Mick Hutton (born 5 June 1956 in Chester, UK) is a British jazz musician (upright bass, electric bass, and Steel Pan and Cuatro) and composer.
Hutton is known from the British jazz scene by his work with musicians like Harry Beckett (Pictures of You, 1985) and with Julian Argüelles, Iain Ballamy, Django Bates (First House), the Chris Biscoe Sextet and Bill Bruford's Band Earthworks. In addition, Hutton worked throughout his career with Alan Barnes, Peter Erskine, Tina May, Jim Mullen, John Scofield, Alan Skidmore, Tommy Smith, John Taylor, Stan Tracey and Kenny Wheeler. In 2002 he played with Robin Williamsons ECM-album Skirting The River Road, and the same year he played in a trio with Martin Speake and Paul Motian (Change of Heart, ECM).
A hand injury forced him to abandon the upright bass. He started working as an amplified electric bassist, percussionist and synthesizer player and as a composer. He is currently playing with his own band including saxophonist Andy Panayi, pianist Barry Green and drummer Paul Robinson. With his own self named Quartet including Iain Ballamy (saxes), Ross Stanley (piano) and Paul Robinson (drums) he frequentlu visits venues around the world.
Hutton may refer to:
Hutton Crater is a crater in the Mare Australe quadrangle of Mars, located at 71.8° south latitude and 255.4° west longitude. It is 99 km in diameter and was named after James Hutton, a British geologist (1726-1797). Many areas of Mars show patterned ground. Sometimes the ground has the shape of polygons. In other places, the surface has low mounds arranged in chains. Patterned ground is common in cold climates on Earth when the soil contains water that is often frozen. Patterned ground is visible below in the image of Hutton Crater.
Hutton Crater Area, as seen by HiRISE. Click on image to see patterned ground.
Hutton Crater Area, as seen by HiRISE. Click on image to see patterned ground.
Hutton is a surname, and may refer to
Mick is a derogatory term for a person of Irish descent. It may also refer to:
Grand Theft Auto III is an open world action-adventure video game developed by DMA Design and published by Rockstar Games. It was released on 22 October 2001 for the PlayStation 2 console, on 20 May 2002 for Microsoft Windows, and on 31 October 2003 for the Xbox console. It is the fifth title in the Grand Theft Auto series, and the first main entry since 1999's Grand Theft Auto 2.
Grand Theft Auto III is played from a third-person perspective in an open world single-player environment, allowing the player to interact with the game world at their leisure. The game is set within the fictional city of Liberty City, which is loosely based on New York City. The story features a mute, nameless protagonist, although he is later referred to as Claude in his cameo in the prequel Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas. Claude is a bank robber who is left for dead by his girlfriend, and quickly becomes entangled in a world of gangs, crime, and corruption.
Upon its release, the game was acclaimed by many reviewers who praised its concept and gameplay, which was coupled with the use of a 3D game engine for the first time in the series. However, the game's violent and sexual content has been the source of much public concern and controversy. It became the best-selling video game of 2001, and has sold over 17 million copies as of 2011. The game is cited as a landmark in video games for its far-reaching influence within the industry. The success of Grand Theft Auto III was a significant factor in the series' subsequent popularity; as of 2008, five prequels set before the events of Grand Theft Auto III have been released, particularly Grand Theft Auto: Liberty City Stories which revisits the Liberty City setting just three years prior.
Mick was a screenplay written by author, political activist, historian and producer Eoghan Harris in the early 1990s. It was intended to tell the story of Irish revolutionary leader Michael Collins. Harris verbally clashed with Neil Jordan, who was planning to produce his own film on the Irish leader, over the emphasis each placed on aspects of Collins's life. One area where they diverged was over longstanding rumours that Collins had been bisexual. Whereas Harris's script planned to state the rumour as fact, Jordan attributed Collins's constant physical touching of the men around him as macho heterosexual horseplay. Harris accused Jordan of sanitising Collins's sexual orientation so as not to offend Catholic Irish America, which had already been scandalised by claims that Padraig Pearse was gay.
Ultimately it was Jordan's film, using Jordan's script and Jordan's version of Collins's life, that was made, as Michael Collins, using Liam Neeson as Collins and, in what was subsequently criticised as a casting mistake, Julia Roberts as Collins's real life fianceé, Kitty Kiernan. Harris openly criticised the film, its contents, its casting and its divergences from the truth (which Jordan admitted, but said they were necessary for narrative purposes) in reviews and on television chat shows like the Late Late Show.
See them fly in the midnight sky and tear it inside out
Hear them crash with a burning flash and rip your soul right out
Then I run for the rising sun, Mother Earth please let me live
I was taught to walk tall and never crawl but why die it's not my sin
I can make you go down
(I don't think so)
Hear me cry to the burning sky, oh Lord what have I done
No more running, no more time, my body has gone numb
I see her face in a safer place and sweet smells fill the air
All I ask is one more touch, dear God is that not fair
I can make you go down
(I don't think so)
Make you go down for the love of God and all the land that he walks on
Don't you see by his hand you will fall
Keep on counting, keep the score, don't want to be hanging around here no more
Oh no, said to you I don't think so
Now I rise up through the skies and my body's still down there
Too many things that were left undone, silent screaming in despair
If I had one last minute upon this world gone mad
I'd shout out brothers and sisters please join hands and walk across this land
I can make you go down
(I don't think so)