Friday, September 5, 2008

NFL season kicks off with free NYC concert

NEW YORK (AP) — Usher, Keith Urban and Natasha Bedingfield are kicking off the NFL season with a free concert that's expected to draw thousands to Manhattan's Columbus Circle.

They are scheduled to perform Thursday afternoon. A video about the Super Bowl champion New York Giants will be shown before the NFL Kickoff show.

Traffic at the busy intersection at the foot of Central Park is expected to come to a virtual stop as fans and speakers — including Mayor Michael Bloomberg — turn out for the event.

The NFL will air portions of the concert live on its network prior to Thursday night's game between the Giants and the Washington Redskins at Giants Stadium.


source from : yahoo music

Christina Aguilera Reaches Target Audience

Ain't no other retailer for Christina Aguilera.

The petite vocal powerhouse has inked a deal to sell her upcoming compilation album, Keeps Gettin' Better—A Decade of Hits, exclusively through Target.

She joins John Legend, whose Live From Philadelphia is a Target exclusive, Carrie Underwood and Alicia Keys among the artists who've enlisted the big-box retailer to peddle their musical wares. Groups such as the Eagles, AC/DC and Journey have made similar arrangements with Wal-Mart.

Aguilera's greatest-hits collection, which also features two new songs, will be available in stores and on Target.com starting Nov. 11.

"I can't believe it's been over 10 years since my first album, and it was really exciting to put all of my favorite songs in one collection for my fans," said the 27-year-old "Genie in a Bottle" singer, who's also busy pushing a new signature fragrance, Inspire, and mothering her 7-month-old son, Max.

source from: Yahoo music

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Library of Congress to honor Stevie Wonder

The Associated Press

The Library of Congress will honor Stevie Wonder with its second Gershwin Prize for Popular Song.
Librarian of Congress James Billington, who announced the prize Tuesday, noted that the prize honors an artist whose work transcends musical styles to bring diverse listeners together and foster mutual understanding. It recognizes a musician's lifetime of work.
Wonder, 58, will receive the award on Feb. 23, 2009. The first Gershwin Prize was awarded in 2007 to Paul Simon.
Self-taught on piano, harmonica and other instruments, Steveland Morris was just 12 when he first wowed national TV audiences on shows like Dick Clark's "American Bandstand." He was "Little Stevie Wonder" back then, a name he says someone at Motown Records — he can't remember exactly who — came up with.
From his earliest days as a prodigy covering Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind" through such songs of his own as "You Are the Sunshine of My Life," "My Cherie Amour" and "Signed, Sealed, Delivered, I'm Yours," his music has sought to uplift and inform as well as entertain.
Among his albums: "Talking Book," "Innervisions," "Fulfillingness First Finale" and "Songs in the Key of Life," the last of which included his classic single "Love in Need of Love Today."

review from : Yahoo Music

Monday, August 25, 2008

Music Review: Beyonce's lil sis carves her niche


Solange, "Sol-Angel and the Hadley St. Dreams" (Geffen Records)

Over the past five years, Solange Knowles has gone through some serious changes.

After releasing her lackluster debut CD "Solo Star," she got married at 17, gave birth, and later divorced — all as big sister Beyonce grew to become one of music's biggest superstars.

But now Solange is ready to carve out her own space in the musical universe with "Sol-Angel and the Hadley St. Dreams," a retro-soul adventure that plays smooth like a magic carpet ride.

On the album's opening track, "God Given Name," Solange let's us know not to expect Beyonce 2.0 from her. She sings: "I'm not becoming expectations, I'm not her and never will be/Two girls going in different directions, striving towards the same galaxy."

Solange recruited a number of top producers for the project, including Cee-Lo, Mark Ronson, Pharrell Williams and Raphael Saadiq. She also has a duet with Bilal. But her work with producer Jack Splash (Alicia Keys, Estelle) is the highlight of her sophomore record. On the funky "T.O.N.Y.," Solange and Splash create a rhythmic, suave tune that will have fans of old-school R&B and contemporary soul replaying it over and over again.

Resource from Yahoo Music

Jennifer Hudson a Star-Spangled Obama Supporter

Oh, say can you see Jennifer Hudson in Colorado?

The Oscar winner has been tapped to sing the national anthem Thursday, the night Barack Obama is set to address the increasingly star-studded Democratic National Convention for the first time as his party's official candidate for president of the United States.

Meaning, no more of that "presumptive nominee" stuff.
"She's thrilled and excited. It's a tremendous honor," said a rep for Hudson, who told E! Online's Marc Malkin in June that she'd love to stump for Obama.

"I'm so proud and excited for him. I haven't gotten a call from them yet, but he does have my support."

The convention, currently underway in Denver, is the destination du jour this week for, among others, big-time Obama supporters such as Jennifer Lopez, Ben Affleck, Charlize Theron, George Clooney, Oprah Winfrey, Kanye West, Dave Matthews, Sheryl Crow, Spike Lee, Susan Sarandon and Annette Bening.

Bruce Springsteen will be on tap to close out the festivities Thursday night.
Resource from Yahoo Music

Jessica Simpson Goes on Over to CMA

Jessica Simpson continues to follow in Carrie Underwood's footsteps.

Proving that she's really serious about this country thing, the 28-year-old Texan joined the Country Music Association last week, E! News has learned.

"She was very sweet and seemed happy to join the organization," a Simpson source said. "Being a member makes you part of the industry. It's great for networking. "

Along with SAG-style privileges, such as special-rate health insurance, her membership makes her a voting member of the CMA, meaning she could have a say in upcoming CMA Award nominations.

The flirtatious "Come on Over," her first twangtastic single for Columbia Nashville, peaked at No. 18 on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart after debuting at No. 41, despite a whole bunch of radio play.

The tune itself received a pretty warm "Howdy!" from critics, but a better test of Simpson's down-home staying power will be the performance of her sixth studio album, Do You Know, which is due out Sept. 9. Dolly Parton duets on the title track, ensuring some street cred right off the bat.

The CMA's roster boasts more than 6,000 artists, songwriters, recording execs, producers, radio personalities and other prominent country figures.

That lineup includes Underwood, a CMA member, winner of four CMA Awards and the ex-girlfriend of current Simpson flame Tony Romo.

"It's definitely media-driven," Simpson told country-music website TheBoot.com last week, referring to Underwood's recent comments to Allure about still getting calls from Romo. "People are just trying to make a story out of nothing. I respect her and hopefully she respects me.
We've just dated the same guy—that's it!"
"I don't understand why she would say that," Simpson added. "I respect Carrie, and I would never say anything like that."
As far as Underwood's musical success is concerned, however, Simpson had nothing but respect for the 25-year-old hit machine.

"I think it's impressive how many No. 1s Carrie Underwood has," the country newcomer said graciously. "Her choice in songs is really great, and she has an incredible voice. As far as new people, she has one of the strongest voices out there."

—Additional reporting by Claudia Rosenbaum-


Resource from Yahoo! Music

Bloc Party to release new album this week

courtesy of NME.com

Bloc Party will release their new album in two days time (August 21) - but you'll be able to hear a new song from the record exclusive on NME.com from Tuesday (19) afternoon.
The band announced the shock release during a webchat with fans on Blocparty.com yesterday (August 18).

NME.com can exclusively reveal that Intimacy, the band's third album, is available to pre-order on CD and mp3 from Blocparty.com now.

The record will see its release in stores on October 28 on Atlantic Records. Fans who pre-order the physical album, which will contain different tracks from the digital release, will receive a free download of the digital version upon purchase.

Intimacy was recorded in two separate sessions, as the band chose to work with both Paul Epworth and Jacknife Lee on the record.

The tracklisting for Intimacy will be:

"Ares" "Mercury""Halo""Biko""Trojan Horse""Signs""One Month Off""Zephyrus""Better Than Heaven""Ion Square"

Bloc Party have made new song "Trojan Horse" available as a stream on the NME Office Blog.


The band play the Main Stage this week at Britain's Reading and Leeds Festivals on Saturday (August 23) at Reading and Sunday (24) at Leeds

Friday, August 22, 2008

Rihanna bests Archuleta to stay atop singles chart

By Jonathan Cohen

NEW YORK (Billboard) - Barbadian pop singer Rihanna begins a second week at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart with "Disturbia," but she barely fended off the best chart debut in more than 18 months, in the form of David Archuleta's "Crush."

Archuleta's track sold 166,000 downloads in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan, and opens at No. 2.

The last song to debut so high on the chart was Fall Out Boy's "This Ain't a Scene, It's an Arms Race" in late January 2007. "Crush" also scores the best opening by an "American Idol" finalist with a song not performed on the show.

Chris Brown's "Forever" slips from No. 2 to No. 3 on the Hot 100, with Katy Perry's "I Kissed a Girl" down one rung to No. 4 and Coldplay's "Viva La Vida" trading places with M.I.A.'s "Paper Planes," placing them at Nos. 5 and 6, respectively. Kardinal Offishall's "Dangerous" featuring Akon remains at No. 7.

Rihanna's "Take a Bow" drops from No. 4 to No. 8, while Ne-Yo's "Closer" inches up one notch to No. 9. Taylor Swift lands at No. 10 with "Change," one of five songs to debut this week from AT&T's "Team USA Soundtrack." The cut sold more than 131,000 downloads.

Kenny Chesney scores his first top 50 debut on the Hot 100 with "Everybody Wants To Go To Heaven" at No. 41. The lead single from his fall album, "Lucky Old Sun," sold 30,000 downloads.

Opening at No. 65 this week on the Hot 100 is Hit Masters' cover of Kid Rock's "All Summer Long," thanks to download sales of 37,000. Kid Rock's original version is not available digitally but as a result of increasing airplay jumps from No. 28 to No. 25.

Reuters/Billboard

Dido bringing it all "Home" in November

By Jonathan Cohen





NEW YORK (Billboard) - British singer-songwriter Dido has slated a November 4 release date for her oft-delayed third album, "Safe Trip Home."


Look No Further," a track from the RCA Label Group album, is being made available as a free download from DidoMusic.com as of Friday (August 22).

The first official single, "Don't Believe in Love," will be issued digitally and on CD on a date to be announced.

"Safe Trip Home" is the follow-up to 2003's "Life for Rent," which has sold more than 2.1 million copies in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

The set was co-produced by Jon Brion and Dido and her brother Rollo Armstrong, working together under the moniker Ark. One track, "Grafton Street," was co-written with Brian Eno.

THIS SONG'S EVEN BETTER THAN THE ORIGINAL!

by Anna Chan

Last week, I listed Marilyn Manson’s cover of “Sweet Dreams” as one of the worst cover songs, but apparently, many disagreed with me. But that’s the beauty of music: What sounds awful to one person may resonate with another.

It’s certainly tough to put a new spin on a much beloved original such as the Eurythmics’ tune and have most people love it, but some musicians can take anything from a huge hit to songs that are just OK and turn them into masterpieces.

Here are just a few I’ve found to be fantastic:

“Superstar”: All right, so last week, I blasted Here for covering Ministry’s cover of Bob Dylan’s “Lay Lady Lay.” Yet this week, not only am I giving props to the Carpenters for their cover of the Delaney, Bonnie & Friends song (which Richard Carpenter reportedly first heard as performed by Bette Midler), I’m also giving huge kudos to Sonic Youth’s cover of the Carpenters’ version on the tribute album “If I Were a Carpenter.” The Carpenters version is probably by far the most popular version of the song, and though Karen Carpenter's vocals were lovely, Thurston Moore's vocals and the band's arrangement had her beat. Granted, a more up-to-date sound may appeal to younger ears, but Moore’s vocals really captured the painful longing, while the music reverberated with the hollowness of being alone. It gives me goose bumps every single time

Revolting Cocks’ “Do Ya Think I’m Sexy”: Don’t get me wrong, there’s nothing terrible about Rod Stewart’s original. It’s fun, it’s sassy, but it’s also a little bit cheesy. (The idea of a 63-year-old singing this to my young-ish ears is also a bit icky.) But RevCo’s 1993 cover (found on their album “Linger Ficken’ Good”) sexed up this hot song a bit more, the way I imagine it should’ve originally sounded in 1978 (though their video is definitely on the silly side). The band turned it from a disco-y type tune into a rocking dance-floor hit sung in a suggestive voice. (Remember the original line “He says I’m sorry but I’m out of milk and coffee”? The new line replaces the beverage with … KY Jelly!) As Austin Powers would say, “Yeah, baby!”

RUN DMC’s “Walk This Way”: This 1986 remake of the 1977 Aerosmith hit is a great example of not only a fantastic cover tune, but also proof of how mixing genres can work. The hip-hop pioneers took the band’s blues-y rock tune, added some funky turntables by Jam Master Jay and rapped Steven Tyler's girl-crazy lyrics, transforming it into a hip-hop/pop hit that helped revitalize Aerosmith’s sagging career and made rap more mainstream. Plus, the video, which also features Aerosmith, is pretty fun.

My other favorite cover songs include:
Soft Cell’s “Tainted Love”Hate Dept.’s “You Spin Me Round (Like a Record)”
Doll Factory’s “Baby One More Time”
Battery’s “Gangster’s Paradise”
80 percent of the “For the Masses” album, a tribute to Depeche Mode

Which cover songs do you think are the greatest of all time?

Sheryl Crow rockin’ new voters — for free

Singer to give away album to people who get 3 friends to register to vote

LOS ANGELES - Sheryl Crow is giving away free music — a tactic she calls the "Tupperware" party approach to inspiring young people to vote.

The Grammy Award-winning singer announced a plan Wednesday to give a digital copy of her album "Detours" to the first 50,000 people who register three friends to vote.
"I hope people wake up and emotionally engage in issues," Crow said in telephone interview during a visit to Los Angeles.

Crow's giveaway is a kickoff to Rock the Vote's voter registration drive. She is also offering a free download of her politically charged song "Gasoline" to anyone who logs onto the Rock the Vote Web site or anyone on the group's mailing list, said the organization's executive director Heather Smith.

Crow, 46, was one of the founding artists of Rock the Vote 18 years ago. She said the "Detours" album fits perfectly into the group's cause since the lyrics touch on topics such as adoption, breast cancer, the war in Iraq, the environment and Hurricane Katrina.

"It's about the issues that everyone's talking about, but there's a lot of hope," Crow said. "At this moment in my life, writing about anything else would be uninteresting and impossible because I feel such urgency."

Crow, who has advocated for environmental, health and humanitarian causes, said her fans know where she stands politically. But in this voter registration campaign she's concerned only for the future of her 1-year-old son, Wyatt, and the future of American democracy.

Crow suggested that more musicians should use their music to promote issues that affect Americans. She said she was inspired by pop musicians from the 1960s and 70s, when political songs were performed by Edwin Starr, Buffalo Springfield, Marvin Gaye and Peter Paul & Mary.

"There was healthy competition among artists to create art that was commercial and political at the same time," Crow said.

"Our music (now) is not representing the times — at least not socially and politically. Or maybe we're just distracted."

Rock the Vote aims to register 2 million young people to vote by November — the largest youth voter drive in history by three times, Smith said.

"These musicians speak to millions of people every day so for them to use their voices to inspire people is a key part of our program," she said.

Anyone who recruits three people to vote will have to log onto the Rock the Vote Web site and go through a verification process before receiving Crow's album, Smith said.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Infamous fired rock drummers

By Tony Sclafani
MSNBC contributor





Pete Best (The Beatles)

The summer movie “The Rocker,” had Rainn Wilson playing a rock drummer dumped from his band on the eve of their stardom. This turn of events seems to be a recurring theme in rock, and if we had to give it a name, we’d call it “The Pete Best Curse.” Best was, of course, the drummer who got fired from the Beatles days after they got a recording contract. Many reasons have been floated as to why the Fab Four canned a two-year member and at least one book has been written about it. Whatever the case for his dismissal, Best takes the “award” for missing out on the biggest ride to stardom in the history of pop music. At least in 1995 he saw a big payday when a few tracks he drummed on found their way onto the first “Anthology” album.





Kate Schellenbach (Beastie Boys)


Founding Beastie Schellenbach beat the hell out of the skins on the Beastie’s 1982 hardcore punk EP “Polly Wog Stew,” and can also be heard loud and clear on their 1983 “Cooky Puss” single. But she was gone by the time the band released their 1986 breakthrough LP, “License to Ill.” What happened? Rick Rubin, that’s what. The bearded producer purportedly reconfigured the band sans Kate when they signed with Def Jam. Schellenbach didn’t find out until she happened to bump into the guys, who were decked out in new Adidas sweat suits bought by Rubin. They later made it up to her by signing her band, Luscious Jackson to their Grand Royale label.


Aaron Burkhardt and Chad Channing (Nirvana)

Everything about Nirvana was high drama, so it’s no surprise that the pre-fame edition of the group blew through two drummers (more if you count substitutes). Burkhardt was made to leave the fold early on because of an alleged penchant for fighting. Channing got the axe after he piped up with too many musical ideas during demo sessions for “Nevermind.” For the record, Channing contends he wasn’t fired, he quit (see Michael Azerrad’s Nirvana bio “Come as You Are: The Story of Nirvana”). In that same book, however, both Kurt Cobain and bassist Krist Novoselic say he was indeed fired.


Scott Raynor (Blink-182)

Give Raynor some credit: he purportedly managed to be too wild for even the guys in Blink-182, who seemed to live for toilet humor and underwear photos. Raynor drummed for Blink-182 for a long six years before he was replaced by Travis Barker in 1998. Talk amongst fans (and on Wikipedia) is that Raynor partied too much and lacked discipline. Raynor himself is evasive. Either way, the Pete Best Curse was in full swing when the group found mega-success with “Enema of the State” after Barker signed on.


George Tutuska (The Goo Goo Dolls)


Today Summer ConcertsPete Best may have put in two years with the Beatles, but Tutuska was with the Goo Goo Dolls for nearly a decade when he was asked to leave. Asking for a songwriting credit was allegedly the mortal sin he committed against lead Doll John Rzeznik (although you assume other issues had to be brewing). Needless to say, the final album Tutuska played on was “A Boy Named Goo,” which propelled the band to stardom.

News : Jennifer Lopez vows to complete triathlon

Jennifer Lopez has vowed to complete her upcoming triathlon, even if she has to "crawl across the finish line".

The 'Jenny From The Block' singer - who gave birth to twins Max and Emme in February - has been training intensively for the gruelling challenge, which involves running, cycling and swimming.

She said: "If I have to crawl across that finish line, I am going to. I keep telling myself that when I'm training, 'This is for charity. Your kids are going to know about this. Don't embarrass the family! Get it done, Lopez!'

"But the swimming is a killer, I'm not a natural."

The singer - who was voted Self magazine's Most Inspiring Woman of 2008 - has also revealed how well her six-month old babies with husband Marc Anthony are doing She said: "The babies are great, they're amazing. I hated leaving them this morning. They're sleeping through the night. We're very lucky."

The 39-year-old mother also said she is not only participating in the event for charity, but for her children too. She added to US TV show 'Good Morning America': "I thought, 'What can I do to make my babies proud.' I think about what they'll think about the year they were born, who I was and what I did.

"It's important for me to set examples for them." The Nautica Malibu Triathlon is held on September 14.

News : Britney Spears’ custody battle bill

Britney Spears’ custody battle could cost her over $700,000.

The troubled singer’s lengthy court process with ex-husband Kevin Federline to establish access rights to their sons, Sean Preston, two, and 23-month-old Jayden James, led to two law firms billing her a combined total of $466,000, court documents have revealed.

In addition, Britney, 26, also agreed to pay Kevin’s legal fees, which amounted to around $250,000. The largest bill comes from attorney Stacy D. Phillips, who claimed in court filings that she is owed nearly $407,000 for four months of work and says she has written off an additional $125,000 in fees.

The remainder of Britney’s bill is for $60,000 for two months work from Laura Wasser who took over the case in June. She brokered the agreement between Britney and Kevin that saw him retain full custody while the singer has visitation rights.

Phillips claims the case was more complicated because Britney’s father Jamie, as co-conservator of her estate, has control over Britney’s affairs.

The payments have to be approved by the Los Angeles commissioner and lawyers for Britney and Jamie have indicated that they will contest the bill.

A hearing has been scheduled for September 16 to discuss the fee. Britney and Kevin married in 2004 and their divorce was finalised last July. Under the terms of their divorce settlement, the singer currently pays her ex-husband $20,000 a month.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Madonna turns 50 with world tour on her mind

Controversial star may be universally admired, but isn't universally loved

LONDON - Madonna won't have much time to fret about turning 50. While many people passing the milestone may prefer to pause and reflect, the "queen of pop" is in the midst of final preparations for her world tour which kicks off in Cardiff, Wales, on August 23, a week after her birthday.
If previous shows are anything to go by, the 40-plus "Sticky & Sweet" dates around the globe will put Madonna under the kind of physical and mental strain that would test a woman half her age.
But the world's most successful female recording artist has never let age, sex or background get in her way, and has remained in the ascendancy with an uncanny ability to reinvent herself just when the old Madonna was nearing her sell-by date.

Her latest reincarnation is a shrewd businesswoman, after she severed ties with long-term record label Warner Brothers to sign up with Live Nation, a company that until recently specialized in music tours.
As well as earning a reported $120 million over the life of the agreement, Madonna appeared to be among the first to recognize which way the music industry was heading.
Recorded music, many artists now believe, is making them less money than live performing, meaning they are looking to spend less time in the recording studio and more on the stage.

The last few years have not all been easy for Madonna, however.
A celebrity who often bristles in the media glare, Madonna may be universally admired but she is not universally loved.
Her decision in 2006 to adopt a young Malawian boy whose mother died was controversial both in the southern African country and further afield.
Aid groups in Malawi said the authorities had bent the rules to accommodate the super-star, and the adoption was challenged in court. Not for the first time, Madonna prevailed and the adoption went through.

Madonna has two other children -- son Rocco with her husband the British film director Guy Ritchie, and daughter Lourdes from a previous relationship.
She directed her first feature film that came out in 2008, and although reviews were mixed, there were harsh words for a woman some feel should forget about movies and stick to music.
Her eight-year marriage to Ritchie has also come under increasing scrutiny after tabloid newspapers in Britain, where she spends much of her time, have reported that the couple are planning to divorce.
Both Ritchie and Madonna have denied the reports.

A career full of controversyMadonna Louise Veronica Ciccone was born in Bay City, Michigan on August 16, 1958, the third of eight children in a devout Italian-Catholic family.
Her big breakthrough came in 1984 when she signed a record deal and made her first two big hits "Like a Virgin" and "Holiday."
The following year she married Hollywood wild boy Sean Penn and landed one of her most memorable screen roles in "Desperately Seeking Susan."
Madonna then urged director Alan Parker to give her the biographical role of Argentine heroine Eva Peron in the musical film "Evita" that won her a Golden Globe Award in 1996.
She has appeared in over 20 films, several of which have bombed, most notably 2002's "Swept Away," directed by Ritchie.


Musically, she has few, if any real rivals.
The Recording Industry Association of America has described her as the best-selling female rock artist of the 20th century and the second top-selling female artist in the United States.
Guinness World Records list her as the world's most successful female recording artist of all time and she has sold an estimated 200 million albums. Her last tour, "Confessions," became the top-grossing tour ever by a female artist.
The Sunday Times estimates Madonna and Ritchie's fortune at around $600 million.
Much of Madonna's success is built on her shock value.
In 1989, the video for "Like A Prayer," her third transatlantic chart-topper, with its links between religion and eroticism, was condemned by the Vatican and caused Pepsi-Cola to cancel a sponsorship deal with the star.

The resulting publicity helped the album of the same title to become a global bestseller.
In her 1990 "Blonde Ambition" tour, she famously wore a Jean Paul Gaultier conical bra and covered the stage in religious imagery. The Vatican called it "one of the most satanic shows in the history of humanity."
At the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards Madonna kissed Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera as they performed her classic song "Like A Virgin."

Comeback performance in ’68 saved Elvis

On anniversary of death, fans remember TV special as highlight for the King

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - When Elvis Presley made his TV special in 1968, he was coming off a string of forgettable films and a long dry spell on the charts, and the rock ’n’ roll music he’d helped pioneer had given way to the Beatles and Jimi Hendrix.
It was a tough time for a comeback, but Presley, looking fit and tan in black leather, pulled it off with one of his best performances ever.
“You can argue that it was the highlight of his career. He had been treading water for eight or 10 years,” said Alan Stoker, a historian at the Country Music Hall of Fame, where Presley has been a member since 1998.

The 40th anniversary of what’s known among Elvis aficionados as “The ’68 Special” is getting attention as fans gather in Memphis this week to mark the anniversary of the singer’s death from heart disease and drug abuse on Aug. 16, 1977.
Presley’s Graceland mansion has opened an exhibit dedicated to the program, RCA has released a boxed set of all the music, and Steve Binder, the TV show’s producer and director, has published a book, “’68 at 40: Retrospective.”
“He said he was fearful of doing television, because aside from the ‘Ed Sullivan’ exposure, television had been a fiasco for him,” Binder said in an interview. “He said, ‘Television is not my turf. I’m not comfortable in a television studio.’ I said, ‘Why don’t you make a record and I’ll put pictures to it.”’

And that’s pretty much what they did for the hourlong show, which aired Dec. 3, 1968, on NBC.
The original idea, the one Elvis’ manager, Col. Tom Parker, had in mind, was a Christmas special with Presley singing holiday favorites.
But Binder wanted Presley doing his own songs and doing them alone instead of with guest stars — a departure from Christmas specials of the day.
The real breakthrough, though, was offsetting the big-production numbers with a loose, in-the-round performance — raw and unscripted — before a small audience.

“We’d start shooting at 9 or 10 in the morning and go until we were done, then he’d go into his living quarters and invite friends and they’d jam to all hours of the morning,” Binder recalled. “I was amazed by all the energy, enthusiasm and fun going on after a hard day’s work. And it was like looking through a keyhole at things you were not supposed to see. I thought, ‘This is better than what’s going on on-stage with the pre-planned numbers.”’
Parker hated the idea, but Binder persisted until Parker allowed him to recreate the backstage jam session for the camera, bringing in Presley’s longtime guitarist Scotty Moore and drummer D.J. Fontana and other friends to help make him comfortable (it had been seven years since Presley last did a live concert).
“There was no plan at all. I mean absolutely nothing,” Moore recalled. “He didn’t know what he was going to do. I knew he was going to pull out some of the old songs we’d done, that kind of thing. But that was it.”

At first, he seemed nervous. “This is supposed to be like an informal section of the show where we faint or do whatever we want to do, especially me,” he cracked before his first number, “That’s All Right.”
But by “Blue Suede Shoes” he was in control, swapping his acoustic guitar for Moore’s electric and stomping his feet through bluesman Jimmy Reed’s “Baby What You Want Me to Do.”
Moore said Presley knew what was at stake.
“Because he hadn’t been touring — he had gotten into the movie thing — I know his feeling was ’I’m getting back before the public this way,”’ he said.
The show started a golden era for Presley that included his hits “Suspicious Minds,” “In the Ghetto” and “Kentucky Rain,” as well as a run of successful Las Vegas concerts and a January 1973 TV special, “Aloha From Hawaii,” his last big artistic statement.


By the mid-’70s Presley had become a caricature of himself. But that night in ’68, he was a young man fighting to re-establish himself.
“I think it was the honesty,” Binder said of the show’s success, “the fact that he wasn’t controlled, wasn’t reading prepared lines. It was raw and it was powerful, and I think it was who he really was.”

Monday, August 11, 2008

Online Petition Launched to Get Rocker to Retire

We were beginning to have doubts about Bono's continued ability to unite people from all walks of life, but then we got wind of an impassioned new internet campaign inspired by the singer's work -- in a sense. Organizers have launched an online petition aimed at getting Bono to retire in order to "stop [his] leading misguided counter-productive philanthropy efforts."

Aaron With, the brains behind the effort, goes into extensive detail about the U2 frontman's shortcomings as a force for social change in a screed posted online, where he also solicits donations that he promises will go to charity -- if the sunglass-sporting singer actually hangs up his white flag once and for all. If he soldiers on? We'd imagine the cash could go to buying enough grain alcohol to start a Bono bonfire and fuel one heck of a cocktail party to go along with it.

Queen, Led Zeppelin Rock Aussie Funerals

"Rage, rage against the dying of the light," as Dylan Thomas famously wrote. Apparently the poet's words are still heeded in Australia, where people are throwing ragers at their own funerals: They're cranking 'Stairway to Heaven' and 'Highway to Hell.

'Centennial Park, a Down Under memorial-service provider, has released the Top 10 most played and ten most unusual funeral songs chosen by Aussies. The most-requested list includes some mortal locks, including Sinatra's 'My Way,' Louis Armstrong's 'Wonderful World' and Nat King Cole's 'Unforgettable.

'More amusingly, the most-unusual list features Led Zeppelin, AC/DC, two songs by Queen ('Another One Bites the Dust' and 'The Show Must Go On') and Monty Python's 'Always Look on the Bright Side of Life.' The service even reports incidents of soon-to-be stiffs instructing funeral directors to play 'Ding Dong the Witch Is Dead' at their after-parties.Maybe laughter really is the best medicine. Even when you're incurable

Taylor Swift's Fearless Factor

08/08/2008 6:00 AM, E! Online
David Jenison
Taylor Swift just secured her high school diploma. Come this fall, expect her to be matriculating to the top of the charts.

The 18-year-old country wunderkind, whose eponymous debut is the Energizer Bunny of the Billboard 200, announced today that her follow-up album, Fearless, will drop Nov. 11.

Swift wrote or cowrote all of Fearless' 13 tracks, including the Colbie Caillat collaboration "Breathe," the coming-of-age scorcher "Fifteen" (first heard at the Country Music Hall of Fame last fall) and "Change," which will be in heavy rotation the next couple weeks—Team USA and NBC selected it for use in the daily Summer Olympics highlight reels.

"Change" made its iTunes debut today, with all proceeds benefiting Team USA. Swift's first radio single, which has yet to be unveiled, will hit the airwaves early next month.

Swift is also set to launch a Stephen Colbert-esque new site, called TheTaylorNation.com. Beginning Aug. 22, fans will be able to preorder Fearless and become eligible to get their mugs on the album cover.

The first 10,000 fans to order a limited box-set edition can upload their photos for a mosaic image to be featured on the artwork and CD. The deluxe set includes the Fearless CD, a leather bracelet, T-shirt, picture book and a Taylor Nation decal, all shipped in special packaging.

After releasing her debut album at age 17, Swift became the first female solo artist to score five top-10 country hits from a rookie release. With the irresistibly poppy "Our Song," she also became the youngest person to write and sing a No. 1 country hit on her own, and she's country music's first solo female artist to write or cowrite every song on a platinum-certified debut.

The self-titled release currently ranks at No. 13 in its 93rd week on the Billboard 200 and has sold nearly 3.3 million copies. (Her recent Wal-Mart exclusive EP, Beautiful Eyes, currently sits at No. 16, giving her two current top 20 albums.)
Swift's debut album wasn't just the No. 9 bestselling album of last year, it's currently No. 6 for 2008, ahead of Leona Lewis and Usher.

On top of all this, Swift won the CMA Horizon Award, the ACM Top New Female Vocalist award, a trio of CMT Music Awards trophies, including Video of the Year, and just scored the Teen Choice Award for Breakout Artist. Last February, she was nominated for the Best New Artist Grammy.

And if she does decide to go to college, that'll make for one heck of an application.
(E! Online articles will no longer appear on Yahoo! after Fri., Aug. 15, but you can always find them at

'American Idol' crooner Clay Aiken now a father

08/08/2008 3:00 PM, AP
The Associated Press

Former "American Idol" runner-up Clay Aiken is a father.

The 29-year-old crooner from Raleigh announced the birth of Parker Foster Aiken on his Web site's blog Friday.

"No hyphens. One first name," he wrote. "One middle name. One last name."

Clay Aiken's mother, Faye, told Raleigh TV station WRAL the child was born in North Carolina.

Aiken was a favorite of fans during the second season of "American Idol," where he finished second to Ruben Studdard. His album "Measure of a Man" went double platinum in 2003, and he made his Broadway debut this spring in "Monty Python's Spamalot."

The baby's mother is Jaymes Foster, Aiken's friend and record producer whom he met while performing on "American Idol." Their son was born at 8:08 a.m. Friday, and weighed 6 pounds, 2 ounces and was 19 inches long, according to the statement on the Web site.

"The little man is healthy, happy, and as loud as his daddy," Aiken wrote. "Mama Jaymes is doing quite well also."
___
On the Net:
http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_en_mu/storytext/people_clay_aiken/28522118/SIG=10qd9m8bp/*http://www.clayaiken.com

Sugarland Founder Not Feeling Love on the Inside

With great success can come great spoils. And, perhaps, the ire of the person who's missing out on the spoils.
Kristen Hall, one of the founding members of Sugarland, the country duo whose latest effort, Love on the Inside, currently boasts the No. 1 spot on the Billboard 200, has sued her former bandmates for what she says is her fair share of the money they've been raking in since she left the group in 2005.

According to a lawsuit filed July 29 in U.S. District Court in Atlanta, Hall and fellow Atlanta musicmakers Kristian Bush and Jennifer Nettles had an agreement entitling each to an equal stake in Sugarland's profits and losses—but the checks stopped coming once she decided to pursue a solo career.

The trio "jointly endeavored to make the band Sugarland a creative and commercial success, and Hall contributed significant time, effort, energy and passion toward the creative and commercial success of Sugarland," the complaint states.

Per the suit, Hall rerecorded the version of the band's breakthrough single, "Baby Girl," that became one of the longest-charting debut singles in country music history and wrote or cowrote every track on their double-platinum 2004 album Twice the Speed of Life.
Also in 2005, while Hall was still with them, Sugarland was named Breakthrough Favorite New Artist at the American Music Awards.

By excluding her from their profit-sharing agreement pertaining to the albums they put out as a trio, Nettles and Bush "have acted in bad faith, have been stubbornly litigious and have caused [Hall] unnecessary trouble and expense," the suit continues.

Hall is asking for at least $1.5 million and a "formal accounting of all partnership affairs and businesses."

A rep for Sugarland referred a request for comment to the band's Los Angeles attorney, Gary Gilbert, whose office said he is currently out of town, per the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
After Hall left, Sugarland scored another multiplatinum hit with 2006's Enjoy the Ride and has picked up an armload of CMT and Academy of Country Music awards, including two ACMAs earlier this year for the song "Stay."

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Interview : Brooke Fraser

Posted By: Kershia Wong

So some of you may not have heard of the name Brooke Fraser. Hailing from New Zealand, this humble and lovely songbird has already made quite a name for herself in the Pacific region. The album Albertine was released in the U.S not too long ago, and she’s currently on tour. I managed to speak to Brooke over the phone while she was preparing dinner for some friends to just have a chat about her music, love life, and the debate about the best coffee in the world.

ZME Music: Tell me more about yourself?

Brooke Fraser: I’m from Wellington in New Zealand and I’m one of 3 children but I’ve been living in Australia since 2004 and currently we’re over in the States touring for about 5 months so at the moment we’ve escaped the winter and we’re in LA

ZME Music: How long have you been playing music for?

BF: I’ve been playing music for I would say, in terms of playing my own songs, on a basic scale since about 13, then more properly when I was 15 or 16, and I was fortunate enough to be signed straight out of high school, and so I’ve been playing music ever since as my full time occupation

ZME Music: How would you describe your music?

BF: I’d say my kind of influence in terms of other artists tend to lean more to the folk side of things. But I like to write songs for everyday people, and so it’s almost like a folk but with a decent sprinkling of traditional popular music to make that accessible to the wider public I suppose you could say.


Interview : Ludo

Posted By: Tibi Puiu

Some of you may remember when we wrote, in our Bands to Watch feature, about a nifty and emerging St. Louis pop-punk band, called Ludo. Their latest record “You’re Awful I Love You,” hit every respecting store on February 26th and was quickly embraced by their fans and new listeners alike. Recently I had the chance to have a short chat with two of the band members, frontman Andrew Volpe and synth master Tim Convy, about various aspects, like the band in general, the new album, the band’s musical directions and other fun stuff.

ZME Music: Aloha fellow rockers. What’s rollin’ ?

Andrew Volpe: Well hello there, good friend. Not much. You know. Keeping it real. Representing. How are you doing?

ZME Music: I’m doing great myself, thanks for asking, let’s just kick off the interview and find out some interesting stuff. Firstly, could you please introduce yourself to the more ignorant people reading this and not aware of your existence (i.e. Our readers)? You could start off by telling us how the band came together.

AV: Ludo formed as an acoustic duo in St. Louis, when Tim Ferrell and I (Andrew) met in the summer of 2000. We were a full band in our minds though - we just needed to find the right people to round out our super-team. After college, we moved to Tulsa to get away from all distractions. Tim Convy and Ferrell knew each other from playing in bands in high school, so he joined us in our acoustic tour. In the summer of 2003, we put ads out all over the internet to find Ludo’s bassist and drummer. Marshall from Omaha and Matt from Houston, respectively, answered the call, and moved into our tiny, crappy house in Tulsa. Three weeks after meeting each other, we recorded our debut album in St. Louis, immediately hit the road, and have toured basically non-stop since then. It’s a real man-bites-dog story. Not sure I used that term right…

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Bowie Covered By Indie Artist In Lates Compilation

Posted By: Tibi Puiu

After they’ve released a more or less successful cover compilation record, in the form of Controversy, a while ago, the fine folks from Rapster are back with yet another cover song compilation LP, this time featuring artists influenced by the great David Bowie.

Matthew Dear, Carl Craig, Kelley Polar, Au Revoir Simone, Joakim, and the Thing are just a few artists who cover the Thin White Duke on “Life Beyond Mars: Bowie Covered“. The songs covered come in different “shapes and sizes,” most off Bowie’s more popular albums like Low, Hunky Dory, and Scary Monsters, but also lesser-known material such as the 1986 soundtrack to Labyrinth, in which David played a part.

Life Beyond Mars is available on iTunes now, and will hit shops in CD format July. Today it was mailed for free with the latest issue of the Sunday Daily Mail, where Bowie also is featured in an article, in which he talks about the new cover album, detailing how the 12 track selection went and confessing which songs came closer to his heart. You can read the whole article here. Tracklist right after the jump.

Life Beyond Mars: Bowie Covered:
  1. Au Revoir Simone: “Oh! You Pretty Things”

  2. Heartbreak: “Loving the Alien”

  3. Kelley Polar: “Magic Dance (Harold and Baby O in Italy Version)”

  4. Leo Minor: “Ashes to Ashes”

  5. Carl Craig Presents Zoos of Berlin: “Looking for Water”

  6. Drew Brown: “Sweet Thing”

  7. Matthew Dear: “Sound & Vision”

  8. Susumu Yokota: “Golden Years”

  9. The Emperor Machine: “Repetition”

  10. Joakim & the Disco: “A New Career in a New Town”

  11. Richard Walters & Faultline: “Be My Wife”

  12. The Thing: “Life on Mars”













Saturday, June 28, 2008

Metallica Responds To The Blogsphere

Posted By: Tibi Puiu

Photo courtesy of dave1968

We didn’t have a chance to write about this, but about a week ago Metallica previewed a mix of songs from their forthcoming new album, to a bunch of journalists in London. Apparently there was a misunderstanding, though, and the subsequent reviews of the material where quickly withdrawn from various websites, within minutes from their posting. Now, the band itself (the whole mix was put to the journalists disposal by their management) are back to clarify the issue and to provide some interesting insights on how they view the internet, mainly the blogsphere, and feedback in general.

As posted on Metallica.com:

While we occasionally enjoy reading the various comments, rumors, speculation, reviews, gossip and all the good that the internet brings, rarely do we feel the desire/need to respond to the “blogosphere” … hey, everyone is entitled to have their thoughts and opinions, right? However, once we re-surfaced on Tuesday after a few weeks on tour in Europe, we were informed that someone at Q Prime (our managers) had made the error of asking a few publications to take down reviews of the rough mixes from the new record that were posted on their sites. Our response was “WHY?!!! Why take down mostly positive reviews of the new material and prevent people from getting psyched about the next record … that makes no sense to us!” So after a few rounds of managerial ear spank and sentencing everyone at Q Prime to 20 push-ups each, we figured why not take matters into our own hands and just post the links here on our site. Kerrang, Metal Hammer, The Quietus.You see, we have maintained an “in the press” section here on Metallica.com for many years now, posting links to reviews of shows, album and DVD releases, and various other tidbits we’ve come across while surfing around. Some good, some not so good, but we put ‘em all up … sort of the same way we treat our message boards on this site … welcoming all feedback.

So in the spirit of keeping this section current, we’ve put as many of the reviews of the rough mixes of the new record up here as we could find. If we missed any, let us know … and in the meantime, we’re always adding, so peruse at your leisure.

Winehouse: 'I have nothing to live for'

Friday June 27, 2008 02:15 PM)

Troubled singer Amy Winehouse insists her problems with drugs and alcohol stem from "boredom" and feeling like she has "nothing to live for".

In a rare interview with Rolling Stone magazine, the Back To Black hitmaker reveals that after her husband Blake Fielder-Civil was jailed on charges of assault and perverting the course of justice in November 2007, she felt like her life wasn't worth living.

The Grammy award-winning singer subsequently cancelled her UK tour and ended up in rehab in an attempt to kick her addictions.

She was also treated at a London hospital for traces of emphysema last week.

And Winehouse blames her downward spiral into drink and drugs on her current unhappy state.
She says, "To be honest, my husband's away, I'm bored, I'm young. I felt like there was nothing to live for. It's just been a low ebb."

But the star insists that although she was treated at a London clinic in March, she doesn't feel like she has fully completed a rehab programme.

She adds, "I've never been to rehab, I mean, done it properly. I'm young, and I'm in love, and I get my nuts off sometimes. But it's never been like, 'Amy, get your life together.'"



Friday, April 11, 2008

Josh Groban to release Live CD/DVD " Awakw Live"


Posted By: Tibi Puiu


The world renowned baritone Josh Groban had a wonderful professional year in 2007. His Chrismas carol album Noël was declared , with almost 3 million copies sold, the year’s best seller, spent five consecutive weeks on top of the Billboard 200, but also held a word class tour across the US. A live CD/DVD had to be made and of course it soon followed.


Thus, on May 6th 2008, the Grammy award winning artist will release Awake Live, a live CD/DVD combo featuring an exhilarating performance at Salt Lake City’s EnergySolutions Arena before a sold-out crowd of 15,000 thrilled fans on August 28th, 2007.


While the DVD includes favorites from Groban’s three best-selling albums, including “Canto Alla Vita” and “Alla Luce del Sole” from his double-platinum self-titled 2001 debut, and “You Raise Me Up” and “Remember When It Rained” from the multi-platinum 2003 album Closer, the majority of the songs are from Awake, including the singles “You Are Loved (Don’t Give Up),” “February Song,” and “Lullaby.” Released in September 2006, Awake debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard album chart and has sold more than two million copies in the U.S. The DVD contains the entire 100-minute concert from Salt Lake City, as well as behind-the-scenes “Making of the Tour” footage. For more about Josh Groban, including information about an exclusive fan-club edition of Awake Live, please visit his official website.
The full track-listing for Awake Live is as follows:


CD:


1. Mai
2. February Song In Her Eyes
3. so She Dances
4. Un Dia Llegara
5. Pearls
6. Weeping
7. Machine
8. Awake

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Live Nation agrees to 12-year pact with U2

By Yinka Adegoke

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Live Nation Inc said on Monday it has reached an agreement for a 12-year global contract to handle the merchandising, digital and branding rights as well as the touring of Irish group U2.

Live Nation has been expanding its business model to develop more far-reaching and deeper relationships with artists beyond just handling their touring.
The deal with U2, one of the world's biggest rock bands, comes just five months after Live Nation announced a comprehensive partnership with pop star Madonna, which included her coveted recording rights.
The company would not reveal financial terms of the U2 deal though analyst David Joyce at Miller Tabak estimated that the deal would "likely be in the $100 million range."
Live Nation said U2 will continue the band's long-term recording and publishing relationship with Universal Music Group, a unit of French media giant Vivendi.
"It's not a do-or-die situation that we have to be involved in the recordings," Live Nation Chairman Michael Cohl said in an interview with Reuters. "We'd prefer to, but it's not always available."
The deal with Madonna, which included the recording rights, was estimated to be worth $120 million over 10 years including a three-album commitment after the artist submits her last album to her current music company, Warner Music Group.
Its partnership with U2 will now include merchandise and licensing rights, sponsorship and strategic alliances, digital rights, fan club/Web sites and other marketing and creative services.
Cohl said the new model will help boost the overall company's profit margins. Analysts have said that touring and ticketing have traditionally been a low-margin business.
Several of the company's executives had managed U2's tours for more than 20 years.

DIVERSIFICATION
Live Nation's attempts to diversify its business and win artists from music labels come as the major recording companies are also trying to reinvent their business and win control of touring, digital and merchandise rights of their artists.
Joyce, who rates Live Nation a "buy," said that as the company tries to bolster relationships with its artists, this latest deal should help its efforts to retain live event market share from existing competitors such as AEG.
But he said there is a question whether music labels will fend off Live Nation's expansion attempts as they attempt to diversify themselves.
The music companies are keen to replace lost revenue caused by falling recorded sales. Fans are buying fewer CDs and not purchasing enough digital music to make up for the shortfall.
The major labels have started signing some artists to so-called 360-degree deals which include recording as well as publishing, touring, digital and other rights.
Cohl said his company will focus on signing other major artists rather than developing new acts such as a traditional music label or publishing house.
"Our intention is to work with artists who are already making it or on their way to making it," he said.
Live Nation said its new strategy will also include its Web site LiveNation.com, which Cohl said was aiming to become the biggest music portal on the Web through a mixture of ticketing, merchandise sales as well as fan clubs and other features.
Shares in Live Nation were up 3.5 percent, or 41 cents, to $12.24 in Monday morning trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
(Additional reporting by Justin Grant; editing by Mark Porter and Jacqueline Wong)

Stones Shine Up a Record


By Josh Grossberg

Los Angeles (E! Online) - The Rolling Stones are blowing up again

On the eve of the launch of their Martin Scorsese-helmed concert documentary, Shine a Light, the World's Greatest Rock 'n' Roll Band unveiled plans to unspool the hugely anticipated film on a record number of Imax screens.
Featuring Mick, Keith and the band performing at New York's intimate Beacon Theatre during 2006's record-setting A Bigger Bang tour, Shine a Light will debut in an unprecedented 93 Imax theaters, as well as 250 normal screens, nationwide on Friday.
"It'll be very large," frontman Mick Jagger said at a Sunday press conference. "After looking at all the options, Marty decided he wanted to make this small intimate movie. And I said the laugh is on Marty in the end, because we'd blown it up on this huge Imax thing...But it looks good on Imax, and we've got both formats, so we're happy with that."
Scorsese agreed, saying the large-screen format "puts you right in the center of every action and every move—it's as if you are right there on stage with the band."
The Oscar winner said while other films have captured the Stones in concert, this is the first to shoot them in a relatively tiny venue.
"I'm better suited to try and capture the group...on a smaller stage," Scorsese told reporters. "More for the intimacy of the group and the way they play together and the way you see the band work together and work each song. I found that to be more interesting. It's more of a compulsion of mine. I like to be able to see that."
The helmer is no stranger to concert docs. Scorsese launched his filmmaking career as an editor on 1970's Woodstock and made one of the best films of the genre with 1978's The Last Waltz, which documented the final concert of the Band.
Unlike the latter, which intercut performances with backstage interviews of band members, Scorsese largely sticks to the Stones rocking out onstage with archival footage of them in pivotal moments of their career intermixed throughout.
The ageless wonders crank through a set list culled from their four decade-plus catalog, including classics like "Jumpin' Jack Flash," "Sympathy for the Devil," "Satisfaction (I Can't Get No)," and "Brown Sugar" to lesser known songs like "Loving Cup," "Some Girls" and "You Got the Silver." They even drag out the old ballad "As Tears Go By."
Along the way, Jagger duets with Christina Aguilera, Jack White and legendary bluesman Buddy Guy—the last pairing of which is one of the film's highlights.
"We've done quite a few shows with Buddy Guy in the past and we've known him on and off for quite a long time. He's one of those continually wonderful blues performers that you admire," said Jagger.
"He's another Muddy Waters," interjected Keith Richards, who trades scorching licks with Guy in the film. "[Playing with him] was a high point for me."
"I think that Marty captured the duet thing we did with him was one of the high points of the movie for me," continued Jagger. "And I think the other guests in slightly different ways all add to the movie."
Ironically, the Stones initially pitched Scorsese the idea of a concert film of their performance to 1 million-plus fans at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro.
But after a series of conversations with the master, they eventually sparked to shooting on a smaller space, partially because it enabled Scorsese more control.
To capture the Rolling Stones in all their live glory, Scorsese assembled a crack team of internationally acclaimed cinematographers, supervised by Oscar-winning director of photography Robert Richardson. They included such shooters as Andrew Lesnie (Lord of the Rings), Robert Elswit (There Will Be Blood), Ellen Kuras (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind) and John Toll (Braveheart).
"It was fantastically enjoyable but in other ways nerve-racking for us," said Jagger. "And I'm sure Marty has a lot of things going on, because he's got to cover it as it happens."
Of course, no Stones presser is ever complete without the obligatory nod to the band's AARP-eligible status.
Referencing one archival clip in Shine a Light in which a then-twentysomething Jagger answers that he could see himself doing the rock thing at the age of 60, one reporter asked if they can see themselves still chugging along at 70.
"That's only five years away!" quipped Richards.
Start 'em up, indeed.

Friday, March 28, 2008

Ashlee Simpson on Tops

By: Natalie Finn
E! Online Photo: Ashlee Simpson on Tops(E! Online)

Los Angeles (E! Online) - Pieces of Ashlee Simpson are going to be all over the mall this spring.

To coincide with the April release of her third studio album, Bittersweet World, the 22-year-old pop star is taking a cue from her shoe-fashioning sis and designing a line of tops for retailer Wet Seal, the teen-favorite clothier announced Thursday.

The collection, "inspired by Ashlee Simpson's personality, sense of style and album artwork," will launch in Wet Seal stores nationwide on April 22, according to the chain, which will also be rolling out the in-store and online promotional guns to tout both the album and the new shirts.

"I was inspired by so many fun, wonderful things as I was recording Bittersweet World, and it's been great to carry through those inspirations into these new shirt designs," said Simpson. "I hope my fans love this album and rock out in these shirts!"

And just as you can pick up a Paul McCartney CD to go with your Starbucks latte, you'll be able to snag a Simpson disc along with a graphic tee and some skinny jeans.

Ashlee is a role model for our girl, and her fun and flirty sense of style is an inspiration for the

line," Wet Seal CEO Ed Thomas said. "The goal was to partner with an icon and deliver affordable fashion, and Ashlee is an ideal partner for this."

"Little Miss Obsessive," the first single off of Bittersweet World, was released digitally on March 11 and hit the airwaves a week later.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/eonline/20080327/en_music_eo/39a5191e3463_4993_95d7_c3bfb884223f;_ylt=AseNiDpWh7ZQzBKLJKtN_iaVEhkF


Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Fleetwood Mac surprised by Sheryl Crow claim

By Gary Graff

Reuters Photo: Sheryl Crow performs in Hollywood, April 5, 2007. Crow's recent claim that she would be...

DETROIT (Billboard) - Sheryl Crow's recent claim that she would be working with Fleetwood Mac surprised a lot of people -- including the members of the classic rock group.

Crow, 46, who's friendly with Mac's Stevie Nicks, told the AOL music website Spinner.com earlier this month that she and the band "definitely have plans for collaborating in the future, and we'll see what happens."

"I think we were all a little surprised (Crow) was announcing that to the world with such certainty," Fleetwood Mac principal Lindsey Buckingham, 58, told Billboard.com with a laugh.

"We have talked about the possibility of bringing another woman into the scene to kind of give Stevie a sort of foil and shake it up a little bit. (Crow) was certainly a name that has come up. We'll have to see."

Nicks, 59, has been the group's sole female member since Christine McVie, now 64, retired from the band in the late '90s.

Buckingham said the group, which last toured in 2004, is considering returning to the road in the first half of 2009, possibly with some new material. He said that he has "a ton of new stuff" that could be used for a new Fleetwood Mac album, its first since 2003's "Say You Will."

Buckingham -- who's just released a new concert DVD, "Live at the Bass Performance Hall," from his 2006-07 solo tour -- is also planning another solo album for this summer.

Recorded with members of his touring band as well as Fleetwood Mac co-founders Mick Fleetwood, 60, and John McVie, 62, he said it "has a little more of a rock feel to it" than his most recent effort, 2006's "Under the Skin."

"It's just another group of tunes that hopefully will translate to stage, and hopefully we can get some more (solo) dates this summer."

Reuters/Billboard

Led Zeppelin tour details revealed?

courtesy of NME.com
Wed Mar 19, 10:00 AM ET

Velvet Revolver bassist Duff McKagan has claimed that his band have bagged tour support slots on a supposed future tour with Led Zeppelin

Although McKagan was not forthcoming with any specific dates or plans for such a tour, he said that his band "have it" in terms of the support slot.

Speaking to BBC 6Music, he said: "I understand that we have it, although I imagine there will be plenty of bands prepared to kick and punch us out of the way for the privilege."
Reuters Photo: Rolling Stone magazine features rock band Led Zeppelin on one of five covers to launch...

For more on Led Zeppelin, check out their NME.com page.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

American Idol Elimination Night: Carry On, Wayward Amanda

Posted Wed. Mar 19, 10:09 PM ET by Lyndsey Parker in Reality Rocks

Listen closely, kids. Hear that? That's the sound of John Lennon and George Harrison rolling in their respective graves.

Seriously, from Amanda inexplicably getting to sing the big "love you make" hook, to the Broadway-style line-formation singalong of the Abbey Road acid-casualty epic "Because," to the awkward moment when Ramiele's mic seemed to be turned off, to David Archuleta ironically singing "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" so soon after his stage dad allegedly made him weep...well, tonight's opening Beatles medley had me and probably the rest of America crying out for "Help!"

Enough with the Beatles songs already, OK? Surely by now Nigel Lythgoe must realize that doing a second Fab Four Week wasn't such a fab idea. It's downright tragic to think that uninitiated youngsters unfamiliar with the Beatles may now forever associate this great band's music with travesties like this. So let's hope tonight is the last Beatlesque Idol episode for a while. And let's pray there's no Wings Night, no Traveling Wilburys night, and no Plastic Ono Band Night, either. And for the love of gawd, if Idol does a Ringo Starr Solo Night, I'll never watch this dang show again!

Oh, and it wasn't enough for tonight's show to wreck the Beatles' legacy--it had to ruin a perfectly good Clash song, too, in that Ford promo. Whoever came up with THAT idea is the real person who should've been eliminated tonight. Hear that distinctive rustle in the background? That's the sound of Joe Strummer rolling in his grave as well.

OK, OK, enough of my kvetching. There were some things to cheer about tonight--like the sassy performance by a suspiciously less busty Kellie Pickler, or the fact that my favorite contestants (Brooke White, David Cook, and Jason Castro, and thin-ice-skating Michael Johns) all made it through. True, none of them gave their best performances last night, but none of them deserved to go home just yet. I'm just so relieved that they've made the top 10, as they're now guaranteed a spot on this season's upcoming Idol tour and compilation album! In the words of Danny Noriega...Score

And another really, really good thing happened tonight: The rock 'n' roll nurse got cut. I would've been even happier if bullet-dodging Kristy Lee Cook, who was also quite justifiably in the bottom two this week, had finally gotten the boot. But hey, Amanda Overmyer simply had to go. And better her than Carly Smithson, who was surprisingly in the bottom three tonight. (Carly's not my fave, but if she'd failed to make the top 10, Randy Jackson might've had a coronary--and that would have been bad, dawg.)

Anyway, good luck, Amanda. Good luck pursuing your fantasy of selling out a local bar in Lafayette. Dare to dream!

The burning question now is, with Danny and Amanda gone, who will Vote For The

Worst endorse next? Watch this space...

For more American Idol, go to Yahoo! TV

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

2008 MTV Movie Awards -- Airing Live On June 1!


Burnett calls ceremony 'the most relevant movie award show in America today.'
By: Chris Harris

The date's been set and the producer secured: The 17th annual MTV Movie Awards will be airing live from the Gibson Amphitheatre in Universal City, California, on June 1.

MTV announced Tuesday (March 18) that Mark Burnett — the Emmy Award-winning executive producer of such hit shows as "Survivor," "The Apprentice," "Rock Star," "The Contender" and "My Dad Is Better Than Your Dad" — will be returning for his second year as the awards' executive producer.

Last year's MTV Movie Awards generated huge ratings, pulling in over 20 million viewers on its premiere night. This year's ceremony will once again premiere live on MTV, with the show's iconic golden popcorn prize up for grabs in categories ranging from Best Kiss to Best Villain.

"I'm looking forward to incorporating the viewers more than ever before, because I consider the MTV Movie Awards to be the most relevant movie award show in America today," Burnett said. "This show honors the movies that millions of young Americans go to see. We will again highlight the interactive culture that is young America."

Nominees, presenters and performers will be announced in the coming weeks, as will the show's host. Last year, Sarah Silverman hosted a memorable awards show with many unusual and hilarious moments, like Best Kiss winners Sacha Baron Cohen and Will Ferrell re-creating their "Talladega Nights" lip-lock.

"The MTV Movie Awards always draws the biggest stars in film and this year is already shaping up to be no exception," said Van Toffler, president of MTV Networks. "The audience's favorite movie and music talent combined with Mark Burnett's uncanny ability to push the envelope and the show being live makes for a concoction sure to set off tons of unexpected water-cooler moments."

The MTV Movie Awards will be airing live on MTV on Sunday, June 1. All the latest updates on nominees, presenters, performers, voting, contests and much more will be coming soon to MovieAwards.MTV.com. And check out Movies.MTV.com for the latest movie news, trailers, photos and more!

Monday, March 17, 2008

Idol Chatter


Posted Wed. Jan 9, 4:17 PM ET by Lyndsey Parker in Reality Rocks



The season premiere of American Idol is this week, and while there's little doubt that it'll once again be a ratings bonanza, music-biz pundits are starting to speculate as to whether the show's finalists can create record-sales bonanzas once they go off the air and into a recording studio.

Obviously some Idol alumni have become massive stars (Carrie Underwood is simply unstoppable; Chris Daughtry had one of the top-selling albums of 2007; Jennifer Hudson managed to even upstage BEYONCE and win an Oscar in the process). But many have had a tougher time lately. Some have been arrested (Corey Clark, Jessica Sierra); some have been dropped from their labels (Taylor Hicks, Katharine McPhee, Ruben Studdard, Bo Bice); and some have released albums that've been considered commercial disappointments (Kelly Clarkson, Jordin Sparks, Fantasia, Clay Aiken). And yet countless others have just flat-out vanished (Nikki McKibbin, anyone?) quicker than Randy Jackson's post-lapband-surgery excess pounds or Paula Abdul's sanity.

So anyway, I'm a member of an online community for female music-industry types, and this week the dominating topic of messageboard conversation has been American Idol...and, specifically, whether or not the show is still a relevant superstar-launcher, or if it has finally, officially been reduced to a shark-jumping, rubbernecking outlet for viewers to gawk at a never-ending freakshow of Wikipedia-footnoted also-rans and wannabe William Hungs.

I thought it was an intelligent discussion, so I'm reposting in its entirety here. (Names and emails have been omitted to protect the innocent. And the not-so-innocent.) Scroll down to read the thread, then feel free to continue the discussion on our own messageboard below...