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Reply #30 posted 06/30/16 9:17am

JoeBala

Watch Yoko Ono's Farewell to NYC Record Store Other Music

Sharon Van Etten, Bill Callahan, Frankie Cosmos, Yo La Tengo and more played tribute show at Bowery Ballroom

BY SARAH GRANT June 30, 2016
Yoko Ono Performs Closing Other Music Record Store New York

http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/watch-yoko-onos-farewell-to-nyc-record-store-other-music-20160630

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Reply #31 posted 07/02/16 6:53am

JoeBala

Morris Day and the Time pay tribute to Prince with swagger and style

Morris Day (Photos by Emmet Kowler)

“Minneapolis, if you love Prince make some noise!”

They were the kinds of one-liners that might come off as platitudes from any other touring performer. But when Morris Day stopped between songs at the Minnesota Zoo’s amphitheater to shout-out one of his oldest friends and most complex musical partnerships, there was no question that he was speaking from the heart.

“Jellybean, we are in the hometown tonight,” Morris said, turning around in a rare unscripted moment to address the drummer who was there from the very beginning, not just from the genesis of the Time but from the start of Morris’s journey with the gang of North Side kids who would invent the Minneapolis Sound.

Although Morris Day and the Time have made many hometown stops in recent years — including a show in January at Paisley Park that was hosted by Prince himself — this gig felt significant for several reasons. Not only was it their first time returning home since the passing of the man who created their band back in 1981, but it was their chance to reconnect with an audience who could fully understand the magnitude of the loss and what it meant to their legacy and their city.

Original drummer Jellybean Johnson sat at the kit flanked by founding member Monte Moir on keys, and Moir’s parents stood proudly in the audience, taking selfies with fans while wearing ballcaps emblazoned with “THE TIME.” When guitarist Tori Ruffin asked if there were any Morris Day and the Time fans in the house, a man loudly replied, “Of course there are, this is MINNEAPOLIS!”

Day was sure to make several hometown references in his songs. He shouted out the North Side more than once, rapped about driving his yellow Cadillac down to the Nacirema Club in South, and reminded the crowd that “Uptown Funk” was an explicit rip-off of the sound he helped Prince to create. “When Bruno sings he’s ‘gonna kiss himself, he’s so pretty,’ where do you think he got that?” Day said to wild cheers.

And through it all he never broke character, never wavered. Even in his quieter moments he was dramatically self-centered and cavalier, like when he removed his sunglasses like he was going to say something serious and said, “Minneapolis, there must be something in the air tonight… because I’m starting to feel real sexy right now.”

Morris performs with an impenetrable swagger, the kind that kids on the North Side adopted back in the early ’70s to compete with each other in high school battles of the band, when he and Prince and Andre Cymone would team up in Grand Central against Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis in Flyte Tyme. It’s the kind of swagger that made him famous as Prince’s nemesis in Purple Rain, and that caused him to butt heads with the boss time and again throughout their respective careers, as they never quit performing like showbiz and Hollywood was just one big battle of the bands and they were determined to take home the prize.

Perhaps the best tribute Morris Day can pay to Prince at this point is to stay in the character that he helped create, to live up to the vision that Prince had for the potential of his hometown crew. From “COOL” to “777-9311” to “The Bird,” which does indeed sound like the funk-pop prototype for “Uptown Funk,” the band cranked out tight rhythms and kept the crowd on their feet, Jellybean digging down deep into the pocket and Moir pounding out those signature synth lines. And Prince would have loved it when Johnson came back on stage in the encore to wail on the guitar while Day sat down behind the kit, a testament to the fact that all those neighborhood kids knew they had to master more than one instrument if they were going to make the cut.

As Questlove so aptly tweeted in the weeks following Prince’s death, “Every Prince rendition will not be a life changing orgasmic experience. Just to SING his work is brave enough.” And so no, there were no tearful tributes, no candid speeches addressing the loss of one of his oldest friends. But in his own way, and with his own signature style, Morris Day gave us the strength to get up, put our hands on our hips, and shuffle our feet to “Jungle Love” in that joyful way that can only be described as courageous.

I’d be remiss to gloss over the fact that Mina Moore and her band did a fantastic job warming up the stage for the Time, and at several moments she proved that she is part of the lineage of artists carrying the Minneapolis Sound into a new age. Moore began the set with a moving a capella rendition of “7” that had the hairs on the back of my neck standing straight, and sprinkled in a cover of Janet Jackson’s “What Have You Done for Me Lately” that would have made Jam and Lewis proud. Her own song, “Yasmina,” was also a set highlight.

Mina Moore

Morris Day and the Time

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Reply #32 posted 07/07/16 2:50pm

JoeBala

eek

‘Eat ‘Em and Smile’ Turns 30: Our Writers Answer Five Big Questions About David Lee Roth’s Masterpiece

Warner BrothersWarner Brothers

David Lee Roth‘s first full-length album, the audacious Eat ‘Em and Smile, celebrates its 30th birthday today. To commemorate this momentous occasion, we invited our writers to offer their unfiltered opinions on five burning questions about Diamond Dave’s undeniable solo career peak.

What’s the best song on the album? What one song would you remove from the record? What went wrong with Roth’s career afterward? And finally, is Smile better than 5150, the much poppier but higher-selling album his former Van Halen bandmates made with new singer Sammy Hagar that same year? Those were the questions, here are their answers.

1) What’s the best song on Eat ‘Em and Smile, and why?

Jed Gottlieb: “Yankee Rose” is the obvious pick – c’mon, who else can get away with a lustful paean to the Statue of Liberty? Nobody, that’s who! “Ladies’ Night in Buffalo?” is the maverick’s choice with its slow-burn groove and syncopated, understated guitar riff. But Roth’s greatest talent is to reel you into a song with a wink, laugh and story. And “Big Trouble” is his best story – winsome and hazy, silly and intense. Bonus points for the wisdom in the lyric, “I bet if you asked them, our heroes would say, ‘Hey, we’re already gone.’”

Nick DeRiso: “Yankee Rose” is endlessly fun, and “Big Trouble” features a subject as outsized as Roth himself. But “Ladies’ Nite in Buffalo?” isn’t just the best song on this album, it might be the best thing Roth has ever done. I still have no clue what he’s singing about, but its atmosphere – coiled, dark and perfectly restrained – is so perfect that I’ve simply never cared.

Michael Christopher: “Yankee Rose” from Sonrisa Salvaje, the Spanish-language version of Smile. The sheer absurdity – and audacity – of Roth deciding to re-cut his vocals for the album so a Spanish-language version could be released shows how over the top he could be in a valiant attempt to outdo the Van Halen brothers. Roth always prided himself on being bilingual, and this gave him a chance to show it off, even if it’s more street-Spanish than Nino Bravo. Bonus points for inadvertently making a song about New York City and the Statue of Liberty, a beacon for future immigrants.

Matt Wardlaw: I’ll go with “Yankee Rose.” Usually, the first single from any record is the song that I like the least. But the way Roth opened this album, by having a “conversation” with his new sparring partner Steve Vai’s guitar, was a signature DLR kinda move, but also one that felt like a new trick in his playbook – and it sounded so cool on the radio. It makes a perfect album opener, and when they follow up with “Shy Boy,” you can tell that Roth really wanted to make a firm statement that his new bandmates had no shortage of chops and flash.

Eduardo Rivadavia: The best song on Eat ‘Em and Smile is also one of the most unusual of David Lee Roth’s career, “Ladies Night in Buffalo.” To hear this ice-cool slice of easy-rolling funk rock nestled amid so many white-hot hard rock party anthems was both a shock and a revelation. Cap that with those vague but evocative lyrics and you have a welcome change-of-pace in an album where most songs get straight to the point and leave little to the imagination.

Matthew Wilkening: I’m very happy to see “Buffalo” getting all this love, and also very tempted to point out that everything from “Tobacco Road” to “Bump and Grind” is sequenced together so tightly it could be considered Roth’s own Abbey Road medley. But I’ll stick with “Big Trouble” – not just because the stream-of-consciousness verses bring to mind the Bon Scott-era AC/DC gem “What’s Next to the Moon,” but because the introspective and surprisingly deep second half (aptly quoted by Gottlieb above) makes you think you’re getting a rare glimpse into Diamond Dave’s serious side. Which must be in there somewhere, right?

2) If you had to knock one song off the album, which would it be and why?

Gottlieb: When you’re looking to cut fat off an album, the second to last song is a good place to start. “Eat ‘Em and Smile” is pretty damn lean, but “Bump and Grind” feels the most obvious: nothing we haven’t heard from Vai, nothing we didn’t expect from Roth. Of course, cutting it means we lose the line, “Have you ever really studied dancing, or do you make it up as you go?

DeRiso: “That’s Life,” on the one hand, is right up Roth’s alley – something very much in keeping with earlier swing-band asides like “Big Bad Bill” and “Just a Gigolo.” On the other hand, enough already.

Christopher: “Tobacco Road.” While not bad, it’s unnecessary to have two covers on one album. Didn’t Roth learn from the poor reception to Diver Down? What stays is “That’s Life,” which in retrospect is absolutely perfect, because it’s like it was written for him. He has been a puppet (the ill-fated 1996 Van Halen “reunion”), a poet (pick a lyric, any lyric), a pirate (see the 1982 Hide Your Sheep! tour) and a pauper (in terms of celebrity, the early ’90s).

Wardlaw: Probably “I’m Easy.” At 2:12, it feels like album filler – although knowing Roth’s musical background and inspirational loves, there’s no question it showcased a sound that he had a lot of passion for. From a sequencing standpoint, it just feels like a weird move to go from “Shy Boy” into “I’m Easy.” Knocking that one out of the way, you move from one curve ball to another in the form of “Ladies’ Nite in Buffalo?,” but that one probably would have played better in terms of the flow of those first few tracks.

Rivadavia: “I’m Easy” would be the cast-off, because it sounds even more forced and unnecessary than the LP’s closing show-tune “That’s Life.” I mean, I get why Roth would want to reprise some of the big band pop tunes that helped sow the seeds of his solo career on the Crazy from the Heat EP, but when stacked alongside a legitimate hard rock record, “I’m Easy” just sounds like an embarrassing step backwards.

Wilkening: “Goin’ Crazy!” — our first glance at the things that would go wrong on the lesser, overly gloppy half of Skyscraper. Which, to be clear, is also half-excellent.

3) Is it better than 5150? Why? Which one holds up better today?

Gottlieb: Eat ‘Em and Smile has both an immortal and ridiculous aesthetic. Like a good cult film – Big Trouble in Little China or Raising Arizona – it seems cartoonish, unhinged and out of another dimension. 5150 is a Michael Bay blockbuster: loud, dumb, fun but unintentionally corny and without an art. 5150 is a Journey record with better guitar. Eat ‘Em and Smile is a Queen record if the Brits had grown up in Pasadena in the ’70s, smoked a lot of dope and listened to a lot of Frank Zappa.

DeRiso: 5150 resonated more with pop listeners at the time, but hasn’t aged as well as Eat ‘Em and Smile, which does a much better job of following up 1984 than the newly reconstituted Van Halen ever could.

Christopher: 5150 is the better album. The chemistry between Eddie and Alex Van Halen and Michael Anthony provided an incredibly solid foundation for Sammy Hagar to find himself in. The songs are structured better; they’re catchier and more memorable. There’s a sense of unity Eat ‘Em and Smile doesn’t have, and no amount of flash or musicianship could usurp it. That being said, Eat ‘Em and Smile holds up better today, because 5150 sounds very dated. The pervasive electronic drums, and tracks like “Love Walks In” and “Dreams” drenched in keyboards, put the album squarely in the ’80s, whereas Eat ‘Em and Smile – though having a few outdated moments as well – for the most part is filled with more basic rock elements, leading it to age at a slower rate.

Wardlaw: Tough question. I’ve always been a 5150 guy (and, in fact, took that side of the deb... years ago). But I’ve been listening to Eat ‘Em and Smile with fresh ears lately, and the album holds together as a good period piece that captures where Roth was at post-VH quite well. I think you can hear a bit of where he left off stylistically with Van Halen circa 1984 on tracks like “Goin’ Crazy” (which really makes me wish that the Crazy From the Heat movie would have happened – that one would have definitely been on the soundtrack, right?), but his new band also inspired him to explore some interesting detours. When it comes to which one holds up best sonically, I think it’s a draw at the 30-year mark. Both albums sound like the era in which they were made, but neither sounds painfully dated in my opinion. Song for song, I’ll still go with 5150 as the better album. The Hagar / Van Halen songwriting collaboration was burning bright in those early days. They were clearly excited to be making music together, and that really comes through on 5150 and the live shows that they played in that time.

Rivadavia: Comparing the two albums song for song, 5150 probably edges Eat ‘Em and Smile in terms of consistency. 5150‘s only borderline throwaway tune is “Inside,” while Smile could have done without those two vintage pop numbers. But I was never a fan of 5150‘s ultra-glossy ’80s production and I think it has dated even more so by today’s standards, while Eat ‘Em and Smile used a more organic approach that has aged better.

Wilkening: It’s close, but Eat ‘Em and Smile is better, and not just because it was so surprising to watch Roth make a 180-degree turn from the hammy covers on Crazy From the Heat, instead trying (and arguably succeeding) at out-guitaring the mighty Edward Van Halen. Admittedly, Eddie was more focused on expanding his range and sonic palette with 5150. The highest highs on Van Hagar’s first record (especially “Best of Both Worlds”) beats anything on Smile, but those computerized drums just have not aged well.

4) As briefly as possible, explain why Roth changed his sound so much for his next album, Skyscraper:

Gottlieb: I’m the guy who likes Skyscraper almost as much as Smile. Okay, maybe that’s too much. But other than the (admittedly excessive) keyboards, extra-cheese of “Just Like Paradise” and overproduction of “Stand Up,” the tracks hold up alongside Smile. Don’t believe me? Start by going back and playing “Damn Good” and “Hot Dog and Shake”: Roth’s most vulnerable moment put back-to-back with a slinky, sloppy rock cut featuring Vai’s best-ever guitar solo.

DeRiso: With songs like “Just Like Paradise,” it seemed as if he wanted in on some of the easy-money pop success found by his former bandmates. Then again, the title track aspired to things neither band had ever tried. In between, Skyscraper took a number of other similarly schizophrenic turns. Please come back, Ted Templeman. All is forgiven.

Christopher: He got desperate. Eat ‘Em and Smile wasn’t nearly as successful as 5150, so Roth pushed the keyboards and synthesizers to the forefront hoping for additional leverage or to make up ground. Not only was he years late to the trend, but it didn’t fit the Diamond Dave pure rock ‘n’ roll approach. There was also a palpable decline in chemistry between Roth and Vai, leaving the songs weaker from the outset. Bringing in additional musicians and songwriters did nothing but make it more bloated.

Wardlaw: I’d say it was just because he could. One thing we know about Roth is that he’s always done what he wants to do at any given moment – or at least tried to. There were probably plenty of things he wanted to do that might have gotten squashed in the Van Halen band structure. With his solo career, he’s had the freedom, for better or worse, to go for what he’s feeling, with no filter. With Skyscraper, he had been playing the major label game long enough that he probably knew that as long as there was a “Just Like Paradise” on the album that the label could take to radio, everything else was fair game.

Rivadavia: I think I accidentally answered this question while making my previous point. When faced with the sobering reality that 5150 outsold Eat ‘Em and Smile two or three-to-one, Roth probably decided that a more modern recording approach, backed by walls of synthesizers, was the answer. Hence the futuristic, often ill-fated experiments of Skyscraper, which sadly tore the band apart while Van Halen, ironically, managed to outsell Dave yet again even as they backtracked into more stripped down hard rock for OU812. D’oh!

Wilkening: I’m guessing it wasn’t just the Hagar and Van Halen sales comparisons that sent Roth into the warm embrace of the nearest keyboard store. It must have been pretty hard for any hard rocker this side of Metallica to ignore the siren call of pop chart success and heavy MTV rotation back in the mid-’80s. And, of course, Steve Vai and Billy Sheehan’s departures sealed the deal. It would be really fun to see what would have happened if this group had kept together and stuck to their guns by staying heavy and rough instead of smoothing their sound out.

5) On a scale of 1-10, your excitement level for a David Lee Roth / Steve Vai / Billy Sheehan / Gregg Bissonette reunion album or tour is a ___ (and why)

Gottlieb: Sorry, but I have to say it: This one goes to 11. Roth is in great shape after the Van Halen reunion and the other guys need to rock again — Vai, Sheehan and Bissonette have mostly made bad or boring music since Roth.

DeRiso: 8. Higher if David Lee Roth was in better voice these days.

Christopher: 6. It would be cool to hear those songs live, especially for a new generation of curious fans who never got to see the original tour; but it was such a blip on the musical radar, its nostalgia factor would be targeted to fairly small and specific demographic. Plus, you’re asking Roth to revisit a time when he was at his strongest vocally and most agile as a frontman. As he is now, at 61 years old, could he even do service to that guy from 30 years ago, or would it be a complete embarrassment?

Wardlaw: I’d put my excitement level for a reunion tour from these guys at a solid 10. One of my great concert regrets is that I didn’t get a chance to see DLR solo, especially with the Eat ‘Em and Smile lineup. My appreciation for all of the members as individual players has only grown over the years, so it would be a real thrill to see Roth get back together with his “other” dream team for one more lap.

Rivadavia: To my own surprise, my excitement level for a reunion of the original DLR band is something like a 9 out of 10. Not only was that quartet a musical wrecking crew of almost unprecedented proportions, but their sudden disintegration left a disappointing feeling of unfinished business. The fact that Vai, Sheehan and, I’d imagine, Bissonette could still perform at the highest level would make an eventual reunion tour a must-see event in my eyes.

Wilkening: As long as it doesn’t upset the apple cart and get him knocked out of Van Halen for another three decades, I’m all in with a 10. Two rules: no keyboards, and I want to hear that version of “In the Midnight Hour” that Roth supposedly has wanted to do with Van Halen forever, since Eddie’s out of the cover game. And please, please, someday let it be revealed that pro-shot footage of the first David Lee Roth band tour is sitting safely in a vault somewhere!



Read More: ‘Eat ‘Em and Smile’...asterpiece | http://ultimateclassicroc...ck=tsmclip
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Reply #33 posted 07/07/16 3:03pm

purplethunder3
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Dolly Parton Announces New Joint Venture with Sony Music Nashville for 'Pure & Simple'

Dolly Parton announces a 2016 North American tour during a press conference held at Nove Entertainment on March 7, 2016 in Nashville, Tennessee.
RICK DIAMOND/GETTY IMAGES FOR WEBSTER PR
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Dolly Parton will release her new record, Pure & Simple, on Aug. 19 through a new joint venture with Sony Music Nashville under the name Dolly Records/RCA Nashville imprints. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

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“Dolly Parton is a national treasure and an iconic singer/songwriter,” Sony Music Entertainment CEO Doug Morris said in a statement. “We are thrilled to be expanding our successful relationship with her through this new global agreement. We are very proud to call her a member of the Sony Music family.”

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Since the advent of SoundScan, now known as Nielsen Music, Parton’s albums have scanned 9.25 million copies, and her track sales are at about 3.3 million since Nielsen began that tracking. This year alone, her album catalog has moved nearly 53,000 unit, while track sales total 123,000.

Her most recent album, Blue Smoke, has scanned nearly 88,000 units, including nearly 37,000 in its debut week ending May 18, 2014.

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For the new album, Parton said in a statement that she is taking “my fans back to my roots. I feel like these songs have a pure, tender side and we didn’t go overboard with arrangements. I’m so glad we’ve teamed up with our friends at Sony to get this album out to the fans.”

Parton co-wrote and co-produced the album, according to the announcement.

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“This is a special reunion for Dolly, RCA Nashville and for me personally,” Sony Music Nashville chairman/CEO Randy Goodman, said in a statement. “We have a firm foundation of Dolly’s incredible catalog of hits on RCA Nashville as well as Columbia Nashville.”

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Goodman previously worked at RCA Nashville when Parton was putting out some of Parton’s biggest-selling albums, like Eagle When She Flies, with 1.14 million in sales.

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

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Reply #34 posted 07/13/16 9:55am

JoeBala

New Marvin Gaye Doc Features Unseen Footage

Late singer's family unearths new film about making of seminal album 'What's Going On'

BY JON BLISTEIN July 12, 2016
Marvin Gaye, DocumentaryMarvin Gaye's seminal 1971 album 'What's Going On' will be the subject of a new documentary that has the full support of the late singer's family. David Redfern/Redferns/Getty

A new documentary will explore the making of Marvin Gaye's seminal 1971 album, What's Going On, Variety reports.

Marvin, What's Going On? goes into production this year and will include contributions from Gaye's three children and former wife, Janis. The film marks the first time the late singer's family has lent their support to such a project.

Recorded in Detroit and West Hollywood, What's Going Onmarked a significant turning point for Gaye, who until then had been known for his indelible duets with Tammi Terrell and solo pop hits like "I Heard It Through the Grapevine." The LP remains a vivid document of American civil unrest in the late-Sixties and early-Seventies and finds Gaye grappling with police brutality, poverty, environmental decay, social injustice and the Vietnam War. The political nature of What's Going On so unnerved Motown honcho Berry Gordy, healmost didn't release it. It's since become a touchstone of American popular music.

"We look forward to participating and sharing what we can through friends, family, photos, footage and priceless stories that only those who knew our father up close and personal would know, as well as his contemporaries, purists and fans who have studied him and his art over decades," Gaye's children, Nona, Marvin III and Frankie, said in a joint statement.

The documentary will be directed by Gabriel Clarke and Torquil Jones of Noah Media Group. Previously, Clarke directed the 2015 doc, Steve McQueen: The Man and Le Mans, about the famed action movie star's 1971 race car flick flop, Le Mans.

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Reply #35 posted 07/14/16 8:58am

JoeBala

Keith Richards stars in 'Origin of the Species' documentary & curates BBC shows

June 29, 20162:53 AM MST
One of rock n' roll's most enduring icons will underline his seeming inability to retire – or, indeed, sit still – with a new BBC film and a weekend of programming. Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards, whose continual survival ranks up among the gr...
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One of rock n' roll's most enduring icons will underline his seeming inability to retire – or, indeed, sit still – with a new BBC film and a weekend of programming. Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards, whose continual survival ranks up among the gr...
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George Harrison featured on lost 1972 Gary Wright album finally being released

June 7, 20169:52 AM MST
George Harrison sitting in with Gary Wright and his band Wonderwheel on "The Dick Cavett Show."
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George Harrison sitting in with Gary Wright and his band Wonderwheel on "The Dick Cavett Show."
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ICYMI: Kelly Clarkson signs new record deal and releases live covers

June 30, 20169:45 PM MST
Kelly Clarkson performs "Tightrope" on the Piece by Piece tour
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Kelly Clarkson performs "Tightrope" on the Piece by Piece tour
Kelly Clarkson/ Weiss Eubanks

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Reply #36 posted 07/15/16 6:18pm

JoeBala

Linda Ronstadt Celebrates Her 70th Birthday Today

Image courtesy of Linda Ronstadt in September, 1977; Ed Perlstein/Redferns/Getty Images (via ABC News Radio)

Image courtesy of Linda Ronstadt in September, 1977; Ed Perlstein/Redferns/Getty Images (via ABC News Radio)

Happy birthday to Linda Ronstadt , who turns 70 today. The powerful and versatile singer was one of the most popular female rock artists of the 1970s, then found success in other musical genres during the following decade.

As lead singer of the folk-rock group The Stone Poneys , Ronstadt scored her first hit in 1967 with a cover of Monkees member Mike Nesmith 's "Different Drum." Linda went solo in 1969 and began focusing on a more pop-rock and country-rock sound.

Ronstadt's career picked up steam with the 1974 album Heart Like a Wheel , which topped the Billboard200 and yielded a #1 and #2 singles, respectively, with covers of "You're No Good" and "When Will I Be Loved." A series of platinum-selling albums followed that featured both pop and country hits. Among her big pop singles during the mid-to-late '70s were covers of "Heat Wave," "That'll Be the Day," "Blue Bayou," "It's So Easy," "Poor Poor Pitiful Me," and "Ooh Baby Baby."

In 1980, Ronstadt branched out into Broadway when she starred in a popular revival of The Pirates of Penzance . Later in the '80s, she recorded three hit albums of jazz standards with famed orchestra leader Nelson Riddle . In 1987, Linda teamed up with Dolly Parton and Emmylou Harris for the hit country albumTrio . That same year, she celebrated her Mexican heritage with Canciones de Mi Padre , a Grammy-winning collection of traditional mariachi tunes.

In 1989, Ronstadt returned to the pop charts with "Don't Know Much," a duet with Aaron Neville that was a #2 hit. Linda continued to release albums into the 2000s, but retired from music in 2011, revealing two years later that she had been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease and no longer was able to sing. In 2014, she was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Copyright © 2016, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

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Reply #37 posted 07/15/16 6:36pm

JoeBala

New Images Of Gal Gadot In Wonder Woman

Ben Bussey15 July 2016

Given that it was almost universally agreed that Gal Gadot’s appearance as Wonder Woman was the principle saving grace of ‘Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice,’ it’s hard to believe that not so long ago many vocal fans were questioning the Israeli model-turned-actress’s suitability for the role.

Having survived her baptism of fire, Gadot has just finished work on the ‘Wonder Woman’ solo movie, which is due in cinemas in less than eleven months time – and now, courtesy of Entertainment Weekly, we have four new looks at the star in action.

Quite why she appears to be in a garage in that first shot remains to be seen…

These first two action shots reveal a suit of armour which appears a fair bit brighter and more colourful than the superheroine’s ‘Batman V Superman’ attire.

It makes sense that her suit would be considerably less tarnished, given ‘Wonder Woman’ is set 100 years earlier during World War I, and sees the immortal Amazon princess Diana visit the mortal world for the first time.

(Or perhaps it’s just brighter because, y’know, everything in ‘Batman V Superman’ was excessively dark and grey…)

Next up, we see Gadot’s Diana side by side with her love interest, Steve Trevor, as played by Chris Pine.

It was rumoured the ‘Star Trek’ actor chose this role over that of Hal Jordan in a future ‘Green Lantern’ movie, although Pine has since refuted this.

Finally, we see Gadot on set with her director, Patty Jenkins.

Surprisingly, this will only be the second feature credit from Jenkins, previously responsible for the Oscar-winning ‘Monster’ with Charlize Theron.

‘Wonder Woman’ isn’t Jenkins’ first contact with the superheroes, however, as she infamously came close to directing Marvel’s ‘Thor: the Dark World,’ but was fired – and here, she replaces ‘Wonder Woman’s original director Michelle MacLaren, who reportedly left over creative differences.

As ‘Wonder Woman’ has a panel lined up for next week’s San Diego Comic Con, we wouldn’t be surprised if more new reveals come our way soon. The film itself is set to hit UK cinemas on 2 June 2017.

Picture Credit: Entertainment Weekly/Clay Enos

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Reply #38 posted 07/18/16 8:48am

JoeBala

Inside Sting's First Rock Album in Decades

How Prince's death, climate change inspired "impulsive" new LP

According to Sting, his new album will be "rockier than anything I've done in a while." Martin Kierszenbaum

It's a perfect Saturday morning, but Sting, unshaven and scruffy, is lying on a couch in a darkened New York studio, taking a nap before starting work for the day. He's still recovering from playing New York's Jones Beach Theater last night, the third date of his co-headlining summer tour...er Gabriel. "That was a workout," he says. "I've been up since 5:30. I'm the son of a milkman." Sting is working overtime to finish57th & 9th (named after the intersection he crosses to get to the studio every day), which has him returning to the guitar-driven rock music he hasn't made in decades. "It's not a lute album," he says with a smile, a reference to 2006's Songs From the Labyrinth. "It's rockier than anything I've done in a while. This record is a sort of omnibus of everything that I do, but the flagship seems to be this energetic thing. I'm very happy to put up the mast and see how it goes."

Sting on Playing a Car Thief, New Duo Single, Sexiness of Singing in French

Sting and Mylène Farmer on their French-English duet, "Stolen Car"

Ship analogies may be on his mind because he spent the past several years writing, and ultimately acting in The Last Ship, a 2014 musical based on his childhood in postwar England. The project followed a productive, freewheeling decade of work that included an LP of Christmas carols, the orchestralSymphonicities and a marathon reunion tour with the Police in 2007 and 2008 – which he stresses did not influence the sound of his new LP. "That reunion was an exercise in nostalgia, clear and simple," he says. "A very successful exercise in nostalgia, but there was no attempt to take that somewhere else." The Last Ship made it to Broadway, but closed after three months. "I found it very gratifying to get it that far," he says. "It was the most satisfying five years of my life." After it closed, Sting found himself with some rare downtime. "I'd walk through the park, and there wasn't much difference between me and somebody who doesn't have a job. Well, I've got a home to go to. But I start to get anxious."

So he took the advice of his new manager, Martin Kierszenbaum – who worked as Sting's A&R man before getting hired full-time earlier this year – and booked studio time with a small group of musicians. They included his touring drummer Vinnie Colaiuta and guitarist Dominic Miller, and Jerry Fuentes and Diego Navaira of the Last Bandoleros, a San Antonio Tex-Mex group that Kierszenbaum also manages. Sting arrived daily without any material and wrote on the spot with the musicians in the studio. "It raises the tension, because everything costs money," he says.

"Most of it was done in an impulsive way," says Kierszenbaum, who produced the LP. "One or two takes. I don't think he's rocked like this since Synchronicity."

Much of the album, Sting says, is "about emigrating." "Inshallah" tells the story of refugees traveling to Europe. "One Fine Day" takes aim at climate-change skeptics. "The biggest engine for migration will be climate," he says. "Millions of people will be looking for somewhere safe. I'm still in a bit of a depression about Britain exiting the EU for no good reason. At least the EU has a program to tackle climate change."

"Mortality does sort of rear its head, particularly at my age."

One highlight is "50,000," a gloomy ballad he wrote the week of Prince's death. Sting describes the process of reading the obituary of one of his rock & roll peers in the song, recalling stadium glory days together before existential fear settles in. "Mortality does sort of rear its head, particularly at my age – I'm 64," he says. "It's really a comment on how shocked we all are when one of our cultural icons dies: Prince, David [Bowie], Glenn Frey, Lemmy. They are our gods, in a way. So when they die, we have to question our own immortality. Even I, as a rock star, have to question my own. And the sort of bittersweet realization that hubris doesn't mean anything in the end."

Sting had his last commercial smash when he was 48, with 1999's Brand New Day, which won two Grammys and went multiplatinum. This time, he's keeping his expectations in check. "The record industry is in a state of chaos and flux," he says. "I have no idea what expectations are. It's not like the old days. Rock & roll is a traditional form now. It's not socially cohesive like it used to be." But that's why he sees it as the right moment to return to the genre. "For me, the most important element in all music is surprise. I'll keep throwing curveballs. It's my journey; people are welcome to share it with me." He laughs. "I really do what the fuck I want."

Former George Harrison, Eric Clapton Muse Pattie Boyd Spills the Beans

Pattie Boyd reveals details on her relationships with George Harrison and Eric Clapton in an autobiography

Larry Ellis/Express/Getty

Legendary rock muse Pattie Boyd, who inspired Eric Clapton "Layla" and "Wonderful Tonight," and, reputedly, George Harrison's "Something," is coming out with an autobiography, Wonderful Today, and doing interviews on her relationships with two of rock's leading men. The juicy details:
• In 1970 Boyd was married to Harrison but became involved with Eric Clapton after hearing "Layla." "We met secretly at a flat in South Kensington. Eric had asked me to come because he wanted me to listen to a new number he had written," Boyd recalled. "He switched on the tape machine, turned up the volume and played me the most powerful, moving song I had ever heard. It was 'Layla.'"
• Later that same night Boyd was caught out in the garden of manager Robert Stigwood's house. "[Harrison] kept asking, 'Where's Pattie? But no one seemed to know. He was about to leave when he spotted me in the garden with Eric," Boyd said. "George came over and demanded, 'What's going on?' To my horror, Eric said, 'I have to tell you, man, that I'm in love with your wife.' I wanted to die. George was furious. He turned to me and said: 'Well, are you going with him or coming with me?'" She went home with Harrison.
• Clapton once showed up drunk at Harrison's home and engaged the Beatles' guitarist in a rock duel. "George handed him a guitar and an amp -- as an 18th-century gentleman might have handed his rival a sword -- and for two hours, without a word, they dueled," Boyd recalled. "At the end, nothing was said but the general feeling was that Eric had won. He hadn't allowed himself to get riled or go in for instrumental gymnastics as George had. Even when he was drunk, his guitar-playing was unbeatable."

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Reply #39 posted 07/24/16 4:15pm

JoeBala

The Radical Self-Respect of Fiona Apple’s “Sleep to Dream,” 20 Years On

Graphic by Noelle Bullion

“Now, when I listen to your shit, I hear similarities. I actually wanted to work with him [Jon Brion] so I could be like the rap version of you. That was one of my main goals. The albums that inspired me for Late Registration were your first one, Tidal, and Portishead’s Dummy, but especially your lyrics and how you sing. How is your vocabulary so ill? Were you tight in vocabulary in your school?”

Kanye West to Fiona Apple, Interview Magazine, October 2005

Fight songs rarely take dreaming as a subject. Dream songs rarely put up a fight. To dream and to fight more often seem opposed. When you mix them, you arrive at reality. Many of us fight against all odds for our dreams. Fiona Apple knows that. “Sleep to Dream” is waking.

In the devotional music of my life, which is the discography of Fiona Apple, “Sleep to Dream” is the opening psalm, a struck match, genesis. It is the first track on her 1996 triple-platinum debut, Tidal, which turns 20 this weekend. When Sony asked Fiona to produce a more obvious single, she wrote “Criminal” in less than an hour and for many that song defines her. I never really listen to that one outside of karaoke backrooms. “Sleep to Dream” is the Tidal track that made me. It is a self-activating thesis for Fiona’s radical self-reliance:

I got my feet on the ground and I don’t go to sleep to dream
You got your head in the clouds and you’re not at all what you seem.
This mind, this body and this voice cannot be stifled by your deviant ways

So don’t forget what I told you, don’t come around
I got my own hell to raise

There is a rumble first. Deep, quaking. All bass and space. It rattles the core. The power of “Sleep to Dream” is foundational. Fiona is not asking for a little respect; she insists on a lot, rips it into her deserving hands. “Sleep to Dream” is reportedly the first lyric that Fiona ever penned. She was 14. She sounds not slightly evil, a storm simmering, about to thunder from the skies. Fiona once said that “if you just made something, you should fucking feel like you’ve got nothing left in you,” and even then she had buckets of life to pour in. (Her parents divorced young; she was taunted by classmates; at 12, she was raped outside of her mother’s apartment; she developed an eating disorder.) As a child, Fiona used a knife to carve the word “STRONG” into her closet. She tattooed “FHW,” an acronym for “Fiona Has Wings,” onto her back. Her language always cuts to marrow. “Sleep to Dream” gave me wings, too. It is about getting ready to fly.

“Sleep to Dream” is a song vehemently against fragile egos. Fiona corners a person who is at once uncaring and too sensitive, who is a liar and overly defensive, who is a space cadet and also apparently living under a rock. A deceiving fool. A dull tool. Judas, basically. Should that not be enough, Fiona boils it all down, too: “Don’t even show me your face cause it’s a crying shame.” GTFO.

I’m not sure if this is what Whitman meant when he wrote “dismiss whatever insults your own soul, and your very flesh shall be a great poem”—or what Emerson meant when he wrote that great art comes with “good-humored inflexibility”—but that’s how I’ve always felt about Fiona. That her music is legitimately transcendent. That her lyrics are sublime truths for kids who feel trapped in their towns and bodies and minds. When I downloaded “Sleep to Dream” on Kazaa nearly a decade after its release, Fiona performed an act of insurrectionism upon my teenage life. This was a young feminist awakening of tectonic proportions. I was never the same.

“Sleep to Dream” stares you dead in the eye. It is made of words and Fiona’s flow is pure fire. (It’s worth noting that the only CD she supposedly purchased in all of 1997 was Wu-Tang Forever.) It is also as elemental, tough, and pissed as any punk song, but where punk is grounded in the notion of “us against the world,” “Sleep to Dream” is “me against the world.” “The piano is percussive, you hit it,” Fiona once said. “It was a huge release for me, just banging on it.” There are other instruments, like a shadowy vibraphone, on “Sleep to Dream,” but all I hear is rhythm and rhyme. Fiona is a wordsmith but more like a designer of armor through turns of phrase. I could put this on and become invincible.

Accordingly, disciples of Fiona Apple do not fuck around. We live our lives with the conviction that our personal connection runs deepest. Kanye has long been among our ranks. Before The College Dropout came out in 2004, a 25-year-old Kanye told one magazine, “I like to take things a little too far, but hey, what’s too far? That’s like the people I respect the most, like Mariah Carey and Fiona Apple, anybody that wilds out and really says the truth. Like, fuck the industry, man, fuck all this. They’re so corporate, they make it seem so free, but there’s all these politics you gotta deal with. That’s why you gotta be the type of artist where they have to deal with you.”

Later, in 2005, Fiona chopped it up with Kanye for Interview. She asked, “Do you have a lot of dreams at night when you sleep? I have a lot of dreams.” Yes, he does (god dreams). “Wait,” Kanye said. “I thought you don’t go to sleep to dream? [laughs]” In the same interview, they talk about collaborating in L.A. at the club Largo, Fiona’s mainstay. “Seriously,” Kanye goes. “You’re possibly my favorite.” One Sunday morning in 2010, Kanye tweeted a mixtape that included “Sleep to Dream,” noting how the line “I have never been so insulted in all my life!” was “one of [his] favorite opening lines to a song.” (It is not the opening line, but that’s OK.)

Fiona and Kanye are both classic rebel spirits infiltrating pop music. They are eccentrics who offend square America and still remain Great American Songwriters. They also both embody whole sets of principles for living. When the video for “Sleep to Dream” won an MTV Video Music Award in 1997, Fiona gave that speech that ought to have been considered heroic, like a banner drop atop popular culture. “Maya Angelou said that we as human beings at our best can only create opportunities,” she said from the stage, “and I’m gonna use this opportunity the way I wanna use it.” It is not hard to imagine Kanye taking notes. You could picture him tweeting all of this. “Everybody out there that’s watching this world—this world is bullshit. You shouldn’t model your life about what you think that we think is cool and what we’re wearing and what we’re saying and everything. Go with yourself.” Later on her website, Fiona clarified that the VMAs made her feel like a “sell-out”: “I had successfully created the illusion that I was perfect and pretty and rich... I'd saved myself from misfit status, but I’d betrayed my own kind by becoming a paper doll in order to be accepted.”

This was a survivor on stage quoting Maya Angelou and telling kids to not buy into the lies and images they are constantly fed—spurred on by a music video of a girl alone in her bedroom singing about manifesting her dreams—aiding us with something that could help us to live. The strength that requires is superhuman. The stoicism it takes to harness your pain and make it dance is as rare as gifts come. Fiona knew what the mirage of perfection was worth: nothing.

Joan Didion once wrote that “innocence ends when one is stripped of the delusion that one likes oneself.” Fiona helped to slow that process. As someone whose teenage life was turned upside down by unattainable images, it is hard to overstate how powerful it remains that Fiona did something to claw out the truth. Since late capitalism works on a molecular level to make girls hate themselves—since it thrives on feminine self-loathing, on dysmorphic thinking—many of us lose our innocence young. “Everyone’s born confident,” Kanye has said, “and everything’s taken away from you.” By the time I was 16 I had learned that as a girl you are never taken seriously. If you are big, you are not taken seriously. If you are small, you are not taken seriously. If you are sick, you are insane. If you are fine, you are boring. “I have never been so insulted in all my life” was basically how I felt about the entire world.

“Sleep to Dream” is prophetic in its battle to not be misunderstood. Why does Kanye love Fiona so much? Because she is a genius. But perhaps it is because Kanye, too, fights endlessly to be taken seriously. As a teenager, I knew some version of this feeling. All I wanted was to be taken seriously. And the gale force sonic boom of “Sleep to Dream” sounded serious as hell. It just cut straight to the point of everything.

This song lifted me up from someplace I’d felt buried deep. It saved me then—a girl with a volatile relationship to herself, a person I left behind. I loved records and reading the newspaper. I was tough and alone. I had no self-confidence but an inexplicable amount of personal drive, burning to exist in places I thought I shouldn’t likely be. Growing up online both brought me closer to Fiona and exacerbated my need for her music. I made a shirt that said “Listen to Fiona Apple” by cutting up and reassembling the letters from two emo band tees, which was too fitting as I was definitely done with all that shit.

Fiona goes to extremes for people who need them in order to survive. When I listen to “Sleep to Dream,” Fiona is singing to every person who ever refused to take me seriously. To anyone who made me hate myself. To the systems that destroyed my innocence. But those people do not really get to be the subject of this song. They don’t animate it. They don’t get a word. Those people hardly come to life. Fiona does.

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Reply #40 posted 08/03/16 9:31am

JoeBala

Mark Cuban's AXS TV to launch summer concert series with Monkees show

(Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

Mark Cuban’s network AXS TV is launching a five-week series of televised rock shows named AXS TV Concerts Hosted by Mark Cuban, EW can reveal.

The series premieres at 9 p.m. ET on Aug. 11 with a performance by the Monkees. That will be followed by concerts from Village People (Aug. 18), Bret Michaels (Aug. 25), KC and the Sunshine Band (Sept. 1), and Bad Company (Sept. 8). Each of the 90-minute concerts will be filmed at The Bomb Factory venue in Dallas, Texas.

“With this exclusive series, I wanted to craft a fun live concert event, giving viewers the best seat in the house to experience these legendary acts,” said Cuban, the founder and CEO of AXS TV, in a statement. “From disco and funk, to classics and metal, there’s truly something here for everyone to enjoy, as we send summer out on a high note with some of the most beloved anthems of all-time.”

The Monkees are currently celebrating their 50th anniversary and recently released a new album, Good Times!, their first in 20 years.

“Weird Al” Yankovic Is Sad He Never Got To Parody Prince

Rachel Sonis | August 3, 2016 - 10:22 am

Wierd Al Yankovic has pretty much parodied every high-profile musician under the sun. Lady Gaga? Of course. Michael Jackson? No problem. Madonna? You betcha. But, as it turns out, there was one musician that said no. In a recent interview with People, the 56-year-old revealed that the late funk legend Prince always rejected the parodist’s requests, and it’s something Yankovic regrets more than ever nowadays.

“It’s too bad,” he told the magazine. “I hadn’t approached [Prince] in about 20 years because he always said no, but I had this fantasy that he’d come out with a new song, I’d have a great idea, he’d finally say yes and it would erase decades of weirdness between us. But that’s obviously not going to be the case.”

The singer continued, “I had a parody of ‘Let’s Go Crazy’ that was about The Beverly Hillbillies. And I wanted to do something funny with ‘When Doves Cry,’ and ‘Kiss.’ For ‘1999,’ I wanted to do an infomercial where you could get anything you wanted by dialing 1-800-something-1999.”

Read the full interview here, and watch Yankovic’s parody of Chamillionaire’s “Ridin’.”

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Reply #41 posted 08/03/16 3:19pm

purplethunder3
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LADY GAGA, BILLY JOEL SET FOR TONY BENNETT’S 90TH BIRTHDAY SPECIAL

Elton John, Aretha Franklin, Michael Bublé and Stevie Wonder are also slated for performances honoring the musical legend
August 2, 2016
LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 08: Recording Artists Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga perform onstage during The 57th Annual GRAMMY Awa
Larry Busacca/Getty Images for NARAS
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Tony Bennett is turning 90 years old tomorrow (Aug. 3), which is certainly a cause for celebration. NBC agrees. That’s why they’re airing a special for Pretty Tony, set (oddly) to air in December!

Tony Bennett Celebrates 90: The Best Is Yet to Come will include a performance by his Cheek To Cheekcollaborator Lady Gaga, as well as Stevie Wonder, Billy Joel, Elton John, Aretha Franklin, Michael Bublé and Bennett himself. Alec Baldwin, John Travolta, Kevin Spacey and Bruce Willis will also appear on the special, which airs Dec. 20 on NBC.

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“I turn 90 tomorrow [Aug. 3] and feel like I’m just getting started and look forward to each day,” says Bennett in a statement. “I have loved performing for the public and sharing the music I love with the world. It’s a thrill to have NBC air a special in honor of my birthday and to have so many wonderful artists that I have worked with and admire participate.”

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Gaga recently covered the Beatles and Neil Young at a DNC Event in Philadelphia; click here to watch.

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #42 posted 08/05/16 2:49pm

JoeBala

Morris Day remembers the last time he spoke to Prince

Morris Day and Prince collaborated on many projects, including “Purple Rain,” although the two were on the outs for years. The pair eventually reconciled.

Back in January, Morris Day got a surprise call from Paisley Park: Prince wanted his childhood friend, musical compadre and on-screen rival to come to Minneapolis with his band, the Time, and play a private show.

“It was the first time in a while that we’d had a chance to sit down and chat,” Day tells The Post. “It had been a few years since I’d seen him. I questioned why he was calling me up at the time. In hindsight, it’s almost like he felt something or knew something was up.”

Barely three months later, Prince was dead. For Day — performing Aug. 12 with the Time at the Ford Ampitheater at Coney Island Boardwalk, on a bill that includes Kool & the Gang — that Paisley Park encounter was the final chapter in a lifelong relationship that helped spawn some of the most beloved and deliriously funky moments in pop-music history.

Modal TriggerPrincePhoto: Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Day, now 58, had played with Prince since their time in the Minneapolis band Grand Central in the ’70s. When Prince made it as a solo star, he took his buddy with him. Day co-wrote “Partyup” for the 1980 album “Dirty Mind,” and Prince set up the Time, with Day as lead singer, as a way to pursue funk music on the side.

Their partnership peaked with the 1984 movie “Purple Rain.” While Prince burned up the screen with his live performances, his portrayal of the brooding lead character, The Kid, in the non-music scenes seemed wooden. Day stepped in, pretty much playing himself — flamboyant, sexy, packing a wardrobe that would make Huggy Bear envious, his vanity assisted by his mirror-carrying sidekick, Jerome Benton.

In short, the movie’s enduring appeal is due almost as much to Day as it is to Prince himself.

“I’ve heard that a few times,” Day says carefully, trying to avoid overshadowing his old friend. “He comes across as this serious, dark guy [in the movie]. But the Prince I knew was quite the comedian. We talked s–t and laughed all the time.”

The Time went on to have some minor hits with “Jungle Love”and “The Bird” (both featured in “Purple Rain”) before cracking the Top 10 of Billboard’s Hot 100 chart in 1990 with “Jerk Out,” a song co-written by Prince.

But there were tensions, too. The Time’s drummer Jellybean Johnson recalls Prince and Day brawling on the “Purple Rain” set. Years later, Prince prohibited Day from using the name the Time on recorded work.

The Paisley Park show included Day and Prince enjoying one last dance. “I heard he was having a good time when we were playing,” Day says now. “There will always be a void. But life goes on. If it were me, I would want people to get on with it. I’m pretty sure he would want the same.”

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