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6 result(s) for "Clinch, Danny"
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Danny Clinch : still moving
This lavish monograph chronicles Danny Clinch's illustrious career with more than 200 photographs of the most important musicians of all time, along with his personal anecdotes and a written contribution by Bruce Springsteen.
In the Net
James opens a cabinet of curiosities to discover how the French Revolution, wallpaper, and NORAD gave us Big Data, and a world where humans merge with the internet.
Fest fosters friendships
  [...] Smeenk now counts himself among the legions of \"Dead heads\" who every summer fan out across the country to attend two- or even three-day music festivals where bands carry on in the tradition of the legendary rock group.
DOING THE MATH IN A DOUBLE BILL
We caught up with [David Lowery] a couple of weeks ago on the eve of Cracker's whirlwind 10-day tour of Spain, after which the band will head for Tucson and then land in Santa Fe with Camper on Wednesday, Feb. 4. The Paramount show is not only one of the first concerts by the re-formed Camper Van Beethoven - which folded its tent shortly after the release of its 1989 album Key Lime Pie - but also a commemorative effort of sorts: Cracker was the first national act to play the now-familiar club on Sandoval Street, in 1998. \"Yeah, it'll be a little bit of a marathon for me,\" Lowery said, speaking from the Virginia home he shares with his wife and their two sons, ages 4 and 1 1/2. He was referring to the fact that he is the only musician who performs with both acts. Cracker, which surfaced immediately on the heels of the Camper breakdown, is essentially a vehicle for Lowery's more viscerally oriented pop songwriting, in tandem with the guitar-hero fretwork of his partner in that group, Johnny Hickman. Camper Van Beethoven was and is associated with Northern California's neo-hippie movement of the mid- to-late 1980s. The band came to underground prominence through the handful of albums it released under its own Pitch-A-Tent imprimatur, distributed by the British indie label Rough Trade - the label that first put Lucinda Williams Camper Van Beethoven continues to work on a thematic album that carries a strong anti-Bush administration message buried within its conceptual lyrics, and the band hopes to have the album ready in time for November's election. Meanwhile Cracker has released two new albums over the past 12 months. The first, Oh Cracker Where Art Thou?, which can be found at www.pitch-a-tent.com, is a collaboration with Colorado's Leftover Salmon, mainly consisting of extended \"new grass\" versions of tunes drawn from Lowery's Cracker catalog, including \"Low,\" \"Get off This\" and \"Eurotrash Girl.\" More recently Cracker released Countrysides on the nationally distributed iMusic label. Countrysides contains only one Lowery composition, the rest being pieces from the traditional side of C 'n' W.
Benefits for children with suspected cancer from routine whole-genome sequencing
Clinical whole-genome sequencing (WGS) has been shown to deliver potential benefits to children with cancer and to alter treatment in high-risk patient groups. It remains unknown whether offering WGS to every child with suspected cancer can change patient management. We collected WGS variant calls and clinical and diagnostic information from 281 children (282 tumors) across two English units ( n  = 152 from a hematology center, n  = 130 from a solid tumor center) where WGS had become a routine test. Our key finding was that variants uniquely attributable to WGS changed the management in ~7% (20 out of 282) of cases while providing additional disease-relevant findings, beyond standard-of-care molecular tests, in 108 instances for 83 (29%) cases. Furthermore, WGS faithfully reproduced every standard-of-care molecular test ( n  = 738) and revealed several previously unknown genomic features of childhood tumors. We show that WGS can be delivered as part of routine clinical care to children with suspected cancer and can change clinical management by delivering unexpected genomic insights. Our experience portrays WGS as a clinically impactful assay for routine practice, providing opportunities for assay consolidation and for delivery of molecularly informed patient care. In a cohort of 281 children with diagnosed or suspected cancer presenting to the NHS, implementing routine whole-genome sequencing provided clinical benefit in 29% of cases and led to change in management in 7% of patients.