Saturday, 30 April 2011

Katie Melua is a very big talent for concert at Birmingham Symphony Hall

Katie Melua is a very big talent and a nearly packed Birmingham Symphony Hall is an actor unlike, rock, girl, torch singer and seamlessly switching between flighty singer.

Appearing first as a disembodied voice with her hit Closest Thing To Crazy the Georgia sliced ​​across the hall singer clear head until the end of both sexy and innocent girl next door star see split screen display.

Katie routes through to the sensitive and torch singer opened by extolling love as pain tracks such as If You Were A Sailboat, the dark and slightly sinister I’d Love To Kill You – a track from her latest album The House, The One I Love Is Gone and Call Off The Search.

Friday, 8 April 2011

Katie Melua wants to perform a show in space

Katie Melua wants to perform a show in space after touring Cern, the Eurpean Organisation for Nuclear Research alongside former astronaut Buzz Aldrin.

The ‘Closest Thing to Crazy’
hitmaker alongside former astronaut Buzz Aldrin has recently enjoyed a tour of the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland, who was the second man on the moon and encouraged by such a journey, and now the first galaxy in a game on track to become a singer.

Organisation for Nuclear Research during her visit to European - known as CERN, where the Collider, a high-energy particle accelerator on the moon either Katie want to performing in a space ship about the likelihood is of buzz words.

She also played three songs for the staff, ‘Nine Million Bicycles’, ‘I Cried For You’, and a new track called ‘Walk Lightly On The World’.

Katie, 26, extraordinary places no stranger to performing, as in 2006, he made ​​the world record for deep concert when they performed deep into the North Sea.

Norwegian singer extensive medical tests and survival training before they had Statoil Troll A gas project, 303 meters below sea level, is that the workers were allowed to sing.

She said at the time: "This was definitely the most surreal gig I have ever done. It took nine minutes to go from the main part of the gas platform down to the bottom of the shaft in a lift.

"Giving a concert to the workers there was something really extraordinary and an occasion that I will remember all my life.”