
-
Trump brands Zelensky 'a dictator'
-
Alcaraz fends off Nardi to make Qatar quarters
-
Trump brands Zelensky a 'dictator' as clash deepens
-
NFL returns to Brazil in 2025 with Chargers to play in week one
-
Sabalenka 'all over the place' in Dubai exit
-
Syrian Jews say held first group prayer in decades in Damascus synagogue
-
New Zealand spoil historic day for Pakistan in Champions Trophy
-
Ikea hopes for furniture market improvement in 2026
-
Game, set, hate: WTA stars reveal fears after Raducanu's Dubai shock
-
Trump auto tariff threat prompts pushback in Germany
-
Gatland 'hurting' after exit as Wales rugby coach
-
Sabalenka thrashed in Dubai as Paolini's title defence ends
-
Arsenal post £17.7m loss despite record revenues
-
Global glacier melt is accelerating, scientists say
-
England to face Senegal and Wales in 2025 friendlies
-
Canada announces first high-speed rail: Toronto to Quebec City
-
Burundi, Uganda manoeuvre as DR Congo violence spreads
-
Macron holds new emergency talks on Ukraine
-
Call for 'maximum' sentence for Bosnian Serb leader
-
Putin hails US-Russia talks as Zelensky-Trump spat deepens
-
Prosecutors want Napoli and owner to stand trial over suspected Osimhen transfer fraud
-
Caretaker boss Sherratt set to shake up Wales for Ireland clash
-
Tajikistan to publish new dress 'guidelines' for women
-
Clement gets stay of execution at Rangers despite 'disastrous' cup exit
-
'Classy' Gill key for Champions Trophy, says India captain
-
Historic day as Pakistan host first international cricket tournament for three decades
-
Ailing pope's obstinacy a blessing or a curse?
-
Lookman blasts coach's penalty barbs after Atalanta's Champions League exit
-
Stock markets skid after Trump threatens auto tariffs
-
Man Utd spent £14.5m on sackings including Ten Hag and Ashworth
-
Lights, camera, resistance. Trump looms over anxious film industry
-
Do look up: How Earth can defend itself against asteroid
-
Pogacar powers into UAE Tour lead
-
Manchester United spent £14.5 mln on sackings including Ten Hag and Ashworth
-
Hamas says ready to free all hostages at once in Gaza truce phase two
-
Young, Latham lead New Zealand charge in Champions Trophy opener
-
France's Senate backs move to ban headscarf in sport
-
Harlequins sign Argentina's Petti for 2025/26 season
-
Kenin ends injured Paolini's Dubai title defence
-
Real Madrid's Bellingham banned for two matches after dissent
-
Arsenal's Tomiyasu out for season after knee surgery
-
Zelensky accuses Trump of living in Russian 'disinformation' bubble
-
Ghana scrambles to fill $156 million shortfall after USAID freeze
-
UK accusers of influencer Tate urge US to stay away from case
-
Ill Jalibert out of France's Six Nations team for Italy
-
Teamwork key to smashing European doping networks: WADA investigations chief
-
Troubled AC Milan reeling from Champions League 'suicide'
-
Glencore looks to leave London Stock Exchange as falls into loss
-
Stock markets fall as traders assess latest tariffs volley
-
Does Europe hold any cards in Ukraine talks?
RBGPF | 3.44% | 67.16 | $ | |
RYCEF | 0.49% | 8.13 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.01% | 23.45 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.68% | 23.54 | $ | |
BCC | -2.3% | 118.705 | $ | |
NGG | 0.82% | 60.88 | $ | |
SCS | 0.69% | 12.395 | $ | |
RELX | -0.75% | 50.51 | $ | |
VOD | -1.15% | 8.245 | $ | |
RIO | -2.41% | 62.668 | $ | |
JRI | -0.63% | 12.76 | $ | |
BCE | 0.15% | 23.405 | $ | |
GSK | -0.34% | 36.485 | $ | |
BTI | 0.37% | 38.28 | $ | |
AZN | -1.53% | 73.675 | $ | |
BP | -1.81% | 34.681 | $ |

Austria celebrates 200 years of 'waltz king' Johann Strauss II
Even 200 years after the birth of Austria's world-famous "waltz king" Johann Strauss II -- widely revered like a modern-day pop star during his lifetime -- his music has lost none of its magic.
Best known for his rousing waltz "The Blue Danube", which became Austria's unofficial national anthem, many of his 500 dance pieces live on in Vienna's roaring ball season.
Strauss's persistent popularity lies in the catchy tunes he composed to cheer up people, his great-grand-nephew Eduard Strauss told AFP.
"He simply created music that touches everyone, regardless of their background," he said.
But his fame was rooted in much more than his hits: just like today, selling music meant marketing the star's image.
"One could say that he was actually the first pop star in the modern sense," said Strauss museum guide Clara Kaufmann.
Vienna is marking the bicentenary with special events, concerts and exhibitions, and even an Austrian Airlines aeroplane emblazoned with a portrait of Strauss and his violin.
Strauss "symbolises music for all", said British dentist Helen Foster, who visited one of Vienna's Strauss museums, adding that his appealing waltz tunes have been "popular with everyone over the ages".
- Impressive stage shows -
Strauss was born in the suburbs of Vienna in 1825 into a family of famous musicians, but despite his father being a household name, Strauss junior's success did not come easily.
Defying his father's explicit wish that he would not follow in his footsteps, he secretly took violin lessons with the support of his mother.
After his father abandoned the family for another woman, Strauss's mother Anna became a driving force behind the career of her eldest son, who kept "churning out music" to make a living.
"Unlike today, there was no insurance, no pension scheme or anything like that," Eduard Strauss told AFP.
"Life had to be earned," said the retired judge, 69.
Johann made his debut at the age of 18, becoming his father's direct rival.
Perfecting his father's simpler waltzes, he elevated them into refined concert works, with the light-hearted, energetic dance music helping many to forget about the hardships they faced in 19th-century imperial Vienna.
He put on impressive shows on stage, playing the violin with great panache and conducting the orchestra with his bow while frantically jumping up and down.
Admired for his impeccable looks, his coiffure was styled "with hair irons before every performance to make it stand up", said Kaufmann. As he aged, he dyed his hair and beard to maintain his youthful appearance.
- 'Mama's boy' -
Marketed as a womaniser, the workaholic was a completely different person off-stage, plagued by insecurities and self-doubt, his great-grand-nephew said.
"He had many phobias –- including travel phobia –- and had difficulties with women. He was a mama's boy," he said.
When his father died in 1849, the younger Strauss took over his orchestra as well as the up-scale entertainment establishments in the city.
Despite suffering a nervous breakdown due to exhaustion, he kept performing and composing at an impressive pace.
In 1866, he wrote what is arguably the world's most famous waltz, "The Blue Danube", which is featured in the prestigious Vienna New Year's concert every year.
Although Strauss despised travelling, he regularly toured across Europe, entertaining Russian nobility for more than a decade.
While initially struggling to compose operettas, he wrote several of them, including a few hits like "Die Fledermaus".
"People still dance to Strauss waltzes, but you can also hear them in concert halls, and that was his special achievement," musicologist Thomas Aigner said about the legacy of the revered composer, who died in 1899.
I.Meyer--BTB