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Reply #120 posted 05/30/15 5:47am

JoeBala

Kelli Garner Says Marilyn Monroe Taught Her To Appreciate Her Curves

Updated: 05/29/2015 2:59 pm EDT
http://thesource.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/Secret_Life_of_Marilyn_Monroe_chair.jpg

Kelli Garner is the latest actress to take on the role of Marilyn Monroe, and playing the screen legend taught her a thing or two about embracing her curves.

"I’m tinier than Marilyn was, but I still have some curves that I didn’t kn...to do with,” Garner said when talking to Yahoo! Style about her role in Lifetime's "The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe." She worked with costume designer Gersha Phillips, who taught her about high-waisted pedal pushers and clothing that accentuates her neck. “Now that I’ve come back home from shooting, I’ve realized my closet is a shame. I need a complete overhaul.”

Embodying the 1950s bombshell made Garner rethink contemporary beauty standards.

“I was afraid to be too skinny, because they were filming for that kind of 1940s/’50s figure. I was trying to stay soft to get that body type," she said. “I would see Marilyn in a little bathing suit or jeans, and she would be laughing and she’d have a full belly coming over her jeans, which is so beautiful. If that is something that happened to me, Kelli, I’d be mortified. With our standards of beauty now, it’s like, ‘Oh you can’t have those rolls there.’ But I think Marilyn is one of the most stunning women who has every been around, and she was never in perfect shape.”

marilyn

The two-night miniseries, which premieres May 30, covers Monroe's life from 15 years old to 36, when she died. It explores her relationship with her mother, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia.

"[Monroe] lied about it; I think she told lots of weird different little stories," Garner told The Hollywood Reporter. "Mental health is still stigmatized, but back then, even [more]. I didn't know she spent a lot of her time with doctors, therapists. I didn't realize the fortitude she had. I didn't realize the great work ethic she had. She's a fighter, hard worker. She's a perfectionist — I think I share that with her. I didn't know how hard-core of a perfectionist she was until I started reading about it."

"The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe" begins May 30 at 8 pm EST on Lifetime.

TV Review: ‘The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe’

The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe

Courtesy of Lifetime

May 28, 2015 | 07:15AM PT

Brian Lowry

TV Columnist @blowryontv

It takes some chutzpah to title something “The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe,” given all the books and movies devoted to her life. But Lifetime has taken the 2009 tome, and turned into an eponymous four-hour miniseries. What sets this latest rehash of the star’s existence apart, marginally, is a knockout performance by Kelli Garner and, to a lesser degree, Susan Sarandon’s turn as her mentally disturbed mother, the relationship through which everything else about the girl born Norma Jean is filtered. Mostly, it’s a dutiful but nothing-new account of the ultimate anti-feminist icon — a sex symbol heavily defined by romances with famous men.

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The two-parter’s framing device relies on Marilyn, near what will tragically be the end of her life, pouring her heart and entire history out to a psychologist (Jack Noseworthy), who patiently listens as she flashes back through it all. That begins with being taken away from her mom (played in those early scenes by Sarandon’s daughter, Eva Amurri Martino), being raised for a time by a guardian she came to know as Aunt Grace (Emily Watson), and spending time in an orphanage, marrying at 16 solely because she needed a place to stay.

A few years later, Norma Jean is launching a modeling career (Garner impressively plays Monroe from 16 to 36), and gradually starts pursuing her dream of working in “the pictures.” Just being beautiful, however (“The camera loves you,” she’s told), isn’t enough, and her advancement comes via liaisons with powerful men, including a studio executive and the agent Johnny Hyde (Tony Nardi), who puts the rechristened Marilyn on a path to stardom.

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Success, however, comes with new pressures, as the studio pushes pills at its asset to keep her on track. Night two, meanwhile, kicks off with Marilyn initiating her torrid romance with Joe DiMaggio (Jeffrey Dean Morgan, overlapping his work in another A&E Networks miniseries, “Texas Rising”), followed by playwright Arthur Miller (Stephen Bogaert).

As for John F. Kennedy, yes, that’s included too, but the senator-turned-President remains discretely off-screen, although there’s still an excuse to show Garner in the knockout gossamer dress Monroe famously wore when she sang “Happy Birthday, Mr. President” to him. Beyond looking the part, Garner replicates Monroe’s voice and mannerisms without falling into caricature, which, given the episodic nature of the material, is an accomplishment indeed.

Underlying it all, in the adapted screenplay by Stephen Kronish, directed by Laurie Collyer, is that Monroe inherited mental illness from her mother, a religious scold (she calls modeling “a sinful business”) who hears voices. Marilyn, as usual, is portrayed as an object mostly of pity, someone who tells her agent, “Everyone uses everyone,” having been on both sides of the equation.

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For those who have followed Monroe’s brief but tragic life — from books to movies to song — it’s hard to imagine there are any secrets left. Indeed, when DiMaggio flies into a jealous rage while watching her skirt blown up filming “The Seven Year Itch,” it is, to quote another Yankee, deja vu all over again.

Part of the allure surrounding Monroe, of course — who would be 88 if she were still alive — is that she remains frozen in time, an ageless icon of Hollywood glamour. Perhaps that’s why, every few years, someone feels inclined to exhume her — extracting a bit more glow from a candle that never burns out for long.

TV Review: 'The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe'

(Miniseries; Lifetime, Sat.-Sun. May 30-31, 8 p.m.)

Production

Filmed in Toronto and Los Angeles by Intuition Prods. and Asylum Entertainment.

Crew

Executive producers, Stephen Kronish, Damian Ganczewski, Keri Selig, Jonathan Koch, Steve Michaels; producers, Joseph Boccia, Don Carmody, David Cormican; director, Laurie Collyer; writer, Kronish; based on the book by J. Randy Taraborrelli; camera, Chris Manley; production designer, Rocco Matteo; editors, Ron Wisman, Ron Wisman Jr.; music, David Carbonara; casting, Kerry Barden, Paul Schnee. 4 HOURS

Cast

Kelli Garner, Susan Sarandon, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Emily Watson, Eva Amurri Martino, Jack Noseworthy, Tony Nardi, Stephen Bogaert
.

New Music Releases:

Kamasi Washington - The Epic
.....................................................My Brightest Diamond – I Had Grown Wild
......................................................Allure – Fantasy

Simply Red: Big Love review – easy-listening epitaphs from Mick Hucknall

3 / 5 stars

(East West)

Unbridled sincerity … Mick Hucknall of Simply Red

It’s been three decades since Simply Red’s debut, and Mick Hucknall has admitted their 11th album may be their last. With this in mind, a wizened nostalgia hangs above this blue-eyed soul – the songs are smooth and sentimental, like easy-listening epitaphs. Wistful laments are nothing new for the group, and their unbridled sincerity remains consistent. But on Big Love these emotions sound abrupt. From Love Wonders to Love Gave Me More and the title track, there’s not a wealth of imagination at play – although Dad, a tribute to Hucknall’s late father, has a boyishly endearing simplicity. Hucknall’s voice, so full of warmth and tenderness, sounds naturally ravaged by the years – not quite a death growl, but certainly up against some strain. Thankfully, however, the famed lothario’s libido still lurks amid the schmaltz: “All the feeling’s so right,” he sings on the steamy, funk-lite Tight Tones, “on this hot horny night.”

Take it as red, Hucknall's still simply magic: Band's latest album is a soul-searching return, writes ADRIAN THRILLS

Quick comeback: Mick Hucknall

Quick comeback: Mick Hucknall

SIMPLY RED: BIG LOVE (EAST WEST)

VERDICT: Soul-searching return

Rating:

When Simply Red played what was billed as their final concert at London’s O2 Arena in December 2010, Mick Hucknall was adamant there would be no going back.

‘I’ll be amazed if I ever play as Simply Red again,’ he said. ‘That’s it — it’s over.’

But five years after that emotional ‘farewell’, the group are back with a new album and UK tour. And, on the 30th anniversary of 1985 debut album Picture Book, Hucknall is unapologetic: ‘I’m fully aware that some critics will be cynical, but I’d be an old misery guts if I didn’t celebrate such a big anniversary.’

The singer’s decision to reassemble a band who were a fixture in British pop for 25 years is vindicated by Big Love.

The first Simply Red album since 1995’s Life to feature original songs only — no cover versions — it reiterates his allegiance to blue-eyed soul music while containing some of his most personal lyrics yet.

Hucknall, 54, has spent the past five years raising his eight-year-old daughter, Romy, with his wife Gabriella and family life provides a clear cornerstone here. Home and hearth have given the one-time playboy a fresh perspective, though contentment hasn’t stopped him from tackling some difficult issues.

Nowhere is this more apparent than on Dad, a beautifully sung lament that tearfully salutes the ‘years of devotion’ put in by his late father Reg, who raised Mick after his mother walked out when he was three: ‘She left, you stayed/It really wasn’t simple at all/You cried, I smiled/I really wasn’t lonely at all.’

Old demons are addressed again on The Ghost Of Love.

A song about abandonment, it avoids sounding gloomy thanks to a panoramic arrangement.

A celebratory mood is evident elsewhere, too, with the title track a simple ballad about the joys of family life and Shine On blending funky drumming with sprightly sax.

Hucknall’s silky voice is also in fine fettle; his natural sweetness augmented with the gruffness of age and a sense of timing that allows him to cruise through songs before adding intermittent bursts of urgency and dynamism.

Putting a tuneful, British spin on the rhythms of black America, Simply Red have shied away from anything ground-breaking here.

But, in playing to their well-established strengths, Mick and his reunited band have delivered a comeback that stands up well to such Brit-soul standards as Stars and A New Flame.

FLORENCE + THE MACHINE: HOW BIG HOW BLUE HOW BEAUTIFUL (ISLAND)

VERDICT: Transitional third album

Rating:

Florence Welch has hinted at a more intimate approach on her third Florence + The Machine album since being swept along by the tide of talented female singers who emerged in London in the late Noughties.

But despite moments of introspection, this is another grandiose affair. Welch’s full-throttle vocal histrionics are again framed by expansive instrumentation, while her vivid imagination is given full rein on songs rooted in fantasy and metaphor.

Florence, 38, has toned things down since 2011’s Ceremonials. With producer Markus Dravs at the helm, this album is warmer. but more rambling.

Florence, 38, (pictured) has toned things down since 2011’s Ceremonials

Florence, 38, (pictured) has toned things down since 2011’s Ceremonials

A tendency to over-embellish is never far from the surface. The title track features a brass section (led by Goldfrapp’s Will Gregory) that powers its way towards a cinematic finale.

Welch remains a forceful vocalist, but the most convincing tracks are those in which she sings with disarming tenderness, reining herself in on the lovelorn blues number Long & Lost before giving a glimpse of the woman behind the music on the tremulous soul ballad Caught.

She also recaptures the fierce, punkish defiance of her formative years on recent single What Kind Of Man, which finds her ‘trying to cross a canyon with a broken limb’.

Given that she fractured a foot at last month’s Coachella Festival, the song has proved prophetic. Florence has since taken to singing from a stool, though she should be fully fit for Glastonbury.

But this — part confessional, part melodrama — feels like a transitional album.

Butterfly Blue cover art

.

Billy Joel Speech At Stony Brook University Commencement

At Stony Brook University’s 55th commencement ceremony May 22nd at Kenneth P. LaValle Stadium, 6,298 students had their degrees conferred, becoming the University’s newest alumni. During the ceremony, two of Long Island’s most prominent luminaries, Billy Joel and Charles Wang, received honorary degrees – a Doctor of Music and Doctor of Humane Letters, respectively.

"I hope that by now you have found what it is you love and I hope that you have learned the skills you need to make what you love your life's work," said Billy Joel during his acceptance speech. "I wish for you the stamina to continue that work when you encounter resistance and tough times ... if you're not doing what you love, you're just wasting your time."

Charles B. Wang, during his acceptance speech, stated his beliefs in four points: "One – you can make a difference; two – integrity and loyalty are only words until tested; three – love life to the fullest; and four – have fun." He also described his inspiration to create the Charles B. Wang Center, an Asian and Asian-American cultural hub at the University.

Read more at StonyBrook.edu and Hamptons.com. Congratulations to Stony Brook University's Class of 2015!

View exclusive photos in the Stony Brook University Co...15 Gallery. Photos by Jeff Schock.

At one point, the microphone goes dead and Billy fixes it. Video courtesy of Stony Brook University.

Billy Joel and Alexis Roderick beforecommencement ceremony at Stony Brook University May 22, 2015

Billy Joel and Alexis Roderick before the commencement ceremony at Stony Brook University on May 22, 2015.

Billy Joel and Charles Wang before the commencement ceremony at Stony Brook University May 22, 2015

Billy Joel (awarded a Doctor of Music) and Charles Wang (awarded a Doctor of Humane Letters) before the commencement ceremony at Stony Brook University on May 22, 2015.

Graduates throw caps at Stony Brook University commencement ceremony LaValle Stadium May 22, 2015

Graduates throw their caps at Stony Brook University's commencement ceremony at LaValle Stadium on May 22, 2015.

Samuel L. Stanley Jr., M.D., Billy Joel, Charles B. Wang, Cary Staller at Stony Brook University commencement ceremony May 22, 2015

Stony Brook University President Samuel L. Stanley Jr., M.D.; Billy Joel; Long Island businessman and philanthropist Charles B. Wang; and Trustee, State University of New York Cary Staller at the commencement ceremony on May 22, 2015.

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Reply #121 posted 05/31/15 6:17am

JoeBala

BB King viewing held in Mississippi Delta before funeral

People file past the casket containing the body of blues legen BB King on Friday. Photograph: Tannen Maury/EPA

Hundreds of friends and fans line up to pay respect to blues legend at public viewing of his casket held in the Mississippi Delta

People file past the casket containing the body of blues legen BB King on Friday. Photograph: Tannen Maury/EPA

Friends and fans are getting a chance to file past BB King’s coffin during a public viewing on Friday in the Mississippi Delta, the land that gave birth to the blues.

The visitation comes a day before the funeral for the man who influenced generations of singers and guitarists.

King was 89 when he died 14 May at his home in Las Vegas. A public viewing and invitation-only memorial service were held in that city before his body was flown to Memphis, Tennessee, for a tribute on Wednesday.Hundreds of people lined the roads to catch a glimpse of the hearse that drove his coffin from Memphis to his hometown of Indianola, Mississippi.He will be buried on the grounds of the BB King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center in Indianola.

Fans say farewell as B.B. King laid to rest in Mississippi

INDIANOLA, Miss. — Hundreds of people filled a church in the Mississippi Delta for the funeral Saturday of B.B. King, who rose from sharecropper in the area’s flat cotton fields to worldwide fame as a blues singer and guitarist who influenced generations of entertainers.

King was 89 when he died May 14 in Las Vegas. At his request, his body was returned to his native Mississippi for a final homecoming.

An attendant closes the door to the hearse with the casket bearing the body of blues legend B.B. King in front of the B.B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center after a day of public viewing, Friday, May 29, 2015 in Indianola, Miss. The visitation comes a day before the funeral for the man who influenced generations of singers and guitarists. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

Amid rain, about 500 people filled the sanctuary of Bell Grove Missionary Baptist Church, a red brick structure that sits in a field off of B.B. King Road in Indianola.

The casket bearing the body of blues legend B.B. King is wheeled to a waiting hearse in front of the B.B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center after a day of public viewing, Friday, May 29, 2015 in Indianola, Miss. The visitation comes a day before the funeral for the man who influenced generations of singers and guitarists. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

More than 200 people who couldn’t get into the sanctuary watched a live broadcast of the funeral in the church’s fellowship hall, many waving hand-held fans with a black-and-white photo of a smiling King hugging his black electric guitar, Lucille.

Photo: EPA

At the beginning of the service, family members filed past King’s open casket, which had an image of Lucille embroidered on the padded white cloth inside the lid. Later, the casket was closed and covered with a large arrangement of red roses.

The Rev. Herron Wilson, who delivered the eulogy, said King proved that people can triumph over difficult circumstances.

B.B. King's casket leaves the B.B. King Museum after

“Hands that once picked cotton would someday pick guitar strings on a national and international stage. Amazing,” Wilson said.

Country singer Marty Stuart said King created a musical legacy for the home state they share.

“As a fellow Mississippian, I’m so proud to stand in his shadow as I walk across the world,” Stuart said.

On the way into the church, Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant recalled spending time with King in the bluesman’s tour bus before a concert last year in Indianola. Bryant said King was proud of being from Mississippi.

Noting the thousands of people who came to Indianola for the public viewing Friday and funeral Saturday, Bryant said: “He would have loved to know that one more time he’s helping the Mississippi Delta.”

Photo: EPA

Tony Coleman, King’s drummer for 37 years, said King never referred to himself as King of the Blues, an honorary title others used.

“He felt like the blues was the king, and it was his responsibility to keep it king,” Coleman said as he entered the church.

A children’s choir based at the B.B. King Museum clapped as they sang gospel songs, including one with the chorus: “Let’s all get together, bring peace to the world.”

President Barack Obama sent a letter to be read aloud by Democratic U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, a friend of King.

“The blues has lost its king and American has lost a legend,” Obama said. “No one worked harder than B.B. No one did more to spread the gospel of the blues. He gets stuck in your head, he gets you moving, he gets you doing the things you probably shouldn’t do — but will always be glad you did.

Photo: Reuters

“B.B. may be gone but that thrill will be with us forever. And there’s going to be one killer blues session in heaven tonight,” Obama said.

More than 4,000 people viewed his open casket Friday at the B.B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center in Indianola.

One of his sons, Willie King of Chicago, said his father taught him to respond with love when others are angry.

“For a man coming out of the cotton field unlearned and you take his music and draw four corners of the world together — that is amazing,” Willie King said Friday at the museum, where his father will be buried.

King’s public viewing Friday was almost like a state funeral, with Mississippi Highway Patrol officers in dress uniform standing at each end of the casket. Two of his black electric guitars stood among sprays of flowers.

Blues guitarist Buddy Guy, 78, said he always intended to tour the B.B. King Museum while its namesake, his longtime friend, was still living.

“His left hand was a special effect,” Guy said, describing King’s talent for bending strings to make the guitar sing.

“These young people playing, you punch a button and you get a vibration,” Guy said. “He didn’t need that. He invented that.”

http://media4.s-nbcnews.com/j/newscms/2015_20/1025811/ss-150515-bb-king-mn-06_1_b169ad574d18b6f81be73021ad166d53.nbcnews-fp-1200-800.jpg

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Reply #122 posted 06/01/15 5:42am

JoeBala

eek It was 49 years ago today when Davy, Micky, Peter, & Mike started filming The Monkees TV series in 1966. cool

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Reply #123 posted 06/01/15 3:04pm

JoeBala

Rare Pics.

Al Pacino and Robert De Niro, 1982

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Sean Lennon and Michael Jackson

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Jackie

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Reply #124 posted 06/02/15 8:04am

JoeBala

Pre-Fame Marilyn Monroe Is Barely Recognizable In Rare Photo

Years after her death, fans can still easily con...he actress posed over a subway grate, laying out in the sand or wearing her now legendary black turtleneck.

But before the actress took on her signature look, she was just another beautiful face trying to stand out amongst the masses. In the rare photo below, for example, pre-fame Monroe is barely recognizable as a young woman in a red sweater:

marilyn monroe

The photo comes from the the collection "Happy Birthday Marilyn!" curated by Andrew Weiss, which captures the star at various phases in her life, spanning the years 1945 to 1962. Featuring images by photographers William Carroll, Andres de Dienes, Lazlo Willinger, Milton Greene, Kashio Aoki, Bert Stern and George Barris, the series examines how a young woman propelled herself from obscurity to mega-stardom in a career lasting only 17 years.

In honor of what would have been Monroe's 89th birthday on June 1, The Huffington Post gained access to some of the collection's most prized depictions of the star.

"Happy Birthday Marilyn!" opens at POP International Galleries in New York City on June 17 and runs through July 1.

marilyn monroe

marilyn monroe

marilyn monroe

marilyn monrie

marilyn monroe

marilyn monroe

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marilyn monroe

10 Things You Didn't Know About Marilyn Monroe

Reuters

By Michael Bartiromo

| June 1, 2015

For someone who's been dead for 52 years, Marilyn Monroe continues to make headlines.

READ: The 21 Best And Worst Portrayals Of Marilyn Monroe

Last year, her cosmetic surgery records surfaced, indicating that she'd had a chin implant and possibly a nose job (those X-rays and medical notes were since sold at auction for $25,600). In addition, Forbes ranked Monroe as the 2013's 6th highest-earning dead celebrity (after Michael Jackson, Elvis, Charles M. Schulz, Elizabeth Taylor and Bob Marley). But perhaps most impressively, she was named the new face of Chanel No. 5 in October of 2013.

On what would have been her 89th birthday (June 1, 1926), we got to thinking: What else would surprise us about America's favorite platinum-blonde icon?

READ: 10 Things You Didn'...bout Elvis

Here's 10 crazy facts you might not have known about Marilyn:

#1. Monroe received only $50 to pose for the nude photos that appeared in the inaugural issue of Playboy magazine. Photographer Tom Kelley originally took the pictures in 1949 for use in a calendar, but Hugh Hefner bought the negatives from the calendar company years later after Monroe's star was on the rise. He paid $500, but the shots made him millions.

#2. It's often said that Marilyn Monroe was a size 16, but a fashion editor for The Times of London dispelled that rumor when she had the chance to try on articles of Monroe's clothing. "Quite the opposite," wrote Sara Buys. "While she was undeniably voluptuous — in possession of an ample bosom and a bottom that would look at home gyrating in a J-Lo video — for most of the early part of her career, she was a size 8 and even in her plumper stages, was no more than a 10."

READ: How To Get Marilyn ...azing Body

#3. Monroe was hyper aware of her persona, and her friends sometimes commented on how different she was when she wasn't "in character." Author Truman Capote once found her gazing into a mirror and asked what she was doing, to which she replied,"Looking at her." And Monroe's "Misfits" co-star Eli Wallach recalls walking around NYC with her, saying, "Nobody noticed who she was because she was just being herself — suddenly her walk, attitude and appearance would change and in moments everyone would be ogling her and asking for autographs. 'I just wanted to be Mari...a moment,' she said."

#4. Monroe stuttered throughout her childhood and teens. "I don't know how it happened … Sometimes if I was very nervous or excited, I would stutter," she once said in an interview. A speech therapist would help her overcome the impediment by instructing her to use a breathier tone of voice, but it's said that her stutter returnedduring the production of "Something's Got to Give " — her final picture — due to stress.

#5. Need a great side dish to go with your next holiday meal? A 2010 collection of Monroe's writings, letters and poems included her personal recipe for stuffing, which was found scribbled on a piece of stationery from the City Title Insurance Company.The New York Times reprinted and recreated the unorthodox recipe (containing liver, heart, beef, egg and raisins, among several other ingredients) and gave it surprisingly high marks for flavor, texture and presentation.

#6. The skin-tight dress Monroe wore while singing "Happy Birthday, Mr. President" at John F. Kennedy's 1962 birthday bash sold at auction for $1,267,500 in 1999,making it the most expensive item of clothing ever sold at the time. The white dress she wore during "The Seven Year Itch" eventually fetched 5.6 million at a 2011 auction.

READ: 10 Things You Didn't Know About 'Happy Days'

#7. Monroe had "the heaviest peach fuzz beard of any actress in Hollywood," said Monroe expert Gene London. According to London, it was due to a hormone cream she slathered on her face to help her skin glow on film. "They [studio chiefs] wanted to remove the facial hair, but Marilyn absolutely refused. She said that when the light hit the fuzz it caused her face to have a soft glow, so they didn't have to photograph her through special lenses, lace or Vaseline the way they did with so many stars."

#8. When Monroe married bespectacled playwright Arthur Miller in 1956, Variety ran a headline reading "Egghead Weds Hourglass."

#9. Rock musician Marilyn Manson derived his name, and that of his group, from the names of Marilyn Monroe and Charles Manson in order to project a dichotomy between good and evil. But oddly enough, in his autobiography, Manson (née Brian Warner) says nobody ever suspects that the Monroe half might be just as dark as the Manson half. "Marilyn Monroe had a dark side, just as Charles Manson has a good, intelligent side," he wrote.

#10. When Monroe died, the New York Times reported that suicides in the city skyrocketed, reaching a then-record high of 12 ...t one day. "If the most wonderful, beautiful thing in the world has nothing to live for, then neither must I," wrote one of the victims in a suicide note.

9 Rare Color Photos Of Marilyn Monroe And Arthur Miller

Nicknamed “the Egghead and the Hourglass,” the iconic movie star and the playwright/author made a very unlikely pair.

On June 29, 1956, Marilyn Monroe married playwright, author, and screenwriter, Arthur Miller – after reportedly having an affair for a year. At first glance the glamorous bombshell and the accomplished playwright made a very unlikely pair, and they had less than healthy reasons to be attracted to each other. Monroeyearned to be fawned upon and improve herself, while Miller loved the ego boost that came with being married to the most desired woman in the world.

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SNAP / Rex / REX USA

The marriage was Monroe’s third and Miller’s second — he left his wife to be with her.

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Sam Shaw / REX USA

Of his relationship with Monroe, Miller wrote, “She was a whirling light to me then, all paradox and enticing mystery, street-tough one moment, then lifted by a lyrical and poetic sensitivity that few retain past early adolescence.”

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Sam Shaw / REX USA

Shortly after their marriage, Monroe risked her career by testifying on behalf of Miller, who was being investigated for alleged Communist activities. He was eventually found guilty of contempt of Congress by the House Un-American Activities Committee for refusing to reveal the names of alleged Communist writers.

Fortunately, Miller’s conviction was overturned, which was reportedly due to Monroe’s intervention.

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Sam Shaw / REX USA

Monroe has a fun moment at their home in Roxbury, Conn.

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Sam Shaw / REX USA

Miller and Monroe share a romantic stroll in New York.

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Sam Shaw / REX USA

The two posing in front of the Queensboro Bridge.

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Peter Stackpole / Time & Life Pictures / Getty Image

A tender moment between the two as they dance at “An April in Paris Ball” held at the Waldorf Astoria in New York.

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Sam Shaw / REX USA

Unfortunately their marriage was turbulent, which was mainly due to Monroe’s deteriorating physical and mental health.

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Archive Photos / Stringer / United Artists / Getty Images

As a last-ditch effort to both save their marriage and help Monroe get over a miscarriage, Arthur wrote the screenplay The Misfits for her as a Valentine’s gift. The film not only brought her critical acclaim, but was also her final complete film.

Monroe and Miller divorced the following year.

Some Like It Hot! Stunning rare photos of Marilyn Monroe relaxing on movie sets can be seen in new travelling exhibition


More than 50 years after her death, fans of Marilyn Monroe can see rare and some never-before-seen photos of the actress in a new exhibition.

Taken between 1952 and 1956, the images give an intimate look at the star, capturing her vivacious nature and beautiful smile.

The photos can be viewed as part Limited Runs' collection ...exhibition, which launches in Los Angeles in June and will then go on to San Francisco and New York City.

True beauty: Marilyn Monroe is seen just before Gentlemen Prefer Blondes in a rare photo from Limited Runs' Travelling Exhinition

True beauty: Marilyn Monroe is seen just before Gentlemen Prefer Blondes in a rare photo from Limited Runs' Travelling Exhinition

One of the more recognisable images shows Marilyn just before Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, lounging around in a cream bikini and displaying her famously voluptuous and gorgeous figure.

A photo from the following year, 1953, has not been seen before and shows the iconic actress cuddling up to a horse.

In the snapshot Marilyn is wearing a low-cut frilly top and jeans, while on the set of The River of No Return.

Horsing around: The actress cuddles up to a furry friend on set of The River Of No Return

Horsing around: The actress cuddles up to a furry friend on set of The River Of No Return

In her natural state: One photo from the same movie set shows Marilyn make-up free and dressed casually, which was rarely seen

In her natural state: One photo from the same movie set shows Marilyn make-up free and dressed casually, which was rarely seen

Another photo from the same film set shows the star in a very rare casual state with no make-up and her platinum locks unstyled, although she wears sunglasses over her bare face.

Marilyn is pictured alongside two black bears while dressed down in a grey jumper and baggy black trousers, but of course still looks stunning.

The Some Like It Hot star relaxes against some rocks in front of a lake while wearing a grey pencil skirt, red top and matching lipstick in one of the shots, taken on set of Niagara in upstate New York.

Catching some sun: The star rests on a rock in between takes for Niagara in this gorgeous image

Catching some sun: The star rests on a rock in between takes for Niagara in this gorgeous image

Vivacious: Marilyn's famous smile and gorgeous figure can be seen in the pictures, such as this one from 1952

Vivacious: Marilyn's famous smile and gorgeous figure can be seen in the pictures, such as this one from 1952

The more recent of the collection of images were taken on the snowy set of Bus Stop.

Marilyn is wrapped up warm in a grey fur coat and boater hat in one photo and a black coat and green scarf in another.

The star, whose real name was Norma Jeane Mortenson, was 36 when she died of a barbiturate overdose in 1962.

Bundled up: Marilyn wrapped up warm in a grey fur coat while filming scenes for Bus Stop in 1956

Bundled up: Marilyn wrapped up warm in a grey fur coat while filming scenes for Bus Stop in 1956

Lights, camera, action: The exhibition, which will travel from Los Angeles to San Francisco and New York, contains another photo from the set of Bus Stop

Lights, camera, action: The exhibition, which will travel from Los Angeles to San Francisco and New York, contains another photo from the set of Bus Stop

Marilyn Monroe: Rare Early Photos, 1950

In 1950, LIFE photographer Ed Clark received a call from a friend who worked at 20th Century Fox. The friend was raving about "a hot tomato" the studio recently signed: one Marilyn Monroe.

Few stars of the 1950s were so compelling, so singular, that they came to define the era in which they lived and in which they created their most enduring work. Marilyn Monroe was one of those stars.

From her earliest days as an actress until late in her career — when she had, against her will, been cast in the public eye as Hollywood’s ultimate Sex Goddess — Marilyn posed for LIFE magazine’s photographers. Here, LIFE.com presents a gallery of pictures — none of which ran in the magazine — by LIFE’s Ed Clark, a Tennessean with a profound talent for capturing the essence of people, whether they were world famous or utterly obscure. His pictures of Marilyn offer a rare glimpse into the early days of an eventual pop-culture icon’s career, when a young actress was blissfully unaware of what the coming years would bring and was, it seems, just happy to be in “the industry” and getting noticed.

[Buy the LIFE book, Remembering Marilyn]

In a 1999 interview with Digital Journalist, Clark described how, in 1950, he received a call from a friend at 20th Century Fox about “a hot tomato” the studio had just signed: one Marilyn Monroe.

“She was almost unknown then, so I was able to spend a lot of time shooting her,” Clark recalled. After all, it was still early in her career, and she’d only just begun to gain attention: Three months before this shoot, she appeared as a crooked lawyer’s girlfriend in The Asphalt Jungle; two months later, she had a small role as an aspiring starlet in All About Eve.

“We’d go out to Griffith Park [in Los Angeles] and she’d read poetry. I sent several rolls to LIFE in New York, but they wired back, ‘Who the hell is Marilyn Monroe?'” (Three years later, Marilyn appeared on the cover of LIFE in a now-famous Clark photo, posing with her Gentlemen Prefer Blondes co-star, Jane Russell.)

Why LIFE never published the gold mine of photos seen in this gallery after Marilyn became a bona fide superstar, however, remains a mystery. The only clue: a brief note about the shoot in the LIFE archives, addressed to LIFE’s photo editor, indicating that “this take was over-developed and poorly printed.”

Whatever the ultimate reason these pictures never ran in LIFE, one thing remains perfectly clear: at 24 years old, whether the moviegoing public realized it at the time or not, in 1950 Marilyn Monroe was already something special.

<strong>Not published in LIFE.</strong> Marilyn Monroe, 24, in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, 1950.

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<strong>Not published in LIFE.</strong> Marilyn Monroe, 24, in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, 1950.

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<strong>Not published in LIFE.</strong> Marilyn Monroe, 24, in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, 1950.

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<strong>Not published in LIFE.</strong> Marilyn Monroe, 24, in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, 1950.

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<strong>Not published in LIFE.</strong> Marilyn Monroe, 24, in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, 1950.

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<strong>Not published in LIFE.</strong> Marilyn Monroe, 24, in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, 1950.

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<strong>Not published in LIFE.</strong> Marilyn Monroe, 24, in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, 1950.

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<strong>Not published in LIFE.</strong> Marilyn Monroe, 24, in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, 1950.

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<strong>Not published in LIFE.</strong> Marilyn Monroe, 24, in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, 1950.

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<strong>Not published in LIFE.</strong> Marilyn Monroe, 24, in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, 1950.

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<strong>Not published in LIFE.</strong> Marilyn Monroe, 24, in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, 1950.

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<strong>Not published in LIFE.</strong> Marilyn Monroe, 24, in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, 1950.

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Reply #125 posted 06/02/15 9:16am

JoeBala

David Benoit pairs with Jane Monheit on new recording titled '2 In Love'

Paula Edelstein - AXS Contributor
By: Paula Edelstein AXS Contributor Apr 28, 2015
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David Benoit and Jane Monheit.
David Benoit and Jane Monheit.
Courtesy of Concord Music Group. Used with permission.

David Benoit’s 2 In Love, featuring singer/songwriter Jane Monheit is on the crest of a new style in which his Grammy-nominated pianism and sonic instrumentals are now paired with Jane’s vocal prowess. Their new sound, heightened and shaped as a new form of musical expression, validates the fact that few contemporary jazz musicians have achieved as much notoriety or had such an impact as David Benoit. The 61-year old Benoit is revered as one of the founding fathers of contemporary jazz and this pairing with 37-year old Jane Monheit serves as a splendid cross-generational effort that is sure to appeal to their fans around the world.

This is David Benoit’s first release with a vocalist and he couldn’t have chosen a better one than the Grammy Award-nominated cool-toned Jane Monheit. Together they present a rich and comprehensive performance of ten songs culled from a variety of styles including ballads, mid-tempo, neo-classical, Latin, Pop and Broadway. They are supported by an alternating rhythm section which features drummer Jamey Tate, Clayton Cameron, percussionist Lauren Kosty, guitarist Pat Kelley and bassists David Hughes and John Clayton. Guest string players Michelle Suh on violin and cellist Cathy Biagini add their impressive accompaniment to several songs including “Dragonfly,” a waltz, “Something’s Got To Give,” from the play of the same name written by Benoit with long-time collaborator Mark Winkler and “The Songs We Sang.”

Along with Jane Monheit, three lyricists – Mark Winkler, Lorraine Feather and Spencer Day – illuminated Benoit’s musical concepts with fresh lyrics that heighten his exemplary abilities to understand and accompany singers. Lorraine Feather’s lyrics to “Barcelona Nights” were inspired by Benoit’s travels to Spain. Jane sings this song with vigor and passion as the band members provide the imagery, textures and imaginary hi-res clips of a night in Barcelona. The song unites a number of important currents in Latin music – particularly the groove and infectious rhythms – with elements of American contemporary jazz.

Benoit is prolific across a plethora of styles and genres and on his heartfelt piano solo piano performance of “Love Theme From Candide"/”Send In The Clowns” he conveys his remarkable talents on songs from Broadway and the Great American Songbook. His art of instrumental storytelling is superb and his choice of repertoire makes this recording worth several listens.

Fans of David Benoit and Jane Monheit will consider their 2 In Love collaboration as having met the standards set by such vocalist/pianist pairings as pop vocalist Diana Ross and pianist Lionel Richie or jazz vocalist Dee Daniels and pianist Cyrus Chestnut’s performances together. Jane’s incredible four-octave range, phrasing, and melodic/rhythmic exploration of David’s new adult contemporary music works well together and brings both of their careers into a broader cultural context. In addition to the wonderful arrangements, all of the musicians excel in conceiving a sound that you are sure to enjoy.

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Reply #126 posted 06/03/15 6:06am

JoeBala

Howard Smith interviews with John Lennon, George Harrison included in new book

June 2, 201511:33 PM MST
Princeton Architectural Press

A book of Village Voice journalist and radio personality Howard Smith's interviews with John Lennon and Yoko Ono, George Harrison, Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones and Pete Townshend of the Who and many others is in the works and will be out in October, Ezra Bookstein, who is editing the book, told Beatles Examiner June 2.“The Smith Tapes: Lost ...1969-1972" will also include Joe Cocker, Eric Clapton, Frank Zappa, Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, Amiri Baraka, Dick Gregory, R. Buckminster Fuller, Andy Warhol and Norman Mailer.

“The John & Yoko interview is the one from December 17th, 1969. Yoko asked Howard to come up to Toronto to help convince John that New Yorkers would love him to come live there. Earlier in the day they held a press conference about the Toronto Peace festival,” Bookstein said. “It’s fantastic.” The Harrison interview comes from May 1, 1970. “He talks about the new break-up and the three vs. one dynamic created by the Apple Records restructuring (and) how difficult it was trying to get songs on their albums. He’s very open about Paul’s resistance to his musical growth, and still seeing him as the little kid he was when they were growing up,” Bookstein said.

Harrison tells Smith, "Paul and I went to school together, you know? I got the feeling that, you know, everybody changes and sometimes people don’t want other people to change, or even if you do change, they won’t accept that you’ve changed and they keep in their mind some other image of you.”

Bookstein says that when Smith asks Harrison, who at the time was getting ready to record “All Things Must Pass,” about ever getting back together, he says, “It’s the least we could do to sacrifice three months of the year just to do an album or two. I think it’s very selfish if the Beatles don’t record together.”

“I'm Not the Beatles,” a eight-CD box set of Smith's chats with John Lennon and Yoko Ono was released in 2014. A 13-CD box, “The Smith Tapes,” that included talks with Lennon, Harrison, Cocker, Townshend, Jagger, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison and others is also available. Also available are several single disc interviews by Eric Clapton and George Harrison (on the Clapton disc), Jerry Garcia, and Jim Morrison. Single discs are also available through the Smith Tapes website.

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Singer Sarah McLachlan debuts with Chicago Symphony Orchestra

June 1, 20158:41 PM MST
songs that celebrate empathy
sarah mclachlan website

Canadian singer-songwriter Sarah McLachlan's voice has been called angelic and breathtaking. She's most well known for stunning ballads, "Angel," "Building a Mystery," "Adia" and "Sweet Surrender," but has recently released a new album, SHINE ON, which includes an array of collaborations and which has garnered the coveted JUNO award. Critics and fans have praised the project for its optimistic themes and inventive textures.

Sarah recently completed an American tour in support of the release and will grace the stage of Orchestra Hall with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in a one-off debut in honor of the 26th Annual CSO Corporate Night Benefit this June. In an exclusive interview with Examiner.com, the multi-faceted artist talks about everything from songwriting to symphonies.

Examiner: Chicago is looking forward to seeing you in a few weeks for your CSO debut, but before we talk about that, let's reminisce. Can you tell us about the first song you ever wrote?

SM: My first song was called, "Out of the Shadows" and it was for my first record. I was nineteen-years-old and I had just gotten a record contract. Originally, this small independent label brought me up to Vancouver and said, 'We're going to have you write with a bunch of other bands that we have on the label.' Well, they didn't talk to these other bands, so these established bands said, 'I don't want to write with this punk kid.' The label said, 'Why don't you see what you can come up with on your own?'

I said, 'Hmmm. I'd never really written anything before but I had helped with hooks and melodies and lyrics with the band that I'd had before, but I'd never written an entire song so I had to, through trial and error, figure it out as I went along. I remember I'd been reading Jerzy Kosinski's 'Painted Bird' (1965). I loved that book and loved the story. I said, 'I'm going to write about the boy.' I wrote that song, loosely based on that book.

Examiner: In 2011, you performed with the Colorado Symphony Orchestra and in June you'll be performing with the CSO. What's the challenge of working in this type of setting?

SM: It's actually amazingly easy. We show up day of. Sean O'Loughlin is my conductor, who has written many of the arrangements. We basically run through the entire show with the symphony. We do the songs once or sometimes twice if tweaks need to be made and we do the show that night. It's amazingly efficient. They're so talented. You put a piece of music in front of them and off they go.

It's pop music and they're pop arrangements so it's not that challenging for them, I think. I could be wrong, but I think it's fairly simple for them to just get in there and bang it off. It's incredibly exhilarating to play with a symphony because obviously with a band you have a certain song that you get used to, and then when you play with a symphony you have this incredible power and force behind you and the energy is so different and really exhilarating.

Examiner: "Angel" has been used in many situations where it has facilitated healing. Why do you think it brings people together?

SM: I'm not really sure. I write from an emotional point of view and I think that it struck a chord with so many people on so many different levels. I'm really grateful It's wonderful to be able to create something that goes out there in the world and has a life beyond me and brings some kind of joy and awareness or comfort to people . Music, for me, is incredibly comforting. I go to music to soothe myself when I'm angry or frustrated and when I'm sad. Music helps me, amazingly.

Examiner: With "World on Fire," you also created awareness. You spent very little money on the video so that you could donate the budget to charities. Was that your idea?

SM: I can't take any credit for that idea. Sophie Muller, the video director, had that idea and she was actually very hesitant to present it to me because she wasn't sure that I would go for it, but she was sure that the record company wouldn't go for it. But I said, 'They're going to love not spending money on this. Are you kidding me?'

It's such an amazing idea. Sophie spent hundreds and hundreds of hours, not just her, but a team, compiling the animation and it was such a powerful song, such a great song for that kind of message. I was, again, thankful that the opportunity presented itself because I never would have thought of it on my own, but I was trying to come up with a good idea for the video, because it didn't seem right that it couldn't be the typical music video where I was in there singing the whole time and having some sort of images that the song evoked. That would be too obvious so her idea was so brilliant because it allowed the listener and the viewer to understand that stuff but on a very different kind of level. I loved that we were able to give away all of that money to charity, as well.

It's a great story to be able to tell. The record label loved it for obvious reasons. The idea was really unique and I'm proud of myself for Sophie's a brilliant artist and I had total faith that it would be great.

Examiner: You wrote, "Song For My Father" for SHINE ON and you asked fans to submit images and recollections of their own fathers. What was the outcome?

SM: My dad was really impactful in my life and he was a great role model. I miss him every day. He passed a little over four years ago and it was around the same time that--no, it's been longer than that now, I was separating from my husband, my dad was sick, I was changing my management and record label and all of my important male anchors were falling away at the same time. Losing my dad was like losing my anchor, my rock. I wanted to honor him in some small way.

I love singing that song because I'm reminded of him and of how much he meant to me. It's not typically sad. One time, somebody asked me about the song and I was talking about him and I just burst into tears. I was surprised by the reaction because I didn't even know it was coming. I didn't expect it at all, but when I'm singing the song, I'm feeling close to him. I feel a sweetness around the relationship that we had, more than the loss. I feel the loss at different times. When I'm singing the song, I feel this closeness to him.

Examiner: "In Your Shoes" has some beautiful vocal layering. How did you engineer those textures?

SM: I love doing that kind of stuff and I harmonize to everything. I'm always singing counter melodies to things. I will be sitting at the console and listening back to the track and I'll sing, 'aah, aah,' and sing some counterpoint. [Production team] 'That sounds good. We should put that in there.'

We often build a whole bunch of tracks that sometimes end up on the final tracks and sometimes they don't. With any of the songs, with any of the instrumentation, because we have our own studio, we can sit there (Laughs) for days. To our detriment, we can add and add and add and take away, take away, take away, just put this piece in and take another one out. Sometimes it's hard to make decisions when you have so much time and so many pieces of the puzzle, but I do love using my voice as an instrument; not just for the lyrics, but as a separate tone that exists.

Examiner: You worked with Bob Rock, who is essentially a rock producer (Motley Crue), on "Flesh and Blood" and "Love Beside Me". Why the shift?

SM: I was very hesitant to work with him because of that, yet I spent the day with Bob, just talking and hanging out. He's such a kind and spiritual man. I really enjoyed him and I really did want to add a raw energy to some of these songs. He really brought that out, so I'm really happy about having that relationship and working with him in that way.

Pierre Marchand and I are much more, not staid, but he has sounds that he tends to go to and Bob's a bit more of a raw, in-the-moment type of guy.

Examiner: So you covered all the bases.

SM: I wanted to explore and Bob encouraged that, which was great.

Examiner: Was "Beautiful Girl" a song you wrote to your younger self?

SM: There are moments of that in there for sure. I was writing about my daughter, our relationship and the storms that we are going to have to weather. She's thirteen now.

Examiner: They're really blossoming. They'll never be that innocent again.

SM: Exactly. My daughter still plays with dolls and I'm really happy about that.

Examiner: Is "What's It Gonna Take?" about some angst in your life or more of a reflection?

SM: I actually wrote that for King Kong, a Broadway musical. Marius de Vries wrote the music and he asked me if I'd be interested in writing a song for Ann (leading actress, Ann Darrow) when she gets on the ship and figures out where she is. Obviously, it's about vulnerability and insecurity and I said, 'Oh, I know how to write about that.'

That would be a fun project because, A, there was just one song and it was a challenge, for me, because I don't typically write about one particular subject. For me, lyrically, it's usually just about exploration and whatever I happen upon. If a story reveals itself, I tend to go that way. I don't say, 'I'm going to write a song about my dad or I'm going to write about X, it just comes out.

This needs to be explored, this needs to be talked about, so it's a fun challenge to look at a particular scene in a theatrical production and look at what she was feeling. So the idea was that she was on the ship, leaving her safe harbor and going into the unknown. I have no idea where I am. She was in two different worlds. She was kind of in love with Kong, but she's also gone back to civilization, so she has her human love and animal and she's trying to figure out how to manage that.

Examiner: Let's talk about an earlier song from "Surfacing". What was "Adia" based on?

SM: Actually I guess I could say I betrayed my best friend and it was a really difficult time because I ended up marrying her ex-boyfriend. I fell in love with her ex and it was one of those lines you don't cross, but I did and as it turned out, it wasn't a fling, we were married for thirteen years.

But it was a really difficult time because I betrayed her trust and I lost her friendship for a while and because she was my very best friend and so it was the story of working through the anger and resentment on both sides and trying to find forgiveness.

Examiner: You started the Sarah McLachlan Music School in 2002. Given your experience, what is most crucial for children to learn?

SM: We use music as a guide. Music offers us the opportunity to explore our emotional world, to connect with ourselves and with each other and I think it's so important for kids to be able to understand themselves a little better and to recognize their own value. I say that because that's what it gave me.

When I was young, I was pretty unpopular; I was picked on a lot. Music was this one piece that I could always go to, that I knew I had, that was always mine. I was good at it and it fed me. . It gave me courage, strength and self-worth. That's why I think it's so imperative for kids to have that in their life. Whether they go on to become professional musicians--that's not what we're after. We're not after sending kids to Julliard or Berkeley, although it has become a beneficial thing that has been happening.

Many of the kids have been graduating and going on to post secondary school and becoming doctors and engineers, so it's about giving kids the opportunity to discover who they are and to be able to find joy in that and connect with that. I think that that makes them better human beings. It allows them to be able to go out into the world and be more well rounded, more understanding and to have more empathy for their fellow humans. It's beneficial all around.

Examiner: You created the Lilith Fair to empower female musicians. What have been the long-term gains? Would you consider recreating the fair?

SM: No, it would have to be someone else, someone relevant now and powerful now. That being said, the cool thing is, if you look at the Top Forty and how female dominant it is, all those women are playing their own arena shows. When we did Lilith back in the '90s, there were a lot of great female artists having a lot of success, but all the summer festivals were completely male dominated and I thought, 'Let's just do something ourselves. Wouldn't that be great?'

I think the strength in numbers is the fact that, being together, we got to bring in and share each other's audiences and gain so many fans in that regard. It really helped a lot of our careers. Also, at the time, there was such a false competition set up. Perhaps it wasn't false, but it was important in the record labels' eyes and the radio stations' eyes, where they said, 'You can't play two women back to back' or 'I'm playing Tori this week, I can't play Sarah.' It was insulting and it was limiting.

It's just music. We're all different. We're all unique. You would never say that about guys and it really put a fire under my butt to fight that and get it changed. That is one thing that we really did stuff down the throats of the old boys' club (Laughs).

You actually can play two women back to back and you actually can put two women on the same bill. Promoters were saying, 'People won't come. That's too much. There's too many women.' That is just ridiculous. I'm not good at hearing no. I think they will and we're going to prove you wrong.

I think it brought a lot of women together and definitely changed some attitudes. Culturally, and as far as society goes, it takes generations to really change peoples' perspectives and I'm really glad we had a hand in it. I think things really have been changing and shifting. Maybe we'll have a female president in America.

Examiner: The time has come.

SM: Wouldn't that be fantastic? A lot of women are becoming CEO's. There still is a hideous inequality as far as how many women are hired and what they get paid, but it is slowly shifting.

Examiner: How do you see your future trajectory?

SM: As I said, I have a thirteen-year-old girl and I'm going to be slowing down a little bit, staying home to be present for her because it's a tricky time, as you know. That being said, I'm still writing music. I'm still working. I'm thinking about doing a Christmas record because that's a good way to stay out there and still make music, but not tour for a year, and I'm thinking about doing the record on a symphonic level.

Examiner: Thank you, Sarah.

Come see Sarah McLachlan on June 16, 2015 at the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Single tickets for the concert-only are $70-$199.

Concert and dinner packages are also available for $200.

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Reply #127 posted 06/03/15 8:14am

JoeBala

Meet Emma Ishta, Star of ABC Family's 'Stitchers'

ABC Family via Getty Images
Emma Ishta is the fresh-faced star of Stitchers, the first ever procedural to air on ABC Family. Emma plays Kirsten, a brilliant, yet detached college student who gets recruited into a covert government agency that uses the memories of the recently deceased to help solve crimes. We sat down with the Aussie beauty in our NYC office to discuss her breakout role and what #BUILTBYGIRLS means to her.

C: Who are the "Stitchers?" What's the show about?
EI: "So basically, the Stitchers are a covert government agency and they have this new technology where they can hack into the brains of people who have passed away to insert a living consciousness into that brain and read their memories or the memories that are most clear or most persistent after they've died."

C: Sounds pretty badass! Is that what made you want to play this character?
EI: "Yeah, I mean I love SciFi stuff, I love fantasy stuff, I'm a HUGE Star Wars fan. I can't wait for the new film...But, mainly it's really that Kirsten is such a strong female character and I think there's a lot more opportunity for women to play those roles in TV and film these days. I'm a huge advocate for representations of highly intelligent women in TV and film, so that was really the huge draw."

C: Kirsten is extremely inquisitive, can you relate to that at all?
EI: "I think we're more different than we are alike...I'm definitely a lot more sensitive and highly emotional than she is. She has this condition, temporal dysplasia, which means she doesn't connect with her emotions at all. So I think, in those regards, we're more dissimilar. But I'm definitely ambitious, I think she's ambitious as well. And, I don't think that's a bad thing for girls. I can be a little bossy...again I don't think that's always a bad thing! You know? Be yourself! So, yeah, I think I am inquisitive, I am curious, I'm probably a little more intuitive than calculating. Kirsten is very calculating, and that's where her inquisitiveness comes from, this sort of like, figuring out the puzzle all the time in her brain as opposed to how I tend to run off of my emotions."

C: Your character is also very crafty with a computer. Cambio has a partnership with an organization called Girls Who Code that's based upon encouraging girls to become the future of the tech industry, has playing the character sparked any interest for you in computer science or coding?
EI: "I really don't know enough about it and I am very interested in leaning more...Diversity is so important. I feel like at the moment it's very much a white male-dominated field, and there needs to be more ethnicities and women. I would love to take a coding course so that I have more knowledge about what it is that I'm actually portraying!"

C: So would you say you're more of a creative type than a math geek?
EI: "I would say so, yeah. I'm more of a creative type. I was good at math, though. I was a musician and I think math and music are often linked. Usually people who are good at music are good at math."

C: What kind of music did you do?
EI: "I played violin for 15 years and I played piano and I sang, I actually studied for a little while at the Queensland Conservatorium in Jazz Voice. So, I did music my whole life!"

C: Wow, that's amazing! So do you think you would want to pursue music professionally at some point?
EI: "You know, I've just gotten into acting, so I'm really happy where I am. But, at the same time, music has always been a huge passion of mine, so I would never close the door. Ever. But, the music industry has changed a lot and the only way for musicians to have a career is to tour. When I met my husband and my step-daughter, I realized that's not the life I want. I don't want to be around that type of party scene. But, I love music so if I were ever able to do it, I would leap at the opportunity!"
Emma Ishta BBG
Cambio
C: Cambio is a site that is for girls and built by girls. #BUILTBYGIRLS is a movement that empowers young women to believe they can be anything they want to be and build anything they want to build. How does that resonate with you on a more personal level? Have you ever felt discriminated against in your career for being a woman?
EI: "There's not a lot of equality for women in the entertainment industry. You know, if you look at how many female directors there are versus men, I think that that really speaks to the level of opportunity. There's only so much you can say is based on skill, when really there's just not enough women given the opportunity to do what men do...I was told from a very young age that I could do whatever I wanted if I put my mind to it and worked hard enough. That has lived inside of me because I was told that repeatedly, from when I was young enough to be able to hear it. And I think that there's a lot of people who haven't been told that their whole lives...I really want to be able to give that self-belief to the next generation of girls, because you can do whatever you want, you're smart enough to do whatever you want if you work hard enough, there's nothing to stop you. It's all about how many times you get up after you fail, you know?"

C: To close, What advice would you give to your step-daughter, or any young girl out there who is trying to make something of herself?
EI: "Every day I tell her, you are smart enough and you can do anything that you put your mind to as long as you work hard at it! Whatever you want to do, you can do, but you have to work at it. Practice, keep going, keep failing, keep trying!"

Fun Facts
Girl Crush: Charlize Theron
Favorite Song of the Moment: "From Eden" by Hozier
Favorite Reality Show: Hoarders...if that counts.
Favorite ice cream Flavor: Coconut!
Nicknames: Em, Emmy

Stitchers also stars Kyle Harris and premieres Tuesday, June 2nd at 9 PM EST on ABC Family.
kirsten-emma-ishta-stitchers-season-1.jpg

ABC Family's Stitchers: 5 Things to Know About the Death-Defying Drama

Stitchers ABC Family

Already a hub for liars, fosters and baby daddies, ABC Family on Tuesday will introduce us to Stitchers (9/8c), a show about a college student named Kirsten who inserts herself into the minds of the deceased in order to solve cases for a secret government agency.

Sounds like a lot to take in, right? We agree, which is why TVLine invited starEmma Ishta to explain the science behind the series — fabricated though it may be — and to dispel a few of the myths.

1. The science, sadly, isn’t real. Ishta’s character is recruited because of her mental disorder, temporal dysplasia, which “prevents her from perceiving the passage of time and disables her from connecting with her emotions,” Ishta explains. “The moment something happens to her, it’s like it’s always been the case.” That said, Ishta also admits the condition isn’t real — even if a certainsomeone set up a Wikipedia page for it.

2. Kirsten will grow. Despite her seemingly cold nature, Ishta’s character will develop as she stitches herself into more brains. “When she stitches into people, she feels the emotions that they feel, which leaves her with residual emotions,” she explains. “That’ll be a massive part of her journey over the course of the season; to become an emotional being after spending years this way is huge.”

3. Go on, ‘ship away! As you’ll see in the premiere, the chemistry between Ishta and Kyle Harris, who plays Cameron — Kirsten’s stitcher guide of sorts — is electric. “You’ll watch their friendship blossom, and while I don’t think their relationship will develop in the most expected way, it’ll definitely happen in a way people will enjoy,” Ishta teases. As for TV’s general ‘shipping culture, she admits, “I just found out what ‘OTP’ means recently. I had to ask my niece!”

4. Answers are coming. Unlike some shows — which manage to stretch one mystery over, say, six seasons — Stitchers offers instant gratification in terms of answering fans’ burning questions. One major aspect the series will explore is Kirsten’s mysterious past, as Ishta says her character “has very little recollection of being younger.”

5. The water is warm. Because stitching requires Kirsten to be almost entirely submerged in water, Ishta spends quite a bit of time in the set’s giant tank — but she assures us it’s a very humane process. “We have one tank day per episode … and I’d spend upwards of six hours in the water on any given day,” she explains. “You don’t want to drink a lot of coffee in the morning, because then you’ll be getting in and out a lot. And they kept it at room temperature, so I was never cold… but I did get pruney.”

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Reply #128 posted 06/03/15 9:23am

JoeBala

Allen Stone Live at Java Jazz Festival 2014

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Reply #129 posted 06/03/15 9:41am

JoeBala

See the cover for Sara Bareilles's new book, 'Sounds Like Me: My Life (So Far) in Song' -- EXCLUSIVE

Sara Bareilles is taking her own advice: The “Brave” singer is writing a book of essays called Sounds Like Me: My Life (So Far) In Song, and EW has the exclusive cover reveal below.

Sounds Like Me will cover the five-time Grammy nominated singer/songwriter’s journey through her career and all the highs and lows that entails. She’ll tell the stories behind her most popular songs, and writes about finding the balance between making art for herself, and commercially successful music. Ben Folds writes the book’s introduction, saying, “For me, this book, like her songs, is having a conversation with the lady herself.”

“It feels infinitely more vulnerable to speak about my life without the metaphor and mask of music or my singing voice,” Bareilles says in a release. “I tried to be candid. I tried to remember things in an unbiased way. I tried to be at least a little funny…. Sounds Like Me is a collection of stories about my own self-discovery. Each essay is anchored by a song that helped me build a deeped understanding of who I am as an artist and person.”

Sounds Like Me hits shelves Oct. 6. Check out the cover below:

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Reply #130 posted 06/03/15 10:12am

JoeBala

Sundance Film Review: ‘Dope’Dope SundanceJANUARY 24, 2015 | 11:24PM PT

Rick Famuyiwa's indie-est project since 'The Woods' is a buoyant teen caper comedy that's one of this year's brighter Sundance commercial prospects.

Dennis Harvey

Film Critic

Sure to be one of the buzzier commercial prospects coming out of Sundance this year, “Dope” is a buoyant teenage caper that has at least as much in common with John Hughes-style high-school comedies as it does with most ‘hood narratives involving drugs, gangs and crime. That mix risks silliness at times, but there’s so much playful energy and wit to Rick Famuyiwa’s indie-est project since “The Wood” (1999) that few viewers will mind. A soundtrack featuring new songs by Pharrell Williams will be a big plus in promoting a film that might conceivably fall between arthouse and mainstream camps theatrically, but should play well to any wider audiences it reaches.


High-school senior Malcolm (Shameik Moore) embodies one cliche demographically: He’s a poor black Los Angeleno supported by a single working mom (Kimberly Elise), his father long gone (back to Africa, in fact). But in other ways, he embodies something else entirely. He, as well as best friends Jib (Tony Revolori, “The Grand Budapest Hotel”) and Diggy (Kiersey Clemons), are all about “white stuff” — meaning they like things that most in their black Inglewood neighborhood consider White People Territory, including classic ’90s hip-hop culture, BMX biking, getting good grades and miscellaneous geek fixations. They’ve even formed their own punk band. This just gets them regularly picked on by gangbangers in and out of school; going home each day, they run a gauntlet of bullying jocks, Bloods and dealers.

One of the latter, Dom (A$AP Rocky) turns a chance encounter into an excuse to use Malcolm as go-between in his attempts to woo Nakia (Zoe Kravitz), the cornrowed beauty his messenger boy was already crushing on. This results in all of the above characters intersecting at a club for Dom’s birthday party that night. When the birthday celebrant’s backroom drug deal turns into a gun melee, Malcolm scores points with Nakia by ushering her to safety. It’s not until the next day that he realizes he’s unknowingly ushered something else out — Dom stuck $100,000 worth of Ecstasy into the high schooler’s backpack.

Apprising Diggy and Jib of his predicament, Malcolm is determined to get rid of the stuff before he’s killed, or before its detection kills his hopes of Ivy League enrollment. But it turns out Dom is now temporarily behind bars, and fully armed others are already pursuing the missing goods. Instructions to hand them over to Dom’s surrogate results in a mid-film comic highlight embroiling the three youths in possible virginity loss (to Chanel Iman’s libidinous Lily), jamming in the home studio of a rich kid (Quincy Brown), fleeing a fast-food-joint shootout, and just making it to an appointment with a Harvard interviewer (Roger Guenveur Smith). After that mess, the kids decide they might as well sell the drugs themselves, using a hacker/dealer/wigger, Will (Blake Anderson) to show them the ropes, and choosing Bitcoin as their legality-evading transaction payment.

By the time that scheme has gone viral (as does the protags’ band, via YouTube), the helmer’s freewheeling screenplay has cheerfully snapped any remaining tether to reality. At this point, a movie hitherto crammed to the gills with incident overcompensates by doing a little too much preachy telling rather than showing in its last stretch, as if it weren’t already obvious that its heart is in the right place — as opposed to, you know, the blithely pro-drug-dealing wrong place. But the fun momentum of “Dope’s” breakneck plotting and snappy dialogue easily overcome any momentary attack of earnestness.

The cast, drawn from comedy, rap, TV, modeling and other spheres, is sharply on form throughout, as is Famuyiwa’s direction; the pic’s esprit is amplified by every editorial trick in the book, from split-screen to freeze-frames. Rachel Morrison’s widescreen lensing provides plenty of equally antic eye candy, abetted by colorful design contributions. The crowded various-artists soundtrack is first-rate, not least the couple songs allegedly created by the protags’ punk trio, Oreo.

Sundance Film Review: 'Dope'

Reviewed at Sundance Film Festival (competing), Jan. 24, 2015. Running time: 105 MIN.

Production

A Significant Prods. and I Am Other Entertainment presentation in association with Revolt Films. Produced by Nina Yang Boniovi, Forest Whitaker. Executive producers, Michael Y. Chow, Rick Famuyiwa, David Lonner. Co-producers, Mimi Valdes, David Grace. Co-executive producer, Sean Combs.

Crew

Directed, written by Rick Famuyiwa. Camera (color, widescreen, HD), Rachel Morrison; editor, Lee Haugen; music, Pharrell Williams, Germaine Franco; production designer, Scott Falconer; costume designer, Patrik Milani; art director, Lawson Brown; set decorator, Christine Eyer; sound, Mary Jo Devenney; re-recording mixers, Craigg Mann, Laura Wiest; supervising sound editor, Mann; assistant directors, Tony Steinberg, Mark Oppenheimer; casting, Kim Coleman.

With

Shameik Moore, Tony Revolori, Kiersey Clemons, Kimberly Elise, Keith Stanfield, De'Aundre Bonds, Roger Guenveur Smith, Blake Andeson, Zoe Kravitz, A$AP Rocky, Forest Whitaker, Quincy Brown, Rick Fox, Amin Joseph, Ashton Moio, Chanel Iman.

Sundance 2015: Dope review – easily meme-worthy teen comedy

5/5stars

Three teens obsessed with 90s hip-hop find an unexpected stash of drugs courtesy of A$AP Rocky – Rick Famuyiwa nails it in this fast and funny flick

Dope film still
The nerds will inherit … from left, Tony Revolori, Kiersey Clemons and Shameik Moore in Dope. Photograph: David Moir/AP

Every generation has a teen comedy that speaks perfectly to the time it was made, whether it’s Sixteen Candles, Clueless, or Mean Girls. Dope, written and directed by Rick Famuyiwa (Our Family Wedding) is yet another update of the familiar formula, where a bunch of nerds have their revenge and eventually come into their own, defeat the jocks, rule the school, and get the girls who would be way too pretty for them in real life. Dope could very well end up in the ranks of this canon, endlessly played on repeat on cable and quoted in meme after meme on Tumblr. The funny thing is, in doing so, it would become the most subversive of them all.

And it’s not because the movie features teens dealing “molly” for bitcoin on the internet or because it takes place in the Bottoms, one of the worst neighbourhoods in Inglewood, California. Malcolm (Shameik Moore) and his two best friends, Jib (The Grand Budapest Hotel’s Tony Revolori) and Diggy (Kiersey Clemons), are nerds obsessed with 90s hip-hop culture and what their classmates dub “white-people stuff”. After a chance encounter with a drug dealer (A$AP Rocky), Malcolm ends up with a backpack full of drugs that he doesn’t know what to do with. Eventually unloading the MDMA might get him into Harvard, but it will take a few wacky adventures before he gets there.

Dope is a crisp and quickly-paced film, but the comedy is front-loaded into the beginning. The laugh-out-loud moments, of which there are plenty, seem to be forgotten later in attempts at a more aspirational tone. Some parts of Malcolm and the crew’s adventure – especially a run-in with a drug dealer’s spoiled children – seem superfluous, but the language is perfect, with the teens turning to social media to express themselves rather than scribbling in each other’s yearbooks.

Famuyiwa’s movie hews close to the teen-comedy formula, complete with party scenes in which the hero almost loses his virginity to a too-beautiful girl (Chanel Iman), and the inevitable senior prom. That’s what makes this movie so revolutionary. It’s about kids who we’re generally not asked to care about: a cast almost entirely made up of actors of colour. Like John Hughes’s best work, this is wish-fulfilment: we all want to see ourselves turned from disrespected nerd to badass big man. However, we’ve shifted here from the wealthy suburbs of Chicago to the hood. The subversion is in getting a mass audience to see themselves in teens we’re so often told are unworthy of our time or admiration.

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Reply #131 posted 06/04/15 5:45am

JoeBala

Elvis Presley Named 'Music Icon' With Postal Service 'Forever' Stamp

Singer is sixth music legend to receive honor, following Lydia Mendoza, Johnny Cash, Ray Charles, Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin

BY RYAN REED June 3, 2015elvis presleyElvis Presley will be the sixth "Music Icon" honored with a Postal Service "Forever" stamp. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty

Elvis Presley will be honored with a "Forever Stamp" as the sixth official inductee into the Postal Service's "Music Icon Series," joining legends Lydia Mendoza, Johnny Cash, Ray Charles, Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin in the elite group.

Graceland, Presley's Memphis estate, will host a First-Day-of-Issue dedication ceremony on August 12th as part of their "Elvis Week" celebration. The stamp image will be available to preview at a later date; meanwhile, fans are encouraged to spread the word on social media using the hashtag "#ElvisForever."

The U.S. Postal Service launched the "Music Icon" series in 2013 as a tribute to "beloved musicians whose blends of sound and way of life broke musical boundaries." The first round of inductees featured Tejano trailblazer Lydia Mendoza, country-folk legend Johnny Cash and R&B-soul genius Ray Charles. Last year, the Postal Service honored two Sixties rock icons, Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin.

This isn't Presley's first brush with stamp greatness: In 1993, the rock and roll icon was immortalized on a stamp featuring a watercolor painting by Mark Stutzman. In an unprecedented move, the Postal Service allowed the public to vote between two portraits: Stutzman's rendering of a young Presley and John Berkey's image of a latter-day Presley. Pre-addressed ballots were handed out through American post offices and in an April 1992 issue of People – and more than 75 percent of voters chose Stutzman's version. The stamp earned an official dedication at Graceland after midnight on Presley's 58th birthday, January 8th, 1993.

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Reply #132 posted 06/04/15 6:25am

JoeBala

Lionel Richie May Have Bedded Your Mother or Grandmother; Tells GQ He Wanted to "Make Love to Every Girl"

DJ JUSMUSIC TUE, JUN 02, 2015 NEWS, R&B NEWS0 COMMENTS
Lionel Richie May Have Bedded Your Mother or Grandmother; Tells GQ He Wanted to "Make Love to Every Girl"

Playa, Playa!

OG Lionel Richie is sharing some of his music industry secrets in a new interview in the July 2015 issue of British GQ, available on Thursday June4th.

During the start of his music career, with the Commodores, Richie and his crew had one goal -- to "make love to every girl in the world."

"When the touring [with the Commodores] started we knew we were gonna do a hundred shows in as many cities, maybe more, in a year. So we decided: we're gonna make love to every girl in the world. That was our mission statement," Richie told GQ.

Richie, now 65, was young at the time, and he and his boys kept score of all the women they were bedding. But he adds that after a while, sleeping with so many women started to take a toll on his body.

"I mean…we all kept score, yeah. We were college guys, so we liked stats. And when you start out, it's madness: there's one in the morning, one in the afternoon, one in the evening. It's great. You're killing it," Richie Adds. "But all of a sudden you get to the fifth show and you're, like: Everybody get out of my room! You can't do it. I don't care whether you're 19 and sexually possessed - you can't do that and put on high-heeled boots and run across the stage every night."

However, Lionel - who divorced his second wife Diane Alexander in 2004 - said the pressure of performing and seducing women eventually turned him onto drugs.

He explained: "That's why drugs became so inviting: because you get a hit of this, and it gives you the stamina. But how long does it last? And then you're in rehab, and what kind of bullshit is that? Or you're falling down on stage and passing out halfway through the show."

Although this time was magical for Richie, he had to end the escapade abruptly in fear of fathering children with strange women.

He details: "It wasn't the sex and it wasn't the drugs. It was... babies. Holy shit! The first time you get that phone call when someone says... hey, guess what? That's called fear, shock and awe. That's when I realized the gun was loaded, you know what I'm saying?….you start hearing stories from guys in other bands of 'I went to Philadelphia to meet my kid', 'I went to New York to meet my kid.' That puts the fear into the heart of any 19- or 20-year-old. A lot of guys didn't care. But fortunately enough, The Commodores had a different standard there. We had some basic ground rules. As much as I would love to think we were dangerous we weren't as dangerous as the dangerous guys. We were Ivy League funksters as opposed to the hard core."

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Watch Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi Jam With Sharon Jones

Former Allman Brothers guitarist previews a family tour 10 years in the making

BY NICK MURRAY May 28, 2015
Tedeschi Trucks BandThe Tedeschi Trucks Band's Wheels of Soul Summer Tour features Sharon Jones and Doyle Bramhall II. Rommel Demano/GettyNext week, the Tedeschi Trucks Band and Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kingsbegin one of the summer's biggest tours. The two groups – plus opener Doyle Bramhall II – aren't playing stadiums or arenas, but they're both bringing double-digit ensembles that could crowd even the country's largest stages.

"There's not many groups that travel with bands carrying that many people on the road at our level," says guitarist Derek Trucks. "Most bands that have 10, 12 people, they're drawing twice as many fans and the finances are different. It's a labor of love when you're doing small theaters."

For this reason, Trucks and his wife Susan Tedeschi (who sings and plays guitar) sought out an opener who they'd want to both hear every night and hang out with between shows. In Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, they found their perfect match, another collection of old souls fronted by a strong woman with an incredible voice. Here, watch them sing an unplugged version of Sam Cooke's "Bring It on Home to Me," accompanied by Bramhall, Mark Rivers and Mike Mattisonbackstage after a warm-up gig in Central Park:

"I remember seeing Susan for the first time and being struck just with how powerful she was," Trucks says. "Really from the beginning, I was thinking that I'd love to record or put a band together with her. Then we ended up getting married, having two kids. . .10 years go by and you realize, 'We should take a stab at this.'"

For the next two months, Trucks is traveling not just with his kids – who will be on summer vacation – but also his parents, who will help with both babysitting and selling merch. After years of jumping between multiple projects, he's enjoying the chance to focus on one group, spending time with his family and friends as they work through new and old songs.

"There was one point where between the Allman Brothers and the Phil Lesh thing and the solo band and the Clapton tour, it was a lot of juggling and a lot of changing hats," he continues. "Now we're working on a record, and it's been really nice to just live with it. It's the first time I've been able to do that as an adult, and I gotta say, it's pretty liberating."

The Tedeschi Trucks Band's Wheels of Soul Summer Tour begins June 5th in Paso Robles, California and continues until August 4th, when it comes to a conclusion in Lewiston, New York. See the full schedule here.

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Reply #133 posted 06/04/15 8:07am

JoeBala

Summer In Reverse, Memory Going Backwards: Kail Baxley’s A Light That Never Dies



Written by: Alex Green

Kail Baxley sounds like Van Morrison if he had grown up in South Carolina and was weaned on Larry Brown’s Big Bad Love.

In many ways A Light That Never Dies is Baxley’s Astral Weeks, but shot thick with the swampy fever of the South and embroidered with the soulful lamentations that can only come from the heartsick, the lovelorn, the lonely and the lost.


Baxley’s voice is a stirring thing–it’s something you’ve known but never heard, something you’ve needed but never been able to find–and it gently stretches its wingsapan through numbers like the utterly rousing title track or the heaving mercy of “Tell The Falling Sun” with a rare and soulful grace.

Produced by Eric Corne and Baxley himself, A Light That Never Dies is an instant classic–it finds that rare groove that pivots from Sam Cooke to Amy Winehouse and back again. There are touches of the blues, hints of ska and calypso and miles and miles of soul.

There’s the finger-snapping blues of “Mr. Downtown,” while “Morning Light” sounds like summer in reverse, memory going backwards, and time freezing into a still life.

Elsewhere, “The Ballad Of Johnny” is a ghostly shuffle, “Owe” is a spare lamentation, and the album-closing “Mirrors Of Paradise” is a ray of hope sailing over the river of the damned.

Or the other way around.

Either way, it’s so beautiful the damned and the hopeful could be mistaken for each other, so it really doesn’t matter what side you’re on.

Astonishing work.

Kail Baxley: A Light That Never Dies

Written by Hal Horowitz June 3rd, 2015 at 11:07 am


Kail Baxley
A Light That Never Dies
(Forty Below)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

It has been so long since soul music has pushed boundaries, it’s hard to remember the heyday of the era when that was commonplace. You have to go back to the early-mid 70s when artists such as Bill Withers, Gil Scott-Heron, Curtis Mayfield, Isaac Hayes, Bobby Womack, War and Marvin Gaye, among others, were consistently experimenting with expanding soul’s horizons. That’s not to say that other more contemporary acts haven’t done excellent work in the field (Aloe Blacc and even Lenny Kravitz come to mind), but to acknowledge that these are few and far between.

So it comes as a pleasant surprise to hear South Carolina singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist Kail Baxley’s sophomore release. The follow-up to 2013’s impressive debut better displays his influences and abilities. He gracefully and effortlessly combines gospel, blues, pop, tinges of harder rock and even classical themes with immediately distinctive vocals. The result is a riveting 11 songs that herald Baxley as a major talent.

You will be immediately hooked by the opening “Light that Never Dies” with its bluesy harmonica, understated horns and vibe that feels both psychedelic and rootsy, a tough and unusual balancing act. Baxley’s laid back voice flirts and floats with music that avoids easy pigeonholing other than to say it’s immensely soulful. While the album is frontloaded with its most immediately accessible tracks, things really get interesting on its final third. That’s where the audacious “Troubled Souls” which shifts from John Martyn-styled folk to tough riff rock, lives. It’s followed by the hushed, acoustic “Chasing James Dean.” It allows Baxley’s moving and poetic lyrics free reign along with only a swampy southern slide guitar as accompaniment.

Regardless of the selection, there are musical surprises waiting, whether it’s the songwriting, vocals, instrumentation or arrangements, and likely in all. Most of this is like nothing we have heard before, certainly recently, which in this world of cookie-cutter artists is perhaps the biggest compliment one can pay. It’s also refreshing to see a relatively new artist be so immune to commercial considerations, both musically and visually by not even putting his picture on the package.

It’s too early to add Baxley to the list of those legendary names who have been so influential in soul’s history, but with this daring, uncompromising and genre-pushing release, he’s well on his way.

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Reply #134 posted 06/04/15 9:48am

JoeBala

Salt n Pepa talk performing, touring and 'American Idol'

June 3, 20156:59 AM MST
Salt n Pepa
Photo by Cindy Ord/Getty Images for #ImNoAngel Caci

It has been nearly 30 years since their debut album, but Salt-N-Pepa is still going strong as one of the most successful groups in hip hop. They are the first all-female rap crew and one of the first rap artists to cross over to the pop mainstream. They lead to the influencing many rappers on the scene and especially paved the wave for female rappers.

They hit the scenes with songs from the debut album such as "My Mike Sounds Nice", " Chick on the Side but it was a b side of the song "Push It" that became a massive hit, climbing to the Top 20 on the pop charts. The song became one of the first rap songs to be nominated for a Grammy Award.

They followed with songs "Expression", "Shake Your Thang", "Whatta Man" and "None of Your Business". The group took some time away from music to raise families, pursue acting and more.

They have been back on the scene on reality TV and touring. They recently have been featured in GEICO’s It's What You Do commercial series.

The group brought some nostalgia to “American Idol” as part of the show’s ’80s-themed week. Sandra “Salt” Denton and Cheryl “Pepa” James, rocked the mic while performing their 1986 hit “Push It,” which had judges Jennifer Lopez, Keith Urban, and Harry Connick Jr. and the audience dancing.

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Janet Jackson announces her first new album in seven years

June 4, 20155:01 AM MSTJanet Jackson attends the Giorgio Armani fashion show as part of Milan Fashion Week Womenswear Fall/Winter 2013/14 on February 25, 2014 in Milan, Italy
Janet Jackson attends the Giorgio Armani fashion show as part of Milan Fashion Week Womenswear Fall/Winter 2013/14 on February 25, 2014 in Milan, Italy
Photo by Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images

Last month, Janet Jackson released a teaser on her 49th birthday suggesting her return to music. Yesterday (June 3), she announced a new album is coming this fall, via BMG. This marks her first LP since 2008's “Discipline.” The upcoming release will also be her first outing with her newly formed label Rhythm Nation, which will “offer a home to both new and established recording artists,” according to a press release. Stay tuned for more details.

In the previously released trailer, Ms. Jackson also promised she'll embark on a new world tour in support of the album. So far, there are no new details on this. It will be her first world tour since 2011. Jackson's new partnership with BMG is a bit different. Unlike traditional record deals, this one is an “artist services deal,” which allows the artist to retain ownership of their recordings and “full oversight of all costs and revenues.”

Jackson's last record, “Discipline,” was release via Island Records, but the singer left the label shortly after the release.

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TV Review: ‘The Whispers’

The Whispers TV Review ABC
COURTESY OF ABC
MAY 29, 2015 | 08:30AM PT
TV Columnist

Although “The Whispers” was developed by writer Soo Hugh, ABC is eager to cite Steven Spielberg’s involvement, and no wonder: This summer series is a veritable mashup of the director’s filmography — a pinch of “E.T.” here, a dollop of the Spielberg-produced “Poltergeist” there, and a soupcon of what might be called “Invisible Encounters of the Kid Kind.” None of that takes away from the modest enjoyableness of the show, which drips clues over the first three episodes, as kids interact with an “imaginary friend” only they can see. Less imagination is required to see “The Whispers” hooking enough viewers to make some noise.


The program opens on a creepy note, with a 6-year-old girl luring her mom up to a tree house, where the woman experiences a harrowing fall. The case catches the attention of an FBI agent, Claire Bennigan (Lily Rabe), who specializes in children, and begins to look more suspicious when she unearths the fact that another kid cited the same name of an imaginary friend, Drill, in a similar incident.

Claire’s life, meanwhile, is extremely complicated. For starters, her husband was reported killed in a military accident, and she’s raising their deaf son (Kyle Harrison Breitkopf) alone. In addition, her dalliance with a Defense Dept. operative, Wes (Barry Sloane, not far from his “Revenge” mode), has complicated both of their lives. Oh, and did we mention that Barry, like Claire, has a young daughter, who seems to be a little old for imaginary friends?

As noted, there are a lot of familiar elements here: Kids interacting with a slightly malevolent presence, a strange visitor that the parents can’t see, and the always-reliable device of flickering lights and appliances. Moreover, there’s a bearded fellow (Milo Ventimiglia) hovering around the fringes, whose role in the plot gradually begins to come into focus.

Inevitably, all those scenes with young kids, aside from being a boon to on-set tutors, can’t help but feel a trifle manipulative. The adults, meanwhile, are serviceable for the purposes of the plot, but could use a little work character-wise, starting with Rabe, who, in terms of the way she delivers lines seems to have taken the title a bit too much to heart.

It’s always advisable to keep one foot on the floor with such programs — two other Spielberg-produced series, CBS’ “Extant” and “Under the Dome,” offer reminders of that wisdom — but “The Whispers” has a polished feel, enough twists, and moves just well enough to steadily build on its central mystery. So for now, anyway, even if the kids aren’t all right, the show is.

TV Review: 'The Whispers'

(Series; ABC, Mon. June 1, 10 p.m.)

Production

Filmed in Vancouver by Clickety-Clack and Amblin Television in association with ABC Studios.

Crew

Executive producers, Steven Spielberg, Justin Falvey, Darryl Frank, Zack Estrin, Mark Romanek, Dawn Olmstead; co-executive producer, Soo Hugh; producer, Sarah Caplan; directors, Romanek, Brad Turner; writer, Hugh; camera, Jeff Cutler; production designer, Joaquin Grey; editor, John Refoua; music, Robert Duncan; casting, Junie Lowry-Johnson, Libby Goldstein. 60 MIN.

Cast

Lily Rabe, Barry Sloane, Milo Ventimiglia, Derek Webster, Kristen Connolly, Kylie Rogers, Kyle Harrison Breitkopf

Uncle Buck Reboot With All-Black Cast Coming to ABC

ABC

Mike Epps will star as Uncle Buck

Uncle Buck is officially coming to TV. ABC has greenlit to series a reboot of the 1989 John Candy film. In a spin on the original film’s casting, the series version has an all-black cast led by Mike Epps (The Hangoverfranchise).

The pitch: “Uncle Buck (Mike Epps) is a fun loving but irresponsible guy who needs a job and a place to stay. By happy coincidence, his nieces and nephew’s Nanny has just quit and his brother and sister-in-law need his help. His unconventional personality just may make him the right fit for the family and they may be the answer to his problems, too.”

The show sounds like it will be a potential good pairing for the network’s other family comedies, including Modern Family,The Middle and Black-ish.

Uncle Buck stars Epps as Buck, Nia Long as Alexis, James Lesure as Will, Iman Benson as Tia, Sayeed Shahidi as Miles and Aalyrah Caldwell as Maizy. “Uncle Buck” was written by Steven Cragg and Brian Bradley. Executive producers are Steven Cragg, Brian Bradley, Will Packer. Co-executive producers are Korin Huggins and Phil Traill. “Uncle Buck” is produced by Universal Television and ABC Studios.

The news comes on the heels of ABC ordering six dramas, including Shonda Rhimes’ The Catch, Don Johnson’s untitled oil boom project, biblical saga Of Kings and Prophets, FBI thriller Quantico, anthology series Wicked City and the Joan Allen-starring project The Family. The network also orderedthree comedies: a reboot of The Muppets, Ken Jeong’s Dr. Ken and Dan Savage’s The Real O’Neals, which stars Martha Plimpton.

We’re in the thick of a frantic period of TV broadcasters making big decisions, so expect more series orders today—and some verdicts on existing shows, as well. Follow@jameshibberd and @natalieabrams for up-to-the-minute details.

This article originally appeared on EW.com

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[Edited 6/4/15 9:50am]

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183104

ALBUM: Melody Gardot ‘Currency Of Man’

Rating:

2009’s uber-successful My One And Only Thrill saw Melody Gardot teaming up with renowned producer Larry Klein (Joni Mitchell, Herbie Hancock, Madeleine Peyroux) and continued the gradual assimilations of tropical elements into her music. This was expanded further on 2012’s orchestral The Absence, which diarised Gardot’s relentless travels and experiences.

Fourth album, Currency Of Man, announces a radical departure for an artiste who restlessly stretches definitions of her art. Gardot escorts us on a new musical voyage, foregoing digital methods in favour of analogue equipment and venturing into the past/passed for musical inspiration, yet remaining in the present for lyrical verité. These truths reside in incisive observations of precarious times in an ever-distressed world, what Gardot terms “reflective-collective”.

Radio static and crackly field recordings create a documentarian feel that encapsulates the social dimension of songs centred on characters observed on the streets of Los Angeles, “people who were experiencing life on the fringe”. Forensic ruminations articulate how social and economic inequality (food banks, homelessness, famine) and conflict fuelled by racial and religious prejudice are exploited to create a culture of division and fear. From tropical climes to topical chimes.

Opener ‘It’s Gonna Come’ sets the tone with strong lyrical themes about seeing “that man” and those “politicians” to a backbeat of filmic strings and jazzy horns, implying that most “don’t see” at all. The fade-out intones “these are battles we’re going to have continuously”. ‘Preacher Man’ relives the story of Emmett Till, a black teenager in a febrile 1950s America whose racially motivated murder signified a landmark moment in the struggle for Civil Rights. Backed by a social media assembled choir this a country-funk lament to a horrific and depressingly still relevant tale.

‘Don’t Misunderstand’ begins with the voice of “America” seeping from a radio, a breathy slow-paced tune full of mystery. ‘If I Ever Recall Your Face’ evokes Dory Previn, wistful vox and sweeping sounds. The Ameri-Franco sheen is in full evidence here, augmented by the cinematic orchestrations and Gallic joie de vivre of arranger Clément Ducol. ‘Bad News’ is a Bluesy-chanteusy-boozy warning of portentous omens backed by inebriated trumpets and sax before the death knell message of “It’s closing time.” The seasoned drinker’s greatest fear.

‘Once I Was Loved’ closes the album in a nostalgic manner, Gardot’s heartfelt delivery struggling to remember the times of yore and looking ahead to the final days. A melancholic yet optimistic finale to a multi-layered collection.

Gardot possesses a utopian outlook (and why not?) in dystopian times, believing in peace and love without ever being gloopy or the pejorative ‘idealistic”; hope and positivity ooze throughout. Holding a mirror up to the world she is effectively crying “Armageddon tired of all this misery”. She has a point.

Currency Of Man is out now via Decca.

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'Late Show With Stephen Colbert' Names Bandleader

Musician Jon Batiste will be front and center when Colbert makes his CBS debut on Sept. 8. AP ImagesMusician Jon Batiste will be front and center when Colbert makes his CBS debut on Sept. 8.

Late Show With Stephen Colbert is starting to take shape.

Colbert has named jazz musician Jon Batiste as his new show's bandleader, CBS announced Thursday.

“His music makes the audience feel so good, we may have to install a ‘Do Not Make Love’ sign,” said Colbert.

Added Batiste: “I’m thrilled! This is a match made in heaven. Get ready for a love riot in late night."

A musician, educator and humanitarian from New Orleans, Batiste hails from a long line of celebrated musicians. He grew up playing percussion and piano in his family's band before studying at Juilliard, where he received both his undergraduate and master's degrees. He has performed internationally with his band, Stay Human, and has collaborated with artists including Prince, Lenny Kravitz and Wynton Marsalis.

Known for his signature "love riots," Batiste has appeared on HBO's Treme and in Spike Lee's Red Hook Summer. One of the youngest Steinway Performing Artists of all time, he also serves as the artistic director at large of the National Jazz Museum in Harlem. Batiste is getting ready to release his first album on a major label this fall.

In addition to Colbert's statement, the Late Show also released a video showing Colbert introducing Batiste that was filmed in his native New Orleans.

The announcement came one day after Colbert released the first promo for his new show. In the clip, he shaved off his recently grown beard in preparation for his upcoming Late Show debut.

Late Show With Stephen Colbert is slated to premiere on Tuesday, Sept. 8, at 11:35 p.m. on CBS.

New Earbuds Allows User to Change Live Audio Environment

Here Active Listening System uses wireless earbuds and app to add sound effects and volume control to any situation

BY DANIEL KREPS June 3, 2015
bionic earsTwo wireless earbuds and a smartphone app may soon change the way we hear the world thanks to the Here Active Listening System.Two wireless earbuds and a smartphone app may soon change the way we hear our favorite bands and concerts. Doppler Labs have unveiled their newHere Active Listening System, an in-ear device that allows the user to control their live audio environment, whether it's boosting the bass at a club or drowning out a crying baby on an airplane. Quincy Jones and composer Hans Zimmer have signed on to the endeavor, with the artists acting as both advisor and investor.

Pono Neil Young

"Our hope is that Here will open up a new paradigm for the concert experience and for live listening," Doppler Labs co-founder and CEO Noah Kraft tells Rolling Stone. "Here has the potential to make every seat in the house the best seat in the house, from an audio perspective. You will be able to dial-in the perfect EQ for your environment, but also, as we build the Here platform, Doppler Labs will be able to recommend the perfect volume, EQ and effects for any given section based on your own historical audio preferences and the acoustics of that specific room."

The Active Listening System boasts features that allows users to alter the EQ of where they are, apply sound effects like reverb and vinyl crackle and use a Real World VolumeControl to adjust the volume of one's surroundings. An assortment of pre-set filters will also be available to reduce the noise of loud babies and bump up the bass of any sound, with the app allowing users to craft their own unique concert experience.

Doppler Labs has launched a Kickstarter to raise additional funds for their Listening System, with a goal of $250,000 aimed for July 1st. Those who back the project will have the opportunity to get their hands on the Here Active Listening System before it hits the public.

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Why 'Entourage' Creator Doug Ellin Chose a Harriet Tubman Biopic as His Next Project

Doug Ellin
Doug Ellin
AP Images

A version of this story first appeared in the June 12 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. To receive the magazine, click here to subscribe.

Move over, Ari, here comes Harriet. Doug Ellin is switching gears in a big way with his next HBO project: The Entourage creator is executive producing a Harriet Tubman biopic with Viola Davis. "My childhood friend Cliff Dorfman gave me Kate Clifford Larson’s book," Ellin says of the 2003 biography, Bound for the Promised Land.

Ellin became fascinated and thought Davis was "the perfect choice" to play Tubman, "so we set up a lunch and gave her the book. She loved it as well. It’s a personal passion for me because Harriet was so much more than just the Underground Railroad that most associate her with." The How to Get Away With Murder star agrees: "I want to be reintroduced to who she really is, other than the woman with the rags on her head who said, 'I’ll kill you if you don’t follow the North Star.' "

As for Larson, a historian whose Tubman biography had previously been optioned by independent documentary filmmakers, she is simply glad that a fuller picture of Tubman's story will finally get the screen treatment it deserves. "I don't know what to say," she says, chuckling at the tonal differences between Ari Gold and Harriet Tubman. "There are certain people that are going to be captivated by Harriet Tubman, and obviously these were the right people because they moved [the project] forward and now there's going to be a movie about her."

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‘Odd Mom Out’: TV Review

Barbara Nitke/Bravo

The Bottom Line

An amusing, quick-witted basic cable sitcom

Airtime

Premieres June 8 at 10 p.m. (Bravo)

Creator

Jill Kargman

Cast

Jill Kargman, Andy Buckley, K.K. Glick, Joanna Cassidy, SeanKleier, Abby Elliott

Comic author Jill Kargman plays a version of herself in Bravo’s new series about the spoiled denizens of Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

The target is a small one, but author and actress Jill Kargman’s aim is consistently true in this quick-witted sitcom adaptation of her 2007 book Momzillas, which skewers a certain type of blue blood Big Apple resident. To be sure, Odd Mom Out’s Jill Weber (Kargman) isn’t quite the spa-loving, Bergdorf-shopping, Pilates-practicing gal that her neighbors and family are. She’s a bit more of a privileged punk, sporting a wrist tattoo and tossing off salty quips between taking care of her loving lawyer husband Andy (Andy Buckley) and their three rambunctious children.

It’s because of Andy, anyway, that she has such an up close and personal view of the Manhattan gentry. Andy’s mother, Candace (Joanna Cassidy) and his brother, Lex (Sean Kleier) are the epitome of spoiled affluence, both born into money, obsessed with making more (Lex just closed a nine-figure deal bringing bagels to China) and intent on taking advantage of all the perks that come with a life of easy luxury. Lex’s wife Brooke (Abby Elliott) is similarly in thrall to the pleasures and benefits of the almighty dollar, and even her body appears to know it. One of the best jokes in the premiere revolves around how, even at seven months pregnant, Brooke barely shows a bump.

Jill’s method of dealing with this cloistered world involves a lot of sarcasm and self-deprecation, much of it bounced off of her snarky best friend Vanessa (K.K. Glick), as well as a few steps inside the circle of entitlement whenever the opportunity presents itself. She’s both appalled observer and shameless participant, and Kargman, playing a variation on herself, clearly relishes exploring that divide. She may frequently roll her eyes at the spoon-fed tastes of these simpleminded aristos (“No bread!” they scream at waiters in a particularly hilarious running gag), but given the chance she’ll gladly go for a makeover at a high-end day spa and trill to the tenuous results at the expense of everything and everyone else.

The ongoing joke is that she always comes back to her senses, advantaged though they may be. Even with Andy’s cog-in-a-machine attorney job, Jill and her family are still six-figures strong, and the tension between seeing that as lifestyle-sufficient or as a hole to climb out of provides for much pointed comic fodder. The major recurring plotline in the first three episodes sent out for review (ten installments have been ordered in total) centers on Jill’s attempts to get her kids into a tony private school. Kargman, a kind of Upper East Side Shelley Duvall, shows off her considerable physical and verbal comic skills as she exasperatedly deals with shade-throwing socialites (guest star Dana Ivey is especially adept with the withering glances) and application deadlines that require both constant cell phone access and cross-town hand delivery of the paperwork.

Her sense of humor is so specific and expertly realized, not to mention superbly complemented by each supporting cast member, that it’s often easy to overlook how fish-in-a-barrel the show’s objects of ridicule are. (Many among the NYC upper classes are self-absorbed, flaming a-holes? You don’t say.) Regardless, Kargman’s intimate knowledge of this elite universe always feels grounded in first-hand experience, and the laughs are frequent and genuine. So, congrats, one-percenters — you have a Louie to call your own.

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Keith Richards hints at new Rolling Stones studio album

June 4, 20158:36 PM MSTKeith Richards and Mick Jagger of The Rolling Stones perform live at Allphones Arena on November 12, 2014 in Sydney, Australia
Keith Richards and Mick Jagger of The Rolling Stones perform live at Allphones Arena on November 12, 2014 in Sydney, Australia
Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images

Rolling Stones fans patiently hoping for a new studio album from the band may not have to wait too much longer. Stones co-founder Keith Richards has revealed the band discussed the possibility of returning to the recording studio while in rehearsals prior to the start of their 2015 Zip Code Tour of North American tour.

The iconic Stones guitarist revealed the news during a new interview posted June 4 at Rolling Stone. Although their have been a number of Stones reissues, live releases, as well as solo, tribute and charity contributions from individual bandmembers, the legendary British rockers have not reunited to release a new studio album since 2005's A Bigger Bang.

Although industry revenue losses due to online piracy have partially behind the absence, the volatile relationship between Richards and songwriting partner, Stones frontman Mick Jagger has also played a pivotal role. Relations between the Glimmer Twins became frosty following some controversial remarks hat Richards made about Jagger in his bestselling 2010 memoir "Life."

Richards suggests in the interview that the tragic death in 2014 of Jagger's longtime girlfriend, L'Wren Scott has caused Jagger to reassess his priorities. Richards says, "Mick went through that terrible thing, and the band has become even more important to him because of that."

With the currently band enjoying what bandmate Ronnie Wood described as "the best vibe ever," Richards was asked about the possibility of a new studio album. "Funny you should mention that," Richards replied. "Just last week, the word 'studio' popped up while we were rehearsing. I said, 'Well, let's find a time. I'm ready!'"

Richards latest remarks follow on the heels of comments made by Jagger last month in a previous Rolling Stone interview, also expressing a desire to record a new Stones album. “I’d love to record a Stones album,” Jagger said. “If that doesn’t happen, then yes [to a solo record]. That’s a truthful answer."

Produced by AEG Live, The Stones' 2015 Zip Code Tour will continue on June 6 in Dallas, Texas, at AT&T Stadium with special guest Grace Potter. Tickets for all U.S. dates can be purchased at AXS.

See below for The Rolling Stones 2015 North American tour schedule. For the latest details on The Rolling Stones, click here.

Rolling Stones 2015 North American tour schedule:

June 6 – Dallas, Texas, AT&T Stadium (Grace Potter)
June 9 – Atlanta, Ga., Bobby Dodd Stadium (St Paul & The Broken Bones)
June 12 – Orlando, Fla., Orlando Citrus Bowl (The Temperance Movement)
June 17 – Nashville, Tenn., LP Field (Brad Paisley)
June 20 – Pittsburgh, Pa., Heinz Field (AWOLNATION)
June 23 – Milwaukee, Wis., Summerfest / Marcus Amphitheater (Buddy Guy)
June 27 – Kansas City, Mo., Arrowhead Stadium (Ed Sheeran)
July 1 – Raleigh, N.C., Carter-Finley Stadium (Avett Brothers)
July 4 – Indianapolis, Ind., Indianapolis Motor Speedway
July 8 – Detroit, Mich., Comerica Park (Walk The Moon)
July 11 – Buffalo, N.Y., Ralph Wilson Stadium (St. Paul & The Broken Bones)
July 15 – Quebec City, Quebec, Festival d’été de Québec

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San Diego County Fair offers a diverse lineup of music and comedy this summer

June 4, 20157:58 PM MST
Local singer/songwriter Savannah Philyaw set to perform at the San Diego County Fair on June 20th
John Hancock

The 2015 San Diego County Fair at the Del Mar Fairgrounds is once again playing host to a variety of musical acts this summer. Acts range from nationally recognized stars like Little Big Town and Colbie Caillat to local acts like singer/songwriterSavannah Philyaw and rock band Dropjoy.

There are also several tribute bands performing including the all female tribute to Iron Maiden, The Iron Maidens, and the only Johnny Cash tribute band officially recognized by the Cash family, Cash’d Out.

The ever popular 11th Annual Gospel Fest will be held on Saturday, June 27th. The festival features Donald Lawrence and Tamela Mann on the Heineken Grandstand Stage at 7 P.M. In addition various gospel acts will be held all day at all of the stages throughout the fair.
Opening weekend features 70’s disco favorite, KC and the Sunshine Band on Friday, a Bluegrass festival on Saturday, June 6th and country star, Gary Allan.

Every Thursday treat yourself to some golden oldies from the Solid Gold concertseries. Artists include, Vicki Carr whose hits include "It Must Be Him," "Pen In Hand" and "Can't Take My Eyes Off You." Vicki performs on June 11th. Other solid gold performers include Tony Orlando on June 18th, Judy Collins on July 2nd, and a tribute to Frank, Sammy, and Dean, The Las Vegas Rat Pack, on June 25th. All shows in the Solid Gold series start at 1 P.M. on the San Diego Showcase Stage.

On Fridays enjoy the comedy stylings of Sammy Obeid, Andrew Norelli, Frank Lucero, James P. Connoly, Eric Schwartz, Vargus Mason, Dwayne Perkins, and Karen Rontowski. All shows begin at 9 P.M. in the Turf Club and are hosted by Jason Love.

You can really get up close and personal with some of your favorite musicians and bands at the Paddock Concert Series. The Paddock Concert Series features nationally known artists and tribute bands performing in one of the Fair's most intimate settings. All concerts begin at 9 P.M. Set to perform in the series are Kaylin and Miles, saxophonist, Mindi Abair and the Boneshakers, blues guitar great The Robert Cray Band, and classic rock legend Iron Butterfly. Other popular acts in the series include,Three Dog Night, Tanya Tucker and The Marshall Tucker Band.

The Rock On Series is mostly tribute bands and begins nightly at 9 P.M. Bands include the aforementioned Iron Maidens, Matchbox TwentyToo, Billy Idolized, and Wicked Garden, a tribute to Stone Temple Pilot. The Rock On Series is also host to original music, including new comer and winner of San Diego Music Award for best new artist in 2014, Cody Lovaas.

Below is a complete schedule for the Heineken Grandstand Stage. Most concerts are free with fair admission but also have reserved seating available for an additional cost. A few of the concerts have additional admission costs. All shows start at 7:30 unless otherwise noted.
June 5 - KC and the Sunshine Band
June 6 - Gary Allan
June 7 – Banda MS
June 10 – Cheap Trick and Peter Frampton
June 11 – The Fab Four
June 12 – Terry Fator
June 13 – Colbie Caillat
June 14 – Los Tigres Del Norte
June 17 – Christina Perri
June 18 – Greg Allman
June 19 – Switchfoot 7:15
June 20 – Clare Bowen and Charles Esten
June 21 – Grupo Intocale
June 23 – Fifth Harmony
June 24 – Little Big Town
June 25 – Spirit West Coast – Early 5:30 show
June 26 – Charlie Wilson
June 27 – Gospel Festival
June 28 – Espinoza Paz
June 30 – Austin Mahone
July 1 – Voz del Mando
July 2 – Digifest
July 3 – Kansas
July 4 – Dana Carvey
July 5 – Calibra 50 and Banda Carnaval

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Robby Krieger at Music Lifeboat fundraiser this Sunday

June 5, 20157:4 ARobby Krieger headlining this Sunday's benefit for Music Lifeboat
Robby Krieger headlining this Sunday's benefit for Music Lifeboat
poster art Music Lifeboat

Robby at Music Lifeboat

Robby Krieger will be playing for the Music Lifeboat charity this Sunday June 7, 2015. Music Lifeboat provides grants to schools for music education. The benefit is being held at the IVAR Theater in L.A. and is formatted as what is being described as a “VH-1 Storytellers” and an “Actors Studio” session. One of the announced highlights of the show will be Krieger playing “Spanish Caravan” with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. Krieger will also be playing selections from artists and albums that influenced his guitar playing. There is also going to be an auction of Gibson Les Paul guitars signed by Robby prior to the event. The Ivar Theater is at 1605 Ivar Avenue, Los Angeles, CA, 90028. The Doors open at 5 pm and tickets are still available. Information and tickets are available at the Music Lifeboat website. Robby recently spoke with...Gary Moore to promote the event.

Krieger Father’s and Son’s

I haven’t run an article (or a mention) of Doors offspring in about three years, the main reason being they aren’t part of The Doors experience. Recently, Waylon Krieger has been singing with his father on “50 Years of The Doors Greatest Hits Tour” this past spring (and will be singing at this Sunday's Music Lifeboat event too). Waylon was recently interviewed by Alternative Nation in the article “My Dad Wrote ‘Light My ...’ Legacy” by Doug McCausland. In it Krieger reveals how he blew the chance to sing in the Manzarek-Krieger Band, by not showing up to the audition so the job went to Dave Brock, he talks about his time with the band Bloodline, and his relationship with his father and when it dawned on him that his father was a legend. When the younger Krieger was 11-12 he suddenly became popular in school and didn’t understand it and Robby took his son aside and explained it “Don’t you get it, man? You got The Beatles, The Stone, Hendrix,…and The Doors!” Krieger also talks about his renewed interest in acting. It’s an interesting interview that will give you some insight into what it’s like not only having a famous father but a legendary one.

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'Empire,' ' HBO among 2015 Television Critics Association (TCA) Award nominees

June 4, 20157:01 PM MST'Empire's' Taraji P. Henson
'Empire's' Taraji P. Henson
Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images for Critics&#039; Choice Television Awards

The 31st Annual TCA (Television Critics Association) Awards announced it nomineesThursday for the 2014-2015 season. This is fresh off the heels of the Critics’ Choice Television Awards presentation earlier in the week. The TCAs almost mirror the nominees from the CCTAs. Television critics seem to think alike. As usual HBOreceived the most nominations totaling seven, while ABC, CBS, AMC, and FX garnered five each amongst the networks. Fox’s ratings king “Empire” and Amazon’s breakthrough series “Transparent” each received four noms.

Many of the winners from TV’s Critics’ Choice are also nominated for a TCA Award. These include Taraji P. Henson (“Empire”), Amy Schumer (“Insider Amy Schumer”), Jeffrey Tambor (“Transparent”), and Bob Odenkirk (“Better Call Saul”). Once again what makes these television awards different from other TV critics groups? Television Critics Association members are full-time TV writers at newspapers, magazines, trade publications, news wire services, news syndicates, and text-based Internet news organizations.

The TCA Awards have been known to be an excellent precursor to the Emmys since 1984. Their Heritage Award has been given out since 2002. It celebrates iconic TV programs critics and viewers have come to love. Past winners included “The Simpsons,” “Saturday Night Live,” and “60 Minutes.” This is the same organization that holds press tours in the winter and summer annually. The TCA Awards will be held during their upcoming summer tour starting July 28 through Aug. 13. Unfortunately for television viewers, the TCAs will not be televised. Winners will be announced in a ceremony at the perennial Beverly Hilton Hotel on Aug. 8.

Here is a complete list of all nominees in all categories for the 2015 Television Critics Association Awards:

Program of the Year
“The Americans,” FX
“Empire,” Fox
“Game of Thrones,” HBO
“Mad Men,” AMC
“Transparent,” Amazon

Outstanding New Program
“Better Call Saul,” AMC
“Empire,” Fox
“The Flash,” The CW
“Jane the Virgin,” The CW
“Transparent,” Amazon

Outstanding Achievement in Comedy
“The Big Bang Theory,” CBS
“Inside Amy Schumer,” Comedy Central
“Jane the Virgin,” The CW
“Transparent,” Amazon
“Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt,” Netflix

Individual Achievement in Comedy
Julia Louis-Dreyfus, “Veep”
Gina Rodriguez, “Jane The Virgin”
Amy Schumer, “Inside Amy Schumer”
Jeffrey Tambor, “Transparent”
Constance Wu, “Fresh Off the Boat”

Outstanding Achievement in Drama
“The Americans,” FX
“Empire,” Fox
“Game of Thrones,” HBO
“Justified,” FX
“Mad Men,” AMC

Individual Achievement in Drama
Viola Davis, “How to Get Away With Murder”
Jon Hamm, “Mad Men”
Taraji P. Henson, “Empire”
Matthew Rhys, “The Americans”
Bob Odenkirk, “Better Call Saul”

Outstanding Achievement in Movies, Miniseries and Specials
“Bessie,” HBO
“The Honorable Woman,” SundanceTV
“The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst,” HBO
“Olive Kitteridge,” HBO
“Wolf Hall,” PBS

Outstanding Achievement in Reality Programming
“The Amazing Race,” CBS
“The Chair,” Starz
“Dancing With the Stars,” ABC
“RuPaul’s Drag Race,” Logo
“Shark Tank,” ABC

Outstanding Achievement in Youth Programming
“Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood,” PBS
“The Fosters,” ABC Family
“The Legend of Korra,” Nickelodeon
“Sesame Street,” PBS
“Switched at Birth,” ABC Family

Outstanding Achievement in News and Information
“60 Minutes,” CBS
“CBS Sunday Morning,” CBS
“The Daily Show With Jon Stewart,” Comedy Central
“Frontline,” PBS
“Last Week Tonight With John Oliver,” HBO

Heritage Award
“Friends”
“Late Show/Late Night with David Letterman”
“The Shield”
“Star Trek”
“Twin Peaks”

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #138 posted 06/06/15 7:27am

JoeBala

A record label with a social conscience: Tom Morello launches Firebrand Records

June 5, 20152:36 PM MST
Tom Morello (C) of the rock band Rage Against the Machine marches with Occupy Wall Street demonstrators during a May Day rally on May 1, 2012 in New York City. Demonstrators have called for nation-wide May Day strikes to protest economic inequality and po
Photo by Monika Graff/Getty Images

On a quest to bring back “socially conscious music” Rage Against the Machine and former Audioslave guitarist Tom Morello and musician Ryan Harvey of Riot-folk, a musician’s collective, have formed their own record label, Firebrand Records. The announcement and launch came June 4 after teasing about the project on Twitter, “What's black/white/Arab/Jewish/queer/straight/tortured/exiled/unbowed/unafraid & kickass. Find out 6-4-15 #Firebrand.”

According to the new label’s website, what makes Firebrand unique is its support ofactivism driven artists and lyrics. Some of the current artists have focuses in causes like Black Lives Matter, the fight against “tyranny and corruption,” refugees, international politics and depression among other things.

Co-founder Ryan Harvey not only participates as Firebrand’s co-conspirator, but also is signed as an artist. Harvey’s sound is of a different era, but its mixed with modern politics. On the activism front, Harvey has worked with veterans in the anti-war fight through the co-founding of The Civilian-Soldier Alliance. Also, he reportedly is a blogger and journalist.

Tom Morello also isn’t a stranger to activism, which would help explain his motivation behind the new label. "It's the kind of label that I wish had existed my entire artistic life," said Morello in an interview with Rolling Stone. Later on in the same article, Morello went on to say, “These are people who are not just revolutionary in their music, but with their actions.”

As for that music, it ranges from melodic electronic-esque singer songwriter duos to Swedish punk with a lot in between. It’s worth a listen.

.

In Conversation With Pat Boone at The Grammy Museum

June 5, 20154:05 PM MST
Pat Boone
Rating: 5 star

Music Icon Pat Boone came to the Grammy Museum Tuesday night for an “In Conversation With” event. Grammy museum director Bob Santelli conducted the interview in the Clive Davis Theatre where all of their special events are held. Many know Boone was a best selling artist of the 50’s and 60’s but did you know he had 38 Top 40 hits among multiple genres, hold the Billboard record for most weeks on the charts at 220 consecutive weeks, number 1 bestselling author, member of the Gospel Hall Of Fame, and appeared in over 12 movies. Just like his friend Elvis Presley, Boone never won a Grammy, since there were no Grammy Awards back when their major hits came out in the 50’s and early 60’s. 2014 marked the 60th anniversary of Boone’s music career, and year prior his 60th wedding anniversary with Shirley Boone. 2015 is the 60th anniversary of Boone’s major hit “Ain’t That A Shame” (Fats Domino Cover).

Pat Boone at The Grammy Museum -slide0
Alex Kluft

The event started at 8 P.M. with a reel of Boone movies including “Journey to the Center of the Earth,” “Bernardine” “State Fair,” and “The Yellow Canary.” Boone walked out to a standing ovation and sat down with Santelli for a Q&A. Boone discussed his music career, duets with other legendary artists, his white buck shoes, making music in different genres, and his heavy metal album and meeting Metallica and Alice Cooper. Early into the interview legendary music producer David Foster spoke about how Pat Boone was the first major pop star he had listened to and became a fan of. Towards the end a video of Boone singing with Ella Fitzgerald and another of him singing with Nat King Cole were shown. At the end of the Q&A a raffle was held for a signed pair of Boone white buck shoes. Before exiting Boone sang one song and brought his wife Shirley up to sing to. After the event Boone came out to the merchandise store for a signing. Attendees received a copy of Boone’s newly released duet vinyl of 13 recordings he picked to pay tribute to other great artists. This album commemorates his 60 years as a recording artist. This event was held the day after Boone's 81st Birthday.

Track Listing:
SIDE 1
Pat Boone & Ella Fitzgerald “I Wish I Were In Love Again” (1:16)
Pat Boone & Ella Fitzgerald “It Don’t Mean A Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing)” (2:15)
Pat Boone & Count Basie “I’ve Heard That Song Before” (1:17)
Pat Boone & Nat ‘King’ Cole “Nature Boy/Poison Ivy” (3:36)
Pat Boone & The Kingston Trio “Tom Dooley” (2:35)
Pat Boone & Anna Maria Alberghetti “You’re the Cream In My Coffee/The Coffee Song” (2:43)
Pat Boone & Connie Francis “My Happiness” (1:58)
SIDE 2
Pat Boone & Jo Stafford “Folk Medley” (6:37)
Pat Boone & George Shearing “Stranger In Paradise” (3:03)
Pat & Shirley Boone and the Boone Girls “Rock-A-Bye” (1:54)
Pat Boone & Andy Williams “Tenderly” (1:31)
Pat Boone & Roy Rogers “Cowboy Medley” (3:02)
Pat & Shirley Boone “May the Good Lord Bless and Keep You” (2:09)

.

Jill Scott Unwraps Unreleased Song "I Adore You" Ahead Of Greatest Hits Album

DJ JUSMUSIC FRI, JUN 05, 2015 MUSIC, R&B MUSIC0 COMMENTS
Jill Scott Unwraps Unreleased Song "I Adore You" Ahead Of Greatest Hits Album

R&B/Soul veteran Jill Scott will release a greatest hits collection entitled Golden Moments prior to dropping her next studio album. The forthcoming set is led by the sultry, unreleased Carvin & Ivan-produced song, "I Adore You," by way of the Hidden Beach vault.

A music video is being prepped -- the visual will be driven by personal fan images.

Listen: https://soundcloud.com/hi...ou-snippet

Golden Moments will arrive on June 16, but is available for pre-order now.

Early last month (May 2015), Scott issued the single, "Fools Gold," a record from her upcoming fifth studio album.

In addition to the upcoming releases, Jilly from Philly will launch a 25-city U.S. summer tour on July 13th in Pittsburgh, PA. The trek will make stops in big cities like Baltimore, NYC (Brooklyn), Atlanta, Houston, and Los Angeles before wrapping August 28th in Phoenix, AZ.

'Golden Moments' Tracklist:

01. Jilltro
02. Golden
03. He Loves Me
04. Crown Royal
05. Slowly Surely
06. My Love
07. It’s Love
08. Hate on Me
09. Whatever
10. Cross My Mind
11. The Way
12. The Fact Is (I Need You)
13. Long Walk
14. Comes To The Light
15. I Adore You (Unreleased)
16. Gettin In The Way

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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