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Thread started 01/17/14 10:17am

MickyDolenz

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Music News #2

Mike Nesmith Joins Micky Dolenz for His First Monkees Convention March 2014

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Mike Nesmith will join Micky Dolenz for his first Monkees Convention in 50 years. Also will be performing his show Movies of the Mind. Fans from all over the world will gather as the Monkees also are formally inducted into the American Pop Music Hall of Fame March 14, 15 and 16 2014 in East Rutherford NJ.

Mike Nesmith Joins Micky Dolenz for His First Monkees Convention March 2014
Secaucus, NJ, January 13, 2014 --(PR.com)-- Mike Nesmith will join Micky Dolenz for the 2014 Monkees Convention

For Monkees Fans, this is 49 years in the making! Be a part of history as Mike Nesmith joins Micky Dolenz for his first ever Monkee Convention being held at the Hilton Meadowlands in NJ March 14, 15 and 16th of 2014.

Promoters Phyllis Paganucci and Jodi Blau Ritzen of Then and Now Events have announced that not only will Mike Nesmith be joining Micky Dolenz at the convention, he will also be performing his new show Movies of the Minds Saturday March 15 at 9pm. Tickets are available on www.monkeesconvention2014.com.

This magical weekend will include performances from Micky Dolenz, Coco Dolenz, Christian Nesmith and Circe Link, Jonathan Nesmith, Jessica Nesmith. Actress Ami Dolenz will be signing copies of her new children’s book and answering a Q and A along with her sisters artist and photographer Emily Dolenz and Micky's youngest daughter actress and business partner in Dolenz & Daughters Fine Furniture Georgia Dolenz. With all of their families in attendance, The Monkees will also be presented with their awards of induction into the American Pop Music Hall of Fame as voted on by the fans late last year. No celebration would be complete without a special tribute to the late and great Davy Jones. Other guests of the convention who will be greeting fans and signing autographs will be Butch Patrick, Donna Loren, Valerie Venet, Henry Diltz, Gary Stroble, Gary DeCarlo, Geri Reischel, May Pang, Larry Storch, Beatles Artist Shannon, David and Jennifer Alexander, The Monkeemobile and more.

Along with incredible performances from Buddy Blanc’s Romeo Delight with special guest Micky Dolenz, Coco Dolenz will perform, Circe Link performing a full show, Jonathan Nesmith with members of The Outerspaces and Mother of Winter, The Characters, The Frodis Capers, The Monkeephiles, The 1910 Fruit Gum Co, you can look forward to singing late into the night with fan favorites of last year The Blue Meanies. Sunday we are excited to present Britton Payne's off broad way show Here We Come~A Monkee Parody. This show has gotten rave reviews from all who have attended its performances.

There will be meet and greets opportunities with all of our guests.

A Monkees Memorabilia Market Place will be open as well.

For tickets to the convention and for the tickets to the Movies of the Mind Show starring Mike Nesmith (a limited engagement) and hotel information please visit www.monkeesconvention2014.com and for updates you can check out the facebook page Monkees Convention.

Note: As of now Monkee Peter Tork has a conflicting schedule and is not set to appear.
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 #1 posted 01/17/14 10:27am

paligap

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...

Kool! and it would be nice if Tork does manage to make it to the event....

...

" I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout
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Reply #2 posted 01/17/14 2:47pm

MickyDolenz

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ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons Joins Daryl Hall on ‘Live From Daryl’s House’

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 #3 posted 01/17/14 5:27pm

JoeBala

cool cool cool

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #4 posted 01/18/14 1:36pm

MickyDolenz

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12 Years a Slave star Lupita Nyong'o cites Michael Jackson as her inspiration

Jess Denham, Thursday 16 January 2014

Hollywood's rising star Lupita Nyong'o has cited music icon Michael Jackson as her inspiration for 12 Years a Slave. The Kenyan actress plays the gritty Patsey in Steve McQueen's harrowing drama, a young slave who is beaten and raped, before meeting Chiwetel Ejiofor's character Solomon Northup when he is kidnapped and sold to a New Orleans' plantation".

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There's something very Michael Jackson-like about Patsey - the child-like quality he always had," Nyong'o told Dazed and Confused magazine. "She had her childhood stripped away from her suddenly as soon as she became of sexual age."

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Jackson shot to fame aged just 6-years-old as a singer in The Jackson 5. Nyong'o, who has made her feature film debut in 12 Years a Slave , also credits Whoopi Goldberg's performance in the movie adaptation of Alice Walker's The Color Purple.

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"Whoopi Goldberg looked like me, she had hair like mine, she was dark like me," she said. "I'd been starved for images of myself. I'd grown up watching a lot of American TV. There was very little Kenyan material, because we had an autocratic ruler who stifled our creative expression."

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12 Years a Slave is tipped to receive an Oscar nomination later today after picking up the Golden Globe award for Best Picture (Drama) last weekend.

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 #5 posted 01/18/14 1:42pm

MickyDolenz

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45 Years Ago: The Beatles Settle Lawsuit With Pete Best

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 #6 posted 01/20/14 11:35am

JoeBala

The Beatles, 'Meet the Beatles!'

'Meet the Beatles!' was released 50 years ago today.

Capitol, 1964

For Americans in the full grip of Beatlemania, this was the first album they could buy. Meet took the Fab Four's second British record, With the Beatles, dropped five covers and added three tracks, including the singles "I Want to Hold Your Hand" and "I Saw Her Standing There." (This may have made a hash of the Beatles' artistic intentions, but it made for a much better record.) John Lennon and Paul McCartney were on a songwriting roll that would be unmatched in rock history, and at this point they were still a real team. They wrote "I Want to Hold Your Hand" together on a piano in the basement of Jane Asher, McCartney's actress girlfriend – as Lennon put it, "eyeball to eyeball."


Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/lists/500-greatest-albums-of-all-time-20120531/the-beatles-meet-the-beatles-20120530#ixzz2qyrpSX00
Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook

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Reply #7 posted 01/20/14 5:48pm

MickyDolenz

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Sharon Jones on Beating Cancer and Career Advice From Inmates

January 17, 2014 1:55 PM ET

Sharon Jones had a bad 2013. The 57-year-old soul singer was diagnosed with bile duct cancer just after finishing her new album, Give the People What They Want. It forced her to postpone the release of her LP, cancel all her tour dates with her longtime group the Dap-Kings and have highly invasive surgery, followed by grueling rounds of chemo.

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She's all better now, and her new album – another excellent set full of brassy, vintage-soul grooves – was finally released this week. Rolling Stone recently spoke with Jones about her recovery, her frustrations with the music industry and her stint as a corrections officer at Riker's Island.

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I read you had your last chemo treatment on New Year's Eve. How did you celebrate that night?
I didn't really want to celebrate because I was still weak. But I had chemo up in Cooperstown, at the medical center. They had a gala for New Year's Eve. I wasn't gonna attend because my immune system was weak. I didn't want to be around a bunch of people and catch a cold. But then at the last minute, I changed my mind. I went ahead and gave my $200 for a ticket, and I had a ball. I had so much fun, man. I got to dance.

Then a DJ came into the room and starting playing Aretha Franklin's "Respect." I grabbed the microphone and started singing. You can't play no "Respect" and not let me sing. It was amazing, even though half the people there didn't even know who I was. Oftentimes people don't know who I am. I don't take for granted that they do.

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Did you worry that chemo would weaken your singing voice?
It wasn't the chemo that weakened my voice. It was what happened first. On the 10th of June I had the Whipple procedure. They had to remove my gall bladder, the head of my pancreas and they took out a foot and a half of my small intestine. Then they built me another bile duct and connected it to my stomach. They had to cut me right across my diaphragm, all the way down to my navel. That was hard. I didn't do any sort of singing until October. I sang "In the Garden" for my pastor, and my voice came back slowly after that.

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Are you officially cancer-free?
On January 23rd I go back to the hospital. They're gonna inject me with the dye, give me a CAT scan and make sure they got all the cancer. They want to make sure my white blood cells are back up. Then they gotta remove this port from my chin where they put the chemo in. I don't want to go on the road with this port in.

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Did your impression of America's medical system change during your ordeal?
The medical system, the insurance, the money I'm paying . . . it's so many thousands of dollars! It's ridiculous how much they charge you for a needle or any little thing. I went to Rite-Aid the other day and I show my insurance card. I needed Creon, which is one of my enzyme medications. He came out with this sheet of paper and wrote out that I had to pay $580! I was like, "Excuse me? Are you damn crazy? How the hell are you gonna charge me that much?" Then he checked my insurance and came back with $35. I was like, "How'd that go from $580 to $35?"

It doesn't many any damn sense. I was like, "Wait, if I didn't have insurance you would be charging me more? Poor people should be charged even less!" People are dying! They are letting people die! It's sad. The doctors in the hospital will not operate on you. They will not take you. And so you're just gonna die.

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I want to switch gears here and talk about your new album. What were your goals going into it? What did you want to accomplish this time out?
The only thing I wanted to accomplish was to finally get recognized by the music industry. If you know the awards, answer me this question: Do you see an award for soul music? No. They have R&B, funk, hip-hop and all sorts of contemporary things. I don't know why I keep saying this and I don't know why I keep using their names . . . And I'm not dogging them. I'm not slandering them. I'm not saying they are bad musicians. But how can Taylor Swift or Justin Timberlake win for R&B and funk? They are pop singers.

You don't have enough soul artists, so they put pop music under R&B and funk. When people ask what music I sing, I say soul, R&B and funk. And at the awards, we aren't recognized. Why? Because we're an independent label. We've been going on here for 19 years and these people don't even know. How are we not even recognized?

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Every time I see your name in print you are labeled a "retro" singer.
Yeah! I'm not some kid from the doggone past. They just don't recognize me. I'm sitting at home every time there's a Grammy. It's like, "What is Sharon doing tonight?" I'm sitting home watching it. But it's OK. But if you go to Europe, there are a lot of young, independent labels that's doing soul music. You might call them retro because they're young and they're trying to imitate somebody. But I ain't retro. Don't call me retro.

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The Beacon Theatre show kicks off a pretty long tour. I imagine it's going to feel pretty triumphant to walk back on that stage after all you've been through.
It's gonna be amazing. I'm praying that in a couple of weeks, I'm gonna have a little bit more energy than I have right now. They're gonna get a great show, but don't expect that power, that energetic Sharon for another few months.

I'm getting these little peach furs on my head. I wonder how my hair is going to look short now that it's growing back. I don't want it to be skimpy-skampy. I don't want to shave it now that it's coming back, but I might have to. Everything on my body turned real dark. My toes, under my feet, inside my mouth, under my tongue – I just turned really dark. I'm still here, but it's gonna take a while to get back to normal. Chemo kills all the good cells along with the bad. I have a feeling they got everything, though. I'm not worried about it.

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Do you think you could have handled success when you were 20?
You know what? I probably could have, but I probably would have been on some stupid major label and you do one song, and if I don't do it right I wouldn't have stuck around. So to me, everything worked as planned. Who knows how things would have happened back then? I was wild when I was young, getting involved in stuff. And thank God I'm where I'm at now.

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Tell me a story about working as a corrections officer at Riker's Island.
One day I told the inmates that I sing and they wouldn't lock up until I did a verse of [Whitney Houston's] "The Greatest Love of All." They refused to go into their cells until I sang the whole thing. I knew when I was there I wasn't meant to be there. Even the inmates told me that. They said to me, "Miss Jones, you aren't meant to be here. You're too nice."

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 #8 posted 01/20/14 6:00pm

MickyDolenz

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Ken Burns Making Documentary on Country Music

PBS documentary maker Ken Burns is examining the roots of country music and how it has changed through the present day for a multi-episode series on public broadcasting.

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Country fans have a wait ahead of them, though. PBS said Monday that Burns' country music project isn't set to air until 2018.

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The noted documentarian has several other projects in the works for PBS, including one on the Gettysburg Address that will air this spring, and films on the Roosevelts, Jackie Robinson and Vietnam.

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The country series explores the question, "what is country music." It will track the careers of the Carter family, Jimmie Rodgers, Bob Wills, Hank Williams, Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson and others.

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 01/21/14 6:27pm

JoeBala

'Happily Retired' Tina Turner Set to Release 'Love Songs' Album

By Keith Caulfield, Los Angeles | January 21, 2014 5:36 PM EST

Just in time for Valentine's Day in February: Tina Turner will release a new compilation album titled "Love Songs."

Due Feb. 4 on Parlophone Records, the 18-track collection boasts familiar favorites like "What's Love Got To Do With It," "The Best," "Private Dancer" and "I Don't Wanna Fight." Alas, there are no new songs or previously unreleased tunes on the album.

It's unlikely the 74-year old Turner will make any promotional appearances in support of the album, as she is "happily retired" from the music business -- according to her spokesperson.

Turner's last studio album, "Twenty Four Seven," reached No. 21 on the Billboard 200 chart upon its release in 1999, and has sold 517,000 in the U.S. according to Nielsen SoundScan. She has since issued two greatest hits albums ("All the Best" in 2005 and "Tina!" in 2008) and a live set in 2009 ("Tina Live") based on her 2008-2009 tour.

The Rock And Roll Hall of Fame inductee -- and eight-time GRAMMY Award winner -- has charted 17 solo hit singles on the Billboard Hot 100. Her first solo hit, a cover of "Let's Stay Together," debuted on the chart 30 years ago this year (on Jan. 21, 1984). Before that, as part of the duo Ike & Tina Turner, she notched 20 hits from 1960 through 1975.

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Reply #10 posted 01/22/14 10:09am

JoeBala

Read Neil Young's Full, Epic Speech From Grammy Honors Ceremony

'The time has come for us to recover and to bring music back to the people in a way that they can recognize it in their souls,' he said last night

Neil Young attends the 56th GRAMMY Awards P&E Wing Event Honoring Neil Young at The Village Recording Studios in Los Angeles.

Michael Kovac/WireImage

January 22, 2014 9:05 AM ET

"Thank you, Neil," Neil Young said to Neil Portnow of the Recording Academy, accepting the President's Merit Award from the Producers & Engineers Wing last night. "I like saying that to myself." Young then gave a fifteen-minute speech that was equal parts musical manifesto, stand-up comedy, and personal history. It's essential reading if you want to understand Young's studio philosophy, or if you just want to know how he made "Like a Hurricane," and it's transcribed below in its entirety (minus a few mumbled and repeated words). "The idea, for me, is to try to get magic," Young told the crowd.

The occasion was the Producers and Engineers Wing's seventh annual Grammy party; the setting was the Village, a storied studio complex in Los Angeles, its walls lined with gold records by everybody from Steely Dan to Neil Diamond to Lady Gaga. Hundreds of knob-twiddlers were in attendance to schmooze, eat sushi, and check out the wares of audio companies. After Young's speech, Dave Matthews came out for a surprise three-song acoustic set, with Young yelling encouragement from the side of the stage: the traditional "Rye Whiskey," "My My, Hey Hey (Out of the Blue)," and "The Needle and the Damage Done." "I hope that I am half the inspiration to people that you have been to me," he told Young.

Young's speech to the throng of producers and engineers:

So this is a cool night because we're all here together. I know almost everybody here. If I don't know you, I thought I did when I saw you. It really is great. A lot of us, you know, producers and engineers –I'm kind of a producer, partially, an engineer, I'm not really good at either one. It's hurt my records in the past. We're performance-oriented: technical things don't matter that much.

That's only one way of making records. A lot of you out here are craftsmen: just beautiful records, and take great care with every note. And I know I'm not one of them. I like to capture the moment. I like to record the moment. I like to get the first time that I sung the song. I like to get the first time the band plays the song. So there's a lot of compromises you make to get that feeling, but in the long run, that's where the pictures are when I hear my words and when I see the pictures while I'm listening. So that's what we try to record.

Recording is so important. We think about the equipment, we think about what are we using, what do we have, what are we recording on, what are we singing through, where is it going, how long is the wire? Why is that piece of shit in the wire between me and where I'm going? Get that out! Don't join the wire together, get one wire, because every time you go through one of those pieces of crap, something happens. We paid big bucks for this place, and we're going to use every bit of it. And we're not going to use what we don't want. Thank you. Great recording here.

I did record here! I think I recorded a few tracks here a long time ago. There's a song, "Like a Hurricane," that I didn't record here. But I couldn't sing at that time, when I recorded that, because I had just had some sort of operation. They told me to stop for a month, but I couldn't stop the music, so in my studio at home, me and Crazy Horse got together and we played this track. It was about fifteen minutes long, because I'd just written it the night before. I recorded it on an acoustic – now let's play with all these other instruments and it's going to be great.

So we got the instruments out and we played it once. And we screwed it up really badly at first. If you listen to the record, you can tell we screwed it up. We cut it off. It just starts out of nowhere. But that was over – now we're in the record. And it's divided, it doesn't matter how cool and together the beginning was, but where it went as soon as it started. So we shortened a little bit.

Then I was here at this place, in 1974 or something, and I said, "You know, a couple of weeks ago, when I couldn't sing – " By the way, I know I can't sing. I mean I couldn't make a sound. And of course, this was back in the day, way back there. So I'm saying, "We have this tape here. I brought this piece to multitrack. We've never played it. I'm going to sing it, because I never got a chance to sing it."

So we put it on, and he played back about ten seconds, and I said, "Okay, stop. Everything was working, right? We heard everything? Okay, there's no reason to listen to it. Because I was there – I know what it is. And it's on the tape. We don't have to listen to it. Let's not wipe the shit off the tape listening to it. Let's record while the stuff is still on – let's listen to what's there, and record it to a two-track while it's still there." Because if you listen over and over and over again, it goes away, bye-bye! Because the tape doesn't like to rub over this head, and then part of it goes away, it's terrible. That bothers me every time the tape plays. So I never hardly ever listen!

Okay, they put the tape on and I went out and I talk: "Am I there?" Yes. "Good. Okay. Record. Number one. Just record all the time – that's why we're here. Don't not record at all, ever. Record! It's a studio! Record! Practice at home! The red button's not that scary, really not."

So we press the button and they start the tape, and I start singing the song. It's long, so it's like, four or five verses over and over again. So I sing one verse, and then the other verse – there's only two verses, so I just keep singing them, one after the other. Later on, we can cut it down. The other guys aren't here, and I hear the harmony part, so I want to sing the harmonies now. We did the harmonies, so we did three tracks, three times through, one time on each track. We had all this stuff, and it was the first time I ever heard it. The first time I ever listened to "Like a Hurricane." And I was hearing it, and I was singing it, and I sang the harmony, and I sang the other harmony, and then we mixed it. So it was like the five-and-sixth time, and then we mixed it. There's a message in there somewhere.

My memory of this place is what it is, that we do records like that. The idea is, for me, to try to get magic. Who knows where the hell it's coming from? I don't – so please record. It's expensive to sit here and not push the button.

I know who you people are. I know you're animals, and I know some of you are very funny. Some of you are just dry – never laugh. "Good morning." I love you all people, because I know what you're doing. I know how crazy you are about all the things that I don't care about. Sometimes you make great records, and it's fantastic. They're not like my records – sometimes I can't feel them, but I really appreciate them. No, sometimes I can feel them and I go, "Holy shit, how did they do that? How did they make that record? I know they layered it – it's not like a documentary where something happens and you take a picture, cinema verite. This is a movie: somebody created all the scenes, and there was the dialogue, and then they did the dialogue again, and there was the foley to do the sounds, and they did all the stuff, and everything's perfect – but it's still good."

There's nothing wrong with that – it's just a different way of doing it than I could ever do, because I have so little ability to do that, that it would really suck: over and over again, getting it right. That's why I'm flat, that's why it doesn't matter that there's bad notes. That doesn't mean it's not production – it just means it's the kind of production that we do.

Some people are here tonight that I've worked with over the ages that are just really incredible people. Al Schmitt's here tonight. And Niko Bolas, he's here. John Hanlon is here. I really appreciate that these guys are – I know you really appreciate, especially Al, because he's the father of what's going on here, and he's still here. He has staying power. And he was recording the way that I want to record now. I'm going to make a record with Al – we're talking about making a record together where there's only one mic, but we do a huge orchestra. And when we finish doing that performance, and every guy's standing the right length from the mic: the background vocal is like "hey-hey-hey," and of course I'm up here, but they're right there, so it sounds like that there. So we're going to do it that way. We're not going to mix it: we're going to do it, and mix it while we do it. Everybody can get in the right place, and if it's not righ – -well, we'll move the bass up. Move the bass closer. It's not loud enough? Move the amp closer, then! It sounds good, but it's just too quiet, so move it up. Move it in, and the drums? Leave it over there, go back farther.

Do you know how fun that is to do? That is so much fun. It's like playing music – it's not making music, it's playing it. I love doing these things. And I'm anxious to do something I've never done before, because there were great records made that way. There's something that happens with one mic. When everyone sings into one mic, when everybody plays into the same mic: I've just never been able to do that, with some rare instances like when I record in a recording booth from a 1940s state fair. I got that sound by closing myself into a telephone booth. And I notice, it sounds just like an old record. And I like the sound of old records! I've always loved that.

So all I'm trying to say is I'm one of you. You honor me, you're honoring yourself. It's not me: it's you. It's what we do. Thank you so much. Digital. Digital is not bad. But Xerox is not good. I always like to say Picasso was really happy to see original Picassos everywhere, but when he went into some places and saw Xeroxes of Picassos, it didn't make him as happy, because he thought people thought that we was making those things. The thing we do is, we make great stuff in the studio and then we kiss its ass goodbye, because nobody's ever going to hear it. That's unfortunate, and it didn't use to be that way. That's something that happened to us – that's an injury we sustained, and it deeply hurt us. So the time has come for us to recover and to bring music back to the people in a way that they can recognize it in their souls – through the window of their souls, their ears. So they can feel and vibrate and so that they can get goosebumps. We cherish those fucking goosebumps. We really need those.

Being impressed by something, and how cool it is, and how sharp it is, and how snappy it is, is one thing, and that translates into almost any media. But when you're singing something very soulful from your heart, and the echo is perfect and everything's great and you're using maybe an acoustic chamber and everything sounds great. And then you listen to it and you love it, but you hear it somewhere else and it's gone – that's terrible. We don't like that. Not many of us like that, we're not happy about it. So we're trying to change that, and we're trying to make it better. We're trying to make music sound technically better, and that's what I want to do. So we have a player that plays whatever the musicians made digitally, and that's going to come out. We're announcing that at SXSW, we're introducing it, it's called Pono, and that's my commercial, thank you very much.


Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/read-neil-youngs-full-epic-speech-from-grammy-honors-ceremony-20140122#ixzz2rADUD1C8

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Reply #11 posted 01/22/14 10:50am

JoeBala

A Saturday afternoon with Raquel Rodriguez

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Raquel Rodriguez and the Big Guys live at The Mint in CA.

Raquel Rodriquez is a gorgeous up and coming soul singer based out of Los Angeles, CA. She and her band, the Big Guys, released their first full length album, “Miss Me” last June. Now, she has her sights set on touring the east coast this summer. On a dreary Saturday afternoon, I was lucky enough to be granted the opportunity to sit down and chat with Raquel.

CS: How would you describe the genre of music you play and why that genre over any other?

RR: Generally, we play soul, but I think the best way to describe it would be feel good music. As the writer, I know it’s music that makes me feel good because I can get stuff off my chest. And people can relate to it. I honestly like soul music because it’s good for the soul. It’s such a cheesy thing to say, but it’s actually kind of true. I love listening to it and I like replicating it because people will tell me that I’ve got so much soul in my voice. And I’m just like, “Yeah, well that’s the point!”

CS: So, how did the band come together?

RR: Mostly through school. Almost all of us went to USC. The first person I met was Jamey, the guitarist. Guitar Center had this competition going on and I saw him playing blues. I thought he was awesome! The drummer was in a separate band. And I was friends with his guitarist. I went to a couple of their shows and thought he was good. Eventually, he became my drummer and also ended up producing the whole album. I met the keyboard player through an ex-keyboard player. I liked him better, so I just started calling him for more gigs. The bass player was in a couple of my classes and was the number one bass player at USC. So, I made him be in my band. [Laughs] He’s in something like 30 bands, but he definitely is a key member in ours. The saxophone player, Tim is best friends with the guitarist and was also the roommate of Sam, our drummer. The trumpet player, Brandon didn’t go to USC. He just knows everybody from mutual music friends. So, it was kind of weird that we all knew each other. It’s such a small music world in Los Angeles.

CS: Do you have any embarrassing band stories?

RR: Embarrassing band stories? Yeah, actually. Oh God. We played a gig opening for J. Cole and Big Sean and I got really excited when people seemed to like our songs. So, I asked the crowd if they wanted to hear a Michael Jackson song called “I Can’t Help It”. After I said that, everyone in the band looked at me like, “Yo! We don’t know that song!” Of course I made them play it anyway. [Shakes her head] It was a train wreck in front of 4,000 people. Afterwards, I couldn’t stop thinking about how stupid I was! Why did I do that? Why did I think that we could just pull it off? I mean, I just looked at them and was like, “You got it, you got it.” And all of them were just like, “No, we don’t got it.” But we pulled it off, I guess…sort of. I’ll probably never play that song in front of anyone ever again.

CS: I know that you won a battle of the bands in college that gave you the opportunity to work with Andrew Scheps, a Grammy-winning producer who has worked with Adele and many other famous acts. What was that experience like for you? Did it change the trajectory of your path? If so, how?

RR: Andrew Scheps was awesome! I was really nervous, though! But when we got there, he made everybody feel like he genuinely cared about the way our song came out. We didn’t really get to finish it that day, so Andrew invited us over to his house to finish it in his home studio. When we walked in, I saw his six Grammy awards and his old school console. And then I started to get nervous again. But still, he was awesome. He definitely changed the arrangement, but he was like a magician that changed our music for the better. I am very, very grateful that I got to work with him.

CS: You recently had your song "Already Beat" featured on the hit TV show, “Sons of Anarchy”. How did it make you feel to hear that was going to happen?

RR: Oh, that was so awesome! When they called me to tell me that they were going to feature my song in the season premiere, I literally started from season one and watched all five seasons before the season six premiere. I didn’t just want to watch the episode to hear the song, but not understand what was going on, ya know? Now, I love the show! It’s really cool to have the song on there because, not only do all of my friends love the show, but it is the first song I’ve ever gotten on a show. It’s always surreal to hear or see yourself on TV. And it was definitely one of those life changing experiences. It’s also definitely something I want to keep doing. I want to push for more songs in TV shows.

CS: I know you have opened for fairly well-known artists before. Have you opened for anyone else or is there any artist or band that you’re dying to open for?

RR: We've opened for a few pretty big artists, but on the horizon, I would love to get the chance to open for (or even just play one show with) Mayor Hawthorne, Allen Stone, Emily King...I can’t even think of them all right now because there are just so many, but I would really like to start touring more, especially in Boston! People on the east coast aren't afraid to show that they love music!

CS: What do you mean?

RR: People on the west coast are pretty image conscious. So, sometimes when I’m playing a show, no one dances. Then afterward, I’ll have a bunch of people come up to me and tell me how awesome the show was and that they loved it. And I wonder…if they loved it so much, why didn’t they dance! I feel like people in Boston are more laid back and wouldn’t be afraid to dance!

CS: Can you tell me a little bit about the making of the music video for "Tell Me It’s Fine"?

RR: Oh, yeah! That was the very first official music video that I’ve ever done. I raised the money for it on kickstarter.com. At first, I was thinking that I didn’t know how to act or wouldn’t be able to lip sync the song. But when I started the first scene, it was so easy! The director even asked if I had done this before. When I told him no, he said that he even though he could tell I was a little nervous, I was still doing great. So, after hearing that, I was excited to shoot other scenes. Anyway, it was a very long day and I wasn’t exactly sure how all of the scenes were going to come together. After I saw it, I understood though and I’m really happy with the way it came out. It’s a romantic and sad story. I definitely want to do more music videos and I am going to very soon.

CS: Do all of your lyrics come from personal experience or are they made up?

RR: It’s a little bit of both. For the most part, my drummer Sam would come up with a song and I would sit with it for a while to try and determine how it makes me feel. For instance, "Miss Me" honestly made me feel like a bad ass. And at the time, I was going through a break up and I hated the ex-boyfriend. I didn’t want to say too much about him, though. So, I started to take other real life experiences and exaggerate certain parts. I like to keep most of the details of my life private. I’m shy. However, I feel like I couldn’t adequately express the emotion in a song without knowing, at least second hand, what it feels like to go through those things. I’ve never just made up a song.

CS: Do you have any tips for up and coming musicians?

RR: I always try and tell people to do what they like doing. I went through a stage where I tried to please everyone else. And after a while, I just started to say, “You know what? I like what I do. It makes me feel good.” Not everyone is going to like my music. It took a while for me to finally accept that, but nobody is ever, ever, ever going to be person that everybody likes. There will always be someone that’s better than you. There’s always going to be someone that’s more talented than you. And you just can’t take it to heart. I also would tell people to hone in on their craft and get it to a level they’re comfortable with before they release anything. I’ve seen some people release music that’s just kind of mediocre. It’s not recorded well and that affects you in the long run. People won’t want to listen to your new song if they think your old one wasn’t that great. Most people would have a higher success rate if they found out who they were before they started releasing things that weren’t true to them.

CS: Are there any plans to come to Boston?

RR: We’re still in the baby stages of planning, but we are setting up a tour for 2014 and we’d like to get to Boston maybe in the summer? I think that once we sit down and figure out a route, we’ll definitely be visiting venues on the east coast!

Be one of the first to get an exclusive look at Raquel’s "Tell Me It’s Fine" with a special message for Examiner readers here! The band’s newest release, "Hold On" will be available for purchase beginning January 27, 2014 via their bandcamp site. Enter the word “Cassandra” at check out for an elite Examiner reader discount! Also, be sure to check back here for upcoming tour dates!

Happy listening!

http://myearstoyours.files.wordpress.com/2013/07/raquel-rodriguez-miss-me-2013.jpg?w=490

Source: http://www.examiner.com/a...b_articles

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Reply #12 posted 01/22/14 4:24pm

JoeBala

Monkees convention adds songwriter Bobby Hart, more to lineup

The cover of an album issued by Dolenz, Jones, Boyce & Hart

EMI/Capitol

January 22, 2014

The organizers of the Monkees Convention that will take place in M...ke Nesmith announced Jan. 22 three more special guests are being added to the lineup.

They include Bobby Hart, the co-writer with the late Tommy Boyce of many of the Monkees' hits, including the TV show's iconic theme and “Last Train to Clarksville.” Their songs appeared on every original Monkees album except “Head.” Boyce & Hart had their own top 10 hit, “I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight,” and two other songs, “Out & About,” and “Alice Long (You're Still My Favorite Girlfriend)” in the Billboard Top 40 in 1968. The duo went out on tour with Dolenz and Davy Jones in the '70s as Dolenz, Jones, Boyce & Hart.

Also added to the show is Andrew Sandoval, Grammy nominated producer and musician and the author of “The Monkees: The Day-b...sation.” Sandoval has been involved with the reissues of their albums and their tours in recent years.

The third guest is Rachel Litchman, who put together the video show for last year's Monkees concert tour and is working on a documentary about Monkees songwriters Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart.

Monkees Convention 2014 will take place March 14-16 at the Hilton Meadowlands in Meadowlands, N.J. For tickets, visit the Monkees convention website.

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Reply #13 posted 01/22/14 7:27pm

JoeBala

Captain & Tennille Divorcing After 39 Years of Marriage

'Captain' Daryl Dragon and Toni Tennille

Captain & Tennille, the married singing duo behind hits like "Love Will Keep Us Together," have split after 39 years of marriage, TMZ reports.

Cathryn Antionette "Toni" Tennille filed for divorce from "Captain" Daryl Dragon in Arizona.

The couple met in 1972 when Tennille was the co-writer for a musical and Dragon was the keyboardist for The Beach Boys. She later toured with the band for a year as an additional keyboardist.

They began performing together at an Encino, Calif., restaurant, where they were discovered by Neil Sedaka. They married on Nov. 11, 1974, and hit No. 1 on the Billboard chart the next year with their cover of Sedaka's song, "Love Will Keep Us Together," which also won a Grammy Award for Record of the Year.

Some of their other biggest hits include "Do That to Me One More Time," "The Way I Want to Touch You," "Shop Around" and "Muskrat Love."

They starred in their own ABC variety show, The Captain and Tennille Show, which aired from 1976-1977, as well as several other specials for the network. In recent years, they released their first-ever Christmas CD in 2006 and recorded two songs for the Cartoon Network special Casper's Scare School.

Captain & Tennille have no children.

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Reply #14 posted 01/22/14 7:33pm

JoeBala

Capitol Records Signs Neil Diamond

Diamond's return to Universal will mark the first time the singer's entire catalog has been under one label.

Neil Diamond - H 2014
Jordan Strauss/Invision
Neil Diamond

This article first appeared on Billboard.com.

Billboard has learned that Capitol Music Group has signed legendary singer/songwriter Neil Diamond to its Capitol Records label. The deal will mark the first time Diamond’s entire catalog has been under one label.

The new deal is Diamond's second go-round at Universal, of which Capitol is a subsidiary, and where he was signed from the late 1960s to the early '70s to its MCA label. Diamond, until this deal, had been signed since the early '70s to Columbia and before that recorded for Bang Records from 1966-68, which was then under the Atlantic umbrella. Now, his entire back catalog will be housed under one label.

PHOTOS: Grammys 2014: The Nominees

Capitol Music Group chairman and CEO Steve Barnett and Universal Music Group chairman CEO Lucian Grainge were instrumental in orchestrating the deal with Diamond and his manager Katie Diamond (his wife). Barnett worked closely with Diamond when he was at Columbia and will personally oversee Diamond’s future projects at Capitol.

Diamond, 72, is writing new material and slated to begin recording this year. His new team and Universal Music Enterprises is formulating a strategy to release his extensive back catalog.

Having sold more than 128 million records during the course of his storied career, Diamond is a Grammy Award-winning artist and member of both the Rock and Roll and Songwriters Halls of Fame. He also is a recipient of the Sammy Cahn Lifetime Achievement Award, one of the highest honors bestowed upon songwriters. Diamond has garnered a Golden Globe Award and 13 Grammy nominations and received the 2009 NARAS MusiCares Person of the Year Award. In 2011, he also collected the prestigious Kennedy Center Honor for his lifetime of contributions to American culture.

In 2012, Diamond received Billboard's Legend of Live honors at Billboard's Touring Awards. Showing his humility at the ceremony, Diamond read the entirety of his first-ever newspaper concert review, a largely scathing piece in the Los Angeles Times of his performance at The Hullabaloo in 1966. The review concluded by saying, "His personal appearance at the Hullabaloo is sadly lacking in the evident talent that sparks his songs and records," which resulted in uproarious laughter from the crowd. Diamond noted that he had kept the review in his dressing room for the past 45 years to motivate him.

Since his Billboard 200 chart debut in 1966 with The Feel of Neil Diamond, he has charted 51 albums, including 17 top 10 efforts. He most recently hit the top 10 with his last studio release, 2010's Dreams. It debuted and peaked at No. 8, marking his 17th top-10 album. It was the singer's fourth top-10 set since 2005, when 12 Songs began his recent hot streak with a No. 4 entry. Since then, he's also notched top 10s with Home Before Dark (his first No. 1 album, in 2008) and Hot August Night/NYC (No. 2 in 2009). He's notably claimed a top 10 album in every decade since the 1970s.

In terms of hit singles, he's logged 53 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, with 13 of those reaching the top 10. He's achieved No. 1s with "Cracklin' Rosie," "Song Sung Blue" and "You Don't Bring Me Flowers" (with Barbra Streisand).

He's also certified as having sold 48.5 million albums in the U.S., according to the RIAA, making him the ninth-largest selling male solo artist in history.

On Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart, Diamond is one of the most accomplished acts in the list's 52-year history. His 58 entries trail only Elton John's 69 hits and Streisand's 64. Eight of Diamond's AC hits have gone to No. 1.

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Reply #15 posted 01/25/14 6:52am

JoeBala

Phil Collins: 'I've Just Started to Work With Adele'

He's only recently become aware of the pop star

January 24, 2014 2:55 PM ET
Phil Collins
Phil Collins
Peter Kramer/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

In a recent interview with Inside South Florida, Phil Collins revealed he's writing new songs with Adele. "I've just started to work with Adele," he said. "I wasn't actually too aware…I live in a cave, but she's achieved an incredible amount. I really love her voice. I love some of this stuff she's done, too."

Check Out 30 Years of Genesis in Photos

It's unclear if these new songs are intended for Adele's long-awaited follow-up to 2011's 21. Collins' statement begs all sorts of follow-up questions, but the interviewer moved directly onto Miley Cyrus and twerking. It turns out Collins hasn't heard of twerking, but he does think that Miley Cyrus is "great."

Phil Collins hasn't released an album of original material since 2002's Testify. Outside of a handful of shows promoting his 2010 Motown covers album Going Back, he hasn't toured since the 2007 Genesis reunion. Soon after the tour ended he sustained nerve damage that made it practically impossible for him to play drums, which weighed heavily on his decision to essentially retire. "I don't want to get caught up in that rock & roll promotion thing," he told Rolling Stone in 2012. "And I have young children, so I don't feel the drive to go out there and compete."

Late last year, Collins announced a change of heart while promoting the Tarzan musical in Germany. "I have started thinking about doing new stuff," he said. "[Maybe playing] some shows again, even with Genesis. Everything is possible. We could tour in Australia and South America. We haven't been there yet."

There's been no further word on Phil Collins' future touring or recording plans, but a collaboration with Adele would be the perfect way for him to re-enter the public consciousness. The move also makes a lot of sense since they are both masters when it comes to writing super personals songs about messy break-ups.


Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/phil-collins-ive-just-started-to-work-with-adele-20140124#ixzz2rQxCTxBx

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Reply #16 posted 01/27/14 4:50pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

Recent Michael Anthony interview:

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 #17 posted 01/28/14 10:11pm

MickyDolenz

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Fleetwood Mac May Begin Recording New Album in March

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 #18 posted 01/29/14 2:33pm

JoeBala

Monkees Among New Inductees To America's Pop Music Hall Of Fame

  • January 27, 2014 at 3:53 PM (PT)

    Hey Hey!

    THE MONKEES will be formally inducted into AMERICA’S POP MUSIC HALL OF FAME with a presentation at the Monkees Convention in Meadowlands, NJ, Saturday, March 15th at noon. MICHAEL NESMITH and MICKY DOLENZ will each receive awards marking their 2014 selection.

    Also elected into the 2014 Hall of Fame were the BEE GEES, TONY BENNETT, THE CARPENTERS, CHICAGO, BUDDY HOLLY, ELTON JOHN, CAROLE KING, DEAN MARTIN, ROY ORBISON, PATTI PAGE, THE PLATTERS, SIMON & GARFUNKEL and THE SUPREMES.

    For his first-ever Monkees Convention, NESMITH will be performing his show, “Movies of the Mind” ON
    Saturday, March 15th at 9p. The weekend will also include performances from MICKY DOLENZ, COCO DOLENZ, CHRISTIAN NESMITH AND CIRCE LINK, JONATHAN NESMITH AND JESSICA NESMITH, THE BLUE MEANIES and the 1910 FRUITGUM COMPANY, among others.

    A special tribute to the late DAVY JONES is also planned.

    Among others in attendance will be BILLY J. KRAMER, BUTCH PATRICK (“THE MUNSTERS“), eek LARRY STORCH (“F TROOP”), and the MONKEEMOBILE. Tickets are available at www.monkeesconvention2014.com.

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Reply #19 posted 01/30/14 2:32pm

JoeBala

Bobby Hart Boyce & Hart: The Guys Who Wrote 'Em.

From Andrew Sandoval:
For the last few years I have been working on co-writing and co-producing a feature length documentary about Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart Boyce & Hart: The Guys Who Wrote 'Em. It features new, exclusive interviews with Michael Nesmith, Micky Dolenz & Peter Tork (among others) as well as a ton of unpublished photos and home movies. In fact, it is entirely made up of vintage footage, which makes it an even more unique and enjoyable film. It is the result of so much teamwork and generosity from so many people; I am so grateful for everyone's help and very pleased to see that it is finally ready to be screened.



Bobby Hart recording his narration for The Guys Who Wrote 'Em.

.

In order to get all of the footage, music and publishing licensed for mass public consumption, we are holding a fund raising, sneak preview of the film in Brooklyn at the Bell House on March 16th.

Bobby Hart (who narrates the film), the director Rachel Lichtman and myself will be there in person for a Q&A and we have invited some special guests too. As many of you know, we will also be at the Monkees Convention on Friday & Saturday. I look forward to seeing a bunch of my east coast pals in March! Here we come.

Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart: The Guys Who Wrote 'Em

Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart: The Guys Who Wrote 'Em

Sun, March 16, 2014

Doors: 2:00 pm / Show: 3:00 pm

The Bell House

Brooklyn, New York

$15.00

Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart: The Guys Who Wrote 'Em

The Bell House presents an exclusive preview of this new, feature length documentary telling the remarkable story of the 1960's duo Boyce & Hart who created the sound of The Monkees, scored hit after hit and somehow helped change the national voting age to 18 in the process. Special fundraiser with Bobby Hart, Rachel Lichtman (director/writer/producer), Andrew Sandoval (writer/producer) & surprise guests IN PERSON! (90 mins; Dir: Lichtman)

.

Clip of movie: http://vimeo.com/73430588

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Reply #20 posted 01/31/14 8:51am

JoeBala

Back to the Future' Musical Heads for London Stage

Back To The Future / Who Framed Roger Rabbit?

Marty McFly will be time-traveling again as Robert Zemeckis and screenwriter Bob Gale team with theater director Jamie Lloyd to adapt the 1985 hit.

NEW YORK – The decade-jumping DeLorean is once again revving its engine.

Robert Zemeckis, screenwriter Bob Gale and theater director Jamie Lloyd have announced development of a stage musical based on Back to the Future, which is aiming to premiere in London’s West End during the 30th anniversary year of the smash 1985 release.

Universal Stage Productions, producer Colin Ingram and Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Entertainment are behind the project, which will feature new music and lyrics by Alan Silvestri and Glen Ballard. Additional music heard in the film by Huey Lewis & the News, Chuck Berry, Pat Ballard and Curtis Williams, including “The Power of Love” and “Johnny B. Goode,” will also be featured.

The classic sci-fi comedy starred Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly, who is transported 30 years into the past in a time-traveling car invented by his friend Dr. Emmett Brown (Christopher Lloyd). In addition to finding his way back to 1985, he also has to ensure his own existence by keeping his high-school age parents’ romance on track.

The film grossed $381 million at the worldwide box office and spawned two sequels. In total, the franchise earned $958 million. Zemeckis directed all three features, which he co-wrote with Gale.

Produced with Donovan Mannato and CJ E&M, the stage musical is expected to bow in London during the 2015-16 theater season.

“The Back to the Future musical is a project that Bob Zemeckis and I have been exploring for almost ten years,” said Gale. “We know the integrity of the material will be preserved in a production that will be a wonderful companion to the Trilogy.”

“I was five when I saw Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale’s landmark movie, Back to the Future, and I have been a huge fan ever since,” added director Lloyd. “The production will include illusions, skateboarding and many other surprises that will capture the spirit of the film but freshly interpret it for a new audience.”

Lloyd is currently represented in the West End with his hit production of the musical The Commitments, based on the 1991 Alan Parker film. He also recently directed James McAvoy in a well-received West End production of Macbeth.

Six-time Grammy winner Ballard collaborated with film score composer Silvestri on the song “Believe” from Zemeckis’ animated feature The Polar Express. Ballard teamed with Dave Stewart on the score for Ghost: The Musical, another movie spinoff, which played London and Broadway.

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Reply #21 posted 02/03/14 7:08pm

MickyDolenz

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2014 ➤ Reunion in the air for Culture Club – again

January 31, 2014

Culture Club, reunion, 2014,Mikey Craig, Roy Hay, Jon Moss, Boy George, pop music

Boy George posts a new pic at Facebook Jan 31, and says:
Had a little writing session with the Club last week. Four degrees of pout! The plot thickens.” … His website adds: “Expect a new album and a tour from Culture Club by the end of 2014.

The last time George announced a Culture Club reunion (2011 New Year’s Eve gig in Sydney, Australia) Jon Moss was also photographed in the studio rehearsals, but he didn’t turn up on the night.

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 #22 posted 02/03/14 11:11pm

JoeBala

^^biggrin

Micky Dolenz performing with Robby Krieger of The Doors at Gibson Guitars 90210 Event...Jan.22,2014

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Reply #23 posted 02/03/14 11:21pm

Timmy84

MickyDolenz said:

2014 ➤ Reunion in the air for Culture Club – again

January 31, 2014

Culture Club, reunion, 2014,Mikey Craig, Roy Hay, Jon Moss, Boy George, pop music

Boy George posts a new pic at Facebook Jan 31, and says:
Had a little writing session with the Club last week. Four degrees of pout! The plot thickens.” … His website adds: “Expect a new album and a tour from Culture Club by the end of 2014.

The last time George announced a Culture Club reunion (2011 New Year’s Eve gig in Sydney, Australia) Jon Moss was also photographed in the studio rehearsals, but he didn’t turn up on the night.

Wow. Mikey Craig still looks the same. We know of Boy George's changes over the years. Jon Moss looks the same. Roy Hay looks older with the glasses on. But I hope they can do it again, if only for one more time.

[Edited 2/3/14 23:22pm]

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Reply #24 posted 02/04/14 8:25am

JoeBala

A Proud Daughter Sways to Her Own Beat, While Dancing With Her Past

Launch media viewer
Maria Rita, the Brazilian singer, performed at City Winery. Hiroyuki Ito for The New York Times

The Brazilian singer Maria Rita’s exquisite concert on Sunday night at City Winery was daringly exposed in more ways than one.

Her only accompaniment came from the pianist Tiago Costa, whose arrangements never offered her voice any concealment. They were, more often than not, sparsely chorded and discreetly played, a skeletal rhythm here, a glimpse of counterpoint there. One, a gorgeously slow version of the Brazilian standard “Manhã de Carnaval,” began with him simply playing one bass note and tapping another inside the piano, damping the string, like a distant carnival drum.

Maria Rita’s voice carried everything else the music needed. It’s a gentle, lustrous soprano with elegant depths and minutely detailed phrasing: long-breathed and sustained or darting and syncopated, vulnerable or teasing, limpid or bluesy. In “Não Vale a Pena” (“It’s Not Worth It”), a mercurial breakup song, she moved easily amid composure, anger and torchy intensity. Her version of the Cuban bolero “Dos Gardenias,” which she sang in Spanish, was all smoldering and yearning.

Seated on a stool, she was an actress, too: coquettish with a hand on a hip or wide-eyed and confessional.

In this concert, Maria Rita also exposed herself to history. All Brazilian pop singers, especially women, have been influenced by Elis Regina, whose gentle, artfully naturalistic voice held marvels of timing and emotion and drew leading bossa nova songwriters. She died in 1982, when she was only 36.

Maria Rita, now 36, is Elis Regina’s daughter, and as she built her career in Brazil she refused to trade on her mother’s repertoire. That only changed in 2012, 30 years after her mother’s death, when Maria Rita was persuaded to perform and record songs her mother had sung, on the album “Redescobrir” (“Rediscovering”) (Facil Brasil).

She finished her City Winery set with some of those songs, reworking them and melding them with her own kind of warmth. Many of the Brazilians in the audience sang along to songs that have never fallen out of pop consciousness.

In her handful of Elis Regina songs, Maria Rita paid tribute to the breadth of her mother’s catalog. She gave the ballads “Mucuripe” and “Romaria” the gravity of lieder; she skipped through the melodic leaps of “Madalena” with playful exuberance.

But Maria Rita wasn’t imitating Elis Regina. With a poised and tender voice of her own, she was claiming songs that are part of her shared heritage as a Brazilian musician, as much as they might be a daughter’s inheritance.

Rita is always amazing. Check her out if she comes to your city: http://www.songkick.com/a...maria-rita

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Reply #25 posted 02/04/14 5:01pm

JoeBala

Sting, Lenny Kravitz & the Flaming Lips Pay Tribute to the Beatles on ‘Letterman’

(Getty Images)

By Shannon Carlin

On February 9, 1964, The Beatles took the stage at the Ed Sullivan Theater, changing music and fandom forever. To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the historic television appearance, artists like Sting, Lenny Kravitz and the Flaming Lips are returning to the same stage—now home to the Late Show with David Letterman—to honor the Fab Four.

For the week of Feb. 3, the Late Show will see a different guest musician come by each night and play a Beatles hit. Broken Bells kick off the week with a performance of “And I Love Her” with Sting hitting the stage the next night for a performance of “Drive My Car.”

Related: Celebrating The Beatles o...mp; Wonder

It’s yet to be announced what Lenny Kravitz will perform on Wednesday, but the next night will feature Wayne Coyne and his band performing “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds,” a song they’ve done before. But this time around, they’ll be joined by special guest and Beatle spawn, Sean Lennon.

Friday night’s performance will be announced next week. Here’s to hoping it’s Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and a few of their famous friends.

CBS will also air the special The Night That Changed America: A GRAMMY Salute To The Beatles on Feb. 9 at 8 pm EST, featuring performances from not only Paul and Ringo, but Dave Grohl, Alicia Keys, Katy Perry, Keith Urban, John Mayer, Brad Paisley and a reunited Eurythmics.

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Reply #26 posted 02/04/14 6:33pm

JoeBala

Steve Perry on Journey Reunion: ‘We’re Trying’

Steve Perry Neal SchonMichael Kovac / Christian Petersen, Getty Images

After years of sending messages back and forth to each other in the press, it appears that Steve Perry and Neal Schon are seriously considering the idea of Perry returning to Journey. In a new interview, the singer reveals that the two are in discussions.

“We’re trying,” Classic Rock reports him as saying. “It’s tough. I’m doing my best in that area, and I can only do so much.”

Perry, who had a cancer scare last year, seems to be in a bit of a nostalgic and reflective mood. “The older I get, the more I do realize how important what we had all together and how it worked,” he added. “The older I get — like I said — the more I realize we brought that out of each other. I brought things out of them, and they certainly brought a lot of my vocal stuff out of me — just rising each other to this place that you can’t get alone. I think that’s probably the biggest chemistry thing I recognize now.”

Last summer, guitarist Schon posted a link to an interview with Perry on Facebook, and added some heartfelt words about his former frontman. “I hope we can can reach out to each other and connect once again,” he wrote. “We had amazing chemistry together. I love him with all the love and admiration you could even have. Steve, let’s talk soon.”

Perry recently collaborated on a track with electronic band AWOLNATION for their upcoming album, which will be his first appearance on record since working with Ambrosia’s David Pack in 2005.



Read More: Steve Perry on Journey Re...re Trying' | http://ultimateclassicroc...ck=tsmclip
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Reply #27 posted 02/05/14 6:57pm

JoeBala

It is with great sadness and heavy hearts that we announce the passing of our beloved Samantha Dolenz, today, February 5th, 2014.
She suffered a major stoke on Sunday night whilst asleep and never recovered.
She will be deeply missed by all of her family and friends. Mickey via facebook. RIP sad

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Samantha Juste (born Sandra Slater 31 May 1944 - 05 February 2014), became known on British television in the mid-1960s as the "disc girl" on the BBC’s Top of the Pops. In 1968 she married Micky Dolenz of the Monkees. Their daughter is the actress Ami Dolenz.

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The REAL Peter Tork (Official):

We saw this very sad news on the Davy's Angels FB page. Our deepest sympathies go out to Micky Dolenz, and the entire Dolenz family. Wishing them all courage and strength during the difficult times ahead. RIP Samantha Dolenz.

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http://31.media.tumblr.com/32acfd94d3d253fe9e7356088fba32c9/tumblr_msyzf2dhMX1qgl54io1_400.jpg

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hideelee:  Ami and Samantha Dolenz 16 Magazine - September, 1969

Micky, Samantha, and Ami at home in Laurel Canyon, circa 1970.

Micky, Samantha, and Ami at home in Laurel Canyon, circa 1970.

Married from (1968-1975)

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Micky and Samantha Dolenz

[Edited 2/5/14 19:22pm]

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Reply #28 posted 02/05/14 7:05pm

JoeBala

Samantha Juste Dolenz Bio


Samantha Dolenz was born Sandra Slater on May 31, 1944 in Manchester, England. Sandra was a teen model and originally wanted to be known as just "Samantha" (perhaps she took her cue from Cher?) Anyway, she compromised and became Samantha Juste. Besides modeling, Samantha became a familiar face to teenagers in England by being the disc girl on Top of the Pops in 1964 (she remained the disc girl for more than 3 1/2 years). Top of the Pops was the biggest and best teen music show in England, and during her time on there, she became known as just "Sammy" to her legions of fans.

Besides just playing the records of other artists, 1965 & 1966 saw Samantha embark on her own (and very brief) musical career. Her tunes, including her most popular song, "That's Nice", as well as "No One Needs My Love Today", and "If Trees Could Talk" were released on Strike Records in the 1960s and can still be found on compilations today, such as the popular Dream Babes compilation. Her voice isn't too bad, either!

Being the disc girl on a popular music show also turned out to be useful, especially in dating famous rock stars. During her time on the show, she met such famous names as The Hollies, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, and in February 1967, Mike Nesmith & Micky Dolenz of the Monkees, who were the BIGGEST band in the world at that point.

And right when Micky laid eyes on the tall, blonde, leggy beauty, it was lust at first site (as he describes in his autobio...the two of them apparently got real friendly the night they met). At the time she met Micky, Samantha was dating (or engaged) to this dude named Paul Ryan, who apparently was a British musician. I have a picture of him somewhere. But Samantha made the smart choice and dumped that Paul dude for Micky. I mean come on, Micky was one of the three most eligible guys in the whole universe. Who could say no?

So yeah, Micky and Samantha fell head over heels in love. Unlike Davy, Micky made his relationship with Sammy known to the Monkees' fans right from the start, Teen Magazines, however, didn't always present the information accurately. In "16" Sammy was described as The Monkees' "friend" from London, and as someone that Micky once "dated" (past tense). In Tiger Beat, however, she started out as being a girl that Micky occaisionally dated, but then after many months, it was made clear that they were indeed TOGETHER.

And they were. Months after meeting, Samantha gave up her prestigious job on Top and the Pops and moved to California to move in with Micky, and the two quickly began throwing rounds and rounds of parties for all of the "in" crowd in the Hollywood Hills. By early 1968, Samantha was pregnant. So obviously they had to get married.

And they did, on June 12, 1968. She was already a few months pregnant (and obviously so, as the pictures show). So yeah, their only daughter Ami Bluebell Dolenz was born on January 8, 1969. Interestingly enough, Ami today looks almost exactly like Samantha. Seriously folks, it's erie.



Their storybook romance continued on through the first part of the 1970s. Samantha had always loved sewing and fashion and started up a boutique in California with fellow Monkee Wife Phyllis Nesmith. By this point, The Monkees fame was nil, and Micky took to handling his Former Teen Idol status by partying like it was going out of style. He was hanging with perpetual party animal Harry Nilsson, and the likes of Brian Wilson, Ringo Starr, Alice Cooper, John Lennon, Henry Diltz, Elliot Mintz, and apparently O.J Simpson (hey, I have photographic evidence of this). He talks frankly in his book about getting completely wasted and ending up at Don Johnson's house and things like that. He was wild. And apparently Micky was naughty (like Nez) and decided to screw up his marriage by having an affair (you can see the possible girls he had affairs with here (the girls at the bottom....). So anyway, obviously Samantha had to leave him and she took Ami with her.

I don't know what happened to Samantha in the 70s and the 80s. Sorry. But moving onto the 90s.....

Samantha and Micky reconciled and became friends again. In the mid 90s Samantha developed breast cancer. She had surgery and radiation treatments, and is thankfully doing ok now. She also has done some public relations & charity work, and hopes to have her own lifestyles type television show (think Martha Stewart). She, Ami, & Micky completed a pilot of a show a bit like that concept in the early 2000s. Aww. cute. Samantha has also recently appeared on The Monkees' E! True Hollywood Story, and the VH1 Behind The Music.

Link: http://www.psycho-jello.c...mybio.html


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Reply #29 posted 02/06/14 8:15pm

JoeBala

How Paul Simon and Sting Became Rock's New Superduo

Inside the one-time New York neighbors' tour full of collaborative performances

Sting and Paul Simon.

Kevin Mazur/WireImage

February 5, 2014 10:30 AM ET

Not long ago, Sting challenged his friend Paul Simon to write a song with him. "The next question is, what do we write about?" Sting says mischievously, taking a break in a Manhattan recording studio. "We're not going to write about getting laid. Or cars. So I don't know."

Paul Simon and Sting share 'On Stage Together' tour secrets

In the meantime, the two singers have another project to work out: their first-ever co-headlining tour, which kicks off February 8th in Houston. Though they've been pals since the late Eighties, when they became neighbors in a New York apartment building, Sting and Simon had never performed as a duo before last May, when they played acoustic versions of "The Boxer" and "Fields of Gold" at the annual Robin Hood Foundation benefit. "I wasn't sure how it would sound," Simon says. "But after we got offstage, we said to each other, 'That was actually pretty good.'" Adds Sting, "There was this audible gasp in the room. We thought, 'Why don't we see if we can take it somewhere else?'"

Each night of the tour will feature multiple duets by the two artists, along with solo sets. Simon says he'd love to sing Sting's "Fragile," and Sting may do Simon's "The Boy in the Bubble." They're also considering connecting songs thematically: Simon told Sting he wants to attempt "Brand New Day," which Sting thinks would pair nicely with "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover." "It's a song about a beginning and a song about leaving," Sting says. "We can find little contrasts in the set." Simon has also asked Sting to tackle "Bridge Over Troubled Water." "Not that I want to imitate Art Garfunkel," Sting says. "He has one of the most beautiful voices in the history of pop. But I can hit those notes. And," he adds with a smile, "it might have more resonance now with Chris Christie."

Both men have other projects under way: Simon is working on a new studio album, and Sting is planning for the June opening in Chicago of his musical The Last Ship, which will hit Broadway in the fall. But both say the collaborative-tour idea was too good to pass up. "It's really about exploring new possibilities," says Simon. "We've both worked with reggae. This has the potential to be something special."

Adds Sting, "I've always liked good music – I might have looked like a punk in the Seventies, but I wasn't one. Paul's intention is always to get better. That's one of my obsessions, too."



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