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.