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Reply #90 posted 02/01/15 5:51pm

JoeBala

Katy Perry blew away the Super Bowl halftime show

By: Chris Chase 20 minutes ago

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

With the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks providing fireworks at the end of the first half of Super Bowl XLIX, Katy Perry brought some too, literally.

The mega-pop star showed off her patented-blend of soft-serve sexiness at the Super Bowl halftime show, performing a medley of her biggest hits that ended with her hit Firework, which came complete with pyrotechnics and Perry rising stories above the field to sing the song.

(Getty Images)

(Getty Images)

Pepsi, the show’s sponsor, was heavily involved throughout, with on-field participants holding up lights to make the soda’s famed logo at the start of the show. Fans in the stands got involved too, waving light sticks. It felt more like an Olympic Opening Ceremony than Super Bowl halftime show, which is a major achievement for a 13-minute show in the middle of a football game. Even Twitter, which collectively dislikes everything, was impressed.

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

Perry emerged riding an animatronic lion and wearing a dress of fire to perform her hit Roar. She quickly transitioned into the 2014 smash Dark Horse, a performance highlighted by a 3D rendering on the Super Bowl field that appeared to make the turf turn into different shapes and sizes, like a chessboard. Perry then made a wardrobe change for a campy, childish rendition of Teenage Dream that wouldn’t have been out of place on Yo Gabba Gabba!

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

With the entertaining, hassle-free show, Perry proved the NFL correct in her selection as halftime — one of the few things the NFL got right this year. Perry is the world’s most followed Twitter user (64.3 million and counting) and a popular, energetic female pop star who sings songs with catchy hooks. She’s someone in the prime of her career and adored by the NFL’s target demographic: young people. Katy Perry is what a Super Bowl halftime show should be. Rather than dragging out The Who or Tom Petty for a medley of songs that were on “Greatest Hits” albums before Katy Perry was born, actually have someone relevant today.

(Getty Images)

(Getty Images)

Perry’s show was heavy on the spectacle. She brought out dancing sharks, fake palm trees and wild animals, like the lion she rode in on.

“I’m the only person in Super Bowl history to bring a lion and sharks to the show,” Perry boasted this week, although that first part is more the fault of Matthew Stafford and Barry Sanders than anything.

Perry appeared to sing much of performance live, thought she avoided any of the usual absurd lip syncing controversy by admitting this week that some of her vocals would be prerecorded given all her movement. She stuck to her hits, unlike Madonna, Bruce Springsteen and The Rolling Stones, who all chose to play material unknown to most fans.

Getty Images)

Getty Images)

The Perry-only performance was top-notch, but the show slipped when its “special guest” was revealed. Perry had been hyping it all week: “When you hear the first ring of the chord, I think jaws will drop and faces will melt.”

The guest didn’t bring quite the reaction for which Perry was hoping. Speculation had ranged from Madonna to Britney to Cher, so when Missy Elliott came out, it was a halftime deflation (down to at least 9.5 PSI). Just when the Super Bowl halftime show threatened to be relevant to the current zeitgeist, Perry trots out a rapper whose last song to hit the charts was in 2008 and peaked at No. 95. Though Missy is a fine rapper, she’s probably unknown to a vast majority of the viewing audience, which is why it was so odd for Perry to hype her like she wanted fans to expect Elvis to enter the building.

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

Imagine the Patriots holding a press conference in the offseason, heralding their announcement as the player who will take them to the next level, and then Doug Flutie walking out from behind the curtain and you’ll get an idea of what the Missy Elliott “surprise” was like.

A real surprise would have been Taylor Swift, the mega-popular pop star with whom Perry is allegedly feuding. Now that would have melted faces.

(Reuters)

(Reuters)

The inclusion of Elliott was as superfluous as The Red Hot Chili Peppers last year, but at least Katy and Missy’s music has something in common. Elliott guested on a remix on that remix of Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.) a few years back, so the rapper’s rhymes flowed nicely over the sleek, stylized, pop beats from music’s biggest hit-makers. But her part of the show was hardly epic and instantly forgettable.

(Getty Images)

(Getty Images)

Why everyone feels the need to bring out a special guest at the Super Bowl is baffling. It’s like telling your audience “I’m not enough.” Duets are fine, but not when they’re just for the sake of having a duet. You know who didn’t have a guest? Prince. Bruce Springsteen. Michael Jackson. The real stars don’t need it. Katy Perry didn’t need one.

Oh, Lenny Kravitz was on stage too because Lenny Kravitz is everywhere, despite having exactly two songs people can name. Though he seems like a perfectly nice, cool rock star, stop trying to make Lenny Kravitz happen.

Perry has performed 108 shows so far in her Prismatic tour, in front of roughly two million fans combined. The expected audience for Sunday night is slightly higher: 113 million.

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

(USA TODAY Sports Images)

“I just hope that at the end of the day, [the viewers] are all smiling in unison,” Perry said this week.

Perry gave plenty reason to smile (those dancing sharks were great), but the biggest grin may be her own. She had gone on a diet before the show and cut out one of her favorite treats. After performing at the Super Bowl, however, she said she’ll eat as many Girl Scout Cookie thin mints as she can.

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Reply #91 posted 02/01/15 6:08pm

JoeBala

Lenny And John(Superbowl 2015)

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Reply #92 posted 02/01/15 6:20pm

JoeBala

View image on Twitter

KP Full Half Time Show Video(Scroll down to end of article): http://www.theverge.com/2...AoTeRdz6BJ

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Reply #93 posted 02/01/15 6:35pm

JoeBala

Tony Bennett, Lady Gaga Sing Reverent Duets for Generations at The Chelsea: Concert Review

Tony Bennett Lady Gaga Vegas Chelsea H 2014
Ethan Miller
Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga at The Chelsea

The Bottom Line

An effortlessly powerful Bennett and a respectfully restrained Gaga pair for a decadent set of standards.

Venue

The Chelsea at The Cosmopolitan;
Las Vegas, NV
(Tuesday, Dec. 30)

Sixty years apart, the two performers showcase more than just their 'Cheek to Cheek' standards in Las Vegas before hitting Los Angeles and New York City

"A lot of people say I sing old songs, but I like 'em better than the new ones," Tony Bennett candidly told the audience at The Chelsea after reprising his signature track, "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" — during which Lady Gaga was offstage, finishing another intricate wardrobe change and/or stepping aside so the seasoned standards singer (sixty years her senior) could treat ticketholders to another solo. However, it seems that the pop singer is currently in strong agreement with her touring partner, as she humbly took on his classics with a restrained, flirtatious spin throughout their Cheek to Cheek concert, all for the sake of complementing — and never overpowering — the legend she's recently befriended.

The two kicked off their series of 2015 performances at Las Vegas' intimate, vintage-designed venue inside the Cosmopolitan hotel. Originally scheduled to only take the Mophie stage on New Year's Eve — before hitting The Wiltern in February, Hollywood Bowl in May and Radio City Music Hall in June (among other dates nationwide) — their late addition to the Strip's already-packed events calendar quickly sold out to followers of both chart-toppers. Formally suited fans and moderately-dressed "little monsters" (relative to Gaga's other arena jaunts) sat side-by-side for a decadent 95-minute set, featuring a whopping 28 songs with a 22-person band amidst curtains of dripping jewels (similar to the hotel's three-story bar, The Chandelier).

During their Cheek to Cheek numbers like "Anything Goes," "Firefly" and "I Won't Dance," and the 2011 Duets II track that started it all, "The Lady is a Tramp," Bennett and Gaga — a pairing she referred to as "Tony Gaga" — shared laughs, traded kisses and danced hand in hand, a genuine candor showcased in their PBS special this past October. "There's nowhere I like to be better than cheek to cheek with Tony Bennett," she smiled at one point. "Don't be jealous, ladies — or gentlemen!" Bennett later quipped back, "Lady Gaga and I just did ...m together — you better buy it because she really needs the money!"

Their generous set, generally celebrating Bennett and his lasting musical influence, also included welcomed solo sections, during which each remained on one side of the stage with their own band (piano, drums, guitar and double bass). Vocally, Bennett hasn't missed a beat, effortlessly holding out songs' closing notes for new and elaborate peaks of familiar tracks like "They All Laughed," "Sing, You Sinners" and "The Best Is Yet to Come," among many, many others. He spontaneously cracked a joke about front-row attendees who arrived late, and before singing "Smile," he said he received a note during its chart reign that read, "'Tony, thank you for resurrecting my song,' and the letter was signed, Charlie Chaplin."

Gaga, free of a pop show's heavy production — visually and musically, as she said, "It's a wonderful break for me to play with real musicians" — shined bright when theatrically relishing in the quiet moments of songs like "Lush Life," "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" and "Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye" (the latter dedicated to her "mother, father, and my darling Taylor [Kinney]" in the audience), or personably cha-cha dancing across the stage during "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)," switching "my baby" to "that asshole" at one point and even flicking off the song's said man, to much applause. She remained authentically reverent throughout the set, well aware of her spot in Bennett's long-standing legacy and never aiming to seize the spotlight (except with seven shimmering outfits of feathers, ruffles and tassels). Often, she shared comments of disbelief: "Do you know that this man is the oldest living legend in the world? But he's the youngest guy I know."

Before the show's confetti-filled closing, Gaga noted a thought she has when alone in her hotel room. "I dream of Tony Bennett and how he's opened my mind with his wisdom, decades of music," she said. "Life is all about how you keep going, right? With your passion. … It will keep you happy forever." The sentiment was not only fitting for an audience contemplating the year ahead, but also for a pair who, very visibly and harmoniously, seem to find the happiness they seek, when they're out together dancing, cheek to cheek.

Set list:

Anything Goes
Cheek to Cheek
They All Laughed
The Good Life
The Lady's In Love With You
Nature Boy
How Do You Keep the Music Playing
Sing, You Sinners
Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)
Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered
Firefly
Smile
When You're Smiling
Steppin' Out With My Baby
I Won't Dance
For Once in My Life
The Best Is Yet to Come
I Can't Give You Anything But Love
Lush Life
Sophisticated Lady
Watch What Happens
Let's Face the Music and Dance
Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye
I Left My Heart in San Francisco
Who Cares (So Long As You Care for Me)
But Beautiful
The Lady Is a Tramp
It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)

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Reply #94 posted 02/02/15 5:26am

Identity





Aguilera Talks Next Album
02/01/15
Link



Christina Aguilera spent 2014 supporting a smash collaboration (A Great Big World's "Say Something"), giving birth and prepping the follow-up to 2012's Lotus.

In a new interview, the pop diva says that Pharrell Williams is helping her to realize her vision.

"During my pregnancy, I had a meeting with him and just connected on where I want to take the next album," Aguilera told Extra TV of Williams. "And we started talking music, and he has one song in particular that I love."

Aguilera did not give a release timeframe for her next full-length, but said of the project, "I just have to make sure it's right, and it's genuine and it's heartfelt, and I'm very excited to pour my heart out into this record fully. I've been gathering and writing and coming up with these amazing ideas for different parts of how I was feeling the past year, so I'm really excited to vocalize all of it and make it all come together."

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Reply #95 posted 02/02/15 2:52pm

JoeBala

^^She needs to work on a Jazz CD.

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Reply #96 posted 02/03/15 3:09pm

JoeBala

Rose Marie McCoy, a Songwriter for Rock, Pop and Jazz Legends, Dies at 92

Photo

Rose Marie McCoy was a collaborator on some 850 songs.

For a woman who composed or collaborated on some 850 songs over seven decades, Rose Marie McCoy, who died on Jan. 20 at 92, was largely unheralded, recognized only belatedly in a nationwide radio documentary.

But her songs, spanning R&B, rock ’n’ roll, jazz and gospel, were widely heard, recorded by scores of singers, including Big Maybelle, James Brown, Ruth Brown, Nat King Cole, Aretha Franklin, Johnny Mathis, Bette Midler, Elvis Presley, Ike and Tina Turner, and Sarah Vaughan.

“When the rock ’n’ roll come in, if you say you wrote rock ’n’ roll, everybody wanted to see,” Ms. McCoy recalled in the documentary, on National Public Radio in 2009. “They wanted to hear what you had. And if they liked it, they didn’t care whether you’re black or white. We thought it was the blues, and they used to call it rock ’n’ roll. I still don’t know the difference.”

Rose Marie Hinton was born on April 19, 1922, to Levi and Celetia Brazil Hinton in a tin-roof shack in Oneida, Ark. — “the kind of place you pass through without even knowing you’re passing through it,” Ms. McCoy said. Her father was a farmer. In 1942, when she was 19, she ventured to New York with $6 in her pocket to launch a singing career.

Living in Harlem and supporting herself by ironing shirts at Chinese laundries there and in the Bronx, she got gigs at nightclubs and eventually at Harlem’s Baby Grand, Detroit’s Flame Show Bar, Cincinnati’s Sportsmen’s Club and Toronto’s Basin Street. She opened for seasoned performers like Ruth Brown, Moms Mabley, Dinah Washington and Dewey Markham, who was known as Pigmeat.

In her spare time, she wrote songs.

“After All” was recorded in 1946 by the Dixieaires with Muriel Gaines. In the early 1950s, she was signed to Wheeler Records and co-wrote “Gabbin’ Blues,” which reached No. 3 on the Billboard R&B chart. She began collaborating with Charlie Singleton, meeting at 6 o’clock in the morning in a booth at Beefsteak Charlie’s, near the Brill Building, the music industry temple in Midtown Manhattan.

They wrote the 1954 ballad “Trying to Get to You” for the Eagles, a black vocal group, but RCA Records signed a young singer who agreed to include the song in his repertoire. The song was included on his first studio album for the label, which spent 10 weeks atop the Billboard pop album chart in 1956.

“We thought he was terrible because we thought he couldn’t sing,” Ms. McCoy recalled.

The singer was Elvis Presley.

“Thank God for Elvis,” she told Joe Richman of Radio Diaries in the NPR documentary, titled “Lady Writes the Blues.” The song concludes:

Photo

Ms. McCoy began her career an aspiring singer before she started writing songs for others. Credit James J Kriegsmann

Lord above you knows I love you

It was He who brought me through

When my way was dark at night,

He would shine His brightest light.

When I was trying to get to you.

By 1961, when she collaborated on Ike and Tina Turner’s “I Think It’s Gonna Work Out Fine,” which earned them a Grammy nomination, she had her own office in the Brill Building. The song includes the lines:

Darling, it’s time to get next to me

Darling, I never thought that this could be

Your lips set my soul on fire

You could be my one desire

Oh darling, I think it’s gonna work out fine.

In the 1970s, several songs she co-wrote were included on the jazz singer Sarah Vaughan’s album “Send in the Clowns,” and she wrote jingles, including one sung by Aretha Franklin and Ray Charles for Coca-Cola. Just a few years ago, she and the country singer Billy Joe Conor co-wrote the songs on his debut album.

Ms. McCoy married James McCoy, a supervisor at the Ford Motor Company, in 1943. He died in 2000. She lived in Teaneck, N.J., until several years ago, when she joined a niece, Helen Brown, in Illinois. She died in Carle Foundation Hospital in Urbana, Ms. Brown said.

In the radio interview, Ms. McCoy said she would still wake up in the middle of the night with whole new songs in her head.

“I should’ve got up and wrote it down,” she said. “But you say, ‘What’s the use? Like, I’m retired now.’ ”

Correction: February 2, 2015

An earlier version of this obituary referred incorrectly to Elvis Presley’s recording of “Trying to Get to You,” a song Ms. McCoy wrote with Charlie Singleton. It was included on an album by Presley that spent 10 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard album chart; the song itself never reached No. 1. It also referred incorrectly to the singer Sarah Vaughan’s album “Send In the Clowns.” Ms. McCoy co-wrote several of the songs on that album with other writers; she did not co-write the entire album with Ms. Vaughan. And it misstated the location of the laundries where Ms. McCoy worked after moving to New York in 1942. They were in Harlem and the Bronx, not New Jersey.

Her Story: http://www.npr.org/templa...=100823151

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Reply #97 posted 02/03/15 3:29pm

JoeBala

Billboard Cover: Behind the Scenes With Katy Perry as She Rehearses for the Super Bowl -- 'The Biggest Event of My Career'

By Jonathan Ringen | January 30, 2015 9:00 AM EST

Billboard Cover: Behind the Scenes With Katy Perry as She Rehearses for the Super Bowl -- 'The Biggest Event of My Career'

Katy Perry photographed on Jan. 7, 2015 at Quixote in West Hollywood.

Miller Mobley

Backstage at the top-secret rehearsals for the biggest gig in American showbiz, in a large, stuffy room marked "Wardrobe," a dozen or so half-naked female dancers wriggle into candy-colored, body-hugging costumes and pull on matching socks and sneakers. At the center of the action is Katy Perry, lying belly-down on a massage table with one bare leg poking out from under a blanket -- simultaneously getting treatment for a bad hamstring and giving notes on her dancers' and bandmembers' costumes. "It's obscene, I know," Perry says, referring to her elaborate multitasking. "But it's not because I'm a diva!"

It's hard to argue with her -- after all, she's a busy woman. In less than two weeks, on Feb. 1, Perry will take the stage at Super Bowl XLIX's halftime show, singing and dancing her way through 12-and-a-half painstakingly choreographed minutes of blockbuster hits for a TV audience of about 100 million (not to mention the 63,400 fans packed into Arizona's University of Phoenix stadium). To get the show in shape, Perry and her team set up here at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena, where they prepped her ongoing Prismatic Tour last spring. It's a massive undertaking. Longtime manager Bradford Cobb compares the endeavor to launching an entire tour. Perry agrees: "This has had brainpower going into it from before we knew we had it, when we were being courted."

Perry weighs in on everything from shoe options to zippers versus velcro, and whatever the question is, she has an immediate, decisive opinion and the confidence that her team will make it happen. "I used to say, 'That's ridiculous, we can never do that,' " says Baz Halpin, her longtime co-creative director. "Now I just say, 'You want to fly in on a giant banana and burst into flames? We'll make it work.' "

Katy Perry: The Billboard Cover Shoot

As Perry surveys the dancers, she's surrounded by the fashion designer Jeremy Scott (who created Perry's Super Bowl costumes), her stylist Johnny Wujek and a woman whose entire job is adding "bling" to the wardrobes -- which Perry is generally inclined to do. When one dancer appears, Perry notes the fit of her top, which may be risque for the family-friendly Super Bowl. "Your boobies are a little too much for that," Perry says cheerfully. "Show Sarah!" (She's referring to Sarah Moll, who runs halftime for the NFL, and whose facial expression shows that she agrees with Perry.)

If Perry is nervous, it doesn't show. She's already 108 shows deep into the Prismatic Tour. Most halftime artists use the performance as a mega-sized launch pad for whatever they have up next, but Perry says it will serve another purpose for her. "There isn't any selling point going up the day after," she says. "I'm just selling my music to the broadest, widest audience ever."

With her 2010 blockbuster Teenage Dream, Perry ascended to the top tier of pop, scoring a Michael Jackson-rivaling five No. 1 Billboard Hot 100 singles and selling 2.9 million copies of the album, according to Nielsen Music. The 2013 follow-up, Prism, sold 1.6 million, and featured two No. 1s ("Roar" and "Dark Horse," with Juicy J).

Still, it's hard to imagine the sales gap didn't stoke Perry's competitive spirit, especially as a new wave of female stars from Ariana Grande to Iggy Azalea began chewing up radio spins. Pop fans tend to pit female stars against each other: Madonna vs. Lady Gaga, Gaga vs. Perry, and lately, Perry vs. Taylor Swift. That last beef has been fought through magazine profiles and subtweets without either explicitly naming the other. In 2014, for instance, Swift described a fellow female musician as her "straight-up enemy" who tried to "sabotage [Swift's] entire arena tour." The next day Perry tweeted, "Watch out for the Regina George in sheep's clothing," a reference to Mean Girls that everyone took to be about Swift. Asked about it now, Perry only says, "If somebody is trying to defame my character, you're going to hear about it."

In any case, the Super Bowl gig is a major win in the Perry column. And not the only one: In 2014, she sold out more than 80 arenas, grossing more than $146 million, according to Billboard Boxscore, making Prismatic the biggest tour of the year by a female artist. Likewise, "Dark Horse" was 2014's No. 1 song on the Mainstream Top 40 chart, and she still has the most Twitter followers -- more than 64 million -- of anyone. "Watching the rehearsals solidified our feeling that she's the right choice," says the NFL's Moll. "And we see the connection she has with her audience and her reach on social media." Says Charli XCX, who will be opening for Perry this spring: "She makes sugary, plastic pop so well, makes it sound smart and amazing. But she also has such a vision within her videos and her live show. I love that she goes all the way with it."

Katy Perry: The Billboard Cover Shoot

When she's working, Perry wakes up around noon, after at least nine hours of sleep. She checks The Huffington Post to see what's going on in the world and slips into the uniform she has worn for the last year: a black Adidas track suit with white stripes and matching slippers. The effect is half Run-D.M.C., half Olympic Village. But style isn't the point. "I'm just not playing the picture game," she says, referring to paparazzi. "If I wear the same thing every day, the pictures don't sell."

Today, with the wardrobe meeting done, Perry curls up on the floor of her dressing room, which is stocked with water and fruit, a burbling humidifier and a pair of beige sofas. She's wearing a gold nose ring, pink nails and lipstick, and her hair pulled back in a casual ponytail. Butters, the puppy she adopted in 2014 (she looks like a living teddy bear), comes flying in, carrying a soggy ball. Perry recently gave custody of Butters to her longtime assistant, Tamara, and her girlfriend. "I was going through a breakup and I was like, 'I'm going to get a dog!'" Perry says, referring, presumably, to one of her off-again stints with John Mayer. "But honestly, I have to run an empire, and as much as I love animals I don't know if I have the mind capacity to do it."

Katy Perry Ties Rihanna F...ngs No. 1s

The rest of her early-afternoon routine involves physical therapy for her knees and some massage, acupuncture or cupping. "Sometimes I get a steam for my voice," she says. She also has a therapist she sees when she's in Los Angeles. "That's one of only a handful of people who see me as Katherine Hudson," Perry says, using her real name, which she changed to avoid confusion with the actress Kate Hudson.

Perry lives in what she calls "a compound" in L.A. with her older sister, Angela Hudson; Hudson's husband, Svend Lerche; and their baby. Her younger brother, David Hudson, lives nearby in Los Feliz and her parents, Keith Hudson and Mary Perry, are in Irvine, Calif. "Everybody is somewhat close," she says. "I always dreamed of living commune style. I want my own Neverland ranch at a some point, but not with the salacious parts." She cracks up.

Her dream? "My own Starbucks on the property," she says, only half-joking. "I have to create my own world because it's hard to go into the other world sometimes. Barbra Streisand has a mall downstairs in her basement -- just weird, amazing stuff like that. I get it, because it becomes such a thing to go out in the world."

Katy Perry: The Billboard Cover Shoot

One of those times came in early January, when she was spotted at dinner with Mayer in L.A. (The pair have dated at least twice since 2012. She also was married to Russell Brand for 14 months starting in late 2010 and was reported to have been dating Diplo last year.) She declines to define their relationship, bristling at the question. "What I will say is that to have any relationship at this level you have to just be protective and figure out how to navigate it," she says. "There is no handbook." She thinks about it, and adds, "In all my relationships, I've learned how I have to be more careful and that it's not up for public consumption."

Perry's parents were hippies-turned-Evangelical ministers, home-schooling Perry and her two siblings and raising them according to a deeply conservative, fire-and-brimstone belief system. The family, who lived mostly in Santa Barbara, Calif., was poor enough that food wasn't always easy to come by. "But I love my childhood," she says. "Because I can't change it and it made me who I am." Perry regrets her lack of formal education, and stays informed about news and issues that are important to her, including her outspoken support for LGBT rights. "I grew up in a little bit of a bubble of ignorance and judgment," she says. "And so I'm happy that I've been able to evolve past that."

Katy Perry: The Billboard Cover Shoot

At 13, Perry convinced her parents to bring her to Nashville to seek a career as a gospel singer; she released an album on a Christian label at 16. But after discovering secular artists, from Queen to Gwen Stefani, she moved to L.A. and shifted her ambitions -- first aiming to be a acoustic guitar-wielding singer-songwriter, later settling on her current plan: global pop domination. She bounced from contract to contract -- "I had two cars repossessed, I was always going by the hair of my chinny chin chin" -- before landing on Capitol Records. Working with Dr. Luke, Max Martin and Benny Blanco, she broke through with 2008's button-pushing "I Kissed a Girl." Since then, that core team (often helped by songwriter Bonnie McKee and others) has produced a string of No. 1 songs. "My strengths are melodies and lyrics," Perry explains. "Max is the king of melodies and Luke is the king of, like, sounds. When we get together we make the biggest songs."

"Everyone has been asking me if I'm going to be nervous before the halftime show," Perry says. "I'm like, I'm f---ing human. This is the biggest event of my career." To prep, she has been studying recent shows, with extra attention on Beyoncé in 2013 and Madonna in 2012. "Those performances are clean and streamlined," she says. "They're about the catalog, the songs. I like Madonna for the graphic effects she brought." And Beyoncé? "She brought so much strength, so much sassiness and just the right amount of sex," Perry says. "She's an icon. Elvis, The Beatles, Michael Jackson -- she's in that category. I'm not. She's like five notches above me, and those levels are compounded in difficulty."

Why Katy Perry's 'Prism' ... You Think

She also reached out to Bruno Mars, a buddy from awards shows, who had the halftime gig in 2014. (She insists she doesn't have many close celebrity friends -- she's probably tightest with Rihanna, Adele and Ellie Goulding.) She scans the email on her phone -- "let me just make sure it's kosh" -- before reading it out loud:

Hello, exclusive Super Bowl club member! I was wondering if you are in L.A. at all this month and would have tea with a sister who is about to throw up with nervousness re: [football emoji]. I've heard about your process through our managers, but am wondering if you had more insight on important things like, spray tan the night before or three nights before? JK, or maybe not!

"I'm going to meet up with him and he'll tell me whatever there is to tell," Perry says. "Although I don't know how much there really is." She knows that no matter how much she prepares, the halftime show is live, and as Janet Jackson and M.I.A. demonstrated, anything can happen. "You can't control other people, and hopefully they're on the same path with you," she says. "My special guests" -- including Lenny Kravitz -- "don't have any agenda other than the music. But you can never be too sure." Kravitz claims that he and Perry have been cooking up a surprise. "It's cool because it's different for me," he says. "Our voices are going to blend well together."

Perry's focused on the opportunity: Playing for an audience so vast that it will include some of the few remaining human beings who have never heard of her. What's her strategy to win them over? It's simple, Perry says: "I want the show to be quintessential Katy. It's like the exclamation point on the whole last cycle. This is the cherry on top of everything I've already done."

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Reply #98 posted 02/03/15 3:53pm

JoeBala

Don Covay, Influential R&B Artist and Songwriter, Dead at 76

Rolling Stones, Aretha Franklin, Little Richard among many vets to cover prolific singer

Don Covay

By Kory Grow | February 3, 2015

Don Covay, an R&B singer and songwriter who wrote songs that would be covered by the Rolling Stones, Aretha Franklin, Little Richard and others, has died. His daughter, Ursula, confirmed the singer's death. He was 76.

In the Sixties, Covay's soulful voice and skill for writing upbeat R&B songs made for a number of hits for both him and the artists who covered them. His first radio hit, 1961's "Pony Time," reached Number One for Chubby Checker the following year. His biggest pop hit, 1964's "Mercy Mercy," which featured Jimi Hendrix on guitar, would go on to be the lead track on the U.S. version of the Rolling Stones' 1965 album Out of Our Heads. And his 1965 hit "See Saw," which he co-wrote with Steve Cropper, would become a Top 10 hit for Aretha Franklin three years after it came out. Prior to that, though, Franklin made a Number Two hit out of "Chain of Fools," a song that Covay had written with Otis Redding in mind in the Fifties.

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Rfe2yCI7jYY/UU72hMtMzrI/AAAAAAAAAXk/L6u7IunOg0Y/s1600/DONCOVAY.jpg

Additionally, as songwriter and onetime employee at famed songwriting outpost the Brill Building, Covay would write hits for Solomon Burke ("I'm Hanging Up My Heart for You"), Gladys Knight and the Pips ("Letter Full of Tears"), Wilson Pickett ("I'm Gonna Cry") and Little Richard ("I Don't Know What You've Got but It's Got Me"). He also wrote songs for Etta James and Redding, and his own recordings have been covered by several artists, including Gene Vincent, Steppenwolf, Bobby Womack, Small Faces and many others.

Covay was born Donald Randolph in Orangeburg, South Carolina in 1938, the son of a Baptist preacher. He performed in his family's gospel quartet, the Cherry Keys, and made his first secular recordings in the mid-Fifties with the doo-wop group Rainbows, which would later feature Marvin Gaye and Billy Stewart among their ranks. By 1957, Covay found a gig chauffeuring Little Richard and appearing as an opener in the Little Richard Revue. His boss went on to produce his first single, "Bip Bip Bop," which failed to chart. Although he recorded other singles in the Fifties, his first hit came in with "Pony Time."

After finding success with both his own singles and as a songwriter, Covay put together an R&B supergroup, the Soul Clan – which found him singing alongside Solomon Burke, Ben E. King, Joe Tex and Arthur Conley, in 1968. Their single, "Soul Meeting," charted in the R&B Top 40. Toward the end of the decade, Covay was playing in another group, the Jefferson Lemon Blues Band, with Shirelles guitarist Joe Richardson and folk musician John Hammond. Their single, "Black Woman," bowed at Number 43 on the R&B chart.

Album Cover, sleeve, out of our heads, THe Rolling Stones, Record, 1965

In the Seventies, Covay worked in A&R for Mercury Records, but also scored one of his biggest solo hits, "I Was Checkin' Out, She Was Checkin' In," in 1973. He also scored hits that decade with "Somebody's Been Enjoying My Home," also in 1973, "It's Better to Have (And Don't Need)," in 1974, and "Rumble in the Jungle" – a tune that was inspired by Muhammad Ali's famous match with George Foreman – in 1975. He notched his last hit, "Badd Boy," in 1980. In 1986, Covay contributed backing vocals, alongside the likes of Tom Waits, Jimmy Cliff and Patti Scialfa, to the Rolling Stones' Dirty Work.

In 1992, Covay suffered a stroke. The following year, a number of artists who had drawn inspiration from the singer-songwriter put out the tribute compilation, Back to the Streets: Celebrating the Music of Don Covay. It featured contributions from Rolling Stones guitarists Mick Taylor and Ron Wood, Bobby Womack, Iggy Pop, Ben E. King, Todd Rundgren, Robert Cray and others. Also, in 1993, the Rhythm and Blues Foundation gave Covay a Pioneer Award.

The singer-songwriter put out a new album in 2000, Adlib – which featured contributions by Paul Rodgers, Wilson Pickett, Paul Shaffer and Huey Lewis, among others, and art by Ron Wood. A collection of rare Covay recordings, Super Bad, came out on 2009.

EurWeb reports that Covay died in his sleep on January 31st, following years of battling a debilitating illness as a result of his stroke.

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The Jacka, Bay Area Rap Hero, Dead at 37

Popular rapper worked with E-40 and Paul Wall among many others and leaves behind deep catalog

By Mosi Reeves | February 3, 2015
The Jacka

Dominic "The Jacka" Newton, one of the most popular rappers in the San Francisco Bay Area's sprawling underground rap scene, was murdered in East Oakland, California on Monday night. He was 37 years old.

Emerging in the late 1990s as part of the Mob Figaz collective, the Jacka evolved into a solo star with street albums like 2005's The Jack Artist. In 2009, he scored his biggest hit, Tear Gas, which reached Number 12 on Billboard's R&B Albums chart and produced the regional anthem, "Glamorous Lifestyle."

"The team has no comment at this time," the rapper's publicist tells Rolling Stone. "But we ask for everyone's prayers for the Jacka's family, loved ones and the entire Bay Area community."

Throughout its history, Bay Area hip-hop has been defined by independent hustle, yielding hundreds of albums a year from locals whose impact often spreads far beyond Northern California. The Jacka's discography encompasses dozens of CDs issued through his imprint The Artist and local labels like producer Nick Peace's Million Dollar Dream.

He worked with countless rappers, from Bay Area icons like E-40, Keak da Sneak and Andre Nickatina to Paul Wall and Devin the Dude. He assembled projects like 2012's The Verdict, part of a four-album exploration of crime and punishment, and Drought Season, a series with Wiz Khalifa-associated rapper Berner. Last fall, he dropped two albums, including Highway Robbery with Philadelphia rapper Freeway.

Born into a broken home in Pittsburgh, the Jacka began hustling on the streets at an early age. However, he also joined the Nation of Islam as a child and later, while serving time in prison on a robbery charge, became a Sunni Muslim. He took the name Shaheed Akbar, even as he continued to depict a uncompromising turf life.

"I knew [being a Muslim] was a way for me to pray to God directly," he told VladTV.com in a joint interview with Freeway last October. "Some of the things I talk about in my music, I don't wanna say 'em, but I say 'em anyway because I'm in the streets, and just so people can get the experience from them."

It was his talent for writing about the West Coast thug life with unflinching honesty, and a slightly wheezy, yet magnetic, voice, that made him a beloved artist. His hardened perspective is reflected on tracks like "Mob Shit," where he rapped, "Some of my niggas shot up, some of 'em died on me too/Some of my niggas came up, got rich and everything/I know they lost a lot, they deal with the pain."

"He was a gangsta rapper, but unlike a lot of gangsta rappers, he didn't glamorize the criminal lifestyle," Matt Werner, who runs the authoritative Bay Area rap site Thizzler.com, tells Rolling Stone. "He talked about the pitfalls and the dark side of it. I think a lot of people really gravitated towards that."

One of the Jacka's influences was Marvin Gaye, another musician unafraid to explore his inner darkness. In a 2009 interview with the San Francisco Bay Guardian, he said, "Listen to Marvin Gaye…I guarantee he's going to grab your soul. He knows something and could put it together with the music. And what he talked about was the struggle, the pain. I try to make shit that'll stick to your soul. Like the music my parents used to listen to."

Twitter reaction unfolded shortly after Jacka's shooting, with scores of musicians from all coasts showing their love and appreciation, including E-40, Bun B, G-Eazy and Freddie Gibbs. R&B singer Keyshia Cole, who was raised in Oakland, wrote, "#RIPTheJacka!! So many good things to say #AboutARealOne." Queensbridge rapper Cormega, who often worked with the Jacka, tweeted "I been looking for the right words but I just can't find them. How do you kill someone who is beloved by everyone and has love for people?"

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