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Leicester Caribbean Carnival honours first event in 40th year

Leicester Caribbean Carnival honours first event in 40th year

BBC News22-06-2025
Leicester's Caribbean Carnival will mark its 40th anniversary with a different starting point in honour of the inaugural event.The carnival will begin at the African Caribbean Centre in Maidstone Road, where it started 40 years ago, rather than Victoria Park which has been the usual starting location in recent years.Organisers canceled last year's event due to financial difficulties but the carnival is set to go ahead on 2 August for its milestone year.Amanda Toussaint, who is on the carnival committee, said after the disappointment of last year the plan was to try to make its comeback "bigger and better than it has ever been".
"This year is 40 years of the carnival and we're super-excited about that and are hoping to make it a huge success this year," she said."Every year is about what you're going to wear, the new trainers you're going to get, who you're meeting, what we're going to do, what the after-party was once you get older"We have the whole range of Caribbean islands represented in the carnival."
The carnival's opening ceremony will be at the African Caribbean Centre where all the dignitaries will speak.It will proceed over Swain Street Bridge to the city centre, then up London Road to Victoria Park.Ms Toussaint added: "Everyone's been taking a degree of responsibility and just trying their very best to get this over the line and make sure that we give people the kind of experience they expect of a 40th carnival in Leicester."I know [carnival chairperson, Dennis 'Sugar' Christopher] as well is very mindful that he wants to step down this year and hand the baton over to a new kind of generation of people to run the carnival."So we've also got to be mindful of what does the future look like for carnival"There's a real kind of energy now to say, what does the 41st year look like? And who's going to take the carnival forward?"
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Shia LaBeouf settles sexual battery lawsuit with FKA twigs, four years after she accused him of abuse
Shia LaBeouf settles sexual battery lawsuit with FKA twigs, four years after she accused him of abuse

Daily Mail​

time7 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Shia LaBeouf settles sexual battery lawsuit with FKA twigs, four years after she accused him of abuse

FKA twigs has officially ended her legal battle with ex-boyfriend Shia LaBeouf, nearly four years after filing a high-profile lawsuit accusing the actor of abuse. According to court documents, the British singer, 37, has requested the dismissal with prejudice of all claims against the actor, 39, which means she cannot bring the case back to court at a future date. The lawsuit, filed in 2020, sought $10million in damages and alleged sexual battery, assault, and emotional distress during the couple's relationship. The two began dating after meeting on the set of LaBeouf's 2019 semi-autobiographical movie Honey Boy, in which Twigs was cast. In a statement to attorneys for both parties confirmed the matter had been resolved privately. 'Committed to forging a constructive path forward, we have agreed to settle our case out of court. While the details of the settlement will remain private, we wish each other personal happiness, professional success and peace in the future,' the pair's respective attorneys said. LaBeouf was represented by Shawn Holley while Twigs hired Los Angeles-based lawyer, Bryan Freedman, who is currently also defending actor Justin Baldoni in his legal battle against Blake Lively. Twigs's original complaint included several disturbing allegations, including claims that LaBeouf knowingly gave her a sexually transmitted disease and once threatened to crash a car with her inside. She also alleged he physically assaulted her at a gas station following that incident. LaBeouf denied many of the allegations, but issued a public statement at the time of the filing, acknowledging his history of harmful behavior. 'I have no excuses for my alcoholism or aggression, only rationalizations,' he told The New York Times. 'I have been abusive to myself and everyone around me for years. I'm ashamed of that history and am sorry to those I hurt.' In March 2024, twigs detailed the aftermath of her relationship with LaBeouf in a candid Vogue interview. 'I think naively I thought it would be like any other break-up, that I'd be sad for six months to a year, and then one day I'd wake up and everything would be fine,' she said. 'But the fact is being abused changes the whole of your nervous system. Because my window of tolerance is now much smaller than it used to be, my body manifests stress in quite extreme ways – it really shows me when it's upset.' Twigs filed her lawsuit against the star with a slew of explosive allegations, which the actor finally addressed in 2022, although the singer slammed his 'gaslighting'. In response to her explosive allegations, LaBeouf branded his ex a 'saint' and recalled how she 'saved' his life and inspired him to wake up and take responsibility for his actions. Meanwhile, twigs called their relationship 'the worst thing I've ever been through in my life.' During his appearance on Jon Bernthal's podcast, Real Ones in 2022, LaBeouf said: 'I hurt that woman. And in the process of doing that, I hurt many other people, and many other people before that woman. 'I was a pleasure-seeking, selfish, self-centered, dishonest, inconsiderate, fearful human being... When I think about what my life has become, and what it is now, like what my purpose is now... I need to be useful.' Among her allegations, twigs accused Shia of violently attacking and choking her, knowingly infecting her with an STD, and physical and verbal violence. But LaBeouf, who has since been diagnosed with PTSD and alcoholism, insisted in 2022 that he is in a better place now. He explained; 'I'm in the tribe of the f***-ups. I'm a very public sinner, a very fallible person in the public sphere. What I think now my purpose is, is to not do… 'The other examples that we've had of how to navigate something like this — which is to go after the woman, or try to win a court case, or get back into a f***ing movie or like get back on at all... 'My purpose, and I mean this with every fiber of my being, is to be instructive with my life, so that I can be an advertisement, like a billboard, for a principled way of living.' In her Vogue spread, FKA elaborated on the depths of her pain, writing: 'I've had to be very compassionate with myself and really listen to myself to get better... 'Now I want to challenge myself to know more about the simple, most pure and important things: love, nature, food, a nontoxic lifestyle, my body. The path I'm on is not the pastel pink yoga leggings aesthetic.' Since then, she has found love with Jordan Hemingway, with whom she went public in March 2023. While speaking about her new romance, she gushed: 'I've kissed a few frogs to get there but I feel that Jordan listens to me and opens me up in a way that no one really has ever been able to.' 'When I'm with somebody who's not in the public eye in the way I am, I'm conscious of everything I can do to make that situation as comfortable as possible because I've been on the other side of it,' she explained. 'And it's really not nice. Right now I feel so ready to stand up for things that I believe in, to protect people who I love.' Meanwhile, LaBeouf is married to actress Mia Goth, with whom he shares a daughter named Isabel.

Ozzy Osbourne's poignant funeral plans revealed after the rock legend's death aged 76
Ozzy Osbourne's poignant funeral plans revealed after the rock legend's death aged 76

Daily Mail​

time7 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Ozzy Osbourne's poignant funeral plans revealed after the rock legend's death aged 76

revealed his plans for his funeral before his death aged 76. The metal legend died on Tuesday just weeks after he took to the stage for his final show with Black Sabbath, with his family confirming the sad news in a statement. The music world have been grieving his death and now, Ozzy's past comments discussing his requests for his funeral have reemerged. His funeral plans have not yet been made public by his family, but Ozzy previously revealed he didn't want it to be a sad occasion but a time to say 'thanks'. 'There'll be no harping on the bad times,' he told The Times back in 2011. 'It's worth remembering that a lot of people see nothing but misery their whole lives, so by any measure, most of us in this country — especially rock stars like me — are very lucky. 'That's why I don't want my funeral to be sad, I want it to be a time to say ''thanks''.' Ozzy insisted he wanted it to be a celebration rather than a 'mope-fest' and that he didn't care what music was played as long as it made his loved ones happy. 'I honestly don't care what they play at my funeral; they can put on a medley of Justin Bieber, Susan Boyle and We Are the Diddymen if it makes 'em happy,' he quipped. Known for his humour, Ozzy joked he'd like to play a prank to make people smile, such as a playing a video of him asking a doctor for a second opinion on his death. However, in another interview a few years later, Ozzy narrowed down his song choice to A Day In The Life by The Beatles. Ozzy has previously credited The Beatles for inspiring him to become a musician himself, revealing he became an avid fan after hearing their 1964 hit She Loves You. When asked about his funeral song, Ozzy insisted he would want a Beatles number being played rather than any of his own music on the day. 'I really need a few more years to think this over, but probably something from 'Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band or Revolver,' he told NME in 2016. 'I definitely don't want my f**king greatest hits album - I never ever play that thing, I'm f**king embarrassed about it. And I definitely don't want a f**king happy song - I'm dead.' The rock star died on Tuesday morning with his family confirming the news in a statement. 'It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning,' they shared. 'He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time. Sharon, Jack, Kelly, Aimee and Louis.' He is survived by his wife Sharon and his six children. He shares three kids - Aimee, 41, Kelly, 41, and Jack, 40, with Sharon. Ozzy also welcomed two children - Jessica and Louis - from his first marriage to Thelma Riley, while he also adopted her son Elliot from her previous relationship. The musician had undergone seven surgeries in the past five years, including a fourth spinal operation in 2023, and had been battling Parkinson's disease since 2003. Ozzy took to the stage for his farewell concert at Villa Park Stadium in his native Birmingham less than three weeks before his death. The rocker reunited with his original Black Sabbath bandmates Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward for the first time since 2005 to bid an emotional farewell to his decades of performing live on stage. After selling out in minutes, over 42,000 fans packed into Villa Park for the aptly-titled Back to the Beginning show, which saw Ozzy and Black Sabbath return to their hometown - 56 years after they formed there. The final photograph of him before his death was taken on stage as he sat on a black throne aptly decorated with a bat to perform his best-known hits for his loyal fans. His final words on stage were: 'It's the last song ever. Your support has enabled us to live an amazing lifestyle, thank you from the bottom of our hearts.' A message on screen then read: 'Thank you for everything, you guys are f***ing amazing. Birmingham Forever,' before the sky lit up with fireworks. Before his final show, Ozzy said he hoped to continue recording music after retiring from live performing, but he heartbreakingly died before he was able to do so. He told Metal Hammer magazine: 'I still enjoy doing my own work, I also enjoy singing on other people's work. 'For the foreseeable future, I will keep on recording if the projects interest me, it's very important.' Ozzy's last solo album, 2022's Patient Number 9, featured a long list of guest artists, including hid Black Sabbath bandmate Tony Iommi, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, Zakk Wylde, and Pearl Jam's Mike McCready, among others. Black Sabbath pioneered heavy metal music in the early 1970s with hits such as War Pigs, Paranoid and Iron Man. Ozzy grew up in Aston, Birmingham, and Black Sabbath - though they were known as Earth at the time - held their first ever gig at The Crown pub in Birmingham in 1968. They renamed the band in 1969 in tribute to their favourite horror film, and the move set them on the path to heavy metal royalty. Black Sabbath's impact on music was enormous and they brought a heavy metal genre that had been in its infancy when they began to the attention of millions of fans. His wife Sharon later came up with the idea for the fly-on-the-wall documentary about her family that was filmed at their Beverly Hills home. It proved a major hit for US network MTV, running between 2002 and 2005. Aimee however refused to take part and criticised her parents for their antics, despite the fact that the show won an Emmy for Outstanding Reality Programme. It covered major events including Sharon's 2002 colon cancer diagnosis and Osbourne's quad bike crash in 2003. Sharon survived the cancer battle despite a poor prognosis. Ozzy admitted that he 'fell apart' during his wife's treatment, whilst Jack tried to take his own life due to the impact of his mother's condition on his mental health. Sharon forged her own career as a TV star, most famously as a judge on hit talent show The X Factor. She now also hosts chat show The Talk on Talk TV. In recent years, Ozzy struggled with his health and he had to cancel shows in 2019 after a fall left him needing surgery on his neck. He began to experience numbness which he thought was connected to his 2003 accident but in January 2020, he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease. The star underwent major spinal surgery in June 2022, which Sharon later said had been a success. To help him recover, the family lodged plans for a rehab wing at their Buckinghamshire mansion. The extension was to feature a self-contained nurse's flat as well as 'discreet grab rails and aids' and 'an abundance of stopping and sitting spaces'. The plans also included a 'health and exercise studio' as well as a 'pool house orangery' and 'garden room'. In September 2023, he had yet another operation, this time on his neck once again. He said afterwards that it was his 'last procedure'.

The 10 songs that defined Ozzy Osbourne
The 10 songs that defined Ozzy Osbourne

Telegraph

time7 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

The 10 songs that defined Ozzy Osbourne

Here's a game that can be played at home: how many artists and bands can you name that single handedly created an entire new genre of music? For all his achievements, both famous and infamous, towering above them all is the bald and immortal truth that Ozzy Osbourne, as a member of Black Sabbath, not only forged a new musical form, but that its sound was the most redoubtable of all. Metal. Please don't be fooled by the encomiums and eulogies, though, because Ozzy was not always loved. Long before the Prince of Darkness became an unlikely international treasure, and certainly before metal reaped the credit from high-minded critics that it so obviously deserves, much of his musical output received a very rough ride indeed. In a far from untypical review, Creem magazine, for example, dismissed Sabbath's masterful 1972 album Vol. 4 as 'the same old s---'. But metal is the people's music, and, ultimately, the people will out. Perhaps the only pleasing aspect of the death of Ozzy Osbourne is that he lived long enough for his finest singles and albums to be accepted by all. In receiving his just due, those early-day critics – or the worst of them, at least – were proved wrong. The kids, meanwhile, as ever, were right. Please stand by, then, for 10 highlights from the musical career of Black Sabbath and Ozzy Osbourne… 10. Shot in the Dark (1986) Although its parent album, The Ultimate Sin, is something of a pop-metal dud, the record's leadoff single, Shot In The Dark, is a peach. With a chorus to die for, the song's reverb-heavy sound typifies loud music in the middle part of the eighties – a period that was about to be usurped by speed metal bands who turned up the volume, quickened the tempos and darkened the lights. Ironically, it was this tranche of groups – with Metallica, Slayer and Pantera among them – who would help revivify the reputation of Black Sabbath themselves. Curiously, Shot In The Dark is notable for its absence from subsequent compilation albums. Ostensibly, the reason given is that Ozzy hates The Ultimate Sin. Maybe. But rumours persist that complications as to who actually wrote the song might be the real story behind these rather glaring omissions. 9. Supernaut (1972) In a case of too-much-too-soon that seems extreme even by the standards of rock and roll, by the time Sabbath came to record their fourth album, Vol. 4, in Los Angeles in 1972, they were so frazzled on cocaine that they considered titling the record Snowblind. Ensconced in a shared home in Beverly Hills, things became so arduous that, upon returning to England, Geezer Butler's girlfriend didn't even recognise him. If any song can be said to represent the sound of a band running on adrenaline, anxiety and heavy-duty substances, Supernaut is that song. Even the lyrics speak of a artists who are losing control of their senses. 'I want to reach out and touch the sky,' Ozzy sang, 'I want to touch the sun'. And speaking of people who were on a different plane, Frank Zappa would later tell Sabbath bassist Geezer Butler that Supernaut was one of his favourite rock songs of all time. 'You can just hear the adrenaline on it,' he said. 8. Suicide Solution (1980) Some of the cuts featured on our list are stone cold bangers. Others, though, make the grade for reasons of wider significance. In its heralding of the moral panic into which metal and hard rock would be swept in the United States, in the 1980s, Suicide Solution belongs to the latter camp. In 1984, the parents of 19-year-old John McCollum, who had shot himself in the head (it was claimed) immediately after listening to the song, sued Osbourne along with CBS Records for 'encouraging self-destructive behaviour' in young people who were 'especially susceptible' to the influence of rock and roll. That the lawsuit was dismissed on the grounds that the First Amendment protected the singer's right to free speech did nothing stop the coming war on loud music. As well as the efforts of the Washington lobby group the Parents Music Resource Center, groups such as Slayer, Suicidial Tendencies and Judas Priest would also find themselves the subject of unwanted legal attention in the wake of tragedies for which they bore no responsibility. 7. Mama, I'm Coming Home (1991) The tasteful monster ballad Mama, I'm Coming Home makes the cut for sentimental reasons. As one of the songs Ozzy Osbourne sang at the Back To The Beginning farewell concert at Villa Park – which, incredibly, took place just this month – the sight of Osbourne singing about returning home, in this case to the very neighbourhood in which he was raised, was poignant even before he passed away. But with the news this week that the gig will next year receive a theatrical release, the performance may well become a defining moment in the history of rock and roll. There's a different sentimental reason for the song's inclusion, too. Mama, I'm Coming Home was co-written by another hard-bitten legend whose death made the world of music an emptier place. Take a bow, Ian 'Lemmy' Kilmister. 6. No More Tears (1991) At the time Ozzy Osbourne released No More Tears, the leadoff single from the album of the same name, in 1991, his career was in something of a slump. Despite his previous album, 1989's No Rest Of The Wicked, attaining double-platinum status in the States, a review in Rolling Stone had stung its creator. It's fine, they said, but it's nothing new. Change, though, was afoot. With its subterranean groove and its excoriating lead guitar work, courtesy of Zakk Wylde, with No More Tears, Ozzy managed to deliver a song that was both familiar yet somehow new. With lyrics such as 'your mama told that you're not supposed to talk to strangers, look in the mirror, tell me, do you think your life's in danger?' the sense of unease remained, as it should, but the spacious music heralded a surprisingly adept reappraisal of his sound. In short, despite not being a particularly big hit, No More Tears signalled that there was life in the old god yet. Duly, its parent album would go on to sell more than five million copies in the United States alone. 5. Crazy Train (1980) As far as debut solo singles go, this one is hard to beat. Anchored by Randy Rhoads's irresistible riff – a series of notes that deftly moved away from the blues-based rock template of the seventies to a sound that would come to define eighties metal – Crazy Train would go on to sell five million copies across the world. It also happens to be the song to which Osbourne's once-local football team, Aston Villa, take to the field. Remarkably, following his sacking by Black Sabbath, in 1979, believing his career to be over, Ozzy retired to a hotel room in Los Angeles in which he intended to take drugs and drink until he ran out of money. He then planned to return to Birmingham to rejoin life as a civilian. Little did he know that his career's second act was about to begin. 4. War Pigs (1970) To be perfectly honest, at least four songs are deserving of the number one slot on this. Among them, clearly, is War Pigs. Rather impressively, the song was born not from a writing session, but from good old musical chops. On the road in mainland Europe, in 1968, Black Sabbath (who at that time were trading under the name Earth) used to fill out their sets with improvisational jams. According to drummer Bill Ward, this most notable of tracks came together in this way. As well as much else, War Pigs heralded the news that a new sheriff was in town. Held in check by Ozzy Osbourne's (largely) unaccompanied vocal, the song offered the clearest imaginable evidence that the hopeful days of the sixties were at an end. Buckle up, boys and girls, things were about to get dark. 3. Iron Man (1970) If Crazy Train set the template for metal riffs in the eighties, it was Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi's hulking chord progression in Iron Man that provided the spine for the genre as a whole. So perfect is it, in fact, that when adding his vocal, Ozzy Osbourne wisely decided to simply sing along with Iommi's thunderous emanations. No additional melody was required. And here's a fun fact for you: at the time of the band wrote the song, Iron Man was actually called Iron Bloke. Yeah. Doesn't work quite so well, does it? 2. Paranoid (1970) With their tritone chord structures – known as 'diabolus in musica', or 'the Devil's music' – and their dark themes, one thing Sabbath never expected to become was pop stars. But when Paranoid, the title track from their second LP, reached number two on the British singles chart, they did just that. Remarkably, the whole thing came together in an instant. With the parent album needing an extra three-minutes or so of music, at the very last minute, the band wrote the track on the hoof. As Geezer Butler recalled to Guitar World magazine, 'A lot of the Paranoid album was written around the time of our first album, Black Sabbath. We recorded the whole thing in about two or three days, live in the studio. The song Paranoid was written as an afterthought. We basically needed a three-minute filler for the album, and Tony [Iommi] came up with the riff. I quickly did the lyrics, and Ozzy was reading them as he was singing.' As fast as that, a classic was born. 1. Black Sabbath (1970) Placing the opening song from Sabbath's first album at the top of this pile may imply that things went downhill right from the start. Evidently, they did not. But in a blush over six minutes, with Black Sabbath, the group set the template that is still being followed this day by metal bands from all over the world. The term 'heavy metal' may not have been affixed to Sabbath for a further four years – and even then, at first, it was used as an insult – but it was born right here, with this song. Fifty-five years after its initial release, the damn thing still sound otherworldly. What's more, its hallmarks remain in constant use. Ominous tempo? Check. Down-tuned guitars? Tick. Lyrics about Satan? Gotcha covered. And then there's the vocals. With his strange and hypnotic voice drifting uneasily over the top of the music, weirdly off the beat, Ozzy's own contribution is in itself deeply significant. Welcome to a new world of overwhelming dread.

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