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The 20 best 4th of July swimsuit sales our fashion editor is grabbing — all under $50

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Charts   来源:Culture  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:"I was an only child so she would be cooking in the kitchen until the early hours and cleaning up and I was left to my own devices, so I did wander into the studios and annoy musicians at an early age," Ms Murray said.

"I was an only child so she would be cooking in the kitchen until the early hours and cleaning up and I was left to my own devices, so I did wander into the studios and annoy musicians at an early age," Ms Murray said.

Tiffany Murray from Blakeney, Gloucestershire, moved to Rockfield Studios in Monmouthshire aged six after her mum, a Cordon Bleu chef, got a job there after being praised by the band Black Sabbath.Ms Murray's memoir, "My Family and Other Rock Stars", details how her mother, Joan, cooked for the likes of Queen and David Bowie.

The 20 best 4th of July swimsuit sales our fashion editor is grabbing — all under $50

"I was an only child so she would be cooking in the kitchen until the early hours and cleaning up and I was left to my own devices, so I did wander into the studios and annoy musicians at an early age," Ms Murray said.Ms Murray previously lived in a house in Herefordshire, where her mum advertised rehearsal space to bands.The likes of Black Sabbath and Queen recorded there before moving onto Rockfield, where they would reminisce about Joan's food, leading to her being hired as the in-house cook.

The 20 best 4th of July swimsuit sales our fashion editor is grabbing — all under $50

Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody", Coldplay's "Yellow", and Oasis' "Wonderwall" are among the songs"Mum and I lived with the bands on the Quadrangle," Ms Murray told BBC Radio Gloucestershire.

The 20 best 4th of July swimsuit sales our fashion editor is grabbing — all under $50

"We lived in the chalet, so you could have Freddie [Mercury] next door."

She said there were other children who lived at the studios, so "it was just normal" in the local area, but, later in life, some jaws still drop when she divulges the tastes and palettes of some of Britain's most legendary artists.Edinburgh's Filmhouse will open its doors again on 27 June, after a lengthy campaign to save and refurbish it and guarantee its future.

Originally opened in a repurposed church in 1978, the cinema was shuttered following the collapse of its parent charity Centre for the Moving Image.Since then, the building has undergone a £2m refurbishment that has seen a complete internal refit to the public areas and screens, and "substantial" repairs to the roof and stonework.

The venue will boast a total capacity of 350 seats and the former three-screen cinema will now offer a fourth, seating 24, for private screenings.A-listers from the film world got behind the campaign to save the well-loved cinema, including patrons Jack Lowden and Charlotte Wells and supporters Dougray Scott, Brian Cox, and Emma Thompson.

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