URL: http://prince.org/msg/8/412806

Date printed: Fri 19th Apr 2024 9:10am PDT

independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Music+Film+TV+Tours| Morgan James Covers D'Angelo full CD|Netflix Doc Nina Simone|Updated Feb 3|2014-15 PT. 5
AuthorMessage
Thread started 12/06/14 5:48am

JoeBala

Music+Film+TV+Tours| Morgan James Covers D'Angelo full CD|Netflix Doc Nina Simone|Updated Feb 3|2014-15 PT. 5

Part 1(4/21/14--6/20/14)Here: http://prince.org/msg/8/406964

Part 2(6/20/14--8/3/14) Here: http://prince.org/msg/8/4...?&pg=1

Part 3(8/4/2014--10/4/2014) Here: http://prince.org/msg/8/409550

Part 4(10-4/2014 --11/30/2014) Here: http://prince.org/msg/8/4...?&pg=1

Part 5. Org members please feel free to add any articles on any upcoming newsworthy music or movie releases. cool


http://radiomilenium.com/fotos/bandera%20musica.jpg


http://thumbs.dreamstime.com/x/film-strip-elements-music-5486832.jpg

New Upcoming Releases:

Smashing Pumpkins -

Monuments To An Elegy

Springsteen (Newly Remastered)

Madeline Ava-Freaking Out & Pixies Doolittle 25 B-Sides & Demos

.

.

.

.

[Edited 2/3/15 15:14pm]

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #1 posted 12/06/14 6:18am

Identity






Keep Shelly in Athens - "Fractals"
members: RΠЯ and Myrtha

SoundCloud


"Fractals" is the smouldering new song from the Greece-based duo that will doubtlessly leave most listeners wondering if they've travelled back to the 1980s.


Blogspot

Reply #2 posted 12/07/14 5:16am

JoeBala

Exclusive: Johnny Gill Talks New Album ‘Game Changer,’ State of R&B & New New Edition Album!

JohnnyGill-052414-060

R&B veteran Johnny Gill is gearing up for the release of his seventh solo album Game Changer, due in stores December 9. The legendary singer has given R&B fans hit after hit as a member of New Edition, LSG, and as a solo artist. Now, Johnny is back not only with a new solo project, but also with a forthcoming New Edition album as well.

ThisisRnB recently caught up with Gill to discuss his new album, longevity, the state of R&B, New Edition’s new album, and much more.

Check out the full interview below!

Your new album Game Changer is on the way, and we have already been blessed with the hot single “Behind Closed Doors.”
Talk about the recording process of the album. What producers did you work with on the album? What can we expect?

Johnny Gill: It’s a Game Changer. I worked with Babyface again, we hadn’t worked together in years. We haven’t recorded with New Edition since 2004 and we have a New Edition joint on there. It’s for grown and sexy folks. It’s great music; all we tried to do is make great music, and hands down we accomplished that so I’m excited about it.


What was it like recording the new song with your New Edition brothers? Is that what inspired the “All 6 Tour” and the forthcoming New Edition album?

We were already on tour when we went in the studio to record the vocals. Just in doing so in New York, it was funny because we were like man this is old and good times!


I miss the era of groups! What do you think it will take for there to be a resurgence in the R&B group?

Johnny Gill: People supporting. People making sure they send the message clearly as well as what they do with R&B. Showing that there’s a need and an interest. People have to send the message to the industry that they want to hear great music and there is a respect for it and a need for it. And traditional R&B hasn’t gone anyway. I’m praying like everyone else that everyone shows up on December 9 to buy my album, and say they still have an interest in R&B music.


What do you miss most about the ’90s and ’80s R&B?

Johnny Gill: That was my era of having fun. Understanding that nothing last forever. The reality of how we structured music and dealt with music is a completely different way of how music is made today. I never wanted to be forgotten and to be respected of how you get to the next step you don’t skip from A to Z you have to go through A-B-C to get to where the new generation is trying to get to. Our job is to make sure they don’t forget, and that they have a respect for the music that was here before. When they are hearing and making music they are hearing our music from before. They are riding on the shoulders of their forefathers because their mothers and uncles were playing our music. It’s important that everyone gets a chance to be respected. I looked at the AMAs and thought it was a great show but where was the R&B? You can’t be mad; if you don’t like something all you can do is change it. All we can do is make sure our genre will continue to be around. Hopefully my album can continue to inspire the new generation and some will say, ‘I want to go that route.’


You took a 14 year hiatus as a solo artist. Why did you take the hiatus and what inspired you to come back?

Johnny Gill: The state of the business was disappointing, the changing of the guards as we can see. I was fortunate that I could tour without having a record, and that’s why I did it for many many years. I never had intentions to record again until someone seriously approached me about doing something, and I would hear it everyday from my fans. I’m thinking the business has changed what am I going to record and for what. To put time and effort into something I can’t control and my fate lies in their hands. I’m like I’m cool. Little did I know 15 years later I’d be in the position to own my own record label. I never thought in my wildest dreams I’d have that level of control over my own career and my destiny.


You are one of the few artists that has been blessed to tour your entire career. What do you love the most about touring, and what has been you craziest tour experience?

Johnny Gill: Being in front of people because people tell you when it works and when it doesn’t. They tell you if you are going in the right direction and if you are doing the damn thang. It’s always fun to feed off the energy of the audience. Now, after 31 years we’ve had some moments (chuckles) unless I can PG it I don’t know if I can talk about crazy tour moments. We’ve had some great times. I’ve been to the mountain top. We’ve had number ones. We’ve been the top rated act. I’ve been the top vocalist of the year, and doing what we do I want to continue to do this at a high level.


You know you are a hot group when you can have several successful subgroups. What has it been like touring with Bobby and Ralph as Head of State? Can you describe each member of New Edition’s (including your own) personality.

Johhny Gill: (chuckles) The thing that I’ve made a conscious effort since I was a kid starting in the business early on.. I’m never going to be defined by one thing holding all the cards or one thing being able to determine my destiny. I always felt being able to recreate and work on different projects allows you to never be stuck in a box or a corner. That’s why you have seen me do New Edition, LSG, Head of State, the George Howard thing. I’m not going to be defined by one thing.

On New Edition: Ron is the All-American guy. He’s our landmark guy. If you didn’t know our names you would go oh with the tall light skin guy. He has such a big and warm personality. Ricky is the guy that would be the ultimate brother for any brother. He kind of rides and sides with understanding whatever you are doing. He can always make sense of stuff. Mike is the kind of brother you are always going to have your own tussles with. He stands stern and firm on his own beliefs. You will always bump your heads with him, but you will come full circle and realize you need the brother like him to bring the leadership and that’s what he brings. Bobby is the rebel. He’s the brother that you have to say you can’t do that, stop, leave that alone. He’s the mischievous one (chuckles). But he’s always been incredible; he’s always had an incredible heart. Ralph would have to be the ultimate brother, best friend, and working partner. He’s always looking to grow and always ready to take risks and challenges. He’s always creating. You want to lock yourself in the room with him every time you want to create. Ralph is the ride or die. Then myself, I’m the daddy. I’m always trying to make things better. I never forget things. I always want to make it comfortable and fun. I’ve always been the protector watching out for all of my brothers.

What I love about classic R&B from the past is the real vocals, timelessness, gritty soul, unique harmonies, vocal arrangement, live instrumentation, the love …..How do you feel about the current state of R&B? What’s missing? What, in your own words, is wrong with it?

Johnny Gill: R&B comes in different formats. I just find that people shouldn’t abandon the hardcore traditional R&B which a lot of stuff derives from. The state of R&B…. R&B is so disrespected. Right now it’s at the bottom of the totem poll. Everything derives from Rhythm & Blues. All genres. You can’t get away from it. It’s the least respected genre right now, and we are going to change that December 9. No one is giving it a chance anymore. Nothing lasts forever. Times change. It’s nothing wrong with that, but if you don’t know where you come from how do you know where you are going. It’s important that we put it in a place to be respected, upheld, and valued.

A few months ago I attended Keith Sweat’s birthday party here in Atlanta. It was a magical night for R&B as so many artists were present. Joe said something to me that stood out, he said ‘R&B artists need to come together like this more often on a united front for the genre to win as you always see rappers collaborating and supporting each other.’ What do you think needs to happen for R&B to really win again?

Johnny Gill: I think Joe hit it; I think he’s right. That’s probably what kept us from being heard. We have to unite and support and keep raising our voice saying don’t forget where we come from. We have to keep reminding people that R&B is still here, and it still exists. It’s still a lane for it and there are still artists that want to do it but they are being forced to go in a different direction because radio won’t play it. So we have to let radio and the industry know there is still a need for it and a market for it.

You’ve been regarded as one of the best voices in R&B. You posses amazing range and a certain soulfulness. How would you describe your sound?

Johnny Gill: God given. Unique. Anointed. I think that every artist has a gift and to some degree we are all anointed. Sometimes we have something that goes even further; and over time it stands the test of time. I never abused it and I understood what God gave me. When I get on that mic I give it the same effort and power no matter if I’m in front of 2 people or 2,000.


What can we expect from the new New Edition album?

Johnny Gill: Who knows because we are in the creative stage. You don’t know until you know. We know we have to come forth and do what feels right for where we are today. Maybe some will agree; maybe some won’t. Maybe everyone will agree. It’s about what state you are in today. I could sing “My,My,My” over and over again but I’ll never have the magic I had then. I was in a time, place, and space that allowed me to interpret what took place. If we try to record that again it would never happen. It’s about where you are today.


Why should people go out and buy your album on December 9?

Johnny Gill: I know how the heads of these companies are looking to see what the support of the fans will be like. The support will show we do have a lane still for R&B music. It will show that there’s a need for it and there are people that want to hear it. I’m here and I’m going to carry that banner to the very end!

.

Pharrell Williams Receives Star on Hollywood Walk of Fame!

Pharrell+Williams+Pharrell+Williams+Honored+FpqErrbZxuel

It was only a matter of time, and that time came on Thursday for the incomparable Pharrell Williams, as the hitmaker and fashion icon was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame!

Pharrell has had an epic year, from winning Grammys to performing at the Oscars, and releasing his acclaimed sophomore album G I R L, which was of course preceded by the massive international hit “Happy.”

Joined by his wife Helen Lasichanh and son Rocket, Skateboard P took the podium to thank his music teachers and grandmother. “I’m ever so grateful for this honor,” he said. “I could never properly explain what this means for me, a native of Virginia Beach, Virginia, who had no idea where my love of music would ever take me.”

Pharrell received even more good news this morning when he found out that he was nominated for 2015 Grammys including Best Urban Contemporary Album. He will perform during “A Very Grammy Christmas” on CBS tonight.

.

Elle Varner Performs for NPR Music’s ‘Front Row Series’

Elle Varner NPR Front Row

Elle Varner has much more to get off her chest. Thankfully, with the stardom she received from her first album, the soulful songstress experienced new love and new heartache, which as we all know makes for the best artistry.

This past October, NPR Music booked Varner for a special intimate show as part of NYC’s CMJ Music Week, which they filmed for their ‘Front Row Series.’ Held at Le Poisson Rouge, the singer-songwriter performed cuts off her anticipated sophomore album, along with favorites from her debut. Backed by a live band, Elle invited the room into the depths of what it means to battle through lies, loss and love itself.

“This past year, I’ve been through some sh*t,” she said, before launching into a stirring performance of “Little Do You Know,” a song from her upcoming album, 4 Letter Word.

Wielding a delicate rasp, and powerful delivery, she showed off the voice that’s kept her standing through it all. Watch the full set now below!

(Warning explicit language)


Link to concert(Warning explicit language) http://www.npr.org/event/...oplay=true
.

Report: R. Kelly to Join Jodeci for the “Real Kings of R&B Tour”

Jodeci

That Jodeci bug has everyone excited, and things are really starting to get interesting now! With the R&B legends making their big comeback to the public eye with their performance at the 2014 Soul Train Awards, and their new single “Nobody Wins” featuring B.o.B coming very soon, the anticipation for a full album, and tour are growing heavy.

During some of their recent comeback interviews, the quartet hinted at plans for a major R&B tour that would shock and awe fans everywhere.

Welp, the cat might be out of the bag now, as it has been reported that R. Kelly would be joining Jodeci for the “Real Kings of R&B Tour”!!!

Although these are not facts just yet, famed TV personality and radio DJ, Big Tigger, took to Twitter earlier this week to get the rumor mills goin.

“I was just told this…. The #RealKings of R&B Tour is real!! JoDeCi & R. Kelly together!!! #jodecimusic #rkelly @rkelly @jodecimusic,” he wrote.

Well wouldn’t that just be crazy! ’90s R&B heaven. Again, don’t go running to Ticketmaster just yet, as these are only insider reports and nothing has been set, but if that is where the talks are going then we can only hope they work this out!

.

New Music: Alicia Keys – We Gotta Pray

alicia-keys_784x0

With the recent verdicts of both the Michael Brown and Eric Garner cases still sitting very fresh in the lives of Americans, everything is but peaceful right now. However, Alicia Keys has done her best to shed some type of light on this dark moment.

While some are choosing to react in the ways they see fit, the talented songstress has used her voice to support the community in their justifiable outrage. Releasing a powerful piano led ballad titled, “We Gotta Pray,” Alicia takes note of the way things are going in the world right now. Singing out, “Fire in the air / What the hell goin on? / Sirens everywhere / Signing that street song,” A. Keys reminds the world to pray for the love that we need tonight.

Take a listen to her heartfelt tune below:

Charlie Wilson Announces Tour with KEM & Joe + New Album ‘Forever Charlie’

Charlie Wilson Forever Charlie Tour

Charlie Wilson truly does seem to embody that feeling of forever. At least on stage, at 60+ years old, he looks like he could be tearing down arenas for another 30 years.

Today, the iconic R&B legend announced that he will be hitting the road on a new national tour titled, “The Forever Charlie Tour,” kicking off February 12, 2015.

The 27-date trek will hit cities all across the U.S., including Detroit, Chicago, Nashville, Houston and many more before wrapping up on March 27 in Oakland, CA. The tour is named after Wilson’s upcoming album Forever Charlie, which is slated to hit stores on January 27 via RCA Records. The album has been preceded by the smooth new single “Goodnight Kisses,” which was recently the #1 most added song at Urban AC Radio.

In addition to Uncle Charlie, R&B vocalists KEM and Joe will be joining him for what is set to be a very successful tour.

“I am so glad to be on the road once again and to bring my show to so many cities across the country. It’s going to be a special night for all the ladies that will join me and my special guests!” says Charlie Wilson. “I am looking forward to sharing the stage with my two talented friends Kem and Joe. They are both artists that I admire and am honored to have them on my tour. We are planning a show the audience won’t ever forget.”

Follow the jump to see the full tour itinerary now!

“THE FOREVER CHARLIE TOUR” DATES:

Feb. 12 Cleveland, OH Wolstein Center
Feb. 13 Buffalo, NY First Niagara Center
Feb. 14 Atlantic City, NJ Boardwalk Hall
Feb. 15 Baltimore, MD Royal Farms Arena
Feb. 18 Raleigh, NC PNC Arena
Feb. 20 Nashville, TN Bridgestone Arena
Feb. 21 Atlanta, GA Philips Arena
Feb. 22 Birmingham, AL BJCC Arena
Feb. 26 Greenville, SC Bon Secours Arena
Feb. 27 Louisville, KY KFC Yum! Center
Feb. 28 Chicago, IL United Center
March 1 Detroit, MI Joe Louis Arena
March 5 Brooklyn, NY Barclays Center
March 6 Norfolk, VA Constant Center
March 7 Newark, NJ Prudential Center
March 8 Washington, D.C. Verizon Center
March 10 Columbia, SC Colonial Life Arena
March 13 Grand Prairie, TX Verizon Theatre
March 14 New Orleans, LA Smoothie King Center
March 15 Houston, TX Toyota Center
March 18 Mobile, AL Civic Center
March 19 Boosier City, LA Century Link Center
March 21 Oklahoma City, OK Chesapeake Energy
March 22 Kansas City, MO Sprint Center
March 25 Los Angeles, CA Nokia Theatre
March 26 Los Angeles, CA Nokia Theatre
March 27 Oakland, CA Oracle Arena

*All dates and venues below subject to change.

Fans who pre-order Forever Charlie, from the singer’s official on-line store, will gain first access to pre-sale tickets for the upcoming tour (http://myplay.me/1cv2). At the time of purchase, buyers will receive a pre-sale code. This particular pre-sale will begin on December 9 at 10 AM local time. The general public on-sale begins December 12 starting at 10 AM local time. Detailed information will be available on www.charliewilsonmusic.com.

Charlie Wilson Forever Charlie Album

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #3 posted 12/07/14 5:31am

JoeBala

Watch First Trailer for Lifetime's Whitney Houston Biopic

Watch First Trailer for Lifetime's Whitney Houston Biopic

By Ryan Gajewski, The Hollywood Reporter | December 06, 2014 3:58 PM EST

Whitney Houston performs at the Wembley Arena in London in 1988

AP

'Whitney' marks Angela Bassett's directorial debut.

Whitney Houston's impressive career highlights and turbulent personal life are at the center of Lifetime's first Whitney trailer.


The biopic tells the story of the singing sensation's rise to fame, along with her relationship with

"I am putting everything on the line -- my career, everything," Houston tells Brown in a heated scene in the trailer.


Yaya DaCosta stars as Houston, while Arlen Escarpeta plays Brown and Mark Rolston is music exec Clive Davis. The project marks Angela Bassett's directorial debut.

Whitney airs Jan. 17 at 8 p.m. on Lifetime. The promo can be seen below.

.

Scarlett Johansson, Jonah Hill, Karen O Sing Dizzying Set List at Vice Anniversary Party

By Ted Simmons, The Hollywood Reporter | December 06, 2014 3:37 PM EST

Karen O
Courtesy of The Fun Star

"It's gonna be crazy but it's gonna be fun. There will be covers, originals, spontaneous orgasms -- enjoy yourselves.”

To celebrate its 20th year, Vice rented out the Brooklyn Navy Yard's Duggal Greenhouse on Friday night (Dec. 5) for the kind of hybrid, manic, alien-like show that only the media brand can. It was concert roulette for three straight hours, and the bearded, beanie-wearing Brooklynites in attendance soaked it right up.

Watch: Lil Wayne Speaks Publicly About Cash Money & Birdman Battle

Just before 11 p.m., the house band -- Yeah Yeah Yeahs' Nick Zimmer, Miike Snow's Andrew Wyatt, Gorillaz's Pauli PSM and The Raconteurs' Jack Lawrence -- took the stage with "semi-official emcee and host" Andrew W.K., who performed his hit "Party Hard" and offered the only real speech of the night: "Welcome to Vice's 20th anniversary celebration. Perhaps you've heard, there are several supergroups, surprise performers, just for you. It's gonna be crazy but it's gonna be fun. There will be covers, originals, spontaneous orgasms -- enjoy yourselves!"

And with that, the whirlwind of performances kicked off. Chromeo performed "Needy Girl," a song released on Vice Records 10 years ago. A metal supergroup with members of Megadeth, Testament and Municipal Waste performed Metallica's "Seek and Destory." Action Bronson cursed and puffed up a storm. A punk supergroup led by Cro Mags' John Joseph took the stage. Jonah Hill performed "Marvin's Room," conceivably as and to Drake. ("My heart's been broken," the actor said, "I thought you and I were friends, Drake. Accept my friendship.") The-Dream covered M.I.A.'s "Paper Planes." Ghostface Killah and Raekwon rapped the 1996 classic "Daytona 500."

Andrew W.K. then returned, singing "Happy birthday, dear Viiiiiice," and offered further address. "You realize that everybody here came because they want to be here, they wanted to be a part of this, they put this together just for the occasion," said the long-haired host in a white tee. "I remember 14 years ago when I first met the founders of Vice -- they said they liked partying, and we hit off."

The sometimes forced edginess of the brand is the same aesthetic that has swept through Brooklyn, its very home. Decorated by the many provocative covers of Vice's print publication (and a projection of the words "Vice Turns 20" stacked neatly into a box), the space housed bartenders dispensing drinks by the handful, while women in oversized sweaters and men with "man buns" tossed them back. There was a festival-like feel both on stage and in the crowd, appropriate for the generation of attendees. The 20-somethings present likely grew into their cool as Vice did and now, here they were, cans of Budweiser crammed into their back pockets as they absorbed the carousel of stimuli on stage.

The Black Lips followed Ghostface, and Perfect Pussy's Meredith Graves followed them. "Hey NYPD, the whole world is watching. Black lives matter," she said, before starting The Strokes' "New York City Cops." Stephen Malkmus did "Range Life" by his band Pavement, and "Remedy" by The Black Crowes. Scarlett Johansson shared a stripped-down cover of New Order's "Bizarre Love Triangle" that got the crowd abuzz.

Members of Pussy Riot noted that they were protesting the night before in Times Square, in response the verdict following Eric Garner's death, and said, "It might not be right to talk about American problems, but I think that murder is murder everywhere and murder should not be met with indifference. Let's grieve and protest for those who are no longer with us."

And then, Karen O -- it was either the potency of her performance, the crowd's entrance into drunkenness, or a combination of both -- but the energy picked up and stayed airborne for the remainder of the night. "I'd like to dedicate this song to Eddy Moretti, to Shane Smith, to Suroosh Alvi, to Vice," the Yeah Yeah Yeahs member said before diving into "Maps."

Throughout the altogether rapid-fire mishmash of a night, there was minimal time between acts and rumors of a Nicki Minaj appearance (that never came to fruition). Jarvis Cocker, frontman for the English band Pulp, took on Sham 69's "If the Kids Are United," with the chorus "If the kids are united, then we'll never be divided" taking on a special significance. And in closing, Lil Wayne performed "John," "Loyal," "Believe Me" and "No Worries," and offered a few words on his frequently delayed new album: "Due to technical difficulties, I'm f---ed up in a bad situation, but I will be out of it soon, and I do it for y'all. So put your fives up for Carter V."

If there is any parallel to be drawn from Vice's first twenty years and its 20th-anniversary show, it is perhaps the frenetic ambition and youth-filled intoxication. No one person knew every performer, but they knew at least some and still took in the sheer immensity of the bill -- like Vice's growing conglomerate -- that could only leave a crowd impressed.

This article originally appeared in THR.com.

.

Contest: Win Tickets to See Adrian Marcel & Elle Varner Live at BB Kings in NYC on Dec. 7!

EV&AMTourFlyer

NYC R&B fans, it’s contest time once again! Today, we have a very special ticket giveaway for fans of R&B singers Adrian Marcel and Elle Varner! ThisisRnB has your chance to see the singers live on tour at BB Kings Blues Club in New York City on December 7!!

The two singers are hitting the road for a short, six city tour this month in promotion of their upcoming albums, and will surely impress as they always do on stages everywhere. Elle Varner is prepping for the release of her sophomore album 4 Letter Word, due out next year, while Adrian Marcel is riding the success of his second mixtape ‘Weak After Next,’ and getting his growing fan base ready for his debut album Got Me F’d Up, also due in 2015.

For those of you in the NYC area we have 4 pairs of tickets available to their Dec. 7 show, and they could be yours!!

See the rules and regulations for your chance to win below!

Rules & Regulations:

To enter for your chance to win, all you have to do is email us with the subject line ‘Adrian & Elle’ to contest@thisisrnb.com, and tell us why you would love to see the singers live. Please include your Full Name and Email Address (No transportation will be provided).

In addition, you can increase your chances of winning by tweeting or sending a message on Facebook to @ThisIsRnB saying: “I want to see @AdrianMarcel510 & @ElleVarner Live in NYC at BB Kings @thisisrnb”. Send us the link or screen shot of your tweet/message in your email as well.

Ages 18+ only. The winners will be picked by random drawing of the submitted entries. The contest will run from today through Friday, Dec. 5 at 11:59 PM.

Winners will claim their tickets at the venue Will Call window.

Tickets are still available for purchase as well. You can buy tickets HERE.

.

.

.

[Edited 12/7/14 5:39am]

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #4 posted 12/07/14 6:22am

Identity



Wu-Tang Clan Looks to Past, Future on New Album, More Works
Dec 2014


Read article here.

Reply #5 posted 12/07/14 6:41am

JoeBala

Epic and Legacy Announce 'Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble: The Complete Epic Recordings Collection' Box Set

Legacy Recordings, the catalog division of Sony Music Entertainment, and Epic Records will release Stevie Ray Vaughan and Do...Collection October 28.

A definitive, career-encompassing 12-disc library, The Complete Epic Recordings Collection brings together, for the first time, the entirety of Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble's official studio and live album canon, including the inaugural commercial release of A Legend In The Making, a collectible (formerly) promotional-only recording of SRV & DT's performance at Toronto's El Mocambo club in 1983.

The Complete Epic Recordings Collection also features two discs compiling rare and hard-to-find archival tracks.

Below you'll find the complete contents of the box set.

Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble: The Complete Epic Recordings Collection

Disc 1: In The Beginning (KLBJ-FM radio broadcast produced by Wayne Bell

Recorded April 1, 1980; Austin, Texas
In The Open
Slide Thing
They Call Me Guitar Hurricane
All Your Love I Miss Loving
Tin Pan Alley (aka Roughest Place In Town)
Love Struck Baby
Tell Me
Shake For Me
Live Another Day

Originally released as Epic 53168, 1992 / Peak chart position: #58

Disc 2: Live At Montreux 1982 (July 17, 1982; Montreux International Jazz Festival)

Hide Away
Rude Mood
Pride And Joy
Texas Flood
Love Struck Baby
Dirty Pool
Give Me Back My Wig
Collins Shuffle

Originally released as Epic/Legacy 86151, 2001 / Peak chart position: #178

Disc 3: Live At Montreux 1985 (July 15, 1985; Montreux International Jazz Festival)

Scuttle Buttin'
Say What!
Ain't Gone 'N' Give Up On Love
Pride And Joy
Mary Had A Little Lamb
Tin Pan Alley (aka Roughest Place In Town)
Voodoo Chile (Slight Return)
Texas Flood
Life Without You
Gone Home
Couldn't Stand The Weather

Originally released as Epic/Legacy 86151, 2001 / Peak chart position: #178

Disc 4: Texas Flood

Love Struck Baby
Pride And Joy
Texas Flood
Tell Me
Testify
Rude Mood
Mary Had A Little Lamb
Dirty Pool
I'm Cryin'
Lenny

Produced by Stevie Ray Vaughan, Richard Mullen and Double Trouble / Executive Producer: John Hammond / Originally released as Epic 38734, 1983 / Peak chart position: #38

Disc 5: A Legend In The Making—Live At The El Mocambo (recorded Toronto, Canada, July 20, 1983, originally released for radio broadcast only)

Testify
So Excited
Voodoo Child (Slight Return)
Pride And Joy
Tell Me
Mary Had A Little Lamb
Texas Flood
Love Struck Baby
You'll Be Mine
Hug You, Squeeze You
Little Wing/Third Stone From The Sun
Lenny
Wham!
Rude Mood

Disc 6: Couldn't Stand The Weather (1984)

Scuttle Buttin'
Couldn't Stand The Weather
The Things (That) I Used To Do
Voodoo Child (Slight Return)
Cold Shot
Tin Pan Alley (aka Roughest Place In Town)
Honey Bee
Stang's Swang

Produced by Stevie Ray Vaughan, Chris Layton, Tommy Shannon, Richard Mullen, and Jim Capfer / Executive Producer: John Hammond / Originally released as Epic 39304, 1984 / Peak chart position: #31

Disc 7: Live At Carnegie Hall (Recorded October 4, 1984; New York City)

Intro--Ken Dashow/John Hammond
Scuttle Buttin'
Testify
Love Struck Baby
Honey Bee
Cold Shot
Letter To My Girlfriend
Dirty Pool
Pride And Joy
The Things That I Used To Do
C.O.D.
Iced Over
Lenny
Rude Mood

Produced by Stevie Ray Vaughan / Originally released as Epic 68163, 1997 / Peak chart position: #40

Disc 8: Soul To Soul (1985)

Say What!
Lookin' Out The Window
Look At Little Sister
Ain't Gone 'N' Give Up On Love
Gone Home
Change It
You'll Be Mine
Empty Arms
Come On (Part III)
Life Without You

Produced by Stevie Ray Vaughan, Double Trouble and Richard Mullen / Executive Producer: John Hammond / Originally released as Epic 40036, 1985 / Peak chart position: #34

Disc 9: Live Alive (Recorded July 16, 1985, Montreux International Jazz Festival; July 17-18, 1986, Austin, Texas; July 19, 1986, Dallas, Texas)

Say What!
Ain't Gone 'N' Give Up On Love
Pride And Joy
Mary Had A Little Lamb
Superstition
I'm Leaving You (Commit A Crime)
Cold Shot
Willie The Wimp
Look At Little Sister
Texas Flood
Voodoo Child (Slight Return)
Love Struck Baby
Change It
Life Without You

Produced by Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble / Originally released as Epic 40511, 1986 / Peak chart position: #52

Disc 10: In Step (1989)

The House Is Rockin'
Crossfire
Tightrope
Let Me Love You Baby
Leave My Girl Alone
Travis Walk
Wall Of Denial
Scratch-N-Sniff
Love Me Darlin'
Riviera Paradise

Produced by Jim Gaines & Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble / Recorded in Memphis, Tennessee and Los Angeles, California /
Originally released as Epic 45024, 1989 / Peak chart position: #33

Disc 11: Archives/Disc One

Tin Pan Alley (aka Roughest Place In Town)
Empty Arms
Come On (Part III)
Look At Little Sister
The Sky Is Crying
Hide Away
Give Me Back My Wig
Boot Hill
Wham!
Close To You
Little Wing
Stang's Swang

Disc 12: Archives/Disc Two

May I Have A Talk With You
Boilermaker
The Sky Is Crying
Shake And Bake
So Excited
Slip Slidin' Slim
Chitlins Con Carne
Little Wing/Third Stone From The Sun
Boot Hill
Life By The Drop

Archives/Disc One, Track 1 produced by Stevie Ray Vaughan, Richard Mullen and Double Trouble; Executive Producer: John Hammond
Archives/Disc One, Tracks 2-12 produced by Stevie Ray Vaughan, Chris Layton, Tommy Shannon, Richard Mullen, and Jim Capfer; Executive Producer: John Hammond
Archives/Disc Two, Tracks 1-8 produced by Stevie Ray Vaughan, Double Trouble and Richard Mullen; Executive Producer: John Hammond
Archives/Disc Two, Track 9 produced by Jim Gaines & Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble
Archives/Disc Two, Track 10 produced by Stevie Ray Vaughan and Jim Gaines

Screen Shot 2014-08-28 at 4.39.30 PM.png

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #6 posted 12/07/14 7:45am

Identity



Be among the first to experience a new generation of Halo multiplayer in the Halo 5: Guardians Multiplayer Beta, starting on December 29, 2014.

Gear up for the Guardians beta by unlocking exclusive content in The Master Chief Collection and Halo: Nightfall.




Watch Vidoc

Reply #7 posted 12/07/14 7:47am

Identity

Reply #8 posted 12/07/14 8:40am

FormerlyKnownAs

New Culture Club Album Tribes
Pre-order “Tribes” the new album from Culture Club, with a bonus audio disc of live recording and extended liner notes. Including an art card insert signed by all 4 band members & limited number available
Pre-order “Tribes” the new album from Culture Club, available upon release as a 24bit Flac & Mp3 download.
Pre-order “Tribes” the new album from Culture Club on CD, sent out in line with the release date.
Pre-order “Tribes” the new album from Culture Club on double gatefold vinyl LP.
The first 100 copies ordered will include an art card signed by the band
Some of the tracks that will appear on the new album 'Tribes' will be.
Like I used to
Different Man
Runaway Train
More Than Silence
Oil and Water
Human Zoo
Let Somebody Love you
Moody Monday
23 songs were recorded in the last session, a few more, including Universal Love. 'Tribes' will have probably 12-14 songs. The rest will be for deluxe edition etc.
Reply #9 posted 12/07/14 9:24am

JoeBala

^ Can't wait to hear the new stuff. cool

$5 MP3 Albums:

http://www.amazon.com/b/r...B00OCKS28Q

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #10 posted 12/07/14 9:56am

Identity




BitTorrent's First Original Web Series

December 2014


Article


Reply #11 posted 12/08/14 10:59am

Identity




"Lips" is the latest single by Marian Hill (Jeremy Lloyd and Samantha Gongol). Become enraptured.


"Lips" - audio

Reply #12 posted 12/09/14 6:27am

Identity






U2 - ''Raised by Wolves''


New video

Reply #13 posted 12/10/14 7:39am

Identity





Jack White Releases Virtual Reality App

December 2014

Get the details here.

Reply #14 posted 12/13/14 12:17pm

JoeBala

Titan of Latin American comedy, Mexico's beloved 'Chespirito' dead at 85

MEXICO CITY Fri Nov 28, 2014 4:43pm EST

Mexican actor and writer Roberto Gomez Bolanos, better known as Chespirito, speaks during a news conference in Bogota June 23, 2009.

Credit: Reuters/John Vizcaino

(Reuters) - Mexican actor and screenwriter Roberto Gomez Bolanos, one of Latin America's most beloved comedians, whose slapstick acts charmed fans from Spain to Argentina for over four decades, died on Friday at the age 85.

Broadcaster Televisa, for whom Gomez Bolanos worked for much of his career, said he died at home in the seaside resort of Cancun. Known as "Chespirito," a word play on 'Little Shakespeare' for his diminutive stature and his prolific scripts, Gomez Bolanos created some of the region's most enduring comic characters.

His show "El Chavo del Ocho," about a naive kid from a poor neighborhood who hid inside a barrel, is widely viewed as the catalyst that helped transform Televisa into a major international company.

Gomez Bolanos was also known for his character "El Chapulin Colorado" (The Red Grasshopper), a clumsy hero in a red overall and yellow trunks which inspired Bumblebee Man, the Spanish-speaking character from the American animated sitcom The Simpsons.

The comedian stopped recording material in the 1980s, but his shows are still aired regularly today.

On Twitter, Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto lamented the death of an "icon whose work transcended generations and borders."

As a young man, Gomez Bolanos dreamed of being an engineer, and fell into comic acting by accident. He was writing show scripts for Televisa, and had to stand in when the actor playing one of the characters he had written did not show, he once told Reuters.

http://media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m6a5q8pfVm1qi7ua6.jpg

Coining catchphrases that made their way into the lexicon of many countries across Latin America, Chespirito's shows were exported to 90 countries and translated into dozens of languages, from Japanese to Portuguese.

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-8UpaMFdZp3s/UaKSZmlBVVI/AAAAAAAACBU/XuwtFtbA4KM/s1600/chilindrinachavo.jpg

Critics panned Chespirito, saying his sketches were repetitive, promoted the misuse of language and encouraged bullying - the obese child in one of his shows was constantly taunted and harassed for his girth. Chespirito, an avid soccer enthusiast, also made several movies and acted in a number of plays. His live shows filled stadiums. Despite his age, Chespirito kept in contact with his fans. In May 2011 he joined Twitter, becoming an instant hit. He had 6.61 million followers by the time of his death.

Chespirito Death: 4 Roberto Gómez Bolaños Quotes Plus 6 Unforgettable Sayings By His Characters

Chespirito's legacy will live through his characters. Mezcalent

Mexican writer and actor Roberto Gómez Bolaños, who is more popularly known around the world as Chespirito, had passed away at the age of 85. The actor had been having health problems since April, and his family has been aware for some time of his ailing health. Chespirito died on Friday November 28th from a heart attack, as was reported by Lolita Ayala live during her news show. He was living in Cancún.

The actor is famous for his characters on "El Chavo del 8," "El Chapulín Colorado,” and other shows. Born in Mexico City in 1929, Gomez Bolaños was writing scripts and screenplays in his early twenties, despite studying for being an engineer. The all-rounded artist also composed songs and scripts for radio shows. It was in the 1960's, when the two most popular Mexican television shows on air were written by Gomez Bolaños, that he earned the nickname Chespirito from director Agustín P. Delgado. The nickname, which he would later be recognized by around the world, translates to "Shakespearito" or "Little Shakespeare."

Towards the end of last year, it was reported that a commemorative book about the comedian--titled "Chespirito: Vida y Magia Del Comediante Más Popular De América" ("Chespirto: Life and Magic Of America's Most Popular Comedian")--would be published. "The Hispanic market has never had such a beloved celebrity like Roberto Gomez Bolanos and perhaps there will never be one like him," said Maca Rotter, executive director of Televisa Consumer Products. "He has been a Mexican icon for past and future generations, considering that his heritage is more alive than ever."

CHESPIRITOchapulinArch10 Chespirito Mezcalent

Here are six quotes from Roberto Gómez Bolaños:

1. “Sir, I'm sorry you do not like my programs. Me neither. But of what value your opinion and mine against millions of viewers around the world."

2. "I could say because they were inspired by CHakespeare, but in reality is because they are very CHingones (badass motherfuckers)" --When asked: "Why do all your characters begin with CH?"

Chespirito Mezcalent

3. "I'll be with Florinda till death do us part or until Shakira ignores me," said Roberto Gómez Bolaños. "Florinda made me a fiathful man."

4. "That spirit is in [Florinda]. Evidenced with his nephews, with my children and now my grandchildren. It is a debt I can not pay."

CHESPIRITOchompirasArch18 Chespirito Mezcalent

Here are six quotes from his character:

1. "¡Síganme los buenos!" - Chapulín Colorado Literally translating to, "Good people, follow my lead," this line used to be used by El Chapulín Colorado.

2. "Fue sin querer queriendo." - Chavo del Ocho Some say this phrase gets lost in translation, but we will translate it regardless: "I did it without wanting to do it."

3. "Se me chispoteó" - Chavo del Ocho Accompanied with a shoulder shrug, this line translates to "I messed up" and is one of El Chavo del Ocho's most well known lines.

CHESPIRITOchapatinArch11 Chespirito Mezcalent

4. "No contaban con mi astucia." - Chapulín Colorado "You weren't counting on my shrewdness."

5. "Bueno pero no te enojes.." - Chavo del Ocho (and cast) "Fine, but don't get mad."

6. "Eso…eso…eso" (while moving the index finger up and down) - Chavo del Ocho "Yes, yes, yes."

Mary Ann Mobley dies at 77; Miss America starred on TV, in films

Mary Ann Mobley, Gary Collins
Mary Ann Mobley, a former Miss America who was in two Elvis Presley movies and on TV, has died. She was 77

When William Faulkner's niece burst into his library with the news that one of her sorority sisters at the University of Mississippi had been crowned Miss America, the Nobel Prize-winning novelist paused for a moment before returning to his typewriter.

http://ia.media-imdb.com/images/M/MV5BNTM0NDQwNzI0OF5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwNTg0NTUxOA@@._V1_SY1200_CR279,0,630,1200_AL_.jpg

Mary Ann Mobley, the 1959 Miss America who described herself as "a short girl with a face as round as a Moon Pie," went on to become an actress, TV personality, and philanthropist. She died at her Beverly Hills home Tuesday of complications from breast cancer, her family said in a statement.

http://www.misswaynecounty.org/uploads/1/4/7/4/1474898/7391977_orig.jpg

Mobley, who was married to actor and TV host Gary Collins for 45 years until his death in 2012, was 77.

An Ole Miss majorette who was described by the Associated Press as "a brown-haired Southern belle," Mobley projected a down-home, wholesome image even in roles that were supposed to be sexy.

On a movie set, her fellow Mississippian Elvis Presley once upbraided a man who swore in her presence.

"Ma'am," he told her, "someday I'm gonna have a party that I can invite you to."

In Presley's "Harum Scarum" (1965), she was the vampy Princess Shalimar, costumed with "about 17 million yards of orange chiffon and I don't know how many pounds of fake hair," she told the Memphis Commercial Appeal in 2007. She also appeared with Presley in "Girl Happy" (1965), the story of a Fort Lauderdale spring break where, according to the trailer, "thousands of the faithful neck up a storm!"

http://img.spokeo.com/public/900-600/mary_ann_mobley_2012_10_08.jpg

On TV, she played a wide variety of roles, including stints as a regular on the series "Diff'rent Strokes" and as recurring characters on "Falcon Crest" and "Hearts Afire."

She and Collins were also well known as representatives for World Vision, a Christian relief organization that filmed them interacting with impoverished children in refugee camps throughout the Third World. They also helped establish a group home for children and a hospital pediatric unit in Mississippi.

Born in Biloxi, Miss. on Feb. 17, 1937, Mobley grew up in the small town of Brandon. The daughter of a prominent lawyer, she was raised in privilege. Her family's friends included the woman she knew as "Miss Eudora" — the noted writer of Southern fiction, Eudora Welty.

Mobley became Miss Mississippi in 1958. Two weeks after taking the state title, she was in Atlantic City, N.J., with an off-the-rack evening gown and a single sheet of music transcribed for her by the organist at her hometown church.

"I didn't know I was supposed to have an orchestration!" she recalled in an essay for the 2013 collection, "Coming Home to Mississippi."

For her showpiece display of talent, Mobley started singing the Puccini aria "Un Bel Di" but suddenly changed course, doing a mock striptease to reveal the shorts she wore beneath her gown while launching into the jazzy "There'll Be Some Changes Made."

The act "still defies explanation to this day," she wrote. "I was so naïve."

Among the contestants Mobley bested were runner-up Anita Bryant, the Miss Oklahoma who became well known as a spokeswoman for Florida orange juice and a vocal opponent of gay rights.

Mobley's survivors include daughters Clancy Collins White and Melissa Collins; a son, Guy Williams Collins; a sister, Sandra Young; and two grandsons.

She maintained homes in Beverly Hills and Mississippi, where her funeral will take place.

Mobley was her state's first Miss America. The second — Lynda Lee Mead, one of Mobley's Chi Omega sorority sisters — was crowned the next year, about the same time the university became a football powerhouse and drew national attention.

http://ia.media-imdb.com/images/M/MV5BMTQyNDc5MzAyOV5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwODk1MDE2OA@@._V1_SX640_SY720_.jpg

"Mary Ann helped this place develop a bit of a mystique," Sparky Reardon, the University of Mississippi's recently retired dean of students, told The Times. "People were wondering: Where did these football players come from? Where did these beauties come from?"

http://cdn.sportsmemorabilia.com/sports-product-image/mary-ann-mobley-hand-signed-8x10-photocoa-face-to-face-with-elvis-presley-385-t3476996-500.jpg

.

R.I.P. Winfred "Blue" Lovett and Sonny Bivins of the Manhattans

We are very sorry to inform SoulTrackers of the death of Winfred "Blue" Lovett, founding member and bass singer extraordinaire of the legendary vocal group The Manhattans. He was 74. For a half century, Lovett's songwriting and singing were integral parts of one of the most popular R&B groups in the world. His composition "Kiss and Say Goodbye," introduced by his deep spoken word prologue, is still one of the most beloved soul songs ever. And while many fans knew of Lovett's terrific vocal work, fewer knew of his impeccable songwriting instincts, often combining elements of love, loss and even infidelity into songs that moved the Manhattans to the A-List of vocal groups. Lovett's death comes just a few days after the death of group co-founder Sonny Bivins, who maintained a version of the group in both good times and bad.

The Manhattans were formed in the early 60s in New Jersey as a quintet led by writer/bass vocalist Winfred "Blue" Lovett and emotive lead singer George Smith, along with Edward "Sonny" Bivins, Richard "Ricky" Taylor and Kenneth "Wally" Kelly, all of whom had just returned from service in the armed forces. The group was popular regionally and had minor national success on the strength of some solid recordings for Carnival Records (their version of the country tune "From Atlanta to Goodbye" was a gem) in the late 60s before gaining the attention of Columbia Records in 1970. Unfortunately, their Columbia signing coincided with the sudden illness of talented lead singer Smith. During a tour through North Carolina, the Manhattans came upon a college student with an amazing Sam Cooke-like voice. Recognizing the incredible talent of this 21 year old, the group invited Gerald Alston to join, and he became the lead singer who would bring stardom to the quintet, with the blessing of Smith, who sadly died just a few months later.

With Alston's smooth lead vocals, solid songwriting talent within the group and the always wonderful work of Philly producer/arrranger Bobby Martin, the Manhattans began to score on the R&B charts, putting out a string of fairly traditional ballads that became Soul hits. Then in 1976, the quintet released Lovett's composition "Kiss and Say Goodbye," a song originally written for country star Glen Campbell, but which instead become the group's signature tune. "Kiss" rocketed to the top of the R&B and Pop charts, and moved the group to the upper tier of R&B acts. And the companion self-titled LP became the first of several top notch albums that the group released in the 70s and 80s. With such great singles as "It Feels So Good to be Loved So Bad," "I Kinda Miss You," "We Never Danced To A Love Song" and "Am I Losing You," the Manhattans' late 70s albums It Feels So Good, There's No Me Without You and Love Talk, were among the decade's best. Love Talk was perhaps the Manhattans' greatest disc - though not their most popular - a near-perfect adult Soul album that sounds as great today as it did more than 30 years ago.

After "Kiss and Say Goodbye," the Manhattans spent the remainder of the decade scoring almost exclusively on the R&B charts. Then in 1980, they again surprised the Pop world, crossing over for a Pop top 10 hit with their loping 1980 ballad, "Shining Star." The group continued to record through the 80s, hitting on the Soul charts with such hits as "Crazy" and "Honey Honey." Their last album for Columbia records was the wonderful but overlooked 1986 disc, Back To Basics, produced in part by Bobby Womack and featuring a young Regina Belle singing background vocals. Unfortunately, the Manhattans' smooth, adult soul style seemed out of place in the frenetic, electric funk sounds dominating late 80s music, and they were dropped by Columbia records in 1987.

Gerald Alston left the group for a moderately successful solo career in 1988, and was replaced by former Cameo vocalist Roger Harris. The group's 1989 Sweet Talk album on small Valley Vue Records stiffed, and Lovett left the following year for medical reasons and Kelly retiring. With the group's two most visible members gone, founding member Sonny Bivins reconstituted the group with some new members and continued touring, ultimately landing a record deal with Hektoen Records for 1994's Manhattans Now LP. A number of personnel changes occurred after that, but the Bivins-led Manhattans continued to perform internationally in multi-act soul music shows for more than two decades.

In 1993 a healthier Blue Lovett wooed Alston back and added David Tyson (brother of the Temptations' Ron Tyson) and Troy May to form a more familiar version of the Manhattans (often billed as "The Manhattans Featuring Gerald Alston and Blue Lovett"), in time for the group's 30th anniversary. That group has toured extensively in multi-group Soul music shows over the past two decades and recorded a very good "Live in South Africa" album in 2000. The group found some of its most loyal fans in South Africa, where much of their public appearances were broadcast on national television.

The Alston-Lovett version of the group, along with and producer Ted Perlman (former musical director for Stephanie Mills), gave soul music fans a wonderful surprise in 2002 with the studio album Even Now. Perlman brought a great batch of new material and some top-drawer backing musicians to the disc, including Billy Preston, Gerald Albright and Chicago's horn section. Even Now was well worth the long wait for Manhattans fans, and was highlighted by the beautiful "Nites Like This," a smooth jazz cut that was one of the year's best singles, and the stirring ballad "Turn Out the Stars," which became the group's biggest hit in nearly two decades.

In 2008 they returned with the beautiful Al Johnson ballad "Men Cry Too," which was originally recorded in the Even Now sessions, as part of a reissued, expanded version of Even Now titled Men Cry Too. It was a memorable addition to an already strong album and made the reissue a must-find for the group's sizeable fanbase. In February, 2014, the Manhattans were featured on the TV One biography show, Unsung, providing a fitting tribute to the group's lasting success.

The loss of Blue and Sonny is a huge one, but they leave an incredible legacy of soul music excellence.

By Chris Rizik

See our Manhattans artist page

Click below to hear The Best of the Manhattans at Amazon

- See more at: http://www.soultracks.com...HZIX5.dpuf
Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #15 posted 12/13/14 12:20pm

JoeBala

THE MANHATTANS Story – part 1

Part 2: 1964-1970
Part 3: 1971-1979
Part 4 (1980-1989)
Part 5 (1988-2012)

In the words of Bar Mix Master “the blend of the charred oak, spiciness, of Bourbon; the sweet, herbal, and slight caramel flavour of Sweet Vermouth; and the indescribable flavour of bitters combine to make a cocktail like none other.” This cocktail “is said to have been invented in New York’s Manhattan Club in 1874 at the request of Winston Churchill’s mother, Lady Randolph Churchill to celebrate a newly elected governor” (http://barmixmaster.com). The cocktail still these days is known as the Manhattan.

This is a multi-part story of one of the greatest and best-loved groups in the history of soul music, the Manhattans, told by its present end ex-members and many other music business figures, who have been dealing with the group throughout the years. As to the origin of the name of the group, there have been different recollections. One member is in favour of the skyline they could see right across the water from the Jersey City - “Manhattan was close to New Jersey. It was easy to remember, and we just felt we wanted to represent class” – but another member, Mr. Winfred “Blue” Lovett, remembers slightly differently: “We collectively came up with the Manhattans, but we referred ourselves to the alcoholic drink. Everybody thought the name was from the borough of the New York anyway, so we just grabbed on to that.”


(The pic courtesy of Mrs. Jeanie Scott)

The five singers, who became the first members of the Manhattans in the early 60s, went to two Jersey City high schools in the 50s - George Smith and Richard Taylor to Snyder High and Winfred Lovett, Kenneth Kelly and Edward Bivins to Lincoln High.


(Sonny Bivins pic taken from www.themanhattans.net)

EDWARD “SONNY” BIVINS

Edward Jesse Bivins, Jr. (tenor) is the senior member of the group in terms of his age, as he was born on January 15 in 1936. Still today he’s best known as “Sonny” - “when I was young, I was always smiling” – but his other nickname used to be “Dip.” Sonny: “I played baseball. Then I started singing, and I couldn’t sing and play baseball at the same time.” He played minor league baseball in the Jersey City All-Stars.

Sonny was born in Macon, Georgia, to Willie and Edward Bivins. “My father tap-danced, and I got into music through my father.” Sonny had two brothers, Donald and James, but no sisters. In Macon he started singing in a school choir and glee club. “We moved no New Jersey in 1950, and I went to Lincoln High in 1951. In school I was two years ahead of Kenny Kelly and Blue Lovett, and we all used to sing around school and on the street corners.”

Sonny’s early idol was Sam Cooke, and of the later acts he puts the Temptations first, but thinks highly of the Dells, the Spinners, the O’Jays and B.B. King, too. His all-time favourite record is To Each His Own by Nat King Cole. He has five children – Mark, Pam, Doug, Yvette and Kenny – but they’re not active in music. “They have their own things they wanted to do in life.”


(On the right: Early Smitty; The pic courtesy of Mrs. Jeanie Scott)

Sonny reminisces how he met their future lead singer, George Smith, for the first time during a teen dance night at the YMCA in 1953 in Jersey City. “I heard somebody playing the piano in the adjacent room from the dance hall. Slowly I opened the door and peeked my head inside and saw a young, teenage guy about my age playing the piano and singing I Cried in my Mother’s Arms. I walked over to him and started to harmonize with him. We looked at each other, smiled and we introduced ourselves. His name was George “Smitty” Smith. As time went on, our relationship grew closer and we eventually left high school and went into the military vowing to complete our high school education once we got out of the service.”

In 1954 Sonny joined the NG. “After the National Guard, I was in the Air Force in Germany till 1957.”


(Smitty at the Apollo; The pic courtesy of Mrs. Jeanie Scott)

GEORGE “SMITTY” SMITH

The second oldest in the first line-up of the Manhattans is George Hoza Smith (tenor), who was born in Florida on December 18 in 1939. Jeanie Scott: “His mother couldn’t remember his actual birth date. It was either supposed to be December the 18th, or December the 28th.” Mrs. Jeanie Scott, formerly McCarthy, who today is the wife of the legendary Jimmy Scott and handles his business (www.jimmyscottofficialwebsite.org ), lived with Smitty until his untimely passing in December 1970. “We got together in 1969, so I was with him maybe a year and a half.”


(On the right: Jimmy Scott, The pic courtesy of Mrs. Jeanie Scott)

“When Smitty was a toddler, perhaps four years old, his mother and his father separated. The only thing he could remember about his father is him walking with some dogs (laughing). His mother moved to Jersey City with Smitty and his oldest sister Marion. Marion has lived her whole adult life in California. Eventually his mother married another man, whose last name was Smith, and he became Smitty’s stepfather, and that’s how he got his name. Smitty’s mother had ten children. After Marion and Smitty – who they all called ‘Brother’ – she had eight other children, so Smitty had three half brothers and five half sisters. Tommy was Smitty’s youngest brother and he had a group called 8 Mile High. The other brothers, Bobby and Joe, had a group of their own, too, Out of Limits.”

“Smitty had three children. When Smitty was fifteen years old, his girlfriend got pregnant with George, Jr., aka ‘Dewberry’, so they got married. George, Jr. looked exactly like him. After he came back from the service, she had another baby while he was away, Michelle, which Smitty took as his own. Later he had his daughter Paula with a girlfriend.”

Through his mother, Smitty first sang gospel music in church and then joined his newly-found singing pals, while in Snyder High. “Smitty and Sonny were close at the time, Blue and Kenny were close”. After Snyder High, Smitty joined the Air Force and was stationed in California for two years.


(Smitty & Jeanie; The pic courtesy of Mrs. Jeanie Scott)

Jeanie: “My first memory of the Manhattans would be hearing their records on the radio - I’m the one that Love Forgot, Searchin’ for my Baby... I had been going to all their shows and I kind of had a crush on Smitty, but I was afraid to talk to him. I had seen him around, and I was peeking around corners at him. Eugene Pitt of the Jive Five would tease me and say ‘go on and knock on their dressing room door and talk to Smitty’, but I wouldn’t go over there. It wasn’t until a couple of years later. They were about to do a show at the Cheetah in New York on 52nd street. I sent Smitty a message and he called me up and he came over to my house the next day. We got together, and we were together ever since, and he moved me in his mother’s house until he passed. As a matter of fact, I stayed with her for a couple of years after that and I remained close to the family throughout the years, especially with Smitty's Mother, brother Bobby - who was like a brother - and Smitty's children George, Jr., & Paula.”

WINFRED “BLUE “LOVETT

Winfred Lorenzo Lovett (bass) was born in Jersey City, New Jersey, on November 16 in 1940 to Lovonia and William Lovett. “My father was a singer in church, and he made it mandatory that I sing in church on every Sunday also.” Winfred has two sisters, Billie and Gwendolyn, and today he resides in Phoenix, Arizona.

Most know this bass singer extraordinaire best under the simple moniker of “Blue.” “It’s my so-called nick-name. If you hung out on streets - and you’re not necessarily bad or are in gangs and nothing like that - you had a nick-name, and because of my complexion and a long hair and a beard “Blue Jesus” was my name. I naturally dropped the ’Jesus’ and kept the ‘Blue’.” During his high-school years he was also called “Bacon” for a short while.

Blue has seven children: William, Robyn, Tania, Kia, Damon, Marisa and Rico. “None of them do anything professionally in music, except Rico, who was born in 1986 and who does rapping. All my kids live on the west coast.”

Some of Blue’s favourite recordings of all times include Neither One of Us by Gladys Knight & the Pips and Sexual Healing by Marvin Gaye. “Also Luther Vandross has come up with some magnificent songs that I like. I think my all-time bass singer would be Melvin Franklin of the Temptations. The Temptations started us off. We patterned us after the Temptations and Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions.”

In Lincoln High, Blue played football and baseball. “Then I couldn’t play sports because of my asthma. Baseball was out and football was definitely out, so my third choice was music, and I never thought that I would get an opportunity. If you were from the New York area, it was very hard back then to get a record deal. You had to be discovered.”

“I did locally high school groups, but nothing ever happened. We just sang to entertain our families, fans, girlfriends... In Lincoln high school Sonny, Kelly and I took part in a singing contest in a variety show and we won. I forgot the name of our group in high school.” All five Manhattans boys got to know each other already in the 50s. “All five of us met during the high school days. Sonny Bivins, Kenneth Kelly and myself went to Lincoln, and Richard Taylor and George Smith went to Snyder, which were competing high schools in Jersey City.”

In the late 50s Blue was drafted. “I was in the Air Force. I was in France, but they closed that base and I was transferred to Wiesbaden, Germany. I was discharged in 1960...’61. There in Germany I had a group of my own called the Statesmen. It was me and four other guys, but not Sonny and Richard. They were stationed in the Air Force in Germany, too, but they were stationed elsewhere.”

KENNETH “WALLY” KELLY

Kenneth Bernard Kelly (tenor) was born on January 9 in 1941 in Jersey City to Eloise and Lloyd Kelly. Kenny: “My parents are both deceased. My mother belonged to a chorus, when she was younger. She sang in a church choir.” Besides one brother, Adonis, Kenny has three step-brothers and a sister. His two children are called Kai and Monee.

Kenny’s last name is spelt both Kelley, and Kelly. “My father spelt his last name Kelly. There happened a vocabulary error somewhere along the line, and my last name got changed to Kelley. As I grew older, according to certain situations I ran in and out of, they assumed it was supposed to be spelt Kelley. I didn’t go through the corrections, so there exist two spellings of my last name. Most of my IDs have Kelly, so I mostly use Kelly.”

Kenny’s nickname is Wally. “We had a guitar player named Charles Reed and he gave it to me, because I was always telling people different little things and answering to their questions.” Kenny is the only college graduate among the members of the group, and he graduated from Morgan State University in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1963.

“Being in a group situation, we idolized a lot of groups – the Spaniels, and later the Temptations and Smokey & the Miracles. Later I had one idol and that was Ray Charles.” Kenny’s favourite record is Letter Full of Tears by Gladys Knight & the Pips, and besides singing he plays piano, trumpet and baritone sax.

“I played in a high school band in Jersey City. I started messing around with my neighbour next door, which was Sonny. He played guitar. We just started singing together, and he introduced me to some guys, who sang. It was just something we did, because we liked doing it. Group singing was popular at that point of time. We all would cross each other at some point. We formed different groups, and from that we eventually came in contact with each other.”

“Sonny belonged to this one group, and he brought me in to hear what the group sounded like. I don’t remember the name of the group, but one member kept missing the rehearsals and I – having been there so frequently and knowing his parts – said ‘okay, I’ll do it’.”

“I grew up with some of the members of the Manhattans. We met in the 50s. I don’t know what groups Richard came out of and I don’t remember what groups Blue was with. Blue was with several groups. A lot of the groups didn’t stay together. They’d form and break up. One group that I, Sonny, Smitty and somebody else were part of was called the Socialeers. We sang in local clubs and talent shows. That group started breaking up, because people had other commitments.” Right after Lincoln High, Kenny joined the Navy, which was followed by his three-year college period in Baltimore. He would meet the other fellows again in 1963.

THE DULCETS

One early incarnation of the Manhattans was as lucky as to even cut a record in 1961. Smitty, Blue, Sonny, Ethel Samuels and Buddy Bell had formed another group and they called themselves the Dulcets. This quintet under a misspelt name of the Dorsets released a single on a New York label called Asnes. The plug side, a slowly and heavily swaying post-doowop, novelty type of a song, was titled Pork Chops (Asnes 101), and in style and interpretation it owes a lot to the Olympics or the Coasters of those days. Blue: “yes, that’s the flavour we had on that.”

Smitty is leading on the song that was written by him, Frennie Brooks and John Brown (mistakenly printed as Bowden on the label). Blue: “I think the owner of Asnes was Frennie Brooks, and those guys, Brooks and Brown, worked at the airport and recorded us. Nobody heard the record – or perhaps twenty-five people – but nobody bought it. It didn’t do anything.” Sonny: “I was laughing, when we did it... but it was okay.” Backed by an uptempo ditty called Cool It, Pork Chops was re-released four years later in the U.K. on the Sue label (391).

Some of the other artists on the short-lived Asnes label were Ernie Johnson (You Need Love) and a “Jamaican doowop” outfit named the Jiving Juniors (Moonlight Lover). Soon after Pork Chops the Dulcets disbanded, so there was no follow-up record. Sonny: “Everybody decided to go their own ways. Ethel and Buddy are still around. I see Buddy every now and then. They are here in New Jersey.”

THE OTHER MANHATTANS

Blue: “We had a battle for the name, until I Wanna Be was released. There was another Manhattans, and the union insisted that whoever came out with the first hit they would be able to maintain the name, and I Wanna Be (Your Everything) came out in ’64 and that was the way we won the name over.”

Music history knows many groups, who have used the name ‘Manhattans’. There are Eli & the Manhattans, Ronnie & the Manhattans and several plain Manhattanses. In the 50s and 60s singles by these groups have appeared on such labels as Dootone, King, Big Mack, Boss, Colpix, Ransom, Web, Piney, Enjoy, Golden World, Atlantic and Avanti, but not any of them is by our group. Blue: “From ’61 through ’64 we tried desperately to get a recording deal, but it was impossible.”

There was at least one occasion, when they actually entered the studio and were ready for Danny Robinson (Bobby Robinson’s brother) to record them, but nothing came out of it. Blue: “He never recorded us. He pretended to record us, but he never did anything with us.”

Kenny: “I became a Manhattan as a result of the group I was introduced to. The members of that group started also not making the rehearsals. Sonny was part of that group and Smitty was already there. We wanted this group to come together. We already knew who we wanted to have as ideal members. So Sonny brought me in, introduced me to the group and then one of the other members stopped making rehearsals. He was a truck driver. Then they brought Richie in. We had to just get a bass voice, and everybody wanted to see if we could get Blue again. He agreed and that’s how we got together.”


(The pic courtesy of Mrs. Jeanie Scott)

JOE EVANS

Mr. Joe Evans is a seasoned musician, to say the least. Throughout decades he has played with a number of jazz, blues and rhythm & blues luminaries, but for the Manhattans he was first and foremost the owner of Carnival Records and the gentleman, who gave them their first record release in 1964.

Joe Evans, Jr, was born in Pensacola, Florida, on October 7 in 1916, so this year he’ll turn ninety-four. He started playing the saxophone in the 1930s in the Ray Shep Band, moved to New York in 1938 and has since played with Jay McShann, Charlie Parker, Louis Armstrong, Cab Calloway, Dizzy Gillespie and Lionel Hampton, to name a few. All this is documented in a fascinating book titled Follow Your Heart (ISBN-13978-0-252-03303-2; University of Illinois Press, http://www.press.uillinois.edu; 180 pages 22 with photos; 2008), written by Mr. Evans himself and Christopher Brooks. It’s an interesting read and contains many remarkable stories starting from Joe’s early days as a musician. He sheds light on touring the south in the 30s, working with such artists as “Ma” Rainey, Billie Holiday, Al Hibbler, Ivory Joe Hunter, Jackie Wilson and Sam Cooke, running record companies in the 60s and 70s and life after an active and many-sided career in music.

Mr. Evans, who today lives in Richmond, Virginia, was kind enough to talk about the Manhattans, Carnival Records and some other points of his career for this article, too. In the 50s he belonged to the Apollo Theater house band in New York. “It was very nice. It wasn’t tough. We played five shows a day, and one night a week you played a midnight show. On Wednesday night they had an Amateur Hour. A lot of the stars were discouraged in that show at the Apollo. The audience was very responsive. On Wednesday night, if you weren’t good, they would boo you. They had a guy called Porto Rico, who would come out in different costumes chasing you off the stage, if they didn’t like you. But the audience was very good to you, if they liked you.”

CEE-JAY, TANGERINE, MOTOWN...

In the late 50s Joe met with Clarence Johnson, and became a partner with him in running a record label. “Cee Jay – that was initials for Clarence Johnson. We called him ‘Jack Rags’. He’s the man that taught me the record business. He played trombone and had played in several bands. He talked me into going into the record business. He knew it, because he was already in it.”

The roster at Cee Jay in 1960 and 1961 included Mike & the Utopians, Sherman Williams, Jay Dee Bryant & the Magic Knights, Little Roy Little, the Four Kings, Jimmy Spruill & his Band, the Vines, Delroy Green & the Cool Gents and Harry Lewis & his Orchestra... but there wasn’t a hit-making unit. “Most of those artists just gave up. Then some of them continued to try to be a success, but they never made it. A lot of them joined other groups, and some of those groups became famous.”

“On that label we mostly did r&b stuff. One big record we had on Cee Jay was a blues record, and it was called I’m a Little Mixed Up by Betty James (583). Leonard Chess of the Chess Records leased it, took it over and made it a big record.”

Clarence Johnson passed away in late 1961, the label ceased to exist and Joe proceeded to work for Ray Charles. “It was very nice. I was working as a promotion director. Ray had a label that was distributed by ABC-Paramount called Tangerine. I did a lot of work coast-to-coast. He was a very nice man, very nice to work with.” Since its start in 1962 Tangerine signed many established artists – Percy Mayfield, Lula Reed, Louis Jordan etc. – but hit-wise it wasn’t a very successful company. “I believe that Ray had an idea what was good, but it was not the same idea what was happening in the business at the time. This is just my belief. He could make hits, but other artists that weren’t as strong couldn’t make hits like that. The material wasn’t as strong as his and they weren’t as dynamic as he was. Then he had a band on the road for the people to hear him in person and he could influence people that way. And he was very good at what he did. Other artists couldn’t get away with that.”

After Ray, Joe worked for a growing Detroit company called Motown after being approached by another saxophone player and a band leader named Choker Campbell. “I was working and travelling with their show, the Motown Review. I was playing mostly background for the artists, but I did a lot of recording with them, too. I recorded with Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, the Temptations, their girl groups, several artists...”

CARNIVAL RECORDS

With Cee-Jay Records Joe had become so attached to the record business that in conjunction with his work at Tangerine he launched and started running a label of his own called Carnival, a name he picked up from a billboard ad. Joe formed the label in 1962 together with Paul “Hucklebuck” Williams, a saxophonist, bandleader and recording artist in his own right that Joe had met in Detroit already in the 40s. They also formed Bright Star Publishing Company (with BMI), and Paul’s home address – 605 West, 156th Street, New York – became the company and label address.

The first release, Your Yah-Yah Is Gone (501), was by a girl group called the Tren-Teens, who were scheduled to cut the record already for Cee-Jay. The song owes some to Lee Dorsey’s Ya Ya, released a year earlier on Fury. The Tren-Teens’ debut single was followed by Delores Johnson’s big-voiced r&b belter titled What Kind Of Man Are You, (502). You can listen to some mp3’s at www.westwoodmusicgroup.com -> Carnival Records.

Joe’s and Paul’s Carnival Records shouldn’t be mixed up with Jerry Moss’ and Herb Albert’s label by the same name in 1961, which turned into A&M a year later. Also Atlantic’s Herb Abramson’s Carnival is a different label.

The third artist for the label was Barbara Brown, who cut in ‘63 a pleading r&b ballad named Send Him to Me (b/w a cute toe-tapper, Sometimes I Wonder), but Barbara’s boyfriend wouldn’t allow her to continue show business career and perform in front of other men, so after one more single a year later she dropped out. She, however, was an important link in Joe and the Manhattans hooking up with each other.

THE MANHATTANS TO MOTOWN

Barbara told Joe Evans about the group, but there are two slightly different stories as to how the two actually met for the first time. Sonny: “Richard, Smitty, Kenny, Blue and I felt that we had put in enough time and hard work to compete at Harlem’s famous Apollo Theater’s Amateur Night, which was held every Wednesday night. So from Jersey City we went to the Apollo and placed 3rd that night. But as fate would have it, Joe Evans was in the house that night. And despite coming third, we really won that night, because he signed us to his Carnival Record label.”

Blue: “A gentleman called Joe Evans was the one who saw us and liked us. He played alto sax in Choker Campbell’s orchestra that travelled with the Motown acts. Joe Evans’ vision was to start a “Motown” in the New York area, and Barbara Brown was one of his first artists. Barbara told him about us and he caught us at the Apollo.”

Joe: “One of the artists on Carnival, Barbara Brown, was responsible for me meeting them. She gave them my phone number, they called me and then we set up an appointment at the Theresa Hotel. I had Paul Williams with me. If I saw them earlier, I didn’t remember them, but I never met them in person until they came into the Theresa.”

“The songs that they sang that day were songs that were made popular by other groups during that time. They sang two or three songs like that. They sang the songs better than the groups that had recorded them (laughing). I said to Paul Williams ‘that is a million-dollar group’, and he said ‘oh, you’re crazy’, but later he said ‘you’re right, you knew what you were talking about’.”

“I asked them ‘do you want a record contract’, and they said ‘yes’, but then they said that ‘everybody promises to record us but they never get around to it’. Then they told me that they had been approached by Bobby Robinson’s brother, Danny Robinson. He was in the record business also (Everlast, Enjoy). They tell them to come to the record session, but when they get there they’re recording someone else and tell them ‘we’ll get around to you’, and when they would finish late at night everybody would pack up and go home. They said that happened to them two or three times. I said ‘well, it won’t happen with me, because if I promise to record you and sign you, I will record you’.”

“The next day they signed the contract and brought it back to me. I asked them had they gone over the contract with their parents or friends, they said ‘no, we don’t need to do that. We’re over twenty-one and speak for ourselves’. So we started from there.”

Joe was still working for Motown, so he took the first two songs he cut on the Manhattans to Detroit first. “I put them on tape and I took the recording to Berry Gordy. He liked it, but he wouldn’t go ahead of Mickey Stevenson. He put him over that, and I would have to talk to him. When I spoke with Mickey Stevenson, he wanted to take it over and only put perhaps my name on a record or something like that. I’ve been in the business too long for that and I wouldn’t go for that, so I didn’t talk to him anymore about them.” Joe soon left Motown altogether.

MUSICIANS, STUDIOS, MIXING...

Joe put the Manhattans on his own Carnival label. For his recording sessions he favoured one particular studio and he used a permanent line-up of rhythm section players. “For most of the recordings I used Talent Masters in New York, because I worked very well with the engineer there. His name was Bob Gallo, and he was also a guitarist.”

“For the rhythm section I had a regular bunch. There was Bernard Purdie, who was the drummer, and Jimmy Tyrell was the bass player. Robert Banks was the pianist. “Snaggs” Allen was the guitarist and Eric Gale was the other guitarist. They recorded all the Manhattans backgrounds.”

“I did the mix. I would record the track first. When I record the track, I would let the vocals sing along with it, just to give the musicians the feel of the song. They didn’t have to be good. They were not for the record.” As Mr. Evans tells in the book Follow Your Heart, on four-track tapes that he used those days “track one was for the lead singer, two was for the background singers, three was for the rhythm section and the fourth track was for whatever additional instruments were necessary.”

“When I put the strings down – I think there were five or six of them – in the mix I would double them up. If I wanted a light sound, I would double them once, and if I wanted something heavier, I would record those five or six in one register and then I make another take of them in another music I wrote. The horns I didn’t double up much. I used the trumpets and I used the trombone most of the time, but I would blend the trombone into the bass sound, and that blend had a different sound to it. When I used the girls in the background, I used the Lovettes, especially with the Manhattans.”

Kenny: “We used Talent Masters Studios in Manhattan. Only studios we used in Jersey City was the rehearsal studios. How many takes we needed? It all depends on the song. Some of the songs we did once, and that was it. We were always told ‘time was money’. It was no use in going there and not be prepared to go. So we tried to prepare ourselves as much as we possibly could, before we went in.”

“FOR THE VERY FIRST TIME”

Those two songs that Joe first took to Berry Gordy were finally put out on the first Carnival single (504) by the Manhattans in March 1964. Sonny: “Our first single, For the Very First Time, was a hit locally in the tri-city area.” George Smith, their lead singer, also wrote the song, which is a rather typical dancer of those days and actually sounds like it could have been cut a couple of years earlier. The flip, a mid-tempo and mellow mover titled I’ve Got Everything but You, was written by Joe and his newlywed wife, Anna Moore. Anna took care of the company’s bookkeeping and her sister, Louise, became an assistant in the firm.

Perhaps a local hit, but nationally For the Very First Time didn’t make any waves. According to Joe, their follow-up, There Goes a Fool/Call Somebody Please (506), did a little better. Released in August 1964, There Goes a Fool was written by Sonny. “I had written plenty of songs, but that was the first one recorded.” It’s an uptempo pop song, which undoubtedly was musically influenced by the British invasion those days. Smitty is again leading, and you can even hear a short flute solo by the producer himself, Mr. Joe Evans. Call Somebody Please is a mid-tempo pop ditty, which Blue wrote and he also leads on this side.

Those days Paul Williams decided to leave the company to pursue other interests such as managing artists, so Joe now had the company all to himself. He formed a new publishing company called Sanavan – the name comes from Anna and Evans – and the new Carnival address became 350 Chadwick Avenue in Newark, Joe’s home address.

OTHER MERRYMAKERS

Although the Manhattans eventually became Carnival’s leading act and breadwinner for the company, many other interesting artists had releases on the label, too. Curly Mayes cut a poppy umptempo ditty called Oh Why (b/w I’m Walkin’ On, Carnival 505) in 1964. Joe: “He was out west somewhere. I’m still looking for him now, because I have a chance to put one of the songs on his records on a television movie.”

Smitty invited his friend, Curby Goggins, to the company. Curby also cut only one single (Come Home to Daddy/Love Me If You Want to; 510) in 1965. Harry Caldwell sang in his high tenor voice a teenage anguish ballad named Nobody Loves Me on Carnival 516 in 1966. It was backed with another yearning song, this time a mid-pacer titled Nobody Loves Me, co-written by Blue Lovett. Joe: “I haven’t seen Harry for years. He’s down in North Carolina somewhere. He was from Charlotte, North Carolina. He was also a brick mason, and he travelled around.” Harry’s second single, a sympathetic “hippie” ballad called A New World Is Just Beginning (547), was released as late as in 1970.

The Lovettes had two single releases and both Little Miss Soul (518 in 1966), and I Need a Guy (530 in 1967) were written by Blue. Blue: “They lived in Jersey City. We all grew up together wanting to be recording artists, and Joe Evans loved them. We used them sometimes as female background singers, and we were looking for that Motown thing that Berry Gordy did. The idea that Joe had was to record these young ladies and hopefully get a hit on them.” Indeed, Little Miss Soul is like a standard Motown scorcher, whereas the flip, Lonely Girl, is a downbeat tender song. I Need a Guy is again a motownish mid-pacer, while I’m Afraid (to Say I Love you) on the flip is a poignant beat-ballad.

Norma Jenkins recorded Blue’s poignant ballad, Need Someone to Love (528; b/w a stomper called Me, Myself and I) in 1967. Blue had invited Norma to Carnival. Blue: “She was very good.” Male duos were popular throughout the 60s, and one single by Carnival’s own Turner Brothers proved that as singers they were equal to many of their colleagues. I’m the Man For You Baby (535) is an almost deep soul ballad, while My Love Is Yours Tonight is a more mid-tempo mover. Joe: “I haven’t seen them recently. These people are hard to keep up with. They came from someplace down south. They were quite active. They got around.”

Kenneth Ruffin stayed at Carnival for one single as well. I’ll Keep Holding On (536) is a pleading soul ballad with a strong support from the horn section, whereas Cry, Cry, Cry is a blues romp. Joe: “Kenny was basically a writer, but I recorded him, because some things he sang quite well. I’ve been searching for him, too. He wrote several songs that other artists did.”

It’s Too Late and I’m Just Gonna Be Missing You (539 in 1968) by Rene Bailey let you know from the opening bars that here we have one big-voiced blues lady. Joe: “She lives in upstate New York. I call to Rene all the time. She’s partly retired. She sings on most of the weekends, and she’s teaching the school.”

In the next part of the story I’ll still feature two other popular Carnival acts – Phil Terrell and Lee Williams and the Cymbals - more in detail and with comments from the artists themselves. In their roster Carnival also had such familiar names to the fans of genuine soul music as Little Royal, who cut a fine soul ballad titled I Can Tell, and Jimmy Jules, who excelled on an Otis type of a slowie named Nothing Will Ever Change. Both singles were released in ’67.

LET’S DANCE FIRST...

So far on all four released Manhattans sides on Carnival Records the songs had been dancers, and we had to wait till the fourth single to hear a ballad. Joe: “Uptempo things were easier to get played. If you had a name, they’d play anything, but the best way to get new artists played was play an uptempo record. When you take it to a deejay, they put it on and they don’t listen to the whole song. They listen to the introduction and a little bit and tell you ‘I’ll play it’. If you have a slow song, they don’t listen enough, no matter what it is. So you had to have a little bit of rhythm to the song for them to give you a break with.”

The Manhattans’ third Carnival single was also a mover, but it became their first hit and marked the beginning of a remarkable success story. That song as well as the rest of the Carnival period and DeLuxe period will be covered in the second part of the story.

Heikki Suosalo

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #16 posted 12/13/14 12:35pm

JoeBala

Upcoming Releases CD/Blu-ray:


Nicki Minaj - The Pinkprint

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #17 posted 12/13/14 12:37pm

JoeBala

Identity said:




"Lips" is the latest single by Marian Hill (Jeremy Lloyd and Samantha Gongol). Become enraptured.


"Lips" - audio

Nice ID! Hope she blows up. She's got skills.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #18 posted 12/13/14 1:59pm

JoeBala

Talking With Sananda Maitreya & Tom Rhodes - Part 1 of 6:

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #19 posted 12/13/14 6:07pm

JoeBala

Engineer and Producer John Hampton Dies

John HamptonJHamptone.com

John Hampton, the acclaimed engineer and producer who worked with Stevie Ray and Jimmie Vaughn, the White Stripes and the Replacements, died last night after a battle with cancer. He was 61 years old.

According to the Memphis Commercial Appeal, Hampton worked at the famous Ardent Studios for nearly four decades, and was inspired to do so by one of rock’s biggest bands. “I was a big Led Zeppelin fan and when Zeppelin’s third record came out, on the back it said ‘Mixed at Ardent Studios – Memphis, Tennessee,’” he explained in a 2007 interview with the paper. “I kind of made up my mind at that point: I want to work at that place.”

He was hired by the studio in 1977, and worked his way up the ranks, eventually becoming a part-owner. His highly impressive resume — seriously, check this out — including Grammy-winning work with two Jack White-led bands, the White Stripes and the Raconteurs. “Jack, without even knowing it … made me remember the way we used to work it when I first started,” Hampton explained. “Working with analog tape and eight tracks, doesn’t leave you a lot of options, so you got to commit on the spot.”

Hampton also mixed three George Thorogood albums, engineered Alex Chilton’s ‘Like Flies on Sherbert,’ the Vaughan Brothers’ 1990 album ‘Family Style,’ and the Replacements’ 1987 classic ‘Pleased to Meet Me.’

His biggest commercial success came when he produced the Gin Blossoms’ 1992 multi-platinum debut album ‘New Miserable Experience.’ The band’s lead singer, Robin Wilson, praised Hampton’s “ability to deal with the personalities involved in a band and the pressures of the studio and get the best out of you.”



Read More: Engineer and Producer John Hampton Dies | http://ultimateclassicroc...ck=tsmclip
Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #20 posted 12/15/14 4:33pm

JoeBala

Miles Davis and Bill Evans

http://jazztimes.com/images/content/articles/0002/7438/200109_050.jpg

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #21 posted 12/15/14 4:46pm

JoeBala

Hear D'Angelo's Brassy, Funky New Track 'Sugah Daddy'

Soulful song is the first off R&B singer's long-awaited LP 'Black Messiah'

D'Angelo

By Daniel Kreps | December 14, 2014

One day after D'Angelo revealed he and his band the Vanguard would release his new album Black Messiah – his first LP in 14 years – in the near future, the idea of the neo-soul singer putting out music again still seemed difficult to fathom. However, with a Black Messiah listening party scheduled for Sunday night, D'Angelo has provided proof that his new studio album is on the horizon: A new single called "Sugah Daddy," which the singer provided to Red Bull's 20Before15 series.

"He is about to take a radical 180 turn with this record," Questlove told Rolling Stone of D'Angelo's new album in June 2012. "It's going to throw people off the same way that Prince's Dirty Mind threw his R&B fanbase off. In the past few years, he's discovered Bowie and Led Zeppelin, the Beatles, Pet Sounds, Captain Beefheart and Zappa."

Despite the influx of new influences, D'Angelo fans will be happy to know that he still makes music that is uniquely D'Angelo's: The brassy, funky "Sugah Daddy," which fully employs the singer's trademark falsetto, would slide comfortably on the back half of his neo-soul classic Voodoo.

https://soundcloud.com/da...dy/s-rtnrM

"I respect [the term neo-soul] for what it is, but anytime you put a name on something, you just put it in a box," D'Angelo said in May. "You want to be in a position where you can grow as an artist. You never want to be told, 'Hey, well, you're a neo-soul artist.' Right now, I'm not. We're going someplace else." "Sugah Daddy" is more of an update on his neo-soul sound than a redefinition.

"Sugah Daddy" is only D'Angelo's second studio song since he released Voodoo in 2000; another non-album cut called "I Found My Smile Again" accompanied his The Best So Far… in 2008. Live performances of "Sugah Daddy" date back to 2012, when D'Angelo's long-awaited record was still tentatively titled James River and "99 percent" finished. Black Messiah's creation was so long in the works, Red Bull evens cracked Detox and Chinese Democracy jokes in their press release announcing the arrival of "Sugah Daddy."

Since the beginning of December, Red Bull's 20 Before 15 series have been offering up exclusive tracks from artists and Red Bull Music Academy collaborators like Lil Herb with Earl Sweatshirt, Dengue Dengue Dengue and Elliphant with Mø. Each day, the first 1,000 people who visit the site get to download the day's track for free. After that, the track is then offered up only as a stream.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #22 posted 12/18/14 2:48pm

JoeBala

Johnny Gill Talks New Edition Reunion

Singer speaks on getting back to the essence of R&B, his solo album, Game Changer, and a possible upcoming project from the group.

Posted: 12/16/2014 01:20 PM EST


R&B has gone through quite a journey since the beginning of the century. Once known for subtle romantic undertones and seductive wordplay, recent years have seen the genre cross paths with EDM, pop and oh yes, even the hip hop sub-genre known as “Ratchet.”

As both a solo artist and a member of the groundbreaking group New Edition, Johnny Gill knows a little something about changing trends in music, but on his latest solo album, Game Changer, the singer is taking a stand for rhythm and blues in its purest form.

“Sometimes in music when you’re considered old school, you don’t get celebrated you get penalized,” Johnny told BET.com in an exclusive conversation. I feel compelled to stand tall with that banner and continue to carry on that lane of R&B that still exists and that people still have a love for. There’s no Luther Vandross anymore. There’s no Teddy Pendegrass anymore or Gerald Levert. Some say, ‘Oh, I don’t think this will work because it won’t work for radio,’ but history is on our side,” he added.

Over the course of his career, which has spanned roughly three decades, Johnny kept his sound consistent, but on his new album, Game Changer, which came out last week, the former New Edition singer put a little more focus on the upper octaves than on his previous projects.

“I approached the album, especially the first single, 'Behind Closed Doors,' from a different angle and started with a falsetto before going into my main style,” Johnny noted. “I was just sitting there talking to a couple of the other songwriters and I said, ‘You know, I want to approach the song from a different angle,’ and that’s how I came up with the falsetto thing. I wanted it to be something that’s quite seductive but yet still really nice and powerful and I’m really, really happy it worked out."

The song was written by Johnny’s longtime friend and former executive producer Babyface. The venerable crooner champions the LaFace Records founding father with helping take his career to the next level.

“I got to work with Babyface, which is always great when the two of us get together. I’ve had some huge records in my career, but the guy that gave me my signature record was Babyface. 'Rub Me the Right Way' was my biggest record but 'My My My' was my signature record. Another thing a lot of people didn’t realize I did was put Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, who were two of the most prolific and hottest producers on the planet, together for one project. I always said no matter where I go musically, even for the next 30 years, I will always feel compelled to have them be a part of whatever I’m doing because they helped get me to where I am today."

One of the other standout tracks on Game Changer is “This One’s for Me and You,” which features New Edition, and, according to Johnny, the reunion brought him right back to the days of packed arenas and screaming fans.

“It was like we never missed a beat! We were actually on the road at the time we recorded the song so we all went in the studio and recorded. It was cool and it was fun because we already were in a groove,” Johnny recalled.

He also said New Edition fans can expect much more from the group in the new year. “We were just sitting in there talking and laughing and at the end of the day that bug came over us and we started talking like, ‘Wow, we gotta get a new CD together, and make some new music as New Edition,’ so that’s how it really ignited and that’s something we’re in the middle of getting situated as well. Fans can expect a new New Edition album coming,” he teased.

In years past, Johnny (like most of the music business) was bound by deadlines and all the outside pressure that comes with being on a major label, but this time around he is on his own label, J Skillz Records, and he’s making sure that every step is taken organically.

“It’s nice. I’m not looking at the clock anymore going, ‘This studio time is costing me,’ cause I own the studio. I can record at my own pace, which makes it better and more enjoyable for me,” said Johnny. “I’m fortunate to be able to be my own boss. I can control where my music is going, how it’s getting out there and how it’s being cared for. It’s something I’ve never had the opportunity to do and I am enjoying every second of it."

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #23 posted 12/18/14 6:54pm

Identity

[img:$uid]http://i.imgur.com/8Tdy6gR.jpg[/img:$uid]


Alessandra Ambrósio would love to love you in her new video.

Reply #24 posted 12/20/14 9:31am

JoeBala

Upcoming Releases on CD's/MP3's:

-----------------------------------------Donny Osmond - The Soundtrack Of My Life

Miguel - Wild --------------------------Dexys Midnight Runners Live At Duke

Alana Henderson - Windfall--Trisha Yearwood - PrizeFighter Hit After Hit

Ane Brun-Songs Tour 2013---Emily Wolfe - Roulette

-----------------------------------------Marilyn Manson-The Pale Emperor

On Blu-ray -Jethro Tull’s Ian Anderson-Thick As A Brick Live In Iceland

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #25 posted 12/20/14 9:37am

Identity





On newsstands now.

Reply #26 posted 12/21/14 10:38am

JoeBala

Fiona Apple and Blake Mills

photo FionaandBlake_zps3714a1d2.jpg

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #27 posted 12/26/14 8:01am

Identity





New video for "Take a Ride".


YTube

Reply #28 posted 12/26/14 8:20am

Identity

[img:$uid]http://i.imgur.com/hN8CuUY.gif?1[/img:$uid]


Dawn Richard - The Black Era/Blackheart

Reply #29 posted 12/27/14 1:39pm

JoeBala

Now On Newstands:

.

.

.

[Edited 12/27/14 13:42pm]

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #30 posted 12/27/14 1:45pm

JoeBala

Identity said:





New video for "Take a Ride".


YTube

This is nice too.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #31 posted 12/29/14 10:22pm

MickyDolenz

Steve Hackett new album announcement


You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
Reply #32 posted 01/02/15 7:08am

JoeBala

Singer Joe Cocker dies aged 70 after cancer battle

Singer Joe Cocker, best known for his cover of The Beatles' With A Little Help From My Friends, has died aged 70.

The Sheffield-born singer had a career lasting more than 40 years, with hits including You Are So Beautiful and Up Where We Belong.

His agent Barrie Marshall said Cocker, who died after battling lung cancer, was "simply unique".

Sir Paul McCartney said he was a lovely guy who "brought so much to the world".

Cocker's friend Rick Wakeman, keyboard player for the rock band Yes, called his rendition of With a Little Help From My Friends "sensational" and said: "He had a voice that was just unique."

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a8/Joe_cocker_1970.JPG

Wakeman told BBC Radio 2: "The great thing is with someone like Joe is what they leave behind, and that will be with us for years and years."

Sir Paul McCartney: "He turned the [Beatles] song into a soul anthem and I was forever grateful"

Known for his gritty voice, Cocker - a former gas fitter - began his singing career in the pubs and clubs of Sheffield in the 1960s before hitting the big time.

He was propelled to pop stardom when his version of With A Little Help From My Friends reached number one in 1968.

He performed the song at the famous Woodstock Festival in New York state a year later.

He was also well-known for his Mad Dogs and Englishmen Tour of 1970, which visited 48 cities across the US.

His duet with Jennifer Warnes, Up Where We Belong - from An Officer And A Gentleman - hit number one and went on to win both a Grammy and an Academy Award in 1983. He was made an OBE in 2011.

Joe Cocker The Sheffield-born singer performed at the Isle of Wight Festival in 1969

Joe Cocker Cocker, pictured here at Los Angeles airport in 1972, had shot to fame in the 1960s

Last year, his arena tour across Europe saw him achieve a number one album in Germany and give what was to be his final concert in Hammersmith, London, in June.

Cocker, who recorded 23 studio albums and 40 albums, lived in Colorado, in the US.

Mr Marshall said it was with "the heaviest hearts we heard that our beloved Joe Cocker passed away last night".

Joe Cocker performs Up Where We Belong with Jennifer Warnes

He continued: "He was without the doubt the greatest rock/soul voice ever to come out of Britain and remained the same man throughout his life."

Mr Marshall described Cocker as a "true star" who was also "a kind and humble man who loved to perform.

"Anyone who ever saw him live will never forget him," he added.

'Etched in our memories'

Sir Paul said he would be "forever grateful" to Cocker for turning With A Little Help From My Friends into a "soul anthem".

The former Beatle said: "I knew him through the years as a good mate and I was so sad to hear that he had been ill and really sad to hear today that he had passed away.

"He was a great guy, a lovely guy who brought so much to the world and we'll all miss him."

Other musicians to have paid tribute to Cocker include Beatles drummer Ringo Starr, who tweeted: "Goodbye and God bless to Joe Cocker."

Joe Cocker and Jennifer WarnesCocker's duet with Jennifer Warnes Up Where We Belong won a Grammy and an Oscar

Joe CockerCocker was recognised with an OBE for services to music in 2007

Aerosmith singer Steve Tyler tweeted: "We loved you forever, we will miss you always. RIP Joe Cocker."

Another to pay tribute on Twitter was singer-songwriter Frank Turner, who wrote: "Wow. Sad to hear of Joe Cocker's passing. Incredible singer."

Bryan Adams tweeted: "Joe Cocker has died. RIP my good friend, you were one of the best rock singers ever."

Meanwhile, Edgar Berger, chairman and chief executive of Sony Music Entertainment International, who signed Cocker, said he was "one of the most humble men I've ever met.

He said his voice "will forever be etched in our memories".

.

Bob Mehr's Memphis Music Beat: Peter Guralnick talks Elvis, Sam Phillips bio on deck

3:46 PM, Jan 1, 2015

http://www.commercialappe...k_25917094

.

Bluegrass Pioneer Charlie Stamper Releases His First-Ever Album

The 84-year-old fiddler, a mainstay in the Kentucky dance halls, was brother to Art Stamper

By Joseph Hudak | December 30, 2014

When influential bluegrass fiddler Art Stamper died in 2005 at 71, the style of playing he popularized with the Stanley Brothers in the Fifties was already well established. The old-time mountain sounds of his native Kentucky, however, lost one of its greatest champions and historians. Fortunately, there is another: Art's sibling Charlie Stamper. This month, the elder Stamper brother released his first-ever album at the age of 84, Glory to the Meeting House.

Related

A collection of songs and snippets of conversation, the project, released on the small label June Appal Records, was co-produced by J.D. Wilkes, leader of Southern-gothic punk band the Legendary Shack Shakers. Wilkes, a fellow Kentuckian, discovered Stamper while researching his book Barn Dances and Jamborees Across Kentucky and set out to capture his spry, often blazing, fiddling. Watch a video of Stamper, with Wilkes on banjo, playing the traditional "Willow Creek" above.

"Charlie Stamper is the kind of treasure that was always hiding in plain sight," Wilkes tells Rolling Stone Country. "Although his brother is in the Bluegrass Hall of Fame, Charlie has always been content to play at the local jamboree down the road and give lessons to the neighborhood kids."

Photo: Courtesy June Appal Records

In addition to Stamper's fiddle skills, Glory to the Meeting House also showcases his ability with the "thrum-bow," a rudimentary instrument made of a hickory bow and wire. Played with one's mouth, the sound produced recalls a hillbilly version of Joe Perry's "Sweet Emotion" talk box.

Wilkes says Stamper viewed making a record as something for his "bucket list," a way to honor his brother Art, Stamper patriarch Hiram, also a musician, and the "family tradition." "He's too humble to assert himself into the trending 'old time' scene," Wilkes says. "Only now has he allowed June Appal Records and me to spread word of his secret royalty."

Glory to the Meeting House, like the "Willow Creek" video, was recorded last January at Stamper's home in Cadiz, Kentucky.

.

New upcoming CD/MP3 Releases

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #33 posted 01/02/15 10:41am

Identity


[img:$uid]http://i.imgur.com/DYwZ6eT.jpg?1[/img:$uid]


Rita Ora: "2015 Will Be the Year That Changes Everything"
01/02/15
Link



She's been a star for quite a while in the U.K., but 2014 was the year that the U.S. really discovered Rita Ora, thanks to her collaboration with Iggy Azalea on "Black Widow." Now, the Albanian-born British singer is ready to take 2015 by storm.

"2015 for me is honestly gonna be the year that changes everything for my life, personally and professionally and creatively," she tells ABC News Radio, adding, "It's the first time I'm releasing an album worldwide."

Indeed, her first album, Ora, featuring the single "How We Do (Party)," was not released globally. That'll change with her second album, due early this year, which she considers to be her "real" debut.

Rita is also launching an acting career: she has a small part in the much-anticipated movie 50 Shades of Grey, playing Christian Grey's sister Mia.



Reply #34 posted 01/04/15 9:33am

JoeBala

Donna Douglas, the Beverly Hillbillies star who played Elly May Clampett, dies at 81

The Beverly Hillbillies star Donna Douglas has died at 81.

The actress, who played buxom toyboy Elly May Clampett on the beloved 1960s TV series, passed away Thursday at her home in Louisiana, her granddaughter confirmed to TMZ.

She was surrounded by her friends and family. The cause of death was pancreatic cancer.

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-dD0bzcE9TjQ/TZ8XvmwHa6I/AAAAAAAABzc/Wwv3LC9CbA8/s1600/dd2.jpg


TV favourite: The Beverly Hillbillies star Donna Douglas has died aged 81. She is pictured in 2004 at the TV Land Awards at the Hollywood Palladium

Donna starred in The Beverly Hillbillies for all nine seasons and even returned for the 1981 reunion TV movie.

http://i.imgur.com/q43eWJd.jpg

The series, which ran from 1962 to 1971, also starred the late Buddy Ebsen and Irene Ryan as well as Max Baer Jr., who turns 77 on Sunday.

The comedy centred around a poor family who, after discovering oil deposits on their land, become very rich.

They then buy a mansion in Beverly Hills, California and proceed to shake up the privileged society with their country ways.

http://ia.media-imdb.com/images/M/MV5BMTA5MzAxNjY2MTReQTJeQWpwZ15BbWU2MDcyMzM0Ng@@._V1_SX640_SY720_.jpg


What a star: Donna, seen here in 2003, reportedly died of pancreatic cancer. She passed away surrounded by family and friends near her home town of Zachary, Louisiana

Beauty: Donna, played Elly May Clampett in the 1960s TV show

The Clampett clan: Donna as Elly May in The Beverly Hillbillies in 1965. She is pictured alongside Buddy Ebsen (left), Max Baer and Irene Ryan

The Clampett clan: Donna as Elly May in The Beverly Hillbillies in 1965. She is pictured alongside Buddy Ebsen (left), Max Baer and Irene Ryan

Chosen from more than 500 other actresses, Donna said she felt at ease playing the role because, like her character, she grew up a poor Southern tomboy.

Her childhood in Pride, Louisiana, came in handy when she was asked during her audition to milk a goat.

'I had milked cows before,' she recalled in a 2009 interview with The Associated Press. 'I figured they were equipped the same, so I just went on over and did it.'

Donna also starred alongside Elvis Presley in Frankie and Johnny as well as several other classic TV series such as Mister Ed, The Twilight Zone, The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, Adam 12 and Route 66.

http://static01.nyt.com/images/2015/01/03/arts/sub-douglas-obit-1/sub-douglas-obit-1-blog427.jpg

Classic: The Beverly Hillbillies centred around a country family who suddenly struck it rich and moved to Beverly Hills in California. The show ran from 1962-1971

The actress married Roland Bourgeois at 17, and divorced just after having her son, Danny P. Bourgeois, whom she shielded from the media spotlight.

Donna's career began with beauty pageants - she was Miss Baton Rouge and Miss New Orleans - followed by a trip to New York to pursue a career in entertainment.

'That was the first time I had ever been on an airplane,' she said.

http://hollywoodshow.com/store/media/catalog/product/cache/3/image/9df78eab33525d08d6e5fb8d27136e95/f/i/file_47.jpg

Blonde bombshell: Donna once said that her upbringing as a poor southern tomboy helped her snag the role as Elly May

Iconic: The beauty starred alongside Elvis Presley in Frankie And Johnny in 1966

Iconic: The beauty starred alongside Elvis Presley in Frankie And Johnny in 1966

photo FJ002HQa.jpg

While modeling didn't appeal to her - 'I didn't want to be that skinny' - television did. Donna was featured as the Letters Girl on The Perry Como Show in 1957 and as the Billboard Girl on The Steve Allen Show in 1959.

https://pleasurephotoroom.files.wordpress.com/2013/10/american-actor-donna-douglas-posing-in-a-formfitting-draped-silk-gown-designed-by-walter-plunkett-while-promoting-director-vincente-minnellis-film-bells-are-ringing-1960.jpg

She was married to The Beverly Hillbillies director Robert Leeds from 1971 to 1980.

After acting, Donna worked in real estate and recorded country and gospel music albums and wrote a book for children that drew on biblical themes. She also traveled as an inspirational speaker.

http://cbsnews2.cbsistatic.com/hub/i/r/2015/01/02/499328f3-14a7-49c5-beea-498383fb86f6/resize/620x465/c2cff798923be7353be8f7e0fd92ad34/rtri8z3.jpg

In 2010 she sued CBS and toymaker Mattel over a Barbie doll that used Elly May's name and likeness. The suit was settled in 2011.

Talent: The actress pictured with actress Pat Priest and musician Herb Alpert in the 1960s

Talent: The actress pictured with actress Pat Priest and musician Herb Alpert in the 1960s

http://img.spokeo.com/public/900-600/donna_douglas_2012_11_30.jpg

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #35 posted 01/04/15 9:42am

JoeBala

Country star Little Jimmy Dickens dies aged 94

Little Jimmy Dickens had novelty hits like May the Bird of Paradise Fly Up Your Nose

Renowned American country music singer-songwriter Little Jimmy Dickens has died at the age of 94.

http://www.eonline.com/eol_images/Entire_Site/201502/rs_634x818-150102185907-634.Little-Jimmy-Dickens.1.ms.010215.JPG

His spokeswoman Jessie Schmidt said Dickens died on Friday of cardiac arrest after suffering a stroke on Christmas Day.

His novelty songs, including May the Bird of Paradise Fly Up Your Nose, earned him a spot in the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1983.

He is also credited with introducing rhinestone suits to country music.

Dickens was the oldest member of the Grand Ole Opry, a weekly music concert broadcast live on US radio from Nashville, Tennessee.

He had performed almost continuously on the show since 1948, making his last performance on 20 December last year to celebrate his 94th birthday.

'One-of-a-kind'

Pete Fisher, vice-president of the Grand Ole Opry House in Nashville, said the show "did not have a better friend than Little Jimmy Dickens".

"He was a one-of-a-kind entertainer and a great soul whose spirit will live on for years to come," he added.

Despite being just just 4ft 11in (1.5m) tall, Dickens said he had never been self-conscious about his height.

"It's been very good for me. I've made fun of it, and get a laugh here and there," he said in a 2009 interview.

Country star Brad Paisley, who performed with Dickens several times, said he had an "incredible and unique place in country music history".

"It is with a heavy heart that I say goodbye to my hero and friend today. I loved you Jimmy," he tweeted.

Singer Barbara Mandrell presents Little Jimmy Dickens with his Country Music Hall of Fame plaque in Nashville - 10 October 1983Singer Barbara Mandrell presented Dickens with a place in the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1983

Little Jimmy Dickens performs alongside Brad Paisley at the Grand Ole Opry House in Nashville, Tennessee - 28 September 2010He performed regularly with US country star Brad Paisley, who described him as "my hero and friend"

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #36 posted 01/04/15 9:55am

JoeBala

Rod Stewart Sideman and Jazz Guitarist Jeff Golub Dead at 59

Jeff Golub died January 1st at the age of 59. The guitarist was best known for his work alongside Rod Stewart.

By Jason Newman | January 2, 2015

Jeff Golub, the longtime jazz, blues and rock guitarist who played on albums by Rod Stewart and Billy Squier alongside his own solo work, died on Thursday at the age of 59, according to Jazz Times.

Related

While the exact cause of death remains unknown, Golub had experienced a series of medical setbacks in recent years, including a rare, incurable brain disorder known as Progressive Supranuclear Palsy.

In his long career, Golub recorded 11 solo albums and three as leader of jazz band Avenue Blue. But it was his work with Stewart — Golub toured and recorded as his lead guitarist from 1988 until 1995 — that earned him the most renown in jazz and rock circles.

Born in Copley, Ohio, in 1955, Golub began playing guitar at 12, absorbing a wide range of influences, including music from the Grand Ole Opry and the British Invasion. The blues became his true obsession, and the guitarist soaked in music by Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy and Eric Clapton, among many others.

After attending the Berklee College of Music, Golub moved to New York in 1980 and began working with Squier, recording seven albums with the arena rock star. He would go on to become an in-demand session player, working with numerous pop and jazz artists including Tina Turner, Peter Wolf, Vanessa Williams and Bill Evans.

Golub released his debut album Unspoken Words in 1988, the same year he would join Stewart's band as lead guitarist. He stayed with Stewart until 1995, but left to focus on his own career. Avenue Blue, the eponymous debut by Golub's group, was released in 1994 and earned Golub new acclaim in the smooth jazz market. Golub would record a steady stream of albums in subsequent years, including 2000's Dangerous Curves, 2003's Soul Sessions and 2007's Grand Central.

In 2011, Golub lost his eyesight after his optic nerve collapsed, though the musician maintained an optimistic outlook on his career and life. "Fortunately, I'm in one of the few professions where I can get by without my sight," Golub said on his website. "It's made me a better artist. It's opened up my ears, and I hear things more acutely now. It's put me more in touch with my feelings and with my public. My audience has been incredibly supportive."

One year later, Golub made headlines when he fell off a New York City subway track and was dragged by an oncoming train, only to escape with minor injuries. The musician used the incident as inspiration in naming his last album, 2013's Train Keeps a Rolling.

"To me, there's only two kinds of music: the kind that's from the heart and the kind that's not," Golub said. "Regardless of the style or genre, music is either real or it's not real. I like any kind of music that's from the heart, and that's the kind that I try to make."

A tribute concert featuring Koz, Christopher Cross, Chuck Loeb, Kirk Whalum and others will be held at New York's B.B. King's Blues Club & Grill on January 21st. The show will raise funds on behalf of Golub and his family.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #37 posted 01/04/15 10:24am

JoeBala

Tango Great Leopoldo Federico Dies at 87

By Judy Cantor-Navas | January 02, 2015 10:41 AM EST

Leopoldo Federico

Leopoldo Federico, Mariano Mores, Horacio Salgan, and Fernando Suarez Paz on Aug. 24, 2006, at the Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Lita Stantic Producciones/MCT /Landov

Leopoldo Federico, the master Argentine bandoneón player who joined Rubén Blades on his Grammy-nominated album Tangos, has died at age 87. "He is a point of reference for tango argentino," Blades told Billboard before the release of the album of tango versions of the Panamanian salsa star's songs, for which he recorded with Federico and his orchestra in Buenos Aires. Tangoswon the 2014 Latin Grammy for best tango album. Blades called Federico a "gentleman who has played with the best, who has been there through a very important part of the development of tango," and whose presence on the recording gave "immediate credibility to what we were trying to do."

Considered one of the greatest tango musicians of all time, Federico performed with Astor Piazzolla in his twenties, and led his own 12-piece orchestra for more than fifty years. The son of a coal salesman, he described himself as a "grown-up boy" who started playing the bandoneón as a child, motivated by a tango-loving uncle. As a teenager he got his first professional gig playing in a cabaret band.

The esteemed Argentine musician and composer received numerous awards, including the honor of Distinguished Citizen of Buenos Aires. Late in his career, Federico collaborated with young tango musicians. In 2013, he was joined by a line-up of fellow tango stars at a tribute concert in Buenos Aires.

"I keep thinking about retiring, but it seems like destiny keeps pushing me [to play on]," Federico said in a 2010 interview.

Federico died in his native Buenos Aires on Dec. 28.

Black Messiah (4 and a half stars)

  • Black Messiah
  • D’Angelo and the Vanguard
  • RCA

D'Angelo

Fourteen years after his last album, the R&B star returns with a warm, expansive masterpiece

BY Rob Sheffield | December 17, 2014

Here's to messiahs worth waiting for. D'Angelo has kept the world fiending 14 years for the follow-up to his Crisco-thick R&B classic, Voodoo, but as the man himself purrs in "Sugah Daddy," "Can't snatch the meat out of the lioness' mouth/Sometimes you gotta just ease it out." Black Messiah shows how deep easy can go. D'Angelo and his band have built an avant-soul dream palace to get lost in, for 56 minutes of heaven.

All over Black Messiah, D'Angelo is a trouble man exorcising his trouble. In "Back to the Future (Part I)," he even jokes about his long layoff: "If you're wondering about the shape I'm in/I hope it ain't my abdomen." There's a hint of political rage in "The Charade" ("All we wanted was a chance to talk/'Stead, we only got outlined in chalk") and "1000 Deaths," showing off the harsh side of D's ever-amazing guitar.

"Another Life" is an album-closing deep-soul epic in the spirit of Prince's "Adore" or Al Green's "Beware," building on Questlove's drums, some Thom Bell-style sitar from D'Angelo himself and the man's warmest falsetto, stretching out minute after minute – because who would want this groove to stop? It will take at least 14 years to absorb all the pleasures in Black Messiah.

.

Emerging Artist Telana Releases Second Impressive 3-Song EP

Telana New Age Soul

This past August, we were very impressed with a young talent out of Cali named Telana. She made her official introduction to the internets with her debut EP ‘Aether,’ which was a short 3-song project that showcased the 17-year-old’s raw soulfulness, which felt well beyond her years.

While that project boasted an overall chill, ethereal vibe to the production, the singer-songwriter has now shared 3 new songs via her Soundcloud under the simple title of “new age soul.” Surprisingly she is exactly on the money with that confident label as the 3 song collection can fall easy under that classification. Not futuristic but retro for sure, as the opening song “Me Time” bounces with ’80s synth percussion. The second joint “Lose My Cool” feels like much of the new age soul that has been coming out of the UK, with a horn filled, hip hop inspired drum loop.

“In awesome loving memory of uncle Kirv, the man who taught me to get groovy with it,” wrote Telana with the release.

The last song is titled “Everything” and features a Sly Stone style bridge, which makes us feel like if the youth are making records like this, ‘everything’ is all good!


Listen: https://soundcloud.com/telana/me-time-prod-cam?in=telana/sets/new-age-soul-1

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #38 posted 01/04/15 10:39am

JoeBala

Kelly Clarkson Drops More New Album Hints, Offers "Dr. Dre" as Clue

Jan 03, 2015 09:22 PM EST

Kelly Clarkson (Photo : Christopher Polk/Getty Images)

Ever since Kelly Clarkson hinted that her new album might have a little country flair to it, her fans have been worried about some sort of reverse Swift genre switch. But Clarkson took to Twitter on Saturday to calm down the supporters who had their pants in a bunch.

She also hinted at a duet… but with whom?

Clarkson could’ve been talking about a studio or live performance. But she partook in the short-lived TV show "Duets," during which she sang with relative unknowns such as Jordan Meredith and Jason Farol.

Besides that, she also alluded to a mysterious first single. Can you figure out her cryptic tweet, which pays homage to the hip-hop classic 2001?

Clarkson made waves earlier this week when she announced that her Na... influence.

"There's all different kinds of genres on there," Clarkson said. "I'm obviously affected by the community I live in. So there's a little bit of everything."

Clarkson has done recent live duets with Trisha Yearwood ("Silent Night," "Prizefighter"), Reba McEntire ("Silent Night," "Because of You") and Martina McBride ("In the Basement"), so perhaps one of Nashville’s female stars will make an appearance on the disc.

.

A Look Back on Latinos in Film in 2014

By Luis Reyes

Although the the Media, Diversity, and Social Change Initiative report, which was released on August 2014 showed that Latinos made up only 4.9% of movie characters across 100 of 2013’s top-grossing films, we question if there is any indication of an upswing in 2014?

OscarIsaccs.ViolentYear

Oscar Issacs as the lead character of Abe Morales in A Most Violet Year

In 2014 filmgoers were treated to the presence of Latinos in many theatrical feature film roles, a few in leading roles such as: Oscar Issacs who starred as Abe Morales, a New York businessman in A Most Violent Year (which has already received accolades and three National Board of Review selections, one for Issacs for Best Actor). Gael Garcia Bernal starred in Jon Stewart’s directorial debut Rosewater as an imprisoned Iranian-Canadian journalist.

Michael PenaOther starring roles went to Michael Pena who had a banner year first in the title role in Cesar Chavez. He then starred alongside Ed Harris and Eva Longoria in Frontera, a story about an undocumented worker and a rancher (Harris) who forged an unusual connection. In October her starred as a World War II soldier opposite Brad Pitt in Fury. Fast becoming one of the most sought after actors in Hollywood, in 2015 Pena has two high profile films releasing, The Vatican Tapes in May of 2015 and The Ant Man in July of next year in which he stars.

However, mostly is was in supporting roles that Latinos had the most impact in some of the most memorable and significant performances in 2014 in major motion pictures. Here is a sampling:

  • John Wick starring Keanu Reeves featured John Leguizamo as a character named Arellano.
  • Kill The Messenger featured Yul Vasquez, Paz Vega and Andy Garcia (who also co-starred in the hit comedy, Let’s Be Cops.)
  • Addicted co-starred Mexican heartthrob William Levy.
  • ChrisRock & Rosario DawsonRosario Dawson as the journalist who interviews Chris Rock’s character in the feature Top Five.
  • The Drop featured John Ortiz as a Puerto Rican NYPD detective and he is also featured in Michael Mann’s Blackhat which is set to release on January 16, 2015.
  • The horror hit Annabelle co-starred Tony Amendola as the priest.
  • The tremendous worldwide Box office hit, Guardians of the Galaxy starred Zoe Saldana and Benicio Del Toro.
  • Pepe Serna in the featured role in Cake which stars Jennifer Aniston and but also starred in the sleeper film festival award winner Man From Reno
  • Kate del Castillo was the other woman in the thriller No Good Deed.
  • Enrique Castillo as the cancer ridden patriarch in Fanny Veliz’s indie film Homebound about a young man forced to return to his home town in El Campo, TX to care for his ill father.
  • Jorge Gutierrez’s Book Of Life the animated film from Dreamworks had a dream cast of the voice talents of Diego Luna, Zoe Saldana, Kate del Castillo, Danny Trejo, Anna de la Reguera, Hector Elizondo and Placido Domingo among many others.

The final word on whether there were enough roles for Latinos in film in 2014 to raise the statistics is yet to be confirmed, but it’s always good to spotlight the talent that did worked this year.

.

D’Angelo & The Roots Deliver Deep Funk At Afropunk Festival [Full Live Audio]

https://soundcloud.com/af...-fest-2014

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #39 posted 01/04/15 11:28am

JoeBala

Dom La Nena

Originally published in 2013

Dom-La-Nena

“Ela“ marks the solo debut from Dom La Nena, a Brazilian born cellist who has worked with such artists as Jane Birkin, Jeanne Moreau, Camille and Etienne Daho. Finding that she wasn’t comfortable recording her music in a traditional studio, Dom was invited by Piers Faccini to try working in his home studio. It proved to be a better environment for Dom, and liking what he heard, Piers ended up working on the songs with her. The resulting album has an exquisite, somewhat dark sound that surrounds multilayered cello with minimalist arrangements of guitar, piano and other instruments. Singing in both Spanish and Portuguese, Dom proves to be as talented a vocalist as she is a cellist. The following is an email interview with her.

Having performed as a cellist with other artists, had you always wanted to also do your own music? What made you decide that this was the time?

I always wanted to compose my own music, but for a very long time I was too scared to go ahead…it was close to impossible.

I started to write these songs when I had finished touring with Jane Birkin a few years ago. At that moment I had some free time for a few months, and just for fun, I decided to work on it… but initially Ii had no intention of becoming a singer or to make an album with my music. that desire came when I finished a few songs that I really liked, and then I decided to share them with some people around me, and then to record it.

Do you feel that your work with others has influenced your solo music music at all?

Of course, it’s always rewarding to play with different people!

Did you write the album as a whole, or are there musical ideas that date back to before you started really focusing on your own music?

All the songs of Ela came at the same time, during a very short period (less than 1 month).

How would you say that the material evolved from when you started work on the album to what we hear on the final release?

When I was in the writing process, I needed to record the songs immediately with their arrangements, otherwise there was no fun, it wouldn’t have been exciting otherwise. This was the process that I prefered. Of course I was at home with a very basic material so I could not make it all like I imagined. I basically had my cello, a little keyboard and a little acoustic guitar, so I had fun making strings arrangements .

The first time I went to Piers Faccini’s home studio, I recorded it all like I had done for the demos. then I started to add a few other elements with the instruments that Piers had in the studio, and then I gave him all the songs and told him he could try anything he’d like!

In some songs he changed a lot, in others he did not add anything, but for me there was something really important and that I think we succeeded to keep: the innocence and the freshness of the demos.

I’m curious as to what factors went into deciding what language is used on a particular track? To what extent might it be dictated by lyrical content vs sound/atmosphere it evokes?

I did not choose the languages… the melodies came often with some words, so sometimes they came in portuguese, sometimes in spanish. some sounds, some notes resonate with a particular word.

I didn’t think “i will write a song in spanish”…otherwise it wouldn’t have worked!

But I have to admit that on the first songs I wrote I was very shy to show it to people who where close to me, so I was very happy to write them in portuguese – this way they could not understand the lyrics, as I live in France!

Working with Piers Faccini on this album, what was the creative/collaborative process like? From what I’ve read, it seems like after you did the initial recording it was a long-distance collaboration?

Initially we were not really supposed to work together on the album. He just invited me to use his home studio since I was looking for options to record my songs. When I went there I worked for a few days and he listened to a few songs and liked them a lot. Of course, I wanted to ask to him to play and sing on it, but as I had no label and no concrete project, I was too shy to ask him. Thankfully, he suggested it himself that he should put some guitars, some backing vocals…

I stayed there for a week or so, working alone. I then gave the songs to him on a hard drive and told him to feel free to do whatever he wanted.

After he worked on the first 3 songs I just loved what he was doing… so we decided to make all the album together.

So, we spent very little time together in the studio. But we used to talk a lot about it, and we did work a lot together on the mixes and mastering.

Your bio mentions that you’d made previous attempts at going into a studio to work on your songs – could you elaborate on what those experiences/results had been like?

Yes, I tried to record them in a studio but I did not feel comfortable with the vibes of a regular studio. Since I had no label, I was using a friend’s studio, so I wasn’t paying for it. But eventually there was so much pressure that I felt totally unproductive.

It’s funny because I really like to do studio sessions for other people, and I never thought that I would not feel good making an album in that environment, but I stopped the process after 1 week of work and decided to make it all by myself at home or wherever else…

Was it always clear to you what type of arrangements/instrumentation you wanted, and the role of cello, within your solo music?

I had composed the songs with the arrangements (mainly cello arrangements). Sometimes, in songs like Ela or Dessa Vez, I started to record a bass line that I liked, then I added another cello track, then other, etc, and finally I got the song !

Piers is also on the Six Degrees label – did he get you involved with the label, or vice versa?

Yes, Piers introduced me to Six Degrees as he was already working with them.

Have you been performing this material live? If so, do you perform with other musicians? What is the instrumentation like? Would you say there are any major differences in the way the music comes across compared to the recording?

Yes, i’ve been playing it on stage and for the moment i’m playing alone. I use a loop station on the cello, and have a little toy-keybord, some little percussions, a ukulele…

Of course the arrangements are not very close to the album, but I like to be alone on stage!

Do you see your solo career as the focus now, or do you plan on continuing on also touring as cellist for other artists?

My focus now is my solo career, but I like a lot to play with other artists, so I have some parallel projects…like my duo called “Birds on a Wire” with Rosemary Standley, the singer of the band Moriarty. We play cello-voice covers, and we will also be touring during 2013-2014.

I’ve been also playing my songs with Piers Faccini, and his songs too!

For more info on Dom La Nena, check out her official website.

Listen: http://domlanenamusic.ban.../album/ela


Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #40 posted 01/04/15 5:12pm

JoeBala

Tammy Wynette and George Jones - The Possum with Little Richard during the 1974 BMI Country Awards in Nashville.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #41 posted 01/04/15 8:42pm

MickyDolenz

Little Jimmy Dickens, beloved 'Opry' star, dies at 94

Peter Cooper For The Tennessean - January 3, 2015

The Grand Ole Opry member Little Jimmy Dickens, center,

The Grand Ole Opry member Little Jimmy Dickens, center, is showing touring Japanese journalists Arimoto, left, and Tsuchiya how he picks gold out of a guitar Nov. 24, 1951. The two journalists were members of a group that was checking out the Middle Tennessee scene for a week.

.

Country Music Hall of Famer Jimmy Dickens, the Grand Ole Opry's most beloved and diminutive ambassador, died Friday at a Nashville area hospital. He was 94.

.

Mr. Dickens starred for decades on the "Opry," where he was a vital part of the scene both onstage and backstage. His dressing room was an essential stop for performers on the show, and it was there that he held court for a variety of artists, some of whom came to the Opry more than a half century after Mr. Dickens' 1948 debut.

.

He remained a vital performer throughout his life, last playing the "Opry" on Dec. 20, a day after his 94th birthday and five days before he would be admitted to the hospital after suffering a stroke on Christmas Day. He died of cardiac arrest on Friday.

.

When the spotlight shone on him, Mr. Dickens would make fun of his size ("I'm Little Jimmy Dickens, or Willie Nelson after taxes"), his rhinestone-studded outfits ("There goes Mighty Mouse in his pajamas") and his old-timer status (He would often introduce his "latest hit," from 1965).

"The Grand Ole Opry did not have a better friend than Little Jimmy Dickens," Opry vice president and general manager Pete Fisher said in a statement Friday. "He loved the audience and his Opry family, and all of us loved him back. He was a one-of-kind entertainer and a great soul whose spirit will live on for years to come."

Little-Jimmy-Dickens-01 (2).jpg

In the final decades of his career, Mr. Dickens' kindness, affability and hospitality were his calling cards. Where others would say "goodnight," Mr. Dickens would shake hands and offer, "We appreciate you." But some of those who laughed with him and sang along to the songs he regularly performed on the "Opry" were unaware of what a potent, even groundbreaking performer he was in the 1950s.

.

While the newly popular genre called rock 'n' roll threatened country's viability, Mr. Dickens toured with a Country Boys band that featured two electric guitars, a steel guitar and more volume than Elvis Presley or Chuck Berry could muster. The classic Country Boys bands of the 1950s included spectacular players such as steel guitarists Walter Haynes and Buddy Emmons, guitarists Jabbo Arrington, Howard Rhoton and Spider Wilson and bass man Bob Moore.

.

"Their complex musical minds coupled with the fire of their teenaged youthful exuberance made for an instrumental combination which wouldn't be bettered," wrote Eddie Stubbs in the liner notes of Dickens' Bear Family boxed set. Rhoton and Wilson often engaged in twin leads that were precursors to the sounds used by The Allman Brothers Band in the 1970s. And though Mr. Dickens often downplayed his own rock 'n' roll efforts, records such as "(I Got) a Hole in My Pocket" and "Hey Ma! (Hide the Daughter)" were visceral and invigorating.


You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
Reply #42 posted 01/04/15 8:49pm

MickyDolenz

David J. Haskins on Bauhaus, His New Autobiography, and Sasha Grey

Eric Alper - Jan 4, 2015

Beginning with the creation of Bauhaus’s seminal debut hit ‘Bela Lugosi’s Dead’, David J. Haskins, when talking, offers a no-holds-barred account of his band’s rapid rise to fame and glory in the late 70s, their sudden dissolution in the 80s, and their subsequent (and often strained) reunions.

In his new autobiography, Who Killed Mister Moonlight, he explores his work as a solo performer, and with acclaimed trio Love And Rockets—culminating in the devastating fire that ripped through the sessions for their 1996 album Sweet F.A. He also delves deep into his exploration of the occult, drawing together a diverse cast of supporting characters, including William S. Burroughs, Alan Moore, Genesis P. Orridge, and Rick Rubin.

.

J was a founding member of the highly influential English post-punk band Bauhaus in 1978, playing bass. David J wrote the lyrics of several Bauhaus songs (including their first single, “Bela Lugosi’s Dead”). He sang backing vocals on many songs, and sang lead on “Who Killed Mr. Moonlight?” Bauhaus first broke up in 1983, reforming periodically at later times.

.

His first venture outside of Bauhaus was a collaborative single, “Armour” / “Nothing”, with artist and poet René Halkett, of the original Weimar Bauhaus school of art and design.

.

He began writing music for a solo career while still in the band, and continued after the band’s break-up, releasing the dark Etiquette of Violence and Crocodile Tears and the Velvet Cosh, and played bass on two Jazz Butcher albums (A Scandal in Bohemia and Sex and Travel), both of which he also produced. J was also a part of the very short-lived band The Sinister Ducks, which included saxophonist Alex Green and comics writer Alan Moore. J also released an EP that was intended as a soundtrack to Moore’s graphic novel V for Vendetta. In 1996 he once again collaborated with Moore alongside musician Tim Perkins when the trio recorded two spoken word with music CD’s, The Grand Egyptian Theatre of Marvels and The Birth Caul.

.

In 1985, J, his brother Kevin Haskins, and Daniel Ash, all former members of Bauhaus, formed Love and Rockets; J once again played bass guitar and also shared songwriting and vocal duties with guitarist Daniel Ash. His most notable lead vocal from this period was the minor hit “No New Tale to Tell”. J maintained his solo career during breaks from Love and Rockets, releasing Songs from Another Season and Urban Urbane after his band’s success with the single “So Alive”. He also released one of the first No. 1 hits from the newly created Modern Rock Tracks charts, with “I’ll Be Your Chauffeur.” J participated in a Bauhaus reunion in 1998. Love and Rockets broke up in 1999, after seven albums. Following what was billed as a one-off performance of Bauhaus at the 2005 Coachella concert festival, Bauhaus reformed for a successful tour of the Americas in late 2005 and Europe in early 2006 as well as a final album, Go Away White.

.

J has a brand new album, An Eclipse of Ships, which brought him to Toronto, and the SiriusXM studios.

download (3)

Read rest of interview here

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
Reply #43 posted 01/06/15 5:16pm

JoeBala

Jazmine Sullivan Covers Whitney Houston’s “I Have Nothing”

Jazmine Sullivan Delivers A Stunning Cover Of Whitney Houston's "I Have Nothing" For VIBE's 'V Sessions' Series.

Jazmine Sullivan puts her own touch on an iconic r&b track with a stunning cover of Whitney Houston‘s “I Have Nothing” for VIBE‘s V-Sessions series. The set comes ahead of the release of her forthcoming Reality Show LP – the long-awaited project which is slated to drop on January 13th via RCA Records. Providing yet another clinic in staggering vocal technique – this one picking up where her performance for NPR Music left off – Jazmine Sullivan absolutely nails this cover of the song. Check the footage below to watch the full performance. Pre-order the Reality Show LP via iTunes. Stay tuned for more from Jazmine Sullivan.

.

Sony Unveils $1,100 Digital Walkman

New device promises high-quality audio playback "just as the artists originally intended"

Sony, Walkman

By Jon Blistein | January 6, 2015

Sony reintroduced their classic Walkman as a high-resolution audio device, the NW-ZX2 Walkman, at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week, Wondering Sound reports. The new device is slated to hit shelves in the spring and will retail for a whopping $1,119.99.

Arriving over 35 years after the initial Walkman — which brought listeners the finest in portable casset...technologySony says their new device "can reproduce master quality recordings just as the artists originally intended." The NW-ZX2 reportedly utilizes a special digital amplifier, which can cut down distortion and noise for a cleaner sound; while it also boasts so-called DSEE HX technology, which bumps up the sound quality of streaming sources that are not high-res.

The NW-ZX2 features 128GB of memory — and can be expanded to 256GB — and a battery that's expected to last up to 60 hours. It's also Bluetooth and Wi-Fi compatible, so it can wirelessly broadcast to various devices, plus a number of new Sony speakers and headphones that also promise high audio quality (Sony also plans to release "the first car audio head unit that is compatible with high-resolution audio formats" this summer). As Gizmodo points out, however, the NW-ZX2 touch screen runs on a version of the Android operating system that's already two years old.

Sony enters an increasingly crowded market for high-end listening devices, as those craving high-res audio can pre-order Neil Young's PonoPlayer for $399 (the device is expected to ship in February). Young officially introduced Pono last year after spending several years developing and trademarking his high-definition alternative to MP3's. The rocker even launched a successful, star-studded Kickstarter campaign that raised over $6 million for the project.

During a chat with Rolling Stone, Young said his primary hope for Pono wasn't that it would sell the most units, but that it would help reintroduce listeners to high-quality audio. "Success is more people finding out about good-sounding music and music choice," Young said. "Whether it's Pono or some other company that decides to do the same thing and beats us because they've got millions and millions of dollars to work with — but we're first."

.

Stone Temple Pilots Singer Scott Weiland Announces Album Release Date, Solo Tour [FULL SCHEDULE]

Jan 06, 2015 11:20 AM EST

Scott Weiland (Photo : Getty/Mike Lawrie)

Former Stone Temple Pilots frontman Scott Weiland has announced the release date of his upcoming album Blaster as well as a string of tour dates in support of the album beginning in late February. According to an interview with Rolling Stone, Blaster is set for release March 31 through Softdrive Records and will be Weiland's first album with his new backing band The Wildabouts. The tour in support of Blaster kicks off Feb. 22 in Scottsdale, Arizona, and finishes March 14 in Boston, though Weiland will be appearing at several festivals between March and May as well.

Blaster will be Weiland's third solo album overall, his first since 2008's "Happy" in Galoshes, as well as his first since being fired from the Stone Temple Pilots in 2013 — he was ultimately replaced by Linkin Park vocalist Chester Bennington.

"'Happy' in Galoshes was an experimental art record, for the most part," Weiland tells Rolling Stone. "Blaster is definitely a band sound: a stripped down, furry sound with a lot of space between the notes. But it's tight and to-the-point while keeping that garage rock vibe to it."

You can check out Scott Weiland's upcoming tour dates with The Wildabouts here, including their scheduled festival appearances for the spring:

02/22: Scottsdale, AZ @ Pub Rock
02/24: Denver, CO @ Cervantes Masterpiece Ballroom
02/26: Omaha, NE @ The Waiting Room
02/27: Chicago, IL @ Double Door
02/28: Flint, MI @ The Machine Shop
03/02: Nashville, TN @ Mercy Lounge
03/03: Atlanta, GA @ The Masquerade
03/06: Orlando, FL @ The Social
03/07: Destin, FL @ Club LA
03/10: New York, NY @ Gramercy Theatre
03/12: Philadelphia, PA @ World Café Live
03/13: Baltimore, MD @ Ottobar
03/14: Boston, MA @ Brighton Music Hall
03/17-22: Austin, TX @ SXSW
04/25: Jacksonville, FL @ Welcome to Rockville
05/16: Columbus, OH @ Rock on the Range
05/30: Napa Valley, CA @ BottleRock Music Festival

You can check out Scott Weiland's music video for his "Happy" in Galoshes single "Missing Cleveland" here:

High-Quality Audio Service Tidal Enters the U.S. Market

Will audiophiles pay $20 a month for better-sounding songs?

Tidal

Steve Knopper | November 5, 2014

Trying to draw in audiophiles with money to spend on costly sound systems, Tidal launched last week as the first U.S. streaming service to offer CD-quality music — other than month-old Deezer Elite, which requires a Sonos hookup to get the high-quality songs. Tidal's hi-fi files are "lossless," which means they aren't as compressed as those offered by rivals Spotify, Beats Music or YouTube.

Rel ated

"With MP3, which is the dominant format for streaming, somehow people have accepted that as OK," says Andy Chen, the Norwegian company's chief executive. "We're saying, 'Maybe that's not OK.' Shouldn't it be the same level it used to be? Why should we accept less?"

The catch is Tidal costs $20 a month, twice as much as most premium streaming services, and its desktop hi-fi function is available, at the moment, only via Google Chrome. Also, because Tidal's FLAC files stream at 1,411 kbps, as opposed to Spotify Premium's 320 kbps, they can slow down an Internet connection and make for a more difficult user experience.

It's unclear whether Tidal, Deezer Elite and others will generate enough customers to make for a cost-effective business model. "A few guys doing it can support it," says David Chesky, co-founder of HDtracks, a long-running download service that specializes in high-end audio. "But if you're giant companies, I don't think so." Tidal's 25 million-song catalog is comparable to Spotify or Beats and contains a few exclusive tracks, such as Bruce Springsteen's "We Take Care of Our Own," that are unavailable via Spotify.

Given Tidal, Deezer Elite and download services such as HDtracks and Neil Young's yet-to-launch PonoMusic store, audiophiles are pleased the pendulum is shifting back to sound quality after years of MP3s and earbuds. "I'm cautiously optimistic that what they're doing is going to be an improvement," says Andy Mendelson, owner of Georgetown Masters, a Nashville studio that has worked on recordings by the Rolling Stones, the White Stripes and others. "It couldn't be a 'de-provement' over what exists in sound quality right now."

.

Gugu Mbatha-Raw to Play Matthew McConaughey’s Wife in Gary Ross’ ‘Free State of Jones’ (Exclusive)

gugu-matthew

Scott Stuber and Jon Kilik ae producing the Civil War tale for Robert Simonds’ STX Entertainment

Hot off a pair of acclaimed performances in “Beyond the Lights” and “Belle,” Gugu Mbatha-Raw will star opposite Matthew McConaughey in Gary Ross’ Civil War movie “Free State of Jones,” TheWrap has learned.

Robert Simonds’ STX Entertainment is producing the $65 million movie and co-financing with foreign sales company IM Global. STX will handle domestic distribution, while IM Global will handle foreign rights. CAA brokered the domestic deal.

Scott Stuber and Jon Kilik are producing with Ross, for whom the project has been a longtime passion project.

Based on a true story, “Free State of Jones” will star McConaughey as Newton Knight and Mbatha-Raw as Rachel, a slave whose relationship with Knight played a central part in his life and in his armed rebellion against the Confederacy during the Civil War. The two enjoyed a common-law marriage after the war.

Mbatha-Raw is poised for stardom on the heels of back-to-back critical hits “Belle” and “Beyond the Lights,” both of which were directed by women. The British actress will soon be seen in the Wachowski’s sci-fi movie “Jupiter Ascending” and the Keanu Reeves courtroom drama “The Whole Truth,” and she’s currently filming Sony’s Untitled NFL Concussion Drama with Will Smith.

Mbatha-Raw is represented by CAA, Curtis Brown Group and Authentic Talent and Literary Management.

.

Australian Model Ruby Rose to Join ‘Orange Is the New Black’

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - APRIL 09: Ruby Rose arrives for the Suboo show at Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Australia 2014 at Carriageworks on April 9, 2014 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Caroline McCredie/Getty Images)

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - APRIL 09: Ruby Rose arrives for the Suboo show at Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Australia 2014 at Carriageworks on April 9, 2014 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Caroline McCredie/Getty Images)

The DJ and LGBT activist will join the ladies of Litchfield Penitentiary on Season 3 of the Netflix series

“Orange Is the New Black” characters Piper Chapman and Alex Vause may fight over something new on Season 3.

Australian DJ and model Ruby Rose broke the news on her off...ebook page that she’ll be joining the cast of the hit Netflix series slated to air this summer.

“Grab yourself a copy of U.S. ELLE MAGAZINE and read about my new role on a small unheard of series called Orange Is The New Black.. ( insert sarcasm ) Haha, I am very excited and honored to be named one of the Magazines fresh faces on TV to watch in 2015,” she wrote.

Netflix also told TheWrap that Rose will portray Stella Carlin, a sarcastic inmate at Litchfield Federal Correctional Institution. Her looks catch the attention of inmates, including bickering lovers Piper (Tayler Schilling) and Alex (Laura Prepon).

Outside of her future role, Rose is a recording artist and appeared in Christina Ricci‘s 2013 film “Around the Block” about an Aboriginal boy torn between love and his family.

Last year, Fox’s “Fringe” actress Blair Brown and Mary Steenburgen, signed on for Season 3. Pablo Schreiber, who played corrections officer George Mendez aka “Pornstache,” won’t be returning. He’s signed on for HBO’s new comedy “The Brink,” TheWrap previously reported.

Radius Entertainment represents Rose.

.

Gladys Knight to Play Psychic on ‘Hot in Cleveland’ (Exclusive)

hot in cleveland tv land GLADYS KNIGHT - photo 1DEREK BLANKS

Derek Blanks

The legendary soul singer will guest star on an upcoming episode of the TV Land comedy

Gladys Knight will be talking to dead people on TV Land’s “Hot in Cleveland.”

The Grammy-winning soul legend will play a psychic named Miss Shonda on an episode titled “Scandalous,” TheWrap has learned.

Miss Shonda is an astrologer who, along with Elka (Betty White), is in a love triangle with the Mayor of Cleveland. When the mayor dies, Elka discovers their relationship and interrogates Miss Shonda on her whereabouts.

Knight is best known for her singing career as the front woman for Gladys Knight & The Pips in the 1960s and 1970s. But, she also has quite the acting resume.

She starred on the upcoming Lifetime movie “Seasons of Love” with Taraji P. Henson. They reunite for an upcoming episode of Fox’s “Empire,” as well. She has also played recurring roles on syndicated White House drama “The First Family,” The WB’s “Jamie Foxx Show” and Fox’s “Living Single.”

She is set to do a live streaming show with country music star Martina McBride in Nashville on Wednesday, Jan. 14 on Skyville.

“Hot in Cleveland,” which celebrated its 100th episode in August, will come to a close after the currently-airing sixth season.

CAA represents Knight.

.

Bess Myerson, First Jewish Miss America, Dead at 90

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d6/Bess_Myerson_1957.jpg

Pioneering beauty queen later found herself mired in scandal

Bess Myerson, who became the first and, to date, only Jewish Miss America in 1945 before becoming a television personality and entering politics, died Dec. 14 in Santa Monica, the New York Times reported Monday. Myerson was 90.

http://s.fixquotes.com/files/author/bess-myerson_SqHvE.jpg

Born in 1924 in The Bronx, Myerson was crowned Miss America in 1945, the same year she graduated from Hunter College with a degree in music. Myerson used the scholarship money from her Miss America win to finance graduate studies at the Juilliard School and Columbia University.

After her tenure as Miss America, Myerson embarked on a career in television, serving as a panelist on the game show “The Name’s the Same” and enjoying a nine-year run as a panelist on “I’ve Got a Secret,” as well as serving as a pitchwoman for various products.

Myerson later entered public service and politics, serving as a consumer affairs commissioner in New York. She also chaired Ed Koch’s mayoral campaign in New York. Myerson herself ran for the Democratic nomination for U.S. senate in 1980, losing out to congresswoman Elizabeth Holtzman.

http://www.peoplequiz.com/images/bios/bess-myerson.jpg-6187.jpg

The former beauty queen became mired in scandal while serving as Koch’s Department of Cultural Affairs in 1983. Myerson had become romantically linked to married sewer contractor Carl Andrew Capasso, and it was shortly discovered that Myerson had been socializing with the judge hearing Capasso’s divorce and had hired the judge’s daughter. Myerson was compelled to resign by the scandal, which came to be referred to as the “Bess Mess.”

Myerson was married twice. She wed first husband, U.S. Navy captain Allan Wayne — with whom she had a daughter Barbara — in 1946. The couple divorced in 1958, and she married Arnold Grant in 1962.

http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopoly_fs/1.1253745!/img/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/article_970/bess2n-1.jpg

.

Francesca Hilton, Zsa Zsa Gabor’s Daughter, Dead at 67

Francesca Gabor Hilton

Getty Images

The only child of actress Zsa Zsa and Hilton hotelier Conrad Hilton suffered an apparent stroke on Monday

Constance Francesca Gabor Hilton, only daughter of Zsa Zsa Gabor and Hilton Hotel founder Conrad Hilton, died Monday in Los Angeles. She was 67.

Hilton suffered an apparent stroke and heart attack on Monday evening while she was with her fiance Michael Natsis, according to a statement obtained by TheWrap. Natsis and arriving paramedics performed CPR on her, but she was pronounced dead after being rushed to Cedars-Sinai hospital.

“As Francesca’s publicist and one of her best friends I am shocked. We were on the phone minutes before she died. We were discussing her book she was writing and a possible deal. She had to go to the restroom. She never made it out. I am so sad about my friend for 35 years who procured Zsa Zsa Gabor her mother as my client during the Beverly Hills cop slapping incident that infamously jailed Zsa Zsa for three days,” said spokesperson Edward Lozzi.

Hilton is survived by her 97-year-old mother, Zsa Zsa, a Hungarian-born actress who starred on various different TV shows and in popular films including “Moulin Rouge” in 1952.

Her father died in 1979, leaving her just a small percentage of his hotel fortune.

During the 1980s, Hilton worked as both a model and an actress, and notably dated actor Peter Sellers. She had a small part in the 1971 film “A Safe Place” with Jack Nicholson, and later regularly performed at the Comedy Store on Sunset Boulevard, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #44 posted 01/06/15 5:55pm

JoeBala

Review: Marvel’s Agent Carter is snazzy, retro, and super-cool

Hayley Atwell shines as one of the Marvel universe’s unsung heroes.

Jan 6, 2015 12:00 AM

Anyone who questions the necessity of Agent Carter should know that in the show’s first episode, there’s a scene where Hayley Atwell—playing Strategic Scientific Reserve agent Peggy Carter—dons a blond wig and a glamorous gown, struts through a club playing hot jazz, plants a knockout kiss on a sharp-dressed gangster named Spider Raymond (played by The Wire’s Andre Royo), then uses a special tricked-out wristwatch to crack Spider’s safe and retrieve a secret formula. Judging by its first two episodes, this is what Agent Carter is going to be: retro-cool pulp thrills in fabulous outfits. Think The Rocketeer or Raiders Of The Lost Ark, but with a dame instead of a dude.

It’s easy to be skeptical about the trends in movies and television toward superheroes and “universes,” where everything is ultimately a commercial for something else—something sold separately. But thus far, Marvel Studios has effectively counterbalanced its mercenary side with genuine creative enthusiasm. There’s only so much that even the likes of Joss Whedon, Shane Black, and James Gunn can do with the blockbuster form, which tends naturally toward the bloated and lumbering. Yet there’s been a real spark of personality and purpose to a lot of the Marvel movies, and even to the uneven-but-energetic spin-off TV series Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. And now there’s Agent Carter, which could be The Flash to S.H.I.E.L.D.’s Arrow: the brighter, snappier sister-show that finds its footing much more quickly than its sibling.

Agent Carter opens with the hero mired in melancholy, still reeling from what happened in the 2011 Marvel movie Captain America: The First Avenger. It’s 1946 now, Captain America is presumed dead, and Peggy’s S.S.R. peers and superiors don’t take her seriously, because they have no firsthand experience of what she did to help the U.S. win World War II. Treated as a glorified secretary by her boss Roger Dooley (Shea Whigham), and openly mocked by her cocky fellow agents Ray Krzeminski (Kyle Bornheimer) and Jack Thompson (Chad Michael Murray)—who are certain she slept her way into her job—Peggy only has one real ally at the S.S.R., agent Daniel Sousa (Enver Gjokaj). But even Sousa’s defenses of Peggy at staff meetings come off as vaguely condescending, and the S.S.R.’s ongoing investigation of Peggy’s old friend and colleague Howard Stark (Dominic Cooper) threatens to make a mockery of everything that Peggy, Stark, and Captain America stood for.

Then Stark approaches Peggy in secret and asks for her help in clearing his name. The government thinks Stark is engaged in treasonous profiteering, selling some of his more dangerous inventions—what he calls his “bad babies”—to foreigners and criminals. In actuality, the tech has been stolen, and Stark wants Peggy to work with his resourceful butler Edwin Jarvis (James D’Arcy) to get these bad babies back, and to find out who took them in the first place. The first two episodes of Agent Carter—“Now Is Not The End” and “Bridge And Tunnel,” which ABC is airing back-to-back—send Peggy out on missions that involve her wearing disguises and trying to find Stark’s troublemakers before her S.S.R. cohorts do.

This is a classic Marvel comics premise: the hassled hero, who has to hide her derring-do. More importantly, it’s a great television premise. Agent Carter’s creators Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely give the show a shot of 1940s pizazz, with propulsive big-band music on the soundtrack and characters who pepper old-timey slang at each other. But really, Agent Carter feels most like a throwback to the 1980s. It’s in the spirit of The A-Team, Moonlighting, Magnum P.I., Hart To Hart, Scarecrow And Mrs. King, and Remington Steele. Peggy and Jarvis in particular have a classic TV relationship: one headstrong, one persnickety, and both extraordinarily handy in their own way.

Agent Carter isn’t always sure how best to handle its hero’s gender. To a large extent, the show is about what it was like to be a woman in America in the mid-to-late-1940s, when the men came home from war and a generation of women who’d enjoyed a lot more independence earlier in the decade had to fall back into their former place. So the show has to walk multiple fine lines with Peggy, making her a feminist hero who’s not too vulnerable, not too cocky, and not too sexy (while still keeping just enough of those traits in play so that viewers will want to spend time with her for an hour a week).

It helps that Marvel has Atwell, who bulls through Agent Carter’s more contrived “sticking it to the male chauvinists” scenes through the sheer force of her charisma. It helps too that Whigham, Bornheimer, and Murray are so good at playing sexist jerks, and that D’Arcy’s Jarvis is such a charming and witty partner to Peggy. (And Cooper’s so great as Stark that even though he’s only in about five minutes of the first episode, his personality lingers long after he’s gone.) Unlike too many foreign-born TV stars these days, Atwell and D’Arcy get to use their native accents, which goes a long way toward them being able to bring a lot of their own personal flavor to their roles. And unlike too many action-adventure heroes, Atwell’s Peggy Carter has a lot of layers: at once flippant (brushing off a request that she do the filing because she’s so good at it by quipping, “Better at what? The alphabet?”), strong-willed (telling Jarvis that one of Stark’s theories has manifested as a miniature bomb, “so your soufflé will have to wait”), and sensitive (showing some real emotion after the unexpected death of a good friend).

A lot of Agent Carter’s kick come from its setting, with its automats and Captain America Adventure Program radio shows. The series takes advantage of the period on the technical side, going all in with the shadowy lighting and softened color-tones. But its greatest asset is Atwell, who takes a character that Marvel Comics has never really done much with before and makes it her own. It’s a feat that matches the story of Peggy Carter herself: Here all along was this Marvel hero with so much potential, now finally getting to show what she can do.


Created by: Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely
Starring: Hayley Atwell, James D’Arcy, Enver Gjokaj, Shea Whigham
Debuts: Tuesday, January 6th at 8 p.m. Eastern on ABC
Format: Hour-long action-adventure drama
Two episodes watched for review
Reviews by Oliver Sava will appear weekly.

.

Ella Henderson’s ‘Chapter One’: Listen To The Full Album Ahead Of Its US Release

Ella Henderson didn’t win The X Factor UK during her stint on the show in 2012 — heck, she only came in 6th place — but as we know, sometimes reality TV singing competitions don’t always get it right. The 18-year-old British singer was one of our picks for Pop’s Class Of 2014, and that’s because she broke out huge with her smash hit “Ghost” last year. The song, co-written and co-produced by Ryan Tedder, topped the chart in her home country for several weeks, and is now soaring here in the States. (“Ghost” is currently hovering just outside of the Top 40 on the Billboard Hot 100, at #43.)

Ella’s debut LP Chapter One finally gets a US release next week (on January 13), and as of today, you can stream the LP in full on iTunes. Don’t miss future hits like “Glow” and “Yours,” both of which have already been serviced as singles overseas, or the gorgeous gem of a track “Empire.” Give Chapter One a listen here and see the tracklist below.

Chapter One tracklist

1. Ghost
2. Empire
3. Glow
4. Yours
5. Mirror Man
6. Hard Work
7. Pieces
8. All Again
9. Give Your Heart Away
10. Rockets
11. Missed

.

David Cassidy Wins Sony Lawsuit

David Cassidy has had a $150,964.84 windfall from a court case.

TMZ is reporting that Cassidy won the lawsuit against Sony over the use of his image on Partridge Family merchandise.

Cassidy filed the lawsuit in October 2011 saying that he hadn’t been paid for all the merchandise marketed by Sony for the TV show. According to the suit ‘For nearly 40 years, defendants have swindled Mr. Cassidy out of his rightful share of the profits from The Partridge Family, and when Mr. Cassidy has inquired as to the matter, have lied to him so as to continue to conceal their deception.

‘Mr. Cassidy has reason to believe, and does reasonably believe, that defendants have been perpetrating a scam’ and ‘will continue to go to any and all lengths necessary, no matter how despicable, to avoid upholding.’

Cassidy was looking for over one million dollars.

In July 2012, Cassidy was denied a jury trial in the case with a judge citing an arbitration clause in the actor’s original 1971 contract. That arbitrator finally ruled on the case, awarding Cassidy $157,964.84.

According to TMZ, Cassidy has asked the court to confirm the amount and requested that $57,943.06 be added in arbitration fees and $35,824.82 in interest.

.

Review: 'Empire' is dirty, soapy hip-hop fun for Terence Howard

Howard and Taraji P. Henson liven up some familiar melodrama

FOX's new "Empire" is the kind of unapologetic melodrama that can go to commercial with Taraji P. Henson pronouncing, "I'm here to get what's mine!," followed by a melodramatic musical sting. It's from Lee Daniels, who co-created it with Emmy-winning writer (and sometime-actor) Danny Strong, so it ain't subtle. And yet... the scene I found myself enjoying the most in the pilot episode (it airs tomorrow night at 9) is a relatively quiet one, where Henson's Cookie and Terrence Howard's Lucious are swapping stories from their time as a couple. He's now a Jay-Z-esque hip-hop mogul, and she's just out of prison and, again, here to get what's hers, and both would like nothing more than to absolutely destroy the other — but even as they're swapping barbs and holding metaphorical knives behind their backs, it's clear that they still enjoy each other's company on some level, and that the attraction they had decades earlier hasn't completely been extinguished.

It's a nice moment, helped enormously by the chemistry between the show's two Oscar-nominated stars, and a smart wrinkle on an old soap cliche. Though I suspect the fact that it stood out as my favorite says more about me, and my usual disinterest in the kind of show "Empire" is trying to be — and, I think, doing a pretty good job of in the one episode FOX made available for review — than about "Empire" itself.

Lucious is a Philly-born rapper who has become a mogul on a first-name basis with President Obama, but in the pilot's opening minutes he gets some news that convinces him it's time to pass the reins of his corporation over to one of his three sons, each of whom is in some way unsuitable to take over: Andre (Trai Byers) has all the business training but isn't a performer (and therefore not right for a star-driven company), Jamal (Jussie Smollett) is a talented R&B singer-songwriter, but Lucious doesn't approve of him being gay (and assumes his audience agrees with him), while rapper Hakeem (Bryshere Gray) is good with a rhyme but completely lacks discipline.

It's a solid enough foundation, very loosely based on "King Lear," but then shaken up with the return of Cookie, who helped found the company with the money she just spent 17 years in prison over, and though both parents profess to be protecting the kids from each other, they really only seem to be interested in the empire itself, rather than its would-be heirs. And with Timbaland attached to help produce the songs performed by Jamal, Hakeem and others, the musical setting feels absolutely credible.

Howard does his soft-spoken devil thing as well as always, but Henson's the main attraction, diving into the soap diva role with such passion and fury that I can picture Madeleine Stowe's "Revenge" character cowering in her safe room until Cookie left her home.

It's been a while since "American Idol" was a useful lead-in for any scripted show, and at first glance the record label setting might make "Empire" the most compatible show to air after it since "Glee." But as Fienberg noted on yesterday's podcast, the "Idol" audience has trended heavily towards country over the years. Will the remaining "Idol" fans stick around to watch this? Are there enough remaining "Idol" fans for it to matter? I don't know, but with the former "Hustle & Flow" co-stars as the leads, whoever tunes in will get something interesting.

Alan Sepinwall may be reached at sepinwall@hitfix.com


.

Ninón Sevilla Dies: Cuban 'Aventurera' Rumbera Actress Dead At 93 Following Cardiac Arrest

Ninón Sevilla Dies At 93
The legendary Cuban actress that gained famed during the Mexican film Golden Age, has died at the age of 93. YouTube

Ninón Sevilla has died at the age of 93 at a hospital in México City. The Cuban actress had been admitted to a hospital since last Friday following problems with her pancreas and liver. Her state was very delicate and it had been rumored she was fighting cancer. It was today, January 1 that the actress went into cardiac arrest and lost her life. Her son Genaro Lozano confirmed the news of her passing saying, "I was arriving at the hospital, I was happy and they gave us that news, she had passed away, it was cardiac arrest." The Cuban producer Federico Wilkins also confirmed the news on his Twitter account. "At 3:45pm Ninón Sevilla died with a Cuban passport," he wrote. "Goodbye Elena Tejero."

Emilia Pérez Castellanos, Ninón's birth name, rose to fame during the Golden Age of Cinema in México with the so-called rumberas-films. Wilkins was referring to the lead character of "Aventurera," which in recent years was taken to stage with actresses like Edith Gonzalez, Itatí Cantoral, Niurka Marcos and Ninel Conde.

http://ilarge.listal.com/image/4325189/968full-nin%C3%B3n-sevilla.jpg

Wilkins followed later confirming that the wake for Sevilla would be held at the Gallosa De Félix Cuevas Funeral. He also wrote, "With the death of Ninón Sevilla we only have two rumberas left, Rosa Carmina and Amalia Aguilar. Tongolele danced Tahitian." Other movies that she participated in included "Revancha," "Sensualidad," "Aventura En Rió" and "Yambao."

Sevilla was also known as a telenovela actress and made her debut in 1964 with "Juicio De Almas" that starred Ofelia Guilmaín and Miguel Manzano. It wasn't until 1984 that saw her return to the genre with "Tú Eres Mi Destino," "Rosa Salvaje" (1987), "Cuando Llega El Amor" (1989) and "Yo No Creo En Los Hombres" (1991). Other telenovelas included "María La Del Barrio" (1995), "La Usurpadora" (1997), "Rosalinda" (1999) and "Tres Mujeres" (1999). Later appearances included guest starring roles in "Central De Abasto" and "Como Dice El Dicho," with her last telenovela role in "Que Bonito Amor" in 2012.

.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #45 posted 01/07/15 12:32pm

Identity



The Guardian Interviews St Vincent
January 2015
Link

Reply #46 posted 01/08/15 4:27pm

JoeBala

Elvis at 80: The King still rules

Updated 9:36 AM ET, Thu January 8, 2015

(CNN)In 1992, the U.S. Postal Service had a vote to determine which image of Elvis Pres...on a stamp: a rendering of the youthful, late '50s King or the beefier, early-'70s version.

http://www.elvispresleymusic.com.au/pictures/img/elvis/60s/61/1961_january_6_elvis_26th_birthday_party_on_set.jpg

The runaway victor was Young Elvis. It remains one of the most popular stamps of all time.

But these days, it seems like '70s Elvis -- also known as "Fat Elvis" -- was the ultimate winner, with common perceptions of the singer focused on the glittery, jumpsuited performer who became the template for a thousand Vegas impersonators: a self-parody.

That's a shame, because the music of Elvis Aron Presley -- who would have turned 80 on Thursday -- remains as raw, direct and immediate as ever.

iReport: Happy 80th, Elvis

"What's there is the warmth, the particularity of communication," says Peter Guralnick, whose two-volume Elvis biography -- "Last Train to Memphis" and "Careless Love" -- remains the definitive chronicle of the singer. "It has to do with that unique talent for communication Elvis had from the very beginning, and that people recognized long before they ever saw him or had an image of him. It was something in his voice that proclaimed it's different."

There's no question that early Elvis -- the pre-Army idol -- retains a primal, unclassifiable force. Songs such as "That's All Right, Mama," "Hound Dog" and "All Shook Up" don't fit into any formula; they still seem as fresh and electric as the day they were released.

But even the later, more overly produced material -- "Suspicious Minds," "Kentucky Rain," "Way Down" -- demonstrate an artist who, simply, connected. (And it wasn't like the early Elvis wasn't equally polished. "Hound Dog," that minute-fifty of headlong fury, took 31 takes -- 31 takes! -- before Elvis was satisfied.)

"I don't sound like nobody," he famously said, and it was true.

Part of the tragedy of Elvis is that he never got a chance to recover from his 1970s decline, in which he was hobbled by drug use and weight problems. It's easy to forget that he was just 42 when he died in 1977. He seemed a generation older.

http://www.elvis-tkc.com/forums/uploads/1277815120/gallery_22367_85_121138.jpg

Elvis' 80th isn't going unremarked, of course, and is being celebrated in 21st-century style. There's a new website, www.elvisthemusic.com, and Spotify has called on fans to nominate their favorite Elvis songs to create an "#Elvis80" playlist. Guralnick's books were recently released in an enhanced e-book format with multimedia additions.

There's no reason an 80-year-old Elvis couldn't have stayed sharp, ready to be produced by a T-Bone Burnett or Rick Rubin. Willie Nelson turned 80 last year and released two albums; Tony Bennett, who's 88, collaborated with Lady Gaga and is up for a Grammy.

http://photos.elvispresleymusic.com.au/images/movies/change_of_habit/mahalia_jackson_meets_elvis_and_barbara_mc_nair.jpg

Guralnick believes that, had Elvis lived, he would have returned to his first love: gospel.

"He was so passionate about gospel music," he says. "I think he would have found enormous satisfaction in exploring gospel music, both traditional and progressive."

http://www.elvispresleymusic.com.au/pictures/img/elvis/60s/62/1962_january_8a.jpg

We'll just have to make do with what we have: a rich body of work from a brilliant artist.

"What you want to be open to is art. The immediacy of art. And I think that's what remains in Elvis' music," says Guralnick.

That's one hell of a stamp.

http://www.brunomars.com/sites/g/files/g2000001576/f/styles/visual_image_detail_large/public/634c521713254f5276b2c9615d2e2a80.jpg?itok=JqX3lRZ7

.

How Elvis Presley's 80th Birthday Is Being Celebrated at Graceland

PHOTO: Elvis Presley is pictured circa 1970.
Auto Start: On | Off

Today marks what would have been Elvis Presley's 80th birthday, and thousands of fans from around the world are gathering in Memphis, Tennessee, to attend special events that have been scheduled to commemorate the milestone at the Graceland estate and around the city.

One of the main highlights of the celebration took place this morning on the Graceland lawn, where a ceremony was held, declaring Thursday to be Elvis Presley Day in Memphis. With Priscilla Presley on hand for the celebration, a specially designed birthday cake was also cut.

Elvis Presley Would Have Turned 80 Today

Kevin Kern, director of public relations for Graceland and Elvis Presley Enterprises, shared some details about the festivities with ABC News.

"We've got a cake fit for a king, complete with eight tiers -- one for each decade," he revealed. "And it's an exciting day, with members of the Presley family in attendance."

Kern added that Presley's daughter, Lisa Marie, would join her mother for the ceremony, which also featured a group singalong of "Happy Birthday" to Elvis, who was born Jan. 8, 1935, and died in August 1977 at the age of 42.

http://images6.fanpop.com/image/photos/32700000/-Elvis-elvis-presley-32745175-417-426.jpg

Other events happening this week in Memphis in conjunction with the 80th birthday celebration include a number of musical performances, a screening of the Presley movies Jailhouse Rock and Viva Las Vegas, a Q&A event and fan-club parties. In addition, an auction offering a variety of rare Elvis memorabilia will be held tonight at Graceland, with one of the most exciting items up for bid being the first recording Presley ever made, an acetate dating back to 1953.

Graceland plans to continue Elvis' 80th birthday celebration throughout 2015,” Kern told ABC News. He added that later in the year, "we'll be launching two special exhibits…that highlight various periods of Elvis' life and milestones in his career."

http://pictures.media.tvinfo.de/pictures/92/f0/9f/b0/e9/91/bf/d8/bb/4d/20/66/fa/ed/f5/63/large_vox_150104_0910_3335c0f5_elvis_lebt__der_king_wird_80-praesentiert_von_andreas_gabalier.jpg

Presley, of course, was the first true rock 'n' roll superstar, a charismatic heartthrob, dynamic performer and powerful singer who propelled the genre into the mainstream of pop music. Regarding Elvis' enduring popularity, Kern notes that "almost half of [Graceland's] visitors were born after Elvis Presley passed, [which] goes to show the impact he still has on popular culture today and music of today."

http://www.vandohalen.com.br/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/elvis.jpg

"There probably wouldn't be The Beatles without Elvis Presley," he said. "It was John Lennon who said, 'Before Elvis there was nothing.' They were tremendously influenced by Elvis Presley and his music."

http://www.elvis-collectors.com/candid-central/dmb.jpg

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #47 posted 01/08/15 4:36pm

JoeBala

Didn't know he was still around. eek HB Larry Storch is 92 today. cool

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #48 posted 01/08/15 5:21pm

JoeBala

‘Brooklyn Girls’ Singer Catey Shaw on Becoming an Internet Pariah

CATEY

by Stephanie Dubick

With gentrification in Brooklyn rising higher than a Williamsburg condo, the idea that people flocking to New York’s most populous borough because they like Girls really pisses off old school Brooklyn-ites like whoa. Last week, the viral smackdown of Brooklyn transplant Catey Shaw and the video premiere of “Brooklyn Girls,” sent the internet into a temporary state of psychotic rage when scathing criticisms against Shaw’s upbeat, and perhaps stereotypical, portrait of Brooklyn — with its abundance of PBR, graffiti and rooftop parties — was considered by some media outlets as the death of Brooklyn. But unlike artists who buckle from online hatred and even death threats from trolls, Shaw exudes a surprisingly stark and wicked sense of humor in spite of it all. And for someone considered the most hated musician on the Internet, who’s also contributing to the gentrification issue or whatever, the 22-year-old Virginia Beach native is thinking less about the critics and more about her upcoming album, which is appropriately entitled, The Brooklyn EP. We spoke to her about what it feels like to be despised by a bunch of anonymous strangers, her music, and being a girl who lives in the borough of Brooklyn.

I was on your Twitter page the other day and your comment on being excited for making it 24hrs without someone telling you to kill yourself was troubling and hilarious. Have you received a lot of death threats online?
I mean, it’s a thing, but I feel like with any internet happening people jump right to that [online threats]. And I don’t take it super seriously. I’m lucky that I’m pretty emotionally stable because if I wasn’t, I think it would be a lot harder to deal with. Luckily, I can laugh at it and recognize how people are on the internet.

Did you imagine that “Brooklyn Girls” was going to receive as much attention as it has?
I was hoping it would receive attention, but obviously I hoped it would have been more positively received. But it was totally intended as a compliment to Brooklyn. And we know that Brooklyn is a hot-button topic right now, so we kind of expected there would be a little bit of reaction, but nothing on this scale.

How are you dealing with the negative attention?
Last week it was a little weird. I was a bit scared to talk about it [the criticisms] because I didn’t want to say the wrong thing and give people ammo. It was just a lot harder last week. And I was so busy that I didn’t really have time to process it until yesterday. I had my one big emotional spell and got it all out. Now I’m ready to hit the ground running again. But it is kind of a blessing in disguise because it gave me a recognizable name.

Why do you think people dislike the song so much?
I think that we’re living in a place where your whole Facebook feed is a deep think piece about everything you could possibly think of. It’s great that this conversation is happening, but there’s clearly people that could talk about this for a long time but just didn’t have the correct outlet to vent. I think New York is a cool place, and I even do it sometimes, too, where I’ll go back to Virginia and I’m just like, ‘Nothing is cooler than New York or Brooklyn.’ We just get this New York-ery attitude about us.

I think a lot of the criticisms stem from the fact that the song could further gentrify an already gentrified Brooklyn. But since you’ve been living there, have you witnessed Brooklyn evolving?
I’ve been living in the same apartment for about a year-and-a-half now and there was one bar near me when I moved here. Last week we [Shaw’s friends] went barhopping and now there’s like, six bars within two block of my apartment. It’s insane. And I live on the ground floor with windows in the front and the amount of noise outside my window is crazy. Gentrification is happening to everyone. No one is immune to it.

So, with all talks of criticism aside, were did the idea for “Brooklyn Girls” come from?
My writing partner [and producer] Jay [Levine] and I were at a studio in LA trying to write pop songs and there was a list of topics that we were trying to work from. We were trying so hard to make the songs work. But then we decided it wasn’t going to happen, so we wrote about what we wanted to write about. We were thinking about [the 1964 song] “The Girl from Ipanema,” and how she’s tall and tan and dark and lovely and walks down the street. So it was this 40-year-old straight man and this 22-year-old lesbian trying to write about this hot Brooklyn chick. The lyrics kind of adjusted over time and the subject matter got a little more specific, but this powerful, enigmatic female was something we wanted to talk about.

http://nyc.thedelimagazine.com/sites/upload-files/560109_475694832486573_809945877_n.jpg

Is that what it means to be a Brooklyn Girl? And can anyone that doesn’t live in Brooklyn be a Brooklyn Girl?
Definitely. I actually think about my little sister, even. She’s 14 and in middle school, and it’s just so funny seeing some of the outfits she puts on and how she goes to school knowing that she doesn’t look like anyone of her friends – she’s the coolest girl in her grade. It’s just really about the confidence to do what you want. For me it was moving to Brooklyn and making my dream happen.

There’s a lot of Brooklyn in the “Brooklyn Girls” video. Was it your idea to show various aspects of the borough?
The video was low budget. We did the whole thing from my apartment and all the extras were my friends. I set up a Facebook event on my personal Facebook page and invited everyone we knew and had PBR for everyone. The reason we had PBR is because it’s the cheapest stuff we could get and we just had a party.

Do you think there’s a certain style to the people who live in Brooklyn?
It may sound corny but expressing yourself through clothes in a way that people don’t have the freedom to do, or at least I didn’t feel like I had the freedom to do when I lived somewhere else, is important. There’s something about being here [in Brooklyn] that no matter how crazy you look, there’s always someone more ridiculous looking. There’s this fearlessness to the way people dress in Brooklyn.

Growing up in Virginia Beach, where you didn’t feel free to express yourself through clothing, how did that affect you? And did moving to Brooklyn help you become more comfortable?
I always wore weird things to school. I remember wearing a ‘50s prom dress in the ninth grade and people saying that it was really weird and me just feeling awesome around school. I never felt natural. But people weren’t looking at me like I was crazy until I moved to Brooklyn.

Where did you go to school?
I went to SVA [School for Visual Art] in New York City for oil painting. I worked pretty much exclusively with self-portraitures and I think making the switch to music and writing was the kind of scene that was best for me.

Also, because of school loan debt, how are you surviving in Brooklyn?
I’m living in what is technically considered a two-bedroom with four roommates. And I’m also just managing my money. I used to do a lot of busking to keep up with money, too. It was kind of those things where you go down to the subway and you’re just playing ukulele and you’re playing by yourself. I could only do about two hours at a time before my thumbs would start bleeding and my voice would get tired. But I would make as much as I could for two hours in the morning, have enough for lunch, and go back and do another two hour shift in the evening. Recently, I haven’t busked as much, but for the first few years that I lived in New York, that’s how I made my income.

And that’s how you were discovered, correct? Playing ukulele in the subway?
I was playing in the subway and one of the trains stopped and my manager Jay and I were just facing each other head on while I was playing. Then the doors closed and the train left, but he took it to the next stop, circled around, came back and then I met him. But it wasn’t until I was looking at my planner from a few years ago, when I first got his number, that I decided to meet him at the studio. It was first time seeing a real recording studio, and my first time writing an original song, and we’ve been together ever since

How did it feel going from busking to the studio?
Incredible. I had been playing in the subway for about a year before I met Jay. I met a lot of people who came up to me while I was busking and said they liked my voice and that they wanted to record me, but it didn’t feel right. But when I met Jay, I knew immediately that he was for real. I felt like someone had finally heard me and I was getting a chance to hone in on this craft that many people devote years and years to. I spent my whole life working on paintings, so to put that energy into singing, and having someone teach me the ways [Levine], was great.

Gotcha! So with the new EP coming out in September, what are your initial thoughts on the album, and what would you like to say to all the haters (and non-haters) on the internet?
I think there’s a lot of subject matter in there and I’m very happy that people are speaking my name. And when the EP comes out, people can make up their minds about whether I’m worth their time or not.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #49 posted 01/10/15 8:55am

JoeBala

Upcoming CD/Mp3 releases:

.

UK Edition:

esquire-uk-fashion-icon-februray-2015-04

[Edited 1/10/15 9:02am]

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #50 posted 01/12/15 11:42am

Identity




Conya Doss is back to stir your soul.


In preparation for her much-anticipated upcoming seventh studio album, aptly titled VII, the veteran singer-songwriter releases the new single "When We Love."

VII will arrive this spring.





SoundCloud link

Reply #51 posted 01/12/15 5:24pm

JoeBala

Anita Ekberg, International Screen Beauty, Dies at 83

Anita Ekberg in “La Dolce Vita,” released in 1960. Credit The Kobal Collection/Riama Pathe

Anita Ekberg, who became an international symbol of lush beauty and unbridled sensuality in the 1960 Federico Fellini film “La Dolce Vita,” died on Sunday in Rocca di Papa, southeast of Rome. She was 83.

http://rack.3.mshcdn.com/media/ZgkyMDE1LzAxLzExLzYwLzJhbml0YS4yMDZmNC5qcGcKcAl0aHVtYgk4NTB4ODUwPgplCWpwZw/0ef92e1f/2fa/2anita.jpg

The cause was complications of a long illness, her lawyer, Patrizia Ubaldi, said.

Ms. Ekberg had kept a low public profile in recent years. She did make an appearance in 2010 at a film festival in Rome, where a new restoration of “La Dolce Vita” was having its world premiere. In December 2011 it was reported that she was almost penniless, had no family to help her and was seeking financial assistance from the Fellini Foundation while living at a nursing home in Italy, her adopted country.

http://netflowers.files.wordpress.com/2012/10/anita-ekberg-142.jpg

Fellini cast Ms. Ekberg in “La Dolce Vita” as a hedonistic American actress visiting Rome. A single moonlit scene — in which she wades into the Trevi Fountain in a strapless evening gown, turns her face ecstatically to the fountain’s waterfall and seductively calls Marcello Mastroianni’s character, a jaded journalist, to join her — established her place in cinema history.

http://cache2.allpostersimages.com/p/LRG/30/3012/EB9BF00Z/plakaty/actress-anita-ekberg.jpg

Ms. Ekberg won a Golden Globe, sharing the 1956 award for most promising newcomer with Dana Wynter and Victoria Shaw, but most of her roles focused on her face and figure. When she traveled overseas to entertain American troops in the 1950s, it was as a sex symbol. Bob Hope introduced her as “the greatest thing to come from Sweden since smorgasbord” and joked that her parents had won the Nobel Prize for architecture.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/33/Anita_Ekberg_1956.jpg

Decades later, she told Entertainment Weekly: “When you’re born beautiful, it helps you start in the business. But then it becomes a handicap.”

Kerstin Anita Marianne Ekberg was born on Sept. 29, 1931, in Malmo, Sweden, one of eight children of a harbor master.

http://media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/71/34/df/7134df4b6cf382b4fd7da57ff94339c6.jpg

She did some modeling as a teenager and was later named Miss Sweden, traveling to the United States as a special guest at the Miss America pageant in Atlantic City. She did not take home the Miss Universe title but did win an American modeling contract and was soon acting as well.

Ms. Ekberg’s first credited film role was in “Abbott and Costello Go to Mars” (1953), in which she played a voluptuous guard on the planet Venus. During the next decade or so she was kept busy in Hollywood movies, including “Blood Alley” (1955), a drama with John Wayne, in which she played a Chinese woman; “4 for Texas” (1963), a western with Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin; “Call Me Bwana” (1963), a comedy with Hope; and two comedies with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, “Artists and Models” (1955) and “Hollywood or Bust” (1956).

Anita Ekberg

She also made a cameo appearance in the travel comedy “If It’s Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium” (1969) and, on the more serious side, had a supporting role as the alluring, social-climbing wife of Henry Fonda’s character in King Vidor’s epic production of “War and Peace” (1956). But it was “La Dolce Vita” that made her famous.

http://imgc.allpostersimages.com/images/P-473-488-90/37/3706/W4CAF00Z/posters/anita-ekberg-1950s.jpg

She worked for Fellini again, as a billboard photograph that comes to life in the segment of “Boccaccio 70” (1962) that he directed, and as herself in “The Clowns” (1970) and “Intervista” (1987). Over a five-decade acting career, she made more than 50 feature films. Her last screen appearance was in a 2002 episode of the Italian television series “Il Bello Delle Donne.”

Romantically linked with Hollywood actors including Sinatra, Gary Cooper, Tyrone Power, Rod Taylor, Yul Brynner and Errol Flynn, she married and divorced twice. Her husbands were Anthony Steel, a British matinee idol (1956 to 1959), and Rik Van Nutter, an American actor who also appeared in films under the name Clyde Rogers (1963 to 1975). Mr. Steel died in 2001, Mr. Van Nutter in 2005. She had no children.

http://iv1.lisimg.com/image/4901140/600full-anita-ekberg.jpg

Ms. Ekberg was often outspoken in interviews, naming famous people she couldn’t bear. And she was frequently quoted as saying that it was Fellini who owed his success to her, not the other way around.

“They would like to keep up the story that Fellini made me famous, Fellini discovered me,” she said in a 1999 interview with The New York Times. “So many have said they discovered me.”

But she did appear reflective at times. “If you want la dolce vita, it is how you look at life,” she told The New York Observer the same year, while in the United States to publicize “The Red Dwarf,” a European film in which she played an aging opera star. “When I go back to Rome, my roses will be in bloom again.”

http://cdnimg.visualizeus.com/thumbs/da/66/da666bee80c520cc3b1408ae8b623d1d_h.jpg

During an interview with the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera on the occasion of her 80th birthday, she was asked if she was lonely. She said yes, a bit. “But I have no regrets,” she added. “I have loved, cried, been mad with happiness. I have won and I have lost.”

http://www.moviegazetteonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/La-Dolce-Vita.jpg

Correction: January 12, 2015
An earlier version of this obituary misspelled part of the name of the Italian television series in which Ms. Ekberg made her last screen appearance. It was “Il Bello Delle Donne,” not “Il Belle Delle Donne.”
Correction: January 12, 2015

An earlier version of this obituary misspelled part of the name of an Italian newspaper to which Ms. Ekberg gave an interview on the occasion of her 80th birthday. It is Corriere della Sera, not Corriere delle Sera.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #52 posted 01/12/15 5:53pm

JoeBala

Watch it on PBS tonight(10PM NYC) check your local listings:

http://www.pbs.org/tv_schedules/

'Evolution of a Criminal': Film Review

Courtesy of Evolution of a Criminal

The Bottom Line

Few first-person documentaries have as harrowing a story to tell

Opens

Oct. 10

Cast

Dante E. Clark, Vladimir Versailles, Jeremie Harris, Rosalyn Coleman, Benton Greene

Director

Darius Clark Monroe

Darius Clark Monroe's documentary recounts his experience of robbing a bank when he was 16 years old and going to prison

Documentary filmmakers often turn to their own lives for inspiration, but few have as compelling a story to mine as Darius Clark Monroe. When he was 16 years old and living with his financially struggling family in a Houston, Texas suburb, he and two accomplices robbed a bank and managed to make off with approximately $140,000. It wasn't long before he and one of his cohorts was caught — the other somehow managed to avoid prosecution — and Monroe, tried as an adult, was sentenced to a five-year prison sentence as a result of a plea bargain.

He served three years, spending his days working in the fields picking cotton. After his release he eventually wound up in NYU Film School and began working on a documentary that essentially serves as a mea culpa for his criminal act. One of his professors was Spike Lee, who serves as executive producer for Evolution of a Criminal.

While the film could have been an exercise in self-justification, it instead offers no excuses, only explanations. Monroe couldn't stand to see his mother and stepfather, seen in a joyful home movie at their wedding, barely managing to make ends meet. When their house was robbed and several VCRs were taken, it lit a fire under him. He first stole several VCRs from the store in which he worked part-time, justifying the act to himself by reasoning that he was only replacing what had been stolen, and that the corporation that owned the store would hardly miss the loss.

But that initial crime inevitably led to a bigger plan, for which he enlisted two friends. Barging into the bank wearing a skeleton mask and accompanied by a cohort with a shotgun, Monroe actually managed to get away with it until one of the robber's bragging led to his arrest.

The film includes a well-staged, dramatic reenactment of the crime, but its mainly comprised of incisive interviews with the figures involved, including Monroe's parents, who admitted to spending some of the money; various friends and family members; one of the prosecuting attorneys, who expresses gratification that Monroe turned his life around but says that she won't be fully convinced until he turns 50 without recidivism; and even one of the bystanders at the bank, now a pastor, who says that he was less than forgiving at the time. Monroe is also seen attempting to talk to other people involved, including the bank guard, who want nothing to do with him.

Shot over the course of several years, Evolution of a Crime is often rough-hewn in its execution, but it's deeply moving nonetheless. High emotionalism is on ample display, from the mother who tears up while talking about her son's desperate act and her own complicity to the accomplice, clearly still struggling with his life, who off-handedly comments about the past, "Shit happens."

The title, ironically, is somewhat misleading. The story is not about the evolution of a criminal, but rather the evolution of a talented filmmaker who's mined his own sorry past to powerful effect.

Production: June 24th, DeerJen, Aliquot Films
Cast: Dante E. Clark, Vladimir Versailles, Jeremie Harris, Rosalyn Coleman, Benton Greene
Director: Darius Clark Monroe
Producer: Jen Gatien
Executive producer: Spike Lee
Director of photography: Daniel Patterson
Editor: Doug Lenox
Production designer: Charlotte Royer
Costume designer: Sarita Fellows

Composer: T. Griffin

No rating, 83 minutes

.


Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #53 posted 01/13/15 4:50pm

JoeBala

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #54 posted 01/13/15 5:54pm

Identity


[img:$uid]http://i5.minus.com/ji3UgJHOgZyhb.jpg[/img:$uid]


7 Quick-fire Questions with TokiMonsta
January 2015


LA electronica/ hip hop producer TokiMonsta (Jennifer Lee) is known for her unique take on electronic, hip hop, and dance music.

Her classical upbringing and eclectic taste in music has allowed her to create vast textural soundscapes—a reverberation that fuses vintage sensibilities with progressive inclinations.

Since her participation in the prestigious Red Bull Music Academy in London in 2010, Tokimonsta has gone on to be a part of the Full Flex Express tour, the first electronic music themed train tour that traveled across Canada with Skrillex, Diplo, Pretty Lights, and Grimes, and has performed at countless music festivals like Coachella, Sonar Barcelona, DEMF, WMC, Electric Zoo, SXSW, to name a few.


Hot on the heels of the news that she’s been working with R&B diva Kelly Rowland, Tokimonsta is also the latest producer to step into the studio to remix ''Keep On Lying'' by globe-hopping UK soul-pop singer Jessie Ware.


And now Tokimonsta will be bringing her brand of music to Singapore for the Red Bull Music Academy Stage @ Super 0 Open Air on 17 Jan 2015.

Along with a solid line up of international artistes carefully curated by RBMA, this all day festival is set to breathe new life into 24 TurnHouse Road, a previously abandoned building and bring you an off-beat cultural experience like no other.

Before she hits the Lion City, Redbull.com caught up with Tokimonsta for a round of quick fire questions on what makes her tick.



The best part of being Tokimonsta is….

being able to make music.


The proliferation of social media and online collaborations has…

helped people to be able to create a community that allows them to share their music across the globe.


The inspiration behind the sounds of “Desiderium” is…

Nostalgia


Away from the stage and bright lights, I am…

Playing with my cat.


The most Korean side of me comes out when…

I’m in an active debate about something


The artist I would love to collaborate next with is…

Bjork.


For my fans in Singapore, you can expect…

a great story about music.



Tokimonsta will also helm an intimate and personal RBMA Session that will take place at the festival grounds earlier in the day. The format is reminiscent of a typical day in the academy, where music influences, equipment and production techniques are shared among like-minded individuals in a conducive couch lecture setting.



Budding local musicians and beat makers will be invited to attend this exclusive session, and also apply for Red Bull Music Academy 2015 which will take place in Paris.



Reply #55 posted 01/14/15 5:38pm

JoeBala

Listen To 'The Eye,' A New Song By Brandi Carlile

December 16, 201411:30 AM ET
Brandi Carlile's fifth studio album, The Firewatcher's Daughter, will be out on March 3.

Brandi Carlile's fifth studio album, The Firewatcher's Daughter, will be out on March 3.

image

David McClister/Courtesy of the artist

It's been common for a few years now to dismiss rock and roll as a shadow of its former self. Usurped by dance beats and hip-hop samples, lost amid the pop spectacle that dominates the Distraction Age, music centered around electric guitars and liberated voices can now seem staid. But maybe we need a new definition of rock and roll; maybe we should return to the original one. In the mid-1950s, when Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly and Little Richard were inventing the practice, to rock was to make a genre-defying leap that connected country to R&B to teenage Top-40 music. Most of all, rocking meant being willing to chance a little rawness.

Brandi Carlile, whose upcoming album is as rock and roll as a singer-songwriter's effort gets, defined the term beautifully in a recent email exchange with me. "There's this indescribable point in rock music where a song becomes known just enough to play it all the way through without falling off the horse, but not enough for an artist to have any control over it," she explained. "That is what I think rock and roll is ... and it's scary." There are many such moments on The Firewatcher's Daughter, which will be released March 3 on ATO Records. Some of them rattle the floorboards; others are quieter, offering beautiful harmonies or rich storytelling. But no matter what they sound like, the songs on this release feel like rock and roll.

According to Carlile, this is because of the way they were recorded. For this first album on the independent ATO after three for Sony subsidiary Columbia, Carlile and the Twins (as she and everyone calls her partners in songwriting and performance, Tim and Phil Hanseroth) went straight into the studio with new material. The atmosphere was intensified by recent milestones the band had crossed, including the pregnancy of Carlile's wife, Catherine Shepherd. With emotions running high and the reins off their process, the band was able to hone in on every great aspect of Carlile's music — its emotional openness, beautiful melodicism and rich textures that reflect a deep engagement with many different corners of American music.

The song we're featuring here, "The Eye," is exactly what it proclaims itself to be: a quiet breath in the midst of the album's glorious storm. Rooted in Carlile's love of both classic country and California pop (particularly Fleetwood Mac), the song is the kind many other artists are going to want to cover. It will be hard to top the original, though; it so eloquently highlights the telepathic connection Carlile shares with her longtime bandmates (on display in a video of the trio singing the song at the bottom of this page). A favorite on recent tours, "The Eye" is destined to become a centerpiece in Carlile's catalog.

Over email, Carlile discussed the making of The Firewatcher's Daughter, the near-supernatural connection she has with the twins, and why being a married parent is as rock and roll as it gets in 2014.

http://reverb-2.dsmartdesign.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/brandi-carlile-images-4.jpg

The first thing I thought when I heard the new album was, wow, Brandi and the Twins are rocking! I know you took a different approach in the studio this time. How did that come about?

Thanks! We took SO many different approaches in the studio and the lead-up to it. I'd say the biggest shift that resulted in us really rocking had to do with the fact that we didn't make any demos. To me rock and roll isn't really a genre but more of recklessness or a risk. ... The more something gets ironed out and sure of itself, the less it begins to rock somehow. I don't know what that makes it, but definitely not authentically rock and roll. Being on Sony for all those years was amazing for so many reasons, but one of the few bitter pills we had to swallow was the way we had to "demo" our songs and get them past the powers that be, just to prove they'd make a good record. ... I'd end up with all of these demos and I could hear the moment on them and never get it back again. I adore all of our records we've made, but damn it, you should hear those demos.

The album ranges widely, soundwise, from the country harmonies of "The Eye" to power pop to that Roy Orbison-style heartthrob thing you do, which I love so much. Did you enter the process of writing these songs with the goal of showing your whole range? Other albums have focused on one or the other of your approaches.

Thank you for noticing that stuff! I got some baby clothes from the Orbison Estate that said "pretty woman" with tiny Ray-Bans. ... I died from excitement because you know how much I love him.

Our whole range is so eccentric because of the close "cultishness" of the twins and me, and the fact that the three of us are so different. Having three equal writers for a band is tricky, and not just for sequencing. I'm always trying to pull all the songs together with something, whether it's a drum or a theme or some ambient sound they all have in them, subliminally. I didn't even try to rein it in this time. We totally let go and embraced how different our songwriting is. My wife was nine months pregnant, so there was very little I could control except my dog! All that vulnerability is all over this record.

http://www.projectrhythmseed.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Brandi-Carlile-shot31.jpg

Family — finding it, keeping it — is a big theme on The Firewatcher's Daughter. I know you started your own family this year, and so did the twins. It's a corny question, but it seems applicable here: How did becoming a parent influence this particular creative work?

Phil's daughter, my niece, is 2. She was in the studio shirtless with a drumstick and her war paint quite often, cheering us on. Tim's son, my nephew, is 1; he was there when he was first learning to laugh, which is so inspiring it's beyond explanation. Believe me, there was a level of intensity and humanness in the studio that the twins and I were not used to. Call it hormones or jitters or whatever, but there were tears and fights and total celebration in that month, and we were all together all of the time. It was crazy, and I think you can hear it.

As far as parenthood goes, it's not a corny question at all because it's right there all the time. It's like the elephant in the room for a rock and roll band, because you're lying if you say you don't lie in bed and wonder if you're cool now that you have songs from Nickelodeon stuck in your head and love your wife and kids. But rock and roll is the people's music. It's supposed to represent all of free-thinking society, and a lot of people have kids, so it is cool to me.

I know that getting paid as a musician is more difficult than ever before because of changes in the way recorded music is distributed. Yet I've also noticed that many of my favorite artists, who are in midcareer, are making the best and most assertive music of their lives. You, for example — this album really feels insistently personal and bold, from the song styles to the production to your singing. How has the changing reality of being a working musician influenced your creative process?

I'm seeing some of the same trend. On a large spectrum. There could be a touch of "nothing to lose" in the air. For me at the time, insistently personal was all I had. I'd been off the road for over a year and had just gotten married and dove into trying to start a family after manically touring my 20s away. Being a working musician was all I knew how to be. It took that time off for me to forget how to be an entertainer and an artist on a major label chasing that dragon, to remember what it was like to write a truly innocent song again.

You've said that "The Eye" is the song that's most representative of your band, because you all share the lead vocal. That's a powerful statement from someone who records under her own name as a "solo artist." Can you talk about the twins as collaborators, and specifically their role in making this song?

When I met the twins I instantly loved them. I had to have them in my life; it was borderline obsessive! They had day jobs and were in a couple of other bands — it was all I could do to get them to want to play with me, let alone be in a band with me. I had six residencies a week, so almost every night I was in a different bar or restaurant, and during the day while they were working I was pinning fliers or busking at [Seattle's] Pike Place Market. The twins would play with me at lots of these gigs, and the idea of three-part harmony at that time wasn't really very cool, but it was somehow solidifying what we would eventually commit to and pursue. But all the gigs were already billed as "Brandi Carlile," and believe me, they didn't want those gigs stuck to them. We just kind of went with that name and never changed it, but at the time, if I thought I could get them to stay with me by calling our band "The Hanseroth Brothers and that bar singer" — that would be our name.

And this song?

"The Eye" used to be two separate songs. One of the ways we write is just to walk around near each other playing our songs and passively wait for the other two to say, "What's that, you should go to that minor chord earlier," or something.

Tim had been playing these two songs that you could really tell were beginning to take shape into something special. Phil and me just suggested that he combine them, and I added a last verse. ... When they took shape we just decided to go for it and make this our one song where we sing evenly all the way through.

I love the catchphrase of this song — "You can dance in a hurricane, but only if you're standing in the eye." It's a proverb! Did it come to you in a flash?

It came to Tim in a flash. I will forever be jealous of the way that man is with words. Some of my favorite things ever said were said by him: "For a heart that is broken makes a beautiful sound."

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #56 posted 01/17/15 9:38am

JoeBala

https://fbcdn-sphotos-c-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-xpa1/v/t1.0-9/1229928_10152801075681694_1262453738504493097_n.jpg?oh=78db86f84668c78b8322d4478ff45235&oe=556BB39F&__gda__=1428572917_11cf711fa08580148ab5ab86e36680b3

Tour Dates

USA

Date Location Venue Buy Tickets Notes
2/25/15 Boston, MA Shubert Theater Buy Tickets
2/26/15 Bethesda, MD Music Center at Strathmore Buy Tickets
2/28/15 Atlantic City, NJ Caesars Atlantic City – Circus Maximus Buy Tickets
3/1/15 Greenvale, NY Tilles Center For the Performing Arts Buy Tickets
3/2/15 Red Bank, NJ Count Basie Theatre Buy Tickets
3/4/15 Providence, RI Providence Performing Arts Center Buy Tickets
3/5/15 Portsmouth, NH The Music Hall Buy Tickets *New Show
3/6/15 Wallingford, CT Toyota Presents Oakdale Buy Tickets
3/7/15 Wilkes Barre, PA Kirby Center For the Preforming Arts Buy Tickets
3/10/15 Buffalo, NY University at Buffalo – Center For the Arts Buy Tickets
3/11/15 Wilmington, DE Grand Opera House – Wilmington Buy Tickets
3/12/15 Port Chester, NY Capitol Theatre Buy Tickets
3/14/15 New York, NY Beacon Theatre Buy Tickets
4/6/15 West Palm Beach, FL Kravis Center for the Performing Arts – Dreyfoos Hall Buy Tickets *New Show
4/8/15 Tallahassee, FL Florida State University – Ruby Diamond Auditorium Buy Tickets *New Show
4/9/15 Clearwater, FL Capitol Theatre Buy Tickets *New Show
4/10/15 Clearwater, FL Capitol Theatre Buy Tickets
4/12/15 Melbourne, FL King Center For the Performing Arts Buy Tickets *New Show
4/13/15 Jacksonville, FL Jacoby Symphony Hall Buy Tickets
4/14/15 Miami, FL Adrienne Arsht Center – Knight Concert Hall Buy Tickets
4/16/15 Sarasota, FL Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall Buy Tickets
4/17/15 Fort Myers, FL Barbara B. Mann Performing Arts Hall Buy Tickets *New Show
4/19/15 Atlanta, GA Atlanta Symphony Hall Buy Tickets
4/20/15 Birmingham, AL Alys Robinson Stephens Performing Arts Center Buy Tickets *New Show
4/21/15 Nashville, TN Ryman Auditorium Buy Tickets *New Show
4/23/15 Charleston, SC North Charleston Performing Arts Center Buy Tickets *New Show
4/24/15 Raleigh, NC Memorial Auditorium – Duke Energy Center for the Preforming Arts Buy Tickets *New Show
4/25/15 Greenville, SC Peace Center For the Performing Arts Buy Tickets *New Show
6/19/15 Rochester, NY Rochester International Jazz Festival Buy Tickets **SOLD OUT**
6/19/15 Rochester, NY Kodak Hall at Eastman Theatre Buy Tickets *Second Show at Rochester Jazz Festival / Show begins: 4:00pm
6/21/15 Lenox, MA Tanglewood Buy Tickets On sale January 25th
8/8/15 Milwaukee, WI The Riverside Theater Buy Tickets
8/12/15 Morrison, CO Red Rocks Buy Tickets On sale December 19th

CANADA

5/11/15 Edmonton, AB Northern Alberta Jubiliee Auditorium* Buy Tickets *denotes Orchestra Show
5/12/15 Kelowna, BC Prospera Place Buy Tickets
5/13/15 Vancouver, BC Orpheum* Buy Tickets *denotes Orchestra Show
5/15/15 Calgary, AB Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium* Buy Tickets *denotes Orchestra Show
5/16/15 Saskatoon, SK TCU Place Buy Tickets
5/17/15 Regina, SK Conexus Arts Centre Buy Tickets
5/19/15 Winnipeg, MB Centennial Concert Hall Buy Tickets
5/20/15 Thunder Bay, ON Thunder Bay Community Auditorium Buy Tickets
5/22/15 Toronto, ON Massey Hall* Buy Tickets *denotes Orchestra Show
5/23/15 Toronto, ON Massey Hall* Buy Tickets *denotes Orchestra Show
5/24/15 Hamilton, ON Hamilton Place Theatre* Buy Tickets *denotes Orchestra Show
5/26/15 London, ON RBC Theatre at Budweiser Gardens* Buy Tickets *denotes Orchestra Show
5/27/15 Kitchener, ON Centre In The Square Buy Tickets
5/29/15 Montreal, QC Salle Wilfrid Pelletier – Place des Arts* Buy Tickets *denotes Orchestra Show
5/30/15 Windsor, ON The Colosseum at Caesars Windsor Buy Tickets On sale date to be confirmed
5/31/15 Ottawa, ON Southam Hall – National Arts Centre* Buy Tickets *denotes Orchestra Show

EUROPE

9/28/15 Birmingham, England Symphony Hall Buy Tickets
9/30/15 London, England Royal Albert Hall Buy Tickets
10/1/15 London, England Royal Albert Hall Buy Tickets
10/3/15 Lyon, France Centre De Congres & Concert Buy Tickets
10/4/15 Düsseldorf, Germany Mitsubishi Electric Hall Buy Tickets
10/5/15 Hamburg, Germany CCH1 Buy Tickets
10/7/15 Stuttgart, Germany Liederhalle Buy Tickets
10/8/15 Frankfurt, Germany Alte Oper Buy Tickets
10/9/15 Rotterdam, Netherlands De Doelen Buy Tickets
10/11/15 Brussels, Belgium Bozar Buy Tickets
10/14/15 Paris, France L’Olympia Buy Tickets
10/15/15 Paris, France L’Olympia Buy Tickets
10/16/15 Zurich, Switzerland Hallenstadion Buy Tickets
10/18/15 Munich, Germany Philharmonie Buy Tickets
10/19/15 Berlin, Germany Tempodrome Buy Tickets
10/27/15 Istanbul, Turkey Zorlu Center Buy Tickets
Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #57 posted 01/17/15 11:55am

Identity

I've been awaiting Diana's return with new material. Thanks, Joe.

[Edited 1/17/15 20:47pm]

Reply #58 posted 01/21/15 2:07pm

Identity

Reply #59 posted 01/22/15 3:47pm

JoeBala

Identity said:

I've been awaiting Diana's return with new material. Thanks, Joe.

[Edited 1/17/15 20:47pm]

Welcome ID. I'm looking forward to bjorks new CD. I bought her latest concert film on Blu-ray/2 CD last week for only $14 on amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Bio...B00OIG3AUE I'm gonna watch it this weekend hopefully.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #60 posted 01/22/15 4:02pm

Identity




FKA Twigs: In Bloom

[Edited 1/22/15 16:04pm]

Reply #61 posted 01/22/15 4:33pm

JoeBala

Shakira & Iggy Azalea Collaboration in the Works

By Colin Stutz | January 06, 2015 7:01 PM EST

Shakira & Iggy Azalea Collaboration in the Works

Shakira's hard at work on her 11th album, reports Spanish newspaper El Mundo, and it's going to feature a collaboration with Iggy Azalea.

Columbian superstar's new LP is said to be a multi-national affair, including other team ups with the Mexican rock band Maná, Spanish singer Alejandro Sanz, and English MC Dizzee Rascal. Though, it's too soon to say whether all those will make the final album or not.

Shakira's of course no stranger to collaboration. Her release from last year, tilted Shakira, included guest spots from Rihanna, Blake Shelton and Magic!.

Behind the Scenes of How Bjork's Team Handled the 'Vulnicura' Leak

By Harley Brown | January 22, 2015 2:34 PM EST

Behind the Scenes of How Bjork's Team Handled the 'Vulnicura' Leak

On Jan. 20, Bjork announced on Facebook that her album had arrived several months earlier than its March release date. "Vulnicura will be rolling out worldwide over the next 24 hours !!" she wrote. "I wanted to tell you the tale of making of this album." Though she went into great detail about how Vulnicura got here, she declined to say why it was here, now.

What the rest of the Internet figured out just days after the Icelandic singer/unicorn announced her eighth album is that, like Madonna's Rebel Heart in December, the whole thing had leaked online. Bjork was first notified by fans through her website, which they contacted to tell her Vulnicura was available for illegal download. Derek Birkett, founder of her label One Little Indian, tells Billboard Bjork asked him what to do, so he reached out to "a few friends in the business" -- Arcade Fire and Paul McCartney manager Scott Rodger of music management consortium Maverick and Megaforce Records' Missi Callazzo, who handles Bjork's U.S. distribution.

"Overall, the advice was to do a pre-sale on iTunes with the instant gratification of two or three tracks," Birkett tells Billboard. "Bjork ideally wanted to get the whole record out, and to cut a very long story short, she made a mostly artistic decision that she wanted to get it all out. She felt very passionately about it."

Birkett ran into problems with some of his licensees, which argued that uploading the album in its entirety immediately would have an adverse effect on Vulnicura's physical sales (the vinyl is still expected sometime in March). Rough Trade Germany warned him that if they did make the whole record available, it would refuse to work with Bjork going forward. "We had to switch some of our partners for other partners," Birkett says. "It had a massive, massive impact on us."

As release deals continued to fall through, Birkett reached out to iTunes after asking Amazon if Vulnicura could be made available as a free download to those who pre-ordered its physical edition. After initially agreeing, Amazon pulled out once the album became available on iTunes, arguing that One Little Indian was engaging in a marketing scam to make Vulnicura No. 1 on iTunes.

"Basically what happened is I panicked and gave it to iTunes because I told them, 'All these deals are going down and we're losing a lot of money,'" Birkett says. "I told them to put it on the cover and we'd give them the exclusive. Then I realized the political implications of giving iTunes the exclusive." The digital store agreed to maintain the exclusive for a few days, after which Amazon agreed to support Vulnicura.

Despite the "nightmare" behind the album leak, Birkett told Billboard and the New York Times that, unlike Madonna's team, he would not pursue legal action against those who initially posted it online. Largely inspired by Bjork's breakup with artist Matthew Barney, Vulnicura features contributions from electronic producers Arca and the Haxan Cloak and singer Antony Hegarty.

.

“The Intimate Truth” EP Out Now

Ledisi - The Truth

Ledisi’s new EP, The Intimate Truth is out now! This seven song EP features acoustic performances from her latest full-length album The Truth (March 2014). Order it now:

iTunes | Amazon MP3 | Google Play

.

Now Out:

Better Man

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Marilyn Manson - The Pale Emperor

.

.

Latin Tribute to Michael Jackson Salsifies 'Smooth Criminal': Watch It Here

By Judy Cantor-Navas | January 15, 2015 11:10 AM EST

Latin Tribute to Michael Jackson Salsifies 'Smooth Criminal': Watch It Here

Here's the first single from the upcoming tropical tribute to the King of Pop.

An album of Latin music versions of Michael Jackson's hits? Could be really bad, like MJ "Bad." Or it could just be really bad.

Unity: The Latin Tribute to Michael Jackson started in 2011 as a (successful) $10,000 Kickstarter campaign by Tony Succar, a young Peruvian-American percussionist (and major Jackson fan) from Miami. He had the idea for the album after recording a salsa arrangement of "Thriller" for a Halloween party, and getting an encouraging reaction after putting it on iTunes.

But actually getting the recording done was not as easy or economical as Succar had originally predicted -- and Kickstarter backers have been waiting for quite a while. (Succar, who had never produced an album before, admits, "I had no idea what I was getting into.") But the album is now set for release on Universal Music Classics in April.

Tracks include hits from throughout the King of Pop's career, with "Billie Jean," "I Want You Back" and "Man in the Mirror" among them. Well-known tropical artists including Tito Nieves, Obie Bermudez, India and Michael Stuart perform on Unity, supported by an old-school Latin big band.

"Smooth Criminal," the first single from the project, is now out with Puerto Rican singer Jean Rodriguez in Jackson's shoes. The song seems set for Latin dance floors and radio from the first minute, thanks to the congas and horns punctuating the framework of the original song -- plus, Rodriguez brings some urban Latino love to the English vocals.

It gets really good about half way through when the band breaks out and Rodriguez turns up the heat when he starts singing -- and soneando -- in Spanish, improvising and playing off a group of backup singers. What started as a pretty cool Michael Jackson cover ends as a hard salsa celebration. We're looking forward to hearing more.

.

.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #62 posted 01/22/15 5:14pm

JoeBala

Google Play Store has Motley Crue: The Greatest Hits (MP3 Digital Album Download) for Free.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #63 posted 01/23/15 9:01am

Identity






Estelle Streams Album Sampler for True Romance
January 2015



Here's the track list for True Romance:

"Time After Time"
"Conqueror"
"Something Good / Devotion"
"Make Her Say (Beat It Up)"
"Time Share (Suite 509)"
"The Same"
"Fight for It"
"Silly Girls"
"Gotcha Love"
"She Will Love"
"All That Matters"
"Not Sure" (Bonus Track)


The album arrives next month.

Reply #64 posted 01/23/15 2:26pm

Identity




R. Kelly celebrated his 48th b-day with a new track titled, "Happy Birthday".

Here's the video.

Reply #65 posted 01/24/15 7:54am

JoeBala

New upcoming releases:

Papa Roach


.

Shania Twain to Release New Live Album, 'Shania: Still the One Live From Vegas'

By Colin Stutz | January 23, 2015 8:00 PM EST

Shania Twain to Release New Live Album, 'Shania: Still the One Live From Vegas'

Shania Twain will release a new live album this year, capitalizing on her Las Vegas residency for a live set called Shania: Still the One Live From Vegas that will include a deluxe edition 18-track CD and DVD.

The album will be out March 3 and will also include special limited edition bundles with a 11-inch by 17-inch commemorative poster with the fan's name printed on it and as a t-shirt. Check out the track list below.

Twain held a residency at the Colosseum at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas for two years that ended in December.

"This show has been a labor of love for over three years," Twain said in a press release. "It has meant so much to me and was such a privilege to live out my visions on that stage, and it is so exciting to now get to share the whole experience with the fans all over the world!"

Shania: Still the One Live From Las Vegas Track List:

CD
1. "I"m Gonna Getcha Good!" / "You Win My Love"
2. "Don"t Be Stupid (You Know I Love You)"
3. "Up!"
4. "I Ain"t No Quitter"
5. "No One Needs to Know"
6. "Whose Bed Have Your Boots Been Under?"
7. "Any Man of Mine"
8. "That Don"t Impress Me Much"
9. "Honey, I"m Home"
10. "(If You"re Not in It For Love) I"m Outta Here"
11. "Come on Over" (Acoustic)
12. "Love Gets Me Every Time" (Acoustic)
13. "Rock This Country!" (Acoustic)
14. "Today Is Your Day" (Acoustic)
15. "You"re Still the One"
16. "From This Moment On"
17. "Red Storm"
18. "Man! I Feel Like a Woman!"

DVD
1. Opening
2. "I"m Gonna Getcha Good!"
3. "You Win My Love"
4. "Don"t Be Stupid (You Know I Love You)"
5. "Up!"
6. "Good, Bad and Sexy" (Interlude)
7. "I Ain"t No Quitter"
8. "No One Needs to Know"
9. "Whose Bed Have Your Boots Been Under?"
10. "Any Man of Mine"
11. "Shania Style" (Interlude)
12. "That Don"t Impress Me Much"
13. "Honey, I"m Home"
14. "(If You"re Not in It For Love) I"m Outta Here"
15. "Carrie Anne"
16. "Come on Over"
17. "Love Gets Me Every Time"
18. "Rock This Country!"
19. "Today Is Your Day"
20. "Black Horse, White Horse" (Interlude)
21. "You"re Still the One"
22. "From This Moment On"
23. "Red Storm" (Interlude)
24. "Man! I Feel Like A Woman!"
25. "Rock This Country!" (Live From Calgary) -- Credits

.

Scott Weiland Premieres New Songs at Sundance

By Phil Gallo, Park City, Utah | January 23, 2015 10:00 PM EST

Scott Weiland & The Wildabouts

Scott Weiland treated a packed house at the ASCAP Music Cafe at the Sundance Film Festival to half of the dozen songs that appear on his first album with his new band the Wildabouts. Due March 31, the songs from the album Blaster are no-nonsense, straight-ahead rock tunes that owe debts to music of the 1980s and '90s inspired by late '60s garage rock.

Billboard at Sundance: Se...r Coverage

The half-hour set's lone cover -- a sharp extended rendition of David Bowie's "Jean Genie" that allowed guitarist Jeremy Brown to play with tones both volcanic and cavernous -- is an appropriate root of the Wildabouts' sound: hook-filled choruses, rhythms propelled by Tommy Black's bass, almost on par with Danny Thompson's steady and aggressive drumming, and little ornamentation. The drive of "Jean Genie" is immediately evident in "Hotel Rio" and the first track being sent to radio, "Way She Moves."

Weiland accurately described the song "White Lightning" as "Godzilla or King Kong doing a song in the Appalachians." It's a boot stomper -- think of the Doors at their bluesiest -- though Weiland and the band sound best when they tear into hard-edged power pop like the catchy "Amethyst."

Longtime Weiland fans were appeased with two of his classics from Stone Temple Pilots: "Vasoline" and "Unglued."

Weiland and the Wildabouts perform again at the ASCAP Music Cafe at 4:45 p.m. on Jan 24.

.

Draco Rosa Celebrates 'Vida' With Vinyl Release

By Judy Cantor-Navas | January 22, 2015 5:09 PM EST

Draco Rosa

It's been almost two years since the original release of Draco Rosa's album Vida, which won 2013's Latin Grammy for album of the year and a Grammy for best Latin pop album, and now a vinyl version is on the way.

Since then, the Puerto Rican rock icon and hit songwriter went on an extensive tour, including a Los Angeles concert that was unforgettable for its intensity: long, loud, at times almost unbearably intimate, a show of life force that under the circumstances could have been taken as a rebel yell at cancer.

J Balvin to Speak at 2015 Billboard Latin Music Conference

Rosa has undergone two stem-cell transplants after being diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma: one before the album was released and one after the tour, when he was told the cancer had returned. He has since moved his studio to a tropical setting in his native Puerto Rico and is reportedly working on his next album.

"I'm back," Rosa told Puerto Rican media recently at a press conference for the charity race "World's Best 10K," for which he serves as a spokesman, urging the public to run in the name of a child with cancer. Rosa said he plans to walk in March in the Scotiabank-sponsored race, which he had to miss last year due to his illness. People who buy a ticket to a raffle related to the event will win a chance to have coffee with the artist, or win a Draco Rosa-autographed guitar.

The vinyl edition of Vida is due Tuesday and will be available on Amazon. Meanwhile, watch Rosa performing the song "Esto Es Vida," which has to be one of the most beautiful love songs -- and life-loving songs -- ever written.

.

Prepare to be Amazed All Over Again by the Gloriously Singular Nina Simone

Reviewing from the Sundance Film Festival, Mike Hogan says the upcoming Netflix documentary What Happened, Miss Simone? perfectly captures the eccentric, unique artist, far better than any archival YouTube deep dive could.

January 23, 2015 11:55 am
Alfred Wertheimer/Courtesy of Sundance

There's an amazing moment in director Liz Garbus’s upcoming Netflix documentary What Happened, Miss Simone? where Al Schackman, Simone’s guitarist and friend of 42 years, remembers his shock at seeing her her walk up to Martin Luther King Jr. and declare, “I’m not nonviolent.” To which King replied, in Schackman’s telling, “That's all right, sister, you don't have to be."

What else was he supposed to say? By then, nobody could control Nina Simone—not even Nina Simone.

The astonishingly gifted and supernaturally cool singer grew up in an environment of crushing, undiscussed oppression. In Jim Crow North Carolina, racial discrimination was as inescapable as the weather, so what was there to say about it? Young Eunice Waymon—that was her given name—absorbed a lifetime’s worth of hurt even as a couple of nice white ladies from the other side of the tracks took an interest in her talent, subjecting her to eight-hour days of rigorous piano practice. Their dream, and hers, was that she would someday become the first black woman to play classical music at Carnegie Hall.

Instead, she was rejected by the Curtis Academy of Music in Philadelphia—because she was black, she later concluded—and wound up playing pop, jazz, R&B, and soul at a grimy bar in Atlantic City. She was so embarrassed at this fall from grace that she adopted the stage name Nina Simone so that her family, whom she was supporting with her late-night gigs, wouldn't discover her secret.

It was indisputably wrong for Curtis to reject her on the basis of her skin color, and churlish at best for her boss in Atlantic City to threaten to fire her if she didn't sing. But what a treasure the world would have missed out on if Simone had never discovered the wonder of her voice. It is among the most expressive of the 20th century, swollen with emotion, almost masculine in its depth, and versatile enough to range, as she put it, from raspy to rich and smooth as cocoa and milk.

Eventually, she fell in love with and married Andrew Stroud, an NYPD vice-squad detective. He was scary, but he also had a plan for Simone’s career, and for a while things were good. Stroud quit his job on the force and became Simone’s full-time manager. With her classical training, quasi-European sensibility, and savvy management, Simone enjoyed commercial and crossover success. One of the film's most surreal scenes shows her performing “I Loves You, Porgy" for Hugh Hefner and his gang on the set of his TV show, Playboy's Penthouse.

Simone undoubtedly enjoyed the trappings of success—the Mt. Vernon home she shared with Stroud and their daughter, Lisa, contained a cold storage room for her fur coats—but all was not well. She found the touring schedule Stroud imposed her exhausting, but her complaints fell on deaf ears or, worse, provoked him to berate her, beat her, even rape her, she said.

Moreover, she wasn’t fulfilled. Her dream was to be a classical musician, not “the high priestess of soul.” However staggering her accomplishments seem in retrospect, they didn't match up to her expectations for herself.

Everything changed in the summer and fall of 1963, as racist terrorists waged a campaign of violence that culminated with the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama, and the assassination of activist Medgar Evers in Jackson, Mississippi. Possessed by horror and rage, the swallowed indignities and alienation of her youth all coming back to her now, Simone wrote and performed—at Carnegie Hall, no less—a blistering new song with the radio-unfriendly title “Mississippi Goddamn.” That’s when she found her true calling.

It would be unfair both to Garbus and to Netflix subscribers who plan to stream this documentary to give away what happens next. Suffice it to say, Simone was both exhilarated and radicalized by the Civil Rights current that swept her right into the center of a war. That's how she saw it, certainly, and the film's most uncomfortable moment comes when, under the influence of her friend Stokely Carmichael, she asks an audience of festival-goers if they are ready to burn down buildings and even kill for the movement.

As she leaves her family behind to start a new life in Liberia and later in Europe, a happy ending is far from guaranteed, not least because her increasingly erratic, even violent behavior threatens to isolate her from the only people capable of helping her. It wasn’t until she reached rock bottom, the film suggests, that Schackman and another friend insisted on taking Simone to a doctor, who offered a diagnosis that gave her the gift of self-control at last, enabling her to enjoy a dignified final act.

Garbus’s documentary is a celebration of Simone’s legacy, but it also takes a reasonably unflinching approach to her faults. (Though her various exploits with firearms go unmentioned, she can be heard in voice over stating that she would have liked to take up arms against the white enemy, if only Stroud hadn’t stood in her way.) But the real joy here is the music, and the archival footage of Simone doing what she did best: singing, playing piano, performing.

In particular, the footage her 1976 comeback performance at the Montreux Jazz Festival captures both her terrifying eccentricity (“Sit down,” she commands a random audience member midway through her perfor...Stars”) and the sheer sublimity of her artistry (the song, once she gets going, is jaw-droppingly great).

You can watch this stuff on YouTube, but what a privilege to have it assembled in this stylish, soulful package. The risk of making a documentary of a towering artist is that, by explaining her, you only end up diminishing her. Not Nina Simone—not this time. In Liz Garbus’s telling, Simone’s talent and personality shine through, as gloriously singular, and uncontrollable, as ever.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #66 posted 01/24/15 8:13am

JoeBala

Tangerine Dream Founder Edgar Froese Dead at 70

Electronic music pioneer passes away unexpectedly after suffering pulmonary embolism

By Daniel Kreps | January 24, 2015

http://assets.rollingstone.com/assets/2015/article/tangerine-dream-edgar-froese-dead-20150124/182928/medium_rect/1422045575/720x405-493198017.jpg

Edgar Froese, founding member and keyboardist of the long-running band Tangerine Dream and a pioneer in the field of electronic music, passed away after suffering a pulmonary embolism on January 20th. Froese was 70.

"This is a message to you we are very sorry for… On January 20th, Tuesday afternoon, Edgar Froese suddenly and unexpectedly passed away from the effects of a pulmonary embolism in Vienna," the official Tangerine Dr...age posted Friday afternoon. "The sadness in our hearts is immensely. Edgar once said: 'There is no death, there is just a change of our cosmic address.' Edgar, this is a little comfort to us."

Formed in 1967 in West Berlin and born out of the same Krautrock scene that produced Kraftwerk, Cluster, Neu! and Can, Tangerine Dream's 1970 debut LP Electronic Meditation, which featured fellow electronic music giant Klaus Schulz, shared many of the same musical qualities as their German peers.

However, by the early-Seventies, Froese and his reformed Tangerine Dream soon journeyed toward more celestial, synthetic soundscapes as featured on albums like 1971's Alpha Centauri and 1973's Atem. After being among the first artists to sign with Virgin Records, Tangerine Dream released their seminal 1974 album Phaedra, where Froese experimented with sequencers and launched the Berlin School style of electronic music. The album is widely considered the band's masterpiece.

Despite a revolving door lineup that was constantly in flux, Froese remained the group's backbone and the lone member to perform with Tangerine Dream since their incarnation. Over the course of Tangerine Dream's nearly half-century lifetime, the band cultivated a cult fanbase thanks to a steady stream of studio albums and live recordings – which, all totaled, was more than 100 releases – as well Froese's own solo output. In later years, when the band added Froese's son Jerome to their roster, Tangerine Dream's style shifted yet again, aligning itself with a more ambient, new age sound, but the band's lasting impact on electronic music never diminished.

"So sad to hear of the sudden death of my friend Edgar Froese, founder of Tangerine Dream. Great memories," Brian May tweeted. The Queen guitarist performed with Tangerine Dream at a concert in 2011; that show was subsequently released as Starmus – Sonic Universe. Scissor Sisters' Jake Shears wrote, "RIP Edgar Froese of Tangerine Dream. Brought me endless inspiration and enjoyment. I dedicate my first film score to his memory."

In addition to their studio and live recordings, Tangerine Dream also became well-known among movie fans for their synth-driven, hypnotic film scores. In the Eighties alone, Froese's outfit contributed indispensable scores to films like director Michael Mann's Thief and The Keep, Risky Business, Near Dark and Miracle Mile. More recently, Tangerine Dream provided music to the video game Grand Theft Auto V.

"We started with Tangerine Dream. We've used them before in terms of licensed music – we're huge fans of Edgar Froese," Grand Theft Auto V soundtrack supervisor Ivan Pavlovich told Rolling Stone. "When we started to think about who would be the right composer for this game, he was the first name that came to mind."

Just prior to his death, Froese completed work on his 500-page autobiography Tangerine Dream - Force Majeure - 1967 - 2014. That book is available to pre-order now through Tangerine Dream's official site.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #67 posted 01/24/15 8:23am

JoeBala

Ronnie Milsap Reflects on Ray Charles, Elvis and Entering the Country Hall of Fame

With a massive 21-CD set saluting his RCA tenure, the seminal country-pop artist looks back on his against-all-odds career

By Stephen L. Betts | November 26, 2014

Ronnie Milsap

Ronnie Milsap didn't just dominate country music in the Seventies and Eighties, he helped redefine it. One of the genre's most successful crossover acts of all time, Milsap blended rock & roll, soul and pop, and took songs with those elements to the top of the country charts a staggering 40 times. His pop chart successes, with such tunes as "It Was Almost Like a Song," "Any Day Now" and the Top 5 smash "(There's) No Gettin' Over Me," have earned the singer six Grammy awards, and in 2014, he was officially inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.

The rewards for the Robbinsville, North Carolina, native have been many, but fans of the albums from Milsap's two-decade tenure with RCA Records are the ones being rewarded with an embarrassment of riches in The RCA Albums Collection. Released earlier this month, it's a staggering 21-CD set that includes every studio, live and Christmas album Milsap ever released for the label. Each album sleeve recreates the actual corresponding cover art and the box set also includes extensive notes about each LP.

An eight-time CMA award winner, Ronnie Milsap was the 1974 Male Vocalist of the Year and was named Entertainer of the Year three years later. But the bright lights of Nashville were far from the world of literal darkness into which Milsap was born in 1943. Educated at Morehead State School for the Blind in Raleigh, the youngster studied classical music and learned to play several instruments. It was a chance encounter with music legend Ray Charles, however, that changed the course of Milsap's life.

These days, Milsap, 71, continues to record and perform, as well as care for his wife, Joyce, who is battling leukemia. In this exclusive conversation with Rolling Stone Country, Milsap recalls the iconic performers who influenced him, the label executives who loved (and hated) his songs and what it means to finally be in the Hall of Fame.

How old were you when it dawned on you that you had a gift for music?
Goodness, I had to be about four years old when I realized I could hear a song on the radio and I could mimic that. I could sing it and I could remember the words. Then when I got to school in Raleigh at the Morehead School for the Blind, they taught me Braille at six, violin at seven and piano at eight. So I got 12 years of classical music training. When I graduated, I wanted to become a professional musician. My counselor said, "No, you can't do that. You'll wind up out on the street, you'll fail."

I left Raleigh and went to Atlanta to a Ray Charles concert. His pilot got me into his dressing room. I was sitting in there playing Ray's piano when he comes in. I said, "Mr. Ray Charles, you are truly the high priest. I've got all your records. I love all your music. I want to become a professional musician." He said, "Play me something." So I did and he said, "It sounds to me like your heart is really into music, and if that is the case then you ought to become a professional musician."

You ended up in Memphis, working a lot with producer Chips Moman at American Studios. What do you remember about being in the studio with Elvis?
I got to play on the session with Elvis on "Kentucky Rain." "More thunder on the piano, Milsap," he said. I got to learn what hanging out with Elvis was all about. His big New Year's Eve party, I got to sit and talk with him like I'm talking with you. It was just great. He was the voice of my generation. I had a million questions to ask him, but he wanted to talk about that session of "Kentucky Rain," so we talked about that. I asked him, "Would you like to get up and sing tonight at this New Year's Eve party?" He said, "No, I want to sit here with my friends and not have to worry about singing." I said, "Well, we know all your songs." He knew we did, but he didn't want to get up and sing and that was fine. It was his party.

Ronnie Milsap, Jennifer Nettles Ronnie Milsap performs with Jennifer Nettles at a Spotify event in Nashville in 2013. Rick Diamond/GettyImages

When you eventually made it to Nashville, success came relatively quickly. Did it ever feel like a struggle once you got here?
No! [Laughs]. I didn't have to sleep in a car, sleep in somebody's garage, I didn't have to do any of that. I was playing this cool gig on the roof of the King of the Road hotel. Playing there every night. And one day, [manager] Jack Johnson said, "Do you have next Monday off?" I said, "Yeah," and he said, "Let's go over to Jack Clement's studio. I want to do a session." He sponsored the first session I went into. Lloyd Green was on steel, Jimmy Capps was on electric guitar and Charlie McCoy was the leader of every session I did at RCA.

What kind of resistance did you encounter from the Nashville country music community because of your Memphis and R&B background?
[RCA executive] Jerry Bradley told Jack Johnson, "I know all about Ronnie Milsap. We take everybody down to Memphis to see him. He's a great rock & roll singer, he's a great R&B singer, but he's not a country singer." Jack played him that tape and Bradley said, "You know what? That son of a bitch is a country singer!" [Laughs]

Or, as it turns out, even disco. How did that come about?
When I first got my studio together, we had the console, we had everything. We stumbled into a song by Robert Byrne called "Get It Up." [Byrne also wrote songs recorded by Lorrie Morgan, Shenandoah and others.] I cut that song all night to get the take I was looking for. We sent it to Jerry Bradley and he hated it. [The B-side of Milsap's Top 10 country single "In No Time at All," "Get It Up" reached Number 43 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1979.]

Putting the albums collection together on CD and getting to revisit some of the older material, are you the kind of artist who constantly wants to get another chance to record something, to have another stab at a particular song?
Well, one time I was hearing "Happy, Happy Birthday, Baby" on the radio. [Record executive] Joe Galante called me for something. I said, "Joe, I need to get back in the studio. Because I'm hearing that song on the radio and I think I can mix it better than that." He said, "Goddammit, Milsap. The thing's already Top 20, leave us alone and let us do our jobs!"

Overall, what do you think about those records today?
That stuff was so much fun, and it reminded me of some of that stuff at Motown, where you really wanted some of those unusual sounds. You had to go create those. You can't sample them like you can do today. Once I had my own studio, I was anxious to find out what the limits were, how far I would chase a song to make it work in any format. Galante said, "That will increase your record sales," and he was right. Joe Galante took over at RCA in March 1983 and said the first single he was going to put out on Milsap was "Stranger in My House." Jerry Bradley said, "I think that's a mistake." [Laughs] Galante rolled with it and it was the biggest international record I ever had.

You also were one of the few country artists whose videos were being played on MTV in its earliest days. How did you feel about that?
June 6, 1984, I was out in Los Angeles to do a video on a song called ...s My Car." I went to Joe and I said, "Man, my uncle just passed away and I need to go back to North Carolina and be there for his funeral." Joe said, "Milsap, let me tell you something. I worked hard to get this group of people together." He was spending some ungodly amount of money to shoot the video. He said, "I'll never be able to get these people back together again. So you need to decide, are you going to stay here and do this video or are you going to go back to North Carolina for your uncle's funeral?" I found out about paying the price for being in music.

What are your thoughts on finally becoming a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame?
It's the highest award they can give you. That is a wonderful thing; I'm glad to be in that select group. I'm very thankful to be in there. What am I going to do now? [Laughs] I think the next thing I'm going to do is try to produce a couple of artists.

If you had to look back and recall one particular special memory from your career, what would it be?
I think it was the night in 1977 that I won CMA Entertainer of the Year. Joycie went up to the stage with me to accept that award and I got to say what an inspiration she had been to me. Then a couple of writers, R.C. Bannon and John Bettis, got together and wrote a song called "Only One Love in My Life." They wrote that song to relive what they had seen on the [awards] show. I put that record out, a Number One record. I think that's the instant that I knew everything I was doing was right.

.

Kanye West Reveals He Asked Paul McCartney About Sex in the Sixties

Superstar debuts Rihanna duet during surprise appearance at industry event

By Daniel Kreps | January 23, 2015

As we've come to expect from Kanye West, new music can arrive at any minute, like when the rapper dropped new track "Only One," featuring Paul McCartney, on New Year's Eve. At the iHeartMedia Music Summit in Burbank, California on Thursday, West premiered his rumored duet with Rihanna to an audience filled with music industry figures, Billboard reports.

The rapper was a surprise speaker at the conference and treated the audience to a 45-minute, stream-of-consciousness speech about his "responsibility to innovate." The rapper also chatted about his recent "Only One" collaboration with McCartney and his love of the Beatles' "Come Together." Amazingly, West revealed that he asked Macca, "What was pussy like in the Sixties?" before performing an a cappella rendition of "Only One."

At the 2013 Governors Bal...n New York, the rapper made controversial statements about how he didn't care if his abrasive Yeezus tracks were played on the radio. "When I listen to radio, that ain't what I want to be anymore," West said during his headlining set. West backtracked from those comments Thursday, telling the IHeartMedia crowd "I was joking!" He then admitted he wished "Black Skinhead" was a bigger hit than it was and sang a portion of the Yeezus cut.

However, West saved the best for last when he unveiled the Rihanna collaboration that Ty Dolla $ign hinted at e...this month (Ty Dolla $ign also said that he and McCartney were featured on the track). West played the as-yet-untitled song straight off his computer and, according to Billboard, the song "featured acoustic guitar and a big, soaring chorus and melody with a massive hook." Before West could announce when the track would be made available to radio, the rapper slammed his laptop shut and walked offstage.

.

[Edited 1/24/15 8:38am]

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #68 posted 01/24/15 8:29am

JoeBala

Ian Allen, Former Negativland Member, Dead at 56

The musician helped usher in the band's notion of "culture jamming" and was most active in the group during the Eighties

By Kory Grow | January 22, 2015

Negativland Former Member Ian Allen Has Died

Onetime Negativland member Ian Allen died on January 17th, a result of infections and complications following heart-valve replacement surgery at a hospital in Sanford, California. He was 56. The band reported the news on its Facebook page.

A member during their 1983 album A Big 10-8 Place, Allen was part of the group on the vanguard of "culture jamming," the wry use of existing recorded material and tape splicing, joining the eras between John Cage and contemporary hip-hop sampling. He was most active between 1981 and 1987, leaving before the group's critically acclaimed, confrontational mid-Eighties run on punk label SST. That run included their 1991 U2 EP, which kickstarted a legendary court case over unauthorized samples.

"His impact, inspiration and influence on the group is impossible to overestimate," the group wrote in its statement. "There would be no group as we know it today, no Over The Edge radio show [on KPFA], no 'culture jamming' and no A Big 10-8 Place LP without him."

The musician had struggled with serious health issues throughout his adult life, the band reported, which prompted his departure from Negativland. Nevertheless, he remained close to the group, attending every concert the band put on in the Bay Area.

"With Ian's blessings, we were thrilled to recently revive and rework an early Eighties unfinished tape loop based on his work, called 'Like Cattle Act,' and made it a part of our current live set," the band wrote. "He was part of creating Negativland's Points LP in 1981, introducing to the rest of us, on the track 'BABAC D'BABC...,' the idea of using tape splicing not just as a way to make loops and connect tracks but as a compositional tool unto itself. This revelation led to the exploration of this technique full-on in 1983's A Big 10-8 Place, and he played a major role in the creation of that record and its unique packaging."

The group also credited Allen's contribution to the concept of culture jamming, as well as introducing the band to radio DJ and Negativland member Don Joyce, inspiring their radio show. It said that the way he pushed the band members, and suggesting making their 1983 LP a concept album, set the standard for Negativland releases. He also had a more unordinary influence on the group: "Ian was obsessed with the number 17, which is why it appears in various ways on so many Negativland projects and texts in the Eighties and Nineties (please note the day he died!)," the band wrote.

"For those who knew him, he was a visionary, magical, impish, playful and eccentric thinker, a true genius who was light years ahead of all of us with his ideas about art, sound, society and technology," Negativland wrote. "He will be dearly missed."

Allen is survived by his brother, Pyke.

Additional reporting by Christopher R. Weingarten


.

Book Review: ‘John Lennon: The Collected Artwork’ – The Beatle as a Visual Artist

Cover John Lennon The Collected ArtworkIt might be hard for those who didn’t live through the arc of John Lennon’s life to understand the impact this one man had on people around the world. Coming out of the darkness surrounding the end of World War II and the paranoia of the 1950s, The Beatles were a breath of fresh air, a sound of hope and new possibilities. Today their songs from the early 1960s probably don’t sound overly rebellious, but in the context of the times they were new and liberating. Sure there was other pop music at the time, equally good if not better, but The Beatles managed to capture the imaginations of young people around the world like few others.

John Lennon: The Collected Artwork

However, it wasn’t just the music. Part of their appeal was the irreverent humour they projected in their public appearances. While they all shared this characteristic, Lennon’s humour and comments always seemed to have more of an edge to them than the others’. This came to a head with his off-the-cuff comment about how The Beatles were more popular than Jesus. While this caused the type of backlash you’d expect in certain quarters – burning of Beatles’ records, condemnation by fundamentalist Christians (sound familiar?), and warnings of “he better not show his face around here” – it did nothing to affect the group’s popularity around the world, proving Lennon right in his assessment.

John Lennon: The Collected Artwork

While many of today’s pop stars and celebrities have carefully cultivated images for public consumption, Lennon’s public persona was his true face. Mischievous, sometimes caustic, and often opinionated, what we saw in his appearances and heard in interviews was who he had always been. You only need to glance through a new book, John Lennon: The Collected Artwork, from Insight Editions, for proof. For the book contains artwork he created from his childhood onwards, and even in some of those earlier drawings we see manifestations of each of those characteristics.

John Lennon: The Collected Artwork

Before Lennon was a Beatle he had attended the Liverpool Art School. Although he was unable to complete his studies as his music career took off, he continued to sketch and draw for the rest of his life as time allowed. Glancing through the book the first impression is of relatively unsophisticated line drawings that appear to range from doodles to sketches or cartoons. But upon closer examination you realize the looseness of style was a deliberate choice. One need only look at some of the detailed backgrounds in the work to realize the time and effort which were put into each drawing.

John Lennon: The Collected Artwork

In his text for the book Scott Gutterman not only makes an effort to put the illustrations into a historical context in terms of Lennon’s life, but also points out how they reflect the way he looked at the world. While the first of the book’s seven sections offers paintings and sketches from Lennon’s early years, the chapters are not in chronological order. Instead, they have been arranged to give us a sense of who Lennon was as visual artist, and what he attempted to accomplish with his work.

John Lennon: The Collected Artwork

Most of the chapters’ titles are self-explanatory: “Self Reflection” (Chapter 2), “Observations” (Chapter 3) or “John With Yoko” (Chapter 6). But Chapter 4, “Japanese Translation Drawings”, is different. After the birth of their son Sean, Lennon and his wife Yoko Ono would make frequent trips to visit her family in Japan. Not only do the pictures in this section depict Lennon’s attempts to learn Japanese, they also reflect his study of sumi-e, a traditional Japanese style of pen and ink drawing.
John Lennon
The work in this section, and many of the pieces created in the years following, reflect this new influence. However, we also see why Lennon would have been attracted to the form. For while there are distinct stylistic differences: The lines are more definite, and these drawings don’t contain the same amount of detail as others, it’s still a natural extension of the line drawings Lennon had been doing previously. On a more personal level, the new style of drawing also reflects the changes he went through during his retirement from 1975 to 1980 when he took time off to raise his new son. There’s a stillness to them indicative of the changes he underwent transitioning from rock and roll star to househusband and father.

While Lennon will always be more remembered for his music than his output as a visual artist, the work contained in this book gives us a different view of him as a person and an artist. They may not be the most sophisticated pieces of art, but each of them reveals something of his nature, whether his sardonic view of middle class values in the work “Squares”, or his love for the simplicity of his domestic life through the depictions of his family in the last years of his life. Most impressive is how much he’s able to communicate with a few strokes of his pen. It’s as if he were able to channel his passion or emotions through this very narrow conduit and have them show up on the page where we can all appreciate them.

john lennon yoko

Of course there’s the question of whether we’d be seeing these works of art if he weren’t John Lennon. The answer is probably not. However, that does nothing to diminish this book’s importance as a record of Lennon and his life. Those who knew his work as a musician, or knew anything about him when he was alive, will be reminded of those things they admired in him. Whether the pieces will have the same appeal to others is uncertain, as in some ways you’d have to have experienced Lennon the person and musician to fully appreciate them.

John Lennon: The Collected Artwork is a beautifully packaged and presented book. The reproductions of his art are as good as those you’d see in any collection of this kind and the accompanying text does a good job of explaining their history and background. Lennon will always be best known as a musician, but this collection of his artwork provides a fascinating look into a different facet of an intelligent, opinionated and original mind. That alone makes it worth owning.

John Lennon: The Collected Artwork

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #69 posted 01/24/15 9:23am

JoeBala

Gina Rodriguez: History Making Golden Globe Award Winner

GinaRodriguezGG

Thank you God for Making me an artist.
Thank you to my mom and my dad for telling me to dream big and to never stop dreaming. To my siblings, to my sisters Evelise and Rebecca for being the biggest role models in my life. This award is so much more than myself. It represents a culture that wants to see themselves as heroes. My father used to tell me to say every morning, ‘Today’s going to be a great day. I can and I will.’ Well, Dad, today’s going to be a great day. I can and I did.” — Gina Rodriguez

With those words Gina Rodriguez made history yesterday at the Golden Globes as she accepted her Best Actress in a Television Series – Musical or Comedy award from the Hollywood Foreign Press for her role in Jane the Virgin; this is the first time in history that a CW show has every been nominated, (Jane the Virgin was nominated for Television Series – Musical or Comedy) let alone have the star win a the Golden Globe!

Prior to the Golden Globes, the CW had announced that Jane the Virgin would be returning for a second season, with their Golden Globe win they must have partying up a storm. However, the reaction to Gina’s win from Latinos in Hollywood is unprecedented and overwhelming. No other Latino/a winninga Golden Globe has had such an impact as that of Gina Rodriguez’s, because in addition to her win Gina takes every opportunity to always represent her under-represented Latino community. From press interviews to her acceptance speeches (yes we are confident there will be more), she is never shy about speaking on behalf of her community.

It is no wonder that twitter was a-blaze with love and congratulatory wishes from Latino celebrities, working actors and fans across the nation. To get a sense of the pride this community feels for Gina, we selected a few of the comments below:

Yes!! So proud of for winning Golden Globe for Best Actress!

Proud of my girl hereisgina for winning her award! Way to go…

Tears of pride & happiness! CONGRATS my dear for your Golden Globe!!! You are yet one more example of our blossoming community!

My 2nd favorite moment of tonight. (1st being ‘s win).

Comedian Ernie G. Gritzewsky put it best

Comedian Ernie G. Gritzewsky

Wow! Wow! & Wow!! I don’t think people realize how HUGE it is that a LATINA, from Chicago, a Boricua, BEAT OUT Lena Dunham (HBO’s Girls), Edie Falco (Sopranos, Nurse Jackie), Julia Louis Dreyfus (Seinfeld, Veep) & Taylor Schilling (Orange is the New Black) for BEST ACTRESS in a TV Series Comedy!! Way to go ‪#‎GinaRodriguez‬!! THIS is a HUGE Night for ALL LATINOS Everywhere!! And like Gina said in her acceptance speech, “This Award is so much more than myself, it represents a Culture that wants to see themselves as Heroes!” Gina Rodriguez YOU ARE OUR HERO, and we Love You!! Here is her acceptance speech, in case you missed it!! (It begins about 1:20 into this clip) ‪#‎JanetheVirgin‬

.

George Lopez Actor/Producer of the Sum of “Spare Parts”

SpareParts.5

By Bel Hernandez

SparePartsPoster

Spare Parts is one of three Latino teen champs movies to be released this year, and it is setting the bar pretty high for these types of feel-good movies. George Lopez not only stars as the mentor of the robotics team of four “dreamers”, he is also one of the producers. This marks the first film under Lopez’s film and TV deal with Pantelion Films (the venture between Lionsgate and Mexico media conglomerate Televisa) he recently signed.

Based on a true story from an article written by Joshua Davis for Wired Magzine in 2004, the film revolves around a group of high school students who compete in an underwater robotics competition, with their Home Deport supplies made robot, beating out the MIT team. The star robotics team is played by Carlos PenaVega (Big Time Rush) as Oscar Vasquez, Jose Julian (A Better Life) as Lorenzo Santillan, David Del Rio (Pitch Perfect) as Cristain Arcega and Oscar Gutierrez as Luis Aranda in what is his first foray into acting. He pulls it off beautifully bringing a quite charm to the role. However, all the performances are solid, with a touch of familiarity and a truthfulness.

SparePartsCurits.Tomei

Jaime Lee Curtis is delightful as the stern, push-over principal of Carl Hayden High School where the students came together under the watchful eye of their teacher Fredi Cameron (Lopez). Marisa Tomei plays the love, non-love interest to Lopez’s Cameron and between is just the right amount of chemistry to not pull focus on the triumphant story of the team of “dreamers” who beat the Goliath MIT college team.

With enough marketing, this is the kind of film is a shoe-in to fill the theater with the audiences cheering after the film, as they did at the advance screenings across the country. Names like George Lopez, Jamie Lee Curtis and Marisa Tomei should be enough to get seats filled in the theater, the supporting cast with fan favorites like Esai Morales as the overbearing and uncaring dad and Alexa PenaVega (nee Alexa Vega of the Spy Kids franchise) is sure to sweeten the deal.

So, go ahead – see the movie and allow yourself feel good, take the family and enjoy watching the little “dreamer” robotics team that could…and did.

Distributor: Pantelion /Lionsgate; Production Company: Lionsgate, Pantelion, Televisa Cine, Travieso Productions, Circle of Confusion, Brookwell McNamara Entertainment

Principal Cast: George Lopez, Jamie Lee Curtis, Carlos PenaVega, Esai Morales, Jose Julian, David Del Rio, Oscar Gutierrez, Alexa PenaVega, Alessandra Rosaldo and Marisa Tomei

Director: Sean McNamara
Producer: Benjamin Odell, George Lopez, Leslie Kolins Small, David Alpert, Rick Jacobs
Writers: Based on the Wired Magazine article “La Vida Robot” by Joshua Davis and Screenplay Elissa Matsueda

Executive Producers: Fernando Peìrez Gavilan, Paul Presburger, James McNamara, Sean Mcnamara and Lawrence Mattis

Runtime: 113 min
Genre: Drama, Comedy
U.S. Release: January 16, 2015
Rating: Rated PG-13 for some language and violence

FB: https://www.facebook.com/...PartsMovie

.

Alice Braga, Justina Machado & Hemky Madera to Star in USA Network’s “Queen of the South”

alice-braga

By Bel Hernandez

USA Network’s TV pilot Queen of the South based on Arturo Perez-Reverte’s novel by the same name, begins production this January 16th in Mexico. The pilot order has been given to Fox Television Studios from a script written by Joshua John Allen, Jeremy Fox and Aaron Harvey.

Teresa Mendoza

Teresa Mendoza

Alice Braga (Elysium) has been cast as the title character of Teresa Mendoza, a beautiful young Mexican woman who goes into hiding when her drug dealer boyfriend is murdered. She ends up in Spain where she eventually takes up the trade and the need to avenge her lover’s murder. She ultimately returns to Mexico and becomes the leader of a cartel. Kate Del Castillo played Mendoza in Telemundo’s Telenovela La Reina del Sur, which in 2011 beat all English-language TV network shows in the ratings.

Hemky Madera (Weeds), Adolfo Alvarez (El Cocodrillo) and Justina Machado (The Purge: Anarchy) have also been cast.

QueenActors

L-R) Hemky Madera, Justina Machado Adolfo Alvarez

In 2009 Perez-Reverte’s Queen of the South was about to be show as a feature film under the direction of Jonathan Jakubowicz (who most recently wrapped Hands of Stone which stars Edgar Ramirez & Robert De Niro). Attached to producer were Sandra Condito (Sequestro Express) and Elizabeth Avellan (Sin City: A Dame to Kill For) when due to threats by the Mexican cartel the project fell apart. This time around there seems to me no such threats to contend with.

NBC Universal is the producing entity with other producing entities listed as Origen Producciones Cinematograficas S.A. Robert Ogden Barum (Lawless) along with Megan Ellison (American Hustle) are executive producing and producing respectively. Pancho Mansfield had also been previously announced as executive producer.

Queen of the South is slated to premiere in 2016 on the USA Network.

.

Misty Boyce Talks New Album 'The Life,' Touring With Sara Bareilles, Moving to L.A. & More [EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW]

Jan 20, 2015 06:16 PM EST

Misty Boyce (Photo : Courtesy of Misty Boyce)

Experimental singer-songwriter Misty Boyce got her start backing artists such as Ingrid Michaelson, The Naked Brothers Band and most recently, Sara Bareilles, on stage but now it's Boyce's turn to be front and center. A formally trained and highly versatile artist in her own right, Boyce followed up her debut album with her second full-length, The Life. The album is out today on Bandcamp. Ahead of its release, we caught up with Boyce to talk about inspirations behind the album, her favorite memories on tour with Sara Bareilles, adjusting to life in L.A. after moving from New York, and more. Here's what she had to say:

MT: So you're a formally trained musician, and I read that you kind of had to unlearn what you had learned in school. What is your favorite musical theory rule to break when you write?

MB: Well I guess I learned in jazz school that 1-4-5 is boring. Going to the 1 chord, then the 4 chord, then the 5 chord, like a country song. Like the most simple, basic chord progression is a no-no because it's boring and I had to unlearn that because it's actually where all of the magic is.

MT: Yeah that's the bread and butter of pop music.

MB: I mean there's some pop songs that are 1 chord, some Madonna songs that never change and yet it's still super interesting the whole time, and that's a skill in and of itself.

MT: What's the idea behind that way of thinking in jazz?

MB: I guess the whole, well not the whole thinking behind jazz, but basically since Charlie Parker, he was the one that was like I'm going to take all these popular songs and add shifty chord changes to it and then play through it. So modern jazz comes a little from that mentality. You start there. You start by making it super complex, and I think even the best jazz musicians start to try to strip that complexity away at some point. It's like being a painter. The best painters learn how to paint in exasperating detail and then Picasso is like no, now I'm just going to be weird.

MT: So does jazz music still influence your sound or is that just kind of where you got your skill set and then moved on from that?

MB: I think that's where I got a skill set and then the skill set that I learned playing jazz, I don't use at all in writing songs anymore. I did when I first started. I would put in all these complex instrumental breaks and then thought that's silly, I just want to write a song.

MT: Does your songwriting process start with the lyrics or music first?

MB: I think definitely I'm a music-first person and then melody or the chords, or both come first and then I add lyrics later, or sometimes the magical thing happens where I'm just kind of singing random stuff and lyrics come out in the moment and that's really awesome, but that's rare. Only like a couple of songs have I had the lyrics for first and even then it's maybe like one line or something like that.

MT: Being from New Mexico and performing a lot in Los Angeles and New York, how have those music meccas influenced your sound? Do you feel like you connect more with the L.A. sound now that you live there?

MB: It's interesting in that music has become very homogenized in a way, but I do think there's still a bit of a difference between the New York sound and the L.A. sound, which I think is really great. When I made the decision to move here a couple years ago, I was gravitating toward artists coming out of here, like Dawes and like Blake Mills. I'm mostly interested in people playing the sh*t out of their instruments and writing really good songs. I'm not super into how everyone can make a record on their computer. That really bums me out as a musician. It shouldn't, but it does. It's all music, so that's great. I love finding those people who are still really taking being great at their instrument seriously and putting on a really good live show and making their words mean everything. Not to say that that's not happening in New York, but the style that I was looking for seemed to be happening more in LA.

http://cdn.ticketfly.com/i/00/00/11/67/65-atlg.png

MT: I know many musicians tour with other acts to pay the bills and see some cool places, but really, their heart is in their own projects. What does working with other acts mean to you?

MB: It kind of started out as another way to pay the bills, but I've played with a couple of musicians whose projects I felt like I cared about it as much as my own. I think Sara [Bareilles] was one of those. It doesn't happen very often. It is sort of like a day job in a way, but every now and then I get lucky and get to play with somebody that I also really care about and care about their music.

MT: So what were some highlights of that tour with Sara Bareilles? Was there anything that stuck out in particular to you?

MB: Yes, actually. Radio City was definitely one of the big ones. Just playing there and looking out to the sea of people and I've seen so many great shows there and that was a very big moment. But even bigger than that was when we played in Sara's hometown, close to Eureka, California, up near San Francisco. We played in a really small theater and she wanted to do "The Way You Look Tonight," and I played a jazz solo. I hadn't played jazz in forever, and then I was doing it on a stage with her, and I actually did really well. And I don't know, it was a magical moment. I felt like all the things that I had worked on had led me to this moment, and it was a really cool experience.

MT: Is there a song of Sara's that's your favorite to play or cover?

MB: I love playing "Eden" from her new record, [The Blessed Unrest], and "Satellite Call." Those songs I look forward to every night.

MT: What was your songwriting process like for the album? Were you writing on the road a lot or did you carve out some time just to focus on this project?

MB: I would say half and half. Some of my songs are older that I just had and hadn't recorded yet, and then the five or six are newer ones I wrote when I was home in L.A. in between tour cycles with Sara. During some points, I had two months at home and that's where most of those songs came from. I do write on the road, but I haven't ever written anything that's actually stuck.

MT: Was there anything particularly inspiring you at the time? Any themes or events in your life?

MB: Yeah, I had gone through a pretty big break-up. There was a wedding planned and I bailed. I moved to L.A. and I was feeling kind of like a gypsy and a little bit lost and a little bit sad, not a little bit, pretty sad. I was just feeling like I how one person says paper bags are better than plastic bags then I hear that actually paper bags take as much energy to make as plastic bags, so it's all going to sh*t anyway. So these broader, hopelessness feelings in life, I was feeling in my own small little universe, too. It's a lot about that kind of thing, but also trying to reach for happiness in whatever way I could. I don't want to stay in that space. I don't want to stay in that sadness. I want to practice looking outside of my own world and not to the shitty parts of it.

MT: Have you been able to spend much time in L.A. there since you actually moved?

MB: No I haven't.

MT: So it probably doesn't feel like home yet.

MB: Not really, I mean it was a year and a half of being here, but not here. My stuff was here, but I was never here. But I guess I've been here for 3 months now since the tour is over and I'm just now starting to feel like all right, cool, I got my place, and now I'm meeting more people and that's great and now I'd like to work a little bit more and just do stuff.

MT: So you just need to get out and get to know the area still?

MB: Yeah, totally. New York I knew where to go on any given night to see something great or hang out with friends, and I don't really have that here yet.

MT: You'll get there. How do you like it compared to New York?

MB: I feel, I love it here. It's just as expensive as New York, but what you get for your money is more and the pace is a little bit slower, which I really needed and that actually gives me room to be more creative. I felt like I was just burning at both ends all the time, working constantly and, granted I would like to be busier here, I would like to be working more, I'd like for it to be a little bit faster of a pace, but I feel like there's room to still be a person here.

MT: What are you envisioning for your live shows in support of the record?

MB: I feel like the simpler, the better. The record has a lot of layers on it, like all modern records do. There's a lot of keyboard parts, and there's a lot of guitar parts and tons of layered vocals. There's 108 tracks on every song. But when I go to see a live show what impacts me most is the simplicity of vocal words. I want to be able to understand the words and hear the vocals so there needs to be enough space to hear that. So I try, in a live show, to keep it simple enough that I can express what I want to express, but not so simple that it falls flat. It's getting that good balance of enough to keep it interesting, but not too much that it steals the show.

MT: I saw that you're touring in Germany. I was wondering, did you just find an unexpected fan base there?

MB: There's an interesting pipeline that happened between Germany and Brooklyn. Through this booking agent named Olaf Beise, he found an artist named Steve Waitt and more and more Brooklyn artists started coming over to Germany through him. He has connections in the northwest part of Germany, and there are smallish clubs that pay a guarantee to Americans, which was like the dream. I just want to tour and break even, and that's like a godsend. And you can go through him. I've been able to go tour Germany and play to really, kind, welcoming, responsive audiences. One time I walked away making 75 bucks, which is unheard of, but mostly I break even. It's just, I have grown a fan base through doing it, but being an American, Germans will just come to the show because you're from L.A. or New York, so you kind of don't have to have a name there like you do in the states.

MT: That's interesting.

MB: It was really, so magical. I felt like a rock star over there.

MT: What's next with this album? Are you going to be pushing that a while or will you start making new music?

MB: I guess both. I'm still looking to get on a tour with another artist, to open for them because I don't really have enough of a fan base across the states to justify going on tour by myself again. I did that in the spring, and it was really fun, but I had to play a lot of sh*tty clubs in between to make it work, so I'm looking for the smart next step to support the record while I'm writing a lot and waiting to see where my next step should be.

MT: Do you have a backing band or is it just you on stage for these shows?

MB: I have a band when I'm in L.A. or New York, but when I'm touring, sometimes I'm allowed to bring my boyfriend and maybe another person with me, but usually it's just by myself.

MT: Do you play keys or guitar, or both?

MB: I've been doing mostly guitar these days, but if there's a piano there I'll definitely play the piano. It's easier to travel with a guitar, and a lot of these new songs were written on guitar.

MT: Going back to the record. You raised money for the album on Pledge Music. I always find it interesting to think of who buys these exclusives. Did you ever end up going to coffee, record shopping, sending a birthday phone call, playing on someone's record or performing at their house? If so, what was that experience like with your fans?

MB: I did, but the fans that bought those were people that I already knew. So it was sort of just getting together with people I was already friends with.

MT: I saw that a percentage of your post-goal money was going to National Eating Disorders Association. Why is that cause close to you?

MB: I had an eating disorder and it was one of the most important life-changing things in my life to go to therapy and overcome it. I think, one of the things that's shaped me the most, and working with Pledge requires that you give to a charity, which I think is so great, and the one that felt the most honest and closest to my own life was that.

For more information on Misty Boyce, head over to her official website or follow her on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube. If you're near Chicago, you can also check her out live at Uncommon Ground on Thursday night (Jan. 22) or the night before (Jan. 21) in Evanston at Levere Memorial Temple.

Listen to her full album here: https://soundcloud.com/mistyboyce

.

Kendrick Lamar's New Album Might Drop Next Week

Jan 22, 2015 10:59 AM EST

Kendrick Lamar (Photo : Mike Coppola/Getty Images)

From Radiohead to Beyoncé to D'Angelo to Björk, we are truly in the era of the surprise album release, and yesterday (Jan. 21), it was revealed that Kendrick Lamar might be joining this very prestigious list. According to a leaked photograph posted by Section Eighty, Kendrick Lamar's long-awaited follow-up to his 2012 breakthrough good kid, m.A.A.d city is set to drop this Tuesday, Jan. 27. The photo shows a list of albums scheduled to be released by Wal-Mart this month, which at the very bottom reads "Kendrick Lamar Jan. 27."

As exciting as this news may be, make sure to take it with a grain of salt. Section Eighty doesn't specify where these photographs came from, and as Stereogum points out, surprise releases such as this tend to start off as digital releases before their physical copies hit stores, and to be perfectly honest, Kendrick Lamar doesn't seem like the type of artist to release his album exclusively through Wal-Mart. However, Lamar is performing at some big festivals this year, including Bonnaroo, so perhaps he does have something unexpected like this planned.

Whenever this album does actually drop (it hasn't even been given a title or album cover yet), it will be Lamar's third studio album overall (second on Interscope/Aftermath), following his 2011 debut Section.80 and his classic 2012 breakthrough good kid, m.A.A.d city. Only one single, "i," has been released from the album so far, and though Lamar performed an untitled new song on The Colbert Report back in December, he admitted to Billboard that it would likely not be included on the album.

Kendrick Lamar's "i" was chosen by the Music Times staff as one of the 25 best songs of 2014. You can check out that complete list right here.

You can check out the music video for "i" right here:

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #70 posted 01/24/15 9:30am

JoeBala

Film & Broadway Stage Performer Navarre Matlovsky, dies at 63

NavarreMatlovsky

Survivors include his wife of 33 years, actress/author Miluka Rivera, his son Elan L. Matlovsky, his daughter Miluette Nalin Matlovsky

Navarre Matlovsky, who performed on the Tony awarded Broadway musical Barnum and the classic film Pete’s Dragon, passed away on December 12, of a ischemic stroke at the Huntington Memorial Hospital in Pasadena, CA. He was 63.

Matlovsky credits also include such films as Treasure of Matacumbe (1976) with Robert Foxworth and Joan Hackett and Movie Movie ( 1978).

On television he guest starred on scores of shows like Julie the Julie Andrews show directed by Blake Edwards and Webster. He also performed on the 42nd Academy Awards Show during the Rain Drops Keep Falling on my Head dance number from the awarded “Butch Cassidy and Sundance Kid” film and at the Kennedy Center’s Honors honoring Cary Grant, with the cast of Barnum and along aside Audrey Hepburn and Mikhail Baryshnikov.

Besides his role in Barnum, later on he was the assistant to the director/choreographer of the Barnum National Tours. He also performed on Broadway in The King of Hearts and on musical shows with Debbie Reynolds, Glenn Close, Jim Dale, Lucy Arnaz, Tony Orlando, Agnes Moorehead, among others.

NavarreMiluka

Navarre Matlovsky & wife, actress/author Miluka Rivera

This long time member of SAG-AFTRA, AEA and AGVA, was involved in Screen Actors Guild’s (SAG) activities along with his wife Miluka Rivera, a lauded actress-activist, author. He was also a photojournalist and Hollywood Correspondent for Puerto Rico, Miami and New York. His photograph of actor Ricardo Montalbán made history by being the first “Screen Actor” National Magazine cover featuring a Latino. The inside of the 1993 SAG issue had photos featuring 6 Latinos and interviews by Miluka Rivera also a former National Board member of SAG.The same year Montalbán became the first Latino to received a “Lifetime Achievement” by SAG.

Navarre was a long time ballroom dance professor at Pasadena City College. In addition he was the co-owner and dance instructor with his wife and dance partner Miluka of the Kumaras Center for the Arts, Dance and Etiquette in Burbank, CA for over 10 years.

He began his classical dancing training at the age of 14. He toured worldwide as a dancer with the legendary Burch Mann’s “American Folk Ballet.

Navarre, who was a native of Los Angeles, CA, was a descendant from the Shotwell aristocratic lineage, documented in the Ambrose M. Shotwell book Annals or Our Colonial Ancestors (1895).

A private Memorial service for Matlovsky will take place during the month of January 24. Donations could be send to the Raul Julia’s Hunger Project.

Survivors include his wife of 33 years, Miluka Rivera, his son Elan L. Matlovsky, his daughter Miluette Nalin Matlovsky an actress and stunt-artist, his sister actress/dancer and professor Noelle North Norris, and 2 nephews.

.

By Becca Longmire On January 22, 2015

LL Cool J Confirmed To Host 57th Annual Grammy Awards

Ceremony will take place on February 8th

It's hard to believe that it's already been a YEAR since last year's Grammys, but it's nearly time for the 57th Annual awards ceremony. And with just a couple of weeks to go, it's now been confirmed that LL Cool J will be presenting the show, once again.

The two time Grammy Award winner will be hosting the celeb-filled ceremony for the fourth consecutive year on February 8 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles - it will be shown live on the CBS Television Network between 8.30pm and 11pm ET/delayed PT.

"As both a GRAMMY-winning recording artist and an accomplished actor, LL Cool J's wide range of talent, dynamic personality and charismatic energy make him the perfect choice to host the GRAMMY Awards," Recording Academy President/CEO Neil Portnow said of this year's host. "His unique expertise allows him to set the right tone for the show and connect with everyone - from his musical peers to fans at home. We are honored to have him back."

LL Cool J is returning to host this year's Grammys (WENN)

And LL Cool J is equally as happy to be returning to that stage! "I'm thrilled to again be part of Music's Biggest Night," he said of the honour. "The performances and moments you see on the GRAMMY stage are nothing less than amazing throughout the years and this year's show is shaping up to be one you will never forget."

This year's Grammys is set to be bigger than ever, with performers that have already been announced including AC/DC, Eric Church, Common, Ariana Grande, Miranda Lambert, John Legend, Madonna, Ed Sheeran, Sam Smith, Usher AND Pharrell Williams. Jeez that's quite the list! It's also thought that Rihanna may be making the...e comeback at this year's awards show, with her drummer, Aaron Drape, allegedly revealing the news via an Instagram Q & A. Now THAT would be one helluva line-up!

The 57th Annual Grammys will be taking place on February 8th (Twitter)

He told one follower: “We have some shows coming up,” and when they asked if they’ll be performing at the Grammys, he simply replied: “Yup yup,” according to the Idolator. Of course, this is yet to be officially confirmed by RiRi and the Grammys themselves but being the Rihanna fans that we are, we’re going to believe it’s true!

She's also getting ready to release her brand new album sometime soon - even more proof that the rumours are true! Time will tell, we guess...

Will Rihanna be the surprise performer at this year's bash? (Splash News)

Make sure you stick with EntertainmentWise for all the gossip from the year's Grammy Awards. You can check out all the nominations here.

.

Adrian Grenier Says ‘Entourage’ Movie Sequel Is Sure Bet (Exclusive Video)

Entourage star Adrian Grenier appears on "Larry King Now" (Clay Pritchard)

Clay Pritchard/Larry King Now

Actor tells Larry King he’s seen the rough cut: “The risks are larger and the reward is even greater”

Adrian Grenier has so much faith in the upcoming “Entourage” movie, he’s betting the big-screen adaptation of the HBO series has already earned a sequel.

Grenier spoke to Larry King about the film, due for release June 5, in an interview filmed for the Feb. 9 episode of “Larry King Now.” The actor made the appearance to promote documentary “52: The Search for the Loneliest Whale in the World,” for which he served as producer.

King pressed for details on the Doug Ellin-directed film.

“I don’t want to be a spoiler,” Grenier said, declining to share plot details.

King then asked if a second film was in the cards.

“If I was a betting man, I’d say yes. I’d put it all down,” Grenier said.

“I’ve seen a rough cut, and I’ve got to say, you’re going to like it,” he continued. “We did recognize that we had to step it up. It’s a bigger format. We wanted to expand the scope. Vince, my character, decides he wants to step it up and do something he’s never done before. The risks are larger and the reward is even greater.”

“Entourage” follows a fictional movie star Vincent Chase and the childhood friends in his employ as they navigate the earthly pleasures and stresses of show business.

The film reunites Grenier, Kevin Connelly, Kevin Dillon, Jerry Ferrera and Jeremy Piven, who has picked up numerous awards for playing high-strung talent agent Ari Gold.

Executive produced by Mark Wahlberg, “Entourage” hits theaters June 5. “Larry King Now” streams Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 11 a.m. PT / 2 p.m. ET on Hulu and Ora.tv.

.

‘True Blood’ Alum Rutina Wesley to Sink Her Teeth Into ‘Hannibal’ Role

HBO's "True Blood" Panel - Comic-Con International 2014

Getty Images

Actress will play a blind woman who becomes Francis Dolarhyde’s last best chance at humanity on NBC drama

Rutina Wesley is moving on from the vampires of “True Blood” to another creature with a taste for gore.

Wesley, who played Tara Thornton on HBO’s vampy drama “True Blood,” has been tapped for NBC’s cannibal drama “Hannibal,” a spokeswoman for the network told TheWrap on Friday.

The “True Blood” alum will join the show for its third season, playing Reba McClane, a blind woman who catches the Red Dragon’s eye, essentially the bride to be of the monster and Francis Dolarhyde’s (Richard Armitage) last best chance at humanity.

Wesley follows in the footsteps of Emily Watson, who played the character in the 2002 film “Red Dragon,” and Joan Allen, who portrayed McClane in the 1986 offering “Manhunter.”

.

Netflix Movie List February 2015: ‘House Of Cards,’ ‘White Bird In A Blizzard,’ ‘Earth To Echo’ Will Be Available To Stream; See All Movies And Series!

white bird
Shailene Woodley's film "White Bird in a Blizzard" will be making it's way to Netflix in February. See the full list of release here! Magnolia Pictures

Now that we are in the heart of the winter there is not much left to do, it’s freezing, it’s windy and the only safe haven is a warm bed. The joy of Christmas has passed, New Year’s seems like last year, and Netflix is your only friend. Don't be ashamed, we understand, and so does the video streaming service because Netflix has released the list of new movies and TV shows coming to the website in February, and it’s as if Valentine’s Day came early! While most users are surely but slowly counting down the days until the Season 3 premiere of “House of Cards,” which will come later in the month on the 27th, there is a ton of new stuff to binge watch till then.

While “House of Cards” is obviously the big fish, Netflix is really stepping up its movie release game in February and users should make the most of it. “Young Ones,” starring Michael Shannon, Nicholas Hoult, and Elle Fanning is an absolute must watch, directed by Jake Paltrow the film is set in the future and while a bit touch and go in terms of narrative, it is worth it for the visuals. Similar to “Young Ones” breathtaking stills and inventive scenes is “White Bird in a Blizzard,” starring Eva Green and Shailene Woodley. The tale is a coming of age story with a shocking twist, co-starring Christopher Meloni this film is emotional and oddly stirring, in a way you did not initially see coming. Last but certainly not least on my must watch list for the month of February is “The Overnighters.” The documentary film directed Jesse Moss is one of a kind, and tells the story of a pastor who sparks controversy in North Dakota by reaching out to the homeless. If these three don’t immediately make you wish it were February 1st, then maybe the rest of the Netflix streaming list will! Check out the full list of movies and TV shows coming to Netflix in February 2015.

February 1:

“We’re No Angels” (1955)

“Houseboat” (1958)

“M.A.S.H.” Seasons 1-5 (TV) (1972-1977)

“Hot Pursuit” (1987)

“King Arthur” (2004)

“Dark Ride” (2006)

“The Brother’s Bloom” (2008)

“Departures” Seasons 1-2 (TV) (2008-2009)

“Into the Blue 2: The Reef” (2009)

“Spartacus” Complete Series (TV) (2010-2013)

“Magic City” Seasons 1-2 (TV) (2012-2013)

“Gimme Shelter” (2013)

“Joe” (2013)

“Now: In the Wings on a World Stage” (2014)

“We Could Be King” (2014)

“Zapped” (2014)

February 5:

“The Little Rascals Save the Day” (2014)

February 6:

“Danger 5” Complete Series (TV) (2011-2012)

February 7:

“Dead Snow: Red vs. Dead” (2014)

“Elsa and Fred” (2014)

February 8:

“Blood Ties” (2013)

“Catch Hell” (2014)

February 10:

“Dwight Howard: In the Moment” (2014)

February 11:

“Mr. Peabody and Sherman” (2014)

February 12:

“Scary Movie 5” (2013)

“The Two Faces of January” (2014)

“Young Ones” (2014)

February 16:

“Save the Date” (2012)

February 17:

“The Overnighters” (2014)

February 18:

“In Secret” (2013)

“Earth to Echo” (2014)

“The Fluffy Movie” (2014)

February 19:

“White Bird in a Blizzard” (2014)

February 20:

“Richie Rich” Season 1 (TV) (2015)

February 21:

“Robocop” (2014)

February 24:

“Hawaii Five-O” Seasons 1-4 (TV) (2010-2014)

“1’000 Times Goodnight” (2013)

February 26:

“Russell Brand: Messiah Complex” (2013)

“Open Windows” (2014)

February 27:

“House of Cards” Season 3 (2015)

.

Cinema Tropical Announces Winner of Best Latin American Film

ElLugardelHijo.Milatant

Las Marthas and Purgatorio Tied for Best U.S. Latino Film

New York, NY, — The Uruguayan film The Militant by Manuel Nieto Zas takes the top award for Best Latin American Film of the Year at the 5th Annual Cinema Tropical Awards presented by the non-profit media arts organization Cinema Tropical earlier today.

Other films noteworthy awards went to the Mexican film Coffee (Chants of Smoke) by Hatuey Viveros was named Best Latin American Documentary Film of the Year, while the Chilean film The Quispe Girls by Sebastián Sepúlveda was awarded with the prize for Best First Film. For the second time, the Cinema Tropical Awards presented a prize for Best U.S. Latino Film Year and the jury decided to give the award to two films: Las Marthas by Cristina Ibarra, and Purgatorio: A Journey into the Heart of the Border by Rodrigo Reyes.

Argentinean filmmaker Gustavo Fontán received the award for Best Director of a Fiction Film for The Face, while filmmakers Camila José Donoso and Nicolas Videlafrom Chile, were the winner of the award for Best Director of a Documentary Film for Naomi Campbel.

Cinema Tropical also announced that New York audiences will have the chance to see the award-winning films as they will be showcased as part of the Cinema Tropical Festival to take place on February 6-8, 2015 at the Museum of the Moving Image.

The winners of this year’s Cinema Tropical Awards were selected by a jury panel composed by Daniela Alatorre, producer, Morelia Film Festival; Gustavo Beck, filmmaker and film programmer; Marcela Goglio, film programmer; Lucila Moctezuma, Executive Producing Director UnionDocs; Tamir Muhammad, Director Content and Artists Development for Time Warner; Rachael Rakes, film programmer; José Rodriguez, Manager, Documentary Programming, Tribeca Film Institute; Bernardo Ruiz, filmmaker; and Naief Yehya, film and culture critic, writer.

The Cinema Tropical AWARDS were created in 2010 to honor excellence in Latin American filmmaking, and it is the only international award entirely dedicated to honoring the artistry of recent Latin American cinema.

.

Lady Gaga & Adele Spark Collaboration Rumours With Fun Selfie

By Shaun Kitchener On January 22, 2015

The pair had a 'bro-down' which we can only hope involved hitmaking

They’re both known to be working on new albums, and they’re both in proud possession of almighty fan bases. So we can only imagine how well-received a collaboration would be between Adele and Lady Gaga.

The pair were hanging out last night (January 25); just hours after the ‘ARTPOP’ star had seemingly been working on music with long-time producer RedOne. Posting a smiley snap to her Instagram page of herself with the record-shattering ‘Rolling In The Deep’ singer, Gaga wrote: "Nothing like a Wednesday night bro-down with the beautiful Adele”.

Oh to have been a fly on the wall…

(Photo: Instagram/Lady Gaga)

Gaga has been keeping fans in-the-loop with her sessions for her next album; her fourth pop release but technically her fifth studio effort following her jazz hook-up with Tony Bennett on Cheek To Cheek last year. RedOne was the maestro behind her breakout hits including ‘Poker Face’, ‘Just Dance’ and ‘Bad Romance’, but hasn’t been so much involved in recent years. Thankfully, they seem to be working together again. Now if we could just add a pinch of Ms Atkins to the mix...

(Photo: Instagram/Lady Gaga)

As for Adele, she was thought to be releasing her third album in 2014, but it never came to fruition - and now rumour suggest we'll be lucky to even get in 2015. A source told Music Business Worldwide that “logically, there is now almost no chance” of us seeing anything from her this side of summer, and it’s no certainty it’ll even hit shelves before Christmas. “The album will be released when it’s ready – (we) hope that will be at some stage in 2015. That’s all I can tell you right now.” Ryan Tedder, Dianne Warren and James Ford have all thought to have been involved thus far.

In the meantime, she could be recording the theme to the new James Bond movie, after scooping awards and plaudits for the title song to 'Skyfall'. A source for MGM told the Mirror that she's only just put herself in the running, saying: “She hadn’t been in contact with the film bosses for a few weeks, but suddenly she said​ she had great plans for the theme, so they flew her over... They’ll still have to decide whether they want the tune once it’s recorded."

In the meantime, let's have an Adele & Gaga banger please...

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #71 posted 01/24/15 9:48am

JoeBala

Katy Perry 'Donates $5k To TLC's Kickstarter Campaign'

The girlband are to release their final album

The Kickstarter campaign to help the two surviving members of TLC make their final album has soared above and beyond its target - and it seems Katy Perry may have had a little something to do with it.

44-year-old T-Boz and 43-year-old Chilli were aiming to raise $150,000 for the final chapter of the TLC story and, according to TMZ, Perry proved herself to be a huge fan by throwing $5,000 in the pot. And, looking at the Rewards offered to backers who pledge certain amounts, she is now basically entitled to a slumber party with a band member of her choice - at which they can “put on our jammies, order some late night snacks, and have some TLCPillowTalk. Mom and Dad won’t be there, so there’s no need to keep the volume down.” Maybe Katy had better wait until after her big Super Bowl gig before claiming her reward, though...

(Photo: WENN)

Explaining why they had taken the crowd funding route instead of going via major labels, the duo had said: "While major labels offer artists multimillion dollar recording and marketing budgets, they don't often give artists complete control of their own music. It is ESSENTIAL that we create our final album completely on our own terms, without any restrictions, with YOU.

"Every penny we raise during this campaign will go towards MAKING this final album together with you! The initial goal of $150,000 will go towards a writing session in the studio with a producer and engineer. The money beyond that will go to booking music producers, writing sessions, mixing sessions, recording sessions, and SO much more. We want to work with the best in the business, so the more we raise means access to the best.”

(Photo: Kickstarter/TLC)

And now, it seems, the best might just be in reach. Thanks to widespread media coverage, fan attention and a little help from the ‘Roar’ star, at time of writing the group have secured 1,505 backers and a $161,000 total, with 28 days still to go.

The group’s third member, Lisa ‘Left-Eye’ Lopes, passed away in 2002; and the band have said in a special Kickstarter update: "Some fans have been asking how we can make a final album without Lisa, and we wanted to share our thoughts with you all, since you have been so kind and supportive on day one. We feel that this final album will be the best way to keep Lisa's memory alive. We can never replace Lisa, and we are constantly thinking of ways to incorporate her into this album. How could we not?! She's a part of TLC.

"Lisa was our sister, and we know she would have loved us doing something so out of the box like this. That's what TLC has always been about!” Check out the Kickstarter for yourself here.

.

'OMG': Game Of Thrones' Sophie Turner Lands Jean Grey Role In X-Men Apocalypse

By Adam Miller On January 23, 2015

X-Men Apocalypse is expected to hit cinemas May, 2016

Director Bryan Singer just shared some very exciting news about X-Men: Apocalypse which is seet to start shooting later this year, revealing the three new actors who will be playing Jean Grey, Cyclops and Storm in Apocalypse, via his Twitter page.

Singer, whose future as director ... last year, claims which have now been dropped, looks like he's concentrating on the next installment of the hugely successful franchise and following news Channing Tatum will proba...as Gambit, we've got some other new faces in the mutan world.

The most recognisable name on the list, if you’re a Game Of Thrones fan at least, is Sophie Turner or Sansa Sark to those of you more familiar with her GoT on screen character. She replaces Famke Janssen, who played the telepathic mutant Jean Grey in all three of the original X-Men pictures as well as returning for a brief role in 2014’s X-Men Days of Future Past; the prequel to the prequel First Class. Reacting to the news on Twitter Sophie, 18, seemed pretty excited about joining the cast, writing: 'OMG' on Twitter after re-tweeting Singer's initial announcement.

Sophie Turner will play Jean Grey in X-Men: Apocolypse (Daniel Deme/WENN)

She’ll be joined by Tye Sheridan who stars as a young Cyclops, not to be mistaken with the young Cyclops who appeared in X-Men Origins: Wolverine. The events of Wolverine ended up being completely wiped out as a result of last year’s of Future Past. So it’s a fresh start and a fresh Cyclops! Sheridan is best known for his roles in the Terrence Malick head-scratching arthouse picture Tree of Life and Joe where he starred along Nicholas Cage. Cyclops was originally played by James Marsden in X-Men’s one through to three but was killed off in 2006’s The Last Stand.

Turner seems pretty excited about joining the cast (Twitter/SophieTurner)

And finally Singer’s latest addition to the X-Men class of 2016 is Alexandra Shipp whose name may be familiar from last year’s Aaliyah biopic for Lifetime. The 23-year-old starred as the RnB icon in last year’s dire TV movie but will surely find her big break in next year’s Apocalypse where she’ll be taking over Hallee Berry’s role as a young Storm.

Already announced as a newbie to the franchise is Inside Llewellyn Davis actor Oscaar Isaac, who is currently filming the upcoming Star Wars: Episode VII. He’ll be starring as Apocalypse, who as you can probably guess has one thing on his mind. Basically he’s not a nice guy and will be the latest in a series of endless obstacles faced by Charles Xavier’s school of mutants.

James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender and Jennifer Lawrence will all be reprising their roles as Xavier, Magneto and Mystique in Apocalypse, which is though to be the closing chapter in the First Class trilogy. There’s also rumours that we’ll get a first look at Channing Tatum’s Gambit and Ryan Reynolds’ Deadpool who have both been given their own stand alone movies, although their appearence in Apocalypse is currently just speculation which we are otherwise more than happy to protest for.

With more announcements expected in the coming weeks all we can say for now is watch this space…

2014’s X-Men: Days of Future Past became the highest grossing picture in the franchise’s history so far taking $748 million from a $200 million worldwide and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Visual Effects.

X-Men: Apocalypse is currently expected to hit cinemas on May 27, 2016.

.

Fame Game

01.24.15

John Travolta, Just As Fever Struck—Celebrities on The Brink of Fame

A Paris exhibition features photographs of Travolta, Meryl Streep, Sigourney Weaver, Robert De Niro, and others—just before their careers went stellar.

Thanks to the accessibility of photography, “everybody is a celebrity,” stated Susan Sontag in her essay America, Seen Through Photographs, Darkly. “No moment is more important than any other moment; no person is more interesting than any other person.”

In the era of the selfie, this seems irrefutable: everyone simply expects that they, and their reality, are worth looking at. And yet? Little powers our curiosity quite like actual celebrity imagery. The pull of the famous person is still, somehow, unrivalled.

The photography exhibition Déjà Stars (January 23 to March 23)—being at the Crous Cultural Center in Paris’s Saint-Germain Des Prés neighborhood—spotlights the attraction of celebrity. With a greatest hits of recognizable personae, all captured in the mid- to late-20th century by one unfamiliar French photographer Marcel Thomas, it revisits and reinforces the mythology of iconic performers.

The name of the exhibition, Déjà Stars (Already Stars), tries to underline the prescience of Thomas’s eye: he photographed people on the brink of stardom, their charisma already manifest, but they were not as reputed as they were to be.

If anyone took 30,000-odd portraits of performers, it’s inevitable that some would make it big; still, the expo does genuinely provide a glimpse of “before.” The images allow us not only to peek at figures prior to becoming capital-C Celebrities, but also to a culture in which celebrity had a different import and allure.

GALLERY: Stars Before The...s (PHOTOS)

150123-moroz-stars-teaseMarcel Thomas

There’s Harrison Ford, in round ‘80s-era glasses. John Travolta in a turtleneck sweater and his real head of hair. There are three shots of Dustin Hoffman, one in which he’s wearing baseball cap that says “SALESMAN” in all caps. A young and goateed Robert De Niro. A youthful Jean Seberg in a beret, as gamine as anyone could be.

Audrey Hepburn is effortlessly chic, topped with a fur cap, breezing along some boulevard. Sylvester Stallone is pimped out in an enormous fur jacket. Jack Nicholson, in a white suit, smoking a cigarette, is seen loping through the street with swagger. David Bowie sports a trench coat. Mickey Rourke is in a zipped-up leather jacket, long before he himself looked wholly made out of cowhide.

There are three shots of Marlon Brando, one of which sees him bleached blond. A frosted-looking Kim Basinger has big hair. A fresh-faced Sigourney Weaver wears an enormous belt and a secretary blouse. Meryl Streep, squinting in the sun, is positioned in front of the Bulgari boutique.

Gregory Peck, debonair in gray suit, is about to step into a car. There are multiple shots dedicated to Elvis in uniform. A snapshot of young Woody Allen features a lady taller than he on his arm.

“Mickey Rourke is in a zipped-up leather jacket, long before he himself looked wholly made out of cowhide.”

Americans and international stars are only one part of the exhibition—there are plenty of French stars, whose celebrity never translated across the Atlantic, or elsewhere. (Singer Johnny Hallyday is France’s token long-term washed-up celebrity; here, he’s a young gun in a bathrobe.) Nonetheless, people would readily recognize a baby-faced Serge Gainsbourg, or a bearded Gérard Depardieu many decades before he fled to Russia for fiscal refuge, or the slightly smug mug of Jean-Paul Belmondo.

Marcel Thomas—nicknamed “le photographe à la moustache” by Simone Signoret, aka the mustachioed photographer—remains unknown to the general public, but is deemed “the first paparazzo” in this expo.

Born in 1909 in the Lorraine region, Thomas initially toiled as a steelworker. After WWII, he moved to Paris, where he worked in a confection shop. He began photographing celebrities in 1947, waiting patiently at the exits of theaters, music halls, swanky restaurants, and other such soirée spots.

He sought out images, but with politesse: he asked permission, and embodied a paparazzo only in the sense of explicitly seeking celebrity subjects with spontaneity and immediacy.

A journalist friend initially tipped him off to celebrity whereabouts, and eventually Thomas became such a regular presence at high-end hotels that he befriended its porters and valets, who would give him key information. All of his photographs were taken in Paris; he didn’t travel.

In 1983, Thomas met Gérard Gagnepain, an editor and graphic designer. They both loved the opera singer Maria Callas and flamenco dancer Carmen Amaya—both were featured in Thomas’s portfolio, notably a 1955 shot of Callas outside Le Meurice, who was swanning around with American socialite Elsa Maxwell.

Though Thomas and Gagnepain knew little of each others’ personal lives, Thomas left him the rights to his colossal oeuvre of some 30,000 images, from vintage prints to unseen negatives.

Gagnepain describes Thomas as an amateur photographer, and his images as “très artisanale”—he developed them not at some great studio, but at the FNAC (a multi-purpose emporium vaguely like a Best Buy, for lack of a better equivalent). Indeed, looking at the images, this wasn’t someone who stared into anyone’s soul; these are in-between moments in public places. But the sheer volume of Thomas’s images attests to an obvious passion.

The images function as a kind of capsule, and they feel dated in a good way: aesthetically (some are small and scallop-edged, all are black-and-white) as well as symbolically (no one is startled on their way out of Duane Reade). One marvels at them the way one does at seeing images of one’s own family album: the sharp sense of the uncanny, of seeing someone clearly familiar yet differing from present perception. The time machine quality has a certain magic.

The over-decorated staging of the exhibition, however, is quite cringe-y. There’s a shabby red carpet, a low-lit jazz club, a celebrity dressing room, a movie theater, ending with a rockabilly diner scene, all to imbue the sense of “showbiz!

It’s a shame, because nothing zaps the glamour of celebrity more than trying to cheaply emulate it for plebs. The images fight with the trappings of faux glitz, instead of being allowed to simply speak for themselves. What could more acutely take you out of the past and into today’s tawdry self-indulgence?

.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #72 posted 01/24/15 10:13am

JoeBala

Stevie Ray Vaughan and ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #73 posted 01/24/15 7:20pm

MickyDolenz

DMC interview about his new comic book & album and performing with Rev. Run


http://www.dmc-comics.com

[Edited 1/24/15 19:23pm]

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
Reply #74 posted 01/25/15 8:01am

JoeBala

Thanks for the postings ID & Mickey. Good stuff.


Joe Franklin, Local Talk Show Pioneer, Dies at 88

Joe Franklin interviewed Debbie Reynolds at the WOR-TV studios in 1985. Credit Walter J. Kuhn

Joe Franklin, who became a New York institution by presiding over one of the most compellingly low-rent television programs in history, one that even he acknowledged was an oddly long-running parade of has-beens and yet-to-bes interrupted from time to time by surprisingly famous guests, died on Saturday in a hospice in Manhattan. He was 88. Steve Garrin, Mr. Franklin’s producer and longtime friend, said the cause was prostate cancer.

A short, pudgy performer with a sandpapery voice that bespoke old-fashioned show business razzle-dazzle, Mr. Franklin was one of local television’s most enduring personalities. He took his place behind his desk and in front of the camera day after day in the 1950s and night after night in the 1960s, ’70s, ’80s and ’90s.

In 1993, he said that he had hosted more than 300,000 guests in his more than 40 years on the air. Another way to have interviewed that many people would have been to go to Riverside, Calif., or Corpus Christi, Tex., and talk to everyone in town.

Photo

Mr. Franklin in 2002 with a trombone given to him by a member of the Tommy Dorsey Band. Credit Don Hogan Charles/The New York Times

And although he never made the move from local television in New York to the slicker, bigger realms of the networks, he was recognizable enough to have been parodied by Billy Crystal on “Saturday Night Live” and mentioned on “The Simpsons.”

What came to be considered campy began as pioneering programming: the first regular program that Channel 7 had ever broadcast at noon. WJZ-TV, as the station was known then, had not been signing on until late afternoon before the premiere of “Joe Franklin — Disk Jockey” on Jan. 8, 1951.

Soon celebrities like Elvis Presley, Bing Crosby and John F. Kennedy were making their way to the dingy basement studio on West 67th Street — a room with hot lights that was “twice the size of a cab,” Mr. Franklin recalled in 2002. He booked Woody Allen, Dustin Hoffman, Barbra Streisand, Bill Cosby and Liza Minnelli as guests when they were just starting out, and hired two other young performers, Bette Midler and Barry Manilow, as his in-house singer and accompanist.

“My show was often like a zoo,” he said in 2002. “I’d mix Margaret Mead with the man who whistled through his nose, or Richard Nixon with the tap-dancing dentist.”

Mr. Franklin claimed a perfect attendance record: He said he never missed a show. Bob Diamond, his director for the last 18 years of his television career, said that there were a few times in the days of live broadcasts when the show had to start without Mr. Franklin. But Mr. Franklin always got there eventually.

And he always seemed to have a gimmick. He celebrated his 40th anniversary on television by interviewing himself, using a split-screen arrangement. “I got a few questions I’m planning to surprise myself with,” he said before he began.

Had he been asked, he could have told viewers that he was born Joe Fortgang in the Bronx. He explained in his memoir, “Up Late With Joe Franklin,” written with R. J. Marx, that his press materials had long said that he had been born in 1928, “but I’m going to come clean and admit that my real birth date was March 9, 1926.” He was the son of Martin and Anna Fortgang; his father was a paper-and-twine dealer who had gone to Public School 158 with James Cagney.

By the time he was 21, he had a new name, a radio career, a publicist and a too-good-to-be-true biography invented, he wrote in “Up Late,” by a publicist. In that book, he denied an anecdote that appeared in many newspaper articles about him: He had met George M. Cohan in Central Park when he was a teenager. That led to a dinner invitation from Mr. Cohan, who let him pick a recording from his collection and take it home — or so the story went. It never happened, Mr. Franklin wrote in “Up Late.”

But a real invitation to pick records was his big break. He had been the writer for the singer Kate Smith’s 1940s variety program, which featured guests like Clark Gable, Myrna Loy and Edward G. Robinson — “all my childhood heroes” — when the radio personality Martin Block hired him to choose the records played on Block’s “Make-Believe Ballroom” on WNEW. Block arranged for Mr. Franklin to go on the air with a program called “Vaudeville Isn’t Dead.” After stops at several other stations in the 1950s, Mr. Franklin settled in at WOR in the mid-60s with his “Memory Lane” program — “that big late-night stroll for nostalgiacs and memorabiliacs,” as he described it.

He was both. He owned a shoe of Greta Garbo’s, a violin of Jack Benny’s and a ukulele of Arthur Godfrey’s — not to mention 12,500 pieces of sheet music and 10,000 silent movies. His office was several rooms of uncataloged clutter, first in Times Square, later at Eighth Avenue and West 43rd Street. “You know, I was a slob,” he said in 2002.

Mr. Franklin met his wife, Lois Meriden, when she applied for a job as his secretary. Soon they were being mentioned in gossip columns. “Dorothy Kilgallen wrote that we were ‘waxing amorous,’ ” he wrote in “Up Late.” “Walter Winchell queried in his column, ‘What radio voice with initial J. F. seen ’round town with model Lois Meriden?’ ” Soon, too, she was accompanying him to the studio for his 6:30 a.m. broadcast. “Lois made faces at me through the control room window, wiggling her ears and her nose,” Mr. Franklin wrote in “Up Late.”

They were married on a television show called “Bride and Groom.” Off camera, he wrote in 1995, “things weren’t going right — it’s been like that for 40 years. But if we divorced, it would cost me a lot of money. Lois is happy, I’m happy, I live in New York, she lives in Florida.”

After his television show was canceled in 1993, Mr. Franklin repeatedly tried to cash in on his fame and his collection of memorabilia. In 2000, he lent his name to a 160-seat restaurant on Eighth Avenue at 45th Street. Eventually it became a chain restaurant with “Joe Franklin’s Comedy Club” in the back; later the restaurant and the comedy club closed. And in 2002, he sold some of his memorabilia at auction.

His survivors include his son, Bradley Franklin; two grandchildren, Billy and Sara; a younger sister, Margaret Kestenbaum; and his longtime companion, Jodi Fritz.

On television, Mr. Franklin did not like to rehearse, and he never used cue cards or prompters. The opening monologue and the questions were all in his head.

http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopoly_fs/1.2090904!/img/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/article_970/5-064.jpg

“I was the only guy who never had a preproduction meeting,” Mr. Franklin said in 2002. “You don’t rehearse your dinner conversation. I’m not saying I was right, but I lasted 43 years.”

Ashley Southall contributed reporting.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #75 posted 01/25/15 8:56am

JoeBala

Interview with 'Empire' star Grace Gealey

By Marie Blake,

Born and raised in the Cayman Islands, Grace Gealey went to school at the University of South Florida in Tampa where she received her Bachelor’s in Theater Arts. She then attended the University of California in Irvine where she received her Master’s on Fine Arts in acting.

Grace Gealey

After completing school, Gealey moved to Los Angeles and New York where she performed professionally on stage and in minor film and television roles. Gealey then moved to Chicago where she made her major television network debut on FOX’s new music series Empire. Gealey stars as Anika Gibbons, head of Empire Entertainment A&R, alongside Terrence Howard as Lucious and Taraji P. Henson as Cookie.

Gealey is also skilled in painting and ballroom dancing, hoping to incorporate those skills into her work in the future.

Marie Blake: Growing up in the Cayman Islands, what drew you into the acting field?

Grace Gealey: What was interesting about that was, I never thought of the acting field because of the fact that it's not a profession that was widely pursued by a woman in the Cayman Islands. It wasn't that I thought ‘yes, acting is what I want to do.’ I just knew that I liked to perform and I love to express myself through art. As I got older I realized that was acting and that I loved performing. It wasn't until I actually went to school at the University of South Florida, until I realized that in order to make this a profession; this is what I would have to do to pursue it.

Marie: I know you've had some prior work in theater and small television roles, but how does it feel to have your network television debut on Empire?

Grace: It feels amazing of course. It's such a phenomenal show to be a part of and now with the ratings and stuff, I’m so honored and humbled to be a part of such a powerhouse project.

Marie: How is it working with such an outstanding cast including Taraji P. Henson, Terrence Howard and Lee Daniels? Have they given you any acting advice?

Grace: Well I wouldn't say acting advice, I went to school and I have my two degrees, but there has been guidance for me in reference of exactly what direction to take, and that has been really amazing.

Marie: What do you enjoy most about Anika Calhoun?

Grace: Well, I call her a silent moving storm because of the fact that she has so many layers and so many dimensions. She can use different tactics to get what it is that she wants, and that is the most enjoyable part of playing her.

Marie: After earning your B.A. in Theater Arts from the University of South Florida and graduating with your M.F.A. from the University of California - Irvine, did you ever imagine that you would be where you are today?

Grace: One dreams (laughs), one definitely dreams, but actually, before I booked Empire, I was in a different place mentally. I was getting to the point where I was accepting the fact that maybe this might not happen for me. I was fine with the fact that if I just create art then that would be enough for me, then Empire happened.

Marie: What was the hardest part in your journey to becoming an actress?

Grace: Everybody has a different journey, everybody has a different path and you don’t really know what to expect. All you know is to just keep plugging away and you hope something will come through and something will happen. There is no formula to stand behind so you don’t know what’s going to happen in the end, You don’t know that if at the end of all of this you’re going to see everything come through. So I think that was the hardest part. There were times when I was working three jobs at one time and I was still auditioning just to make ends meet and I was hoping that something was going to come through. Especially after you have two degrees, standing solid through the process is sometimes the hardest part because there is no guarantee.

Marie: Are there any actors or directors you would love to work with in the future?

Grace: Oh yeah! (laughs). I would love to share the screen with Meryl Streep, wouldn't we all? I would love to work with Spielberg and Scorsese; that would be lovely. I’m also a huge fan of Johnny Depp and the way he creates his characters, so that would be fun. I mean any of the greats really. I’m just enjoying the ride at this point.

Marie: Do you see yourself branching out into other ventures like film or Broadway?

Grace: Of course, again for me it's not just about being in television, it's about creating art and if I can create art on Broadway or if I’m able to explore in film, absolutely, whatever that entails. As long as I’m creating art and I’m being challenged I feel like it's something that I would consider.

Marie: I know you’re very talented in other areas like dance and art, so if you weren't acting, what do you think you would be doing instead?

Grace: I would either be painting or I'd be ballroom dancing. Those are the things I do on my free time and I absolutely love it. I love expressing myself through those mediums of art.

Marie: Are there any other projects that you’re working on?

Grace: That is in the process (laughs), so I’ll have to get back to you on that one!

image courtesy of Jennifer Graylock/INFphoto.com

Home » Culture » ‘Empire’ State of Mind

‘Empire’ State of Mind

Grace Gealey on her role as a high-powered music exec on Fox’s newest series

When Empire, the new series from Lee Daniels, premieres on Jan. 7, it’ll be not only something to watch, but something to listen to. The Fox series brings viewers into the world of Lucious Lyon, a ferocious hip-hop mogul whose fading health means major changes for his entire operation. In addition to his three sons, all of whom are angling to take over his kingdom, Lucious is tangling with an unpredictable ex-wife, a troubling past and a music industry teetering on the edge of obsolescence.

And then there’s Anika Gibbons. Played by Grace Gealey, Gibbons is Lyon’s paramour and A&R rep, and perhaps the least volatile character on the show—or so it seems. Here, Gealey talks about landing the role, doing her homework and why you won’t see her singing on TV any time soon.

http://cache4.asset-cache.net/gc/460199040-empire-cast-members-grace-gealey-taraji-p-gettyimages.jpg?v=1&c=IWSAsset&k=2&d=GkZZ8bf5zL1ZiijUmxa7QZJnTNiWbfVX3Xf8Qr8f4pAa9dIr5lYjhfFSv%2BcDi2yk9%2FYumshimEgx5NR6AlwUMQ%3D%3D

Talk about luck: the show films in Chicago and you had coincidentally just moved there from New York when casting began. How’d that work out?

They knew they were shooting the series in Chicago and were casting out of Chicago, and that was fortunate for me. I went into the casting director in Chicago, and she put me on tape and she sent it off. Then Lee Daniels flew in to do the callbacks and two days later, I got the job.

Two days? That’s not very long.

No, it all happened within a span of five days.

What was it about the show that appealed to you?

Well, apart from the names attached to it, it was the character I’m playing. But just the caliber of artists that were associated with this was the number one thing. The other thing, of course, was the actual script, reading it and meeting this character, who was just this extremely refined and elegant but fiery woman who showed what she felt more than spoke it. I found that to be very interesting, and was thinking about what things I could bring to her.

Gealey on 'Empire'

Gealey on ‘Empire’

The music industry is such a unique thing. What kind of research did you do into how A&R and labels work?

Well, I watched a lot of interviews with A&R people, but the biggest thing I was missing was a female A&R executive. I was learning that the music industry was very cutthroat in a lot of ways, and my biggest question was if you were a woman, how did that play a role. Luckily, I was able to get an interview with a female hip-hop executive and I just asked her every single question I had. She was completely honest with me and that was the best research that I got.

The show’s about a lot of things: family, business, pride, talent, loyalty. What is it you want people to take away?

You know, the reason why I find this whole project to be extremely fascinating is the dynamic that we’re creating. You have a husband and wife—now ex-husband and ex-wife—with their three children living in the ghettos of Philly and dealing drugs. This is the African-American community associated with hip-hop culture, and this is the family dynamic in that community. So, I think the show gives a sense of hope; it gives a sense of an expanded view for people who think that’s how everyone lives. It’s about showing the different elements within our culture.

You’ve filmed almost the entire first season now. How does Anika change over the course of those 12 episodes?

Oh, every episode is so interesting because I started to develop my own trajectory for the character, and then I’d get a script and it would change everything. That happened with every single episode.

It’s an interesting time to portray the record industry because it’s in such transition. Are you guys paying attention to real life stories?

Yes! You’d be so surprised by the things we talk about and the things that we live with, and then what happens in today’s world. I mean, I can’t give too much away, but the parallels are unbelievable. I can’t wait for you to see it; I can’t say any more.

Do you have any musical talent yourself?

I sing and I dance.

Are we going to see any of that?

No! I don’t think so. You’d be surprised by some of the actors on the show who are able to sing or have musical talent—that will definitely shock you—but not me.

WRITTEN BY Adam Rathe

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #76 posted 01/26/15 4:23am

Identity







Majid Jordan - ''Forever'' official video

New dance track from the Canadian duo.



majidjordan.com

Reply #77 posted 01/27/15 9:36am

JoeBala

Linda Ronstant

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #78 posted 01/27/15 12:11pm

JoeBala

This gal has strong soulful/jazz vocals. eek

She played Teena Marie in Motown The Musical.

Interview: Morgan James Talks “Hunter” Album, Prince Co-Sign, Starring on Broadway

YKIGS November 10, 2014

http://images.bwwstatic.com/columnpic3/2228178image213.jpeg

The path for Morgan James to r&b stardom hasnt been conventional by any means, but it’s special all its own. After attending the prestigious Julliard School, she eventually landed on Broadway in The Addams Family and eventually the role of Teena Marie in Motown: The Musical. It wasn’t until Berry Gordy Jr. took notice of her there and connected her with LA Reid at Epic Records that her music career began to take off. Now equipped with the hit cover of Prince’s “Call My Name”, she will release her album “Hunter” this week. YouKnowIGotSoul sat down with Morgan James while she was performing at our Sol Village event and discussed the origins of her career, getting signed to Epic, Prince co-signing her cover, and much more.

Hunter (Expanded Edition)

YouKnowIGotSoul: Let’s start at the beginning. You’re originally from Idaho and eventually came to school at the Julliard here in New York City. How was the transition?

Morgan James: *Laughs* Well I moved to New York City when I was 18 from California. I lived in Idaho when I was a kid and we lived in California and then I moved all the way across the country to go to Julliard. I thought 59th street was downtown. I was so sheltered, but I wasn’t afraid because I knew I was supposed to be here. It’s what I wanted to do, it was my dream to go to Julliard. I was so excited to be here and I just took everything in.

YouKnowIGotSoul: After you had graduated from Julliard, where did you career take you?

Morgan James: My career took many, many twists and turns. I kinda thought I would graduate from Julliard and be a star. *Laughs* I thought I had this voice and this degree, and I had talent and dedication, I thought I would make it. It’s so much harder than that. I started auditioning for theater and singing in clubs and waiting tables and doing the things I needed to do to pay the rent. It was very difficult. After a few years I got on Broadway, I did four original companies on Broadway and I started doing commercials and TV and theater. Then I found my voice really. I think that’s the hardest part for an artist is finding their voice and learning how to write, finding what they have to say that is unique.

YouKnowIGotSoul: What do you think triggered that in you? Your career on Broadway took off first but then you branched into singing. What brought that out of you?

Morgan James: What really brought out the voice that I have, my soul voice and true voice, was really not getting any work and being very sad and being poor and having to sit with that. I think that’s where the blues comes from. I started singing out in clubs and I kinda just imitated other people, like Aretha or Mariah or Chaka or Sade. I would learn how to imitate these people but I really didn’t have my own sound. You have to spend time listening and singing and practicing and you have to put in the time. What really got my career started and brought me to the label was when I met Berry Gordy Jr., he is a mentor to me. He introduced me to LA Reid and he really saw something in me that maybe nobody else had ever seen.

YouKnowIGotSoul: What do you think it was that made Epic Records so interested in signing you?

Morgan James: At the time I got signed, I didn’t write music really. I really didn’t know what kind of record I was going to make. I knew I was a soul singer and I was going to make a soul record. When Doug Morris signed me to Epic Records and introduced me to LA Reid, we kind of experimented. I did a lot of demos and a lot of songs that people would go “Maybe not yet”. You have to experiment a lot before you find what you’re ultimately going to make. I sang a lot of shows with the band because I had to try out material. Over the last two years I sang a lot of shows. Some were hits, some were misses. *Laughs* I tried to figured out what kind of record I was going to make.

YouKnowIGotSoul: Introduce us to your “Hunter” album which will be your second release on Epic Records.

Morgan James: My album “Hunter” is going to be coming out on Epic Records November 11th and it features my single “Call My Name” which is a Prince tune. It’s currently on Urban A/C radio which I’m very happy about. I co-wrote 9 of the 14 songs. It’s a really, really rich soul album. I sang all of the background vocals. I did not tune one single note, there is no tuning on my record, it’s all real ingredients. Horns, whirly, organ, piano; it’s rich and soulful and funky and I hope there’s something for everyone on there. *Laughs*

YouKnowIGotSoul: “Call My Name” is the current single, and a Prince cover. What drew you to want to cover that song?

Morgan James: I’m a huge Prince fan and I had been singing “Call My Name” for several years. I sang it in the first show I ever did. It’s been in my body a long time. I arranged it and I just love it. I love it from a woman’s perspective; I think it’s very intimate and tender. His lyrics are very romantic and appeal to me. I played it for LA Reid and he loved it and he knew that it probably was not going to be approved because Prince doesn’t approve a lot of songs; he doesn’t like people covering his songs. His lawyer said no and we initially released “Hunter” without “Call My Name” on it. Finally LA Reid basically called Prince and asked him to listen to it and he did and he got right back to him and said he loved it; so we had clearance. We took it to radio immediately, we pulled the other version of “Hunter” so we could add “Call My Name” and that’s why “Hunter” is coming out in a month. Everything kinda changed with “Call My Name” because we took it to WBLS, they started playing it, and “Heart & Soul” started playing it and it’s had a life of its own. I feel really, really blessed that Prince gave me his blessing.

YouKnowIGotSoul: Talk about where you future aspirations lie now that you’ve had success in both singing and acting on Broadway.

Morgan James: Hmmmm. I take voice lessons still every week. My aspirations and dreams keep evolving. I think dreams evolve and I want to become a better songwriter. I want to do more collaboration within my genre and I want to continue to make records. I want to just keep getting stronger as a musician and make movies. *Laughs* Being a better songwriter, that’s top of the list because I think that is a very intimidating, difficult task. I really admire people that just continue to write and get stronger.

YouKnowIGotSoul: Anything you’d like to add?

Morgan James: I’m so happy to be here, thank you for having me. Thank you for the love everybody keeps showing “Call My Name”.

.

.

Hunting Down An Interview With Morgan James

05:16 PM Friday 1/16/15 0 | |

Postmodern Jukebox’s Scott Bradlee – the guy that turns today’s pop hits into other genres on YouTube – recently brought our attention to a singer/songwriter named Morgan James. Pollstar called up James this week after being thoroughly impressed with her rendition of Hozier’s “Take Me To Church.”

She’s the first vocalist on board for Postmodern Jukebox’s European tour, which begins in February. Along with “Take Me To Church,” James also did a soulful version of Maroo...n Jukebox.

But more importantly, she’s in the midst of promoting her Epic Records debut album, Hunter, which was released in November. The expanded edition of the LP includes a cover of Princ...My Name” – a version that he has heard and probably appreciated.

James, who has appeared in several Broadway shows including “Godspell,” has a big supporter in none other than Berry Gordy Jr., who is well aware of James because of her performance as Teena Marie in “Motown: The Musical.”


As the quick interview began, we asked her if she was familiar with Pollstar.

“I feel like you’re in Fresno, aren’t you?” she said.

We don’t hear that answer a lot, but James grew up about an hour north of us in Modesto, Calif. That means she’s sort of the Modesto version of Broadway star Audra McDonald, who grew up in our little town before escaping to the big lights.

Yes, we tried to drop that name, but James beat us to it.

So you grew up near the rest of us.

Yeah, I grew up in Modesto. I moved when I was about 12 and lived there through junior high and high school. Actually I think I moved there in fifth grade. My parents just got a job. We were from Idaho so anything in California seemed glamorous, sunny and gorgeous. We moved to the valley and it turned out to be the most incredible place to grow up. I found great music teachers, I found great colleagues and I totally found music. I discovered that was going to be what I would do with my life when I was there. And one of my favorite singers on the planet is from Fresno so I became obsessed with that: “I’m from an area where she’s from so I hopefully will drink some of that water.”

That’s funny. I was going to drop her name and you went there first.

Audra McDonald? She’s the reason I went to Julliard. And, of course, I took a different path since I left it. When I first graduated I thought to myself, “Why did I go there? I don’t use use it.” But I use my training every day. It’s invaluable, what I learned.

Still seems to be a big leap from our little valley to Julliard.

It’s a big leap to just move to New York by yourself. It was such a longshot that a lot of people probably thought, you know, “[Most] people don’t really get into Julliard.” I kind of was fearless. I just knew I’d get in, even if everybody else thought I was crazy. And when you get that opportunity, when they say yes, you just go..

If I hadn’t gotten an invite to Julliard I probably wouldn’t have moved to New York when I was 18 but thankfully it gave me a launch pad. It’s not a scary place to me anymore but packing up and going there otherwise would have been intimidating.

And now that I’m here, I could never leave.

Speaking of leaving: you have a background in Broadway, but you have an album you need to promote. How much of 2015 is staying in New York versus leaving it?

I want to get the record out to as many people as possible. I’m lucky because I love to tour and to sing. I want to reach people. I want to speak to fans and get the music out there. I think there are some recording artists where live singing is not their forte, but my thing is singing in front of an audience. That is what I’m supposed to be doing with my life. I hope 2015, frankly, brings a lot of travel. I want to be out there meeting people and singing for them.

So I’ll be in Europe for six weeks. I’m going to be traveling April through June in the States, including some classical projects, flexing my classical muscles again.Thankfully, I get to use so many parts of my instrument and artistry. I’m so lucky to do that; it doesn’t get lost on me that I get to make music for a living. I’m always going to want more gigs; I’m always going to want bigger ones. I’m always going to want to make more records. But it’s not lost on me that I’m able to do this.

Promoting Hunter will be my main objective for the year, and [to] start writing, of course, because you have to get back on the horse.

So you are touring the States this year.

Yes. I have a big New York date. I’ll be in Philadelphia, Chicago, Hartford. Summertime, we haven’t confirmed but obviously we’re talking festivals and some sort of opening slot for me. So late spring, summer will be in the U.S. and I hope to go back to Europe with my band in the fall.

Promoters will come up to me and say, “Hey, do you like” – and they’ll say a town – “Would you like to go there?” and I’ll say, “I love towns!” I will go anywhere where you want to hear music.

People will reach out to me on my fan page and it may take me a while but I try to respond to every single person because the only way I get to make music is because there are people who want to hear it.

Sometimes it’s exhausting. I can’t imagine what it’s like for someone like Taylor Swift. My God, I’m dealing with a fraction of the numbers but I really try to hear everybody. I don’t think fans know how much artists appreciate it. Some days it feels like nobody hears you and then a stranger will reach out from across the globe and say, “Hey! I hear you! I appreciate what you’re making.”

Sometimes that really gets you through a day!

I shared a few of your videos with a Facebook friend and she immediately became a fan.

That’s amazing. And it can happen like that. As much as the music industry has changed, and a lot of it makes me sad and there are things that I miss from the old days, there are moments like that where one person can say to another, “Hey, you should listen to this” and they do, and it can still be passed person to person. That’s what I love about music: you get to share it with someone else, and they get to have it as their own.

That’s the beauty of social media. A lot of it can be annoying but, through social media, I can reach people from all over the world.

Have you seen any differences since the “Take Me To Church” video came out earlier this month?

I have actually. I feel like my career as a whole has been a slow burn but it feels like it’s been bubbling and it’s starting to boil. I feel there’s something under the surface and I just have to keep making the music I’m making.

A lot of people have been saying they saw it and finding me. It came with my announcement a few days later that I’d be doing six weeks in Europe. So I was hearing from a lot of my international fans. It’s been a great response to this video in particular.

Anything else you’d like to tell fans?

I’m happy people are finding the record. I think it’s hard to make a record of original music with no auto-tuning these days. I’m proud of that. I’m happy people are finding new, original soul music that is not auto-tuned, and I hope to be able to bring it to a town near them.

Upcoming dates for Morgan James:

Feb. 6 – Belfast, No. Ireland, The Belfast Empire Music Hall
Feb. 7 – Dublin, Ireland, Vicar Street
Feb. 8 – Manchester, England, Academy 2
Feb. 9 – Gateshead, England, Sage Gateshead
Feb. 10 – Glasgow, Scotland, Old Fruitmarket
Feb. 11 – Edinburgh, Scotland, The Queens Hall
Feb. 13 – Sheffield, England, The Leadmill
Feb. 14 – Birmingham, England, The Institute
Feb. 15 – Bristol, England, Thekla
Feb. 16 – Brighton, England, Concorde 2
Feb. 17 – London, England, O2 Shepherds Bush Empire
Feb. 19 – Amsterdam, Netherlands, Paradiso
Feb. 20 – Breda, Netherlands, Mezz
Feb. 21 – Sint Niklaas, Belgium, De Casino
Feb. 22 – Bordeaux, France, Rock School Barbey
Feb. 23 – Madrid, Spain, Caracol
Feb. 24 – Barcelona, Spain, Caprichos De Apolo
March 3 – Oslo, Norway, Parkteatret AS
March 4 – Goteborg, Sweden, Nefertiti
March 5 – Stockholm, Sweden, Fasching
March 6 – Copenhagen, Denmark, DR Concert House
March 7 – Hamburg, Germany, Knust
March 8 – Berlin, Germany, Lido
March 10 – Luxembourg, Luxembourg, Rockhal
March 11 – Villeurbanne, France, Le Transbordeur
March 12 – Paris, France, Alhambra Paris
March 13 – Cologne, Germany, Luxor
March 14 – Frankfurt, Germany, Zoom
March 16 – Zurich, Switzerland, Kaufleutensaal
March 17 – Prague, Czech Republic, Lucerna Music Bar
March 18 – Warsaw, Poland, Stodola Club
March 19 – Ostrava Zabreh, Czech Republic, Rock & Roll Garage
March 20 – Vienna, Austria, Porgy & Bess

James apppears with Postmodern Jukebox on all dates.

Please visit MorganJamesOnline.com for more information. And click here for our 2014 interview with Scott Bradlee.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #79 posted 01/27/15 12:23pm

JoeBala

Morgan James did the whole new album D'angelo live. She played Teena Marie in Motown The Musical:

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #80 posted 01/27/15 1:25pm

JoeBala

Micky Dolenz remembers Mike Nesmith’s return to Monkees: ‘It brought tears to my eyes’

http://www.trbimg.com/img-509e92d1/turbine/lat-monkees-la0006814962-20121107/900/900x506

After so long away, Mike Nesmith’s first steps back toward the Monkees were understandably tentative.

His old pal Micky Dolenz was there to ease the transition during a deeply emotional initial practice session. “I had to teach him the chords!” Dolenz quips, laughing, in a newly posted talk with Kevin Pollak. “Well, not quite. But, yeah, he hadn’t sung that stuff in years. It was amazing, and it brought tears to my eyes.”

http://i.azcentral.com/commphotos/view/709406.jpg

After the Monkees’ late-1960s hey day, Nesmith didn’t return for nearly 20 years, appearing with Dolenz, Davy Jones and Peter Tork at the Greek. He then helped orchestrate the final four-man reunion of the band, with 1997’s Justus. After another lengthy layoff, Nesmith began touring with Dolenz and Tork as the Monkees again, starting in 2012 after Jones’ untimely death.

If anything, these long-hoped-for reunions have given Dolenz a deeper appreciation for the talent he always knew Nesmith possessed — even when the original Monkees handlers didn’t seem to. “I always loved his material,” says Dolenz, who is gearing up for a pair of dates in April at Ontario — the first Monkees dates in Canada since 2002.

http://www.globusmagazine.it/_/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/ct-ent-1119-monkees-review-20121118-001.jpg

“It’s so hard to explain, because there’s the Monkees, which had wonderful songs,” he adds. “They were written by Boyce and Hart, Carole King and these incredible writers, and produced well. It was wonderful material that I sing to this day. But behind the scenes, there was this undercurrent — mainly, Mike — of being frustrated. When it came time to start recording and getting the music together, he brought in a few of his songs and, basically, they said, ‘No, this is not Monkee music.’ So he took one of the songs that they turned down, and he goes to this young girl singer who was kicking around Los Angeles at the time named Linda Ronstadt.”

That became Ronstadt’s breakout debut single, “A Different Drum,” which went to No. 13 in 1967.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #81 posted 01/27/15 2:49pm

JoeBala

Review

On 'Vulnicura,' Bjork is heavy and at her most personal

Bjork
Album review: 'Vulnicura' is Bjork's most personal work
Bjork seems to document her breakup with visual artist Matthew Barney on 'Vulnicura'
.@LilEdit says Bjork takes listeners on a heavy journey in 'Vulnicura'

In the opening measures of Björk's new album, "Vulnicura," the Icelandic artist offers a direct statement of purpose, one involving personal upheaval she describes as "a juxtapositioning fate." Mentioning "moments of clarity as so rare, I better document this," Björk directs her gaze in that first song, "Stonemilker," on the dissolution of a relationship.

Bjork

As she does so, what can be described only as Björkian strings and beats swirl around her. These drifting arrangements soar through tracks like birds spinning circles in prairie skies, even as the experimental pop singer, 49, lyrically crawls through the brush below in utter confusion. At times devastated, others baffled, still others strong and determined, the artist on "Vulnicura" offers nine songs, six of which move in chronological order through that juxtapositional end and beyond.

The artist's most personal record in a career full of vocal and emotional drama, "Vulnicura" is a self-described "complete heartbreak album," its title Björk's own invented word. What it defines, though, is as lyrically raw and shockingly direct as Marvin Gaye's "Here, My Dear" or Beck's "Sea Change," and seems to document the end of her relationship with the visual artist Matthew Barney.

Referring to herself in a Facebook post as being "kinda surprised how thoroughly I had documented this in pretty much accurate emotional chronology," the artist considered her creations to be "like 3 songs before a break up and three after." On early listens — the record arrived with little notice on Tuesday night — it's an exquisite, inspired and typically angular listen, filled with much texture and impatient roaming, with musical and vocal tones built into spatial structures that fearlessly trace the lyrical ordeals.

Though Björk, who has a daughter with Barney, never mentions her ex by name, she delivers lines about family — mothers, fathers and daughters in "Family" — that make it painfully apparent this is her take on a real-life situation. (Barney and Björk reportedly ended their decade-long relationship in 2013.)

Bjork

Bjork has seldom minced lyrics. Her previous album, "Biophilia," was thematically linked through lyrics about nature and the environment; her mostly a cappella 2004 album "Medúlla," recorded while she was pregnant, was overtly political. Rising in the 1990s after gaining popularity as the singer of Sugarcubes, her solo career has drawn on experimental electronic dance music and contemporary classical music, tracing and mixing styles and collaborating with musicians eager to work with such a voice.

Nuanced and miraculously expressive, her vocal cords growl and scowl, soar like clarinets and wail like violins. Hinting at voices as varied as Meredith Monk, Kate Bush, Maria Callas and the guy who sang "Surfin' Bird," it delivers singular vibrations.

She has thrived within musical partnerships, even as her work has traveled far afield of so-called popular music. Over the decades and seven earlier studio albums (excluding her self-titled 1977 debut, released when she was a young Icelandic pop star), she has teamed with innovative creators including Tricky, Matmos, Matthew Herbert, Mouse on Mars, Zeena Parkins and Mark Bell. For "Biophilia," Björk worked solely with the British dubstep producers 16bit.

"Vulnicura" sees her collaborating with a new pair: the English ambient producer who makes music as the Haxan Cloak and the Venezuelan producer Arca, whose tracks with Kanye West and FKA Twigs have driven his rise. As usual, Björk arranges much of "Vulnicura" herself, with modernist string bursts, drifting, expansive patterns and punctuated squawks.

Those words are penned with a diary-esque honesty. "Stonemilker," for example, is accompanied in the liner notes with the descriptive, "9 months before." The next song "Lionsong" is described as occurring "5 months before." The brief "History of Touches" ("3 months before") hints at fading passion and a final bout of passion.

During the epic 10-minute centerpiece, "Black Lake" ("2 months after") after describing "my soul torn apart, my spirit is broken," Björk goes for the jugular: "You have nothing to give / Your heart is hollow / I'm drowned in sorrows / No hope in sight of ever recover / Eternal pain and horrors."

On "Notget," Björk hits hard: "Without love I feel the abyss / Understand your fear of death."

After those first six songs, the singer abandons time-stamping and moves through three closing pieces without markers. Suggesting that the end is evolving into a beginning, these works arrive like dawn after a thunderstruck night.

Collaborating with New York singer Antony, she sings of "fine-tuning my soul" in "Atom Dance," of letting "this ugly wound breathe" and "peeling off dead layers of loveless love."

During a beat-heavy highlight, "Mouth Mantra," the artist circles around and through Arca's rhythms with sheets of sampled, manipulated voice, while lyrically addressing writer's block.

"Vulnicura" is a serious, heavy journey through a rough ordeal, a work certainly too deep to fully absorb so quickly after its release. Like many of her recent records, it's not toe-tapping beat-based music. But fans like myself will find much to love as we explore its many peaks and valleys.

Whether the unnamed ex feels the same is another story.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #82 posted 01/27/15 3:41pm

JoeBala

CHARLIE WILSON

“Forever Charlie”

REVIEW

(P Music/RCA)

This is the pop-music moment of Women Are More Interesting, and in related news the grown-up, heart-wounded masculine R&B tradition has gone into a blind stagger. The romantic sensitivity of the middle-aged male is not a trending topic.

But here comes Charlie Wilson running into the room in his white suit. He’s laughing and whistling, with a lithe voice full of authority and cultural memory, and he could lord it all over you, but he won’t. He’s going to create mobility and flexibility. He’s going to stir up the molecules and raise the happiness.

Mr. Wilson, once the singer of the Gap Band, now an old-school talisman for Snoop Dogg, Pharrell Wilson, Kanye West and Bruno Mars, makes decent R&B records and remains a total treat as a live act; in both cases, he reminds you of his past as an important link between the epic, chanting funk of the ’70s and the clipped, efficacious, electronic funk of the ’80s.

His most hardheaded comeback record of recent years, “Charlie, Last Name Wilson,” produced in 2005 by R. Kelly, put him forward as a smooth player — a cliché that at this point would seem too sad and lonely for someone like Mr. Wilson. His new album, “Forever Charlie,” stays aboveboard.

He’s going to praise you. He’ll assure you that he loves your good-night kisses. He’ll compliment your birthday dress — without innuendo — and sing “It’s your party, you can dance all you like.” He’s going to compare you to a priceless masterpiece, a glass of lemonade and, best of all, “that good potato salad.”

In sound, “Forever Charlie” plays lightly with nostalgia, befitting someone who suggests the indefinite past. The standout songs tend to be produced by the Cartoons, who go in more heavily for updating old-school details — Gap Band grooves, vocoders, 1950s-ballad triplets — and Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, who take hard right turns like putting sequencers and keyboard sounds on “Things You Do” to make you think of the “Miami Vice” soundtrack. You don’t necessarily see that coming. Here’s what you do see coming: A cameo by Snoop Dogg (on “Infectious”) and an easy-tempo reggae tune with Shaggy (“Unforgettable”). It doesn’t matter; they don’t hurt anything.

Above all, Mr. Wilson keeps it light. What a relief! A great singer who knows it’s not all about him. BEN RATLIFF

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #83 posted 01/27/15 5:11pm

JoeBala

Video: Chrisette Michele – ‘Together’

The time has come for Chrisette Michele to give her fans what they’ve been waiting for. Finally revealing the full length video to her new single “Together,” the R&B Divas starlet reminds us just what love feels like.

The song, which is the perfect wedding and relationship anthem, takes us back to the days of the love your grandparents shared. Donning lovely braids and different shades of pink, the singer-songwriter promises to remember to stay in love with her beau.

Chrisette’s new project The Lyricists’ Opus EP is on iTunes now! She will kick off “The Opus Tour” beginning in San Francisco on January 22.

EP CD Drops Jan 29 2015.

Lyricists Opus

Take a look at the Derek Blanks directed visual below!

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #84 posted 01/27/15 5:34pm

JoeBala

D'Angelo Black Messiah Red Bull

D’Angelo Set To Perform on ‘Saturday Night Live’

Look. At. God!

After 15-years of holding out on music, R&B veteran D’Angelo is creeping his way back into our hearts and we have not one single complaint about it.

After surprising the world with his most recent release Black Messiah, the talented singer-songwriter will make his first post appearance on the stage of the legendary “Saturday Night Live.” Set to perform with his band, The Vanguard, the D’Angelo will serve as the musical guest on the evening of January 31.

The show, which will be hosted by J.K. Simmons, comes right before D’Angelo performs at the Apollo Theater on February 7 and before the launch of the European leg of the “Second Coming Tour.” Black Messiah, which entered the Billboard 200 charts at No. 5, marked the singers third studio album and also ranked #1 in our “Top 20 R&B Albums of 2014” list.

View image on Twitter

Excited to announce J.K. Simmons will host January 31 with musical guest @TheDangelo! http://bit.ly/180JpV4 #SNL


Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #85 posted 01/27/15 7:52pm

JoeBala

New All-Female 'Ghostbusters' Cast Chosen

The Paul Feig-directed reboot is eyeing a summer shoot in New York.

Kristen Wiig Leslie Jones Kate McKinnon Melissa McCarthy Split - H 2015
AP Images/Invision
Kristen Wiig, Leslie Jones, Kate McKinnon, Melissa McCarthy

The all-new, all-female Ghostsbusters are here.

Melissa McCarthy, who was already in talks for one of the leads, has signed on for the Paul Feig-directed reboot, and Sony is now negotiating with Kristen Wiig as well as Saturday Night Live players Leslie Jones and Kate McKinnon, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.

Negotiations are ongoing, but the quartet are expected to sign on as the specter-seeking, poltergeist-punishing, phantom-phollowing foursome in the reboot, which is eyeing a summer shoot in New York.

McCarthy and Wiig have worked with Feig before, both breaking out in the director’s Bridesmaids.

Jones, who is currently onscreen in Chris Rock’s Top Five, joined SNL early last year and this fall was promoted to feature player status.

McKinnon has been on SNL since 2012 and last year was nominated for an Emmy for her work.

The film is set for release on July 22, 2016, Feig said on Twitter.

The Ghostbusters reboot has endured a long development process. Original director Ivan Reitman was on board to return, but while original castmembers Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis and Ernie Hudson had agreed to reprise their characters, Bill Murray proved elusive. Reitman then bowed out of the project when Ramis passed away last year. Following Reitman's departure, Feig was approached to direct and reconceived the project as a reboot starring an all-female cast.

Wiig is repped by UTA, Odenkirk Provissiero Entertainment and Jackoway Tyerman. Jones is repped by APA and Integral Entertainment, while McKinnon is repped by UTA and Principato Young.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #86 posted 01/27/15 7:59pm

JoeBala

'Empire's' Taraji P. Henson on Cookie's Careful Planning, Loyalty and Greatest Vulnerability

The actress talks with THR about the universal appeal of the hip-hop soap and Cookie's second chance.

Empire S01E02 Still - H 2015
Chuck Hodes/FOX

"Boo Boo Kitty." "Goat ass." "Jump out the window and straight down." "The streets aren't made for everybody; that's why they made sidewalks." There is no question that Empire's Cookie Lyon is one of a kind — as is the woman who brings her to life every week on Fox, Taraji P. Henson. But though Henson was immediately as taken with Cookie as Fox's audience is after three weeks, the actress had some initial trepidation about taking on the role of the Lyon family matriarch.

"You don’t get these scripts often; I don’t get these scripts every day. I was trained; I’ve read some of the most amazing literature known to man; so I know good writing when I see it. I know a good script when I read it. So, I knew that, but at the same time, it scared the hell out of me," the actress tells The Hollywood Reporter. "I had to reel myself back in [saying], 'OK, Taraji, I don’t think everybody’s going to love me; I don’t think everybody’s going to love it; but at the end of the day, this is important work.' "

At the end of the day, Henson is an actress who likes to challenge herself and realized, like so many others do, that it was worth taking a risk to do something that scared her.

"The story we have to tell is big," Henson said. "There’s not an American who can’t identify with at least one of those characters. At the end of the day, this is important work. It’s challenging people to think. People are pissed; there are black people who think we can’t show this side of the race, but this is human; white people identify with this! This has nothing to do with color; people identify with this because it’s human stuff."

THR caught up with Henson to discuss the breakout drama so far and what's in store for Cookie and her boys.

See more 'Empire': How Lee Daniels... 'Dynasty'

How important was it for you to show Cookie's lighter side — with so many quotable lights — and seeing her smile after serving a 17-year jail sentence?

She’s a real person, and real people laugh at themselves sometimes — I hope. She’s multilayered; she’s not just one thing. That’s something [co-creator] Lee Daniels really strived and wrote for, and it’s something the writers really pushed as complications because life is complicated. Why we do some of the dumb stuff we do, I will never try to explain [but] it’s called being a human. We don’t come with a book and a map that says, “This is how you live your life perfectly.” I don’t even know what perfect is; I don’t want the pressure of perfect — whatever that is. Because at the end of the day, I know I’m human and I’m going to make the wrong choice sometimes. I’m going to listen to the wrong person; I’m going to take the bad advice when I know I should have listened to my instincts. That’s what I stick to with Cookie — playing those human moments — and I think that’s why some people have taken to her. At the end of the day, she’s real, and she’s honest. She’s honest with herself, and she’s not hiding anything.

She certainly has secrets — specifically just how she got out of jail early.

Don’t we all? (Laughs.) That whole situation in working with the feds — first of all, there is no way you’re getting out early on a federal charge. Once the feds step in, it’s a wrap; you’re doing your time. No need for a lawyer; you’re going away. They have all the evidence they need; they’ve been watching you; there’s nothing you can do to worm your way out of it — except if you snitch. So she’s got some deal going on; she was supposed to do 30 years, but she got out in 17, so something’s going on. But the rule of the street is you don’t snitch. And here you have a woman who is watching her empire — she’s in jail, but she’s seeing it go public, and it’s bigger than she ever could fathom it’d be. And she’s not going to sit around and lose out. But there’s a reason why it was scripted that she goes to the door with a gun [in the pilot].

How worried is she about people in her life finding out she snitched?

Cookie feels like she can take on the world; she thinks she can take on that whole empire. This is a woman who has nothing to lose. She’s not second-guessing nothing. She got a second chance at life [so she’s] balls to the wall, doing anything. Everybody else is scared and afraid; Cookie is not [because] she lived in the worst of the worst for 17 years. It’s do or die for her.

Where is her focus, coming up? She hasn't wasted any time trying to find her place in society, let alone her family.

I think Cookie’s smart enough to know not to put all her eggs in one basket, so she’s trying to do a lot of things all at once. This is a woman who has lost 17 years, so time is something that she doesn’t take for granted, and I believe that in 24 hours she’s trying to do 10,000 things while a normal person is just trying to do three. She's had 17 years to think about this!

The world is very different now, though, and she does have her ups and downs with it. Where is she most vulnerable, and what is her greatest adjustment?

Family. Anything in life she can get through; nothing can hurt her out on the streets; her family is the only thing that has her heart. That’s all she has; that’s all she can claim that’s hers. Everything she did was for her fam ily. [Her greatest adjustment though is] acclimating herself back to society, catching up — Twitter, Instagram, what the f— is viral? What are you talking about? What is this stuff?

She should have hired a savvy assistant to help with those things!

Cookie sticks to what she knows. I made up the backstory. They write these characters in, and for me, I’ve got to make it believable, so I was like, “Why? Why is Porscha [Ta'Rhonda Jones] her assistant?” I had to make that reason up in my head so I could believe it. So I said, “OK, Cookie doesn’t really have a lot of money, and she’s not that savvy yet, having been gone for a long time. All she knows is the hood, so when she comes back, where’s the first place she goes back to? The hood. So she goes, and she finds this girl at this hole in the wall strip club. She needs somebody loyal, who’s going to be owing to me because I saved [her] life. So she got this girl off the pole, probably making $20 a night in ones." And so, this girl owed her, and she’s loyal, and that’s the thing about the streets: you’ve got to have somebody in your right hand who’s going to be loyal to you. That’s huge for Cookie because she’s loyal [too].

Going back to family being a vulnerability for Cookie — clearly that's a spot where loyalty is key, too. She's closest to Jamal (Jussie Smollett) right now, but will she take active steps to bring the other boys in more?

Absolutely. She loves all her boys; it’s just that she knows Jamal better than the rest of them. It’s not that she loves him more; she just knows him more. He’s the one who came to visit her when she said don’t come. He still fought to know his mother. So they have a familiarity that she doesn’t have with the other sons, but that doesn’t mean she doesn’t want it [with them, too]. Whenever she sees a chance to try to make some headway, she’ll try to take it, but she doesn’t push it. She can pull back; she’s not going to force it. Sometimes as a parent, your kids hurt you— your family hurts you, they do that — and everything can’t be a big blowout because you’d be dead; you would just die from stress. If I blew up every time my child hurt my feelings (laughs.) Think about it, Cookie has learned how to keep her emotions together. Being in jail, I mean, you can’t be acting a fool because it would make it harder for you when you want to get out. So she’s had to learn how to keep her emotions in check. She’s not going to fly off the handle; it would make her weak.

Empire airs Wednesdays at 9 p.m. on Fox. What are you looking forward to seeing — and what's your favorite Cookie one-liner? Sound off in the comments below. Stay tuned to THR's The Live Feed for more Empire coverage after Wednesday's episode.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #87 posted 01/29/15 11:02am

MickyDolenz

Don Harron, Canadian Writer and Actor, Dies at 90

Alex Stedman News Editor, Variety.com

Don Harron Dead: Canadian Actor and

Don Harron, a Canadian actor and writer who brought laughter to Canadian and American audiences alike with his alter ego Charlie Farquharson, died Saturday. He was 90.

.

According to the Associated Press, his daughter Martha said Harron died in his Toronto home surrounded by his family. He had chosen not to undergo treatment for cancer.

.

Martha said he didn’t lose the wit he was known for at the end of his life.

“He was still sharp. He was still capable of being funny even though his voice was barely above a whisper,” she told the AP. “It’s horribly sad, but it’s beautiful too.”

.

Harron first introduced Farquharson, a country bumpkin who took any chance to make fun of all things Canadian, on a CBC television revue in 1952. He would go on to appear as the character on U.S. television variety show “Hee Haw.”

.

Farquharson was an author as well — Harron penned several books under the name.

.

Harron was also known for helping to bring the Lucy Maud Montgomery novel “Anne of Green Gables” to a CBC TV production in 1955. Nine years after it aired, “Anne of Green Gables” was also turned into a stage production, which has been performed for 50 consecutive years at the Charlottetown Festival on Prince Edward Island.

.

Harron made many appearances on American television in the 1960s, including roles in “Mission Impossible,” “The F.B.I.,” “The Outer Limits,” “12 O’Clock High” and “Dr. Kildare.”

.

Born in Toronto in 1924, Harron started his career as a cartoonist, drawing caricatures in the 1930s. He turned to showbiz when he landed an audition for CBC Radio.

.

The actor and writer pursued educational interests as well. The University of Toronto feted Harron with scholastic awards for his pursuit in philosophy.

.

Later in his life, Harron served as an advocate for seniors. In recent years, he appeared as Farquharson in PSAs encouraging the elderly to use walking aids.

.

Harron is survived by his partner Claudette Gareau and three daughters. His daughters have also taken to showbiz: Mary Harron has directed such films as “American Psycho,” and Kelly Harron is working on turning “Anne of Green Gables” into a film.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
Reply #88 posted 01/30/15 6:54pm

JoeBala

Miles And Steve.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #89 posted 02/01/15 3:31pm

JoeBala

Companies are turning Katy Perry's halftime show into an online shopping event

http://i2.wp.com/radaronline.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/katy-perry-idina-menzel-super-bowl-halftime-009.jpg?resize=600%2C760

When you think about buying things during the Super Bowl, one thing comes to mind: those championship T-shirts, hats, and DVDs that go on sale directly after the last down. But halftime performer Katy Perry and a slew of companies are working to find a new way to get you to spend money during the game.

Shop 'till you drop

http://i1.wp.com/radaronline.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/katy-perry-idina-menzel-super-bowl-halftime-005.jpg?resize=600%2C929

The artist will sell limited edition products branded with her name during the game and the halftime show through a host of connected TV apps and other outlets, reports Variety. Instead of relying on a costly TV ad during the Super Bowl, Katy Perry, Universal Music Group, and Pepsi will use a service called Delivery Agent to try to sell the products to fans.

http://i.accesshw.com/production/images/226/630x630bd/226623.jpg

The products will be promoted on Samsung and LG smarts TVs, as well as on Roku devices. Promoted tweets from another partner — Visa — will use Twitter's new buy feature to let users purchase directly from their feeds. Anyone who looks up Katy Perry's music with the Shazam app will also have an opportunity to buy, as will those who turn to the Vevo YouTube channel to listen to more of her music.

http://static5.businessinsider.com/image/54cbdf106bb3f7ef7606cd4c-1200-924/katy%20perry%20super%20bowl%20football.jpg

There's no word yet on exactly what kind of products they'll be selling, but the "limited edition" goods will be sold until February 3rd — or until supplies run out.

Katy Perry: Pepsi Super Bowl XLIX Halftime Show Press Conference -27

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #90 posted 02/01/15 5:51pm

JoeBala

Katy Perry blew away the Super Bowl halftime show

By: Chris Chase 20 minutes ago

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

With the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks providing fireworks at the end of the first half of Super Bowl XLIX, Katy Perry brought some too, literally.

The mega-pop star showed off her patented-blend of soft-serve sexiness at the Super Bowl halftime show, performing a medley of her biggest hits that ended with her hit Firework, which came complete with pyrotechnics and Perry rising stories above the field to sing the song.

(Getty Images)

(Getty Images)

Pepsi, the show’s sponsor, was heavily involved throughout, with on-field participants holding up lights to make the soda’s famed logo at the start of the show. Fans in the stands got involved too, waving light sticks. It felt more like an Olympic Opening Ceremony than Super Bowl halftime show, which is a major achievement for a 13-minute show in the middle of a football game. Even Twitter, which collectively dislikes everything, was impressed.

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

Perry emerged riding an animatronic lion and wearing a dress of fire to perform her hit Roar. She quickly transitioned into the 2014 smash Dark Horse, a performance highlighted by a 3D rendering on the Super Bowl field that appeared to make the turf turn into different shapes and sizes, like a chessboard. Perry then made a wardrobe change for a campy, childish rendition of Teenage Dream that wouldn’t have been out of place on Yo Gabba Gabba!

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

With the entertaining, hassle-free show, Perry proved the NFL correct in her selection as halftime — one of the few things the NFL got right this year. Perry is the world’s most followed Twitter user (64.3 million and counting) and a popular, energetic female pop star who sings songs with catchy hooks. She’s someone in the prime of her career and adored by the NFL’s target demographic: young people. Katy Perry is what a Super Bowl halftime show should be. Rather than dragging out The Who or Tom Petty for a medley of songs that were on “Greatest Hits” albums before Katy Perry was born, actually have someone relevant today.

(Getty Images)

(Getty Images)

Perry’s show was heavy on the spectacle. She brought out dancing sharks, fake palm trees and wild animals, like the lion she rode in on.

“I’m the only person in Super Bowl history to bring a lion and sharks to the show,” Perry boasted this week, although that first part is more the fault of Matthew Stafford and Barry Sanders than anything.

Perry appeared to sing much of performance live, thought she avoided any of the usual absurd lip syncing controversy by admitting this week that some of her vocals would be prerecorded given all her movement. She stuck to her hits, unlike Madonna, Bruce Springsteen and The Rolling Stones, who all chose to play material unknown to most fans.

Getty Images)

Getty Images)

The Perry-only performance was top-notch, but the show slipped when its “special guest” was revealed. Perry had been hyping it all week: “When you hear the first ring of the chord, I think jaws will drop and faces will melt.”

The guest didn’t bring quite the reaction for which Perry was hoping. Speculation had ranged from Madonna to Britney to Cher, so when Missy Elliott came out, it was a halftime deflation (down to at least 9.5 PSI). Just when the Super Bowl halftime show threatened to be relevant to the current zeitgeist, Perry trots out a rapper whose last song to hit the charts was in 2008 and peaked at No. 95. Though Missy is a fine rapper, she’s probably unknown to a vast majority of the viewing audience, which is why it was so odd for Perry to hype her like she wanted fans to expect Elvis to enter the building.

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

Imagine the Patriots holding a press conference in the offseason, heralding their announcement as the player who will take them to the next level, and then Doug Flutie walking out from behind the curtain and you’ll get an idea of what the Missy Elliott “surprise” was like.

A real surprise would have been Taylor Swift, the mega-popular pop star with whom Perry is allegedly feuding. Now that would have melted faces.

(Reuters)

(Reuters)

The inclusion of Elliott was as superfluous as The Red Hot Chili Peppers last year, but at least Katy and Missy’s music has something in common. Elliott guested on a remix on that remix of Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.) a few years back, so the rapper’s rhymes flowed nicely over the sleek, stylized, pop beats from music’s biggest hit-makers. But her part of the show was hardly epic and instantly forgettable.

(Getty Images)

(Getty Images)

Why everyone feels the need to bring out a special guest at the Super Bowl is baffling. It’s like telling your audience “I’m not enough.” Duets are fine, but not when they’re just for the sake of having a duet. You know who didn’t have a guest? Prince. Bruce Springsteen. Michael Jackson. The real stars don’t need it. Katy Perry didn’t need one.

Oh, Lenny Kravitz was on stage too because Lenny Kravitz is everywhere, despite having exactly two songs people can name. Though he seems like a perfectly nice, cool rock star, stop trying to make Lenny Kravitz happen.

Perry has performed 108 shows so far in her Prismatic tour, in front of roughly two million fans combined. The expected audience for Sunday night is slightly higher: 113 million.

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

“I just hope that at the end of the day, [the viewers] are all smiling in unison,” Perry said this week.

Perry gave plenty reason to smile (those dancing sharks were great), but the biggest grin may be her own. She had gone on a diet before the show and cut out one of her favorite treats. After performing at the Super Bowl, however, she said she’ll eat as many Girl Scout Cookie thin mints as she can.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #91 posted 02/01/15 6:08pm

JoeBala

Lenny And John(Superbowl 2015)

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #92 posted 02/01/15 6:20pm

JoeBala

View image on Twitter

KP Full Half Time Show Video(Scroll down to end of article): http://www.theverge.com/2...AoTeRdz6BJ

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #93 posted 02/01/15 6:35pm

JoeBala

Tony Bennett, Lady Gaga Sing Reverent Duets for Generations at The Chelsea: Concert Review

Tony Bennett Lady Gaga Vegas Chelsea H 2014
Ethan Miller
Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga at The Chelsea

The Bottom Line

An effortlessly powerful Bennett and a respectfully restrained Gaga pair for a decadent set of standards.

Venue

The Chelsea at The Cosmopolitan;
Las Vegas, NV
(Tuesday, Dec. 30)

Sixty years apart, the two performers showcase more than just their 'Cheek to Cheek' standards in Las Vegas before hitting Los Angeles and New York City

"A lot of people say I sing old songs, but I like 'em better than the new ones," Tony Bennett candidly told the audience at The Chelsea after reprising his signature track, "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" — during which Lady Gaga was offstage, finishing another intricate wardrobe change and/or stepping aside so the seasoned standards singer (sixty years her senior) could treat ticketholders to another solo. However, it seems that the pop singer is currently in strong agreement with her touring partner, as she humbly took on his classics with a restrained, flirtatious spin throughout their Cheek to Cheek concert, all for the sake of complementing — and never overpowering — the legend she's recently befriended.

The two kicked off their series of 2015 performances at Las Vegas' intimate, vintage-designed venue inside the Cosmopolitan hotel. Originally scheduled to only take the Mophie stage on New Year's Eve — before hitting The Wiltern in February, Hollywood Bowl in May and Radio City Music Hall in June (among other dates nationwide) — their late addition to the Strip's already-packed events calendar quickly sold out to followers of both chart-toppers. Formally suited fans and moderately-dressed "little monsters" (relative to Gaga's other arena jaunts) sat side-by-side for a decadent 95-minute set, featuring a whopping 28 songs with a 22-person band amidst curtains of dripping jewels (similar to the hotel's three-story bar, The Chandelier).

During their Cheek to Cheek numbers like "Anything Goes," "Firefly" and "I Won't Dance," and the 2011 Duets II track that started it all, "The Lady is a Tramp," Bennett and Gaga — a pairing she referred to as "Tony Gaga" — shared laughs, traded kisses and danced hand in hand, a genuine candor showcased in their PBS special this past October. "There's nowhere I like to be better than cheek to cheek with Tony Bennett," she smiled at one point. "Don't be jealous, ladies — or gentlemen!" Bennett later quipped back, "Lady Gaga and I just did ...m together — you better buy it because she really needs the money!"

Their generous set, generally celebrating Bennett and his lasting musical influence, also included welcomed solo sections, during which each remained on one side of the stage with their own band (piano, drums, guitar and double bass). Vocally, Bennett hasn't missed a beat, effortlessly holding out songs' closing notes for new and elaborate peaks of familiar tracks like "They All Laughed," "Sing, You Sinners" and "The Best Is Yet to Come," among many, many others. He spontaneously cracked a joke about front-row attendees who arrived late, and before singing "Smile," he said he received a note during its chart reign that read, "'Tony, thank you for resurrecting my song,' and the letter was signed, Charlie Chaplin."

Gaga, free of a pop show's heavy production — visually and musically, as she said, "It's a wonderful break for me to play with real musicians" — shined bright when theatrically relishing in the quiet moments of songs like "Lush Life," "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" and "Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye" (the latter dedicated to her "mother, father, and my darling Taylor [Kinney]" in the audience), or personably cha-cha dancing across the stage during "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)," switching "my baby" to "that asshole" at one point and even flicking off the song's said man, to much applause. She remained authentically reverent throughout the set, well aware of her spot in Bennett's long-standing legacy and never aiming to seize the spotlight (except with seven shimmering outfits of feathers, ruffles and tassels). Often, she shared comments of disbelief: "Do you know that this man is the oldest living legend in the world? But he's the youngest guy I know."

Before the show's confetti-filled closing, Gaga noted a thought she has when alone in her hotel room. "I dream of Tony Bennett and how he's opened my mind with his wisdom, decades of music," she said. "Life is all about how you keep going, right? With your passion. … It will keep you happy forever." The sentiment was not only fitting for an audience contemplating the year ahead, but also for a pair who, very visibly and harmoniously, seem to find the happiness they seek, when they're out together dancing, cheek to cheek.

Set list:

Anything Goes
Cheek to Cheek
They All Laughed
The Good Life
The Lady's In Love With You
Nature Boy
How Do You Keep the Music Playing
Sing, You Sinners
Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)
Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered
Firefly
Smile
When You're Smiling
Steppin' Out With My Baby
I Won't Dance
For Once in My Life
The Best Is Yet to Come
I Can't Give You Anything But Love
Lush Life
Sophisticated Lady
Watch What Happens
Let's Face the Music and Dance
Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye
I Left My Heart in San Francisco
Who Cares (So Long As You Care for Me)
But Beautiful
The Lady Is a Tramp
It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #94 posted 02/02/15 5:26am

Identity





Aguilera Talks Next Album
02/01/15
Link



Christina Aguilera spent 2014 supporting a smash collaboration (A Great Big World's "Say Something"), giving birth and prepping the follow-up to 2012's Lotus.

In a new interview, the pop diva says that Pharrell Williams is helping her to realize her vision.

"During my pregnancy, I had a meeting with him and just connected on where I want to take the next album," Aguilera told Extra TV of Williams. "And we started talking music, and he has one song in particular that I love."

Aguilera did not give a release timeframe for her next full-length, but said of the project, "I just have to make sure it's right, and it's genuine and it's heartfelt, and I'm very excited to pour my heart out into this record fully. I've been gathering and writing and coming up with these amazing ideas for different parts of how I was feeling the past year, so I'm really excited to vocalize all of it and make it all come together."

Reply #95 posted 02/02/15 2:52pm

JoeBala

^^She needs to work on a Jazz CD.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #96 posted 02/03/15 3:09pm

JoeBala

Rose Marie McCoy, a Songwriter for Rock, Pop and Jazz Legends, Dies at 92

Photo

Rose Marie McCoy was a collaborator on some 850 songs.

For a woman who composed or collaborated on some 850 songs over seven decades, Rose Marie McCoy, who died on Jan. 20 at 92, was largely unheralded, recognized only belatedly in a nationwide radio documentary.

But her songs, spanning R&B, rock ’n’ roll, jazz and gospel, were widely heard, recorded by scores of singers, including Big Maybelle, James Brown, Ruth Brown, Nat King Cole, Aretha Franklin, Johnny Mathis, Bette Midler, Elvis Presley, Ike and Tina Turner, and Sarah Vaughan.

“When the rock ’n’ roll come in, if you say you wrote rock ’n’ roll, everybody wanted to see,” Ms. McCoy recalled in the documentary, on National Public Radio in 2009. “They wanted to hear what you had. And if they liked it, they didn’t care whether you’re black or white. We thought it was the blues, and they used to call it rock ’n’ roll. I still don’t know the difference.”

Rose Marie Hinton was born on April 19, 1922, to Levi and Celetia Brazil Hinton in a tin-roof shack in Oneida, Ark. — “the kind of place you pass through without even knowing you’re passing through it,” Ms. McCoy said. Her father was a farmer. In 1942, when she was 19, she ventured to New York with $6 in her pocket to launch a singing career.

Living in Harlem and supporting herself by ironing shirts at Chinese laundries there and in the Bronx, she got gigs at nightclubs and eventually at Harlem’s Baby Grand, Detroit’s Flame Show Bar, Cincinnati’s Sportsmen’s Club and Toronto’s Basin Street. She opened for seasoned performers like Ruth Brown, Moms Mabley, Dinah Washington and Dewey Markham, who was known as Pigmeat.

In her spare time, she wrote songs.

“After All” was recorded in 1946 by the Dixieaires with Muriel Gaines. In the early 1950s, she was signed to Wheeler Records and co-wrote “Gabbin’ Blues,” which reached No. 3 on the Billboard R&B chart. She began collaborating with Charlie Singleton, meeting at 6 o’clock in the morning in a booth at Beefsteak Charlie’s, near the Brill Building, the music industry temple in Midtown Manhattan.

They wrote the 1954 ballad “Trying to Get to You” for the Eagles, a black vocal group, but RCA Records signed a young singer who agreed to include the song in his repertoire. The song was included on his first studio album for the label, which spent 10 weeks atop the Billboard pop album chart in 1956.

“We thought he was terrible because we thought he couldn’t sing,” Ms. McCoy recalled.

The singer was Elvis Presley.

“Thank God for Elvis,” she told Joe Richman of Radio Diaries in the NPR documentary, titled “Lady Writes the Blues.” The song concludes:

Photo

Ms. McCoy began her career an aspiring singer before she started writing songs for others. Credit James J Kriegsmann

Lord above you knows I love you

It was He who brought me through

When my way was dark at night,

He would shine His brightest light.

When I was trying to get to you.

By 1961, when she collaborated on Ike and Tina Turner’s “I Think It’s Gonna Work Out Fine,” which earned them a Grammy nomination, she had her own office in the Brill Building. The song includes the lines:

Darling, it’s time to get next to me

Darling, I never thought that this could be

Your lips set my soul on fire

You could be my one desire

Oh darling, I think it’s gonna work out fine.

In the 1970s, several songs she co-wrote were included on the jazz singer Sarah Vaughan’s album “Send in the Clowns,” and she wrote jingles, including one sung by Aretha Franklin and Ray Charles for Coca-Cola. Just a few years ago, she and the country singer Billy Joe Conor co-wrote the songs on his debut album.

Ms. McCoy married James McCoy, a supervisor at the Ford Motor Company, in 1943. He died in 2000. She lived in Teaneck, N.J., until several years ago, when she joined a niece, Helen Brown, in Illinois. She died in Carle Foundation Hospital in Urbana, Ms. Brown said.

In the radio interview, Ms. McCoy said she would still wake up in the middle of the night with whole new songs in her head.

“I should’ve got up and wrote it down,” she said. “But you say, ‘What’s the use? Like, I’m retired now.’ ”

Correction: February 2, 2015

An earlier version of this obituary referred incorrectly to Elvis Presley’s recording of “Trying to Get to You,” a song Ms. McCoy wrote with Charlie Singleton. It was included on an album by Presley that spent 10 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard album chart; the song itself never reached No. 1. It also referred incorrectly to the singer Sarah Vaughan’s album “Send In the Clowns.” Ms. McCoy co-wrote several of the songs on that album with other writers; she did not co-write the entire album with Ms. Vaughan. And it misstated the location of the laundries where Ms. McCoy worked after moving to New York in 1942. They were in Harlem and the Bronx, not New Jersey.

Her Story: http://www.npr.org/templa...=100823151

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #97 posted 02/03/15 3:29pm

JoeBala

Billboard Cover: Behind the Scenes With Katy Perry as She Rehearses for the Super Bowl -- 'The Biggest Event of My Career'

By Jonathan Ringen | January 30, 2015 9:00 AM EST

Billboard Cover: Behind the Scenes With Katy Perry as She Rehearses for the Super Bowl -- 'The Biggest Event of My Career'

Katy Perry photographed on Jan. 7, 2015 at Quixote in West Hollywood.

Miller Mobley

Backstage at the top-secret rehearsals for the biggest gig in American showbiz, in a large, stuffy room marked "Wardrobe," a dozen or so half-naked female dancers wriggle into candy-colored, body-hugging costumes and pull on matching socks and sneakers. At the center of the action is Katy Perry, lying belly-down on a massage table with one bare leg poking out from under a blanket -- simultaneously getting treatment for a bad hamstring and giving notes on her dancers' and bandmembers' costumes. "It's obscene, I know," Perry says, referring to her elaborate multitasking. "But it's not because I'm a diva!"

It's hard to argue with her -- after all, she's a busy woman. In less than two weeks, on Feb. 1, Perry will take the stage at Super Bowl XLIX's halftime show, singing and dancing her way through 12-and-a-half painstakingly choreographed minutes of blockbuster hits for a TV audience of about 100 million (not to mention the 63,400 fans packed into Arizona's University of Phoenix stadium). To get the show in shape, Perry and her team set up here at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena, where they prepped her ongoing Prismatic Tour last spring. It's a massive undertaking. Longtime manager Bradford Cobb compares the endeavor to launching an entire tour. Perry agrees: "This has had brainpower going into it from before we knew we had it, when we were being courted."

Perry weighs in on everything from shoe options to zippers versus velcro, and whatever the question is, she has an immediate, decisive opinion and the confidence that her team will make it happen. "I used to say, 'That's ridiculous, we can never do that,' " says Baz Halpin, her longtime co-creative director. "Now I just say, 'You want to fly in on a giant banana and burst into flames? We'll make it work.' "

Katy Perry: The Billboard Cover Shoot

As Perry surveys the dancers, she's surrounded by the fashion designer Jeremy Scott (who created Perry's Super Bowl costumes), her stylist Johnny Wujek and a woman whose entire job is adding "bling" to the wardrobes -- which Perry is generally inclined to do. When one dancer appears, Perry notes the fit of her top, which may be risque for the family-friendly Super Bowl. "Your boobies are a little too much for that," Perry says cheerfully. "Show Sarah!" (She's referring to Sarah Moll, who runs halftime for the NFL, and whose facial expression shows that she agrees with Perry.)

If Perry is nervous, it doesn't show. She's already 108 shows deep into the Prismatic Tour. Most halftime artists use the performance as a mega-sized launch pad for whatever they have up next, but Perry says it will serve another purpose for her. "There isn't any selling point going up the day after," she says. "I'm just selling my music to the broadest, widest audience ever."

With her 2010 blockbuster Teenage Dream, Perry ascended to the top tier of pop, scoring a Michael Jackson-rivaling five No. 1 Billboard Hot 100 singles and selling 2.9 million copies of the album, according to Nielsen Music. The 2013 follow-up, Prism, sold 1.6 million, and featured two No. 1s ("Roar" and "Dark Horse," with Juicy J).

Still, it's hard to imagine the sales gap didn't stoke Perry's competitive spirit, especially as a new wave of female stars from Ariana Grande to Iggy Azalea began chewing up radio spins. Pop fans tend to pit female stars against each other: Madonna vs. Lady Gaga, Gaga vs. Perry, and lately, Perry vs. Taylor Swift. That last beef has been fought through magazine profiles and subtweets without either explicitly naming the other. In 2014, for instance, Swift described a fellow female musician as her "straight-up enemy" who tried to "sabotage [Swift's] entire arena tour." The next day Perry tweeted, "Watch out for the Regina George in sheep's clothing," a reference to Mean Girls that everyone took to be about Swift. Asked about it now, Perry only says, "If somebody is trying to defame my character, you're going to hear about it."

In any case, the Super Bowl gig is a major win in the Perry column. And not the only one: In 2014, she sold out more than 80 arenas, grossing more than $146 million, according to Billboard Boxscore, making Prismatic the biggest tour of the year by a female artist. Likewise, "Dark Horse" was 2014's No. 1 song on the Mainstream Top 40 chart, and she still has the most Twitter followers -- more than 64 million -- of anyone. "Watching the rehearsals solidified our feeling that she's the right choice," says the NFL's Moll. "And we see the connection she has with her audience and her reach on social media." Says Charli XCX, who will be opening for Perry this spring: "She makes sugary, plastic pop so well, makes it sound smart and amazing. But she also has such a vision within her videos and her live show. I love that she goes all the way with it."

Katy Perry: The Billboard Cover Shoot

When she's working, Perry wakes up around noon, after at least nine hours of sleep. She checks The Huffington Post to see what's going on in the world and slips into the uniform she has worn for the last year: a black Adidas track suit with white stripes and matching slippers. The effect is half Run-D.M.C., half Olympic Village. But style isn't the point. "I'm just not playing the picture game," she says, referring to paparazzi. "If I wear the same thing every day, the pictures don't sell."

Today, with the wardrobe meeting done, Perry curls up on the floor of her dressing room, which is stocked with water and fruit, a burbling humidifier and a pair of beige sofas. She's wearing a gold nose ring, pink nails and lipstick, and her hair pulled back in a casual ponytail. Butters, the puppy she adopted in 2014 (she looks like a living teddy bear), comes flying in, carrying a soggy ball. Perry recently gave custody of Butters to her longtime assistant, Tamara, and her girlfriend. "I was going through a breakup and I was like, 'I'm going to get a dog!'" Perry says, referring, presumably, to one of her off-again stints with John Mayer. "But honestly, I have to run an empire, and as much as I love animals I don't know if I have the mind capacity to do it."

Katy Perry Ties Rihanna F...ngs No. 1s

The rest of her early-afternoon routine involves physical therapy for her knees and some massage, acupuncture or cupping. "Sometimes I get a steam for my voice," she says. She also has a therapist she sees when she's in Los Angeles. "That's one of only a handful of people who see me as Katherine Hudson," Perry says, using her real name, which she changed to avoid confusion with the actress Kate Hudson.

Perry lives in what she calls "a compound" in L.A. with her older sister, Angela Hudson; Hudson's husband, Svend Lerche; and their baby. Her younger brother, David Hudson, lives nearby in Los Feliz and her parents, Keith Hudson and Mary Perry, are in Irvine, Calif. "Everybody is somewhat close," she says. "I always dreamed of living commune style. I want my own Neverland ranch at a some point, but not with the salacious parts." She cracks up.

Her dream? "My own Starbucks on the property," she says, only half-joking. "I have to create my own world because it's hard to go into the other world sometimes. Barbra Streisand has a mall downstairs in her basement -- just weird, amazing stuff like that. I get it, because it becomes such a thing to go out in the world."

Katy Perry: The Billboard Cover Shoot

One of those times came in early January, when she was spotted at dinner with Mayer in L.A. (The pair have dated at least twice since 2012. She also was married to Russell Brand for 14 months starting in late 2010 and was reported to have been dating Diplo last year.) She declines to define their relationship, bristling at the question. "What I will say is that to have any relationship at this level you have to just be protective and figure out how to navigate it," she says. "There is no handbook." She thinks about it, and adds, "In all my relationships, I've learned how I have to be more careful and that it's not up for public consumption."

Perry's parents were hippies-turned-Evangelical ministers, home-schooling Perry and her two siblings and raising them according to a deeply conservative, fire-and-brimstone belief system. The family, who lived mostly in Santa Barbara, Calif., was poor enough that food wasn't always easy to come by. "But I love my childhood," she says. "Because I can't change it and it made me who I am." Perry regrets her lack of formal education, and stays informed about news and issues that are important to her, including her outspoken support for LGBT rights. "I grew up in a little bit of a bubble of ignorance and judgment," she says. "And so I'm happy that I've been able to evolve past that."

Katy Perry: The Billboard Cover Shoot

At 13, Perry convinced her parents to bring her to Nashville to seek a career as a gospel singer; she released an album on a Christian label at 16. But after discovering secular artists, from Queen to Gwen Stefani, she moved to L.A. and shifted her ambitions -- first aiming to be a acoustic guitar-wielding singer-songwriter, later settling on her current plan: global pop domination. She bounced from contract to contract -- "I had two cars repossessed, I was always going by the hair of my chinny chin chin" -- before landing on Capitol Records. Working with Dr. Luke, Max Martin and Benny Blanco, she broke through with 2008's button-pushing "I Kissed a Girl." Since then, that core team (often helped by songwriter Bonnie McKee and others) has produced a string of No. 1 songs. "My strengths are melodies and lyrics," Perry explains. "Max is the king of melodies and Luke is the king of, like, sounds. When we get together we make the biggest songs."

"Everyone has been asking me if I'm going to be nervous before the halftime show," Perry says. "I'm like, I'm f---ing human. This is the biggest event of my career." To prep, she has been studying recent shows, with extra attention on Beyoncé in 2013 and Madonna in 2012. "Those performances are clean and streamlined," she says. "They're about the catalog, the songs. I like Madonna for the graphic effects she brought." And Beyoncé? "She brought so much strength, so much sassiness and just the right amount of sex," Perry says. "She's an icon. Elvis, The Beatles, Michael Jackson -- she's in that category. I'm not. She's like five notches above me, and those levels are compounded in difficulty."

Why Katy Perry's 'Prism' ... You Think

She also reached out to Bruno Mars, a buddy from awards shows, who had the halftime gig in 2014. (She insists she doesn't have many close celebrity friends -- she's probably tightest with Rihanna, Adele and Ellie Goulding.) She scans the email on her phone -- "let me just make sure it's kosh" -- before reading it out loud:

Hello, exclusive Super Bowl club member! I was wondering if you are in L.A. at all this month and would have tea with a sister who is about to throw up with nervousness re: [football emoji]. I've heard about your process through our managers, but am wondering if you had more insight on important things like, spray tan the night before or three nights before? JK, or maybe not!

"I'm going to meet up with him and he'll tell me whatever there is to tell," Perry says. "Although I don't know how much there really is." She knows that no matter how much she prepares, the halftime show is live, and as Janet Jackson and M.I.A. demonstrated, anything can happen. "You can't control other people, and hopefully they're on the same path with you," she says. "My special guests" -- including Lenny Kravitz -- "don't have any agenda other than the music. But you can never be too sure." Kravitz claims that he and Perry have been cooking up a surprise. "It's cool because it's different for me," he says. "Our voices are going to blend well together."

Perry's focused on the opportunity: Playing for an audience so vast that it will include some of the few remaining human beings who have never heard of her. What's her strategy to win them over? It's simple, Perry says: "I want the show to be quintessential Katy. It's like the exclamation point on the whole last cycle. This is the cherry on top of everything I've already done."

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
Reply #98 posted 02/03/15 3:53pm

JoeBala

Don Covay, Influential R&B Artist and Songwriter, Dead at 76

Rolling Stones, Aretha Franklin, Little Richard among many vets to cover prolific singer

Don Covay

By Kory Grow | February 3, 2015

Don Covay, an R&B singer and songwriter who wrote songs that would be covered by the Rolling Stones, Aretha Franklin, Little Richard and others, has died. His daughter, Ursula, confirmed the singer's death. He was 76.

In the Sixties, Covay's soulful voice and skill for writing upbeat R&B songs made for a number of hits for both him and the artists who covered them. His first radio hit, 1961's "Pony Time," reached Number One for Chubby Checker the following year. His biggest pop hit, 1964's "Mercy Mercy," which featured Jimi Hendrix on guitar, would go on to be the lead track on the U.S. version of the Rolling Stones' 1965 album Out of Our Heads. And his 1965 hit "See Saw," which he co-wrote with Steve Cropper, would become a Top 10 hit for Aretha Franklin three years after it came out. Prior to that, though, Franklin made a Number Two hit out of "Chain of Fools," a song that Covay had written with Otis Redding in mind in the Fifties.

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Rfe2yCI7jYY/UU72hMtMzrI/AAAAAAAAAXk/L6u7IunOg0Y/s1600/DONCOVAY.jpg

Additionally, as songwriter and onetime employee at famed songwriting outpost the Brill Building, Covay would write hits for Solomon Burke ("I'm Hanging Up My Heart for You"), Gladys Knight and the Pips ("Letter Full of Tears"), Wilson Pickett ("I'm Gonna Cry") and Little Richard ("I Don't Know What You've Got but It's Got Me"). He also wrote songs for Etta James and Redding, and his own recordings have been covered by several artists, including Gene Vincent, Steppenwolf, Bobby Womack, Small Faces and many others.

Covay was born Donald Randolph in Orangeburg, South Carolina in 1938, the son of a Baptist preacher. He performed in his family's gospel quartet, the Cherry Keys, and made his first secular recordings in the mid-Fifties with the doo-wop group Rainbows, which would later feature Marvin Gaye and Billy Stewart among their ranks. By 1957, Covay found a gig chauffeuring Little Richard and appearing as an opener in the Little Richard Revue. His boss went on to produce his first single, "Bip Bip Bop," which failed to chart. Although he recorded other singles in the Fifties, his first hit came in with "Pony Time."

After finding success with both his own singles and as a songwriter, Covay put together an R&B supergroup, the Soul Clan – which found him singing alongside Solomon Burke, Ben E. King, Joe Tex and Arthur Conley, in 1968. Their single, "Soul Meeting," charted in the R&B Top 40. Toward the end of the decade, Covay was playing in another group, the Jefferson Lemon Blues Band, with Shirelles guitarist Joe Richardson and folk musician John Hammond. Their single, "Black Woman," bowed at Number 43 on the R&B chart.

Album Cover, sleeve, out of our heads, THe Rolling Stones, Record, 1965

In the Seventies, Covay worked in A&R for Mercury Records, but also scored one of his biggest solo hits, "I Was Checkin' Out, She Was Checkin' In," in 1973. He also scored hits that decade with "Somebody's Been Enjoying My Home," also in 1973, "It's Better to Have (And Don't Need)," in 1974, and "Rumble in the Jungle" – a tune that was inspired by Muhammad Ali's famous match with George Foreman – in 1975. He notched his last hit, "Badd Boy," in 1980. In 1986, Covay contributed backing vocals, alongside the likes of Tom Waits, Jimmy Cliff and Patti Scialfa, to the Rolling Stones' Dirty Work.

In 1992, Covay suffered a stroke. The following year, a number of artists who had drawn inspiration from the singer-songwriter put out the tribute compilation, Back to the Streets: Celebrating the Music of Don Covay. It featured contributions from Rolling Stones guitarists Mick Taylor and Ron Wood, Bobby Womack, Iggy Pop, Ben E. King, Todd Rundgren, Robert Cray and others. Also, in 1993, the Rhythm and Blues Foundation gave Covay a Pioneer Award.

The singer-songwriter put out a new album in 2000, Adlib – which featured contributions by Paul Rodgers, Wilson Pickett, Paul Shaffer and Huey Lewis, among others, and art by Ron Wood. A collection of rare Covay recordings, Super Bad, came out on 2009.

EurWeb reports that Covay died in his sleep on January 31st, following years of battling a debilitating illness as a result of his stroke.

.

The Jacka, Bay Area Rap Hero, Dead at 37

Popular rapper worked with E-40 and Paul Wall among many others and leaves behind deep catalog

By Mosi Reeves | February 3, 2015
The Jacka

Dominic "The Jacka" Newton, one of the most popular rappers in the San Francisco Bay Area's sprawling underground rap scene, was murdered in East Oakland, California on Monday night. He was 37 years old.

Emerging in the late 1990s as part of the Mob Figaz collective, the Jacka evolved into a solo star with street albums like 2005's The Jack Artist. In 2009, he scored his biggest hit, Tear Gas, which reached Number 12 on Billboard's R&B Albums chart and produced the regional anthem, "Glamorous Lifestyle."

"The team has no comment at this time," the rapper's publicist tells Rolling Stone. "But we ask for everyone's prayers for the Jacka's family, loved ones and the entire Bay Area community."

Throughout its history, Bay Area hip-hop has been defined by independent hustle, yielding hundreds of albums a year from locals whose impact often spreads far beyond Northern California. The Jacka's discography encompasses dozens of CDs issued through his imprint The Artist and local labels like producer Nick Peace's Million Dollar Dream.

He worked with countless rappers, from Bay Area icons like E-40, Keak da Sneak and Andre Nickatina to Paul Wall and Devin the Dude. He assembled projects like 2012's The Verdict, part of a four-album exploration of crime and punishment, and Drought Season, a series with Wiz Khalifa-associated rapper Berner. Last fall, he dropped two albums, including Highway Robbery with Philadelphia rapper Freeway.

Born into a broken home in Pittsburgh, the Jacka began hustling on the streets at an early age. However, he also joined the Nation of Islam as a child and later, while serving time in prison on a robbery charge, became a Sunni Muslim. He took the name Shaheed Akbar, even as he continued to depict a uncompromising turf life.

"I knew [being a Muslim] was a way for me to pray to God directly," he told VladTV.com in a joint interview with Freeway last October. "Some of the things I talk about in my music, I don't wanna say 'em, but I say 'em anyway because I'm in the streets, and just so people can get the experience from them."

It was his talent for writing about the West Coast thug life with unflinching honesty, and a slightly wheezy, yet magnetic, voice, that made him a beloved artist. His hardened perspective is reflected on tracks like "Mob Shit," where he rapped, "Some of my niggas shot up, some of 'em died on me too/Some of my niggas came up, got rich and everything/I know they lost a lot, they deal with the pain."

"He was a gangsta rapper, but unlike a lot of gangsta rappers, he didn't glamorize the criminal lifestyle," Matt Werner, who runs the authoritative Bay Area rap site Thizzler.com, tells Rolling Stone. "He talked about the pitfalls and the dark side of it. I think a lot of people really gravitated towards that."

One of the Jacka's influences was Marvin Gaye, another musician unafraid to explore his inner darkness. In a 2009 interview with the San Francisco Bay Guardian, he said, "Listen to Marvin Gaye…I guarantee he's going to grab your soul. He knows something and could put it together with the music. And what he talked about was the struggle, the pain. I try to make shit that'll stick to your soul. Like the music my parents used to listen to."

Twitter reaction unfolded shortly after Jacka's shooting, with scores of musicians from all coasts showing their love and appreciation, including E-40, Bun B, G-Eazy and Freddie Gibbs. R&B singer Keyshia Cole, who was raised in Oakland, wrote, "#RIPTheJacka!! So many good things to say #AboutARealOne." Queensbridge rapper Cormega, who often worked with the Jacka, tweeted "I been looking for the right words but I just can't find them. How do you kill someone who is beloved by everyone and has love for people?"

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!

URL: http://prince.org/msg/8/412806

Date printed: Fri 19th Apr 2024 9:10am PDT