#joolz jones
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Joolz Jones (grandson of Brian Jones), Linda Lawrence and Donovan at the grave of Brian Jones on the 50th anniversary of Brian's death
#Brian#grandson of brian jones#linda lawrence#donovan#girlfriend of brian jones#the rolling stones#grave in cheltenham#joolz jones
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
B-Side Magazine Aug/Sept 93 - Live Reviews
Featuring:
New Model Army/Joolz/Edward Alleyne-Jones
Cranberries/P.J. Berry
Radiohead
Belly
if you like my scans and want to repost them off of tumblr or crop/otherwise make edits to any of the photos contained within this article please credit my blog and the original photographer (where applicable), and if you're feeling extra generous and want to help me out you can donate via my ko-fi donating will allow me to obtain more magazines to scan and upgrade my equipment.
#New Model Army#Cranberries#Radiohead#Belly#b-side magazine#magazine scans#90s#my scans#lol that mention of Suede in the Radiohead review
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
Rock and Roll Storytime #5: Brian Jones and His Five(?) Children
While I will absolutely admit to being infatuated with dead rock stars, that doesn’t mean I’m going to give them a pass for everything they’ve ever done. Take for example, Brian Jones. While I think he is quite cute and an extraordinarily talented musician, there’s the fact that he was also abusive towards women, and he was never really involved in the lives of any of the multiple children he sired.
Hell, he was so bad in regards to having responsible sex, we don’t even know how many children he had for sure.
What I’m going to do with this is tell you how his five confirmed children came into the world and maybe even talk about some of the speculated ones this time.
Confirmed:
1. Barry David Corbett (aka Simon): So, let’s face it, Brian started out young, being just seventeen when he got his then girlfriend, Valerie Corbett pregnant (sources vary as to whether she was fourteen or seventeen when this happened). What’s important to remember is that the adults of Brian’s generation heavily disapproved of teenage pregnancy (some of it owing to how we used to be a lot more religious), and if Call the Midwife is anything to go by (great show by the way), it was usually the parents who would determine whether a teenage mother was able to keep her unborn child. Most often, it seems, the child would be given up for adoption, though it seems that sometimes, a shotgun wedding would be initiated, and in rarer cases, the grandparents would bring the child up under the impression that the mother was actually an older sister, whilst they posed as the biological parents (think Jack Nicholson). Reportedly, Brian encouraged Valerie to get an abortion, which, mind you was illegal at the time, but she refused. She gave birth to little Barry on May 29, 1960, and he was subsequently adopted out and renamed Simon. Reportedly, he eventually found out that Brian was his father in 2004, and by then, he was married with two kids of his own.
2. Unknown (Known as Belinda or Carol depending on the source): within months of getting Valerie pregnant, Brian was at it again. In this instance, he met a woman only known as Angelique at a dance and the two had a one-night-stand. As it turns out, the 23-year-old was married and had been going through a rough patch with her husband. When she turned up pregnant, she and her husband ultimately decided to keep the baby, and on August 4, 1960, Brian’s only known daughter was born. According to Bill Wyman, Brian never knew about his eldest daughter’s birth, and in a similar vein, the subject of Brian Jones was taboo in Belinda’s household, given the pain it caused both her parents (which is also the reason we don’t know her real name). Bill’s book Stone Alone, states that she realized that her father wasn’t her biological father when she was six, and that she realized Brian was her father when she was fifteen after her brother brought home a Rolling Stones record (Through the Past Darkly, Big Hits Vol. 2). In talking to Belinda, Bill also discovered that she had temporal lobe epilepsy, which to the pair of them, explained Brian’s hypochondriac tendencies, as well as some of his behaviors (for instance, Bill said that in about a minute, Brian would go from being fully engaged in a conversation to being completely disengaged). While the truth of the matter is, we’ll never know for sure whether or not Brian had epilepsy (because we knew jackshit about mental health back in the day), I personally think it’s an interesting explanation for Brian’s health problems, and that theory might even shine a light on what might have happened the night he drowned.
3. Julian Mark Andrews: Surely, Brian was living the “Sex, drugs, and rock and roll” lifestyle well before he became a rock star. After returning to Cheltenham after the scandal that was him getting Valerie pregnant, Brian began dating 15-year-old Pat Andrews. When she was sixteen, she fell pregnant with his child, and by her own admission, she was so naive about childbirth that she didn’t even realize she was pregnant until her sister marched her into the doctor’s office. On October 22, 1961, she gave birth to Julian Mark, named after Julian “Cannonball” Adderley. By all accounts, on the day Mark was born, Brian sold four of his records (his most prized possessions) in order to buy flowers for Pat and clothes for his newborn son. He was even involved in their lives for a while, but sadly, this arrangement wouldn’t last. For one thing, Brian was very promiscuous, and he was never good at the whole “fidelity” thing. Another possible explanation is that one time, when Pat and Mark came to spend a day with Brian after he became famous, his manager, Andrew Loog Oldham, started bitching about how Brian shouldn’t be seen as a “family man” (even though Bill Wyman was married and had a young son). Apparently, Andrew wanted to market Brian as a hot young bachelor that the fangirls would have no qualms squeeing over. In either case, Brian soon cut all ties with Pat. In addition, according to Paul Trynka, Mick Jagger once made a drunken pass at Pat (she rejected his advances), and Mick apparently bragged to Brian that they’d had a drunken fling. According to Pat, Brian never gave her a chance to explain her side of the story, and that was around the time Brian cut all ties. In 1966, she sued Brian for child support, and when Brian failed to show up to court, the very pissed-off judge awarded Pat the maximum sum allowed at the time: £2.50 a week for Mark as well as another £78 to cover Pat’s court costs and confinement expenses. After Brian’s death though, the payments stopped coming in. On a side-note: Laura Jackson’s book states that Mark has no memories of his father.
youtube
4. Julian Brian Lawrence Leitch: Before anyone says anything, yes Brian has two sons named Julian, and allegedly, he wanted all of his sons to be named after Cannonball Adderley. In 1964, Brian had been dating a 17-year-old Linda Lawrence for two years. She subsequently gave birth to his third son on July 23, 1964. Reportedly, he was involved for a brief while whilst he lived with Linda and her parents, but then he was kicked out after it became clear that he had no intentions of marrying Linda. She came forward against Brian with a paternity suit in 1965, and ultimately, she received a £1,000 settlement. In October 1970, she married Brian’s friend and fellow musician Donovan Leitch (simply known as Donovan in most parts) who later taught Julian to play guitar. For the curious, there are clips of him online singing “Sympathy for the Devil,” and he later became the father of Joolz Leitch Jones, who like his father, grandfather, and step-grandfather, is a musician.
5. Paul Molloy (John Maynard): This one is an utter doozy even when you take into account the usual low standards surrounding any given rock star and his/her children. This story starts with Brian dating 19-year-old Dawn Molloy on and off again throughout 1964 (while he was still seeing Linda, mind you), and her eventually becoming pregnant. At around this time, Brian was ordered by Andrew to never contact her again. Subsequently, Andrew, in a case of severely misguided damage control, essentially coerced Dawn into signing a non-disclosure agreement, which stated that the matter was now closed and she would never go to the public or press about the child being Brian’s (the whole thing was witnessed by Mick Jagger). In exchange for her silence, she would be awarded £700. Her parents were not supportive of her during her pregnancy, and she was sent to a home for unmarried, expectant mothers, where, on March 24, 1965, she gave birth to Paul. Soon after, she was forced to give up her son for adoption, and told that she would never be able to see him again (those of you who’ve seen the film Philomena or Call the Midwife will probably get an idea of what I’ve been describing). Paul was renamed John, and while he did know that he was adopted, he did, at least, know he was loved. Some thirty years later, John, having married and had three kids of his own, went looking for his birth family, and was eventually able to find his birth mother and information about his late birth father. Mother and son have both spoken about their experiences since; Dawn wrote a book entitled Not Fade Away, and John spoke to the Daily Mail, where he said of Brian, “First, I'd probably hit him for what he did to Dawn. Then I'd brush him down and ask him if he wanted a coffee. I'd like to chat with him. To get to know him and for him to get to know me. He'd like me, I know he would. I'd want him to be proud of me. To be honest, I'd just want him to be my dad.”
Unconfirmed/Rumored:
-Marlon Richards: For a while, people suspected that Marlon was actually Brian’s son for a while because when he was little, he was blond and had a cherubic face, though I could argue that this came more from his mother, Anita Pallenberg. Even if I could already dispute the idea that Marlon is Brian’s son, given how Brian and Anita’s relationship came to a legendarily messy finish in 1967, there’s also the fact that Marlon grew up to look exactly like Keith. Still, figured I might as well debunk this old rumor.
-Timmy Faithless: This one comes straight from Australian tabloids in which it is claimed his mother, Loriann (the article will make sure you remember she was a Satanist, which doesn’t matter to me, but whatever), conceived after a Melbourne concert. As with anything in the tabloids though, I tend to doubt the veracity of such claims (it might help if we had Brian’s DNA on file, but last I checked, police don’t really have a good reason to dig up Brian’s skeleton).
-Anna Wohlin claimed to have been carrying Brian’s child, but miscarried shortly after his death, likely due to the high stress and duress caused by the situation. However, I personally think she’s a bit of an unreliable witness, so I’ll just leave that to conjecture.
-Barbara Wolf: In 2019, she came out of the woodworks to allege that Brian was her father and that he was murdered by Frank Thorogood (she is not the only one of Brian’s children to believe he was murdered). Once again though, considering this story seems to have originated in a tabloid, I’ll just sit over here being my highly skeptical self.
-David Lars “Cannonball” Brandstone: Claimed to be writing a book about his dad set for release in 2008. Once again though, I find myself sorely doubting his claims about Brian (some of the details he gives in his interview are a bit... suspect to say the least).
If there’s anything to be taken away from what you just read, it’s that sometimes, people are going to be irresponsible as hell when it comes to... relations. As someone who has experienced something similar to what Brian’s children went through (teenage mother, absent father), I can certainly say that, while I respect Brian’s musical ability, I simply cannot condone his behavior in any of these cases. I know that it was a different time, but still, the fact that he got so many women pregnant and subsequently abandoned them is simply inexcusable.
Thank god for contraception and better sex ed.
Sources: Brian Jones: The Making of the Rolling Stones by Paul Trynka Brian Jones: The Untold Life and Mysterious Death of a Legend by Laura Jackson 27: A History of the 27 Club through the Lives of Brian Jones, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison, Kurt Cobain, and Amy Winehouse by Howard Sounes Stone Alone by Bill Wyman https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1353783/Being-Brian-Joness-son-greatest-thing-happened-me.html http://www.angelfire.com/rock3/sixtiesfish/kidsweb/kids.html https://iorr.org/talk/read.php?1,2325726,2325735 http://www.angelfire.com/rock3/sixtiesfish/brianjones_son.html https://ultimateclassicrock.com/the-rolling-stones-children/ https://www.earcandymag.com/foundationstonebook-2.htm https://www.mirror.co.uk/3am/celebrity-news/daughter-rolling-stones-wild-child-17479033 https://born-late.blogspot.com/2011/09/legend-of-girl-child-linda.html https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Jones#Early_life_and_children https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8OANZg8_iE
#brian jones#the rolling stones#rock and roll#storytime#brian i love you but come on#that's just plain irresponsible
11 notes
·
View notes
Video
youtube
(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction (Rolling Stones); Cover by Joolz Jones & Sina
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
Rock and Roll Storytime #5: Brian Jones and his Five(?) Children
Note: This is going to be a bit less light-hearted than the others I’ve posted so far. Please bear with me.
I may occasionally admit to myself that I have schoolgirl crushes on the dead, but that doesn’t mean I won’t call them out for something they did. Take, for example, Brian Jones. I’ll admit that I love him, I’ll daydream about saving his life, and of course, I will stand up for him (because the Rolling Stones was once HIS band). But make no mistake, he didn’t have a good track record with his girlfriends or the various love-children he fathered over the years (which I especially take issue with being the child of two high school seniors and having never met my biological father). While I could tell you of his mutually-abusive relationship with Anita Pallenberg, I’d prefer to save that for another time. For now, let’s talk about those relationships, trysts, and one-night-stands that resulted in the births of his five confirmed children (there may be more, and I keep hearing of a daughter who was born just a few months before Brian’s death, but I’d prefer to stick with these five).
1. Barry David Corbett (aka Simon): Let’s face it, Brian started out young, by which I mean that he was just seventeen when he got his then-girlfriend, Valerie Corbett, pregnant. Sources don’t agree upon whether she was just fourteen (ew) or seventeen (which isn’t much better). Bear in mind, in the 1950s, not only was teenage pregnancy a serious no-no, but very often, the mothers were given no say in what happened to their unborn child, often being forced to give up the baby for adoption not long after birth (while the fathers usually got off relatively light in comparison with, say, a mildly-damaged reputation). Reportedly, Brian’s solutions for this were, depending on sources, a shotgun wedding (Paul Trynka’s Brian Jones: The Making of the Rolling Stones) or an ILLEGAL abortion (most other sources I’ve read). In the end though, Valerie gave birth to Barry on May 29, 1960, and the child was given up for adoption and given the name Simon. Because Brian wasn’t listed as his father on the birth certificate, he didn’t find out Brian was his father until 2004, and by then, he was married with two kids of his own.
2. Unknown name (Known as Belinda or Carol, depending on the source): Just a couple of months later, Brian was at it again, this time, having a one-night-stand with a married woman, Angeline, resulting in her pregnancy. She and her husband decided to raise the baby as their own, and on August 4, 1960, her and Brian’s daughter was born. Given that this resulted from a one-night-stand, Brian more than likely never knew about his only daughter’s birth. Brian’s bandmate, Bill Wyman, managed to get in contact with her for his 1990 book, Stone Alone. Growing up, she realized her adoptive father wasn’t her biological father when she was six, and by all accounts, she realized Brian was her father when her brother brought home a Rolling Stones record when she was fifteen. She has declined to let her real name be known to the public, most likely because the subject of Brian Jones is a sore spot in her family. However, it is made known in Stone Alone that she was diagnosed with temporal lobe epilepsy (it can be hereditary), which, to her and Bill, explained some of Brian’s behaviors (e.g. switching off from conversations at random moments). While this probably doesn’t explain everything, and we’ll never know for sure whether Brian had epilepsy or not, I still think it’s an interesting explanation for at least some of Brian’s overall health problems.
3. Julian Mark Andrews: Certainly, Brian was living up to the “Sex, Drugs, and Rock and Roll” lifestyle before he’d even become a rock star. For a time, a then 19-year-old Brian dated 16-year-old Pat Andrews. By her own account, she was in such denial about being pregnant, that it apparently took her sister marching her into the GP’s office just to confirm it. On October 22, 1961, Pat gave birth to her and Brian’s son, better known as Mark. Reportedly, on the day Mark was born, Brian sold his record collection so he could buy flowers for Pat and clothes for his newborn son. Sadly though, Brian’s support was not to last. One reason might be that Brian never was good at that whole “fidelity” thing to begin with. Another might be Rolling Stones manager, Andrew Loog Oldham’s, meddling. By one account, Pat went with Mark to visit Brian, who promptly started bitching about how Brian shouldn’t be seen with a girlfriend and a young child, wanting to market Brian as a single young man and not a family man (much like what once happened with the Beatles’ John Lennon). Brian, obviously, didn’t seem to have the heart or spine to stand up for Pat and Mark and stopped associating with them. Yet another reason, according to Paul Trynka, was Mick Jagger making a drunken pass at Pat, and then bragging about it (with much embellishing) in Brian’s presence (and by her account, he never gave her a chance to explain her side of the story). For one reason or another, Brian eventually cut off all contact with Pat and Mark. She eventually sued him to try and get him to pay child support payments, and when Brian failed to show up for court, the judge, more than a little pissed with Brian, awarded her the maximum sum allowed at that time of £2.50 a week for Mark as well as another £78 to cover Pat’s court costs and confinement expenses. However, after Brian’s death, the payments stopped coming. According to Laura Jackson’s book, he has no memories of his father.
4. Julian Brian Jones Leitch: Yes, you’re reading that right, Brian had two sons named Julian after Julian “Cannonball” Adderley. 😑 By this time, Brian was dating 17-year-old Linda Lawrence, who gave birth to Brian’s fourth child (and third son), Julian, on July 23, 1964. Reportedly, Brian lived with Linda and her family for a while, but her parents kicked him out once they realized that he had no intentions of marrying their daughter. She was the first of Brian’s ex-girlfriends to come forward with a paternity suit, but it was dropped later that year and Linda was awarded a £1,000 lump sum when the suit was dropped. In October 1970, just over a year after Brian’s death, Linda married Brian’s friend and fellow musician Donovan Leitch (better known as Donovan), who taught Julian to play a guitar. He is the father of Joolz Leitch Jones (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJyE6DDbMzJgpU5mwCu1q8w), who is also a musician, much like his father and grandfather. Interestingly, I also found a clip of Julian singing “Sympathy for the Devil.” I’ll defer judgement to you guys: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zja7DuuYi-M
5. Paul Andrew Molloy (aka John Maynard): This one’s a doozy, even with my already-low standards when it comes to rock stars and their children (*eye-ing Steven Tyler*). This story starts with Brian dating 19-year-old Dawn Molloy on and off again throughout 1964, and her realizing she was pregnant. Brian straight-up abandoned her around this time , and Andrew, still of the opinion that the Rolling Stones should not be seen as family men (even though Bill Wyman was married and also had a young son), he essentially forced her to sign a non-disclosure agreement (witnessed by Mick Jagger, of all people) saying that she would not mention Brian or the child to the press and was paid £700 in exchange for her silence. She gave birth to her and Brian’s son Paul, on March 24, 1965. Soon after, she was forced to give her son up for adoption, and he was renamed John. Some thirty years later, he went looking for his biological family, and soon found out Brian was his father, and also got in contact with both Dawn and Bill. By that time, he was married with three children, and in a Daily Mail article in 2013, he was able to speak about his experiences. Likewise, Dawn has also written a book about her ordeal, Not Fade Away (which I haven't read yet).
And there you have it, the messy stories of Brian and the five children he’s been confirmed to have. And yes, somehow, Brian managed to have five children by the time he was 23, and he was dead at 27! Like I’ve said, there’s the kids speculated to be his, but I figured it’d be easier to stick with the five who are known. Though, knowing Brian, there is no doubt in my mind that there are probably scores more out there. One thing’s for sure though is that, despite my admitted infatuation with Brian, I cannot condone his behavior towards the children he knew he had, especially since I’ve been through a similar situation in my life. Thank God for contraception.
Sources: http://www.earcandymag.com/foundationstonebook-2.htm
Stone Alone by Bill Wyman
Brian Jones: The Making of the Rolling Stones by Paul Trynka
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8OANZg8_iE
Brian Jones, The Untold Life and Mysterious Death of a Rock Legend by Laura Jackson
https://ultimateclassicrock.com/the-rolling-stones-children/
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1353783/Being-Brian-Joness-son-greatest-thing-happened-me.html
http://www.angelfire.com/rock3/sixtiesfish/kidsweb/kids.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Jones#Early_life_and_children
#brian jones#the rolling stones#most of my faves are straight-up problematic#brian i love you but come on#rock and roll
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
RIBA reveals 62 projects vying to be named world's best new building
A forest chapel in Japan, an oyster-shell-inspired ferry terminal in Italy and a grain silo converted into an art museum in South Africa are among the projects shortlisted for the second edition of the RIBA International Prize.
The Royal Institute of British Architects has released a longlist of 62 projects vying for the RIBA International Prize 2018, a biennial architecture award that aims to set a global standard for architecture.
Covering everything from small housing projects, to major new museums and office buildings, the list includes projects from 28 countries, by firms including BIG, Zaha Hadid Architects, Foster + Partners and Heatherwick Studio.
Zeitz MOCAA, Cape Town, South Africa, by Heatherwick Studio
Dezeen is media partner for the RIBA International Prize 2018.
Other projects in the running for the award include Dorte Mandrup's sculptural extension to the Wadden Sea visitor centre, along with Ensamble Studio's large-scale contemporary sculptures set in the Montana wilderness.
Also longlisted is a library in Istanbul by Tabanlıoğlu Architects, and a nearby mosque set into terraced steps by Emre Arolat Architects.
Salerno Maritime Terminal, Salerno, Italy, by Zaha Hadid Architects
Rogers Stirck Harbour + Partners has two buildings on the list: a 34-storey office tower in Sydney with criss-crossed red braces, and a 50-storey tower block for a bank headquarters in Mexico City.
Japanese architect Hiroshi Nakamura is behind the forest chapel on the list, while Stefano Boeri is recognised for his tree-covered tower in Milan.
The project that was named World Building of the Year at the World Architecture Festival last month is also among the nominees. The structure, created by a team from the Chinese University of Hong Kong, is a prototype for an affordable, earthquake-proof house built from rammed earth.
BBVA Bancomer Tower, Mexico City, Mexico, by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners with Legorreta + Legorreta
"The RIBA International List 2018 shines a light on the world's best new buildings and most impressive architectural talent," said RIBA president Ben Derbyshire.
"Most importantly, this significant selection of 62 projects illustrates the meaningful impact and transformative quality that well-designed buildings can have on communities, wherever they are in the world."
Vertical forest, Milan, Italy, by Boeri Studio with Studio Emanuela Borio and Laura Gatti
The RIBA International Prize was open to any registered architect in the world – not just RIBA members. All projects were eligible, regardless of size, type or budget, provided they demonstrated "visionary and innovative thinking".
A jury – including Diller Scofidio + Renfro co-founder Liz Diller and Joshua Bolchover of Rural Urban Framework – will select a shortlist from these 62 projects.
They will then visit each of these projects in person and name four finalists, before an overall winner is announced in November 2018.
Wadden Sea Centre, Ribe, Denmark, by Dorte Mandrup
The first edition of the prize was won by Grafton Architects, with their vertical campus for a Peruvian University.
Described by judges as a "modern-day Machu Picchu", the Universidad de Ingeniería y Tecnología (UTEC) was praised as an exceptional example of civil architecture.
Explore the entire longlist here:
› 8 Chifley Square, Sydney, Australia, by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners with Lippmann Partnership › AP House Urbino, Pieve di Cagna, Italy, by Gardini Gibertini Architects › Audain Art Museum, Whistler, British Columbia, Canada, by Patkau Architects › Baan Huay Sarn Yaw - Post Disaster School, Chiang Rai, Thailand, by Vin Varavarn Architects › Baitasi House of the Future, Beijing, China, by Dot Architects › BBVA Bancomer Tower, Mexico City, Mexico, by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners with Legorreta + Legorreta › Beyazıt State Library, Istanbul, Turkey, by Tabanlıoğlu Architects › Bremer Landesbank Headquarters, Bremen, Germany, by Caruso St John Architects › Bundner Kunstmuseum Chur, Chur, Switzerland, by Barozzi Veiga › Cabbage Tree House, Bayview, Australia, by Peter Stutchbury Architecture
Beyazıt State Library, Istanbul, Turkey, by Tabanlıoğlu Architects
› Captain Kelly's Cottage, Tasmania, Australia, by John Wardle Architects › Central European University - Phase 1, Budapest, Hungary, by O'Donnell + Tuomey with M-Teampannon Kft › Children Village, Formoso do Araguaia, Brazil, Alephzero with Rosenbaum › City Hall Deventer, Deventer, Netherlands, by Neutelings Riedijk Architecten › Cluny Park Residences, Singapore, by SCDA › Cuernavaca House, Mexico City, Mexico, by Tapia McMahon › Empower, Khayelitsha, South Africa, by Urban-Think Tank, ETHZ › EY Centre, Sydney, Australia, by Francis-Jones Morehen Thorp › Factory In The Forest, Penang, Malaysia, by Design Unit Sdn Bhd with Chin Kuen Cheng Architect › Garden Tower, Wabern, Switzerland, by Buchner Bründler Architekten
Structures of Landscape, Fishtail, Montana, United States of America, by Ensamble Studio
› GS1 Portugal, Lisbon, Portugal, by PROMONTORIO › Joolz, Amsterdam, Netherlands, by Space Encounters Office for Architecture › Kannikegaarden, Ribe, Denmark, by Lundgaard & Tranberg Arkitekter › Kericho Cathedral, Kericho, Kenya, by John McAslan + Partners with Triad Architects › King Fahad National Library, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, by Gerber Architekten › Kunstmuseum Basel, Basel, Switzerland, by Christ & Gantenbein › Lanka Learning Center, Eastern Province, Sri Lanka, by Feat Collective › M4 Metro Line Budapest, Budapest, Hungary, by Palatium Studio, with Budapesti Építőművészeti Műhely, Gelesz és Lenzsér Építészeti, Puhl és Dajka Építész Iroda, sporaarchitects, VPI Építész Studio and Palatium M4 Projekt › MAAT, Lisbon, Portugal, by AL_A › Maersk Tower, extension of the Panum complex at the University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark, by CF Møller Architects › Mount Herzl Memorial Hall, Jerusalem, Israel, by Kimmel Eshkolot Architects in collaboration with Kalush Chechick Architects
Sayama Forest Chapel, Tokorozawa, Saitama, Japan, by Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP
› Msheireb Museums, Doha, Qatar, by John McAslan + Partners › Mulan Weichang Visitor Centre, Weichang, China, by HDD › Musee d'arts de Nantes, Nantes, France, by Stanton Williams › Museum Voorlinden, Wassenaar, The Netherlands, by Kraaijvanger Architects › National Design Centre, Singapore, by SCDA › Oasia Hotel Downtown, Singapore, by WOHA Architects › Post-earthquake reconstruction demonstration project of Guangming Village, Zhaotong City, China, by One University One Village Programme, The Chinese University of Hong Kong › Queen Elisabeth Hall, Antwerp, Belgium, by SimpsonHaugh, with Bureau Bouwtechniek › ROGIC ROKI Global Innovation Centre, Hamamatsu, Shizuoka, Japan, by Tetsuo Kobori Architects › Salerno Maritime Terminal, Salerno, Italy, by Zaha Hadid Architects with Interplan Seconda
The Palestinian Museum, Birzeit, Palestine, by Heneghan Peng Architects with Arabtech Jardaneh
› Sancaklar Mosque, Istanbul, Turkey, by EAA-Emre Arolat Architecture › Sayama Forest Chapel, Tokorozawa, Saitama, Japan, by Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP › Social Housing in Bairro Padre Cruz, Lisbon, Portugal, by Orange - Arquitectura e Gestão de Projecto with Bruno Silvestre Architecture and D Sul › Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center, Athens, Greece, by Renzo Piano Building Worskhop with BETAPLAN › Structures of Landscape, Fishtail, Montana, United States of America, by Ensamble Studio › Studio Dwelling at Rajagiriya, Colombo, Sri Lanka, Palinda Kannangara Architects › Suzhou Chapel, China, by Neri&Hu Design and Research Office › Tatsumi Apartment House, Tokyo, Japan, Hiroyuki Ito Architects › The Ancient Church of Vilanova de la Barca, Spain, by AleaOlea architecture&landscape › The Palestinian Museum, Birzeit, Palestine, by Heneghan Peng Architects with Arabtech Jardaneh
Kericho Cathedral, Kericho, Kenya, by John McAslan + Partners with Triad Architects
› Three Metro Stations L9, Barcelona, Spain, by Garcés-de Seta-Bonet Arquitectes with TEC 4 Ingenieros Consultores › Tirpitz, Blåvand, Denmark, by BIG › Toho Gakuen School of Music, Tokyo, Japan, by Nikken Sekkei › Tolsa 61, Mexico City, Mexico, by MOCAA Arquitectos › University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands, by Allford Hall Monaghan Morris › Vertical forest, Milan, Italy, by Boeri Studio with Studio Emanuela Borio and Laura Gatti › Wadden Sea Centre, Ribe, Denmark, by Dorte Mandrup › Welcome Centre and office building, Shanghai, China, by Sergison Bates Architects › Xiao Jing Wan University, Shenzhen, China, by Foster + Partners with GDI › YKK80 Building, Tokyo, Japan, by Nikken Sekkei › Zeitz MOCAA, Cape Town, South Africa, by Heatherwick Studio with Van Der Merwe Miszewski Architects, Rick Brown Associates and Jacobs Parker
The post RIBA reveals 62 projects vying to be named world's best new building appeared first on Dezeen.
from ifttt-furniture https://www.dezeen.com/2017/12/12/riba-international-prize-2018-longlist-worlds-best-building-hadid-heatherwick-rogers-foster/
0 notes
Photo
Nephew Joolz Jones NYNY🗽 #brianjones #therollingstones #nyny
0 notes
Text
Grandson of Brian Jones - Joolz Jones
1 note
·
View note
Text
1 note
·
View note
Text
Joolz Jones - grandson of Brian Jones. Joolz is the son of Julian Brian Lawrence/Leitch and his grandmother is Linda Lawrence.
1 note
·
View note
Text
Joolz Jones - vnuk Briana Jonese
Donovan: Joolz je syn Juliana Jonese, který je zase synem Briana Jonese a mé ženy Lindy. S Lindou jsme se vzali na začátku sedmdesátých let a naštěstí jsme stále spolu. Nejprve jsme vychovali Julianu společně s našimi dvěma dětmi a poté jeho syna Joolze. Je to oficiálně můj padělek. A bylo nevyhnutelné, že velmi brzy přišel do styku s hudbou doma. Nyní se z něj stal také skvělý hudebník a skladatel, který do svých písní vkládá hodně srdce a duše a tak nějak navazuje na Brians a můj odkaz.
0 notes