independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Music: Non-Prince > News #14
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 1 of 2 12>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Author

Tweet     Share

Message
Thread started 06/07/16 4:08pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

News #14

ABBA Celebrate 50th Anniversary With First Performance in 30 Years
By Daniel Kreps | June 6, 2016 | Rolling Stone

https://67.media.tumblr.com/ca2ffab9676e90d2917fffa0a0e48a09/tumblr_o89haktoc11rw606ko1_r8_540.jpg

ABBA celebrated the 50th anniversary of their founding by performing onstage together for the first time in 30 years.

Agnetha Faltskog, Björn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid (Frida) Lyngstad were all in attendance at Stockholm's Berns Salonger Sunday for a private gala honoring the influential pop group, and while the quartet stood onstage together to discuss their career with attendees, ABBA sang a rendition of their 1980 hit "Me and I," Sweden's Expressen reports.

At first, Lyngstad and Faltskog sang the track together as a tribute to Andersson and Ulvaeus, but soon the male half of ABBA joined in toward the end of the song to cap the reunion. The impromptu performance marked the first time since 1986 that ABBA has played music together onstage in public.

Since then, the quartet has reunited sparingly, mostly for promotional purposes: In January, ABBA staged a rare four-member reunion at the opening of Mamma Mia! The Party in Stockholm, a gathering that represented the first time since 2008 that the group was photographed together, EW writes.

In 2010, after it was revealed that ABBA would be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Andersson announced that the quartet would not reunite at the induction ceremony for a variety of reasons, including Faltskog's reluctance to fly. "Agnetha is not flying, so I don't know how she's going to get to New York," Andersson told Rolling Stone at the time.

Despite a rumored billion-dollar offer for a reunion tour, ABBA have refused to get back together – both couples, Lyndstad and Andersson as well as Faltskog and Ulvaeus, divorced in 1980 – making their Sunday performance all the more improbable.

"It was absolutely amazing. A lot of emotions," Lyngstad told Expressen of the reunion. "We've made this journey throughout our history. Benny and Björn in particular. It's been very nostalgic."

While no video from the "Me and I" performance has emerged, a few photos of the reunited ABBA have been posted on social media.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1 posted 06/08/16 7:32am

JoeBala

Theresa Saldana, actress in 'Raging Bull' and 'The Commish,' dead at 61

Theresa Saldana
Mark Olsen

Actress Theresa Saldana, known for movies including “Raging Bull” and nominated for a Golden Globe for her work on TV’s “The Commish,” has died after an illness, according to a family member. She was 61.

Although a prominent actress, Saldana was perhaps best known for surviving a knife attack by a disturbed fan outside her West Hollywood apartment in 1982 in which she was stabbed 10 times. The attack was among the earliest to bring attention to celebrity stalking and the fine line between being a fan and dangerous fanaticism.

Saldana played herself in a 1984 TV movie, “Victims for Victims: The Theresa Saldana Story.” The movie was nominated for one prime-time Emmy Award. Saldana also founded the advocacy group Victims for Victims, which fought for anti-stalking laws. She also published a memoir, “Beyond Survival,” in 1987.

On playing herself and re-creating the near-fatal attack, Saldana told The Times in 1984, “I hope it stands as an example, not just to victims of crime but to others who have been through a tragedy, that you can get through almost anything.

“If a girl can get through being butchered almost to death, if one can do that, then almost anything is surmountable. There is something about almost dying that gives you great strength – if you do survive, and if you do fight back.”

Born in Brooklyn, N.Y., on Aug. 20, 1954, Saldana first gained attention for her role in Robert Zemeckis’ Beatle-mania-themed 1978 film “I Wanna Hold Your Hand.” In 1980 she also appeared in “Defiance” alongside Jan-Michael Vincent and in Brian De Palma’s “Home Movies.”

But it was her role in Martin Scorsese’s 1980 film “Raging Bull” that really seemed to signal her emergence. In the film, frequently cited as among the best of the 1980s and ranked in the top five on the American Film Institute’s list of the Greatest American Films of All Time, she played the wife of Joe Pesci’s character, brother to Robert De Niro’s boxer Jake La Motta.

After the 1982 attack, she worked mostly in episodic television, with roles on such quintessentially ’80s-era shows as “T.J. Hooker,” “Cagney & Lacey,” “Simon & Simon,” “Matlock,” “Hunter,” “Falcon Crest” and “MacGyver.”

Saldana was nominated for a Golden Globe in 1994 for her role on “The Commish,” where she played the wife of the title character, a police commissioner played by Michael Chiklis.

On Twitter on Tuesday, Chiklis posted a message that said, “Painful to hear the news of Theresa's passing. My family & I extend our love, condolences & support to her family in their time of grieving.”

It was on the morning of March 15, 1982, that Saldana, then 27, was stabbed outside her apartment in West Hollywood. Her Scottish-born attacker, Arthur R. Jackson, had attempted to reach her via agents in both New York and Los Angeles, eventually finding her whereabouts from a family member in New York and representing himself as someone working for Scorsese.

A passing Sparkletts water truck driver, Jeff Fenn, subdued Jackson until police and paramedics arrived.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #2 posted 06/08/16 11:48am

MickyDolenz

avatar

https://66.media.tumblr.com/63d8bf4878a3ed37ff5963ee78fc4051/tumblr_o89haktoc11rw606ko1_r9_540.jpg

watch here

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #3 posted 06/08/16 12:13pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

Former Genesis Singer Ray Wilson Says Mike Rutherford Didn’t Want to Continue
By Jeff Giles June 7, 2016

Atlantic

Genesis faced an uphill climb after Phil Collins quit the group, but replacement singer Ray Wilson wishes they’d stuck with it at least a little longer.

Wilson, who came in to record 1997’s Calling All Stations LP after Collins announced his departure from the lineup the previous year, tells Eonmusic that his version of the band was just hitting its stride after it finished the subsequent tour — only for guitarist Mike Rutherford to hit the brakes.

“When I signed my contract to join the band, it was for two albums. It was always the idea to do the first and then go from there, but Mike Rutherford changed his mind – that’s exactly what happened,” said Wilson. “I think he felt he didn’t have the stamina to do another one. All of a sudden you’re faced with going from 15 million albums’ sales to two and a half, and I think he couldn’t find it in himself to do the next one.”

Wilson’s observations echo statements made by Rutherford himself. “I enjoyed the process of making Calling All Stations,” he later explained. “What happened was that, suddenly, the mood changed and I sort of felt that going forward to create a new Genesis required too much work. I just didn’t have it in me, and I had the Mechanics. I know that Tony and Ray wanted to carry on, but I just knew I couldn’t do it.”

For Wilson, the sudden end to his brief time in Genesis remains a source of disappointment — particularly since it’s made it easier for Banks and Rutherford to, as he sees it, sweep that period of the band’s history “under the carpet.” Unlikely as it might have been for this lineup to duplicate the impact achieved during Collins’ tenure, he still wishes they could have at least made the attempt.

“It’s a great shame,” he said of the lack of a Calling All Stations follow-up. “Even if it hadn’t been very good, we didn’t need to release it, but we should have at least sat down together and continued the process, because I think we really became a band after the tour.”

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #4 posted 06/08/16 12:44pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

Spinning Around: A History of the Soul LP: A - K Volume 1
by John Lias {2016}

This is the first and definitive attempt in book form to list and discuss thousands of soul LPs that were issued in the vinyl era. Volume 1 addresses album releases by hundreds of artists from the famous - James Brown, Marvin Gaye, Bobby Bland, Gladys Knight & The Pips, The Impressions and Aretha Franklin - to the much more obscure - John Byrd, Paul Kelly, Bill Coday, Harmon Bethea and Geater Davis. Beautifully produced in hardback, with over 400 pages and 435,000 words, including 108 colour photographs of LP covers, Spinning Around : The History Of The Soul LP, Volume 1 : A - K, is the first truly comprehensive study of this topic ever undertaken anywhere in the world.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #5 posted 06/08/16 4:52pm

JoeBala

Selena Quintanilla On NBC Universo: When, Where To Watch Back-To-Back 'Queen Of Tejano' Special

Selena Quintanilla fans are in for a real treat thanks to NBC Universo. On Thursday, the network will air a back-to-back special on the Queen of Tejano. As Selenaholics ourselves, we're stoked because every day is a day to celebrate her legacy.

The great news was revealed Wednesday morning on Selena's official Facebook page, which is managed by the Quintanilla family. "Tomorrow, NBC UNIVERSO will present and extra-special program: 'Selena' the movie, followed by the 'Siempre Selena' special," expressed the post that garnered nearly 2,000 shares within the hour. The post, which was accompanied by a 30-second trailer, also made sure that fans get a hold of the hashtag #SelenaUniverso to keep interactive during the TV special.

With snippets from the movie and her last concert at the Astrodome in Houston, the trailer states the following: "NBC Universo presents a special night to celebrate the queen of Tejano music. First, 'Selena'the movie, followed by 'Siempre Selena,' a special based on the concert that immortalized her forever."

Selena QuintanillaNBC Universo will air a back-to-back special in honor of the late Selena Quintanilla. Here's what to expect and how you can watch it! NBC Universo / Telemundo

We're pretty sure that after this news, all Selena fans are canceling their Thursday night plans to stay at home and spend it with the beloved "Bidi Bidi Bom Bom" songstress. Here's when and where to watch this back-to-back special.

Date: Thursday, January 8, 2016

SELENA: THE MOVIE
Time: 8 p.m. Eastern Time

SIEMPRE SELENA
Time: 11 p.m. Eastern Time

Channel: NBC Universo (check local listing)
DirecTV: Ch 410 (HD/SD)
Dish Network: Ch 838 (SD)
Verizon FiOS: Ch 275 (SD)
AT&T U-verse: Ch 1192 (HD); 192 (SD); 1071 (HD); 71 (SD); 3009 (HD)

Watch online here

On other news, the Quintanilla family is also inviting all Selena fans to show their love and support by voting for Selena in an important list compiled by Billboard.

"Billboard compiled a list that represents the best-selling, most influential and most acclaimed albums across a variety of genres and decades," expressed the Facebook page early this week. "Their editors focused almost entirely on studio albums -- compilations are only included where absolutely necessary, and live albums appear in select, historically important instances."

Selena's album "Amor Prohibido" has been selected as part of the Music Industry's Favorite Albums of All Time. The results of the survey will be part of Billboard's "The Music Industry's Greatest Albums of All Time." Fans can vote here!

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #6 posted 06/08/16 5:03pm

JoeBala

Brian Wilson on ‘Pet Sounds’: ‘I really respect the people who like my music’

Allen Foster - AXS Contributor
By: Allen Foster AXS Contributor Jun 8, 2016 5 hours ago
Brian Wilson
Brian Wilson
Courtesy of Brian Bowen Smith, used with permission.

In our social media driven world of concisely worded extremism where individuals are either haters or idolizers who offer their views in less than 140 characters, genuine praise has lost it’s impact. A passionate fan frequently posts “I die every time you release something!” in the YouTube comments section of her favorite indie band. That’s a rapturous accolade for sure, and it may well be true on a personal level, but how do we then recognize and adequately express our gratitude for those artists who have truly changed the world with nothing more than that spark they have inside?

Brian Wilson has been compared to Mozart. He’s been called a genius. His music has proven itself to be timeless. At the very least, Pet Sounds (1966) is almost universally acknowledged as a masterpiece. It has been touted as one of the most influential albums in all of pop music. In fact, there are many people who consider Pet Sounds to simply be the greatest album ever made. Let that sink in for a minute, the greatest album ever made.

Now that’s some truly impactful praise!

This Friday, June 10, The Beach Boys will be celebrating the 50th anniversary of Pet Sounds with a veritable cornucopia of audio gold. The expanded collection will include the remastered album (stereo and mono), session outtakes, alternate mixes, and previously unreleased live recordings. In addition to the album’s release, Brian is currently on an extensive world tour which will bring him back to the US on June 12 where he will have a Herculean string of nonstop dates, which currently carry him all the way through October!

When AXS caught up with Brian, he was at an airport awaiting his flight to arrive. He was infectiously upbeat and friendly, focused and direct.

AXS: Hi Brian, it’s incredible to get to speak with you. How are you?

Brian Wilson: Very good, very good. How are you doing?

AXS: Great! You are my answer to that question: “If you had the chance to speak with anyone, whom would you choose?”

BW: Thank you!

AXS: So many people see you as a genius and a living legend, how do you see yourself?

BW: I see myself as a creative record producer and a good singer.

AXS: Do you feel the weight of the status that the world has placed on you?

BW: No, I feel gratitude and I really respect the people who like my music.

AXS: You’re celebrating the 50th anniversary of Pet Sounds. Do you still have the same excitement you had when you were originally working on the album?

BW: Yes! And when we do it on stage, we reproduce it to sound exactly like the album.

AXS: Some artists have performed with a symphony to offer fans a taste of the grandeur that they might not have been able to capture on the original tracks. When you were recording Pet Sounds, was there anything that you heard in your head, but felt you couldn’t achieve in that particular setting?

BW: No, I made the album exactly as I heard it.

AXS: When you made Pet Sounds, you had to create all the sounds from scratch. Today there are bundles and packages offering limitless options to artists. Do you use any of those tools or do you still craft the sounds on your own?

BW: I still like crafting the sounds on my own.

AXS: What is your studio process like?

BW: I use ProTools and computers and I take a lot longer to make records these days than I did when I was young.

AXS: Do you rely on effects and digital manipulation to get that studio magic?

BW: No, we rely on ourselves.

AXS: Still focusing on Pet Sounds, which tracks are you the most proud of?

BW: “God Only Knows” and “Wouldn’t It Be Nice.”

AXS: Is there any particular reason that those two songs stand out?

BW: The melodies, the words, and the lyrics. The harmonies are important, too.

AXS: There’s a quote from you that says that you write by instinct, is that true?

BW: Yes, I always have an instinct or an intuition about a song, when I write.

AXS: But it’s nothing tangible, nothing you can put your finger on?

BW: No, it’s just a feeling I get.

AXS: I work the same way. I can’t exactly say when an article is done, it just feels right.

BW: Yes, yes, that’s good. And that’s always been how I’ve worked.

AXS: Over the years, you didn’t always interact with your contemporaries.

BW: No, not really that much.

AXS: Was there a reason for that?

BW: Yes, it’s because I’m always so busy.

AXS: The respect and admiration that I have for you, do you have that for anyone?

BW: Yes, Paul McCartney.

AXS: You’ve met him and had conversations with him.

BW: Yes, yes.

AXS: What were those conversations like?

BW: They were very brief. He told me he likes “God Only Knows.” He thought it was the greatest song ever written. He’s just been a friend I haven’t seen very much for a long time.

AXS: “God Only Knows.” That song was so important to so many people. It still is. I also always identified with “I Just Wasn’t Made for These Times.”

BW: Tony Asher wrote those lyrics.

AXS: Yes, but it’s the music that reaches you first. It’s more powerful. If you took the soundtrack away from a movie, it would lose it’s soul.

BW: Right, right, I agree with you. And, thank you.

AXS: You’ve been a performer for over 50 years, but it seems like you are touring now more than you ever have in the past. Do you have a newfound love for performing?

BW: No, my love for performing his been the same the whole time. It’s still exciting to me. I’m proud to perform on stage. I’m 73 years old, but I can still sing!

AXS: In closing, what can we expect to hear on this tour?

BW: We have Pet Sounds plus 25 Beach Boy classics. Thank you very much for the interview.

AXS: Thank you.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #7 posted 06/09/16 3:57pm

JoeBala

The Monkees Earn Highest-Charting Album Since 1968 on Billboard 200 Chart

By Keith Caulfield | June 09, 2016 4:42 PM EDT

Mickey Dolenz and Peter Tork of The Monkees

Mickey Dolenz and Peter Tork of The Monkees perform on Good Morning America on June 1, 2016.

Ida Mae Astute/ABC via Getty Images

Hey, hey, it’s The Monkees! The veteran group nabs its highest-charting album since 1968 on the Billboard 200, as Good Times! debuts at No. 14.

The set, which is the act’s first studio album since 1996 (and first recorded without the late Davy Jones, who died in 2012), launches with 23,000 equivalent album units earned in the week ending June 2, according to Nielsen Music. Of that sum, 22,000 were in pure album sales -- the group’s biggest sales week since Nielsen Music began tracking data in 1991. (The robust number lands the set at No. 6 on the Top Album Sales chart.)

The Monkees' 10 Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits

The Monkees last charted higher on the Billboard 200 back in 1968, when The Birds, The Bees & The Monkees peaked at No. 3. They previously logged five top 10s, with their first four albums all reaching No. 1 in 1966 and 1967.

The new album commemorates the 50th anniversary of the group’s formation in 1965 and the debut of its eponymous, Emmy Award-winning TV show in 1966. The set also enters at high ranks on a host of other charts, including a No. 1 bow on Tastemakers, No. 6 on Top Album Sales and No. 3 on Top Internet Albums.

Hear the Monkees' New Rivers Cuomo-Penned Single 'She Makes Me Laugh'

The three surviving Monkees (Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith and Peter Tork) all appear on Good Times!, as does Jones on one track, via an archival recording.

The album sports new songs written by Rivers Cuomo, Noel Gallagher, Paul Weller and Ben Gibbard. Those all-new tracks are joined by recently completed songs that date back to the 1960s, by some of the writers who penned The Monkees’ biggest hits (Neil Diamond, Carole King, Gerry Goffin, Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart).

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #8 posted 06/11/16 9:21am

JoeBala

'Tribute: Prince' New Comic Book Released

Comic chronicles artist's "meteoric rise to dominance" in music

BY ALTHEA LEGASPI June 9, 2016
Prince, Prince comic book, Tribute: Prince new comic book released, Storm Entertainment, Blue Water Comics, comic book biographiesComic book 'Tribute: Prince' has been released, which features three different covers and chronicles his "meteoric rise to dominance" in music. Theo Wargo/WireImage/Getty

Prince is the subject of a newly released comic book. Tribute: Prince was released on the late singer's birthday, June 7th, which was declared 'Prince Day' by Minnesota governor Mark Dayton. The comic book biography is currently available in both print and digital versions.

As it's described in the statement, the 24-page comic book "chronicles his meteoric rise to dominance in the pop/funk music scene." Published by Storm Entertainment,Tribute: Prince is written by Michael L. Frizell and features artwork by Ernesto Lovera and Vincenzo Sansone. It's also available with three different covers.

"I first became aware of Prince's music when I was in high school thanks to '1999,' 'Little Red Corvette' and other [songs]. I remember listening to his stuff almost religiously when the soundtrack to Purple Rain hit. His sound and lyrics defined the era for me in ways that Michael Jackson didn't and, quite frankly, couldn't," writer Frizell said in a statement. "The subjects of his songs spoke to me in ways I didn't understand until I was older, but the dark poetry of them compelled me to keep listening. To this day, my iPod is full of his work and I listen to it as I write."

Prince, Prince comic book, Tribute: Prince new comic book released, Storm Entertainment, Blue Water Comics, comic book biographies

Storm Entertainment, formerly known as Blue Water Comics, has released a number of tribute comic book biographies over the years, including one on Kurt Cobain, as well as ones on John Lennon, George Harrison, Whitney Houston, Amy Winehouse, Michael Jackson and David Bowie.

"I hope readers come away with not simply a sense of the richness of his life, but how he influenced practically every artist that came after; regardless of genre," Storm Entertainment president Darren G. Davis added in the statement.

This isn't the first time the company has honored Prince. As Blue Water, they released the book Fame: Prince #1 in 2013, which was also written by Frizell and featured illustrations by Lovera.

Tribute: Prince is available digitally for $3.99 via Amazon and other eBook retailers. Print copies start at $3.99 and are available via Comic Flea Market, which also has an exclusive cover for $5.99 and a 100-copy limited edition cover for $9.99.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #9 posted 06/11/16 4:54pm

JoeBala

A Prince wish, Paisley Park considered for museum like Graceland

Media satellite trucks and fans line the street outside Paisley Park, the home of singer Prince, Thursday, April 21, 2016 in Chanhassen, Minn. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)
June 10, 2016 | UPDATED: 5 hours ago

Long before Prince died, he told close friends he wanted to turn his Paisley Park home and studio complex into a museum. Now, the trust company overseeing his estate — likely with the backing of Prince’s siblings — is exploring the idea to open it up as a tourist attraction that some have compared with Elvis Presley’s Graceland.

Paisley Park, in suburban Chanhassen, already has a large soundstage, two recording studios and the inner sanctum where he lived — the basics for operating as a museum, performance space and recording venue. Since no will has surfaced since Prince’s April 21 death of an accidental fentanyl overdose, the final decision will be up to whoever the courts determine will inherit the estate.

Bremer Trust, the special administrator of Prince’s estate, received permission from a Carver County judge Wednesday to hire entertainment industry experts to help determine how best to make money off Prince’s intellectual property.

Details are contained in an affidavit by Bremer Trust President Craig Ordal, which is now sealed due to confidential business information and the sensitive nature of negotiations. But a filing by an attorney for Carlin Williams, a Colorado prison inmate who claims to be Prince’s son, said the affidavit shows that Bremer’s plans include hiring experts “on how to manage public tours of the grounds, facilities and buildings located at Paisley Park.”

Prince hosted numerous parties and gatherings — some seemingly impromptu — at Paisley Park for years before his death. Shortly after it, his brother-in-law, Maurice Phillips, told the British tabloid The Sun that the family planned to turn it into a shrine to rival Graceland in Memphis, Tenn. Longtime Prince collaborator Sheila E told “Entertainment Tonight” that Prince was already working on making it a museum, gathering memorabilia from his career, including his motorcycle from “Purple Rain.”

And Jeremiah Freed, aka Dr. Funk and Dr. Funkenberry, a longtime fan and friend of Prince who hosts a podcast and website, said the pop superstar’s ideas kept evolving, including ways for fans to hear and see his vast archive of unreleased music and videos, so that it’d be a different experience each time.

Prince had the kind of stature that should generate fan interest for many years, said Meredith Rutledge-Borger, associate curator at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland, comparing him with Michael Jackson and John Lennon.

“It’s a wonderful, wonderful ambition,” she said. “It’s going to be a lot of work. But they’re ahead of the game because they’ve got the stuff … he kept the majority of everything very much to himself.”

And she also expressed hope that the complex would continue Prince’s philanthropic work by serving as a music education center for young people.

prince_danceparty_paisleyparkPrince’s 1985 song “Paisley Park” spoke of a place where “admission is easy … come 2 this place in your heart.” Any museum needs multiple revenue streams besides ticket sales, said Allan Hammons, who was instrumental in developing both the B.B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center in Mississippi and the new GRAMMY Museum Mississippi. Such sources can include retail sales and space rentals for meetings and events. It also helps to stage new temporary exhibitions to bring people back, he said.

“You have to be creative, there’s no doubt about that,” Hammons said. “And you have to work at it constantly.”

One advantage that Graceland and the B.B. King Museum have is that the artists are buried on site, so visitors can pay their respects, he said. Prince’s relatives haven’t said what they’ve done or intend to do with his cremated remains.

Nothing has come yet from talk of creating a similar shrine for Michael Jackson, who died in 2009. His sprawling Neverland estate in Los Olivos, Calif., was put on the market over a year ago for $100 million. Although three or four interested buyers have toured it, no offers have been accepted, according to real estate agent Suzanne Perkins. Its location more than a two-hour drive from Los Angeles could limit its appeal as a tourist hot spot anyway.

Officials with Graceland and Elvis Presley Enterprises declined to comment on possibilities for Paisley Park.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #10 posted 06/13/16 9:17am

JoeBala

Selena Gomez Mourns Friend Christina Grimmie as More Than $38,000 Raised for Ex-‘Voice’ Contestant’s Family

A difficult time. Selena Gomez mourned the loss of her friend Christina Grimmie after the former Voice contestant was shot and killed following a concert in Orlando, Florida, on Friday, June 10.

The “Hands to Myself” singer, 23, took to Twitter to share a throwback photo with the singer on Saturday, June 11. “My heart is absolutely broken. I miss you Christina,” she wrote.

Gomez’s stepfather, Brian Teefey, discovered Grimmie on YouTube when she was still in high school. He later worked as her longtime manager.

Christina Grimmie and Selena Gomez
Christina Grimmie and Selena Gomez Courtesy of Selena Gomez/ Twitter

“I was 16 and in school at the time,” the songwriter explained during an interview with Seventeen magazine in 2011. “My brother was in my Miley Cyrus video for only a second, so I put his link in the description. Brian (Selena’s stepdad) tried to contact me, but it’s very hard to do that because of all the messages. So he contacted my brother, instead. So then my brother texted me in the middle of school, like, 'I really think Selena Gomez’s stepdad is trying to get a hold of you.' I didn’t believe it; I had heard too many stories. But it ended up being true, and he came over our house. We discussed things and everything fell into place. It was amazing how it happened. I’m so blessed that they’re in my life. They’re literally like a family — Selena has been so encouraging every since we got hooked up. It’s crazy! It’s very much a fairy tale.”

As previously reported, Grimmie was fatally shot after a concert at the Plaza Live theater on Friday night by Kevin James Loibl. The 27-year-old gunman, who did not know the singer personally, opened fire as she was signing autographs. The 22-year-old songstress was best known for being a finalist on season 6 of The Voice in 2014.

Christina Grimmie’s ‘Heroic’ Brother Marcus: ‘I Don’t Know What I’ll Do Without Her’
Christina Grimmie’s Brother: ‘I Don’t Know What I’ll Do Without Her’Gunman Who Killed ‘Voice’ Contestant Christina Grimmie Identified Christina Grimmie: Rewatch Her Incredible Audition on ‘The Voice’

Also in her interview with Seventeen, Grimmie gushed of Gomez, saying, “She’s been really, really encouraging to me. She really taught me two things. First: be yourself no matter who talks crap about you. … The other thing is to keep going when you mess up live. … Selena has taught me that if your mike shuts off, or if you trip or do something stupid, keep going.”

The “Come and Get It” singer also shared a link to a GoFundMe page established by Teefey on Saturday morning to raise money for the Grimmie family. The page has already collected more than $39,000 in less than 24 hours.

"Words cannot begin to describe the pain I am feeling," Teefey wrote on the GoFundMe page. "I learned this business through the eyes of a father and Christina was like a second daughter to me. All I wanted to do was assist her in achieving her musical dreams while protecting her from the pitfalls associated with the business. I never could have imagined this horrific event being one of the pitfalls needing to be avoided."

Christina Grimmie
Christina Grimmie Joshua Blanchard/Getty Images

"In Christina’s honor I have created a Go Fund Me page to assist her family in their time of need," he continued. "As family Mother, Father, and Brother made the ultimate family sacrifice to support Christina on her musical journey. They did nothing but love her and support her as family the best they knew how, the only worry I want them to have at this point is that of recovery. Grimms I love you, and miss you beyond comprehension."

According to a report by E! News, Gomez canceled meet-and-greets at her concert in Miami on Saturday night following the sudden death of Grimmie.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #11 posted 06/14/16 7:43am

JoeBala

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #12 posted 06/14/16 11:26am

JoeBala

Former Wings Guitarist Henry McCullough Dies at 72

Jorgen Angel, Getty ImagesJorgen Angel, Getty Images

Henry McCullough, who played guitar on some of Wings‘ earliest records, has died. The Irish guitarist, who also played with some of rock’s biggest names, was 72.

In addition to his work with Paul McCartney‘s post-Beatles group, McCullough was also a member of Spooky Tooth, Joe Cocker‘s Grease Band and the traditional Irish folk group Sweeney’s Men.

But he was probably best known for being tapped by McCartney to play guitar on Wings’ second album, 1973’s Red Rose Speedway, as well as a handful of singles from the era, including “Hi, Hi, Hi” and “Live and Let Die.” He also performed the celebrated solo on the No. 1 hit “My Love.”

McCullough got his start in local Northern Ireland bands while in his teens. He later joined Éire Apparent, a group managed the Animals‘ Chas Chandler, who also spearheaded Jimi Hendrix‘s career at the same time. The association led to shows with Hendrix, the Move and Pink Floyd.

By the end of the ’60s, he had joined Cocker as a member of the singer’s Grease Band, and was onstage with them during their career-making Woodstock performance. Around the same time, he played guitar in the rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar and then joined Spooky Tooth for an album.

He was then asked by McCartney to join Wings. After a year or so with the band, he left before Band on the Run was recorded. Over the next decade, he performed onstage with and on records by Pink Floyd (that’s him muttering “I don’t know; I was really drunk at the time” on The Dark Side of the Moon), Roy Harper, Marianne Faithfull, Donovan and Dr. Feelgood.

In the ’00s, he continued to release solo albums and play shows throughout Europe. He had a heart attack in late 2012 that left him in critical condition. In March 2015, a benefit concert was held for McCullough that included performances by Paul Carrack, Nick Lowe and others.



Read More: Former Wings Guitarist He...Dies at 72 | http://ultimateclassicroc...ck=tsmclip

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #13 posted 06/17/16 9:53am

JoeBala

Rubén Aguirre Dead: Actor Known As 'Profesor Jirafales' Dies From Complications With Pneumonia

Rubén Aguirre, who was known for his role as “Profesor Jirafales” in “El Chavo del 8,” has passed away this morning, his dear friend Edgar Vivar, who played “Señor Barriga” confirmed on Twitter. He was 82.

“My favorite professor rests in peace now,” Vivar wrote. "Today my good friend Rubén Aguirre left this earth. I will miss you very much.”

Mi profesor favorito descansa en paz...Hoy mi gran amigo Rubén Aguirre parte de este plano .
Te extrañaré mucho🌹

In early June, Consuelo de los Reyes, Aguirre’s wife had mentioned on a TV show that her husband was in serious condition. “From one day to another he lost all his strength and now he’s not moving,” de los Reyes said at the time. “He can’t even roll on the bed and is not talking as much. Diabetes has him like that.”

However, his daughter, Verónica Aguirre confirmed to CNN en Español that her father passed away from complications with pneumonia. He had been hospitalized in May, but was released on June 7 to rest at home in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, where he took his last breath.

Aguirre was born in Saltillo, Coahuila on June 15, 1934. He began his acting career in Monterrey, working with a famous clown named “Pipo.” From there, he ventured on to Mexico City, where he worked at Televisión Independiente de Mexico, a national television network that operated until 1973 when it merged with Telesistema Mexicano to form Televisa. He oversaw several television scripts to see which ones would make good shows, and that’s how he met Roberto Gómez Bolaños, known as Chespirito, the mastermind behind “El Chavo del 8” and “El Chapulín Colorado.”

Rubén AguirreRubén Aguirre passed away Friday morning from complications with Pneumonia. He was known for playing "Profesor Jirafales" in "El Chavo del 8." Televisa


Chespirito noticed Aguirre’s tall, skinny figure and asked him to play Profesor Jirafales on the show he was developing, called “El Chavo del 8.” The name “Jirafales” came from from “jirafa,” which means “giraffe” in Spanish. Aguirre agreed. He was good friends with Carlos Villagrán, whom he recommended for the role of Quico.

After “El Chavo,” Aguirre moved to Argentina, where he opened a circus with the name Profesor Jirafales. He returned to Mexico in 2003 and started working as an announcer at game shows.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #14 posted 06/20/16 5:10pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

Morris Day interview (June 2016)


You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #15 posted 06/22/16 4:02pm

JoeBala

book cover

A Little Thing Called Life

From Elvis's Graceland to Bruce Jenner's Caitlyn & Songs in Between

by Linda Thompson

Award-winning songwriter Linda Thompson breaks her silence, sharing the extraordinary story of her life, career, and epic romances with two of the most celebrated, yet enigmatic, modern American superstars—Elvis Presley and Bruce Jenner.

For the last forty years, award-winning songwriter Linda Thompson has quietly led one of the most remarkable lives in show business. The longtime live-in love of Elvis Presley, Linda first emerged into the limelight during the 1970s when the former beauty pageant queen caught the eye of the King. Their chance late-night encounter at a movie theater was the stuff of legend, and it marked the beginning of a whirlwind that would stretch across decades, leading to a marriage with Bruce Jenner, motherhood, and more drama than she ever could have imagined.

Now for the first time, Linda opens up about it all, telling the full story of her life, loves, and everything in between. From her humble beginnings in Memphis to her nearly five year relationship with Elvis, she offers an intimate window into their life together, describing how their Southern roots fueled and sustained Graceland's greatest romance. Going inside their wild stories and tender moments, she paints a portrait of life with the King, as raucous as it is refreshing. But despite the joy they shared, life with Elvis also had darkness, and her account also presents an unsparing look at Elvis's twin demons—drug abuse and infidelity—forces he battled throughout their time together that would eventually end their relationship just eight months before his untimely death.

It was in the difficult aftermath of Elvis's death that Linda found what she believed was her true home: the arms of Olympic gold medal-winner Bruce Jenner. Detailing her marriage to Bruce, Linda reveals the apparently perfect life that they built with their two young sons—Brandon and Brody—before Bruce changed everything with a secret he'd been carrying his entire life, a secret that Linda herself kept for nearly thirty years, a secret that Bruce's transition to Caitlyn Jenner has finally laid bare for the world. Providing a candid look inside one of the most challenging moments of her life, Linda uncovers the struggles she went through as a woman and a mother, coming to terms with the reality of Bruce's identity and resolving to embrace him completely no matter what, even as it meant they could no longer be together,

And yet, despite her marriage unraveling, her search for love was not over, eventually leading her to the legendary music producer and musician David Foster, a relationship that lasted for 19 tumultuous years, resulting in a bond that spurred her songwriting career to new heights but also tested her like never before. Filled with compelling and poignant stories and 16 pages of photographs, A Little Thing Called Life lovingly recounts Linda's incredible journey through the years, bringing unparalleled insight into three legendary figures.

Tavis Smiley imagines Michael Jackson's final days in new book

Jocelyn McClurg, USA TODAY3:33 p.m. EDT June 20, 2016

Tavis Smiley had his plane ticket and hotel reservation and was thrilled that he was going to see Michael Jackson's comeback performance at London’s O2 Arena in July 2009.

Smiley, a Jackson fan since childhood, had never before asked a favor of “Miss Katherine,” Jackson’s mother, with whom he was friendly. But the PBS talk-show host simply had to see the singer's final "This Is It" concert series. Mrs. Jackson said she’d make certain he got good seats.

Then, as Smiley writes in his new book, “came June 25.”

“It hit me so hard,” Smiley says by phone from Los Angeles, describing how he felt when he heard of Jackson’s shocking death at age 50. “I was just undone. It came out of nowhere.”

He wanted to understand how it happened, to literally “get inside Jackson’s head.” And that’s what he and co-author David Ritz attempt in Before You Judge Me: The Triumph and Tragedy of Michael Jackson’s Last Days (Little, Brown), which arrives just days before the seventh anniversary of the superstar’s death.

The non-fiction book takes a novelistic approach, speculating on how Jackson feels, what he's thinking, and most pointedly, how he cannot sleep in the 16 weeks leading up to his death.

Author Tavis Smiley looks at Michael Jackson's last

Author Tavis Smiley looks at Michael Jackson's last days in his new book. (Photo: Kevin Foley)

“Sometimes we lose sight of people’s humanity,” Smiley, 51, says. While the book makes clear that Jackson suffered "any number of self-inflicted wounds,” Smiley says he hopes “it allows us to see him through a different prism. Allows us to revel not just his artistic genius, but in his humanity.”

The co-authors interviewed people close to Jackson such as Quincy Jones, Berry Gordy and Janet Jackson, and called on trial transcripts and other documents, including the case against Jackson's personal physician, Dr. Conrad Murray. (Jackson died of acute propofol intoxication. Another new book also publishing on Tuesday — 83 Minutes: The Doctor, the Damage, and the Shocking Death of Michael Jackson by Matt Richards and Mark Langthorne — closely examines the case.)

Smiley, who wrote a remembrance for USA TODAY after his friend Prince's untimely death, says Gordy said it best in trying to understand why some celebrities succumb to drugs: “Berry said to me, ‘There are moments in the lives of certain iconic figures where, if they're not careful, they become rudderless.’”

Jackson was dealing with many pressures in the final months of his life, as he agreed to increase the number of London shows from 10 to 50.

'Before You Judge Me' by Tavis Smiley

'Before You Judge Me' by Tavis Smiley (Photo: Little, Brown)

Smiley says he ended up wondering “how Jackson survived as long as he did. In the last 16 weeks of his life, he’s self-medicating, he’s changing managers like he’s changing underwear, his father is on his case to do a reunion tour with his brothers, he's got creditors coming at him.”

Before You Judge Me does not directly address the child molestation allegations that shadowed Jackson for years. “I wasn’t there, and I will never know,” Smiley says.

Smiley, author of numerous books, remains a dedicated fan of Jackson’s music and artistry. He says he’s often wondered what that London show would have been like.

“I like to think he would have put on a great opening night,” says Smiley, who believes there would have been subsequent cancellations. “How long he could have sustained that, I do not know. Not with the condition he was in.”

Smiley is joining producer J.J. Abrams to develop Before You Judge Me into an “event television series” for Warner Bros. Television, though it has not yet been sold to a network.

Was Rita Coolidge Cheated Songwriting Credit on 'Layla'? (Exclusive Memoir Excerpt)

Rita Coolidge photographed in the 1970s.
JIM MCCRARY/MICHAEL OCHS ARCHIVES/GETTY IMAGES

“Until now I’ve never told of how I helped write one of the greatest rock songs ever recorded.”

Over a long career in music, Rita Coolidge is known for her numerous hit songs and extensive studio work across pop, rock, country and more. Her place in history is secure, but even with a body of accomplishments dating back to the early ‘70s, one particular song continues to vex the Grammy winner.

Coolidge claims she was unfairly denied songwriting credit onDerek & the Dominos’ iconic hit “Layla.” In her just published memoir Delta Lady (Harper), Coolidge details a songwriting session with Jim Gordon, who went on to co-write and record “Layla” alongside Eric Clapton. Coolidge says she conceived what would one day become the song’s piano-laced coda as an unfinished demo with Gordon in 1970.

Billboard is excited to premiere this exclusive excerpt of Delta Lady in which Coolidge (along with co-author and Billboardcontributor Michael Walker) tells her side of the genesis of one of classic rock’s most powerful songs.

One afternoon in 1970, Jim Gordon came over to my house in Hollywood, sat down at the piano, and played for me a chord progression he’d just composed. Most people know Jim as one of L.A.’s top session drummers in the early ‘70s -- he played on everything from Glen Cambpell’s “Wichita Lineman” to the Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds album -- but he was also a capable pianist, and because he was exposed to so many styles of music, he had a well-developed sense of melody and structure. The chords Jim played for me were in the key of C sharp and built to an eight-note refrain before the progression repeated. There was something haunting about it, especially when the bright major chords suddenly dipped to B-flat 7th for the refrain. It also seemed deeply familiar—like when you meet someone you’re immediately attracted to who seems at once both exotic and approachable.

I loved Jim’s progression, but at the moment that’s all it was -- a stunning riff, not a song. As we played with it, a second progression suddenly came to me, a countermelody in the key of G that “answered” and resolved the tension of Jim’s chords and built to a dramatic crescendo that bridged the song’s beginning and ending. I wrote lyrics that reflected the melody’s sense of fatalism and hope (“my darling believe me, don’t ever leave me, we’ve got a million years to show them that our love is real.”). Jim and I ended up calling it “Time (Don’t Let the World Get In Our Way)” and taped a demo. We played the song for Eric Clapton when we were in England touring with Delanie and Bonnie -- I remember clearly sitting at the piano at Olympic Studios while Eric listened to me play it all the way through (so does Bobby Whitlock, Delaney’s and Bonnie’s ace piano player, who was on the session). Jim and I left a tape cassette of the demo with Eric, hoping of course that he might cover it. Nothing came of it, and I largely forgot about it. But our song, with Jim’s wistful melody and my sweet countermelody, would come to haunt me the rest of my life.

I was at A&M Records one afternoon in 1971 after I’d finished my first album, getting promotional photos taken. The photographer had turned on a radio while he worked. I wasn’t paying much attention but suddenly noticed that the song that was playing sounded familiar. I was thinking, Wait, I think I’ve heard that before. The photographer was telling me to pose this way and that, but all I could hear was that song. Suddenly, it dawned on me: the song on the radio was my song—except that I’d never recorded it. The veins must have been popping out on my neck. I cried, “That’s my music! That’s my music!” It was “Time,” the song Jim and I had written and played for Eric at Olympic. Except that now it was an instrumental as played by Bobby Whitlock, Carl Radle, Eric Clapton, Duane Allman and . . . Jim Gordon. Collectively known as Derek and the Dominoes. The song was “Layla.” And “Time” had been appropriated as the soon-to-be-famous “piano coda” that gives Eric’s greatest song its bittersweet denouement.

When I got my hands on the album, Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs, I looked at the label. “Layla” was credited to “E. Clapton and J. Gordon.” No mention of “R. Coolidge.” I was infuriated. What they’d clearly done was take the song Jim and I had written, jettisoned the lyrics, and tacked it on to the end of Eric’s song. It was almost the same arrangement. I have to admit it sounded stunning. Juxtaposing Eric’s desperate verses about his unrequited love for Pattie Boyd, his best friend George Harrison’s wife, and the coda’s -- make that my coda’s -- wistful, winding melody, was a masterstroke. Following Eric’s impassioned singing and guitar playing inspired by the torture of falling into a forbidden love, the coda was “nothing less than bliss, the sound of love fulfilled,” a critic noted forty years after the song was recorded. Even without my words, Jim’s and my original intent shines through. That didn’t make being left out of the songwriting credits any easier.

I told my producer, David Anderle and A&M’s co-founder, Jerry Moss about not getting credit on “Layla” -- in fact, I told everyone I knew. I finally called Robert Stigwood, Eric’s manager. All he said was, “You’re going to go up against Stiggy? The Robert Stigwood Organization? Who do you think you are? You’re a girl singer -- what are you going to do?” I talked to David and he was sympathetic but said, “You know, you don’t have the money to fight this.” And it was true. Also, the Layla album was not an especially big hit when it was released in 1971, and certainly nobody knew that “Layla” was going to become Eric’s anthem. But that was beside the point -- I deserved credit for my work. I never wanted the money. I just wanted my name on it. (When I later learned that Stiggy had been hung out of his office window by a fellow manager’s goons to dissuade him from poaching an act, I wanted to applaud.)

There was no way Jim could have forgotten we’d written the song together. If I sound bitter, I’m not. “Layla” has generated hundreds of thousands of dollars in songwriting royalties -- maybe millions -- over the years for Eric. But I know that part of Jim’s share actually went to his daughter, Amy. And that, finally, was how I was able to deal with it, just knowing that she had something from her dad.

Until now I’ve never told of how I helped write one of the greatest rock songs ever recorded. “Layla” has a lot of fathers -- in addition to Eric’s and Jim’s contributions, Duane Allman may have adapted part of the song’s guitar riff from Albert King’s vocal on “As the Years Go Passing By.”

But I think it’s time everyone knew that it also has a mother.

Excerpted from Delta Lady: A Memoir by Rita Coolidge with Michael Walker.
Copyright (c) by Rita Coolidge. Reprinted by permission of Harper, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #16 posted 06/22/16 4:14pm

JoeBala

Peter Gabriel and Sting Kick Off U.S. Tour With Exuberant, Inspired Collaborations: Concert Review

Peter Gabriel and Sting last toured together in 1986 and 1988 as part of a string of Amnesty International benefit concerts. Last night, at Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio, the pair kicked off their new Rock, Paper, Scissors tour with a marathon set brimming with exuberant collaborations.

In fact, it’s more precise to call this a co-mingling tour, not a co-headlining tour, because both artists (and their respective bands) collaborated throughout the two-hour-and-40-minute set. Sting even lightly characterized the night as an “organic battle of the bands,” even though the competition was clearly friendly.

The show started off with both groups backing Gabriel on “The Rhythm of the Heat,” the first track from 1982’s Peter Gabriel. Having two drummers and a percussionist on the stage was a boon for the song, which felt like a volcano simmering and then exploding. Sting then bounded onstage for a buoyant take on his solo hit “If I Ever Lose My Faith in You,” which featured additional and cutting flourishes from fiddle player Peter Tickell.

Gabriel’s “Games Without Frontiers” was another early standout: Sting and Gabriel not only shared lead vocals, but they harmonized together on the chorus, their voices blending and weaving around one another perfectly. That push-pull matched the song’s strident, prey-stalking rhythmic backbone: In tandem with the arrangement, Sting and Gabriel marched across the stage and around each other, like a toreador circling a bull. “Solsbury Hill” also benefitted from the collaboration: Couples danced in the section of arena seats behind the stage — and Gabriel himself galloped around the stage — as both bands ran through the folk-flecked, uplifting song.

At times, the concert’s song swapping was even more pronounced and intriguing. Sting did an admirable job taking over lead vocals on Gabriel’s “Shock the Monkey,” which featured skittering electronic currents reminiscent of drum ‘n’ bass. As a preface to the Police‘s “Message in a Bottle,” Sting delighted the crowd by singing a brief, nearly a cappella snippet of Genesis‘ “Dancing With the Moonlit Knight.” A few songs later, a laid-back take on the Police’s “Walking in Your Footsteps” segued right into him tackling Gabriel’s equally funky “Kiss That Frog,” a tune highlighted by David Sancious’ keyboard wizardry. Gabriel and his band later returned the favor by transforming Sting’s upbeat “If You Love Somebody, Set Them Free” into an ominous, Pink Floyd-reminiscent prog dirge with rich, soulful overtones. At the end of the song, Gabriel whispered “Set them free” and “Let ’em go” with barely concealed creepiness.

In other spots, however, these collaborations were subtler. For the Police’s “Invisible Sun,” Gabriel and Sting band member Jo Lawry huddled stage right at Gabriel’s piano/keyboard setup and added surging backing vocals. And during Sting’s “Englishman in New York,” Gabriel added mincing, smoky vocals on several verses, a perfect match for Sting’s jauntier delivery. Throughout the set, each musician (and his band) moved on and off the stage seamlessly — sometimes so stealthily that it was a surprise to see who might be contributing to a song. That’s a testament to the weeks of rehearsal they’ve spent preparing for this tour, time and dedication which absolutely made a difference to the night’s flow and balance.

Both Sting and Gabriel did periodically do songs with their own respective bands, however. Gabriel’s song picks included fan favorites “Secret World” and “Darkness”; during the moody, ambient latter, Gabriel walked around the stage with a camera in his face, making the predominant crowd screen feature a stark, black-and-white close-up of his visage. “Red Rain” was absolutely massive and thundering, with prominent piano and Gabriel’s gravelly voice conveying appropriate gravitas, and “Big Time” was a colorful, funky burst of energy boasting some of the night’s coolest production flourishes: stage lights and film footage of band members bathed in 3-D-like effects.

Sting’s set was loaded with Police hits — highlighted by a Steely Dan-esque take on “Driven to Tears,” with red-hot guitar work from Dominic Miller, and a jazz-combo take on “Roxanne” with an interlude of “Ain’t No Sunshine” — but he too pulled out a rare solo cut, with great success: Mercury Falling‘s “The Hounds of Winter,” on which Lawry howled and trilled like a siren breaking glass. Sting’s portion of the night also had subtle political and social commentary; in particular, he gave particular pointed emphasis to the “If I Ever Lose My Faith in You” lyric, “You could say I’d lost my belief in our politicians/ They all seemed like game show hosts to me.

On a somber note, Sting also referenced the Orlando mass shootings, and said the “way we can counter unspeakable cruelty and mindless stupidity is empathy and solidarity,” before doing a moving, Spanish guitar-inflected version of “Fragile.” Later in the night, Gabriel told a story about meeting a young activist who was thinking about going into politics — and revealed it was British MP Jo Cox, who was assassinated last week. He then dedicated a stunning, somber new song to her, which featured minimal percussion and a breathy, keening chorus repeating the phrase “love can heal.”

That revelatory moment gave way to a percussion-heavy, hip-swiveling “Desert Rose” and then everyone again coming together for an upbeat, optimistic version of Gabriel’s “In Your Eyes.” Every musician onstage was moving and grooving — even Sting, in the back ceding the spotlight to Gabriel, by adding harmonies with the rest of the auxiliary singers. The entire concert was like this: no ego and no preciousness about the music from any corner of the stage — just seasoned musicians passionate about performing and transforming.

That joy shone through on the encore of “Every Breath You Take,” another joint production, and the night-closing, Technicolor horn explosion “Sledgehammer.” This closer was exuberant fun, featuring charming choreography — onstage right, Gabriel pointed at Sting and the auxiliary vocalists at stage left, and mimed pulling the troupe toward him, as if they were on a piece of string — and plenty of goofy, unaffected singing and stage moves. The musicians and audience alike clearly having a blast — a fitting end to a night where even familiar songs played hundreds of times felt and sounded invigorated and refreshed.

Peter Gabriel and Sting Set List, June 21, 2016
“The Rhythm of the Heat”
“If I Ever Lose My Faith in You”
“No Self Control” (Sting and Gabriel sharing vocals)
“Invisible Sun”
“Games Without Frontiers” (Sting and Gabriel sharing vocals)
“Shock the Monkey” (Sting main lead vocal)
“Secret World”
“Driven to Tears”
“Fragile”
“Red Rain”
“Message in a Bottle” (with Sting doing a brief snippet of Genesis’ “Dancing With the Moonlit Knight” as an intro)
“Darkness”
“Walking in Your Footsteps” / “Kiss That Frog” (Sting vocals)
“Don’t Give Up”
“The Hounds of Winter”
“Big Time”
“Englishman in New York” (Sting and Gabriel sharing vocals)
“Solsbury Hill” (Sting and Gabriel sharing vocals)
“Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic”
“If You Love Somebody, Set Them Free” (Gabriel covering the song)
“Roxanne” / “Ain’t No Sunshine”
New and untitled Peter Gabriel song
“Desert Rose”
“In Your Eyes”

Encore:
“Every Breath You Take” (Sting and Gabriel sharing vocals)
“Sledgehammer” (Sting and Gabriel sharing vocals)




Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #17 posted 06/22/16 7:26pm

JoeBala

'Supergirl': Wonder Woman Lynda Carter to Play President

The actress will have a recurring role on the sophomore season of the CBS-turned-CW series.Lynda Carter Jeffrey Mayer/WireImage

The actress will have a recurring role on the sophomore season of the CBS-turned-CW series.

Wonder Woman is coming to The CW's Supergirl.

Lynda Carter, the actress who brought the Amazonian superheroine to life on the small screen, has booked a recurring role on Supergirl, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.

Carter will play the president of the United States and recur on the sophomore season of the CBS-turned-CW drama starring Melissa Benoist. She will first appear in episode three of season two.

Producers Greg Berlanti and Andrew Kreisberg told reporters last season that scoring Carter to play the president in season two was their dream casting for the part. The duo noted that they first envisioned Carter's president for a role in season one, though her schedule did not work out. "We're going to do it, we'll just do it next year," Kreisberg said.

Co-showrunner Ali Adler told THR after the season-one finale that having Carter join the series would be "incredible" and a "true honor." At the time, her casting was contingent on her schedule.

Supergirl marks Carter's first TV role in a few years. She last guest-starred onTwo and a Half Men in 2013, playing herself. She also played Moira Sullivan for an episode of Superman prequel series Smallville in 2007. Carter is best known for playing Diana Prince/Wonder Woman on the ABC-turned-CBS series, which aired for three seasons and nearly 60 episodes in the late 1970s. She is repped by Mavrick Artists Agency, the Katz Co. and Dorit Simone Management.

For Supergirl, Carter becomes the second high-profile casting as the series looks to make noise and retain viewers for its move to The CW. The series castTeen Wolf favorite Tyler Hoechlin to play Superman/Clark Kent, with the character debuting at the start of season two. The series returns Monday, Oct. 10, at 8 p.m. on The CW.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #18 posted 06/23/16 8:18am

JoeBala

Wayne Jackson, Trumpeter With Memphis Horns, Dies at 74

Wayne Jackson of The Mar-Keys pose for a studio portrait in 1965.
GILLES PETARD/REDFERNS

Jackson performed on recordings by numerous top-shelf artists, including Otis Redding, Elvis Presley, Neil Diamond and U2.

Trumpet player Wayne Jackson, who played standout horn lines on rock 'n' roll, soul, R&B and pop mainstays along with Memphis Horns partner and tenor saxophonist Andrew Love, has died. He was 74.

His wife, Amy, said her husband died of congestive heart failure Tuesday night at a hospital with her by his side. Jackson had been hospitalized and released June 7 before taking a turn for the worse Monday night and being readmitted.

"He led an incredible life and he left an amazing music legacy," Amy Jackson said.

Jackson and Love performed on recordings by numerous top-shelf artists, including Otis Redding, Elvis Presley, Neil Diamond and U2.

Jackson and Love - the Memphis Horns - were awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in February 2012, only the second instrumental backup group in history to receive the honor at the time. According to his wife, in his acceptance speech, he said, "It's been a dance of love between me and that trumpet."

Love died in April 2012.

Love, who was black, and Jackson, who was white, played together on 52 No. 1 records and 83 gold and platinum records, according to Memphis-based Stax Records. Amy Jackson said her husband received his first gold record in 1961 and his last in 2005.

The duo backed up Aretha Franklin, Elvis Presley, Otis Redding, Neil Diamond, Isaac Hayes, the Doobie Brothers,U2, Jack White, Alicia Keys and many other American pop music acts.

The Memphis Horns could sound wistful and romantic on one song, boisterous and up-tempo on another. They provided the horn tracks on dozens of well-known songs, including Redding's "Dock of the Bay," Franklin's "Respect," Diamond's "Sweet Caroline," Presley's "Suspicious Minds," Sam & Dave's "Soul Man," Al Green's "Let's Stay Together," Steve Winwood's "Roll With It," Peter Gabriel's "Sledgehammer," and U2's "Angel of Harlem."

Jackson was born in Memphis and was raised across the Mississippi River in West Memphis, Arkansas, according to his website.

On his website, he described the time when his mother gave him a trumpet at age 11.

"I opened up the case, and it smelled like oil and brass. I loved that, so I put it together, blew, and out came a pretty noise," he said.

Jackson said he first heard Love play at the Manhattan Club with the Willie Mitchell band.

"I knew we would be perfect together," Jackson said in a statement released after Love died. "He had a big tone and I had a big tone, and I knew that they would blend in the most natural, beautiful way."

They were first paired together as part of the Stax Records' Mar-Keys, which backed most of Stax's catalog of artists. They played behind Redding, Isaac Hayes, Rufus Thomas and Carla Thomas, among others.

In 1969, Jackson and Love formed the Memphis Horns. Jackson later moved to Nashville and spent three years traveling with country music performer Marty Robbins, according to Jackson's website.

In 2008, Jackson and Love were inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame. Jackson also wrote three books.

Funeral arrangements were pending.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #19 posted 06/23/16 2:42pm

JoeBala

James Earl Jones Confirmed as

cool

Voice of Darth Vader in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

  • Lucas Siegel
  • - 06/23/2016

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #20 posted 06/23/16 9:21pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

The Beatles: Eight Days A Week - The Touring Years

Watch the first trailer for the highly anticipated documentary feature film about The Beatles’ phenomenal early career The Beatles: Eight Days A Week - The Touring Years.

US THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE SET FOR SEPTEMBER 16 AND AVAILABLE ON HULU DAY AFTER

Press Release
LOS ANGELES, CA June 20, 2016 – Academy Award®-winner Ron Howard’s authorized and highly anticipated documentary feature film about The Beatles’ phenomenal early career The Beatles: Eight Days A Week - The Touring Years has set its US theatrical release date for September 16th, 2016 and debuts the first trailer from the film and the official poster to launch the campaign, it was announced today by Imagine Entertainment, White Horse Pictures and Apple Corps Ltd.

Hulu will be the presenting partner for the theatrical release of the film in the US where the film will become available to stream exclusively to Hulu subscribers on September 17th.

Featuring rare and exclusive footage, the film is produced with the full cooperation of Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Yoko Ono Lennon and Olivia Harrison. White Horse Pictures’ Grammy Award-winning Nigel Sinclair, Scott Pascucci and Academy Award®-winner and Emmy® Award-winner Brian Grazer of Imagine Entertainment are producing with Howard. Apple Corps Ltd.’s Jeff Jones and Jonathan Clyde are serving as executive producers, along with Imagine’s Michael Rosenberg and White Horse’s Guy East and Nicholas Ferrall.

Studiocanal is an anchor partner on the film having acquired UK, France, Germany and Australia and New Zealand rights.

The Beatles: Eight Days A Week - The Touring Years is based on the first part of The Beatles’ career (1962-1966) – the period in which they toured and captured the world’s acclaim. Ron Howard’s film will explore how John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr came together to become this extraordinary phenomenon, “The Beatles.” It will explore their inner workings – how they made decisions, created their music and built their collective career together – all the while, exploring The Beatles’ extraordinary and unique musical gifts and their remarkable, complementary personalities. The film will focus on the time period from the early Beatles’ journey in the days of The Cavern Club in Liverpool to their last concert at Candlestick Park in San Francisco in 1966.

Richard Abramowitz’s Abramorama will handle the US theatrical release of the film that is set to be an event driven experience with a few special surprises planned for cinemagoers.

Hulu will have the exclusive US streaming video on-demand rights to the film on SVOD beginning September 17th – marking the first feature film to debut on Hulu following its theatrical premiere. The Beatles: Eight Days A Week - The Touring Years is the first film acquired by Hulu’s Documentary Films arm which will serve as a new home for premium original and exclusive documentary film titles coming to Hulu.

Following an all-star world premiere in London on September 15th, the film will roll out theatrically worldwide with release dates set in Japan (September 22nd), Australia and New Zealand (September 16th) and UK, France and Germany (September 15th).

Award-winning Editor Paul Crowder is the editor. Crowder’s long-time collaborator, Mark Monroe, is serving as writer. Marc Ambrose is the supervising producer.


www.thebeatleseightdaysaweek.com

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #21 posted 06/23/16 10:00pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

Johnson Publishing sells Ebony, Jet magazines to Texas firm
Robert Channick, Chicago Tribune June 15, 2016
http://www.trbimg.com/img-5760a6ec/turbine/ct-ebony-covers-20160614-1/750/750x422
After a 71-year run in Chicago, Johnson Publishing is getting out of publishing.

The company said Tuesday it has sold Ebony, its iconic African-American lifestyle magazine, and the now digital-only Jet magazine to Clear View Group, an Austin, Texas-based private equity firm, for an undisclosed amount.

Johnson Publishing will retain its Fashion Fair Cosmetics business and its historic Ebony photo archives, which remains up for sale. The deal, which closed in May, also included the assumption of debt.

A family-owned business throughout its history, Ebony has documented the African-American experience since it first hit newsstands in 1945. It has shaped culture ever since, coming into its own as it reported from the front lines of the civil rights movement during the 1960s in powerful photos and prose.

In recent years, though, Johnson Publishing has seen declining media revenues as it struggled to evolve from print to digital platforms.

Linda Johnson Rice, chairman of Johnson Publishing and daughter of founder John Johnson, will serve as chairman emeritus on the board of the new company.

"This is the next chapter in retaining the legacy that my father, John H. Johnson, built to ensure the celebration of African-Americans," she said in a statement Tuesday.

The new publishing entity, Ebony Media Operations, will maintain the magazine's Chicago headquarters and its New York editorial office, as well as much of the current staff, according to Michael Gibson, co-founder and chairman of African-American-owned Clear View Group.

It is the first investment in the publishing business for Clear View.

"We made this purchase because this is an iconic brand — it's the most-recognized brand in the African-American community," said Gibson, 59. "We just think this is a great opportunity for us."

Cheryl McKissack, who has served as chief operating officer since 2013, will assume the role of CEO of the new publishing entity under Clear View, operating out of the magazine's Chicago office. Kierna Mayo is stepping down as editor-in-chief of Ebony to pursue other opportunities, Gibson said.

Chicago-based Kyra Kyles, who has headed up digital content for Ebony and Jet since last June, will add the role of editor-in-chief of Ebony, Gibson said.

"When we make an investment, that's what we look for — a strong team that can actually run the company," Gibson said. "We're not managers or experts by any stretch of imagination in the media business. What we bring to the table is very strong networking and the ability to raise financing and the ability to establish a vision for the company."

Desiree Rogers, the former social secretary for President Barack Obama who has been steering Johnson Publishing since 2010, will remain CEO, focusing on the cosmetics business, which represents about half of the company's total revenue.

"The overall strategy of separating these two distinct businesses — media and cosmetics — will ensure that both iconic brands are positioned for future investment and growth," Rogers said in a statement.

Under Rogers, Johnson Publishing made a number of moves in an effort to shore up finances. Those included taking on a minority partner in 2011, and taking the money-losing weekly digest Jet out of print circulation in 2014.

In January 2015, Johnson Publishing put its entire photo archive up for sale, hoping to raise $40 million. The historic collection spans seven decades of African-American history, chronicling everyone from Martin Luther King Jr. to Sammy Davis Jr.

The collection is still for sale, Rogers said Tuesday.

While the publishing industry continues to face headwinds — year-over-year magazine revenue is down 9 percent through April, according to Standard Media Index — Gibson said Ebony will remain in print for the foreseeable future. At the same time, he recognizes the need to ramp up digital growth.

"There's a lot of good reasons to keep the print," Gibson said. "That will always be our anchor. We want to grow the digital platform more consistently with both Ebony and Jet."

Gibson also sees opportunity in leveraging and expanding Ebony's events business. But in the end, the greatest asset he acquired was the legacy of a brand, one which he hopes will be influential for years to come.

"It's a dream come true," Gibson said. "Growing up, we had Ebony and Jet in our household all along. You knew you made it when you made it to the cover of Ebony or Jet. It is just exciting — I pinch myself every morning."

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #22 posted 06/24/16 8:04am

JoeBala

Thanks MD! Looking forward to the film.

New Series 'Queen of the South' Makes its Debut On USA Network

The anticipated new TV drama 'Queen of the South' makes its debut Thursday night. The series is based on the global best-selling novel "La Reina Del Sur", and tells the tale of Teresa Mendoza, a woman who is forced to run and seek refuge in America after her drug-dealing boyfriend is unexpectedly murdered in Mexico. Teresa then becomes a force to reckon with in her own right.

Queen of the South - Pilot
"Piloto" Episode 101 -- Pictured: (l-r) Alice Braga as Teresa Mendoza, Jon Ecker as Guero Benedicte Desrus / Getty Images

The series takes after the novel by internationally acclaimed Spanish author Arturo Pérez-Reverte.

The novel was also adapted into a top-rated series, La Reina del Sur, that aired on Telemundo, USA Network's sister station (both are part of NBC Universal).

"Mendoza teams up with an unlikely figure from her past to bring down the leader of the very drug trafficking ring that has her on the run", according to the show's release.

c
Meet the Latina Stars of 'Queen of the South' 2:13

Mendoza, the main character, is played by Brazilian actress Alice Braga, who is known for her roles in City of God and Lower City. The Brazilian actress has won multiple awards for her acting in both the US and Brazil. She is also the niece of the famous Brazilian actress, Sonia Braga.

Many noted Latino actors star in the new series. "Everybody is phenomenal in this cast, everyone is Latino", said actress Justina Machado, who plays Brenda Parra in the series, in a recent interview with NBC Latino.

Queen of the South - Pilot
"Piloto" Episode 101 -- Pictured: Alice Braga as Teresa Mendoza Eniac Martinez / Getty Images

"It has a Little bit of everything you know, it has revenge, it has love, it has hatred, it has survival, it has action, so it's a good story. The characters are endearing, even though they're criminals, most of them. I think when you have a good story people will connect", said actress Veronica Falcón.

Queen of the South - Season 1
"Caurenta Minutos" Episode 102 -- Pictured: (l-r) Alice Braga as Teresa Mendoza, Juan Filipe Barrientos as The Charger, Veronica Falcon as Camila Vargas Bill Matlock / Getty Images

"All of the actors are from different backgrounds, one is from the Dominican Republic, I'm from Brazil, there's one from just the border of Tejas, [and] a Puerto Rican, and that's something I think is very important nowadays, for us to have so many Hispanics who live in the U.S. We have such a big Latin community, that just to be part of a show like this is very special", Alice Braga told NBC News in a recent interview.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #23 posted 06/24/16 7:08pm

JoeBala

Bluegrass music patriarch Ralph Stanley dies at 89

March 11, 2011. Ralph Stanley poses for a photo backstage at the Grand Ole Opry House in Nashville, Tenn. (The Associated Press)

March 11, 2011. Ralph Stanley poses for a photo backstage at the Grand Ole Opry House in Nashville, Tenn. (The Associated Press)

Ralph Stanley, a patriarch of Appalachian music who with his brother Carter helped expand and popularize the genre that became known as bluegrass, died Thursday. He was 89.

His publicist, Kirt Webster, confirmed Stanley's death but did not have details.

Stanley was born and raised in southwest Virginia, a land of coal mines and deep forests where he and his brother formed the Stanley Brothers and their Clinch Mountain Boys in 1946. Their father would sing them old traditional songs like "Man of Constant Sorrow," while their mother, a banjo player, taught them the old-time clawhammer style, in which the player's fingers strike downward at the strings in a rhythmic style.

Heavily influenced by Grand Ole Opry star Bill Monroe, the brothers fused Monroe's rapid rhythms with the mountain folk songs from groups such as the Carter Family, who hailed from this same rocky corner of Virginia.

The Stanleys created a distinctive three-part harmony that combined the lead vocal of Carter with Ralph's tenor and an even higher part sung by bandmate Pee Wee Lambert. Carter's romantic songwriting professed a deep passion for the rural landscape, but also reflected on lonesomeness and personal losses.

Songs like "The Lonesome River," uses the imagery of the water to evoke the loss of a lover, and "White Dove," describes the mourning and suffering after the death of a mother and father. In 1951, they popularized "Man of Constant Sorrow," which was also later recorded by Bob Dylan in the '60s.

The brothers were swept into the burgeoning folk movement and they toured the country playing folk and bluegrass festivals during the '60s, including the Newport Folk Festival in 1959 and 1964.

But when Carter died of liver disease in 1966, Ralph wasn't sure he could continue. His brother had been the main songwriter, lead singer and front man, and Ralph, by his own account, was withdrawn and shy, although he had overcome some of his early reticence.

"Within weeks of his passing, I got phone calls and letters and telegrams and they all said don't quit. They said, 'We've always been behind you and Carter, but now we'll be behind you even more because we know you'll need us,'" Stanley told The Associated Press in 2006.

After Carter's death, Ralph drew even deeper from his Appalachian roots, adopting the a cappella singing style of the Primitive Baptist church where he was raised. He reformed the Clinch Mountain Boys band to include Ray Cline, vocalist Larry Sparks and Melvin Goins. He would change the lineup of the band over the years, later including Jack Cooke, and mentored younger artists like Keith Whitley and Ricky Skaggs, who also performed with him.

Dylan and Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia praised his work and, in the case of Dylan, joined him for a remake of the Stanley Brothers' "Lonesome River" in 1997.

He was given an honorary doctorate of music from Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tennessee, in 1976, and he was often introduced as "Dr. Ralph Stanley." He performed at the inaugurations of U.S. Presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, was given a "Living Legends" medal from the Library of Congress and a National Medal of Arts presented by the National Endowment for the Arts and President George W. Bush. He became a member of the Grand Ole Opry in 2000.

But at age 73, he was introduced to a new generation of fans in 2000 due to his chilling a cappella dirge "O Death" from the hit Coen Brothers' "O Brother, Where Art Thou?" movie soundtrack. The album was a runaway hit, topping the Billboard 200 chart, as well as the country albums and soundtrack charts, and sold millions of copies.

He won a Grammy for best male country vocal performance in 2002 — beating out Tim McGraw, Ryan Adams, Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash and Lyle Lovett — and was the focus of a successful tour and documentary inspired by the soundtrack. The soundtrack, produced by T Bone Burnett, also won a Grammy for album of the year. The following year he and Jim Lauderdale would win a Grammy for best bluegrass album for "Lost in the Lonesome Pines."

He said in an interview with The Associated Press in 2002 that younger people were coming to see his shows and hear his "old time music," and was enjoying the belated recognition.

"I wish it had come 25 years sooner," he said. "I am still enjoying it, but I would have had longer to enjoy it."

Despite health problems, he continued to record and tour into his 80s, often performing with his son Ralph Stanley II on guitar and his grandson Nathan on mandolin.

[Edited 6/24/16 19:48pm]

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #24 posted 06/26/16 7:33am

JoeBala

'Million Dollar Quartet' filming gets under way

April 8, 2016 - Dressed in period costumes, extras from the "Million Dollar Quartet" television show linger inside the Arcade restaurant after shooting wrapped there. Filming began this week for the show, an eight-episode series about the birth of rock and roll that will appear on CMT (Country Music Television) in November.  (Brandon Dill/Special to The Commercial Appeal)
April 8, 2016 - Dressed in period costumes, extras from the "Million Dollar Quartet" television show linger inside the Arcade restaurant after shooting wrapped there. Filming began this week for the show, an eight-episode series about the birth of rock and roll that will appear on CMT (Country Music Television) in November. (Brandon Dill/Special to The Commercial Appeal)
April 06, 2016

By John Beifuss of The Commercial Appeal

Filming began Monday on the Memphis-based birth-of-rock-and-roll television series "Million Dollar Quartet."

"Memphis has opened its arms, and it's been a great start," said series executive producer Leslie Greif, whose Los Angeles-based Thinkfactory Media is creating the eight-episode scripted drama in partnership with CMT (Country Music Television), the cable network where the program will debut in November. "We already shot the first scene with the young Elvis at Humes. We move and groove, in and out."

Drake Milligan and Kevin Fonteyne will star as young Elvis Presley and Johnny Cash

Highly visible, thanks to its armada of equipment trucks, its small army of crew members and its fleet of vintage "picture cars" (as necessary as the costumes in conveying a sense of 1950s authenticity), the production in its first few days has hit Millington, the former Humes High School, the Cooper-Young neighborhood (for some "gospel" scenes at Galloway United Methodist Church) and the South Main district.

"I guess I've been through 30 or 40 of these," said Harry Zepatos, owner of the oft-filmed Arcade Restaurant, where shooting took place Wednesday. Founded in 1919, the Arcade has been showcased in numerous TV shows and commercials and in such notable films as "Mystery Train," by Jim Jarmusch, and "21 Grams," directed by Alejandro Iñárritu, winner of back-to-back Best Director Oscars for "Birdman" and "The Revenant." "It's a lot of work," Zepatos said, "but it's always fun."

Many of the significant cast members are in town, and several have documented Memphis experiences on social media. Series lead Chad Michael Murray, who plays Sun Records founder Sam Phillips, tweeted a picture of his bearded self on "Day One of Production," commenting "Gotta get the hair right 4 the era ... then a shave ... ." Texan Drake Milligan, cast as the pre-fame Elvis, posted a picture from a day of "hanging out" at Graceland, with the hashtag "#wheninmemphis." Christian Lees, who plays Jerry Lee Lewis, tweeted: "LOVED my first couple of days in Memphis. So much good music everywhere you go."

Other cast members include Jennifer Holland, cast as Phillips' wife, Becky; Margaret Anne Florence, cast as Phillips' assistant, Marion Keisker; Billy Gardell, as future Elvis manager "Colonel" Tom Parker; Christian Lees' twin brother, Jonah Lees, who will play Jerry Lee Lewis' cousin Jimmy Swaggart; Keir O'Donnell (of the "Fargo" TV series) as WHBQ disc jockey Dewey Phillips; and Kevin Fonteyne, cast as Johnny Cash, who offered Saturday — as Cash might have done — the most honest tweet yet: "All I can hear is Spice girls blaring from Beale St. here in Memphis. Wtf?!?"

"Million Dollar Quartet" is intended to be CMT's entrée into the increasingly crowded field of quality scripted television, where the network's competitors include HBO, AMC, FX, Netflix, Sundance and other companies. Set primarily in 1954, the eight episodes now being filmed are supposed to be the first season of what would be an ongoing series about the early years of rock and roll, with Sam Phillips as the focal point for a roster of supporting characters that also will include Ike Turner, B.B. King and various country music stars, in addition to the Mid-South "rockabillies." The first season is being directed by London-born Roland Joffe, a two-time Oscar nominee for the harrowing historical epics "The Killing Fields" and "The Mission"; Joffe previously worked with Greif on the recent History Channel miniseries "Texas Rising." Shooting is expected to be complete in early July, by which time the production is expected to have spent some $17 million in Memphis and Shelby County, in order to qualify for $4.3 million in state funds set aside for local filmmaking. This would dwarf the amounts spent in West Tennessee by even such major past movie projects as "The Firm" and "Walk the Line."

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #25 posted 06/26/16 3:47pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

Jerome Teasley, drummer for Motown, R&B legends, dies in Phoenix at 67
Ed Masley, The Republic | azcentral.com 11:36 p.m. MST June 21, 2016
http://www.gannett-cdn.com/-mm-/16cccc2d58ed7a59c91f69ffbda3cf8d67a47375/c=0-0-638-480&r=x404&c=534x401/local/-/media/2016/06/21/Phoenix/Phoenix/636021369244798963-IMG-1562.JPG
By the time he moved to Phoenix in the ’80s, Jerome Teasley had played drums for such iconic figures in the history of soul and R&B as Wilson Pickett, Al Green, Ike and Tina Turner and Jr. Walker & the All-Stars, appearing on three Walker albums and Green’s first album, “Back Up Train.” He also played with bebop legend Sonny Stitt.

Bob Corritore recruited Teasley, who died Thursday, June 16, to drum for a group he and Janiva Magness had just formed, the Mojomatics, when the drummer left Detroit for Phoenix.

“He was just unbelievable,” Corritore says. “For the soul show drumming, fantastic. There’s a whole bunch of videos on YouTube of him and Jr. Walker & the All-Stars. He was that guy that provided the perfect power that you always needed. Very powerful. I mean, it took me a little while to get used to his handshake because it was so strong, it would pretty much crush your hand.

"Jerome was very cool and always came to play, always had a fantastic, very positive, ready-to-go, ready-to-sweat animal instinct to his playing. It was always refreshing. You could always feed off of that.”

Teasley had Stage Four cancer in his lungs and liver. Diagnosed a year and a half ago, he was admitted to St. Joseph’s Hospital in Phoenix two days before his death. He was 67.

Teasley’s daughter, Charlie, says, “There were a lot of things that factored into my dad’s death. He got pneumonia and the bacterial virus on the pneumonia spread to the blood. The cancer that he had in his liver and his lungs spread, too. And then his kidney’s failed. He also wasn’t getting any oxygen to the brain and his lungs weren’t working."

Still going out and playing

The last time Corritore saw Teasley, he had no idea he’d been ill.

“Apparently, Jerome didn’t want anybody to know about his illness,” Corritore says. “He was getting out and playing. And he was hanging out, too. The last time I saw him was a couple weeks ago at one of our gigs at the Rhythm Room. I didn’t realize he was dealing with all that stuff. It was just good old Jerome. He looked great. He looked very on. I didn’t realize at the time that he was just making sure that everybody felt real connected to him. But we had some good smiles together.”

Charlie says, “My dad was up walking around and playing the drums, living an independent life, three days before he was admitted to the hospital.”

Charlie says her father was “a very optimistic” man who loved eating at Lo-Lo's Chicken & Waffles

“He always looked at the positive side of things,” the daughter he called Cha Cha says. “No matter how negative I was, he was always positive and uplifting. If you ever needed anything, he would help you any way he could. He just wanted everyone to be happy and everything to be OK. And he was really funny.”


Music was his world

“That’s all he wanted me to do in life was to be a musician," Charlie says. "But unfortunately, I didn’t get that talent from him. I mean, I’m sure he thinks I do have talent but I just don’t try hard enough, but I never really got that talent.”

Teasley drummed for a number of legendary artists through the years, but he's best remembered for his long association with the All-Starrs. Although he signed on after “Shotgun,” he appears on 1969’s “Home Cookin’” album, which included three Top 40 entries on the Billboard Hot 100: “Come See About Me,” “Hip City Pt. 2” and “What Does It Take (To Win Your Love).”

There are reviews online that mention Teasley playing drums for Walker gigs as recently as 1994, a year before the All-Star's death. And he never stopped playing in Phoenix.

For the past five years or so, he's been a regular at Chuck E. Baby's Sunday Night Menagerie Jam, sitting in with the band at Prankster's Too in Scottsdale.

"The guy's groove was impeccable," says A.D. Adams, who drums for Chuck E. Baby and tours with Louis Prima Jr. "His left hand and his timing on his backbeat, I think that's what I felt the most when he played. There was such a sense of patience with him. He was such a wise, wise drummer. He wasn't gonna out-flash you. He wasn't gonna outrace you. This was no Keith Moon affair. He just kept that steady pocket. That backbeat was incessant. No matter if he was was syncopating the groove or not, you always felt the backbeat. That two and that four just clobbered you. And that's what he would always say. He goes, 'Nothing else matters. If that backbeat is there, that's the ticket. He just had his way of signing things. You could be outside and hear the drums and go, 'Oh, that's Jerome Teasley.'"

As a fellow drummer, Adams says, "To me, every time Jerome walked on the stage, school was in session. The drummers knew school was in session. You could play everything he played. But he played it better. He played it like him."

Teasley tried to teach the younger drummer a few of his signature moves, Adams says.

"And I would play it right," Adams says. "Technically. But it never felt like him. There was something in his touch that was so clean and precise but effortless, that's what drove me nuts about trying to emulate some of his chops. They were so effortless for him and I was trying so hard. And he'd laugh and go, 'You're trying too hard.'"

Adams also enjoyed the stories Teasley told about his storied past while partaking in his favorite drink -- a double bourbon with a single ice cube.

"I guarantee," Adams says. "There's a double bourbon with one ice cube waiting at the Pearly Gates for that guy."

Drum Talk TV posted video of Teasley playing drums at Pranksters Too in early April on its Facebook page Monday, and there was clearly still plenty of fire and force in his playing at that point.

“When I first met him, he had just come into town,” Corritore says. “And I had heard that he was a great drummer who used to play with Jr. Walker and the All-Stars. Janiva Magness and I were forming a band called the Mojomatics at that time I put him to work. I mean, the guy was unbelievable. He had a really pushy uptown shuffle so he could relate really well to the blues. But he could also, if we were doing a funky number or something that was an R&B groove, you weren’t gonna find anybody any better than that.”

Watching Teasley play was a special treat for Charlie.

“It was really magical and inspiring,” she says. “Whatever rough patch my dad came across in the music industry, whether he had jobs or he didn’t, he never gave up on his passion. And he always just made it happen.”

Her father was writing a book, Charlie says, “about what it was like to be the drummer, playing behind the stars like Junior Walker and Tina Turner because not many people hear the story of the people who played behind the stars.”

He didn't come away from the experience a wealthy man. But Teasley didn't seem to mind.

"He was dead broke," Adams says. "And that always bothered me. Here's this guy, he's another one of those victims of showbiz. But his soul was so intact. Through all that, getting ripped off left and right, I never heard him badmouth anybody. He wasn't bitter about it. If he was upset, he never said it. I don't think he ever felt that he had ever been defeated. All he sensed was 'I gotta play.' He'd go to every jam in town just to play. And he wasn't making a dime. But he just had to play. His DNA says 'Play the drums.' And he did it so effortlessly, that was the beauty of it – the simplicity of his strokes and the purity of the music. He left so much room for everybody else. I loved his playing but more than anything else, I truly, truly loved the man. Everywhere he went, he just endeared himself to everyone."

The Rhythm Room has planned a Teasley tribute on July 10, for which Magness is coming to town to take part.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #26 posted 06/28/16 8:48am

JoeBala

‘Mustang Sally’ author ‘Sir’ Mack Rice dies

Posted: Yesterday 9:12 p.m.
Jim Newberry/Special to The Commercial Appeal. Sir Mack Rice performs Saturday 2/17/2007 at the Cadillac Palace Theatre in Chicago.
Jim Newberry/Special to The Commercial Appeal. Sir Mack Rice performs Saturday 2/17/2007 at the Cadillac Palace Theatre in Chicago.
Jim Newberry/Special to The Commercial Appeal. Sir Mack Rice performs Saturday 2/17/2007 at the Cadillac Palace Theatre in Chicago.
Jim Newberry/Special to The Commercial Appeal. Sir Mack Rice performs Saturday 2/17/2007 at the Cadillac Palace Theatre in Chicago.

By Bob Mehr of The Commercial Appeal

The author of "Mustang Sally," the co-writer of "Respect Yourself," soul legend, and Stax Records stalwart "Sir" Mack Rice died Monday night at his Detroit home from complications of Alzheimer's Disease.

Rice's death was confirmed by family friend Pat Lewis in a statement to the Stax Museum of American Soul Music. He was 82.

Though he lived in Detroit for more than 60 years, the city that produced Motown, it was Memphis and Stax Records that would become a creative home for Rice. He would pen hits for Stax artists including Rufus Thomas ("The Funky Penguin, Pt. 1"), Albert King ("Cadillac Assembly Line"), Johnny Taylor ("Cheaper to Keep Her"), and the Staple Singers ("Respect Yourself").

"I was completely in awe of him," said Scott Bomar of Memphis R&B band the Bo-Keys, who worked with Rice starting in the late '90s. "He was like this mythical songwriting giant — he'd written 'Mustang Sally' and 'Respect Yourself' and all these songs that were lesser known but just as amazing like 'Money Talks' and 'Tina the Go-Go Queen.'"

"He was a real spiritual person," added Bomar. "He had a real kind spirit, a very kind man and thoughtful human being. And that came through in his songs. When he saw human suffering or injustice it affected him and his way of working through it was to write a song about it. He was writing songs in an era when a song actually had the ability to change people's hearts and minds. And something like 'Respect Yourself' is a message song and it resonated with a lot of people."

Born Bonny Rice in Clarksdale, Mississippi, in 1933, as a teen he was an avid fan of the "race" music of the 1940s — Charles Brown, Amos Milburn, T-Bone Walker — but he had no aspirations to play. Eventually, one of his Clarksdale running buddies, a young Ike Turner, took him under his wing. "Ike was trying to teach me to play piano, but I wasn't interested," recalled Rice in a 2007 interview with The Commercial Appeal.

His family headed north for Detroit in 1950. In high school, Rice joined his first singing group, the Five Scalders, winning a couple of talent contests. But after graduating, he was drafted into the Army and served several years in Germany. When he returned to Detroit in 1955, his mother mentioned an ad in the newspaper placed by a group looking for new members.

The group Rice would join was the Falcons, and it would feature two singers who later figured prominently in the Stax story as well: Wilson Pickett and Eddie Floyd. The Falcons enjoyed some success over the years, with hits like "You're So Fine" and "I Found Love," before Pickett left to go solo in 1963. Afterward, Rice and Floyd kept going as a duo for a couple of years, touring the South heavily. Eventually, Floyd split for D.C. and Rice began toying with the idea of writing songs. "I'd written a few things with the Falcons, but none of the hits," he noted. "But I had a few ideas."

One of Rice's ideas was a "joke song" about Ford's new sports car. Originally titled "Mustang Mama," it was soul queen Aretha Franklin — who played piano on Rice's original demo — who suggested the song's now famous title, "Mustang Sally."

In 1966, white R&B-pop group the Rascals made the newly rechristened "Mustang Sally" the b-side to their multimillion-selling smash "Good Lovin'," helping open Rice's eyes to a career as a writer. "Until then, I wasn't writing for a living. I was writing for a feeling," he said. "But that kinda started me getting into the groove."

Although Rice had scored a small R&B hit with his own version of the song for the Mercury/Blue Rock label — it was session producer Andre Williams who gave him the nickname "Sir" Mack — the definitive version came with Wilson Pickett's rendition, recorded in Muscle Shoals, Alabama . "He's the one that caused that song to be as big as it was," said Rice.

Through his connection with Pickett — who cut a series of hits at Stax during the mid-'60s — Rice's path began to draw closer to Soulsville. Steve Cropper had been working with Pickett and also had begun collaborating with Rice's old Falcons bandmate Eddie Floyd — the pair had sired the hit "Knock on Wood." It was while promoting the track in Detroit in 1966 that Cropper first crossed paths with Rice, who was soon brought into the Stax fold. Although Rice would cut a handful of solo singles for Stax over the years, his main focus was writing for others. He began commuting regularly from Detroit to Memphis starting in 1967.

Compared to his previous label experiences, the communal spirit that Rice found working at Stax was something of a shock. "Isaac Hayes and David Porter cut a tune of mine called 'Hold It, Baby' for Sam and Dave," said Rice. "That was my first break. I never thought I'd get one on Sam and Dave 'cause they was hot as fire. But David and Isaac, them guys was not a selfish production team. Somebody like me could come in with some material, and they would cut it. They would always reach out. That surprised me."

"We had unity at Stax, and a love we had for each other. Whites and black, got along like brothers — and sisters, 'cause we had women working there, too."

Rice remained with Stax until the very end, when bankruptcy consumed the label in the mid-'70s; in fact, he was one of the company's last full-time employees.

After the demise of Stax, Rice would reunite with Cropper at the guitarist's TMI studio. Although he never recaptured the chart success of his Stax days, Rice's catalog of songs have endured. "Mustang Sally" and "Respect Yourself" have been covered several hundred times by an array of artists that include everyone from B.B. King to Lynyrd Skynyrd, Buck Owens to Bruce Willis.

In the early '90s, Rice resumed recording, putting out a series of solo albums, his last coming in 2006. He continued to perform — playing at the Stax Musuem and Ponderosa Stomp in New Orleans — until his illness forced him to retire.

Plans for services are pending.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #27 posted 06/28/16 2:26pm

JoeBala

Rick Springfield will be performing on ABC Television Network's "Greatest Hits" this Thursday, June 30 at 9pm ET! Check your local listings!


Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #28 posted 06/28/16 2:43pm

JoeBala

Prince’s Yellow Cloud Guitar Sells for $137,500 to Colts Owner Jim Irsay

Prince’s Yellow Cloud Guitar Sells for $137,500 to Colts Owner Jim Irsay

You might say Jim Irsay got a bargain.

On Saturday, June 25, the Indianapolis Colts owner and guitar collector bought a Yellow Cloud guitar owned by Prince for $137,500 at Heritage Auction’s Entertainment and Music Memorabilia Signature auction. The guitar was one of the late artist’s favorites and was among the main guitars he used from 1988 to the mid 1990s.

Of course, $137,500 hardly seems a bargain—unless you consider what else is in Irsay’s collection. He paid considerably more in February 2015 when he dropped $343,750, including commission, for Les Paul’s Black Beauty.

But that was nothing compared to the small fortune he’s spent on Beatles gear in recent years. A keen collector of the group’s instruments, Irsay paid $567,500 for George Harrison’s cherry-red 1964 Gibson SG and $408,000 for a 1966 Vox Kensington prototype guitar once owned by John Lennon.

His other auction prizes include Lennon’s 1964 Rickenbacker 325 Fireglo “Beatle Backer” ($910,000), Jerry Garcia’s custom Doug Irwin Tiger ($957,500), and Bob Dylan’s 1964 Fender Stratocaster, which the folk-rock legend played at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival for his infamous electric set ($965,000).

But even those prices pale in comparison to the $2.125 million Irsay paid last November for Ringo Starr’s drum head with the Beatles logo, seen during the group’s 1964 performances in the U.S., and the $2.2 million he dropped the following month for Starr’s first 1963 Ludwig Oyster Black Pearl three-piece drum kit, purchased at the same auction where he bought Lennon’s Beatle Backer.

So $137,500 for a guitar that was one of Prince’s favorites? It’s small change by comparison.

The bright yellow guitar, serial number P.M. 16644, was built by luthier Andy Beech and features gold-colored hardware, including Schaller tuners, a Floyd Rose Original tremolo (with bar), one volume knob, one tone knob, a three-way switch, nut and truss rod cover. The pickups are an EMG humbucker in the bridge position and an EMG single-coil in the neck. The auction included a custom hard case and seven original Prince guitar picks of six different designs and colors.

The guitar was authenticated by Prince’s former guitar tech Zeke Clark, who notes that the instrument was the second Cloud guitar that Beech built for Prince, preceded by P.M. 16643. Prince used the guitar for recording and at performances for several years until he broke the neck at a French TV studio. Clark repaired it and at the same time installed the Floyd Rose, the first one that Prince had ever used.

Chris McKinney, curator for Irsay’s collection, says his boss “is delighted this historical instrument will reside with many others.

“The collection is about preserving pieces of music history and this guitar will join those used by some of the world's greatest musicians—of which Prince certainly deserves a place of honor.”

In the video below, McKinney shows a few of the Colts owner’s guitars, including instruments once owned by Lennon, Harrison and Garcia.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #29 posted 06/29/16 9:19am

JoeBala

ICYMI: BET Drops The Trailer For ‘The New Edition Story’

by Elle Breezy 0

New-Edition-Biopic

In case you missed it during Sunday’s BET Awards, here’s the trailer for the network’s upcoming biopic seriesThe New Edition Story.

The three-part series will chronicle the rise of five boys from Boston (Ronnie, Bobby, Ricky, Mike, and Ralph, and the addition of Johnny Gill later on) as the were catapulted into the stratosphere of superstardom and all the drama in between.

“Empire” star Bryshere Gray (Yazz/Hakeem) has scored the starring role as Michael Bivins in the forthcoming made-for-TV miniseries. Along with Gray, Luke James will play Johnny Gill, Keith Powers will portray Ronnie Devoe, Elijah Kelley has been cast as Ricky Bell, Algee Smith will be playing Ralph Tresvant, and Woody McClain will play Bobby Brown.

Watch the trailer below.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 1 of 2 12>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Music: Non-Prince > News #14