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  • The Strad news – New principal second violinist at the LA Phil

    The Strad news – New principal second violinist at the LA Phil

    Read more news stories here

    The Los Angeles Philharmonic has announced that Canadian violinist Melody Ye Yuan will join the orchestra in September as its new principal second violin. The violinist joined the orchestra in 2024 as a member of the first violin section. 

    Yuan began the violin at the age of five in China before moving to Vancouver, Canada, to study with Taros Gabora at nine years old. She studied under David Gillham at the University of British Columbia (UBC) for one year before moving to Boston to join the class of Donald Weilerstein at the New England Conservatory. She went on to study a master’s degree at Los Angeles’ Colburn Conservatory of Music under Martin Beaver. 

    Yuan made her orchestral debut with the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra in 2012, and has since regularly performed with the orchestra. She has travelled across North America as well as Germany, Russia, Austria, and China performing as a soloist. 

    Yuan has also won various prizes, including first prize at the 2009 Yuri Yankelevitch International Violin Competition at the age of eleven, ranking third at the Canadian Music Competition, and winning the UBC Concerto Competition in 2016. In 2020, she was included in CBC music’s ‘30 under 30’ in classical music.

    Yuan performs on a 1708 Carlo Giuseppe Testore violin.

    Best of Technique

    In The Best of Technique you’ll discover the top playing tips of the world’s leading string players and teachers. It’s packed full of exercises for students, plus examples from the standard repertoire to show you how to integrate the technique into your playing.

    Masterclass

    In the second volume of The Strad’s Masterclass series, soloists including James Ehnes, Jennifer Koh, Philippe Graffin, Daniel Hope and Arabella Steinbacher give their thoughts on some of the greatest works in the string repertoire. Each has annotated the sheet music with their own bowings, fingerings and comments.

    Calendars

    The Canada Council of the Arts’ Musical Instrument Bank is 40 years old in 2025. This year’s calendar celebrates some its treasures, including four instruments by Antonio Stradivari and priceless works by Montagnana, Gagliano, Pressenda and David Tecchler.

    Continue Reading

  • Zak Brown explains how McLaren are handling ‘enjoyable’ task of managing Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri’s relationship

    Zak Brown explains how McLaren are handling ‘enjoyable’ task of managing Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri’s relationship

    Zak Brown has insisted that handling the relationship between Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri both on and off the track is an “enjoyable” task for McLaren rather than a “problem”, with the CEO hopeful that the pair’s rivalry will continue until the end of the season.

    The Woking-based outfit have enjoyed an impressive first half of the campaign, having built a whopping 238-point lead in the Teams’ Championship, while Piastri and Norris are now some way ahead of their rivals in the Drivers’ standings.

    This also saw the two papaya cars collide for the first time at the Canadian Grand Prix, before spending much of the following race in Austria locked in a fight for the win.

    Asked during the British Grand Prix weekend about how he was finding the task of managing the intra-team battle between McLaren’s drivers, Brown responded: “Pretty awesome.

    “I thought Austria was an epic race – everyone’s been kind of waiting to see that race between the two of them and they were on it, they were fast, they were aggressive, they gave each other racing room and it was very exciting, so I’m looking forward to seeing more of that.”

    In terms of whether it is a case of ensuring that Norris and Piastri keep things clean on the track – and still remain amicable off it – Brown admitted that he is keen to see more close racing between the two right down to the wire.

    “It’s not a problem,” Brown said of handling the situation. “It’s quite enjoyable, and they want to race fairly. They just want equal equipment, fair treatment, which is exactly what they get, and they want to beat 19 other cars, their team mate included, so it’s a pleasure to work with them.

    “They’ve got a tremendous amount of respect for each other – how you see them conduct themselves, that’s how they are behind the scenes.

    “I think a lot of that is the chemistry that we’ve built in the team, and I see no reason why it can’t come down to Abu Dhabi and I hope the two of them are battling it out, and when it’s all said and done they shake hands and say, ‘Job well done’ and go again next year.”

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  • Big-Bang echoes unmask a billion-light-year hole around Earth—and it’s stretching space faster

    Big-Bang echoes unmask a billion-light-year hole around Earth—and it’s stretching space faster

    Earth and our entire Milky Way galaxy may sit inside a mysterious giant hole which makes the cosmos expand faster here than in neighboring regions of the universe, astronomers say.

    Their theory is a potential solution to the ‘Hubble tension’ and could help confirm the true age of our universe, which is estimated to be around 13.8 billion years old.

    The latest research – shared at the Royal Astronomical Society’s National Astronomy Meeting (NAM) in Durham – shows that sound waves from the early universe, “essentially the sound of the Big Bang,” support this idea.

    The Hubble constant was first proposed by Edwin Hubble in 1929 to express the rate of the universe’s expansion. It can be measured by observing the distance of celestial objects and how fast they are moving away from us.

    The stumbling block, however, is that extrapolating measurements of the distant, early universe to today using the standard cosmological model predicts a slower rate of expansion than measurements of the nearby, more recent universe. This is the Hubble tension.

    “A potential solution to this inconsistency is that our galaxy is close to the center of a large, local void,” explained Dr Indranil Banik, of the University of Portsmouth.

    “It would cause matter to be pulled by gravity towards the higher density exterior of the void, leading to the void becoming emptier with time.

    “As the void is emptying out, the velocity of objects away from us would be larger than if the void were not there. This therefore gives the appearance of a faster local expansion rate.”

    He added: “The Hubble tension is largely a local phenomenon, with little evidence that the expansion rate disagrees with expectations in the standard cosmology further back in time.

    “So a local solution like a local void is a promising way to go about solving the problem.”

    For the idea to stand up, Earth and our solar system would need to be near the center of a void about a billion light-years in radius and with a density about 20 percent below the average for the universe as a whole.

    Directly counting galaxies does support the theory, because the number density in our local universe is lower than in neighbouring regions.

    However, the existence of such a large and deep void is controversial because it doesn’t mesh particularly well with the standard model of cosmology, which suggests matter today should be more uniformly spread out on such large scales.

    Despite this, new data presented by Dr Banik at NAM 2025 shows that baryon acoustic oscillations (BAOs) – the “sound of the Big Bang” – support the idea of a local void.

    “These sound waves travelled for only a short while before becoming frozen in place once the universe cooled enough for neutral atoms to form,” he explained.

    “They act as a standard ruler, whose angular size we can use to chart the cosmic expansion history.

    “A local void slightly distorts the relation between the BAO angular scale and the redshift, because the velocities induced by a local void and its gravitational effect slightly increase the redshift on top of that due to cosmic expansion.

    “By considering all available BAO measurements over the last 20 years, we showed that a void model is about one hundred million times more likely than a void-free model with parameters designed to fit the CMB observations taken by the Planck satellite, the so-called homogeneous Planck cosmology.”

    The next step for researchers is to compare their local void model with other methods to estimate the history of the universe’s expansion, such as cosmic chronometers.

    This involves looking at galaxies that are no longer forming stars. By observing their spectra, or light, it is possible to find what kinds of stars they have and in what proportion. Since more massive stars have shorter lives, they are absent in older galaxies, providing a way to establish a galaxy’s age.

    Astronomers can then combine this age with the galaxy’s redshift – how much the wavelength of its light has been stretched – which tells us how much the universe has expanded while light from the galaxy was travelling towards us. This sheds light on the universe’s expansion history.

    The Hubble constant was first proposed by Edwin Hubble in 1929 to express the rate of the universe’s expansion. It can be measured by observing the distance of celestial objects and how fast they are moving away from us.

    The Hubble tension refers to the discrepancy in the measured expansion rate of the universe, specifically between the value based on observations of the early universe and value related to observations of the local universe.

    Baryon acoustic oscillations are a pattern of wrinkles in the density distribution of the clusters of galaxies spread across the universe. They provide an independent way to measure the expansion rate of the universe and how that rate has changed throughout cosmic history.

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  • Dentons Link Legal successfully defends Mr. Vijay Biyani in Personal Insolvency Proceedings before NCLT Mumbai

    Dentons Link Legal successfully defends Mr. Vijay Biyani in Personal Insolvency Proceedings before NCLT Mumbai


    Leaving Dentons

    Beijing Dacheng Law Offices, LLP (“大成”) is an independent law firm, and not a member or affiliate of Dentons. 大成 is a partnership law firm organized under the laws of the People’s Republic of China, and is Dentons’ Preferred Law Firm in China, with offices in more than 40 locations throughout China. Dentons Group (a Swiss Verein) (“Dentons”) is a separate international law firm with members and affiliates in more than 160 locations around the world, including Hong Kong SAR, China. For more information, please see dacheng.com/legal-notices or dentons.com/legal-notices.

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  • England call up veteran spinner Liam Dawson to replace Bashir for fourth Test with India | England v India 2025

    England call up veteran spinner Liam Dawson to replace Bashir for fourth Test with India | England v India 2025

    Liam Dawson has been added to England’s squad for the fourth Test against India, ending an eight-year exile from the longest format in international cricket.

    Last month the Hampshire all-rounder made a successful return to England’s T20 side after a three-year absence and, with Shoaib Bashir forced to pull out of the India series with a broken finger, he has finally been rewarded for his excellent red-ball form in recent seasons: 49 first-class wickets in 2023 followed by 54 in 2024, by a considerable margin his two most successful campaigns.

    In nine matches this summer Dawson has taken a comparatively sober 21 wickets while the most successful spinner in the top flight, with 32, is Jack Leach, who has been overlooked despite still being on an England and Wales Cricket Board central contract. Dawson has also been preferred to Rehan Ahmed, Will Jacks and Tom Hartley, all spinners who have played Tests for England in recent years.

    The 35-year-old is a much better batter than Bashir or Leach, with a first-class average this summer of 44.66 and across his career of 35.29, and a total of 18 first-class centuries.

    “Liam Dawson deserves his call-up,” said the England selector Luke Wright. “He has been in outstanding form in the County Championship and consistently puts in strong performances for Hampshire.”

    Bashir broke his finger while fielding off his own bowling during India’s first innings at Lord’s, but despite the injury batted in England’s second innings and bowled 5.5 overs on the final day, taking the decisive wicket as the Test was won by just 22 runs. Ben Stokes, the captain, said: “It’s a big shame, but I think the courage he showed to go out there and bat for us, and being willing to sit there on the bench waiting for his moment to come on and bowl, just proves how much it means to everyone who gets the opportunity to put the shirt on. “Not even a couple of breaks is going to stop anyone getting out there.”

    Quick Guide

    England squad for fourth Test against India

    Show

    Ben Stokes (Durham; captain); Jofra Archer (Sussex); Gus Atkinson (Surrey); Jacob Bethell (Warwickshire); Harry Brook (Yorkshire); Brydon Carse (Durham); Zak Crawley (Kent); Liam Dawson (Hampshire); Ben Duckett (Nottinghamshire); Ollie Pope (Surrey); Joe Root (Yorkshire); Jamie Smith (Surrey; wicketkeeper); Josh Tongue (Nottinghamshire); Chris Woakes (Warwickshire).

    Thank you for your feedback.

    Essex’s Sam Cook and Jamie Overton of Surrey, who were both in the squad for the third Test, have been released to their respective counties to play in the County Championship. Gus Atkinson, who made his comeback from a hamstring injury by playing for Spencer CC against Sunbury in the Surrey Championship on Friday, retains his place.

    Meanwhile, Jimmy Anderson and Rocky Flintoff will both take part in the Hundred this season after being selected in the wildcard draft. Anderson, the England bowling great who turns 43 this month, was selected by Manchester Originals. Flintoff, 17, will join up with his father, Andrew, head coach at Northern Superchargers. The pair were two of 32 names drafted, the final updates to the 16 squads before the competition’s fifth year.

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  • Rupee falls to over two-week low on corporate dollar bids, outflows – Reuters

    1. Rupee falls to over two-week low on corporate dollar bids, outflows  Reuters
    2. Indian rupee creeps higher  Business Recorder
    3. USD/INR trades firmly as inflation in India cools down again  FXStreet
    4. Currency watch: Rupee rises 16 paise to 85.76 against dollar; crude oil slide & weak greenback lift senti  Times of India
    5. Navigating the Tariff Storm: The Indian Rupee and Equity Markets in 2025  AInvest

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  • St Ives rugby facility scheme appoints contractors

    St Ives rugby facility scheme appoints contractors

    A plan to move a rugby union clubhouse and training pitch to allow a development of 120 new homes in St Ives has reached a “key milestone”, a council says.

    Cornwall Council said it has confirmed local contractors Fox Construction and WR Sandow would deliver the first phase of the scheme.

    It added construction was set to begin towards the end of the summer, with a pitch potentially playable in autumn 2026.

    The plans would see the relocation of the current clubhouse to provide a new modern facility, existing training facilities being moved north of their current site to provide a new sports pitch, better access and improved sightlines of the main pitch from the new clubhouse, backers said.

    The project has received £2.9m from the government’s Town Deal programme and £2m match-funding from Cornwall Council.

    The relocation would free up the land to provide affordable homes and extra care housing, the council said.

    It added outline planning permission for up to 50 dwellings and up to 70 extra care units had previously been granted.

    The scheme, led by Cornwall Council, has been developed in partnership with St Ives Rugby Club and the Rugby Football Union and it would meet the requirements and standards of Sport England.

    Cornwall Council member Andrew Mitchell said: “I have supported both parts of this scheme, the rugby club development and proposed housing.

    “It does seem to have taken an age to get to this point, but breaking ground will make it feel real and I wish all involved great success”.

    Ian Sanders from St Ives RFC said: “This development allows us to grow further on the pitch whilst continuing to support the local community off it for another 100 years.

    “We also welcome the opportunity to play our part in assisting with the need for housing in our town.”

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  • NotebookLM Adds New Guides on Shakespeare, Finance, Parenting, More – PCMag

    1. NotebookLM Adds New Guides on Shakespeare, Finance, Parenting, More  PCMag
    2. Try featured notebooks on selected topics in NotebookLM  The Keyword
    3. Google’s curated AI ‘notebooks’ talk you through topics from parenting to Shakespeare  The Verge
    4. Google’s NotebookLM adds features that bring a trove of books for students  The Indian Express
    5. Google Adds Featured Notebooks to NotebookLM for AI Research  Analytics India Magazine

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  • See images of solar eruptions on the sun in unprecedented detail – The Washington Post

    1. See images of solar eruptions on the sun in unprecedented detail  The Washington Post
    2. NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Snaps Closest-Ever Images to Sun  NASA Science (.gov)
    3. Watch Solar Winds Burst into Space in the Closest-Ever Glimpse of the Sun  Colossal
    4. NASA’s Parker Probe Just Dived Into the Sun’s Atmosphere and Solved a Fiery Solar Mystery  SciTechDaily
    5. This is the closest ever image of the Sun. You can clearly see the solar wind  MSN

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  • The Strad News – Man arrested over theft of 285-year-old violin, worth £150k

    The Strad News – Man arrested over theft of 285-year-old violin, worth £150k

    Read more news stories here

    The Metropolitan Police has made an arrest in its search for a 1740 Lorenzo Carcassi violin that was stolen from a London pub in February this year.

    The violin belongs to David López Ibáñez, a member of the Philharmonia Orchestra. The instrument, along with three bows, were stolen in a black Riboni Unoeotto case at 7:30pm on Tuesday 18 February from the Marquess Tavern in Canonbury.

    In June, the Met Police released CCTV images of the suspect and appealed to the public to help trace the thief.

    Suspect pic 10 - violin theft

    A 43-year-old man was arrested on 25 June on suspicion of theft and was taken into custody. He was released on bail pending further inquiries.

    However, the violin has not been recovered.

    Ibáñez described the violin, worth £150,000, as his ‘voice.’

    ’Aside of the actual monetary value of it, to me it really was priceless,’ he told the BBC.

    The violin has a distinct heart-shaped hole at the back of the scroll. Ibáñez urges anyone who may have seen the violin to get in touch with the police with the Crime Reference Number  01/7178074/25. 

    Best of Technique

    In The Best of Technique you’ll discover the top playing tips of the world’s leading string players and teachers. It’s packed full of exercises for students, plus examples from the standard repertoire to show you how to integrate the technique into your playing.

    Masterclass

    In the second volume of The Strad’s Masterclass series, soloists including James Ehnes, Jennifer Koh, Philippe Graffin, Daniel Hope and Arabella Steinbacher give their thoughts on some of the greatest works in the string repertoire. Each has annotated the sheet music with their own bowings, fingerings and comments.

    Calendars

    The Canada Council of the Arts’ Musical Instrument Bank is 40 years old in 2025. This year’s calendar celebrates some its treasures, including four instruments by Antonio Stradivari and priceless works by Montagnana, Gagliano, Pressenda and David Tecchler.

    Continue Reading