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Thread started 01/07/14 9:20am

JoeBala

Little Known Stuff About Singer, Actors, etc. Part Tres.

Five Famous Songs Meant For Other Artists We'd Love To Hear

By Al Horner

Posted on 06 Jan 14

Five Famous Songs Meant For Other Artists We'd Love To Hear

Ever passed up on an opportunity and come to regret it? This weekend saw news emerge that one of 2013's biggest selling singles, Miley Cyrus's 'Wrecking Ball', was originally intended for Beyonce. While the former Destiny's Child hit maker probably had enough 'bangers' of her own on her recent self-titled fifth studio album to not rue missing out on the track too much, others haven't been so lucky. For example, did you know X Factor winner Leona Lewis had first dibs on the Calvin Harris-penned 'We Found Love', only to turn it down and watch Rihanna score ten consecutive weeks atop the US Billboard chart with it? You might not be bothered about hearing that alternative version (even if Leona last year claimed "mine's better") but these five tracks meant for other artists might be worth be hearing sung by their original suitors…

Michael Jackson – 'Rock Your Body' (Justin Timberlake)

No wonder critics hailed JT's 2002 smash as a homage to the irresistible disco of Jackson in his 70th pomp – it was later revealed the track was originally offered to the King of Pop for what transpired to be his final album, 'Invincible'. Jackson passed on the song, which came almost full circle at the 2004 Superbowl event, when Timberlake performed the track with Michael's sister, Janet.

NME

Pusha T – 'Niggas In Paris' (Watch the Throne)

The infectious Hit-Boy beat that spanned the biggest hip-hop track of the decade so far was originally offered to Pusha T, who felt it wasn't "demonic" enough for his brand of rap. Instead, it was his mentor Kanye West who used the beat, on his 2011 collaboration with Jay Z. “I tell people all the time that I don’t know if I would’ve attacked it that way which means the record might not have been as special once I got on it," explained Pusha, who hit the rap big leagues last year with breakout album 'My Name Is My Name'. You wonder if he'd have got there quicker with this now-iconic production behind him.

TLC – 'Hit Me Baby One More Time' (Britney Spears)

R&B trio TLC almost recorded the song that launched Britney Spears and became the defining pop song of the '90s – but felt the song didn't fit with their proto-feminist message. TLC's T-Boz explained: "I was like, I like the song but do I think it's a hit? Do I think it's TLC? I'm not saying 'hit me baby'. No disrespect to Britney. It's good for her. But was I going to say 'hit me baby one more time'? Hell no!" The song sold 1.52m copies in the UK alone for Spears. It's easy to admire TLC's stance on its implied violence towards women but hard not to wonder about the sleeker, more soulful take on the track the trio would have served up.

Elvis – 'Golden Years' (David Bowie)

Written during the peak of his '70s cocaine addiction, Bowie wrote the intoxicating 'Golden Years' with Elvis in mind. When Presley declined the track, Bowie reworked the song to fit his 'Station to Station' album. While it didn't reach 'Fame' levels of adoration, the track charted for 16 weeks in the UK and became a cult favourite among fans. Listening to it, you can easily imagine the King's dulcet baritone wrapped around its lyrics.

NME

Stevie Nicks – 'Call Me' (Blondie)

Number 1 for six weeks running in the States, becoming the biggest selling song of 1980, Blondie scored a huge hit when Giorgio Moroder handed them the jaunty 'Call Me'. He'd first tried to give the song to Fleetwood Mac singer Stevie Nicks though, who reportedly liked the demo she'd heard but was unable to use it because of inter-label politics (Nicks had just signed a deal with Modern Records, which made working with Moroder difficult). Debbie Harry's new wave edge gave the song a welcome grittiness, but a Nicks rendition would be very compelling.


Read more at http://www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/five-famous-songs-meant-for-other-artists-wed-love-to-hear#ztjoQzfwUsRiTQLV.99
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Reply #1 posted 01/08/14 10:47am

JoeBala

Ten interesting facts you should know about
Elvis Presley

http://media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/32/11/99/3211992a297860620172364b57a5349e.jpg


Elvis Aaron Presley was born on 8 January 1935. He was the second of twins but his older twin was still born.

His Mother brought Elvis his first guitar for his 11th birthday, it cost $7.75.

Recorded over 650 songs and is the biggest selling artist of the 20th century.

Presley had his first number one hit in the US was Heartbreak Hotel in 1956.

In 1957 he brought Graceland a 23 Room Mansion in Memphis for $100,000.

He made 31 movies, mostly low budget musicals.

Married Priscilla Ann Beaulieu at the Aladdin Hotel in Las Vagas on 1st May 1967, she was aged 22, he was 32 years old. They were divorced in 1973.

Daughter Lisa Marie Presley was born in Memphis on 1st February 1968, nine months after his wedding to Priscilla.'

Elvis died on August 16 1977 in his bathroom at Graceland aged 42. His official cause of death was cardiac arrhythmia. However, it is widely believed that the real cause of death was due to cocktail of ten prescribed drugs he had taken in the hours leading to his death.

Elvis's Estate has made considerable more since his death, with 20 million records sold within the first 24 hours after his death.

Bonus Elvis Presley Facts



Was a natural blonde but dyed his hair black.

Elvis held a black belt in Karate.

Presley held a jammy session with the Beatles in August 1965 in California. The session was not recorded.

He suffered from sleepwalking as a child.

He only managed a 'C' in his eighth grade music class.

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Reply #2 posted 01/09/14 8:33am

thedoorkeeper

I would have given anything to see Elvis & the Beatles in their jammies.

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Reply #3 posted 01/12/14 9:19am

JoeBala

Elton john

10 interesting facts:

1.

he is an English singer-songwriter, composer and pianist.

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2.In his four-decade career, John has sold more than 200 millionrecords making him one of the most successful artists of all time.

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3.He has more than 50 Top 40 hits, including seven consecutiveNo. 1 U.S. albums, 56 Top 40 singles, 16 Top 10, four No. 2 hits,and nine No. 1 hits.

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4.He has won five Grammy awards, an Academy Award, a GoldenGlobe Award and a Tony Award.

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5.in 2004, Rolling Stone ranked him #49 on its list of the 100greatest artists of all time

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6.He has been heavily involved in the fight against AIDS since thelate 1980s, and was knighted in 1998.

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7.He entered into a civil partnership with David Furnish on 21December 2005 and continues to be a champion for LGBT socialmovements.

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8.In 2008, Billboard magazine released a list of the top 100 most-frequently-charting artists in the history of the Billboard Hot 100. John was listed at #3, behind only Madonna and The Beatles.

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9.He was educated at Pinner Wood Junior School, Reddiford Schooland Pinner County Grammar School until the age of 17, when heleft just prior to his GCE A Level examinations to pursue a careerin the music industry.

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10.When John began to seriously consider a career in music,his father, who served as a Flight Lieutenant in the Royal AirForce, tried to steer him toward a more conventional career,such as banking.

http://www.biography.com/imported/images/Biography/Images/Profiles/J/Elton-John-9355335-4-402.jpg

[Edited 1/12/14 9:32am]

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Reply #4 posted 01/12/14 10:41am

COMPUTERBLUE19
84

avatar

10 Things You Never Knew About Freddie Mercury
1. Even his official passport read ‘Frederick Mercury’, despite the fact that his birth name was Farrokh Bulsara. Calling him anything but Freddie would not be well received, however - he started using the name ‘Freddie’ prior to ever arriving in England, and ‘Mercury’ when Queen first started.

2. Mercury didn’t consider himself a particularly great pianist. As a result, he always dreaded performing ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ in concert because he worried he would mess up on the piano in the process. In future years, he started using the piano less on albums so he would be free to dance and run wildly during concerts.

3. In the final scene of Queen’s ‘It’s A Hard Life’ video, when Freddie sits down on the steps, he does so very gingerly, favouring one side over the other. At the time of filming, he had only just had a plaster cast removed, a souvenir after drunken horseplay went awry one night in the New York bar in Munich.

4. Mercury was always in his best form at concerts after emotional conflict. Before a show at the Milton Keynes Bowl, Mercury got into a massive argument with his current beau, Bill Reid, that culminated with Reid biting Mercury’s hand so hard that it left teeth marks and bled profusely. Another fight left their hotel room with a layer of broken glass and plaster on the carpet.

5. In another incident with Reid, the two of them yelled at each other for so many hours that Mercury woke up completely hoarse on the day that Queen was scheduled to perform live on Saturday Night Live, a hugely popular variety show in the USA. The entire day was spent trying remedies to get his voice back, which he was only barely able to do in time.

6. After boarding a flight to New York from Tokyo one day, Mercury discovered the plane was a DC10, a model that had had some problems in the past. “DC death more like!” Mercury remarked, before immediately gathering his things, exiting the plane, and taking the only available seat on the next flight fourteen hours later - economy class, as opposed to his First Class seat on the DC10.

7. When Mercury was on tour in the United States, he found out the man he was seeing, Tony Bastin, had been seen out with someone else. For revenge, Mercury paid for Bastin to fly out to see him in the US under the pretense of visiting. Mercury met him immediately after his arrival, told him it was over and then put him on the next plane back to London that day. Mercury also kept Bastin’s cat, Oscar.

8. Mercury loved his cats, so much so that while on tour, Mercury would periodically call home to talk to them. His one-time girlfriend and long-time close friend Mary Austin would hold the cats up to the phone so they could listen to him speak. He also had portraits painted of them.

9. Mercury’s assistants were required to have a pen and paper on them at all times in case inspiration hit unexpectedly. Lyrics for ‘Life Is Real’ were started suddenly while flying over the Atlantic from New York, with what is now the classic line “guilt stains on my pillow” originally taken down as “cunt stains on my pillow”.

10. A recreation of the statue created to honour Mercury, found on Lake Geneva in Montreaux, Switzerland, stands on top of the Dominion Theatre, just down Oxford Street from Clash HQ

"Old man's gotta be the old man. Fish has got to be the fish."
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Reply #5 posted 01/21/14 8:49am

JoeBala

9 Songs Where Stuff Is On Fire

Sometimes it's a pleasant little campfire and other times it's a raging inferno, but songwriters just love those flaming lyrics - we have a whole category of songs where stuff is on fire.

It's usually a metaphor, but you'll see from this first example that sometimes the fire is quite real. Here are 9 sizzling songs. Click the titles to land on the Songfacts entries.


9 Songs Where Stuff Is On Fire

1. "Smoke On The Water" by Deep Purple (1972)


What's on Fire? The Montreux Casino

"They burned down the gambling house
It died with an awful sound"


When showing appreciation for a band, lighters are OK, flare guns are not. During a Frank Zappa concert at the Montreux Casino in Switzerland, someone stupid with a flare gun made rock history when he ignited a fire that consumed the building. The casino burned, smoke rose off the water of Lake Geneva, and Deep Purple, who were supposed to record their Machine Head album after the concert, used the Rolling Stones mobile studio instead.


2. "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)" by The Beatles (1965)


What's on Fire? The Girl's Apartment

"And when I awoke, I was alone, this bird has flown
So I lit a fire, isn't it good Norwegian wood"


John Lennon later admitted to having various affairs while he was married to his first wife, Cynthia. "Norwegian Wood" is his therapy session, where he puts himself in the apartment of one of these girls, sleeps in the bathtub, then starts a fire. The smoke represents the smokescreen he put up to cover the affairs.


3. "Sex on Fire" by Kings of Leon (2008)


What's on Fire? Sex

"Your sex is on fire
Consumed, with what's to transpire"


If AC/DC wrote this song, we'd know it was about a social disease, but Caleb Followill says it really is about the burning fire of love in the throes of passion.


4. "Burn One Down" by Ben Harper (1995)


What's on Fire? A Marijuana Cigarette

"Before you knock it, try it first
You'll see it's a blessing and it's not a curse"


Afroman was a silly stoner in "Because I Got High," and Rick James seemed a little too fixated on his "Mary Jane," but Ben Harper seems to have a healthy relationship with his herb. He points out the unifying power of a joint and makes the case that unlike traditional chemically-enhanced cigarettes, marijuana comes directly from the earth, and the earth is good.


5. "The Unforgettable Fire" by U2 (1984)


What's on Fire? Hiroshima

"And if the mountain should crumble or disappear into the sea
Not a tear, no not I"


The Unforgettable Fire is an exhibit at the Chicago Peace Museum featuring drawings from survivors of the bombing of Hiroshima, Japan during World War II. U2 lifted the title of the exhibit for the name of their album, and wrote this song to go with it. It's typical Bono, with lyrics that could describe a relationship with God or a girlfriend.


6. "The Roof Is On Fire" by Rockmaster Scott & The Dynamic Three (1984)


What's on Fire? The Roof

"The roof, the roof, the roof is on fire
We don't need no water let the motherf--ker burn"


The roof represents confinement, so if you can somehow get rid of the roof, by maybe raising it or setting it on fire, then you're free. Parliament would just Tear the Roof off the Sucker to get to the funk, but these guys celebrated its burn. This was back in the day when the DJ was the star (think Grandmaster Flash), and his rappers were generally hype-men. So Rockmaster Scott would whip the crowd into a frenzy with his turntable magic, and the crowd would shout back the famous chant. In an attempt to make the song broadcast-friendly, they recorded a new version in 1985 without the cursing.


9 Songs Where Stuff Is On Fire

7. "Flight Of Icarus" by Iron Maiden (1983)


What's on Fire? Icarus' Wings

"On your way, like an eagle,
Fly and touch the sun."


According to the Greek myth, Deadallus and his son Icarus escape the prison of King Minos by flying away on wax wings. Icarus gets a little carried away though, and keeps flying higher until the sun melts his wings and he plummets to his death. Iron Maiden changes things a bit, with Deadallus encouraging his son to fly ever higher and meet his doom.


8. "I'm On Fire" by Bruce Springsteen (1984)


What's on Fire? A Guy Who Can't Sleep

"At night I wake up with the sheets soaking wet
and a freight train running through the middle of my head"


The guy Springsteen sings about in this one has it so bad for some girl that he wakes up with night sweats thinking about her. Bruce portrayed this guy in the video, where we learn that he's an auto mechanic with strong feelings for a classy married woman who keeps bringing her car in for him to work on.


9. "Disco Inferno" by The Trammps (1976)


What's on Fire? The Dance Floor

"The folks are flaming, out of control
It was so entertainin', when the boogie started to explode"


John Travolta burned up the dance floor to this song in Saturday Night Fever, but it was the 1974 movie The Towering Inferno that inspired the lyrics. Burn, baby, burn!

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Reply #6 posted 01/21/14 8:51am

JoeBala

Album Cover Inspirations

What do Earth, Wind & Fire and Iron Maiden have in common? Surprisingly similar album covers. But they're not the only ones: artists from Coldplay to Motley Crue have released album art that looks strangely familiar. Let's compare covers.


Dub Sex vs. Blur
Parklife

Impossible to talk about mere coincidence: for the album cover of Parklife, Blur copied or paid tribute to the image on Then and Now by the Manchester band Dub Sex, who had some success at the end of the 1980s. Released in 1994, Parklife, Blur's third album, made it possible for the band to confirm their reputation as a major group of the 1990s Britpop movement, with hits like "Girls And Boys" or "Parklife."

Simon & Garfunkel vs. Kruder & Dorfmeister
Bookends

For their first album, the Austrian electro duet Kruder & Dorfmeister paid tribute to Simon & Garfunkel's album Bookends, which contained the hit "Mrs. Robinson." If you disregard Pete Kruder's moustache, the similarity is perfect!

Earth, Wind & Fire vs. Iron Maiden
Powerslave

If there is one similarity to be found between Earth Wind & Fire and Iron Maiden, it is in the covers of these two albums. On the one side, Earth, Wind & Fire's All 'N All funk soul album released in 1977; on the other side, Iron Maiden's Powerslave heavy metal album (featuring the track Two Minutes To Midnight), released seven years later. The similarity between the two album covers is striking. However, don't try and find musical influences between the two bands; there aren't.

The Mountain Goats vs. Coldplay
Parachutes

It doesn't look like Coldplay tried hard to find a cover for their first album Parachutes. The photo bears a similarity to the 1995 album Nine Black Poppies by the California Indie-Rock group The Mountain Goats. In 2000, Chris Martin's band was just starting to get introduced to the public with Yellow, their first single which propelled them at #1 in the UK charts.

Massive Attack vs. Flying Lotus
Mezzanine

Even if the electo act Flying Lotus's music doesn't sound like Massive Attack's distinctive Bristol trip-hop sound, you can still find plenty of similarities between their album covers. That's Massive Attack's 1998 album Mezzanine on the left and the Flying Lotus 2008 offering Los Angeles on the right.

Kiss vs. Lordi
Creatures of the Night

In 1982, Creatures of the Night celebrated Kiss's comeback. For their 2009 single Beast Loose in Paradise, the Scandinavian band Lordi, whose members also wear masks and make-up on stage, didn't hide their admiration for this mythic band.

Booker T. vs. Caribou
Potato Hole

Plagiarism or strange coincidence? On the one side Booker T.'s 2009 blues rock album Potato Hole, featuring the smash hit "Green Onions"; on the other side is Caribou's 2010 electro album, Swim, featuring the song Odessa. These albums feature two musical styles that are diametrically opposite, but with cover albums which show great similarities.

The Beatles vs. Frank Zappa
We're Only In It For The Money

One year only after the release of The Beatles' Sergent Pepper's Lonely Heart's Club Band album, Frank Zappa released We're Only In It For The Money as a satire of the flower power of that time. The album cover includes all the details of the original, with the flowers replaced by vegetables.

The Rolling Stones vs. Motley Crue
Too Fast For Love

Replacing glimmer with glam and jeans for leather, Motley Crue paid tribute to the Rolling Stones famous 1971 Sticky Fingers album cover on their 1981 release Too Fast For Love.

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Reply #7 posted 01/30/14 4:12pm

JoeBala

When In Rome: Norah Jones

Norah Jones Facts

Included in People magazine's annual "100 Most Beautiful People" list in May 2008.

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Became the first artist to sweep the 'Big Four', the four most prestigious honors at Grammy Awards, since Christopher Cross did in 1981 when she scored the attainment in 2003.

Made a guest performance in Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz on NPR on January 19, 2003.

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Her hit single "Don't Know Why" has been covered by Pat Metheny also by Japanese singers Aya Matsuura and Ken Hirai.

Contributed her voice in Mike Patton's album "Peeping Tom" and Amos Lee's self-titled record.

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Was among the music artists taking part on tribute album "Remembering Patsy Cline", singing "Why Can't He Be You."

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Appeared in an episode of "Sesame Street" introducing the letter "Y" by changing her "Don't Know Why" lyrics to "Don't know why Y didn't come."

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Sang the cover versions of both Roxy Music's "More Than This" and Nick Drake's "Day Is Done" in Charlie Hunter's album "Songs from the Analog Playground."

Was featured in Outkast's album "Speakerboxxx/The Love Below."

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Worked as a lounge singer before being signed as a recording artist at Blue Note Records.

http://userserve-ak.last.fm/serve/_/77367014/Norah+Jones+Norah+for+Magnet+Magazine.jpg

Attended the same high school as Erykah Badu and Roy Hargrove did.

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Carried out her first gig on her 16th birthday, singing Billie Holiday's "I'll Be Seeing You" at a Dallas coffeehouse.

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Is also a member of country band The Little Willies who released debut album in March 2006.

http://static1.purepeople.com/articles/2/44/23/2/@/317464-norah-jones-arrive-aux-studios-abc-a-637x0-1.jpg

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Reply #8 posted 01/30/14 6:41pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

Soul-blues singer Benny Latimore (Let's Straighten It Out) played keyboards on What You Won't Do For Love by Bobby Caldwell and on some of Joss Stone's albums.

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The laugh Phil Collins does (Ha, Ha, Ha!) on Genesis' Mama came from The Message by Grandmaster Flash & The Furious 5

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Before releasing an album as TLC, Left Eye & T-Boz sang and also did some writing on Jermaine Jackson's You Said album.

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Weird Al was going to parody Black Or White by Michael Jackson, but Mike turned him down this time.

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Tejano singer Selena was a Jehovah's Witness and so are George Benson and Venus & Serena Williams

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Marilyn Monroe & Dorothy Dandridge were neighbors at one time and often visited each other

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Actor Telly Savalas (Kojak) had a number 1 hit in the UK with his remake of Bread's If.



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
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Reply #9 posted 02/04/14 7:07am

JoeBala

Bob Marley's Album 'Exodu...h Century.

Bob Marley and the Wailers - 'Exodus'(c) Island Records, 2001

In 1999, Time Magazine named Bob Marley's Exodus the "Best Album of the Century." In 2006, they changed their mind, listing the best 100 albums of the century with no Exodus to be found. Marley's Legend made that list, though, as did the soundtrack to The Harder They Come, which featured several of Bob Marley's contemporaries, most notably Jimmy Cliff.

Read More: Essential Bob Marley Albums

http://lpdw.free.fr/BobMarley/photo/Wailwailers1965.jpg

Bob Marley Lived in Delaware. Yes, Delaware.

In 1966, Bob Marley, having a hard time making a living as a musician despite a few nationally-popular ska hits, left Jamaica for 10 months to live with his mother in Wilmington, Delaware. He worked in a Chrysler automobile plant.

No Bob Marley Song or Album Ever Won a Grammy, But Bob Marley Did.

Despite being one of the best-selling artists of all time, Bob Marley never won a Grammy Award for any of his specific works. He did, however, win a posthumous Lifetime Achievement Grammy in 2001. His sons Ziggy Marley and Stephen Marley have each won five Grammy Awards, and his Damian has won three. Marley's former Wailers bandmates Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer won one and three Grammy Awards, respectively.

Bob Marley Was a Vegetarian.

Because of his Rastafarian beliefs, Bob Marley kept to an Ital diet. Ital is based on the same ancient dietary laws that kosher and halal diets are based on, but Ital is somewhat more open to interpretation by the Rastafarian than either of the aforementioned diets would be to the Jew or Muslim, respectively. Marley's interpretation made him a vegetarian.

Bob Marley Had 11 Kids. Or Maybe 13.

Bob Marley was as prolific at fathering talented children as he was at writing and performing songs. He biologically fathered at least nine children with at least seven women (though most estimates put the total number of biological children at 11) and he adopted two more. Of his acknowledged children, seven are internationally-acclaimed musicians (Sharon, Cedella, Ziggy, Stephen, Julian, Ky-Mani, and Damian).

Get in the Mood: Bob Marl...Love Songs

Bob Marley Wrote "No Woman, No Cry."

Well, duh! "No Woman, No Cry" is one of Bob Marley's most famous songs, right? Sure. But check your album and you'll see that the song is credited to "V. Ford" or "Vincent Ford." Ford was an old friend of Marley's who ran a soup kitchen in Kingston, and by giving Ford the songwriting credits to what would become a hit song that was covered dozens of times over, Marley essentially funded the soup kitchen in perpetuity. No word on where the royalties are going today, but here's hoping they're still helping people out.

http://f.kulfoto.com/pic1/0001/0011/72Czr10184.jpg

BM Drove a BMW.

Bob Marley owned at least one BMW car in his lifetime. He publicly stated that he really didn't care that it was a luxury automobile, he just liked the coincidence that the initials for Bob Marley and the Wailers were BMW.

Bob Marley Refused to Amputate his Toe Because of his Religious Beliefs.

Bob Marley died of melanoma, a skin cancer which spread throughout his body. The original melanoma was found on his toe, but when doctors suggested amputation, he refused, based on his religious beliefs.


Bob Marley Was Buried With his Guitar, Among Other Things.

Bob Marley was buried in a crypt in Nine Mile, St. Ann Parish, Jamaica (also his childhood home) with a few of his favorite things: his Gibson Les Paul guitar, a soccer ball (he loved soccer/football, both as a fan and as a player), a Bible (the Rastafarian faith takes all of its basic tenets from the Christian Bible), and a bud of marijuana (Marley believed in mariju... sacrament).

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Reply #10 posted 02/05/14 12:19pm

JoeBala

At age 49 he was youngest-ever recipient in the 22-year history of Kennedy Center Honors given annually for lifetime contribution to arts and culture, presented by President Bill Clinton in Wash DC, Dec. 5, 1999.

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Awarded the Polar Music Prize, the Royal Swedish Academy of Music Award, in 1999.

Recorded an instrumental jazz album under the name "Eivets Rednow" ("Stevie Wonder" spelled backwards).

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At the age of 17 he performed with The Jimi Hendrix Experience playing drums at the BBC. (Jammin'/I was made to love her, BBC Sessions)

Elected to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989.

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His first #1 hit was the half-improvised "Fingertips - Part 2", recorded live in concert (The first live pop single to ever reach #1). It topped the Pop Music and R&B charts in 1963 when Stevie Wonder was only 12. You can the hear the musicians struggling to keep up with the young vocalist and harmonica player as he improvises rhythm and blues riffs, and at one point in the recording a musician is heard shouting "What key? What key?"

http://www.blufftonconnection.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/stevie-wonder-1.jpg

Has won 21 Grammy awards (a record for most Grammy awards)

He was voted the 15th Greatest Rock 'n' Roll Artist of all time by Rolling Stone.

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"Little Stevie" Wonder grew up to not very little at all, as he stands over 6' tall.

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In 1988, he announced his interest in running for mayor of Detroit in the 1992 election. However, he never followed through with a campaign.

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His ex-wife, Syreeta, died of breast cancer in Los Angeles on July 6, 2004.

vintageblackglamour:  Stevie Wonder and his first wife, the brilliant singer and songwriter Syreeta Wright (1946-2004) as they celebrate their wedding day on September 12, 1970. Ms. Wright co-wrote “Signed, Sealed, Delivered, I’m Yours” and “If You Really Loved Me” with Mr. Wonder and recorded “With You, I’m Born Again” with Billy Preston in 1979. The newlyweds are seen as they leave Bernette Baptist Church in Detroit en route to their reception. They honeymooned in Bermuda. Photo: Bettman/Corbis.

In his acceptance speech for the Oscar for Best Song in 1984, Wonder dedicated his award to imprisoned civil rights leader Nelson Mandela. The South African government promptly banned Wonder's music from the country.

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He has 7 children. The last of these, Mandla Kadjaly Carl Stevland Morris, was born May 13, 2005. He was born on his 55th birthday and is his and Kai's first child. Mandla means "Powerful/Defiant" in Zulu. Kadjaly is Swahili for "Born from God"

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In addition to his being blind, he also has loss of smell due to a 1973 car crash in North Carolina from which he also has a scar.

Digest: Stevie Wonder to Join Apollo Theater's Hall of Fame; Dipset's Juelz Santana Arrested in New Jersey

Shortly after reaching his 21st birthday in the spring of 1971, he became the first Motown Recording artist to gain complete artistic control of his records.

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Collaborated on the 1985 smash hit "We Are the World" (USA for Africa)

http://www.hallandoates.de/Covers/We%20are%20the%20world3b.jpg

His 1976 song "Isn't She Lovely" (from album "Songs in the Key of Life") was dedicated to then newborn daughter Aisha whose name and "baby sounds" can be heard on the track

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Joined friends Dionne Warwick, Gladys Knight and Elton John on the 1986 chart-topper "That's What Friends Are For", the proceeds of which were donated to AIDS research. Also played harmonica on the recording.

http://www.mfiles.co.uk/composers/quincy-jones-stevie-wonder-michael-jackson-lionel-ritchie-we-are-the-world.jpg

Oddly enough, two other vocalists introduced his 1973 smash hit "You Are the Sunshine of My Life" (from album "Talking Book") before Wonder actually sang any lyrics. Respectively, these singers were James Gilstrap and Lani Groves.

.

Played harmonica on Chaka Khan's 1984 hit "I Feel For You"

Wrote "Superstition" originally for friend Jeff Beck while completing his 1973 album "Talking Book." Though Beck had actually recorded the number in 1972, Motown rush-released Wonder's cut ahead of the album, and "Superstition" became his

second number one hit in January 1973

Has been blind since birth

.

Father of Aisha Morris, and Keita Morris.

.

Son of Lula Mae Hardaway.

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Became the very first blind recipient of an Academy Award when his composition "I Just Called to Say I Love You" won Best Original Song from "The Woman in Red" soundtrack.

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Inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1983.

.

Wrote the tribute for Mariah Carey's endorsement in Time magazine's "100 Most Influential People in the World" (Artists & Entertainers section / Issue May 12, 2008).

.

Voted the ninth greatest singer of the rock era in a Rolling Stone magazine poll in 2008.

,

He was awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for Recording at 7050 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California.

http://www4.pictures.zimbio.com/gi/Stevie%2BWonder%2BFunk%2BBrothers%2BReceive%2BStar%2BWalk%2BohDJZ8MgCf2l.jpg

Received the Second Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song on February 25, 2009. Selection was announced September 2008.

.

Friend Dizzy Gillespie played the trumpet solo on "Do I Do" from Wonder's "Musiquarium" compilation album (1982).

He was nominated for a 2010 New Jersey Hall of Fame for his services and contributions to Arts and Entertainment.

.

Named U.N. Messenger of Peace [December 2, 2009].

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Dedicated his song "Sir Duke" (from "Songs in the Key of Life" (1976)) to lifelong hero Duke Ellington.

Dedicated the finale of his 2008 "Live At Last" London concert to the memory of his beloved mother who had died 31 May 2006. Wonder performed his song "As" (from album "Songs in the Key of Life") to commemorate the moment.

.

The funky "guitar riff" that underscores most of his song "Superstition" was actually generated on a Hohner D6 Clavinet keyboard that is still, to this day, a mainstay among Wonder's array of keyboard instruments.

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Inducted into the Apollo Legends Hall of Fame in 2011.

http://cdn.singersroom.com/upload/archive/flicks/2011/06/Stevie-Wonder-Apollo/Stevie-Wonder-2.jpg

He is a lifelong staunch liberal Democrat.

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A guest at the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Concert.

Queen Elizabeth II meets Stevie Wonder backstage at The Diamond Jubilee Concert in London Monday June 4, 2012. Thousands of flag-waving fans gathered to watch British music royalty celebrate Queen Elizabeth II on Monday with a Buckingham Palace concert featuring acts from throughout her 60-year-reign. But the queen's husband, Prince Philip, missed the concert after being hospitalized with a bladder infection.

.

http://i2.cdnds.net/12/23/618x345/showbiz_diamond_jubliee_concert_15.jpg

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Reply #11 posted 02/15/14 8:40am

JoeBala

Top 10 Songs About Death

Grim ReaperPeter Macdiarmid, Getty Images

When you strip down songwriting to its most essential subjects, you’re usually left with stories about love and stories about death. Today we’re focusing on the latter with the Top 10 Songs About Death. For as long as rock and roll has been around, musicians have been obsessed with their mortality – not a surprise, given how many of their fellow rockers have died tragically young. Despite being about a real downer of a subject, some of the tunes below are playful, some are inspiring and others merely illustrate how the great beyond is a universally fascinating topic.


10

‘Going, Going, Gone’

Bob Dylan
From: ‘Planet Waves’ (1974)

From ‘The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll’ to ‘Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door’ to the entirety of ‘Time Out of Mind,’ Bob Dylan has spent a fair amount of time writing about life’s last act. On this chestnut, ol’ Bob contemplates suicide with the help of the Band. “I’ve just reached the place / Where the willow don’t bend,” he howls. It’s an earnest, dark and soulful song, backed by Dylan’s most inspired collaborators – one of whom, Richard Manuel, would take his own life 12 years later.

9

‘Dancing with Mr. D’

Rolling Stones
From: ‘Goats Head Soup’ (1973)

Appropriately grimy for a song about a dalliance with death (that’s what the “D” stands for), the Rolling Stones' ‘Dancing with Mr. D’ finds Mick Jagger theorizing about his possible coup de grace. Jagger wonders, “Will it be poison I put in my glass? / Will it be slow or will it be fast?” Perhaps he had his partner in crime, Keith Richards, in mind. Between drug addiction, house fires, brutal falls and a near-electrocution, Keef’s been dancing with Mr. D all his life.

8

‘The Last Carnival’

Bruce Springsteen
From: ‘Working on a Dream’ (2009)

Bruce Springsteen and his E Street Band have proven resilient in the face of death, and continue to press on following the deaths of founding members Clarence Clemons and Danny Federici in recent years. This track, from the otherwise upbeat ‘Working on a Dream,’ finds Springsteen paying tribute to one of them by revisiting 1973’s ‘Wild Billy’s Circus Story,’ on which Federici played accordion (his son Jason performs the honors this time). Bruce laments, “We won't be dancing together on the high wire / Facing the lines with you at my side,” and sings about how the train keeps on rolling anyway.

7

‘Fade to Black’

Metallica
From: ‘Ride the Lightning’ (1984)

The metal legends contributed one of the Top 10 Songs About Death during a period in which the band members were obsessed with the subject (after all, the title of ‘Ride the Lightning’ refers to the electric chair). ‘Fade to Black’ was Metallica’s first ballad and the first to set the slow and heavy template that the band would return to again and again. In the epic song, frontman James Hetfield roars about suicide and an emptiness that fills him. He had his own brush with death when, while performing the song in 1992, he walked into a pyrotechnic stage effect and suffered second- and third-degree burns.

6

‘Keep Me in Your Heart’

Warren Zevon
From: ‘The Wind’ (2003)

It’s one thing to theorize about your death or reflect on a fallen friend. It’s another to write a song about staring your own mortality in the face. That’s what singer-songwriter Warren Zevon did in 2003, after being given a short amount of time to live with terminal mesothelioma. An audibly weary Zevon ruminates about shuffling off this mortal coil, and hopes his loved ones won’t forget him. He sings in simple terms, which makes his more poetic lyrics all the more meaningful. “Engine driver’s headed north to Pleasant Stream,” Zevon warbles over a scintillating acoustic guitar. “Keep me in your heard for a while.” He died two weeks after his last album was released.

5

‘In My Time of Dying’

Led Zeppelin
From: ‘Physical Graffiti’ (1975)

Although the album credits would tell your different, Led Zeppelin did not write ‘In My Time of Dying.’ It's an old gospel tune that had been kicking around for at least 50 years before the boys got hold of it. Dylan had even done a version on his debut LP. But nobody but Zeppelin could have done this to it, making it an 11-minute stunner (the band’s longest studio track) with woozy slide from Jimmy Page and relentless pounding from John Bonham, who accidentally ends the song with a coughing fit. Through the song, Robert Plant sings a plea for deliverance, despite his misdeeds, and the band delivers one of the most thrilling performances of their career.

4

‘The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald’

Gordon Lightfoot
From: ‘Summertime Dream’ (1976)

The record store nerds in ‘High Fidelity’ call this one of the best death songs, and we have to agree. Gordon Lightfoot’s modern version of the sea shanty took inspiration from an actual bulk carrier that sank on Lake Superior in November 1975, taking its 29-member crew to an icy grave. The Canadian songwriter (a boating enthusiast himself) tells the story earnestly and with a modicum of creative license, placing the focus on the tragic tale and the punishing forces of nature against which no man can win. In the middle of the storm, he allows himself a philosophical moment: “Does anyone know where the love of God goes / When the waves turn the minutes to hours?

8

‘The Show Must Go On’

Queen
From: ‘Innuendo’ (1991)

Brian May was the prime mover behind this Queen barnstormer, which is about frontman Freddie Mercury pushing himself to the brink of exhaustion as a performer, as he was becoming weaker and weaker from his struggle with AIDS. Near the song’s end, Mercury belts, “I have to find the will to carry on.” At the time – about a year before Freddie’s death in 1991 – May didn’t know if Mercury would be able to deliver the powerful vocal that the track demanded. He was overjoyed to see his bandmate muster all his strength to tear the song to shreds. The show must go on, indeed.

2

‘Tears in Heaven’

Eric Clapton
From: ‘Rush’ (1992)

Following the tragic death of his four-year-old song Conor, the Eric Clapton found solace in songwriting. The result was this heartfelt ballad, in which the guitar great imagines a situation in which he can spend a little more time with his little boy. But ‘Tears in Heaven’ isn’t just about death, but finding the resolve to deal with all-encompassing grief. “Beyond the door / There’s peace, I’m sure” he sings, sounding unconvinced. E.C. actually retired the song from his performances in 2004, feeling that he couldn’t connect to it in the way he had in the years following Conor’s death (such as on 1992’s Grammy-winning ‘Unplugged’ album). But in 2013, he began playing ‘Tears in Heaven’ again.

1

‘(Don’t Fear) The Reaper’

Blue Oyster Cult
From: ‘Agents of Fortune’ (1976)

Proving that death and cowbell go together like Romeo and Juliet is the track that ends the Top 10 Songs About Death. Frontman Buck Dharma wrote the Blue Oyster Cult classic while contemplating an early demise for himself. While some misinterpreted ‘(Don’t Fear) The Reaper’ as a song about some sort of murder-suicide arrangement, Dharma (a.k.a. Donald Roeser) went on record that he was writing about the inevitability of death and the futility of being scared of it. The radio staple didn’t just become Blue Oyster Cult’s biggest hit; it also inspired Stephen King’s ‘The Stand’ and a certain ‘Saturday Night Live’ skit. But not even more cowbell will save you from the grim reaper.



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Reply #12 posted 02/17/14 8:53am

JoeBala

Thelonious Monk (1917–1982)

http://img.timeinc.net/time/magazine/archive/covers/1964/1101640228_400.jpg

How to say the name:

Thelonious is said like Theh-low-nee-ous.

Born:

10th October 1917 in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, USA.

Thelonious Monk’s grave in Hartsdale

Died:

17th February 1982 in Englewood, New Jersey, USA.

Buried:

Ferncliff Cemetery and Mausoleum, Hartsdale, Westchester County, New York, USA.

Some famous pieces:

  • ‘Round Midnight.

  • Blue Monk.

  • In Walked Bud.

  • Epistrophy.

  • Well You Needn’t.

  • Evidence.

  • Striaght No Chaser.

  • Rhythm-A-Ning.

Some great albums:

  • Genius of Modern Music, Volumes 1 and 2 (1947–1952).

  • Thelonious Monk/Sonny Rollins (1953–1954).

  • Solo 1954.

  • Brilliant Corners (1956).

  • Thelonious Monk with John Coltrane (1957).

  • Thelonious in Action (1958).

  • At Town Hall (1959).

  • Monk’s Dream (1963).

  • The London Collection (1971).

  • Plus many more!

Some interesting facts:

  • He was one of the main jazz artists to create ‘Bebop’ jazz. In fact, many people think of him as the founder of ‘Bebop’. However he didn’t play this style for very long. [Bebop is a style of jazz from the early 1940s until the late 1950s. It is often very fast and has very talented playing.]

  • He was a piano player and wrote a lot of his own music (including all the ‘famous pieces’ mentioned above).

  • His playing was quite unusual. It often had few notes and strange chords.

  • He often hit lots of notes on the piano with his elbow or forearm! At other times he would get up from the piano and start dancing round in circles!

  • He had very few lessons in music and mostly taught himself.

  • He played with some of the great jazz artists of his time, including Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker.

  • He was a good friend and teacher of Bud Powell.

  • He didn’t really care what the public thought of his music. He played what he wanted, and that was that!

  • He was known for wearing hats and sunglasses.

  • He was very shy and often said very little.

  • He played very little in the last ten years of his life. He spent most of this time hiding away in the house of the rich woman, Baroness Nica de Koenigswarter. (She looked after Charlie Parker for a short while at the end of his life too!)

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