UAE Sheikh Zayed
1984 Second phase of Ruwais Housing Complex built. Today the 7,000-unit complex houses some 24,000 people.
1985 The refinery is expanded with the commissioning of a 27,000 b/d hydro cracker complex
2009 Plans announced to build $1.2 billion fertilizer plant in Ruwais, producing urea
2010 Adnoc awards $10bn contracts for expansion of Ruwais refinery, to double capacity from 415,000 bpd
2014 Ruwais 261-outlet shopping mall opens
2014 Production starts at newly expanded Ruwais refinery, providing jet fuel and diesel and allowing the UAE to be self-sufficient for petrol supplies
2014 Etihad Rail begins transportation of sulphur from Shah and Habshan to Ruwais for export
2017 Aldar Academies to operate Adnoc’s schools including in Ruwais from September. Eight schools operate in total within the housing complex.
2018 Adnoc announces plans to invest $3.1 billion on upgrading its Ruwais refinery
2018 NMC Healthcare selected to manage operations of Ruwais Hospital
2018 Adnoc announces new downstream strategy at event in Abu Dhabi on May 13
Source: The National
THE SPECS
Engine: 1.5-litre turbocharged four-cylinder
Transmission: Constant Variable (CVT)
Power: 141bhp
Torque: 250Nm
Price: Dh64,500
On sale: Now