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Reply #30 posted 04/12/16 3:14am

Hudson

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I would consider every artist that isn't considered a legend or currently able to get radio support a has been (or a never been), who cares. A lot of the best tracks of all time can be found on the albums of has beens.

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Reply #31 posted 04/12/16 3:21am

hausofmoi7

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http://www.irishtimes.com/culture/music/neneh-cherry-there-is-a-very-shallow-sexualised-entrapment-that-women-get-sucked-into-1.2602016

Neneh Cherry: ‘There is a very shallow, sexualised entrapment that women get sucked into’

Neneh Cherry has plenty to say, whether about appearing pregnant on Top of the Pops in 1988 or how things have changed for women in music

Neneh Cherry: “I still feel so unfinished, in a way, and that can really piss me off sometimes.” Photograph:  Rafa Rivas/AFP/Getty Images

Neneh Cherry: “I still feel so unfinished, in a way, and that can really piss me off sometimes.” Photograph: Rafa Rivas/AFP/Getty Images

‘Hello, darling.” Neneh Cherry answers the phone to you like you’re her best friend. She is just in from the market and is a bit flustered and can I just give her three minutes?

She is coming to Dublin at the end of the month to do a Q&A as part of the MusicTown festival. It was supposed to be with her husband, producer Cameron McVey, who has worked not only with Cherry but also Massive Attack and Portishead. But McVey’s in hospital getting a hip replacement. “He’s in hell right now,” she says, so it will just be her, which is no small thing. Cherry has plenty to say.

Mention Cherry to most women of a certain age and the image that will come to mind is her beautifully badass appearance on Top of the Pops in 1988. Cherry bounced around the stage to her breakthrough hit Buffalo Stance, seven months pregnant in black Lycra, back at a time when pregnancy in Ireland was still a slightly embarrassing, smock-wearing affair.

Cherry’s solo career went quiet after her 1996 album Man, and much was made of her “resurfacing” in 2014 with the well- received Blank Project. “There’s that thing with people if they haven’t seen or heard from you for a while, it’s like a weird, long, big sleep. ‘Why did you disappear?’ ”

There was no great mystery. She was busy with family and “life’s demands . . . My creative drive also comes from the way that I lead my life. So if I wasn’t in my life I don’t know that I’d have stuff to write about.”

After her third album in 1996 and the velvet toughness of tracks such asWoman, Cherry “felt like I kept banging my head against limitations. The environment of the success” was wonderful, she says, a complete surprise, but “the idea behind making Buffalo Stance and Raw Like Sushi wasn’t to be famous, it was to change things and do things the way that we do them, always with an idea of activism or a kind of rebellion”.

Numbers game

A numbers game began to take over, which she found frustrating. “I knew that I wanted to keep being in a place that was more experimental, feeling that I could throw out curve balls and that would be cool. If you’ve signed with the big dudes and put money into your pocket and bank accounts . . . then you’re running up debts and making videos that are costing more. You’re on a tour. It’s a f***ing weird commitment.”

Cherry’s two most recent albums were with the Smalltown Supersound label based in Norway, and the passage of time has brought its own freedom.

“It was like starting over a bit. And I guess where I am age-wise, I care, but I don’t really give a shit. I’m not trying to be or needing to be a new kid on the block or the new trendiest, hippest thing that’s happened.”

The industry has undergone significant changes since Cherry first appeared on the scene. “My youngest daughter, Mabel [McVey], is signed to Polydor. She’s just starting working on an album, but some of the conversations that we’ve had are similar to things that I went through.” The expectations of a major label remain the same: “Record sales and wanting hits.”

But one of the key differences Cherry sees is “the kind of temporary aspect. A lot of who you are and what you are and how well you’re doing is considered by how many people are on your Instagram. And also because of the amazing amount of music that’s being put out, and a lot of good music, there is this kind of continuous turnover.”

Artists no longer have time to develop. “Already since Blank Project, I’ve had discussions with people I’ve worked with that I should have more music out and all of the good work I did with the last album, the momentum’s kind of gone already. I’m like, okay, fine, there’s a momentum, but then there’s also a place where what you’re putting out has to have some value.’

“When I look at some of the artists around me, there’s this pressure to have success before you’re really walking.” Whereas before, “you’d listen to something and think, This is going to be good in, like, two albums.”

Cool in Lycra

What about the enduring legacy of the Top of the Pops appearance? She never imagined its impact. “When me and Judy [Blame, stylist and art director] got dressed to go on TOTP, we were sort of focusing on finding things that were cool that had Lycra in them,” she laughs.

“I sure as hell knew that I wasn’t gonna stand there and wear a weird cloak pretending that something else was happening . . . In a way it became the best thing about that whole journey, other than the music, was the fact that I was carrying Tyson inside of me.”

She was wary of “the overall thing that shadows over being a woman in making music and putting out records. Sexual energy is really strong, it’s everywhere and everything, so I never felt like I wanted to not let those juices flow. But it was definitely a powerful thing, carrying a child and feeling that it became a strong element in the content of what we were doing.”

I ask her if she feels women have made progress in the industry, now that overt sexuality is so prevalent, and perhaps even expected. She’s not sure how to answer.

“Sometimes it’s like, men this and men that, but yeah, there is a stereotypical, very shallow, sexualised entrapment that women get sucked into, and you open up a f***ing Vogue or just general media, and it’s enough to make you want to heave.” But it’s not straightforward. “It’s not like we’re always forced by some guy with a suit; we are also making sometimes very suspect choices.”

She is hopeful when she looks at her daughters. “They are wilful, really amazing, interesting, driven. There’s a phenomenal amount of women that are really on fire. A lot of us are realising that we thought we had come a lot further than we actually had. It’s like, oh shit, we’ve gotta keep our eye on the ball.

“Why don’t more girls want to produce records and why the f*** aren’t there more girls who . . . still now, when I see a woman playing the drums I literally get the horn. Oh my God, it’s so cool. But why do more girls want to be lead singers? We have all those issues of men being paid more than women, facts that are unbelievable. But there is a kind of sisterhood, a place where we’re being reactive and active and that’s really important.”

Cherry and McVey famously bankrolled acts such as Massive Attack when they were just starting out. She mentions Skinny Girl Diet, “a band that we were kind of . . . sponsoring sounds really wack, but working with a bit.” That relationship “didn’t quite work out”, but helping out new bands is “just a really natural part of how we work, because it becomes a two-way relationship. It’s an exchange.”

McVey has “a songwriting skill that, I have to admit, it’s sometimes f***ing irritating because he constantly just spits out these amazing songs”, and the collaboration between them is key to her music. “We have a thing that I value so much, that magic that we have between us, that crazy air pressure is where I work best. I’ll go away and write things on my own but then it’s very much about us coming together and making sense of the songs.”

Cherry has done the festival circuit for the past two summers, with RocketNumberNine, the two musicians she worked with on Blank Project, but now it’s “time to put my head down and get some new music made”.

She won’t be taking another hiatus. “I still feel so unfinished in a way, and that can really piss me off sometimes, but I’m also really thankful. If you let things go for too long, it’s a little bit like you’re starting over. It can be that feeling of going on to the next chapter rather than starting a new book.”

“It means finding the very human narrative of a man navigating between idealism and pragmatism, faith and politics, non- violence, the pitfalls of acclaim as the perils of rejection” - Lesley Hazleton on the first Muslim, the prophet.
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Reply #32 posted 04/12/16 8:01am

JKOOLMUSIC

I didn't say or think it but this article is sorta true on a certain "has been" and "has been" behaviors, I consider Bobby Brown one of the ultimate has-beens:

http://www.dailymail.co.u...-Blue.html

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He was the first to spot her potential, even writing her breakout hit Blue.

But there is no love lost between LeAnn Rimes and record promoter Bill Mack.

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Bill turned up to watch his former protege perform at Billy Bob's Texas on Saturday night, but was snubbed by the singer, according to his son Billy.

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'Usually don't rant, but it's the truth,' wrote the younger man, before explaining that the encounter was 'almost comical'.

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'My dad and I go to... see LeAnn Rimes and wish her the best,' he wrote, getting in a jibe that the night spot had 'the lowest attendance I've seen there in a long while'.

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Billy did not hold back as he got stuck into the 33-year-old.

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'No need to wonder why she is a has been in this industry,' he wrote.

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'Her lack of humility, to her fans, my dad, Curb Records, or anyone else who has ever been in her corner in the early part of her career is hard, but a lil cute to watch.'

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'Kardashian attitude': Billy Mack's angry Facebook rant

And Billy, a radio presenter in Texas, added: 'Sometimes it's best to stay in LA. Don't crawl back to Texas with a Kardashian attitude, expecting a Texas size applause.

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'I wish her the best, but you can't fool the fans. I speak only for me, and nobody else on this matter.'

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But while Billy made it clear he was not speaking for his father, Bill Mack has been just as harsh about his former protege.

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'LeAnn is a beautiful girl with an incredible voice, but recently she’s getting attention for all the wrong reasons like breaking up a marriage, eating disorders and now going to rehab,' Bill told MailOnline back in 2012, following her entry into rehab.

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'All of LeAnn’s problems date back to being a child star 15 years ago when her parents divorced and she was pushed into the spotlight,' Bill said.

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'She made good money, but she didn’t have the love and support she needed and she had a lot anger bottled up inside, which is now starting to affect her both physically and mentally.'

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Making a point: LeAnn posted on Instagram on Monday, sharing a picture of herself in the studio with Diane Warren, writing 'A fab #musicmonday with my friends... Great things to come!'

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Billy later returned to Facebook to say that his dad 'wasn't mad' about being snubbed.

'Yea, I do wish her the best,' he said. 'It really was sad to watch.

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'We were told "You know how our princess is". He really wanted to stroll through Billy Bobs. I know it was because the passing of Merle this week. He wasn't mad. He just said "What a shame". It bothered me more than him.'

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Reply #33 posted 04/12/16 8:21am

RodeoSchro

Adorecream said:

To be a washed has been, your artist must have...

1. Not had a hit (Something that has gone past Top 40) since 1990 or earlier

2. Constantly touring and nearly always playing the same few hits

3. Half of their band members are new or not original OR there are multiple versions of the group led by one or more original members and a bunch of strangers in the band.

4. Have to be double their age or more at the hit.

5. If they play trend (Rap, dance) or novelty music, they must have worn off and be out of fashion.

6. Physically or drug addled state.

7. Needing to tour to earn money

8. Mostly playing oldies circuits or being forced to play out of way territories (Like New Zealand, Russia or Malta) as their 1 or 2 hits hit biggest there.

9. Do not count retired acts.

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None of those criteria are the definition for "washed up has been". If people are paying to hear them perform, they are a working artist. Which, by definition, excludes them from being a "washed up has been".

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Reply #34 posted 04/13/16 3:37pm

thesoulbrother

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This is such a bullshit topic. Artists tour to make money. They have a living to make just like you and I. Just because they're not clocking #1 hits like they once did doesn't make them has-beens. If they can pull an audience and people will pay their money to see them play, so be it. Not to mention, some people enjoy going to see an act they grew up on and relive good memories. Shit... does all this make Prince or Janet or Bruce or Madonna has been acts? Pull your panties outta your ass and let people enjoy what they want to enjoy.

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Reply #35 posted 04/15/16 12:09am

Adorecream

It seems a lot of you have no sense of humour. Christ you guys are a morose lot. Maybe I will stop doing new topics about anything not 100% positive to please you sad sacks.
Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name
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Reply #36 posted 04/15/16 8:25am

RodeoSchro

Adorecream said:

It seems a lot of you have no sense of humour. Christ you guys are a morose lot. Maybe I will stop doing new topics about anything not 100% positive to please you sad sacks.



A girl was a big Merle Haggard fan. In honor of his passing, she decided to have his picture tattooed on the insiide of her left thigh. Being a big George Jones fan, she decided to have him tattooed on the inside of her right thigh.

After a couple hours' work, the tattoo artist said, "I'm done. What do you think?" The girl looked down and said, "What the #^%$?!? Those look NOTHING like Merle Haggard and George Jones!" That tattoo artist disagreed, and went out to find someone who could give a third opinion.

But all he would find was a drunk. He brought the drunk in and said, "Look at this. Who are these guys?"

The drunk stuck his head between the girl's legs and looked back and forth, back and forth. Then ne emerged and said:

"I don't know who the two guys on the sides are, but that guy in the middle is definitely Willie Nelson!"

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