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Reply #150 posted 07/19/14 7:48am

JoeBala

Sananda & Wife Francesca Maitreya at the American Embassy 4th of July party 2014 in Milano: the week of their 11th anniversary.

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Reply #151 posted 07/19/14 7:53am

JoeBala

The Best Headphones Under $15: Which Pairs Make the Grade?

By Chris Payne, New York | July 18, 2014 10:30 AM EDT Billboard

Headphones
Getty Images/iStockphoto

Apple has just taken Beats Electronics under its wing, so these days, there is plenty of funding attached to Beats by Dre and those iconic white earbuds everyone seems to have a pair of somewhere in their drawer. But what about headphones on a budget? Surely there must be some decent options flying under the radar, away from the big money branding territory. Billboard set out to find the good deals… or lack thereof.

We found nine of the most popular pairs of headphones and earbuds, all going for less than $15 dollars (prior to shipping and handling fees) on Amazon. Some would make you look cool on the subway, some would make you look like a time traveler from the early '90s. But on the contrary, it's not all about the looks. Some of the flashiest pairs produced the poorest sound and some of the simplest looking earbud models fared best in our scoring system.

Speaking of which, all pairs were graded in four areas -- sound quality, comfort, style and bleeding -- with the latter referring to how badly the sound projects beyond the listener's ears (i.e. will the rest of your office be able to hear your song choice?). In all categories, the higher the score the better, with all four categories averaging into a final cumulative score.

In the end, a handful of pairs tied for our highest score, so we'll leave it up to you to decide which best fits your needs. You won't likely find a $100 value in this bargain bin, but at the rate you probably lose or break headphones, why not pick up a few pairs and give them a shot? You might find out you don't need that fancy pair after all.

Syba CL-AUD63032 Circumau... Headphone

PRICE: $11.79

Headphones: Syba

This lesser-known brand should appeal a style-over-substance types -- the big purple 'phones look expensive, but the pesky noise bleeding will let everyone around you know you should have invested in better bass.

Samsung Replacement EH64A...eo Headset

PRICE: $6.04

Headphones: Samsung, In-ear

Looking for a cheaper alternative to Apple earbuds? Here you go. Sound holds up decently well until you push the volume high and though the bass is weak, the treble holds its own.

Wicked Audio WI1853 IN-EA...CE EARbuds

PRICE: $3.89

Headphones: Wicked Audio, In-Ear

The packaging has this pair's "Sound Score" set between "sweet" and "awesome," but this is just the type of over-branded, flashily-packaged earbud that will catch the eyes 8-year olds and have the audiophiles running away.

Panasonic RP-HT21 Lightwe...h XBS Port

PRICE: $7.49

Headphones: Panasonic

This pair looks like it's from 1992 and it bleeds sound like noise-canceling technology is part of the distant future. But if you're looking for cozy pair for work that you won't lose -- and without the compressed sound of cheap earbuds -- you could do worse.

Wicked Audio WI2002 HELIX EARbuds

PRICE: $5.80

Headphones: Wicked Audio, In-Ear

These earbuds come with around-the-ear latches, giving them workout-friendly support that the other buds on this list lack. They're among the best options on this tally, though they're not conducive to an environment where you'll have to take them on and off constantly.

JVC HAS160B FLATS Lightwe...es (Black)

PRICE: $12.86

Headphones: JVC

These old timers look only slightly more modern than the Panasonic over-the-head model. They get the job done and their sound is more expansive than what you'll get from earbuds. It's just too bad everyone in your office will know what you're listening to, as these bleed like a pair of speakers.

Sony MDR-ZX100 ZX Series Headphones (White)

PRICE: $14.84

Headphones: Sony

Sturdy and durable, Sony's economy-level headphone model is just about the best you can do for under $15. The wiring and input jack are reinforced as well or better than any pair on this list and unlike some of the other over-the-ear models, these look (gasp!) somewhat modern!

Panasonic RPHJE120K In-Ea...one, Black

PRICE: $9.10

Headphones: Panasonic, In-Ear

With some of the most legit bass and all-around sound quality you'll find in cheap earbuds, these little guys deliver just about everything except an eye-catching look on the street.

Sony MDREX10LP/BLK In-Ear Headphones

PRICE: $9.99

Headphones: Sony, In-Ear

Sony's economy earbuds are a near pound-for-pound match for Panasonic's, though they come up slightly short in bass, loudness and overall fidelity.

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Reply #152 posted 07/19/14 8:41am

JoeBala

Jordan Anderson on Finding Her Way in Nashville

By Chuck Dauphin | July 16, 2014 7:13 PM EDT

Jordan Anderson
Melinda Norris

When you hear the heartfelt lyrics of Jordan Anderson's latest single, "American Dream," keep in mind that it is her real life she’s singing about — word for word.

"I wrote it with James Dean Hicks in Nashville. It was an awesome experience. It's about my journey and making the move up here to Nashville," the Colorado native told Billboard. "I graduated early from high school and moved up here when I was eighteen, and decided to go for it – even though it was a scary thing for me to do. It all culminated into this song. We live in this awesome country that we theoretically have the opportunity to pursue any dream. This song is about my dream, but my hope is that other people can relate their dreams to it too and be encouraged to cha

After splitting time between Florida and Music City, Anderson tells The 615 that making the move to Nashville was something she wanted – and had to do. "I went back and forth for about two years, but there’s such a different vibe about living here. When you're in here, you're surrounded by music. It's everywhere you go."

She says she being here around so much talent constantly refreshes and inspires her. "There are all kinds of new experiences and networking opportunities. You can always find other amazing artists and learn from them. There are people who have been here a couple of years longer than you who can give you advice. It's so much cooler to actually be in the area where there are people who can guide you through things, as opposed to being separated from Nashville, where you are always outside of the circle – and always looking in and trying to get your foot in there. Being in Nashville has just been an awesome experience. I love the city. It's awesome to be here."

She says there was an adjustment period moving to a larger city, but Music City doesn't really feel like the huge metropolitan area it is. "I always joke that Nashville is kind of a small town. I had never lived in a big city before I got here. I was a little terrified. But, the circle of people here is so large. You can go anywhere around town and see somebody that you know. It's really comforting to have that feeling. Anytime I've been to New York or Chicago, I've been overwhelmed, but in Nashville it feels like your family is just around the corner."

A former performer at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Anderson says that the difference in the talent pool in Nashville did take a little getting used to. "It was a huge shell shock when I moved up here. Back home, I was probably one of the only country music singers in the town. People knew me for that, so when there were events where people might have needed a country singer, I was the 'go-to' girl. I went to Belmont my first year, and that in itself taught me a lot about going into the very large pond of singers that go to Belmont alone – let alone everyone else in town."

Anderson is currently working with Kent Wells (Dolly Parton) in the studio, and she’s ready to give it her all. "Throughout this next year, I'll be touring with my band, enjoying performing and connecting with my growing fan base. Each year the steps I’m taking are getting me closer to my dream of success. So I'm just going to continue working hard and am excited to see where it all takes me."

.

Sunny Sweeney 'So Happy' With Latest Album 'Provoked'

By Chuck Dauphin | July 18, 2014 6:10 PM EDT

Sunny Sweeney

It's been three years since the last album from Sunny Sweeney, and the songstress hopes that her fans are looking forward to the August 5 release of her third disc, "Provoked," as much as she is. "I am about to bust, I'm so happy," she exclaims to Billboard. "I've been playing the new stuff at shows, and they seem to be really excited about it. They're saying 'This is you.' I've always been very open about things that have happened in my life, and I love writing about personal stuff because I'm not the only person that has gone through it. It's so awesome when fans will come up and say 'Thank you for writing that' and that they can relate to it. That's why I want to do this job — to have people feel something when they feel my music."

Sweeney — who hit the top 10 with "From a Table Away" — says she enjoyed the writing process for "Provoked," but also enjoyed searching for material. "I've just been writing and trying to get the best songs I can get. For me, it's always a challenge to try to top yourself. 'May the best song win' has always been my theory, so that's why there are two songs on there that I didn't write."

One of those songs is her current single, "Bad Girl Phase," which was co-written by Nashville sensation Brandy Clark. Sweeney was happy to get one of her songs on the disc. "She is on fire right now, and so talented. My producer, Luke Wooten, came in and said 'I need to play you this song. It sounds exactly like you.' He played it, and I said 'If that song is not available, it was a totally cruel joke for you to play it.' I was super-excited to put it on the record."

She joked with The 615 that she knows the lyrics very well, though stresses all is well in her life now — for good reason. "I went through it when I got divorced a couple of years ago. I think from talking to a bunch of people, there's that phase where you think 'Woo-Hoo.....Now what?' You don't have to check in with anyone. I never got too crazy or wild. I was like 'I'm never getting married or dating again. I'm going to be single for the rest of my life.' Then, lo and behold, comes my husband, who is the most amazing human being on the planet. I should have found him first. He's a police officer, and is super straitlaced and keeps me in line. He's my saving grace as far as relationships go, because I swore off of them before him. But everything turned out okay, and I'm better than I've been in a long time!"

On board early with the single is SiriusXM, as they were with recent hits by Florida Georgia Line and Cole Swindell. Sweeney says she appreciates the support. "John Marks has an ear for certain things that he can hear it — whatever the 'it' thing is. He was my first radio dinner that I ever went on, before he was there. I cherish that relationship. I feel lucky to have him and SiriusXM behind me."

A portion of the sales from "Provoked" will go to help benefit a cause very close to Sweeney's heart: CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates). "My first internship in college was through a guy named Chad Rainey, who I became really good friends with. He's paralyzed and in a wheelchair. He called me last year and said 'I don't know if you'll be able to do this or not, but I am doing a benefit show for CASA. He explained to me what it was, and I said I would do it. We went up there to do the gig, and a lot of the people there have worked there for years. They were telling me stories about kids they had placed in homes because of the proceeds they have gotten through the organization. It just really hit me hard. I grew up with four parents — mom, dad, stepmom, stepdad — all of whom were 100 percent there for me. So it really hit me hard that some kids don't even have a parent that can provide and give them a happy and healthy home. It struck me hard as something I really needed to get behind. So whenever we decided to do the pledge campaign to record the album, I thought 'Can we do part of it to benefit CASA?'" She says that helped her gain a lot of support for the record. "As it turns out, there's a lot of people who only donated because of it. It helps out a wonderful cause."

.

HyunA Appears Topless in New Single Announcement

By Jeff Benjamin, New York | July 16, 2014 7:17 PM EDT

HyunA Appears Topless in New Single Announcement

HyunA

Is the "Gangnam Style" starlet preparing her sexiest song yet?

"Ms. HyunA is back, she's back!" PSY's "Gangnam Style" co-star has announced her new single "Red," the lead track off her upcoming EP "A Talk," in what might be her sexiest photoshoot yet.

The singer/rapper kicked off her first solo release in nearly two years via a set of risque photos. The 22-year-old poses confidently in a bathtub, giving off the impression she's wearing nothing but her blue heels, earrings and bright-red lipstick. One can notice what looks like a shirt or dress from a closer look, but fans' imaginations have likely been running wild since their reveal. Check out a few snaps below:

View image on Twitter

.Embedded image permalink

Rumor has it that HyunA's prepping for a more mature look than her previous images. Just last November, the SXSW 2014 performer made headlines for posing in bra and panties to tease her new EP with Trouble Maker, a duo project with Beast's Hyunseung.

"A Talk" will be released on July 28 along with the lead single "Red." It's HyunA's fourth effort as a soloist and follows 2012's "Ice Cream," a Top 10 hit on the K-Pop Hot 100 complete with a super-sexy (and PSY-filled) video that's snagged more than 58 million views.

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Reply #153 posted 07/19/14 9:01am

JoeBala

City's oldest musician, jazz trumpeter Lionel Ferbos dies at 103

City's oldest musician, jazz trumpeter Lionel Ferbos dies at 103

Credit: Getty Images

NEW ORLEANS, LA - MAY 06: 100 year old Lionel Ferbos sits in with The Preservation Hall Jazz Band during there 50th. Anniversary performance at the 2012 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. (Photo by Rick Diamond/Getty Images)

wwltv.com

Posted on July 19, 2014 at 8:35 AM

Updated today at 9:29 AM

Dominic Massa / Eyewitness News


NEW ORLEANS - Lionel Ferbos, a trumpeter and icon of New Orleans’ traditional jazz scene hailed as the city’s oldest musician who gained international attention for performing well past the century mark, died Saturday, just two days after turning 103.

Fans, friends and family members noticed Mr. Ferbos' frail health on Thursday night, but celebrated the fact that he was able to attend his birthday party at the Palm Court Jazz Cafe on Decatur Street.


He was unable to perform at the party, but posed for photos and greeted dozens of well-wishers and fellow musicians who turned out to honor a living legend.

His family said Mr. Ferbos died peacefully at home Saturday morning.

“I’m thankful that I lived to be this age, because very few people see that,” he said in an interview w... birthday.

Mr. Ferbos remained active up until earlier this year, when his health forced him to give up performing. Prior to his decision to retire, Ferbos was a fixture at local jazz clubs and festivals, including the Jazz and Heritage Festival (having played at every one since the beginning), French Quarter Festival and Satchmo Summer Fest, playing alongside performers half his age or even younger.

His last public performance was in March. Still, Ferbos’ longevity and legacy drew attention and admiration from around the world. USA Today and The New Yor...ebration.

Each year for his birthday, friends and family would organize a letter and card-writing campaign, which brought in fan mail from around the world. His 103rd birthday garnered congratulations from President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama.

“We extend our best wishes for a wonderful birthday and we hope you get to spend the day surrounded by loved ones,” read the Obamas’ letter. “Your generation helped guide America through extraordinary and uncertain times, leaving an indelible mark on our nation. As you celebrate 103 years, we trust you reflect with great pride on your achievements and on contributions made over the course of your life.”

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2011/07/25/us/ORLEANS/ORLEANS-articleLarge.jpg

A native of the city’s Seventh Ward, Mr. Ferbos had been performing since he was a teenager during the Great Depression. Since he suffered from asthma as a child, his parents would not let him take up a wind instrument. He said when he as 15, he saw an all-girl orchestra at the Orpheum Theater and argued that he ought to be able to do anything a girl could. He bought an old cornet from a pawn shop and began taking lessons.

His first professional music jobs were with society jazz bands at well-known venues such as the Pythian Roof Garden, Pelican Club, San Jacinto Hall, Autocrat Club, Southern Yacht Club and the New Orleans Country Club as well as smaller dance halls, clubs and churches.

In 1932, he joined Captain John Handy’s Louisiana Shakers and played the Astoria and toured the Gulf Coast. He later backed blues singer Mamie Smith while playing with the Fats Pichon Band.

During the Depression, he worked as a laborer in New Orleans City Park for the Works Progress Administration, then played first trumpet in the WPA jazz band, of which he was the last surviving member.

http://media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lody30WVNP1qg691i.jpg

Health problems initially led to Ferbos’ musical career, but almost ended it.

"I was always ill,” said Ferbos in 2010 for a profile by WWL-TV’s Sally-Ann Roberts. “I had asthma in every joint and I had about four or five operations. And the doctor told me, he said, ‘You're doing alright, but you aren't going to live too long.’ And so that was when I was round about 50,” he laughed.

A deeply-committed family man, Mr. Ferbos preferred to stay close to home in Pontchartrain Park, with most of his gigs here in New Orleans. He did, however, make eight tours of Europe with the New Orleans Ragtime Orchestra, which he helped form to revive the music unearthed on sheet music, recordings and other memorabilia in the Hogan Jazz Archive at Tulane University.

Since 1967, he performed with the New Orleans Ragtime Orchestra, of which he was a founding member. He also continued his regular weekly gig at the Palm Court on Decatur St., where he lead the Palm Court Jazz Band for more than two decades.

He was a founding member of the orchestra that brought Vernel Bagneris’ Broadway musical “One Mo’ Time” to life in 1979.



Despite his long career, Mr. Ferbos made few early recordings. After he joined the Ragtime Orchestra and the Palm Court bands, he was recorded on several CDs on the GHB label. He remained a favorite among traditional jazz fans, well past the century mark.

“To me it’s really nice, when they appreciate you,” he said. “When it gets so they don't appreciate me, I'll stop. All through my life, I’ve been lucky. People have been very nice to me."

Ferbos inspired many of the young performers he worked with in recent years, including trumpeters Irvin Mayfield and Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews.

“Practice, practice, practice” was the advice he said he would give up and coming musicians. “Do that and you’ll make friends all over the world.”

“I want to thank everybody who has been very nice to me,” he said, fighting back tears of happiness in a July 2014 WWL-TV interview. “I have very good friends.”

While active as a musician, Ferbos for many years also kept his day job as a tinsmith in his family’s sheet-metal business. He went to work with his father in the family business in the 1940s, and became a master metal worker. He also worked at Haspel’s Clothing Factory in the early 30s, where he met his future wife. Ferbos and his wife, Marguerite Gilyot, were married for 75 years, until her death in 2009. The couple had a daughter, Sylvia, and son, Lionel Jr., who died in 2006.

In addition to his daughter, Ferbos is survived by three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren as well as a host of nieces and nephews.

Funeral arrangements are pending.

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Reply #154 posted 07/19/14 1:03pm

JoeBala

9 Stunning Photos Of The Beatles And Other Counter-Culture Icons By Photo Legend Terry Spencer

Terence Spencer packed a lot into life before his death in 2009. After serving in World War II, he later became one of America's most celebrated photo-journalists, chronicling everything from the Swinging 60s to conflicts in the Congo and Vietnam. Among his snaps are some incredible shots of the Beatles and other counter-culture icons, set to feature in an exhibition launching tomorrow (July 19).

  • Photo: Terence Spencer Photo Archive

  • Added: Jul 18, 2014

Photo: Terence Spencer Photo Archive
Photo: Terry Spencer/rockarchive.com
Photo: Terence Spencer Photo Archive
Photo: Terence Spencer Photo Archive
Photo: Terry Spencer/rockarchive.com
Photo: Terence Spencer Photo Archive
Photo: Terence Spencer Photo Archive
Photo: Terence Spencer Photo Archive

The man himself - Terry Spencer.

Photo: Terence Spencer Photo Archive
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Reply #155 posted 07/19/14 1:33pm

JoeBala

ROBERT PLANT Talks About Lyrical Inspiration For 'Lullaby And… The Ceaseless Roar' Album In Short Film

ROBERT PLANT Talks About Lyrical Inspiration For 'Lullaby And… The Ceaseless Roar' Album In Short Film

Legendary LED ZEPPELIN singer Robert Plant's new album, "Lullaby And… The Ceaseless Roar", will be released September 9 on Nonesuch/Warner Bros. Records. Produced by Plant, the album is his label debut and features 11 new recordings, nine of which are original songs written by Plant with his band, THE SENSATIONAL SPACE SHIFTERSJustin Adams: bendirs, djembe, guitars, tehardant, background vocals; John Baggott: keyboards, loops, moog bass, piano, tabal, background vocals; Juldeh Camara: kologo, ritti, Fulani vocals; Billy Fuller: bass, drum programming, omnichord, upright bass; Dave Smith: drum set; and Liam "Skin" Tyson: banjo, guitar, background vocals. Pre-orders are available now at RobertPlant.com and include a limited-edition print and an instant download of an album track.

A short film titled "Returning To The Borders", which explores the themes of "Lullaby And… The Ceaseless Roar", can be seen below. In the clip, Plant wonders the English countryside while recalling his travels in the American south — travels which influenced the album's lyrics.

He says: "I've been away a long time from these borders. I spent a lot of time traveling through the south. I was searching to see if I could find out the character of the area from the radio that was on in the car. So I wrote the lyrics against an amazing link to those days, back in the 1930s and '40s, when the south was the centre of the black revolution in music, before the Great Migration up to Chicago."

"Lullaby And… The Ceaseless Roar" is Plant's first record since 2010's "Band Of Joy", which followed 2007's six-time Grammy Award–winning collaboration with Alison Krauss, "Raising Sand". Justin Adams and John Baggott of THE SENSATIONAL SPACE SHIFTERS appeared on Plant's 2002 release "Dreamland", while all but Camara and Smith appeared on 2005's "Mighty Rearranger". The new-album lineup recently toured the world before recording "Lullaby And… The Ceaseless Roar" at Helium Studios in Wiltshire and Real World Studios in Bath, U.K. The track "Rainbow" was recorded in Contino Rooms in London. Tchad Blake mixed all but three tracks on the album.

"It's really a celebratory record, powerful, gritty, African, trance meets ZEP," Plant says.

"The whole impetus of my life as a singer has to be driven by a good brotherhood.

"I am very lucky to work with THE SENSATIONAL SPACE SHIFTERS. They come from exciting areas of contemporary music…

"I have been around awhile and I ask myself, do I have anything to say? Is there a song still inside me? In my heart?

"I see life and what's happening to me. Along the trail, there are expectations, disappointments, happiness, questions and strong relationships, and now I'm able to express my feelings through melody, power and trance; together in a kaleidescope of sound, colour, and friendship."


.

The Cost Behind Booking Your Favourite Band Revealed

Got a birthday or BBQ coming up? Don't just stick your iPod on and hope for the best: book your favourite band to swing by yours for a private performance! Here's how much spare change you'll need to afford them, according to a report put together by Business Insider. Like Prince? He'll set you back up to £1.15M.

  • Added: Jun 3, 2014
Photo: Press
Also in a similar price bracket is pint-sized pocket pop star Bruno Mars, who'll request approximately £590,000, should you want to book him. If you can convince Pepsi your Gran's 70th is as big a global event as the Superbowl, who knows, they might chip
Photo: Getty

Jay Z's private performances are known to almost cost around the £600K mark too. Word of warning – don't allow him too big a guestlist, unless you want Kanye hoovering up all the vol-au-vents before any one gets near 'em. That guy bloody loves a flakey French pastry.

Photo: Getty

Look at him. I mean, really look at him. You think Mick Jagger would just pop around your crusty digs for any less than $1,000,000? Rolling Stones routinely get up to $1,499,999 for shows. That's around £880,000.

Photo: Getty
The Black Keys know where it's at. Only have two band members, and the £590,000 they reportedly charge for shows goes way, way further. That's good business sense, boys.
Photo: Getty
Nation's sweetheart and perennial pavement-chaser Adele would like to play your party, but not for less than £440,000 thank you very much.
Photo: Getty
Peroxide hair dye ain't cheap, so it's just as well Eminem can command up to approximately £600K for shows, isn't it?
Photo: Getty
He might party with his own son on stage, but if you want Billie Joe Armstrong and his Green Day gang to rock out with your own little offspring, it’ll set you back upwards of £440,000. You’d be an idiot, American or otherwise, not to.
Photo: Amy Brammall/NME
Cost to hire Muse for a private event? Around £600,000. Additional electricity costs from all those TVs? God knows. Make sure you've popped a couple of quid in the meter before their set, folks.
Photo: Getty
Crooner and cougar heart throb Michael Buble has become the king of modern swing. Just in case his annual Christmas albums aren't enough to get your office party jumping, for a meager £400K he'll swing (ha ha ha ha ha ha!) by in person for a performance.
Photo: Getty
£290,000. That's the cost of Mr Chris Martin and his Coldplay peers for the evening. Pay that and you can consciously uncouple from the idea of ever sending your kids to college.
Photo: Getty
Want just Dave Grohl? Alone? Nobody else? (Not like that). Stump up just £146,000 and the man will treat you to an acoustic performance, say Business Insider.
Photo: Getty
Want an exclusive audience with Jack White's crew The Raconteurs? Sure thing. They do request approximately £290,000 though. Get counting them pennies.
Photo: The Raconteurs
Have yourself a beautiful dark twisted fantastic party by hiring the one and only Kanye West. That'll be £200,000 please. What!? The guy's got to put his compass-named brood through university somehow.
Photo: Getty
Grohl fanatics from Richmond, Virginia recently managed to persuade Foo Fighters to play a crowd-funded gig. And, considering Business Insider say the Foos cost about £175,000 a show, the Richmond collective have gone and nabbed themselves a bonafide bargain – bringing in Dave and co for just £40,000.
Photo: Richard Johnson/NME
The Bruce Willis Blues Band. Yes, you read that right. John McClane did actually dabble in a recording career before he became an international star with the release of Die Hard. We’ve heard that if you relentlessly heckle him shouting "Yippee-ki-yay, motherfucker", he’ll dart you a bashful smile. Or murder you. All for the tidy cost of £175,000.
Photo: Getty
Having just released 'Ultraviolence', there would really be no better time to hire Lana Del Rey to play your BBQ. Problem is, she’s kinda in demand right now, so she does currently carry a £175,000 price tag. But it’s okay. Don’t be sad. Docking stations balanced on a stool in your garden emitting tinny audio of ‘Video Games’ is almost as good.
Photo: Pooneh Ghana/NME
"Private schools, daycare, shit, medical bills, I'll pay that," the mighty Outkast once rapped. Big Boi, you sure are a generous guy! Except, oh wait a sec, you stopped just short of "free gig round your house" on that little list, so any Outkast mega fans out there, you'll be doling out £115,000 for the privilege of their company. Soz.
Photo: Getty
The Prince of Darkness himself, Ozzy Osbourne, costs £115,000 to hire for a show. But just think of the hijinks you could get up to with Ozzy at your parents’ house. You'd be bat shit crazy not to really, wouldn't you?
Photo: Ed Miles/NME
Radiohead are all yours for just £115,000 a night. Not that Radiohead seem to play a lot of private shows.
Photo: Getty
Iggy Pop does car insurance adverts so of course he'll come play a gig for you. So long as you don't mind doling out £75,000, that is.
Photo: Andy Willsher/NME
Want some Courtney in your life? For a paltry £15,000, you can have a crazy little thing called Love treat you to her awesome catalogue of grunge bangers. YES PLEASE.
Photo: Getty
For just £15,000, you could have the only two-time Mercury Prize Award winner of all time PJ Harvey wow you from the comfort of your own domocile. She is an MBE though, so you'd probably wanna make sure the house is tidy.
Photo: Getty
"Lead me out on the moonlit floor," sang Sixpence None The Richer on that one song ('Kiss Me') all those many moons ago. Does bog-standard carpet suit you instead, guys? Can we lead you out onto that instead? If so, and providing we can find a spare £15,000 knocking about, we'd love to host your for the evening here at NME HQ.
Photo: Getty
Can we all agree that, in the midst of a recession, maybe there's better ways to blow £15,000 than on hiring the Village People for the night? Yes? Good. Thank you.
Photo: Getty
These guys may even pip Village People for the novelty factor. £10,000. That's the cost of hiring Right Said Fred for the night. For that price, I bet they're able to afford all sorts of shirts they're too sexy for.
Photo: Getty
"Got a bank account bigger than the law should allow," famously sang Sisquo. Well it’s alright for some, isn’t Sisqo? Damn you and your illegal bank account. Wish we had one of those. For us plebs over here, we’d have to pay a bumper £10,000 to hear you play sex-pest S&B anthem ‘Thong Song’. One day. One day...
Photo: Getty
As a musician and political activist, we feel like we should really be respecting Serj Tankian. Serj was awarded an Armenian Prime Minister’s Medal for his efforts to draw attention to the Armenian Genocide. For £10,000, you could have him perform and speak for you and your friends. We’re not going to offer any mildly silly remarks here. Just respect for Serj. What a guy.
Photo: Getty
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Reply #156 posted 07/19/14 1:55pm

JoeBala

James Brown Biopic 'Get on Up'

Produced by Mick Jagger, the movie will span the Godfather of Soul's life and career

Chadwick Boseman as James Brown in 'Get on Up'.
Universal Pictures
July 19, 2014 10:45 AM ET

Anyone who still thinks jocks and artists don't mix has yet to be acquainted with Mr. Chadwick Boseman. After playing Jackie Robinson in 2013's 42 and a fictional football star in this year's Draft Day, the young actor seems poised to nail the role of James Brown in Get on Up, the forthcoming biopic that counts Mick Jagger as a producer.

The new trailer for Get on Up, directed by The Help's Tate Taylor, is a major tease. It's got Brown falling in love with music as a kid, punching a guy out in prison, and pioneering all those Soul Trainworthy moves/hairdos/getups. Get on Up looks like it won't be a straight-up feel-good musical, though, even if Craig Robinson of The Office and Pineapple Express is set to show up.

The film will detail Brown visiting Vietnam, living and touring through the thick of the civil rights movement, and dealing with clueless reporters trying to grasp esoteric concepts like "the groove" and "the funk." Oh, and he accidentally blasts a shotgun indoors. (Speaking of hijinx, that chase scene with the cops totally happened, and was detailed in national newspapers in 1988. 'They shot out his tires in South Carolina. He was running on two steel rims on the front. He drove about six miles like that.")

Visiting the Today show this past week, Jagger explained what a seminal influence Brown was on the Rolling Stones. "It wasn't an influence like, 'Oh, I'm going to cop his move or I'm going to cop his songwriting,'" Jagger said. "The main thing I copped from him, which I think is a good thing to learn for any performer, is the way he interacted with the audience. The way he charmed them. The way he told them what to do. The way he gave them his emotions. The way he expected them to give back." Producing alongside Jagger is Oscar-winning industry veteran Brian Grazer (A Beautiful Mind, Apollo 13, 24), who's been trying to get a Brown biopic going since the 1990s. Viola Davis, Octavia Spencer, Dan Aykroyd, and Philadelphia singer Jill Scott will appear in costarring roles.

Back in February, Rolling Stone visited the Get on Up set and heard Jagger's praises for Chadwick Boseman. "It's a really hard role to do," Jagger said. "It would've been safer to take someone from Broadway who had a lot of dancing and singing background. Chad would be the first to tell you, he wasn't a dancer. But after he'd worked for six weeks on it, he immeasurably had become the character." Boseman and Brown were actually both born in South Carolina, about 100 miles (and 49 years) apart. Tate Taylor, a Mississippi native, was thrilled with this connection. "[Boseman's] protective of the men of the South, and said, 'We cannot mess this up! I don't know if I can do it right!'" Taylor told Rolling Stone. "And I was like, 'I'm with you! Just come on!' And he came in and killed it."

It looks like Jagger, Taylor, Grazer and company hit the bullseye with the Get on Up soundtrack, too. The 20-song collection, due for a July 29 release, features live and studio cuts including "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag, Pt. 1," "Super Bad," "Please Please Please," "The Payback Pt. 1," and, of course, the 1970 classic from which the film gets its title, "Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine." Get on Up hits theaters August 1.

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Cyrille Aimee It's A Good Day Coming 8/19/14


CYRILLE AIMÉE Infuses Novel Blend
of Musical Styles on
It's A Good Day -
Available August 19 on Mack Avenue Records

"...astonishingly creative...with a brilliant sound, fresh ideas,
impeccable rhythm and an overall approach that honors tradition
without being shackled to the past" - The Wall Street Journal

"When you see Cyrille Aimée perform, you instantly fall in love with her -
her voice, eyes, curls, and the joyful spirit she invests in each song." - JazzTimes
It's A Good Day is the major label debut by the widely acclaimed young jazz singer Cyrille Aimée-yet another step forward for the rapidly rising vocalist. Winner of both the Montreux Jazz Festival's Vocal Competition and the Sarah Vaughan International Vocal Competition, Aimée explores a range of musical styles, eras, continents and moods on It's A Good Day (Mack Avenue) with a singular voice on inventive arrangements, produced by Fabrice DuPont (Shakira, Jennifer Lopez).
Aimée's musical outlook is reflected in an emphasis on the guitar, an instrument with an indigenous form in nearly every culture of the world-and it was the sound of the gypsy guitar that inspired Aimée to become a musician. While growing up in Samois-sur-Seine, Aimée snuck out of her home to the nearby gypsy encampments and was mesmerized by the music of those who followed the spirit of Django Reinhardt, revered as one of the world's most influential guitarists. Aimée-who as a child also lived in Paris, Cameroon, Singapore and the Dominican Republic-later became fascinated with Brazilian guitar, and her music reveals a thorough understanding of bossa nova and samba idioms. She has now settled in Brooklyn, where she continues to absorb the inner workings of American jazz and the culture of the music's homeland.
Photo Credit: Anna Webber
The musical accompaniment on It's A Good Day is as novel as Aimée herself: three guitars (Jazz, Gypsy and Brazilian) with bass and drums. This captivating multi-guitar sound is provided by her close collaborator, Michael Valeanu, a player of French and Italian extraction on a contemporary jazz-style electric guitar; her countryman Adrien Moignard on the steel-string guitar gypsies favor due to its piercing, staccato sound; and the Brazilian guitarist Guilherme Mont eiro, who relies on a nylon-stringed instrument which provides the bossa nova its soft and undulating sensuous sound.
Thoughtful arrangements of the thirteen songs-both standards and originals-ensure a sumptuous musical blend. "We worked hard to create a road map for each guitar to make the sound beautiful and exciting-without creating a musical traffic jam," explains Aimée. The flexible and fluid rhythm section of bassist Sam Anning and drummer Rajiv Jayaweera holds it all together.
Opening the album are two standards, an engaging version of Rodgers and Hart's "Where Or When," and the upbeat title track, "It's A Good Day," made famous by Peggy Lee. "Bamboo Shoots," an alluring original by Anning, somehow manages to sound gypsy, Hawaiian and pop-all at the same time. In the same vein, her arrangement of "Love Me Or Leave Me" has an original multi-cultural spin. "I was inspired to do a version of 'Love Me Or Leave Me' after hearing Nina Simone's recording," recalls Aimée, "and then I found the Billie Holiday version, and was further inspired."
Seamlessly added to the mix are covers of Michael Jackson's "Off The Wall" and Duke Ellington's "Caravan." "Caravan was one of the first songs I ever learned," says Aimée, "and it was time to inject some fiery gypsy soul into it." That frame of mind found it to "Pourtant," a French pop song that was a hit for Vanessa Paradis, as well as "All Love," which began as an instrumental composition by the late guitarist Babik Reinhardt, the son of the legendary Django. "I heard this beautiful melody so many times, but when they played it at Babik's funeral, I asked for permission to put a lyric to it."
It's A Good Day also features catchy original compositions by Aimée. Featured are "One Way Ticket"-the result of a trip to India, "Twenty-Eight" and "Nuit Blanche" ("White Night"), a French expression that refers to an inability to sleep while brooding over lost love. Oscar Pettiford's "Tricotism" is the zesty closer-almost an encore. How better to feature bassist Anning than in a jazz classic by one of the founding fathers of the modern jazz bass?
Cyrille Aimée is an artist of many facets. Infused by a novel blend of multicultural influences, a vision for a unique sound and with a voice that is sublime, It's A Good Day makes for a great day for a wide array of lovers of music.
About Cyrille Aimée:
Vocalist Cyrille Aimée was primarily raised in France by a French father and Dominican mother. As a child she snuck out of her bedroom window on summer nights wandering into nearby gypsy encampments filled with those attending the annual Django Reinhardt Festival in Samois-sur-Seine. She quickly fell in love with their music and way of life, and was captivated to the point of traveling throughout Europe where she and her musician friends would play and sing on street corners across the continent. This tour eventually led her to the Montreux Jazz Festival, where she won first prize in their vocal competition-which included the financing of her first self-produced album. Aimée auditioned for the French version of American Idol, for which she was selected to be a finalist. Informed she would have to sing only what she was told, her gypsy and jazz spirit rebelled-she left the competition. She now happily tours the world with her band as well as in a duo setting with Brazilian guitarist Diego Figueiredo. Aimée's talents recently caught the attention of Stephen Sondheim who cast her in an Encores! Special Event at New York City's City Center in November 2013. It's A Good Day, Aimée's major label debut, will be released in August 2014.

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Reply #157 posted 07/19/14 7:57pm

JoeBala

000812_Lionel Hudson.JPG

Lionel Hudson, Memphis - August 12, 2000


Lionel Hudson Interview by Andrew Hearn, August 12, 2000

Tell me where your connection with Elvis and "That's The Way It Is" begins.

I started off as a helper for RCA, and we were doing so many records of this gentleman [Elvis]. I had heard of him and knew what he was about but I just couldn't believe that the man could put out that many records. That's when I began listening to him, when I used to go into the sound booths and I started to fall in love with him.

Well, while I was working at RCA I met a girl who was his fan club president on the West Coast. Her name was Linda and she's in the original movie singing in the choir [sic]. She was a very good friend of mine and it was her that recommended me to Mr. Saunders [MGM director] to be in the picture. So I got in the picture and then to Las Vegas and this is where I really got to meet Elvis. I could go over to the studio any time I wanted because I was the employee who would transport the tapes over to the producer. At the time I was the only person there working for RCA as a foreman and so this is how I became friends with Elvis and Colonel Parker.

How was Colonel Parker?

Oh, the Colonel always took care of me, but I was always moving around carrying boxes and stuff. You saw the movie where all the Elvis banners are? I used to go up there all the time. By this time I had become a foreman and so next time I was in the presence of Elvis was in the studio but he was so busy all the time. Once in a while I'd talk with him and he was a very nice person.

What made Elvis so special to you, as an employee of RCA?

The thing that made him special to me is that he was from Mississippi, and my father was a very well-known doctor there. My mother lived in Jacksonville, Tennessee and they were seventy-five miles apart but when we sat down as a family all we really talked about was Elvis. From then on he's been a part of my life and he's the reason I'm in the business I'm in today, it's all because of him.

What kind of things did Elvis talk to you about?

Well, Elvis told me that he felt like he was in prison sometimes and although he had everything to be happy about, he was really an unhappy man. I said to him, "Why? You've got everything" and he replied, "You can have all the money in the world but you don't have peace of mind."

Do you think Elvis was envious of the man on the street?

He gave some money to me one time and told me to just go and enjoy myself. I thanked him, took the money downstairs in the hotel and I played. I won $22,000 because I just didn't care, I just put all the odds on the table and won it all within two hours.

I started to get to know him and he talked to me about so many interesting things, especially about the black way of life. He said that things have been written in books about what he'd said about black people and their music. He said that they only printed what they wanted to, and not the full story. He said he don't talk about things any more because the more you do, the more they stir it up and use it as a selling point.

How many shows did you see there in Vegas?

I saw about four or five shows. They were very good as far as I'm concerned but I've looked at so many of them, if you ask me I can't really remember them apart from the show that I was in because everywhere I go people remind me of it. I enjoyed "Jailhouse Rock" and, of course, "Patch It Up."

Fans all over the world will remember you as the guy really losing it during that number.

I tell you, I had no idea that it was going to be that good and I was sitting right down front along with my girlfriend and the music got good with a decent beat. "Polk Salad Annie" was another one and I really wanted to get up on that but when "Patch It Up" was on I just couldn't stay still, I had to get up and do that little move there. It was really something, and I really didn't know they were going to be shooting me.


700812_Lionel Hudson.JPG

Lionel Hudson, Las Vegas - August 12, 1970


So when you first saw the movie, you were totally surprised when you were up there dancing?

Mr. Saunders had a preview at the MGM studios so I saw it before it got out on the market. I went there and enjoyed the movie, but a lot of it they had cut out, but I was very well pleased with it.

What was it like watching the original movie again last night?

Let me tell you, last night I felt like I was going back to RCA with all the people who were in the movie. The lady and her mother were my co-workers and, as I said earlier, the lady who said he was like a brother was his fan club president out there, so it made me think of those people and that time. Being in that movie has opened so many doors for me, it really has. I can only say that from the time I walked into RCA Elvis has been paying me my wages because he produced so many great movies and records.

Do people still recognize you?

I can go virtually anywhere in the United States and someone will recognize me from that movie. I had walked into a place in California and I noticed people just staring at me. After a while one of the waitresses came over and said, "Haven't I seen you some place before?" I said, "I don't think so" and she replied, "Wasn't you in that movie with Elvis Presley?"

What do you think about the loyalty of Elvis' many fans?

You know something? Elvis still lives on in a lot of people's minds today and some of them didn't really know Elvis but they knew about him. Just like that waitress, they were watching him in the movies and things and by the way, by the time I left that place I had signed four or five autographs.

Are you looking forward to seeing the premiere of the new version tonight?

I want to see what they've taken out and what they've put in but I'm hoping they don't cut me out! But not only that, I'm going to be watching the whole thing all way through.

Have you been up to Graceland recently?

I've passed there several times but I've only been up there once; it gave me a feeling of happiness and sadness and I just don't like to feel that way. My father used to call me a "soft-heart" because I would look at things and start crying. I never could understand why I was crying when I should be happy. So I really don't like to be at the house too much.

But you're having a good time here in Memphis during "Elvis Week"?

Oh yes, I'm really having a good time because all the people that I meet all really enjoy Elvis and they speak so well of him. We all make mistakes and we all have bad times in our lives but when your as big as Elvis is in this city, and all over the world, it doesn't matter. He was very good to me and I'm living a very comfortable life because of Elvis. I owe it all to Elvis.

Elvis really is fondly remembered, isn't he?

He was a person that was loving and kind. He was a talented person and a very bright star. He was a good person who gave away a lot of money, he gave me quite a bit of money too. I won that $22,000 and because of that I semi-retired and nobody really knew about that.

When was the last time you saw Elvis?

The last time I saw him was at the last show he did in Las Vegas and he had begun to swell quite a bit. This was 1976 and it wasn't the Elvis I knew during those shows in 1970 and it hurt me to him like it, he just wasn't himself.

Let's close with a nice story from your years at RCA.

Well, one time when I was on night shift I got a call from Alabama and two young ladies were on the phone and they wanted to know all about Elvis. I didn't know who they were but I enjoyed talking with them. I got a letter from them two young ladies thanking me for giving them information about Elvis. They were trying to get in touch with Elvis through the company but we never gave those details out to no one.

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Reply #158 posted 07/20/14 10:12am

JoeBala

Natalie Wood

http://kittypackard.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/NatalieWood.jpg

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http://iv1.lisimg.com/image/501967/600full-natalie-wood.jpg

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Reply #159 posted 07/21/14 1:51pm

JoeBala

The Patriot star Skye McCole Bartusiak dies at 21

Skye McCole Bartusiak in 2006. Photo/Getty

Actress Skye McCole Bartusiak, who portrayed Mel Gibson's young daughter in the 2000 film The Patriot, has died in her Houston home. She was 21.

Bartusiak's mother said actress had been living in a garage apartment at her parents' home.

The actress' boyfriend found her unresponsive on her bed on Saturday.

Helen Bartusiak said she tried to resuscitate her daughter but could not.

She said the actress had been healthy and did not drink or do drugs and the family still doesn't know a cause of death.

She told CNN news: "We lost our girl. We think she had a seizure and choked and nobody was there.

"They were working on her for 45 minutes and could not get a heartbeat. She was a kind and really beautiful girl."

Abigail Breslin, also a child star and a close friend of Sky, paid tribute on Twitter, writing: "One of my very good friends and someone who was like a sister to me, Skye McCole Bartusiak passed away today.

So devastated."

Roland Emmerich, who was the director and producer of The Patriot also sent his condolences, writing: "This is not the kind of news you want to begin your day with. RIP sweet Skye McCole Bartusiak."

Bartusiak made her film debut at age 6 in the The Cider House Rules in 1999. Her most recent move was Sick Boy in 2012.

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James Garner Dies

07/20/2014 at 05:00 AM EDT

James Garner Dies
James Garner
Getty

James Garner, for more than 50 years one of Hollywood's most likable leading men on the big screen and on TV, died at his Los Angeles home Saturday night, reports TMZ. He was 86.

The star, best known for the Maverick and The Rockford Files TV series, had suffered what had been described as a minor stroke in 2008.

Besides his popular work on the small screen, Garner also appeared opposite Julie Andrews in two critically acclaimed movies, 1964's The Americanization of Emily and 1982's Victor/Victoria. In addition, he costarred opposite Doris Day in The Thrill of It All and Move Over, Darling (both 1963), and added his own charm to perhaps one of the greatest buddy movies of all time, 1963's The Great Escape, with Steve McQueen.

Another box-office hit was the 1966 racing film Grand Prix, which put him in widescreen Cinerama.

Besides appearing as an aged astronaut with Clint Eastwood in 2000's Space Cowboys, Garner had later roles in the 2004 film The Notebook and as Katey Sagal's father on the ABC sitcom 8 Simple Rules.

Dickensian Childhood

Born James Scott Bumgarner in Norman, Oklahoma, the future star had a childhood that played like a modern day Oliver Twist. He was only 5 when his mother died, and he and his two brothers were farmed out to various relatives.

Three years later the family was reunited when their father, Weldon (who subsequently married four times), introduced them to their first stepmother, a mean-spirited woman who regularly beat them.

"Mostly me," Garner told PEOPLE in 1985 – the same year he received a Best Actor Oscar nomination for Murphy's Romance, with Sally Field.

"My dad worked hard as an upholsterer and carpet layer," said Garner, "but he was a rake and he drank a lot. He'd come home bombed and make us sing to him or get a whipping."

From that experience, Garner developed a lifelong sympathy for the underdog. "I cannot stand to see little people picked on by big people," he said. "If a director starts abusing people, I'll just jump in."

At 14, he left home and did odd jobs. Two years later he lied about his age and joined the merchant marine, but left in less than a year.

Drifting to L.A., Garner attended Hollywood High, where he developed into a football hero – only to prove shy off the field.

"All the girls liked him," said a childhood friend, "but Jim hardly dated."

Male Model

Still, Garner's hunky teen torso won him his first on-camera job: a Jantzen swimsuit ad – something he later regretted. "Ever since I did that darn ad, I've hated having my picture taken," he said.

The Korean War interrupted his modeling career. He was wounded twice and won two Purple Hearts. "I wasn't a hero," he said modestly. "I just got in the way a lot."

James Garner Dies| Death, Tributes, Grand Prix, The Dirty Dozen, Victor/Victoria, Maverick, The Rockford Files: I Still Love L.A., James Garner

James Garner in Grand Prix, 1966

Everett

It was also luck, he claimed, that got him into acting. A pal from back home who'd become a producer gave him the small role of a judge in Broadway's The Caine Mutiny Court Martial. The star of the show, Henry Fonda, became his model and mentor.

Warner Bros. made Garner a contract player, which led, in 1957, to his starring as the shy Western hero on Maverick – at the bargain price of $500 a week. After four years he sued and got out of his contract.

Litigation also surrounded his departure from Rockford in 1979, after five years on the show. He claimed all the stunts ruined his health – and that the studio's bookkeeping cheated him out of millions in profits. (After a 10-year legal battle, Universal and Garner settled their financial dispute out of court.)

On a happier note, in 1956 he met aspiring actress Lois Clarke at a Democratic rally, and, he said, "She just knocked me out." Two weeks later they were married.

Already the mother of a daughter, Kim, by a former marriage, Lois had another daughter with Garner, Gigi. All three women survive him.

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Idris Elba in Talks for Guy Ritchie's 'King Arthur'

The Warner Bros. project is a reimagining of the story of King Arthur and his knights.

AP Images
Idris Elba

Idris Elba is in talks to star in Knights of the Roundtable: King Arthur, Warner Bros.' new take on the English myth being directed by Guy Ritchie, The Hollywood Reporter has confirmed.

Joby Harold wrote the script, which is a reimagining of the story of King Arthur and his legendary knights of the kingdom of Camelot.

Elba will play Bedivere, Arthur's father's right-hand man, who is will teach Arthur how to lead an army.

The role of Arthur has not been cast but testing will begin in August.

Producing the movie are Lionel Wigram, Akiva Goldsman, Tory Tunnell and Harold.

Elba's boarding reunites the actor with Ritchie, who directed him in the London-set crime movie RocknRolla, which Warners distributed in 2008.

Elba is best known for starring in the BBC's acclaimed Luther series. He will also be voicing the character of Shere Khan in Disney's The Jungle Book, currently in preproduction, and is attached to star in the thriller Bastille Day.

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Reply #160 posted 07/21/14 2:33pm

JoeBala

Richard Marx Is Back

By Michele Amabile Angermiller | July 21, 2014 2:05 PM EDT

Richard Marx photographed by Deborah Anderson in 2014.

Deborah Anderson

The guy who wrote the book on romance lands his highest-charting album, 'Beautiful Goodbye,' in 20 years

Richard Marx could teach a class on hit love songs. The singer-songwriter has notched 29 Billboard Hot 100 hits, the majority of them uber-romantic — from his first No. 1 as an artist, 1988's "Hold On to the Nights," to his 2011 Hot Country Songs chart-topper for Keith Urban, "Long Hot Summer." Marx, now 50 and recently divorced from his longtime wife, actress Cynthia Rhodes, says he writes "what every woman wants to hear and what every man wished he could say." With "Beautiful Goodbye" (released on Kobalt), his first album in 10 years, starting No. 39 on the Billboard 200 — his best-ever debut and highest-charting set since 1994 — Marx is romancing listeners once again.

Billboard: Did you set out to make an album that doubles as a date-night soundtrack?
Marx: I was influenced by EDM and trance. I love that because it often doesn't have a lyric to focus on; the music takes you away. It made me listen to Chopin. That is so sexy to me.

The video for "Whatever We Started" shows you looking lonely the morning after. What's the story behind it?
It's a dance between two people who have already been intimate but something stopped them short — maybe fear. It's that feeling of "This is bigger than both of us."

You're prolific on Twitter. What’s your take on social media?
I love it, but I also like mystery. I don’t know shit about Peter Gabriel, and few people have impacted me as much. I don't know what he has for breakfast and I don't care. I find myself being too accessible. My personal life has always been personal.

That said, it was sad to hear about your divorce.
I appreciate that, but at the same time, I don't understand it. It was a beautiful 29 years and we brought three amazing men into the world. Somebody said they were sorry my marriage failed. I went, "Really? I think it was a smashing success."

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The Weeknd: Kiss And Tell (2013 Cover Story)

Jul 15, 2013
Interview By Damien Scott Photography By David Black.

The Weeknd has always let his music do the talking—dark, debauched mixtapes that changed the sound of modern R&B and profoundly influenced Drake’s sophomore album, Take Care. Now, As Abel Tesfaye prepares his debut album, Kiss Land, he’s speaking out for the first time. Listen up.

http://exclaim.ca/images/weeknd16.jpg

This feature appears in Complex's August/September 2013 issue.

The Weeknd wants to be a star. Perhaps he’s given you another impression—because he’s never done an interview (until now) and he rarely poses for photos. But the 23-year-old singer, songwriter, and producer, born Abel Tesfaye in Scarborough, Ontario, doesn’t plan to languish in obscurity. Nor will he be one of those indie artists who wields tremendous influence but whose names are only known by “purists.” Fuck that.

The Weeknd’s plans are just as big, or bigger than, those of his peers and idols. But in order to accomplish them he must first master the art of stardom. Part of which means opening up to the media. The other parts—great music and live shows—he’s already got a handle on. His smoky, 3 a.m.-after-party-in-my-hotel-room debut, House of Balloons (released March 21, 2011), had fans and critics hailing him as on...rchbearers. The music caught the attention of another Canadian star by the name of Drake, who shared some of The Weeknd’s songs on his blog, invited him to perform on the first two OVO Fests, and enlisted the second-generation Ethiopian to work on his Grammy-winning sophomore album, Take Care.

The Weeknd closed out 2011 with two more stellar offerings via free download—Thursday and Echoes of Silence. He collected these, along with Balloons, as a three-disc album titled Trilogy after signing a joint venture d...l Republic (not through OVO) in September 2012. Even though all three albums were available for free, Trilogy managed to move more than 300,000 copies.

The next test for The Weeknd will be his major label debut, Kiss Land. If the other three albums described life for a young man on the cusp of success, Kiss Land represents the thrill—and the horror—of tasting and savoring stardom.

Tesfaye knows the world is waiting to see if he can deliver a project anywhere near as good as his first ones. That’s why he’s been taking his time with the recording, honing in on the strengths and weaknesses of his past work. In his L.A. studio session there are no girls with their noses...s keyboard, no pills or weed scattered about—just The Weeknd in full go-mode, sipping Cabernet, perfecting drums and vocals. The next night, at the hotel restaurant where he and his XO crew are staying, he’s a little less at ease, but ready to speak his piece.

Why haven’t you done an interview until now?
I felt like I had nothing to say. I still feel I have nothing to say. I’m the most boring person to talk to.

So why now? Is your label pushing you to do press for the album?
No, labels always push. I mean, Trilogy was a rerelease, but they still said, “Maybe you should do some interviews.” Honestly, I want to do interviews now because it’s one thing that I haven’t mastered. Even Prince did interviews. Michael did interviews. And I can tell in the interviews they’re uncomfortable. Why are they doing this? Because they feel like they have to do it to be a complete artist. I felt like this was my time. And maybe I wouldn’t have done it if I thought you were an asshole. I probably would have been like, “Fuck this guy.”

Is the air of mystery intentional?
Yes and no. In the beginning, I was very insecure. I hated how I looked in pictures. I just fucking hated this shit, like, crop me out of this picture right now. I was very camera shy. People like hot girls, so I put my music to hot girls and it just became a trend. The whole “enigmatic artist” thing, I just ran with it. No one could find pictures of me. It reminded me of some villain shit. But you can’t escape the Internet. There are super fans, and I was really testing their patience. At the end of the day you can’t deny the music. That was my whole thing: I’m going to let the music speak for itself. I’ll show them that this is what I do. But I’m very good at letting shit slide. If I wasn’t…

In the beginning, I was very insecure. I hated how I looked in pictures... That was my whole thing: I'm going to let the music speak for itself.

—you’d go crazy.
I feel like I’m already crazy. I just wouldn’t be able to focus on my music. If I didn’t let shit slide, I’d probably still be working on Echoes of Silence right now. But, I know how to let go of bullshit. And I know how to let go of unmixed and unmastered records. But not anymore. To me, this is my first album. Kiss Land is definitely my first album.

A fresh start.
Yeah, that’s why I didn’t want to mix and master House of Balloons or Thursday or Echoes of Silence. I didn’t feel like they were my albums. Those were my mixtapes.

It was a hell of a mixtape.
Yeah, man. I just wanted to make the greatest mixtape of all time, that’s all. And if I didn’t, I definitely made the longest mixtape of all time. [Laughs.]

Which of the three resonates with you the most?
House of Balloons is the most important for me because I spent the most time on it. I didn’t have a deadline for that. As soon as I put House of Balloons out, I let the world know I’m coming out with two more albums this year, so I had my own little deadline. Before House of Balloons, it was all freedom.

House of Balloons was actually supposed to have more songs than it does. I had so many records left, and then Take Care came through. “Crew Love,” “Shot for Me,” and “The Ride” were supposed to be on House of Balloons. I wanted to come out with like 14 records. I felt like “The Ride” was the last one, and it wasn’t done yet. [Drake] heard it and he was like, “This shit’s crazy.”

How did you give it to him? Was it just an instrumental?
Yeah, we were making the drum loop and...oh, man, I had smoked I don’t know how much weed. Even Drake, he came into that session and we were all smoked out. It was terrible how much weed smoke was in that room. I was surprised I could even hit a note. I had sung this melody—it wasn’t a hook, just an unfinished lyric. And he liked it so much, he was like, “I need to have this, man.... I know I’ve already taken ‘Shot for Me’ and ‘Crew Love’ and this and that.” And me, I was hungry at that time. I was like, “Dude, take anything.” At that point I was like, “Hell, yeah.”

In your mind, what was “The Ride” supposed to be?
There are two ways of making music for me. There’s a calculated route—like, I know exactly what I’m going to do with this song. And then there’s the free mind. That was one of the free-minded records. It was all subconscious. I’ll make the music first and loop it, and then I’ll go into the booth and start singing almost 45 minutes straight. And these are not words; this is gibberish. It’s a songwriter language. There are lyrics on Thursday, I don’t even know what the fuck I said. “Gone” was a complete freestyle.

I want to show the world that I can s**t out albums like nothing.

Isn’t that like eight minutes long?
[Laughs.] Yeah, exactly. With me, everything is a blank canvas. I’m painting this canvas by whipping the colors. I want to show the world that I can shit out albums like nothing.

The song “Kiss Land” has a new level of musicality and thoughtfulness that seems apropos for your first major label release.
I’m all about evolution. I’m the first person to judge myself. I listen to my music and I’ll be like, “This is shit.” Everyone around me is like, “What the fuck is wrong with you?”

What are some flaws you saw in your past three releases?
Just technical, musical stuff. And, of course, writing. You’re bound to find flaws and repetition when you come out with three albums in one year. At that point I was very cavalier; I didn’t give a shit. Some people realize it and some don’t. Me, I’m very critical.

I’m not here to change or lie about what I’m going to do. What I sing about is what I sing about. But there’s a lot of cool twists with this album, because this album symbolizes everything that I’d never experienced in the past 21 years of my life. I’d never left Toronto. I’d driven to Montreal, but I’d never been on a plane before two or three years ago.

Wow. That’s crazy.
From when I was born to when I was 21, I never left Toronto. That’s why I’m such a city cat. Trilogy is my experiences in those four walls. Kiss Land is me doing the things I did in Trilogy in different settings. [Laughs.]

My favorite of the Trilogy set, which goes against conventional wisdom, is Echoes of Silence.
Really, the last one? Echoes of Silence was made in Montreal. I had a lot of darkness in that city.

My favorite song on that project is “Next.”
That’s an artist’s song. If you’re an artist, you can relate to that record. Especially if you’re in that hip-hop world, “Next” is for you.

It’s that balance of high and low. To start a song off, “She pops that pussy on a Monday.” Where is this going from there?
I’m a huge fan of R. Kelly’s. He’s a musical genius, and probably the most prolific artist of the generation before mine. Some of the lines he says, if you say them in a normal voice, it’s the most disgusting thing you could say to somebody. But I can say “Pussy-ass nigga” in the most elegant and sexiest way ever, and it’s accepted. If I can get away with singing that, I’m doing something right.

All that ignorance on my records—“When she put it in her mouth, she can’t seem to reach my…”—that’s me paying homage to R. Kelly, and even Prince to a certain extent. The things R. Kelly was saying were crazy. You can say it now and it’s nothing, but back then you couldn’t.

All that ignorance on my records—'When she put it in her mouth, she can’t seem to reach my…'—that’s me paying homage to R. Kelly, and even Prince to a certain extent.

Since Trilogy, you’ve made songs with Wiz, Juicy J...
French Montana, Drake. They are all friends of mine. Every time Wiz came to Toronto, my friend would take me to his concerts and bring me backstage. To this day, he’s the realest dude ever. So when he asked me to work with him, I did it without hesitation.

When you do a feature for other artists, do you give them an entire song?
With “Crew Love,” it wasn’t like that. Like I said, that was my song. I had a hook and I had a second verse. And Drake heard it and he was like, “Fuck, man.”

There’s a second verse?
Yeah, there was a second verse on it.

You’ve got to play that for me!
I fucking hate that second verse. That was a complete freestyle as well. I’m glad Drake placed his vocals on it. That song was so special to him. I didn’t hear that verse until maybe four or five months after I gave it to him. Even with “The Zone,” I was scared I was going to have to put out Thursday before his verse came in because Drake takes his time. He makes sure that he says the right shit and his flow is on point.

It seems like your work on Take Care was similar to the way Kanye West enlisted Kid Cudi on 808s & Heartbreak.
Or when Jay-Z hit up Kanye for The Blueprint.

Do you think Drake tapped you to give Take Care that feel?
Yeah, he told me he wouldn’t be able to do the album without me. You can read it on the credits that he thanked me. I don’t know if that’s him being generous, but I gave him a lot of records. I made “Practice.”

What did you do on “Practice”?
That whole hook was me. That’s probably the only song I wrote for Take Care. The rest of it was just shit I was going to have for [House of Balloons]. He really wanted to incorporate my sound, which was inspired by his sound. It’s not like, “Oh, I had the ‘new sound.’” It was just easier for him to relate to me, because it was his sound with an edge. It was that Toronto sound. So yeah, you’re right. I feel like I could have been that for his album.

People think you guys aren’t cool with each other anymore.
No, that’s not true. Definitely not true. But it makes sense. The thing about Drake is I told him what my decisions were going to be. And he was down with it from the beginning.

You mean in terms of your label deal?
Everything. I told him from day one what my decision was going to be. I wasn’t going that route. I was going to go my own route. And he supported me.

I told Drake what my decisions were going to be. And he was down with it from the beginning.

So when you read things about how you two are not cool…
—he’s like me when it comes to shit like that, too. He loves reading that stuff.

You both just brush it off?
Of course. I don’t like to spoon-feed people. I don’t like to be like, “You know what? I’m going to let the world know that we’re cool. We’re going to take a picture together. Everyone’s cool.” It’s all about the mystery, and people like it. Shit’s WWE, man. It’s wrestling, you know what I mean?

The other rumor is that you two are PartyNextDoor.
[Laughs.] No, no, no, that’s not true at all. I never met him.

Where do you see yourself in the world of R&B?
The only thing R&B about my shit is the style of singing. My inspiration is R. Kelly, Michael Jackson, and Prince, for the vocals anyway. My production and songwriting, and the environment around those vocals are not inspired by R&B at all.

I heard Portishead drums on “Belong to the World.”
Yeah, that was the inspiration behind that. I wrote a letter to the producers of Portishead and let them know this album is inspired by them.

The entire Kiss Land album?
Most of it. I find a sound and run with it. It varies from Stevie Nicks to Genesis and Phil Collins. The production is very cinematic for me, and R&B was never cinematic like that.

Do you have a greater understanding of love on this album?
I don’t know. Like I said, a lot of it’s subconscious.

On “Belong to the World,” it sounds like you may have had a serious relationship.
“Belong to the World” is about falling in love with the wrong person. There are some songs where I talk about the same person, but I like to make every song about someone else. Thursday is a conceptual album. Whatever that situation was, I spent the whole album focusing on that situation.

Have you gone through heartbreak before?
I think I did. I’m not sure. Some people think they go through situations and then it hits them like a fucking brick. I hope that I fell in love and I hope that my heart was broken. Because if I didn’t, then I don’t know what I’m about to go through in the next 20 years of my life.

That’s what Kiss Land is to me, an environment that’s just honest fear. I don’t know who I am right now and I’m doing all these outlandish things in these settings that I’m not familiar with. Kiss Land is like a horror movie.

Last night in the studio you said Kiss Land was a ridiculous title.
Yeah, because Kiss Land symbolizes the tour life, but it’s a world that I created in my head. Just like House of Balloons symbolizes Toronto and my experiences there, but it’s a world that I created. When I think about Kiss Land, I think about a terrifying place. It’s a place I’ve never been to before that I’m very unfamiliar with.

A lot of it is inspired by filmmakers like John Carpenter, David Cronenberg, and Ridley Scott, because they know how to capture fear. That’s what Kiss Land is to me, an environment that’s just honest fear. I don’t know who I am right now and I’m doing all these outlandish things in these settings that I’m not familiar with. To me, it’s the most terrifying thing ever. So when you hear the screams in the record and you hear all these horror references and you feel scared, listen to the music because I want you to feel what I’m feeling. Kiss Land is like a horror movie.

Holy shit. That’s the last thing you’d expect from the title.
I didn’t want to call it Dark World or something so generic. The title came from a conversation that I overheard and those words stuck out. Someone said, “Kiss Land” and I thought, “That’s going to be the title of my album.” It sounds so ridiculous. When I put [the title] out everyone was like, “What the hell? This is going to be corny. It’s going to be all lovey-dovey.”

People will say, “It’s a wrap; we lost him.”
But that’s what I want. I want them to be underwhelmed. I’m all about surprises. If you watch a horror movie and it’s called Kiss Land, it’s probably going to be the most terrifying thing you’ve ever seen in your life.

The Toronto singer-songwriter's recently announced tour featuring ScHoolboy Q and Jhene Aiko, which is set to kick off at Brooklyn's Barclays Center on September 19, 2014. The tour will also be hitting Hollywood, San Francisco, Las Vegas, and Toronto, Canada.

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Reply #161 posted 07/21/14 2:47pm

JoeBala

Cote de Pablo Cast in “The Dovekeepers” Miniseries on CBS

CotedePablo

Cote de Pablo’s departure last July, as one of the longest-running players in NCIS, still has audiences wondering why after eight seasons, she was written out of the popular series. A favorite among CBS audiences, they will be glad to know that de Pablo returns to the network in the 2015 miniseries The Dovekeepers which is executive produced by Roma Downey and Mark Burnett (The Bible, Survivor).

The four-hour miniseries is based on Alice Hoffman’s historical novel The Dovekeepers and centers on four women’s fight for survival at the siege of Masada. The Dovekeepers is based on real life events of when the Jews were forced out of Jerusalem into the fortress of Masada. De Pablo will play the role of Shirah, a single mother with mystical powers, which lead to her being called the “Witch of Moab”.

The miniseries is a co-production between CBS Television Studios and LightWorker Media. Executive produced by Downey and Burnett along with Frank Siracusa, John Weber and Yves Simoneau (who also directs) from an adaptation by Ann Peacock.

De Pablo is repped by Paradigm and Management 360.

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Deborah Cox Covers 'I Will Always Love You' For Upcoming Whitney Houston Biopic [LISTEN]

Deborah Cox(Photo : Getty Images)

Production for Lifetime's upcoming Whitney Houston biopic is in full swing.

While fans are most certainly looking forward to hearing Houston's classics in the portrayal of her life, her family has blocked the network from using her original tracks and Deborah Cox will be covering her music, as previously reported.

TMZ recently got a hold of Cox's rendition of "I Will Always Love You."

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Whitney Houston Biopic --... B. Sucky)

Back in 2000, Houston and Cox collaborated on a track called "Same Script, Different Cast."

As the press release notes, the film "chronicles the headline-making relationship between the iconic singer, actress, producer and model and singer-songwriter Bobby Brown-from the time they first met at the very height of their celebrity, to their courtship and tumultuous marriage. Throughout it all, difficulties followed the superstar couple while they dealt with the overwhelming rewards and consequences of the fame and fortune created by Whitney's meteoric rise that would soon overshadow them both."

The film is slated to air in 2015 and will be directed by actress Angela Bassett in her directorial debut.

"I really just want to tell a story about a boy and a girl who fell in love," Bassett recently told CNN. "And these are the words and this is the place, and these are the people on the outside, you know? And I want to be as honest as I can about doing that."

Yaya DaCosta will play Houston in the Lifetime adaptation of her life. Arlen Escarpeta has been cast as Bobby Brown and Yolonda Ross is set to portray Houston's friend Robyn Crawford.

Suzzanne Douglas will play Houston's mother Cissy, with Mark Rolston as Clive Davis, the record mogul who signed Houston to Arista Records.
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Singer Lupillo Rivera: A Stranger In His Own Land

Exclusive Excerpt

Murrieta Protestors Block Immigrants, Alienate Mexican Music Star

Lupillo Rivera 1

By Eliana Alcaraz Esparza

On this particular Tuesday morning, July 1, 2014, Mexican singer Lupillo Rivera felt happy as a “King.” It was on this day his much-anticipated single, “El Rey de los Borrachos” was to be released. He had been signing pre-sold CDs for days and today was the day they would officially ship out, solidifying Rivera’s rise as one of Mexico and Latin America’s most popular artists.

While at his Temecula, CA residence packing the dozens of CDs, Rivera ran out of envelopes. With his wife and 5-year old son in tow, he drove his pickup truck toward nearby Murrieta. The events that transpired next were coincidental but painfully revealing.

“I happened to be driving by at the precise moment the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) buses were trying to enter Murrieta. A bunch of people were blocking the street,” he recalled.

Rivera had come upon a political protest on the street. He looked around and was suddenly confronted with something quite opposite of the warm welcomes the popular singer was accustomed to receiving.

Angry demonstrators stood in front of a DHS bus, screaming and holding up signs. Curious, Lupillo parked his truck and walked up to a nearby police officer to ask what was happening. The officer informed him it was an “immigration protest.” But simple words didn’t convey the complete meaning.

As Lupillo walked closer, he could read the hatred and rage written on the faces of the protestors. Then he read it on the signs they were carrying and it all slowly began to register:

“Illegals Out!”
“Return to Sender”
“Protect Your Kids From Disease”
“Send Them Back w/Birth Control”
“We Don’t Want You”

What he stumbled upon was a small war. Anti-immigrant protestors were blocking passage of three DHS buses that were transporting 140 undocumented immigrants. The passengers were mostly Central American mothers and their children who had been apprehended at the Southwest border in Texas. The kids certainly knew nothing about the immigration crisis that has been going on in the U.S. for decades; let alone what they were fleeing or that they were seeking “asylum.” The protestors managed to prevent the buses from entering Murrieta and the nearby USCIS Detention and Processing Center.

Since he looked Latino, some of the protestors made a beeline towards him. “Almost instantly,” said Rivera, “I was being yelled at with insults.”

First came the ugly words and then a large Caucasian man spat at him. Lupillo quickly realized in modern America despite whatever status you achieve the color of your skin still defines you. Although an American citizen, Rivera was accosted by protesters because, “According to them, we’re all illegal.”

The beloved singer further explained, “It was like an out of body experience.”

When they spit on my face,” declared Rivera, “they spat in all of our faces.”

Now the award-winning singer finds himself on the news and at the center of a national border crisis controversy. Ironically, neither the Mayor of Murrieta, Alan Long nor the protestors who zeroed in on Rivera with verbal attacks, were aware of the Mexican singer’s celebrity whose fan base is in the hundreds of thousands.

Rather than offer a real apology, the mayor only seemed to stir the pot of controversy further when he decided to turn a humanitarian crisis into a political one, and then insulted the singer as a bonus.

Sitting with Lupillo Rivera as he recounted his horrific experience in Murrieta, I was profoundly affected by his relaxed and grounded, spiritual nature. While Rivera himself was too humble to accept any weighty comparisons, I could only identify his graciousness in the line of fire with other important names of the past—names like Cesar Chavez, Martin Luther King, Bobby Kennedy all great men capable of seeing life and community beyond racial segregation.

EE: You found yourself in the middle of a protest that you really didn’t understand initially. What was going on in your mind?

LR: I felt undignified and violated. I was surprised that the Murrieta Police Department just stood by allowing these attacks. It is just one example of how the city of Murrieta failed its residents and innocent bystanders. Some protestors defending the city say the protests are not an act of racism, but now I see that it is. I hesitate to use the word racism because of its negative meaning, but there is no doubt that it was the motivating factor behind Murrieta’s horrible attack against Latino immigrants, documented or undocumented—adult or child. If the bus had been transporting children from Russia, Europe, or Canada there would have been no protest.

EE: How were you able to restrain yourself while being attacked?

LR HDP4LR: [He sighed, with tears in his eyes]I have to admit, getting spit on, criticized… it hurt… it hurt a lot. But I’m a grown man and I can handle it. I can walk away. My children stopped me from fighting back. My five-year old little boy was a few feet away witnessing what was happening and I didn’t want him to see me as a violent person. I have to lead by example. After he witnessed the man spitting in my face, my son said, ‘That man should not be on the street. Call the police.’ My boy should have witnessed the police doing their job instead he saw them stand by as a stranger attacked his dad.

EE: Did you have any idea the power that Tweeting would have?

LR: Twitter is powerful. I mean I can tweet and gather 5,000 views in 30 minutes. That’s a huge responsibility and one I take very seriously. My wife knew that my fans would not abandon me.

EE: It must have come as a total surprise to the Murrieta’s officials when they found out who you were.

LR: They had no idea. I’m sure it ruined their day to read and hear in the news about who I am and what happened to me.

EE: In your opinion, did the police department fail to do their job?

LR: Yes. The attacks were verbal and then there is the shoving and spitting, but what if someone had pulled a gun or knife? We were all in the middle of chaos and the police stood by and did nothing. We were not the ones standing carrying signs with racist messages. We did not provoke this incident. Yes, I believe the mayor is responsible for his police officers standing by and do nothing.

LR HDP8

EE: Congratulations, your new CD is climbing fast on the Billboard charts. You’re also touring Mexico as well as the U.S. What other projects are you working on?

LR: I’m really excited about my new upcoming radio show, ‘De Farra con Lupillo Rivera,’ which will be broadcast throughout the major U.S. markets on both AM and FM and people will be able to stream it online and download a mobile app. I’ll let everyone know when we’re on the airwaves via Tweeter!

Also, I’m working on a couple of video games that I can’t really talk about yet but they will help and inspire children, especially those suffering with terminal diseases.

EE: What do you want the world to remember about this past week?

LR HDP5

LR: I didn’t ask for this, but here I am. I’m still not really sure what I’ve been drawn into. People are congratulating me and I’m saying to myself, ‘For doing the right thing?’ I’m going to let the chips fall where they may. If I’m needed, I’m there. A friend told me it’s not about the disrespect toward me… it’s about the children.

EE: Thank you, Lupillo Rivera for rising above the turmoil and showing the world that all people of all ethnicities matter in America.

Murrieta’s border crisis is not going to go away any time soon. As for Lupillo Rivera, he continues to say he is in it for the long haul, ready to defend and ensure that undocumented immigrant children are shielded from the shameful and sickening anti-immigration sentiments. We don’t know if his newfound role as a potential leader will have a lasting impact or will promote any positive change in immigration reform, but for now it’s enough.

Read the full Herald de Paris interview where Rivera gives a detailed account of exactly what: http://www.heralddeparis....and/239050

Follow Lupillo Rivera on social media:
Twitter: @Lupillo8
Facebook: Lupillo Rivera Official
Instagram: lupilloriveraoficial

Lupillo Rivera is the younger brother of the late singing superstar Jenni Rivera who died in a tragic plane crash on December 9, 2012. He was born in Jalisco, Mexico in 1972, and was raised in Long Beach, CA. He is a naturalized American citizen. His father, singer Pedro Rivera, owner of the independent label Cintas Acuario, helped launch Lupillo’s first single, “El Moreno,” and soon he was signed up to Sony Discos.

–Vanessa Verduga, Randy Vasquez, Danny Mora contributed to this editorial.

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Reply #162 posted 07/21/14 3:17pm

JoeBala

Review: Bruno Mars electrifies Madison Square Garden in New York Special

http://38.media.tumblr.com/f0fe2c399914cd5a71ffd2f397656c2d/tumblr_n8smayESOU1rgu4kio1_1280.jpg

By Markos Papadatos
Jul 15, 2014 in Music

New York - Pop superstar Bruno Mars played a sold-out, headlining show on July 14 at New York City's Madison Square Garden, as part of his "Moonshine Jungle" tour.

An Atlantic recording artist, Mars shared the stage with Pharrell Williams, who is best known for his chart-topping single, the upbeat "Happy." Mars commenced his set with "Moonshine" and it was followed by such vocals as "Natalie" and "Treasure." He delivered on "Billionaire" and he made the up-tempo Barrett Strong classic "Money (That's What I Want)" his own. "Marry You" was a stunning performance and the wedding bells ringing in the background were addicting. "If I Knew" was performed as a medley with "It Will Rain," meanwhile "The Lazy Song" had a laid-back vibe to it and it connected well with the fans.

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He brought out the delicacy of the lyrics in the piano-driven ballad "When I Was Your Man," and it was followed by an impressive piano interlude, prior to him singing the crowd-favorite "Grenade" in an explosive rendition that featured pyrotechnics, laser lights and Mars playing the guitar. Listening to "Locked Out Of Heaven" in a live setting was a great deal of fun. Mars closed with his signature song, the Grammy-winning "Just The Way You are."

It was a crisp vocal performance that incorporated neat choreography from his back-up dancers, which his fans could not help but sing along to. Towards the end of the song, he treated his fans to a remix of the pop tune. The pop sensation had the entire crowd singing the chorus of "Just The Way You Are" back to him, which was a moving moment of the evening, prior to introducing his talented band members during the outro.

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His encore featured "Gorilla" as the stage was lit in alternating laser lights of different colors, which was quite the spectacle, and the best way to close his show. The Verdict Overall, Bruno Mars showed his fans that he was on fire at New York's Madison Square Garden. He had great stage presence and his whole team put on a superb production. Pharrell Williams was a fantastic opening act. Their show garnered an A rating. It ranks as one of the two best concerts I have seen this year at Madison Square Garden, along with Armin van Buuren's "Armin Only: Intense" tour.

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Sara Bareilles performs at Madison Square Garden – Night 1 (7/19)

Article written and images taken by Vladislav Grach

Tell the world that Sara Bareilles has always had it all right. The sensational songstress held two amazing concerts at Manhattan’s Madison Square Garden on the 19th and on the 20th of July. Broken Records Magazine was present at her opening night at Madison Square Garden. Sara Bareilles’ Little Black Dress tour easily takes the cake for being one of the most romantic concerts to come to New York City in 2014.

Image by Vladislav Grach. <a href=www.vladgrachphoto.com" />

Sara Bareilles is fun, quirky, and her absolutely remarkable voice is capable of sending shivers down your spine. Did you know that she is multi-talented as well? You will quickly find out that Sara Bareilles is not only a unique singer that could hit the highest of high notes but that she will also astonish you by playing piano and acoustic guitar too. Sara Bareilles proved to Madison Square Garden that she is a musician to her core and a writer whose words are not only easy to relate too but they are savvy too. The visual aspect of the Little Black Dress Tour is top tier. The tours stage production is a wonder in itself and adds to the concert experience immensely.

Image by Vladislav Grach. <a href=www.vladgrachphoto.com" />

During her performance of ‘I Choose You’ Sara sings the words, “Tell the world that we finally got it all right. I choose you. I will become yours and you will become mine. I choose you,” as the central of 14 large LED Television monitors depict a series of wonderfully done drawn animations; Two puzzle pieces coming together, a sun set, shooting stars above a lake and forest, two hearts combining into one, and two figures embracing and joining into a embrace. These are just a few of the animations you will see at Sara Bareilles concert. During her performance of ‘Chasing The Sun’ these same LED monitors show a giant orange sun shine. During ‘Manhattan’ Sara Bareilles fans were surprised to see the very B-Roll present during her lyric video for the song.

Image by Vladislav Grach. <a href=www.vladgrachphoto.com" />

A major highlight during the contest was Sara’s cover of her friend Sia’s newly released song called ‘Chandelier.’ Sara Bareilles masters the song and covers it acoustically with a guitar and a series of impressive high vocals. Her voice soars during her performance of ‘Chandelier.

Old souls, lovers, and dreamers rejoice and go see Sara Bareilles in your area as she tours to promote her newest album called, The Blessed Unrest. Miss Bareilles tour is the perfect tour to take a sweetheart too.

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Reply #163 posted 07/21/14 4:27pm

JoeBala

Sia Visits Howard Stern

Dan K's picture
Posted by Dan K

Sia, the secretive songwriter behind some of the biggest hits on the radio stopped by the Howard Stern Show Wednesday.

The singer/songwriter, who has crippling stage fright, has written for Rihanna, including the hit "Diamonds," which Stern -- who normally likes hard rock -- has always talked about enjoying. She also penned hits for Britney Spears and Beyonce.

Sia does not allow herself to be photographed -- which Stern complied with -- posting only pictures of her from the back on HowardStern.com. Though in most cases that would seem like a calculated affectation Sia seems to actually be scared of the spotlight which is why she has given away some of the biggest hits of the past two years letting other artists become famous (or more famous) off of her work.

Stern went through a list of the hit songs Sia has written> These were the highlights.

Diamonds – Probably Sia’s most famous song, wasn’t written with Rihanna in mind.

Pretty Hurt – Katy Perry loved the song so much that she texted Sia saying she was ‘pretty hurt’ that Sia didn’t offer the song to her. Sia told her to check her inbox, because she had sent the song to Katy months before.

Titanium –This one was intended for Alicia Keys, but DJ and producer David Guetta liked Sia’s demo vocals so much that he used them.

Wild Ones – A huge hit, that Sia sang although she didn't want to because of the lyrics (which she wrote).

Sia has a new album coming out July, 8.

Stern Full Interview with Singer/Songwriter Sia:

http://media-cache-ec0.pinimg.com/236x/70/d3/76/70d37605aa48e2084643086a036f5c22.jpg

[Edited 7/21/14 16:28pm]

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Reply #164 posted 07/21/14 7:40pm

JoeBala

Fiona Apple and Jon Brion Appear on Blake Mills' "Don't Tell Our Friends About Me"

By

Evan Minsker
on July 21, 2014 at 11:00 a.m. EDT

Fiona Apple and Jon Brion Appear on Blake Mills'

Singer/songwriter Blake Mills is best known as a long-time collaborator of Fiona Apple's—the two toured together last fall–as well as for working with Haim, Conor Oberst, Julian Casablancas, Sky Ferreira, Cass McCombs, and more. He releases his new album Heigh Ho on September 16 via Verve/Record Collection. Apple guests on the album's lead single "Don't Tell Our Friends About Me", which also features Jon Brion, who plays tiple, as well as Rob Moose (Bon Iver, Antony and the Johnsons, Sufjan Stevens) and Gabriel Kahane. Listen above.

Apple is also featured on the album track "Seven". The album also features Don Was, Jackson Browne, Jim Keltner, Tony Berg, Benmont Tench (Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers), Mike Elizondo, and Griffin Goldsmith (Dawes). Update: Jackson Browne does not appear on the album, though he did contribute to the lyrics, particularly on the track "Curable Disease".

Listen: https://soundcloud.com/bl...s-official

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Reply #165 posted 07/22/14 8:13am

JoeBala

Django Reinhardt Biography

Guitarist (1910–1953)

Quick Facts

Name
Django Reinhardt
Occupation
Guitarist
Birth Date
January 23, 1910
Death Date
May 16, 1953
Place of Birth
Liberchies, Belgium
Place of Death
Fountainebleau, France
AKA
Django Reinhardt
Originally
Jean-Baptiste Reinhardt

Django Reinhardt was a jazz guitarist who became one of the first important soloists in the genre.

Synopsis

Born in Belgium on January 23, 1910, Django Reinhardt learned guitar at an early age, adapting his technique to accommodate the loss of the use of two fingers burned in a caravan fire in 1928. Reinhardt toured the United States with Duke Ellington in 1946. He was one of the first important guitar soloists in jazz; his blend of swing and the Roma musical tradition, as well as his unconventional technique, made him a unique and legendary figure. Reinhardt died in France in 1953.

Early Life

Born on January 23, 1910, in Liberchies, Belgium, Django Reinhardt became famous for his unique musical sound, which blended elements of American jazz with traditional European and Roma music. Reinhardt's father was a musician and entertainer and his mother was a dancer, according to some reports; they were Manouches, or French gypsies, and they eventually settled in a camp near Paris. Raised without any formal schooling, Reinhardt was practically illiterate.

In his youth, Reinhardt learned to play an interesting instrument—a hybrid of a guitar and a banjo. He was largely self-taught, never learning how to write or read music. Later on, Reinhardt had to depend on others to transcribe his compositions. He was already playing in clubs in Paris by his early teens. Reinhardt started out playing popular French music, but he became interested in American jazz in the mid-1920s. He especially liked the works of Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong and Joe Venuti. His promising career, however, was almost ended by a terrible accident in 1928.

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Tragic Fire

In 1928, Reinhardt was injured in a fire in his caravan. A lit candle fell into some paper, or celluloid, flowers that his wife had made to sell, and the flames quickly spread throughout their home. Both Reinhardt and his wife made it out of the fire, but Reinhardt suffered bad burns to his right leg and left hand. Perhaps worst of all for this talented musician, he permanently lost the use of two fingers on his damaged hand. He would spend the next 18 months to two years recuperating.

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During this time, Reinhardt taught himself how to play music again. It was a slow, painful process, but he devised an innovative style of guitar playing. With his two fingers and thumb, Reinhardt handled his instrument with remarkable speed and agility. He was back to dazzling audiences in the Paris nightclubs by 1930.

Famous Quintet

By the mid-1930s, Reinhardt had joined forces with violinist Stephane Grappelli to form the Quintet of the Hot Club of France (Quintette du Hot Club de France). Their group, which grew to include Reinhardt's brother Joseph and others, became the first major European jazz band. Some of the band's early recordings included covers of American songs like "Dinah" and "Lady Be Good," and these tracks helped win them a following on both sides of the Atlantic.

Reinhardt also produced original music, which fused his musical heritage with the latest jazz and swing sounds. Some of his most famous works with the quintet are "Djangology," "Bricktop" and "Swing 39." His style from this period has been called "gypsy swing" and "le jazz hot."

World War II

According to some reports, Reinhardt was in England touring with Grappelli in 1939 when World War II began in Europe. He decided to return to France, but his cohort remained abroad. The following year, the Nazis took control of France, a move that put Reinhardt in jeopardy. The Roma, or gypsies, were among those considered undesirable by the Nazis, and thousands and thousands of them perished in concentration camps during the war.

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Remarkably, Reinhardt was allowed to play freely in the clubs of Paris during much of the war. It seemed that the Nazis viewed this famed city as their playground to some degree, and their military personnel enjoyed frequenting its nightclubs. Reinhardt expressed his melancholy over the occupation in one of his most famous compositions: "Nuages," which means "clouds."

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According to Contemporary Musicians, the musician made two attempts to flee France for Switzerland, but both of these efforts proved to be unsuccessful.

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Final Years

After the war, Reinhardt became interested in electric guitar and experimenting with other styles of jazz. He toured the United States with Duke Ellington in 1946, but he failed to win over American audiences and critics. Reinhardt also started recording with a new version of his beloved quintet, but rarely gave public performances. Instead, he spent much of his time in the South of France.

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In 1953, the famed improviser jammed with another jazz legend, Dizzie Gillespie. That same year, he made his final recordings. Reinhardt died on May 16, 1953, in Fontainebleau, France. He reportedly died after suffering a stroke, though some reports claim it was a brain hemorrhage.

In any case, the music world lost a great talent that day. Reinhardt is regarded among the most prominent European performers to have heavily influenced American jazz. Additionally, his work has had a lasting impact on other guitarists in different musical styles, influencing such diverse artists as B.B. King and Carlos Santana.

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Reply #166 posted 07/22/14 2:52pm

JoeBala

U2 reportedly set to release new album 'before the end of the year'

Tabloid reports also suggest the band could perform in London as part of iTunes festival

Photo:

U2 will reportedly release their new album in November, with the band said to be "very confident" ahead of their long-awaited comeback.

July 22, 2014 Source NME

The group are due to release their first album since 2009's 'No Line On The Horizon' and have been recording with producers including Danger Mouse in recent months. A spokesperson for U2 recently denied that the band hav...lease date of their 13th studio album to 2015.

Taking this further, a report in The Sun today (July 22) sees the tabloid report that "the new album will drop before the end of the year, most likely in November" while also suggesting that the band could perform at London's Roundhouse in September as part of this year's iTunes Festival.

"The U2 comeback is very much on for this year," said a source. "This album has been a real struggle for them to make. It's taken a long time and Bono didn't find it easy. But they're very confident now and are convinced the wait has been worth it."

In addition to a new U2 album, Bono and The Edge are also working with Once director John Carney on a new musical film based on the filmmaker's childhood.

U2 won a Golden Globe earlier this year for their song 'Ordinary Love', taken from Nelson Mandela biopic Mandela: Long Walk To Freedom.


.

Hear Eric Clapton Cover JJ Cale's 'Cajun Moon' - Premiere

The former Cream guitarist debuts a new track off his forthcoming 'The Breeze' LP

Eric Clapton and JJ Cale
Brian Rooney

July 21, 2014 10:35 AM ET

On July 29th, Eric Clapton is releasing The Breeze, an LP of songs originally recorded by recently deceased southern guitar hero JJ Cale. Although the former Cream guitarist scored Seventies solo hits with covers of Cale's "Cocaine" and "After Midnight," his new album features guests like Mark Knopfler, Tom Petty, John Mayer, Willie Nelson and Derek Trucks and tracks like "Call Me the Breeze" and "Cajun Moon." Both tunes can be streamed below, and while the former, the blues number that led off Cale's debut, has been out for nearly a month, the latter had not been previously released.

The 100 Greatest Artists of All Time: Little Steven on Eric Clapton

In an interview in the current issue of Rolling Stone, Clapton remembered the early stages of this project: "When I started talking about this album with Dave Kaplan, who runs [Clapton's label] Surfdog, he had only heard the JJ songs that I covered. In Europe, we heard JJ as Americana, all the roots put together. JJ was very self-critical, dismissive about his gifts. He was happy to just be known as a songwriter. But when I tried to play like him – it's beyond most musicians."


Hear Here: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/hear-eric-clapton-cover-jj-cales-cajun-moon-premiere-20140721#ixzz38FSGYXNH


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Reply #167 posted 07/22/14 3:16pm

JoeBala

'Buck Rogers' Star Erin Gray: How I Turned Comic-Con (and Other Conventions) Into a Second Career

"I felt weird in the beginning about charging money [$30 per autograph]," she tells THR. "But then I realized actors are entertainers. And we tell stories."

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Courtesy Everett Collection

A version of this story first appeared in the Aug. 1 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine.

Erin Gray begat many a fanboy dream with her portrayal of tough but sexy starfighter pilot Wilma Deering on NBC's 1979 sci-fi series Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, and since the early 1990s she's been regular on the convention autograph circuit. Gray eventually started a business booking actors for conventions and engagements, and today her Heroes for Hire reps around 150 clients, including Arrow star Stephen Amell, Torchwood star John Barrowman and fan favorite Bruce Campbell.

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On how she discovered a second career after life on television:

"I came to a crossroads in my life. I was going through a divorce and bankruptcy, and had a child in private school. I went to a seminar at the Chicago Museum of Broadcast Communication; [Batman actress] Julie Newmar and [Star Trek actress] BarBara Luna were there, and they started talking about conventions.

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I have never heard of anything like that, and when they told me about them, my reaction was, 'Oh nobody would remember me and the show. It was over 10 years ago.' This was about '91 or '92. A year later, BarBara called me and said, 'Erin, you're going to this place at this time, and you're going to call me after and thank me.'

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Recently with Daughter Samantha Grey

"So I went. I saw there was a line around the building and I asked the promoter who that was for, and he said, 'You.' And I went 'What? Really?' So I spent the day reeling in stories of people's memories of watching the show. And I was like, 'Wow, who knew?'

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"I felt weird in the beginning about charging money. But then I realized actors are entertainers. And we tell stories. I wanted to make sure that everyone who came to me got a story and was inspired by something in some way. And I listened to women come up to me and say, 'You're the reason why I became an Air Force pilot.' "

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"I had no idea what impact I had. Going to these conventions made me realize that I influenced an entire generation of men to appreciate strong women and still find them sexy, and women to be police and military officers.

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On how she started her convention-booking business:

"One day [her Buck Rogers co-star] Gil Gerard called and asked what I was doing, and I said I was going to Ohio to a sci-fi convention. And he was like, 'What is that about?' And when I told him, he was like, 'Can I go?'

"Then Gil played golf with Marc Singer, who was in V and Beastmaster, and Marc called me up and said he wanted to go too.

"Gil said, 'I'll pay you 10 percent,' and I was like, 'No, I'm your friend.' 'Oh I'll make you work for it.' And sure enough he did. (Laughs.) Booking his flights, his car service. And when Marc called, I said, 'OK, 10 percent.' But I wasn't thinking about it as a business at the time. It started as me helping out my friends go through this.

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"After I had done enough shows, booking them, and feeling responsible for them — that was the mother in me — I realized that if the promoters wanted to grow their business, they needed to be able to call a WME or any other agency. And I knew how to do that, I could get that call answered.

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On the autograph circuit:

"I will likely do only about four signings this year, but I'll appear at [a lot more conventions] in my capacity as an agent. I probably do 30 to 40 shows a year. It slows down in November, December and picks back up in March. But that's starting to change because it's becoming more international. For example, there are now shows in Brazil in December."

Gil Gerard(Buck Rogers)

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On paying for autographs:

"Prices are getting higher. I don't think they should. I think there's a point where it's not about money but about the relationships with the fans. I don't like seeing fans walk away feeling they've been fleeced out of their life savings. The good shows are where the fans get a lot of out of it and the actors get something out of it."

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On agent snobbery:

"The actors that do this are mostly TV actors — and I don't know if that'll change. There's a snobbery from the film actors and their representatives. And there is a certain negative connotation of doing these things in certain agents' minds. I think it's wrong.

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"There's a star of a new series, and I was talking to his agent and he said, 'I don't think he's going to be doing any of those.' And I said, 'He's agreed to play a famous comic book character and you're going to tell him to shun the fans? Are you nuts?' He's agreed to come into this comic book world. He needs to embrace it and the fans."

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Reply #168 posted 07/22/14 3:25pm

JoeBala

10 Things You Probably Didn’t Know About "The Giver"

BuzzFeed spoke with author Lois Lowry about her famous book turned movie. Here’s a few things we learned about The Giver. posted on July 15, 2014, at 7:02 a.m.

1. Author Lois Lowry was inspired to write The Giver because of her late father’s illness.

The Weinstein Company / The Giver

What inspired you to write The Giver in the first place?

Lois Lowry: Well as it happened, my father was very old at that time and in a nursing home. I would go to visit him about every six weeks in another state, and on this particular visit I realized for the first time that he was beginning to lose pieces of his memory. He didn’t have Alzheimer’s, but he was getting up there — around 90 years old — and he had forgotten my sister and that startled me. My sister, his first child, had died young, but he had obliterated somehow that memory and I began thinking on my way home, Heck, maybe it’s a good thing you forget something when it’s painful, but of course when you start thinking along those lines you realize that it’s not a good thing. The product, what we’re made of, is our whole path — good and bad. And so I began to think about the possibility of writing about people who had found a way to manipulate human memory. That was the start of The Giver, and I’ve never been a writer of science fiction or even a reader of it, but all of a sudden I realized I was going to have to write a book set in the future and that’s what it turned out to be. That was the start of it.

2. There’s no set time period of the book, but Lowry’s grandson speculates it’s 50 years from now.

The Weinstein Company / The Giver

Do you ever say what time period The Giver takes place in?

LL: No, it’s just some time in the indefinite future. It’s kind of interesting, I have a grandson who’s 13 and he asked me recently how far in the future it was. He speculated it was 50 years in the future, and the reason that came up is because the filmmakers had asked me how the boy’s bedroom should be decorated, and I said it should be very stark, nothing decorative on the walls, but maybe something educational like the periodic table of elements. And I mentioned that to my grandson and he said, ‘Fifty years in the future, there won’t be any helium anymore.’ Well, who knew, only a 13-year-old [laughs]. So you know, things of that sort would be very different, but who knows, the future seems to be speeding up and I read an article recently implying that very soon we will in fact be able to manipulate human memory. Whether that’s a good thing or a bad, we can only guess.

What do you think?

LL: That’s a little scary to me.

Did they consult you for anything else for the movie?

LL: They let me read the screenplay and asked me to comment on it, and then the director emailed me periodically throughout the early part of the filmmaking asking my advice about set design, costume design, etc. So I was really in the loop from the beginning; they had no obligation to, I had no veto power, but they could not have been more gracious than they were and they brought me over to South Africa to watch the filming. They really have just been wonderful to work and be with.

3. Lois Lowry never planned to write a sequel or series, it just happened.

The Weinstein Company / The Giver

The Giver has a very ambiguous ending and it seemed like that was the end of the story, but then you came out with a sequel. Did you always plan to write a series or did that just happen?

LL: No, writing the second book kind of took me by surprise. I hadn’t intended sequels or companion novels, but I got so much mail from readers who were dissatisfied with the ending. To me it was always an optimistic ending, but some people felt that they were dead at the end. The movie retains the ambiguity of the ending, but I think the optimism is a little clearer at the end of the movie than it was in the book, so people will go away happy from the movie.

So is there a chance the other books will be adapted to film?

LL: There was some talk among the filmmakers of a sequel, but it’s really too soon I think. They’ll have to wait and see how this film does before they make any decisions.

4. Some big movie changes from the book are the ages of the characters and the amount of action added.

The Weinstein Company / The Giver

This movie adaptation is years after you wrote the book. Did you always want it to be a movie? Why so late?

LL: I’ve always been a movie fan; I’m probably the only person over 75 who has seen Wayne’s World 2. At any rate, I was very delighted when they approached me to make a film, but I was also aware of the difficulties of this particular book becoming a film because it’s an introspective book and there’s not a lot of action, and I knew they would have to add action — which they have done — and I just hoped they would do it well and keep it in tone of the book, and they have done that. So, I’m very pleased with the decisions they’ve made, even making the characters a little older has worked well.

So, what’s their ages?

LL: Jonas, Asher, and Fiona are more like 16 and instead of having the ceremony where the kids turn 12, the ceremony takes place when they graduate from their education and are given their job assignments. So they’re teenagers, and the only thing I asked the filmmakers was that they not turn it into a teenage romance, and they have not done that, but there’s a sweet quality to the relationship between Jonas and his friend Fiona, and they’re both very lovely looking kids. Teenagers will shiver with excitement at the thought of a romance, but it can’t happen because in keeping with the book, the boy leaves at the end and leaves her behind.

5. Jeff Bridges bought the movie rights to the book 18 YEARS AGO.

The Weinstein Company / The Giver

How long ago did they approach you for the movie rights?

LL: I think it was 18 years.

That’s how long ago??

LL: Yeah, it was a very long time! Jeff Bridges bought the rights to the book because he wanted a movie that he would direct and would star his father, a very fine actor named Lloyd Bridges, he would be the title role. And then years passed and it just never got made, and Lloyd Bridges eventually died, but Jeff continued to hope to make the movie and now of course he’s old enough and with the right makeup, was able to play the role himself and he does an incredible job.

Do you think part of the reason it’s coming up now is because of this trend of dystopian-book-to-movies?

LL: Possibly. You know, who knows why things happen and fall into place, but certainly dystopian literature for young people and then the ensuing movies like Hunger Games and Divergent have been very popular. This one [The Giver] has been in the works longer, but those have been made into movies sooner. So, it couldn’t hurt the popularity of this particular genre.

Were you ever hesitant about it becoming a movie?

LL: I don’t think so, but I think the reason I was never terribly worried about the quality of the movie was because of the hands that it was in. I’ve always respected Jeff Bridges and he was working with other people who are very confident and all of them very devoted to the book, and all of them have children who have read the book. So I think that gave me a certain amount of lack of worry. I felt it was in good hands — even though they weren’t my hands [laughs]. And also, they’ve been very gracious in keeping me in the loop and seeking my advice and my opinions throughout the process.

6. Even though Meryl Streep’s character is relatively small and bland in the book, she’ll cause a lot more conflict in the movie.

The Weinstein Company / The Giver

When you were writing the book, did you always have the same ending? Any alternate endings?

LL: No, it was always directed towards that ending. I don’t have an ending firmly, clearly in mind when I’m writing any book, but when I get to the ending, everything seems to go in a certain direction and by the time I reach that final page, it feels like the only way it can end, at least for me.

Like you were saying earlier that they put more action into the movie. It seems from the trailers that Meryl’s character is supposed to be a big villain, but in the books she just doesn’t know.

LL: Yeah, the Chief Elder in the book is a woman, but she has a very small role and no personality really. And boy, once you have Meryl Streep playing that role, you want it to be a bigger role. Also, it added wonderful conflict to the movie. Jeff Bridges is what I would describe as the spiritual leader of the community, and Meryl Streep is the political leader, and in the movie as you can tell from the trailer, they fall into conflict. There’s some scenes between the two of them that are truly very stunning, and the Chief Elder in the book didn’t have the opportunity — I didn’t give her that opportunity — so I’m glad she got it in the movie.

7. Lowry doesn’t have a specific explanation for how the societies became the way the are in the books.

The Weinstein Company / The Giver

In The Giver series, there seem to be several different types of societies and they’re not quite the same. How did they get to that place?

LL: Well I think this is not mentioned in The Giver, but in the second book, it refers back to some sort of — it’s not explicit — some sort of cataclysmic world events that have taken place, and these other societies have sprung up in various forms. We can assume some kind of nuclear disaster, some kind of war, some kind of climate disaster, and we don’t really need to know what has happened. We just have to assume the world has changed and had to restart in some way, and those restarts have taken different forms.

How did it get to that point where everyone is the same color and there’s no minorities? What happened that made it that way?

LL: See, you’re asking questions about technology and I’ve avoided any of that because I don’t have a clue how I got to that point, but I think we can assume that over generations and back and back and back, just intermarriage would do that. I read somewhere that if all dogs were allowed to run loose and intermarry as it were, that eventually we would end up with a world of medium-sized brown dogs. And so I think that’s what has happened in this world. But of course, casting hundreds of people to play the citizens in the community, I don’t think there are any marked differences but of course they’re not all the same color, not all of the same color hair, even though they’re in black and white you can tell that.

8. Over 22,000 books were used to film the Giver’s home.

The Weinstein Company / The Giver

In the third book of the series, The Messenger, Jonas tells Matty about the books he came about. Was it the Giver who sent them?

LL: Yes, it would’ve been. I had forgotten that part. Incidentally, in the Giver’s quarters in the movie, where he lives and where the boy goes, I went to South Africa and saw the room where they filmed those scenes. They bought 22,000 books from used book stores to put in that room, it’s just an astounding room. And then when the movie was finished, they donated those books to schools and wherever. Anyway, in that third book we get to see Jonas as a man, he’s now grown, the leader of the community, and he talks about the books. Chances are he didn’t have 22,000 [laughs], that’s quite an array of book cases. In the movie, the Giver has to climb a ladder to get the books down.

So does this mean Jonas’ old world all regain their memory?

LL: Yeah, I think we can assume that and I think the movie allows you to assume that too. The boy undertaking to save the baby does in fact save the world, his world at least, and brings about change that’s good, but we don’t know the details.

9. The defining trait for people with gifts is pale eyes, but they changed that for the movie.

The Weinstein Company / The Giver

Why do people with pale eyes have gifts?

LL: Incidentally, In the movie, they don’t have the pale eyes. It became a problem needing to put contact lenses in certain people, including babies, was just too much of a problem. So they have a different identifying gimmick, but in the writing of the books, each of the main characters in each book is a young person, and each of those young people have a particular gift. That was true in the first book, he called it the gift of seeing beyond, and then I just kept it up for the subsequent books and by the time I got to the fourth book, I had to decide what gift the boy, and it’s actually the baby Gabriel who grew up to be an adolescent, what his gift would be. And I think his is most important because he has the gift to be able to experience other people’s feelings, and only if we all had that gift, there would be no more conflict in the world.

10. Lois Lowry was offered a cameo, but declined.

The Weinstein Company / The Giver

Do you make a secret cameo at all?

LL: [Laughs] The scene in the book, which is not in the movie, where the boy bathes the old woman in the house of the old, I told Jeff that if they put it in the movie I would’ve volunteered to be the old naked lady in the bathtub. Only joking! Actually, they offered to let me sit on the stage as one of the elders, and I declined. And then when I watched them filming that scene on the stage, they sat there for 11 hours and I was very glad I declined.

The Giver hits theaters Aug. 15.

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Reply #169 posted 07/22/14 3:40pm

JoeBala

Why Linda Perry Decided to 'Make or Break' It on Reality TV

12:04 PM PST 07/22/2014 by Shirley Halperin
http://www3.pictures.zimbio.com/gi/Linda+Perry+Global+Launch+Montblanc+John+Lennon+1SFyI2zD3-Ml.jpg
AP Images
4 Non Blondees alum and VH1 host Linda Perry with wife Sara Gilbert

The former 4 Non Blondes singer and hitmaking songwriter tells Billboard why she's trying her hand at a new VH1 competition show — and putting her uncompromising attitude on display.

"Sometimes I’ll look back at old pictures where I’m a little heavy and dressed funny and think, ‘How did I get chicks all the time?’”

Linda Perry is not sharing this personal insight with a close friend. Rather, she’s addressing a Beverly Hills ballroom full of entertainers — actresses Evan Rachel Wood, Teri Polo, Whitney Cummings and Milla Jovovich, comedian Margaret Cho and fellow songwriter Sia among them — at the May 10 Evening With Women gala to benefit the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center, an event she has curated for the last six years (which would raise $600,000 that night). Her tear-drop-tattooed eyes, however, are fixed on one woman in particular: her wife of five weeks, Sara Gilbert, whom she met in 2011 through a yoga instructor, seated front and center.

“I had a whole ’nother life before you, baby,” Perry, 49, coos into the microphone. Cue her past life: She’s about to take the stage with the band that put her on the map -- the band she left in an inexplicable haste -- for the first time in nearly two decades. Despite days of rigidly scheduled rehearsals, the cobwebs, and perhaps some skeletons, are still there. Indeed, the group is only a couple of songs into their set before Perry cracks, “That sounded so much better at sound check.”

Between 1992 and 1994, 4 Non Blondes sold 1.5 million albums (according to Nielsen SoundScan), notched a top 10 hit — the ubiquitous singalong “What’s Up” — and toured the world. Their moment was short-lived; Perry, unhappy with the role and responsibilities of being a frontwoman, quit in 1995, and the band plunged back into oblivion. (A reunion was never discussed until it served a greater purpose for Perry: charity.)

But the success of 4 Non Blondes acted as a launch pad for Perry, the songwriter, who saw her first hit as a co-writer, Pink’s “Get the Party Started,” go to No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2001. Indeed, it’s Perry’s pedigree (along with her unpredictable potty mouth) that got her a VH1 series, "Make or Break: The Linda Perry Project," which she hopes will help discover the next Bob Dylan or Patti Smith.

Launched July 16, Perry’s answer to "American Idol" is a boot camp that brings eight individuals to their breaking points — in this case, aspiring musicians, songwriters and studio wizards competing for a chance at a production deal with Perry by proving their music-making might in a high-stress environment. “I’m looking for someone to take over this legacy of music,” says the songwriter-producer, who, according to sources, charges in the vicinity of $30,000 per song. “There’s a bunch of kids out there that are hungry. There’s a Sia out there; there’s a Linda Perry ... But there is no Bob Dylan to teach someone how to be like Bob Dylan.” The show’s goal: to find one.

Sitting at her North Hollywood studio a month after the Beverly Hilton concert, Perry explains the genesis of her TV show. "Artists that I’ve worked with, whether it’s Christina [Aguilera] or Pink, [have said], 'She’s balls to the walls, she’s aggressive, she goes right for the f—ing jugular ... I became emotional, I cried ...’ And VH1 were like, ‘Would you be interested in doing a show about that?'"

She learned the ins and outs of recording on 4 Non Blondes’ 1992 debut, Bigger, Better, Faster, More!, mostly from fighting with producer David Tickle. “I hated that record,” she says. “Not because the album was bad. It was just that our heart wasn’t in it. Or mine wasn’t.” For “What’s Up,” Tickle originally inserted a marching band snare as an accent. “It was ridiculous,” says Perry. “He made me change words ... I cried to Interscope and said, ‘I am not allowing this to be put out there.’ They were like, ‘Why can’t you just be a singer, Linda?'" (Tickle did not respond to a request for comment.)

By quitting the band, Perry was going against the advice of her label, Interscope Records, and its outspoken founder, Jimmy Iovine, who had taken the reins on 4 Non Blondes’ debut. Abandoning her multi-platinum act for a nebulous future on her own was risky, to say the least.

The millions she made from the album, which spent 59 weeks on the Billboard 200? “Tainted money,” says Perry, recalling the day she drained her bank account of the last $10,000 of her “What’s Up” payoff. “My accountant said, ‘Well, you’ve spent it all!’ I had no money. Then, literally, a week later, Pink called. And my whole life changed.”

Her sexuality also played a part in her decision to go it alone. Although Perry says she has never personally struggled with being gay, her bandmates, two of whom were lesbians, weren’t ready to be out quite as loudly in the early '90s. Things came to a head when Interscope sent a plant to interview the band and test their responses to touchy personal questions. Perry remembers her answer: “Why would me liking pussy play into our music?” But bassist Christa Hillhouse and drummer Dawn Richardson were less willing to go there. Perry thought their uneasiness was absurd. “I was like, ‘I’m gay. I have no problem about it. So I’m going to be gay, and you guys can be in the closet,’" she recalls.

Perry released several well-received solo albums. But then her father, Alfred, an engineer with whom she had had a strained relationship (a music hobbyist, “He wanted to be hanging out with Frank Sinatra but didn’t choose that lifestyle,” says Perry), got sick toward the end of the ’90s and she “went into this tailspin,” says Perry. (Her mother, Marluce Lucena Martin, is still alive.) “I didn’t have the greatest relationship and I was always beating him up for it. I never thought he saw me until I became famous. When he was in and out of hospitals and I started to get closer to him, it was hard. I was drinking like crazy. I wasn’t sleeping. I had massive panic attacks where I thought I was dying.”

Through it all, the hits kept coming -- Aguilera’s “Beautiful” in 2001, which landed Perry a Grammy nomination, and Gwen Stefani’s “What You Waiting For” in 2004. Then, Perry’s father died in 2005. She still tears up at the memory. “When something dies, something is born, and I was like a whole new Linda,” she says of her decision to give up alcohol, coffee and cigarettes, and go vegan. “Now, I am the clearest, the most focused. I look the best, I feel the best, I’m writing the best.”

http://www.contactmusic.com/pics/lf/glaad_media_awards_220412/linda-perry-and-sara-gilbert-the-23rd_3840625.jpg

Perry hopes to share the wisdom she painfully gained, which makes her new show’s title, Make or Break, even more apt. Taping at her 10,000-square-foot recording studio took just three weeks, during which, Perry says, “I opened my mouth and didn’t shut it for 18 days. I don’t know what the f— I said, but I know real shit happened.”

Coming to terms with the needs of reality TV was a real eye-opener — for both VH1 and its new host. Perry, who grew up in San Diego and calls Los Angeles home, describes the first day of shooting: “I did something, and they missed it, so they came to me, like, ‘Can you do that again? That was such a great moment.’ And I go, ‘Um, let’s get this clear: If you didn’t get it, you didn’t get it. You missed it. I’m not repeating anything.’ I told the artists, ‘If anybody asks you to redo something or puts words in your mouth, you call me up.’”

VH1 says it is precisely that attitude that made the show an attractive addition to its prime-time programming slate, which has had an uptick in viewers thanks to recent hits like "Love & Hip Hop Atlanta" and "Hollywood Exes." “What really engages VH1 viewers is authentic storytelling,” VH1 president Tom Calderone tells Billboard. “Our viewers are incredibly sharp. If they sense an artist or celebrity isn’t being genuine or that a storyline just doesn’t ring true, they’ll tune out.”

Perry thinks she may have what they’re looking for. “They want more viewers of credibility,” she says. “It’s not because of my good looks. It’s because they know I have a credible career. I haven’t whored myself out.”

This story originally appeared on Billboard.com.

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Billy Joel to Receive Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song

11:14 AM PST 07/22/2014 by Roy Trakin
Library of Congress

Joel, called "a storyteller of the highest order," will receive the honor in November in Washington, D.C.

Billy Joel will be the next recipient of the Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song, it was announced by Librarian of Congress James H. Billington.


Billington said Joel "ranks as one of the most popular recording artists and respected entertainers in the world. His piano-fueled narratives take listeners into the relatable and deeply personal moments of life, mirroring his own goal of writing songs that ‘meant something during the time in which I lived … and transcended that time.’ ”

Joel will receive the prize in Washington, D.C., in November and be feted with a series of events, including an honoree’s luncheon and musical performances. The Gershwin Prize honors a living musical artist’s lifetime achievement in promoting the genre of song as a vehicle of cultural understanding; entertaining and informing audiences; and inspiring new generations. Previous recipients include Paul Simon, Stevie Wonder, Sir Paul McCartney, Carole King and the songwriting duo of Burt Bacharach and the late Hal David.

“Billy Joel is a storyteller of the highest order,” Billington said. “There is an intimacy to his songwriting that bridges the gap between the listener and the worlds he shares through music. When you listen to a Billy Joel song, you know about the people and the place and what happened there. And while there may be pain, despair and loss, there is ultimately a resilience to it that makes you want to go to these places again and again.

“Importantly, as with any good storyteller, the recognition experienced in a Billy Joel song is not simply because these are songs we have heard so many times, but because we see something of ourselves in them.”

Added Joel: “The great composer George Gershwin has been a personal inspiration to me throughout my career. And the Library’s decision to include me among those songwriters who have been past recipients is a milestone for me.”

Joel is the sixth top-selling artist of all time and the third top-selling solo artist of all time, according to the Recording Industry Association of America.

His multiple Grammy wins include Song of the Year and Record of the Year (“Just the Way You Are,” 1978), Album of the Year (52nd Street, 1979), and back-to-back wins for Best Rock Vocal Performance, Male for two of his 13 multi-platinum albums, 52nd Street and Glass Houses in 1979 and 1980, respectively.

In December 2013, Madison Square Garden announced Joel as its first-ever music franchise. Joining the ranks of the Garden’s other original franchises, the Rock & Roll Hall of Famer kicked off monthly performances, to continue as long as there is demand, starting on January 27, 2014, and currently sold out through November.

STORY Billy Joel Tried Heroin, ...l (Video)

Joel’s life and work have reflected his abiding interest in history. In 1987, he accepted an invitation from the Soviet Union to perform there, becoming the first American pop star to bring a full rock production to the Soviet Union. In a recently released documentary about the two-week tour, A Matter of Trust – The Bridge to Russia, he notes that he decided to go in part because “I wanted to have an answer when my daughter said, ‘Dad, what did you do during the Cold War?’ ”

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Diane Warren to Receive Leadership Award for Support of LGBTQ Community

10:48 AM PST 07/22/2014 by Phil Gallo
Courtesy of Point Foundation

Songwriter will be honored on September 13 at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza for speaking out against bigotry and the work of her foundation supporting music education.

Diane Warren will receive the Point Foundation’s Leadership Award for her support of the LGBTQ community.

Warren will be honored at a “Voices on Point” concert and dinner on Sept. 13 at L.A.'s Hyatt Regency Century Plaza. The event is a benefit for the foundation, the nation's largest scholarship-granting organization for LGBTQ students of merit. The evening features musical performances and testimonials from the Point’s current scholars and alumni.

“Diane Warren has earned fame and respect, not just through the creation of an incredible body of music, but also because of her empathy, integrity and her commitment to education,” says Jorge Valencia, executive director and CEO of Point Foundation. “Our Point Scholars learn through their leadership training, that a leader is someone who uses their talent and position to ensure that others can live with dignity and respect.”

Warren was chosen for her speaking out against bigotry and the work of her foundation that supports music education. In 2012, she wrote the theme for World Humanitarian Day, “I Was Here,” which Beyoncé performed at the United Nations. Warren’s songs are also among those featured in the “It Gets Better” musical theater project that is touring the U.S.

Since 2001, Point has invested more than $15 million in the education and support of Point Scholars. Point Foundation promotes change through scholarship funding, mentorship, leadership development, and community service training.

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Gregg Allman and Sturgill Simpson Fuse Country and Soul at Annenberg Center: Concert Review

Gregg Allman Annenberg - H 2014
Donato Sardella/Getty Images for Annenberg Foundation/Courtesy of Annenberg

The Bottom Line

Newcomer Sturgill Simpson steals the show from Gregg Allman on a set of flinty, beautifully crafted songs performed with grit and skill.

Venue

Annenberg Space for Photography
Los Angeles, CA (Saturday, July 19)

Kentucky-born Simpson proves the revelation, as he and Gregg Allman kick off the Annenberg Space for Photography/KCRW’s "Country in the City" series.

Gregg Allman may have been the headliner at the Annenberg Space for Photography Saturday evening, but newcomer Sturgill Simpson made the bigger impression. The opening show in KCRW’s "Country in the City" series served as a coming-out party for the Kentucky-born, Nashville-based singer-songwriter.

His second album, Metamodern Sounds in Country Music, released on his own High Top Mountain label, is the kind of country album you didn’t think they made anymore, a collection of flinty, beautifully crafted songs performed with grit and skill. It harkens back to the golden age of outlaw country, with touches of Merle Haggard, George Jones and Lefty Frizzell (he included a perfectly gimlet-eyed cover of “I Never Go Around Mirrors” in his set) thrown in for good measure). He apologized early on that touring had left his voice a little raw, but no apology was necessary. Live, Simpson and his hard-driving band are proudly unvarnished, alternating between rockers sweaty and dirty as the mines and trains that run the “Railroad of Sin,” and mournful and tender as the murder ballad “Medicine Springs.” Simpson sings them with a baritone drawl reminiscent of Waylon Jennings and Kris Kristofferson. But the real revelation was guitarist Laur Joamets.

That’s not a misprint. As hard it might be to believe that someone with that name could play country music, the Estonian guitarist’s playing displayed an impressive fluency, deftly mixing Nashville twang, Bakersfield growl, and speedy bluegrass runs. With the solid rhythm section of Miles Miller and Kevin Black, the 45-minute set’s energy never flagged. They return to L.A. September 11. Don’t miss them.

If the title of Simpson’s album nods towards Ray Charles’ classic 1962 album, Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music, Gregg Allman’s set leaned toward the sophisticated R&B of Charles and Bobby Blue Bland, with mixed results.

Even after his health problems (which led to a liver transplant in 2010), the 66-year-old Allman looked good. He lost some weight, but his voice retains the heft and passion of his prime. But he’s backed by an eight-piece band that often feels like it’s at odds with his strengths.

Augmented by a three-piece horn section and percussionist, it’s a band built in the style of classic soul revues. But too often, the results are, at best, academic, at worst, cluttered and dull. After opening with a simmering “Statesboro Blues,” they turned his 1989 solo track “She’s No Angel” and the Allmans’ “Don’t Keep Me Wondering” into the kind of enervated adult R&B of Steve Winwood or Phil Collins.

It’s certainly more soulful than the music either of them has served up lately, but it’s dearly lacking in fire or inspiration. Guitarist and musical director Scott Sharrard probably has the most thankless job in music: just about every solo he plays will be compared to either Duane Allman, Dickey Betts or Warren Haynes. He’s a fine player, but nothing he does will make anyone forget them. That’s the problem: the entire band is made up of fine musicians with little personality. The 15-minute James Brown medley they performed mid-set to give Allman a breather pointed up a bigger problem. They simply aren’t an especially good fit for Allman’s moody blues.

And the best music came when they did the least. A cover of “I Found a Love,” Wilson Pickett’s early hit with the Falcons, was a grand vocal showcase for Allman and Sharrard‘s harmonies; “Ain’t Wasting No More Time” pulsed with bluesy ache; and “Stormy Monday” included Allman’s most impressive work on his Hammond B3, as well as a solo from Sharrard paying tribute to the sharp, stringy tone of the song’s composer, T-Bone Walker. And “Love Like Kerosene,” the set’s sole new tune, had the rollicking drive of the best Chicago blues.

But “Whipping Post” was, for some reason, turned into a shuffle. It was a move that so undermined the song that it took most of crowd until the chorus to recognize it. Unless it was Allman’s way of discouraging the calls for the song that have studded concerts since the ‘70s (although this was probably the only night it could be yelled unironically), you have to wonder why he did it. “One Way Out,” another Allman Brothers chestnut, fared better under the Caribbean onslaught, but you still had to wonder why he bothered. A good deal of the crowd had already made their way for the exits.

They should return, for this short series is a welcome addition to the summer’s free, outdoor concert schedule. It’s been smartly programmed, pairing a well-known act with a lesser-known but worthy opener (future shows include Shelby Lynne with Jamestown Revival, and Wynonna Judd and Nikki Lane). And the Annenberg' Space's fine photography exhibit, Country: Portraits of an American Sound, is definitely worth checking out while you’re there.

Tickets for "Country in the City" is free with an advance RSVP.

Set list:

Sturgill Simpson

Sitting Here Without You
Water in a Well
Long White Line
Poor Rambler
Medicine Springs
Life of Sin
Living the Dream
I Never Go Around Mirrors (Lefty Frizzell cover)
Railroad of Sin

Gregg Allman

Statesboro Blues
She’s No Angel
Don’t Keep Me Wondering
Ain’t Wasting No More Time
I Found a Love (Wilson Pickett cover)
Stormy Monday (T-Bone Walker cover)
Give Me Back My Bullets
Sweet Feeling
Black Hearted Woman/Hot Lanta (James Brown medley)
Melissa
Love Like Kerosene
Whipping Post
____

One Way Out

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'Get On Up' Premiere: Chadwick Boseman Initially 'Didn't Want to Try' Playing James Brown

10:10 PM PST 07/21/2014 by Hilary Lewis
AP Images
Chadwick Boseman at Monday night's "Get on Up" premiere.

The "42" star took on the daunting task of playing the Godfather of Soul by working hard and taking things "one step at a time," his co-stars and director Tate Taylor told THR at the Universal biopic's debut at Harlem's Apollo Theater.

To play James Brown, the hardest-working man in show business, Get on Up star Chadwick Boseman took an appropriately industrious approach.

“The man did his homework,” Jill Scott, who plays Brown’s second wife, Deedee, told The Hollywood Reporter at Monday night’s Get On Up premiere in New York. “He worked so hard; he practiced five hours a day — every day. Even on his time off he was still practicing those dance moves. Chad couldn’t even dance when he took this film.”



The film’s choreographer, Aakomon Jones, who also plays a choreographer in the movie, confirmed that while Boseman wasn’t a professional dancer, “he had rhythm.”

“What I always say is, ‘All you have to do is work really hard, and you can make up for not really dancing like James Brown your whole life as I have.’ He worked hard enough and played catch-up,” Jones added.

Jones explained that he and Boseman trained for three-and-a-half weeks before production began, working “for hours upon hours,” with Jones teaching Boseman how to dance as the 42 star learned how to become Brown as an actor.

Still, director Tate Taylor told THR that it was Boseman’s acting ability that convinced him he was the right man for the job.


“I realized that first and foremost, I had to find a brilliant actor. It’s easy to gravitate toward the costumes and the dancing, but I just realized that somebody was going to have to play a 63-year-old, and that’s what I had him read for,” The Help helmer said. “So I just searched for an actor with skill, and Chadwick was the guy.”

Nevertheless, Boseman told THR he was so intimidated by the prospect of playing the Godfather of Soul, “I didn’t even want to try it.” Taylor spent two months convincing Boseman to take on the gig, telling the actor that they “would take it one step at a time.”

“And as much as he was wanting to make sure he could do it, I did too, and that if we at any point felt that it wasn’t working out, we would go our separate ways. And it kept working out,” Taylor said.

What sealed the deal for Boseman? “I knew that everybody that was involved was going to be at the top of their game, so why not try?” he said.



In addition to winning over the cast and crew, Boseman impressed Brown’s family, with Brown’s grandson, Jason, who worked on the film, telling THR, “Chadwick’s work ethic was outstanding. He knew how important the role was to the world, and he gave his world to play James Brown.”

The premiere at Harlem’s legendary Apollo Theater drew many members of Brown’s family, along with the production team that helped the film make it to the big screen, led by Brian Grazer and Mick Jagger.

The Rolling Stones frontman, who’s getting increasin... Hollywood, told a group of reporters that he hopes audiences will “be excited by the music…[and] touched by the story.”



Speaking of music-based stories, Get On Up choreographer Jones also gave THR some hints about the choreography in Pitch Perfect 2, which he just finished working on, saying it will be “bigger, more involved, more advanced and a lot more dance.”

Meanwhile, Taylor also dished on the Tupperware movie he’s working on with Sandra Bullock, whom he met with longtime friend Octavia Spencer the same way Spencer did — through his work as a production assistant on A Time to Kill.

Taylor cautioned that the project, which Sony recently picked up, is still in its early stages, saying, “I’ve gotta write it!”

“It’s a wonderful project about Brownie Wise, the woman that basically, as I say, she leaned in 20 years before Sheryl Sandberg was even born, and she started a revolution for women in the workplace by selling Tupperware, and it’s a story of her life but not a biopic of her life, it’s inspired by her life,” Taylor explained. “I went to Sandy [Bullock] and gave her my pitch for it and she said, ‘This sounds great, let’s do it.’ And luckily Sony Pictures and Amy Pascal said [they were onboard]."

Get On Up co-stars Dan Aykroyd, Nelsan Ellis, Tika Sumpter, Josh Hopkins, Fred Melamed and others also made the scene at the Apollo along with Universal Pictures executives Ron Meyer, Donna Langley and Jeff Shell.

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Jack White Launches Third Man Books, Announces Poetry Collection 'Language Lessons'

Jack White(Photo : Jason Merritt/Getty Images)

Never one to be short on ideas, Jack White has announced the launch of Third Man Books, an independent publishing company and offshoot of his Nashville-based record label, Third Man Records.

As reported by Rolling Stone, the first release from Third Man Books will be Language Lessons: Volume I, a collection of prose and poetry featuring the work of Dale Ray Phillips, CD Wright, Adrian Matejka, and non-fiction pieces by punk musicians Richard Hell and Tav Falco.

This being a Jack White endeavor, however, the book will also come with two LPs of "jazz, psychedelic-punk, poetry, blues, and pop," featuring the music of William Tyler and Destruction Unit.

In addition to the book itself and the records, Language Lessons will also include frameable poems by CD Wright, Frank Stanford, Brian Barker, Jake Adam York, and Chet Weise, featuring artwork by Big Boys guitarist Tim Kerr, Hate illustrator Jim Blanchard, and folk artist Butch Anthony.

Language Lessons: Volume I will be available for purchase on August 5 and can be pre-ordered at the Third Man website.

Concerning the launch of the new company, Third Man has released a statement, which says, "Third Man Books, like Language Lessons, will be fearless, imaginative, and eclectic. We hope to be a welcome addition to what is already a very compelling and thrilling independent American literary landscape."

Rolling Stone also reports that this weekend's Newport Folk Festival will feature a preview of Language Lessons with live readings from some of the book's contributors, such as Zachary Schomburg, Joshua Maria Wilkinson, Janaka Stucky, Sampson Starkweather, Paige Taggart, and Kendra Decolo. Jack White is also scheduled for a headlining performance at the festival.

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Watch: Trailer For Sundance Satire 'Dear White People' Brings Black Back

News

by Kevin Jagernauth


July 22, 2014 6:26 PM

How do you make a comedy about contemporary race relations in America, without being reductive or offensive? Hell, don't ask us, but writer/director Justin Simien seems to have figured it out and then home. His "Dear White People" was a buzz title at this year's Sundance Film Festival, winning the Special Jury Award for Breakthrough Talent and a new full length trailer to present the sharp satire.

The film takes viewers to the campus of Winchester University where activist Samantha White is elected as head of a traditionally black residence hall, and she uses her notoriety as host of the provocative and polarizing radio show “Dear White People” to try to prevent the college from diversifying Armstrong Parker House. Meanwhile, Afro-wearing geek Lionel Higgins is recruited by the otherwise all-white student newspaper to go undercover and write about black culture, and this and more hijinks converge during the ill-conceived “unleash your inner Negro” Halloween party.

Again, this isn't the easy kind of thing to pull off, but it looks "Dear White People" gets it right. Starring Tyler James Williams, Tessa Thompson, Teyonah Parris, Brandon P. Bell, Kyle Gallner, Malcolm Barrett, Brittany Curran, Marque Richardson, and Dennis Haysbert, the film opens on October 17th.


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JoeBala

Hear Ex-Kyuss Singer John Garcia's Duet With the Doors' Robby Krieger

The vocalist and guitarist discuss their chance collaboration

John Garcia
Garcia Gallito.
July 22, 2014 3:05 PM ET
"If someone told me at 19 years old, when I wrote 'Her Bullets Energy,' that Robby Krieger would be playing on it, I would have told them, 'You're out of your mind and go jump in a lake,'" says John Garcia, the voice behind bands like Kyuss, Vista Chino and Unida, referring to the closing song on his self-titled solo debut.

Although Garcia recorded his vocals on last year's Vista Chino record through microphone that the Doors guitarist owned and Jim Morrison used, he tells Rolling Stone that his union with Krieger on John Garcia was more fortuitous than anything else. His producer, Harper Hug, listened to the song and said, "I'm hearing a Spanish, flamenco guitar on this track." When Garcia asked him who would be a good fit on the track, Hug suggested his acquaintance, Krieger. "I pretty much fell over from my chair and said, 'Do you think he would do it?'" Garcia says.

"For the last couple years, I've been building a new studio with Harper Hug and sound man Michael Dumas," Krieger tells Rolling Stone. "We're calling it 'Horse Lattitudes.' Harper played me a song that I really liked, and we decided to try recording some of my flamenco guitar on it. This was the first time we actually recorded at the studio. We did it in the big room, and it sounded awesome."

Garcia reports that while he was recoding the song, which he describes as a "love-tragedy story," he barely discussed it with Krieger. "We spent more time, I think, talking about golfing than we did about the track," he says. "I'm from Palm Springs, and there's a shit-ton of golf courses here. He was asking me about a couple courses out here. I'm not a golfer myself, but he's Robby Krieger so I was trying to do my best to accommodate." The singer laughs. "But to end the record with an acoustic track with Robby, it was very, very fitting."

Garcia is releasing the album, which also features guest appearances by Danko Jones and his former Kyuss bandmate Nick Oliveri, on August 5th. It can be pre-ordered here.


Hear Here: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/hear-ex-kyuss-singer-john-garcias-duet-with-the-doors-robby-krieger-20140722#ixzz38FiUArrk

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"The Big Bang Theory" Makes TV History

The comedy series has just been renewed for three more seasons.

Mar 12, 2014 | 05:21 PM

CBS' "The Big Bang Theory" just made history by becoming the first program in mode...television to be renewed for three additional seasons.

the big bang theory

Source: BuzzFeed/CBS

"Comedy is a big part of our schedule, and 'The Big Bang Theory' is the biggest comedy force on television," said Nina Tassler, Chairman of CBS Entertainment. "We're proud to work with and showcase the incredible talents of Chuck Lorre, Steve Molaro and this amazing cast every week," she added.

READ: "Big Bang's" Jim Pa...of Sheldon

Already in its seventh season, "The Big Bang Theory" is currently boasting its highest ratings to date. Starring Johnny Galecki, Jim Parsons, Kaley Cuoco, Simon Helberg, Kunal Nayyar, Mayim Bialik, Sara Gilbert, and Melissa Rauch, the show brings in 19.7 million viewers in the coveted 18-49 demographic.

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‘Star Wars: Episode 7′ Casts Carrie Fisher’s Daughter as a Young Princess Leia

Star Wars Episode 7 Billie Lourd Carrie FisherGetty Images/Lucasfilm

We knew that ‘Star Wars: Episode 7‘ was going to be a little nostalgia-heavy with the return of the original trilogy’s stars to the franchise, but it turns out that it goes even deeper than that. A new report claims that the new film will not only feature flashbacks to the younger days of Carrie Fisher‘s Princess Leia Organa, but that the young version of the secret Skywalker sibling will be played by Fisher’s own daughter.

The news comes via The Daily Mail (as originally reported by Latino Review) so feel free to disbelieve all of this until official confirmation rolls around.

So here goes: Billie Lourd, the daughter of Fisher and Hollywood agent Bryan Lourd, has supposedly been cast as a young Princess Leia and will appear in flashback scenes. And yes, she’ll apparently be rocking those iconic (and endlessly parodied) hair buns. Lourd is described as an “aspiring actress and singer,” which is the polite was of calling her a newcomer with no credits yet to her name. We can’t judge Lourd as an actress yet, but she does bear enough of a resemblance to her mother (see above) to make this work. Give her the proper hair and attire and she could pass as a close-enough version of her mother from nearly 40 years ago.

The family connection is interesting and all, but the real news here is that ‘Episode 7′ will apparently feature flashbacks, which will be a first for this series. So, put on your thinking caps, boys and girls: what kind of relevant information do we need from Leia’s past that wasn’t already explored in the original trilogy? Is director J.J. Abrams setting us up for some kind of big twist? Maybe some big secrets are emerging from the past to threaten the future?

Or do you think those whole thing is just a load of gossip?

‘Star Wars: Episode 7′ is still set to open in theaters on December 18, 2015 release date, even with Harrison Ford’s busted leg slowing things down.



Read More: ‘Star Wars: Episode 7...ncess Leia | http://screencrush.com/st...ck=tsmclip
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Reply #172 posted 07/23/14 6:12pm

JoeBala

Philip Seymour Hoffman's Final Disappearing Act

He was one of the greatest and most versatile character actors of all time, but in his new film A Most Wanted Man, Philip Seymour Hoffman looks like himself—a man who's about to leave us forever.

By John Hendrickson on July 23, 2014

Victoria Will/Invision/AP

We’re used to seeing Philip Seymour Hoffman disappear. He disappeared behind dark-rimmed glasses and a whimper, way down in the soul of Truman Capote. He disappeared under scraggly hair and a moustache as a wisdom-spouting Lester Bangs. He disappeared in a polyester Oakland A’s jersey, arms crossed, pouting in the direction of Billy Beane. He disappeared with a bob haircut and a tank top, holding a boom on a porno set, lusting after Dirk Diggler.

And then he disappeared on February 2, 2014, inside a standard issue black body bag, horizontal, strapped to a gurney, rolling out of his New York City apartment under camera flashes.

What’s most troubling about watching Hoffman in the new film A Most Wanted Man—one of his final roles—is that, for the first time in his two-decades-and-change career, Philip Seymour Hoffman looks like himself. When we watch him huff and wobble through the streets of Hamburg, we’re watching a fictional performance from a real-life man who was rapidly deteriorating, and would soon be dead.

In the film, based off the John le Carre novel of the same title, Hoffman stars as Gunther Bachmann, a weathered German spy. Not weathered in the Robert Redford way. There is no poise. He’s beaten down, ghostly white, stubbled. A round head and a fleshy jowl. His gut curls over his waist like a melting Buddha candle.

Hoffman’s character could most easily be described as an antihero, but it’s hard to root for him. He’s a loner with seemingly no personal life, married to his work, perpetually getting shit on by forces greater than himself. He doesn’t do this job for glory—whatever little glory there is—and, at one point, in conversation with an American of the same trade, he admits that he doesn’t even know why he does this type of work anymore. But he’s good at it, more or less, and it consumes him. He’s searching for something, though what is intentionally unclear. His eyes are tired and removed from almost every scene. Even his pigment feels in stark contrast to the rest of the cast (not least, bleached blonde Rachel McAdams). He’s just not all there.

In a recent essay in The New York Times, John le Carre, the author of the film’s source material, waxed poetic about watching one of the greatest actors of the modern era bring his words to life. For as good as he was, PSH couldn’t do a proper German accent, and the film is a little worse for it. But as le Carre writes:

He made his voice the only authentic one, the lonely one, the odd one out, the one you depended on amid all the others.

And, perhaps more hauntingly:

Whenever he left the room, you were afraid you’d seen the last of him. And if that sounds like wisdom after the event, it isn’t. Philip was burning himself out before your eyes.

He’s smoking in almost every scene. Not just inhaling, but forcefully sucking the tobacco through the filter and deep into his lungs. He’s wheezing. He’s ordering black coffee at any place that sells it, then pouring whiskey in the cup on at least one occasion. Hoffman maintained sobriety for 23 years before relapsing in 2013. When they found him on his bathroom floor, there was a needle dangling from his arm.

Philip Seymour Hoffman with Robin Wright in A Most Wanted Man.

I was among the vulture press outside 35 Bethune Street, an otherwise quiet block in the West Village, when the Crime Scene Unit arrived. It was a weirdly temperate afternoon in the dead of winter, the kind of day on which PSH used to ride his bike through that particular part of Lower Manhattan. As I approached his street, there was an eerie hush among the gathering neighbors, fans, and paparazzi—just over a dozen people at first. Two bored NYPD officers guarded the entrance to his building; a bouquet of white roses rested against the door next to them. The vulture press arrived in fives and tens, awkwardly grinning and passing rumors. News vans raised antennas for remote broadcasts, on-air reporters stared at their smartphones looking at unconfirmed reports on Twitter. Two detectives in ties and trench coats exited the building and said nothing. By now there was yellow tape blocking off each end of the street; the sidewalk gawkers had surged past one hundred. An NYPD truck arrived to erect steel blockades, corralling the masses for the next indefinite amount of hours. The police escorted an old lady with a walker down the middle of the street so she could get to her apartment. A neighbor crouched on his fire escape and peered down at the scene, a white dog resting in his lap. All the while, we stared at a brick building, looking up at the fourth floor, trying to figure out which unit was his. A Fox News reporter next to me audibly wondered if “the body” was still inside.


The dark comedic tension that resides on both sides of death permeated the air that Sunday — Super Bowl Sunday. Hoffman rented this apartment on Bethune Street, away from his wife and kids, because she kicked him out of the house after his relapse. As photographers next to me switched lenses and glanced at their first frames, one shooter sighed and said to his competitor: “You thought you were gonna be at the Meadowlands, right?” They both laughed. The Seahawks were preparing to route the Broncos just across the river, and these guys were hoping to get a body shot of a dead heroin addict.

There’s a scene in the film where Hoffman sits alone at a dive bar. He’s in a booth, drinking whiskey, unnoticed through a cloud of cigarette smoke and humming neon — the sort of place you’d expect to find in the Deep South. He stares into the bottom of his glass, and he’s eventually joined by a woman whom he doesn’t much feel like talking to. It doesn’t look like he’s acting. Which is why this film, despite its flaws, will make a lasting impact. When you watch this movie, you’re watching Philip Seymour Hoffman die.

On January 30, Hoffman was spotted in a bar in downtown Atlanta. He was in town shooting The Hunger Games. TMZ published the grainy photo, along with witness accounts of his “multiple trips to the bathroom.” It’s the type of tabloid speculation that you usually brush off after a cursory glance. Three days after that photo was taken, I stood on a crowded New York sidewalk and watched two crime scene specialists in full-body white suits climb out of a van. They rolled a gurney out of the back and walked it through the building’s front door. Philip Seymour Hoffman was inside, four flights up, his large, fleshy body sprawled out on the bathroom floor. But the man we revered — the antihero — had disappeared long ago.

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Edgar Winter Pays Tribute to Johnny: 'My Greatest Musical Hero'

Edgar Winter Band and other groups on upcoming tour will play songs associated with Johnny

Johnny Winter (left) and Edgar Winter in 2012.
Bobby Bank/WireImage

July 23, 2014 2:45 PM ET

Johnny Winter's brother, multi-instrumentalist Edgar, will pay tribute to his sibling, who died at age 70 last week, on his upcoming tour. In a statement, Edgar expressed admiration for Johnny and remorse for his passing. "My wife, Monique, and I are shocked at the suddenness of Johnny's passing, especially since I was so looking forward with such joy and anticipation to seeing him again and playing together," Edgar wrote on Facebook. "I know his body is departing this physical realm, but his presence, his music, and his spirit are undiminished, and alive as ever in my heart.

"Johnny has always been, is now and will forever remain my greatest musical hero of all time," he continued. "But more than all that, he's my brother – in family, in music, in life and beyond. I will do my best to carry on in honor of his memory and the Winter name."

The Lion in Johnny Winter: A Tribute to the Guitar Icon

Accordingly, Edgar has reprogrammed his upcoming Rock 'n' Blues Fest tour to serve as a tribute to Johnny. On each date of the tour, the Edgar Winter Band, Vanilla Fudge, Rare Earth member Peter Rivera and Savoy Brown's Kim Simmonds intend to play songs that fans associate with Johnny, Vintage Vinyl News reports. Rick Derringer, whose "Rock and Roll, Hoochie Koo" Winter recorded with Derringer on his Johnny Winter And album in 1970, will appear as a special guest on the tour's final two nights.

Johnny Winter's final album, Step Back, is still set to come out on September 2nd. It will feature the Texas blues guitarist playing with the likes of Eric Clapton, ZZ Top's Billy Gibbons and Aerosmith's Joe Perry, among others.

Here are the tour dates for the Rock 'n' Blues Fest tour:

7/31 Clarkston, MI – DTE Energy Music Theatre
8/01 Westbury, NY – NYCB Theatre at Westbury
8/02 Rockland, ME – Harbor Park
8/03 Red Bank, NJ – Count Basie Theatre
8/05 Glenside, PA – Keswick Theatre
8/06 Cohasset, MA – South Shore Music Circus
8/07 New Brunswick, NJ – State Theatre
8/08 Englewood, NJ – Bergen Performing Arts Center
8/10 Waukegan, IL – Genesee Theatre
8/13 Melbourne, FL – King Center For Performing Arts
8/14 Jacksonville, FL – Florida Theatre
8/15 Fort Lauderdale, FL – Broward Center for the Performing Arts
8/16 Clearwater, FL – Ruth Eckerd Hall
8/21 San Jose, CA – City National Civic of San Jose
8/22 Anaheim, CA – City National Grove of Anaheim
8/23 Las Vegas, NV – Cannery Casino Hotel
8/24 Snoqualmie, WA – Snoqualmie Casino



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Reply #173 posted 07/23/14 6:16pm

JoeBala

'Guardians of the Galaxy' Star Zoe Saldana on 'Avatar' Sequels, Marriage and Race in Hollywood

This article first appeared in the August 1 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine.

A lot of of movie stars have a franchise on their résumé. Some even have two. But there never has been an actor who has pulled off three humongous ongoing sci-fi action series all at the same time. Until -- just maybe -- now.

Zoe Saldana, the 36-year-old star of Avatar and Star Trek, whose films have reeled in more than $5 billion total box office, is poised for the ultimate Hollywood hat trick with the Aug. 1 opening of Guardians of the Galaxy, Marvel's latest big-budget (reportedly $170 million) effort at transforming a bunch of C-list comic book characters into an Iron Man-sized phenom. Joining Saldana's green-skinned assassin Gamora are Chris Pratt's stranded Earthling Peter Quill, a tattooed bruiser named Drax (Dave Bautista), a walking tree (voiced by Vin Diesel) and a raccoon (voiced by Bradley Cooper) with a predilection for firearms. "If anybody can pull it off, it's Zoe," says J.J. Abrams, who auditioned more than 40 actresses to play Uhura in his 2009 reboot of the Trek series. "When she came in the room," he remembers, "she had this incredible commitment and toughness -- she swore a lot -- and yet she was also really funny and sharp and beautiful. She told us she was right for the part, we didn't tell her."

Alas, Saldana won't be at Comic-Con this year -- she'll be in Europe promoting Guardians -- but THR caught up with her for a long chat before she headed overseas. Below, she reveals what she knows about James Cameron's next three Avatar films, her long love of science fiction and the reality of being an actress of color in today's Hollywood.

You started your career in a giant franchise, with a smallish role in 2003's Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl. But you hated it, no?

Those weren't the right people for me. I'm not talking about the cast. The cast was great. I'm talking about the political stuff that went on behind closed doors. It was a lot of above-the-line versus below-the-line, extras versus actors, producers versus PAs. It was very elitist. I almost quit the business. I was 23 years old, and I was like, "F— this!" I am never putting myself in this situation again. People disrespecting me because they look at my number on a call sheet and they think I'm not important. F— you.

And now you're headlining in three simultaneous giant sci-fi franchises -- Guardians of the Galaxy, Star Trek and Avatar. How did that end up happening?

You just gravitate naturally to what your heart yearns for. And I grew up in a very science fiction-driven household. It was odd for me to grow up and go out in the world and not see other women going crazy for science fiction …

Wait a second. You're saying that as a kid you'd come home from school, make yourself a peanut butter and jelly sandwich and turn on the TV to watch Star Trek?

Well, not Star Trek. That was too old for me. But I watched Terminator, Aliens, The Hunger, supernatural thrillers, I'm one of the only people who loved Dune. The casting was superb. Not every actor can do a David Lynch movie.

You've proved your geek cred. So, what are Avatar 2, 3, and 4 going to be about? Reveal every plot detail, please.

I wish I knew! I've been told by Jim [Cameron] that it'll be about an overall spiritual journey, but I don't have a script.

OK, then how about Star Trek 3?

I know even less about Trek 3. All I know is that the producers of Trek 3 called the producers of Avatar 2 to find out when Avatar will finish shooting. [They both start shooting next year.]

The sci-fi genre has not always been such a welcoming place for women. In the original Trek, most of the women were in miniskirts or tin-foil bikinis. Even Uhura wasn't much of a role …

She was eye candy. But that's true of every genre. Eighty percent of what's out there is told through the point of view of a male. I can sit down with so many filmmakers for so many projects and play so many actors' girlfriends or wives. But in sci-fi, I can play Gamora.

For those of us who never read the comics, Gamora is an alien assassin with superhuman strength and agility.

She was taken from her planet when she was a child and forced into a life of violence and crime. She reminds me of the lost kids of Sudan, the boys who are taken from their family and have to come back to their villages and shoot everybody. Even though it's a Marvel movie, I take it all very seriously. My husband [Italian artist and ex-soccer player Marco Perego] was a great help with the research for the part. He was talking to another artist who showed us her latest work. It was this matador doing a beautiful march of death with a cape and the sword. I saw it and thought: "That's Gamora. That's what a female assassin would do." She'd seduce her victim. And then I got to England and sat down with the fight coordinators -- these guys were pure testosterone; women were like aliens to them -- and had to convince them that this was what she would do. They'd been designing the fight scenes for weeks before I got there, but I was like, "No."

Is it true you almost broke co-star Chris Pratt's ribs during a fight scene?

I almost kicked him in the nuts. He was like (in a high-pitched voice), "It's fine, it's fine." (Laughs.) I love that about men. They're determined to maintain their dignity. Even when they're crushed.

There's a rumor going around that you got married last year after only a month of knowing your husband.

No! I've known my partner for five years. I knew of his work. I knew of him. Then we met. And months later, we both made the decision to do what we both individually vowed never to do -- to get married.

You vowed never to get married?

Why get married? Because I believe in love? Because I don't want my kids to be called bastards? No. Those reasons are not natural to me. Maybe for tax reasons I would have done it.

What turned it around?

He did. And as soon as we decided we were going to get married, we didn't wait. We did it three weeks later. That part was very, very quick.

There's also a story about your mom once mistaking Thandie Newton for you …

Yeah, that's true. She saw a poster for Crash and called me to ask me why I didn't tell her I was in a movie with Matt Dillon.

Are you often mistaken for other actors?

I've gotten Kerry Washington and Jada Pinkett, too, but mainly Thandie. People ask me if I'm offended that I'm confused with every other black actress out there. "Doesn't it bother you that people think you're all the same person?" No. Because one time I entered a restaurant and there were all these beautiful blond girls around a table, probably all from Orange County. It felt like it might have been a high school reunion or something. There were like 20 beautiful girls, but they were all the same. I couldn't tell any of them apart.

So is Hollywood getting better about race? Do you feel resistance?

I don't want to spend my life thinking about all the impossibilities I face when I wake up in the morning. But the reality is, I'm a woman of color in America. That itself is enough for you to wake up and go, "Oh, f—!"

Well, you've done pretty well.

My balls are pretty big. There's a confidence that my sisters and I were raised with. After my dad died [in a car accident, when she was 9], my mom moved us from Queens back to the Dominican Republic. A very macho sort of place. But my mom raised us to know that we are equal to anyone. Whenever we went out, if we were meeting other people, my mom would always say, "I hope you like them." Not "I hope they like you." We were the most important.

Your skin tone has changed from blue in Avatar to green in Guardians

And this time it was actual makeup. Avatar was motion-capture, so everything was done in post. But Guardians was the way it's normally done. You get picked up at 3:30 in the morning and spend 4½ hours getting things glued and spray-painted on to your face.

Which did you like better?

Avatar. Working in the volume, doing performance-capture. Because you don't have to worry about what you're going to look like. That gets added later. You just play the character.

Are you worried about getting typecast in sci-fi? Are you longing to do a serious drama set in a one-room cottage in the woods?

A lot of the people who have power -- the ones doing the casting or writing reviews -- these are people who put people in boxes. They look at what I've done and think, "Oh she's a sci-fi beauty queen." I wish that wasn't the case. I didn't purposely avoid doing things other than sci-fi. In between Avatar, Star Trek and Guardians, I've done other films, right here on Earth.

Like the Nina Simone biopic coming out later this year. You've been blue and you've been green, but ironically the movie that generated the most controversy is the one in which you're brown. There was criticism that you were too light-skinned to play Simone.

You have to try to understand where people are coming from. This has always been an issue in our society. A white person can play Cleopatra, even though Cleopatra was a North African woman who in reality had coffee skin. But that's not sellable in Hollywood. So you get Elizabeth Taylor with purple eyes. So there's always been a lot of tension in the African-American community about Hollywood being a whitewashing machine. But that wasn't the case with Nina. There were so many other variables that people don't know about. I wasn't the first person to step up to the plate. They went out to everybody for the part. There were other people attached for years [like Mary J. Blige]. And they just decided not to do it. And at the end of the day, we had to tell this story. It's our duty to go out and tell stories about women and about people of color because we don't do that enough.

Race doesn't seem to matter as much in sci-fi.

You know why? Because the people we discriminate against in sci-fi movies are the aliens. We make them the villains. We have to make somebody bad.

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Reply #174 posted 07/23/14 6:32pm

JoeBala

Alicia Keys to Mentor Pharrell Williams’ Team on ‘The Voice’

Alicia Keys to Mentor Pharrell Williams' Team on 'The Voice'

Getty Images

The “Girl on Fire” singer will team with the new coach on the NBC competition's seventh season

Alicia Keys has been called into duty on the upcoming seventh season of NBC's “The Voice.”

NBC, Keys and new coach Pharrell Williams announced on Twitter that the singer will mentor Team Pharrell.

Keys rounds out next season's mentors, which includes previously announced Little Big Town, who will be working with Blake Shelton; Gavin Rossdale, who partnered with wife and new “Voice” coach Gwen Stefani, and the iconic Stevie Nicks will work with Adam Levine‘s team.

Also read: Gavin Rossdale to Mentor Wife Gwen Stefani's Team on ‘The Voice’

“The Voice” will be a working reunion for Williams and Keys, who last recorded a duet together titled “Know Who You Are” on his latest album, “GIRL.”

Williams was tapped in March to replace the departing CeeLo Green. He had previously served as a mentor on the show as well.

“The Voice” returns for Season 7 on Tuesday, Sept. 22 at 8 p.m. on NBC.

See video: Singing Nun Wins Italy's ‘The Voice': Watch Her Winning Cover of ‘What A Feeling’

See the tweets below:

My friend invited me to be a mentor for his team on ! His team killed it wink

Lucy Lawless Joining ‘Marvel's Agents of SHIELD’

Lucy Lawless Joining 'Marvel&#39;s Agents of SHIELD'

SyFy

The action star best known for playing “Xena: Warrior Princess” is returning to her action-packed TV roots

It looks like Lucy Lawless will be featured in the sophomore season of “Marvel's Agents of SHIELD.”

The hot heroine who spent most of the '90s racking up fan cred as “Xena: Warrior Princess” will be featured in ABC's equally geeky Marvel spin-off, according to TV Guide, but the nature and extent of her role is still unknown.

“SHIELD,” a TV spin-off based around Clark Gregg‘s Agent Coulson character from several of the recent Marvel movies including “The Avengers” and “Iron Man,” debuted to impressive ratings at the start of last season. But as TheWrap previously reported, the numbers eventually dipped throughout the course of its freshman run.

In May, ABC renewed the program for a second season and also announced the addition of ”Marvel's Agent Carter” to its lineup, which stars “Captain America's” Hayley Atwell.

Lawless is best known for her six-year run as the titular butt-kicking star of “Xena: Warrior Princess,” but she has had more recent television appearances on “Parks & Recreation” and “Spartacus: War of the Damned.”

“SHIELD” showrunners Jed Whedon and Maurissa Tancharoen will both be speaking at the show's Comic-Con panel at 3:00 on Friday, July 25 in Ballroom 20; it's possible they will reveal more details about Lawless’ involvement in the upcoming season.

The show kicks off its second season Sept. 23, 2014 on ABC.

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‘Gotham’ Creator on Why Batman Would Spell the End of the Show

'Gotham' Creator on Why Batman Would Spell the End of the Show

Happy Batman Day! Danny Cannon and Bruno Heller reveal to TheWrap exactly where their upcoming Fox drama is headed — and where it isn't

“Gotham” executive producer Danny Cannon and creator/EP Bruno Heller spent the better part of Sunday still trying to convince media that their Fox show is not a Batman show.

“I was relieved when I found out there was no Batman, I don't want to stand shoulder to shoulder with Chris Nolan,” Cannon told TheWrap. “Chris Nolan's masterpiece and on a TV budget? I really don't want to do that.”

TheWrap sat down with Cannon and Heller following their Television Critics Association panel this past weekend to try to make a little more sense about what the superhero prequel is about. Though their creative visions are consistent, press and fans alike seem to be confused over this interpretation of the DC Comics property.

Heller explained his reasoning: “For me I always lose interest as soon as he gets into the costume. You can't tell human stories with super-humans in the frame.”

Still, Fox surely doesn't want to turn away any Batman diehards. The network is counting on “Gotham” to be its own hero, similar to this past season's freshman ratings savior “Sleepy Hollow.”

But don't expect Cannon to predict the show's ratings fate.

“I still don't know how to read ratings — there are so many numbers,” he said. “If they are good, everyone loves them, if they are bad, they tell you what is wrong with them … I just want to be able to stand by the box set years from now.”

Though both producers would prefer that potential box set to have fewer DVDs in it. Neither are thrilled with the network's 16-episode order, admitting that the number is a little daunting and could hurt the creative process.

“It is the precise difference between chess and speed chess,” Heller said. “Network TV is speed chess. So much of it — more than anything — is improvisational simply because you get the actors to sit, you get the director, you get the crew and then you see what the hell you can come up with.”

“I've done a run of 24 and had a few ‘Fuck, I wish we didn't have to put that [episode or two] on the air’ [moments],” he continued. “That never happens with 12 [episodes, which Heller did with 'Rome'].”

See video: Fox's ‘Gotham’ Teaser: Ben McKenzie Takes on Young Penguin, Catwoman

In terms of the drama's appeal, Fox and the producers are well-aware of the audience they are targeting. The males will likely show up automatically, the females will take a little more work.

Enter Gotham crime boss Fish Mooney (Jada Pinkett Smith), a brand new addition to the comic book city's underworld.

“It was important to have a strong, powerful female character that is unapologetically a player,” Heller said. “And not because she's attractive or sexy — that's not the source of her power.”

He added: “It's funny, I didn't have Jada in mind while writing the character, but as soon as I saw what she was doing, she had taken it. It is a powerful archetype that you don't see nearly enough of — which is an unapologetic, powerful, kick-ass bad woman. ‘Bad’ in both senses of the word.”

So, the big question: Will we ever see Batman? Logically, that mostly depends on how long the show is on the air, considering Bruce Wayne begins his journey at about 12 years-old on the Fox show.

In the Frank Miller comics, Wayne begins his worldly travels around 14, returning to Gotham 18 years later. In real-time, getting there would require a “Simpsons”-esque Fox run.

Still, Heller isn't opposed to reaching that logical, loyal conclusion, should it work out that way via a ton of seasons or a time warp.

“I think there is a natural, sort of Moby Dick ending, if you'd like — which is not a clever ending — but as soon as Batman appears, that is the end of the show,” he told TheWrap. “Enter Batman; exit the show.”

“Gotham” premieres on Sept. 22 on Fox. Wednesday July 23 has been declared “Batman Day” by DC Entertainment.

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Review: Philip Seymour Hoffman's Final Lead Role in 'A Most Wanted Man' is One of His Best

"Ooooh, Americans," growls the late Philip Seymour Hoffman, as the scheming German intelligence agent Gunter Bachmann in "A Most Wanted Man," Anton Corbijn's measured adaptation of John le Carré's 2008 novel. It's another great performance, but dinged by the tragic context that it's his last.

Hanging up the phone after a terse exchange with one of his demanding U.S. colleagues, Bachmann twirls his fingers and unleashes the shifty smile that strikes a nimble balance between sullen drama and physical comedy. There's a visceral thrill embedded in this penultimate onscreen role, which precedes his appearances later this year and the next one in the closing installments of the "Hunger Games" franchise.

The story, which finds Bachmann battling to crack down on a terrorist agency in Hamburg, provides Hoffman with plenty of rich moments that rise above the particulars of its dense plot. It's a triumphant send-off to a career defined by brilliant ambiguity: He's a conflicted antihero worth rooting for.

Bachmann is a hard-drinking loner on a personal mission, and often comes across as a devious carnivore stalking its prey. However, his motives stem from a more sympathetic place. When a young Chechen-Russian Muslim (Gororiy Dobygin) shows up after surviving prison torture in his native country, Bachmann gravitates towards the mysterious figure — not so much to accuse him of terrorist affiliations, but to use that assumption for more constructive purposes, by turning the young religious man into bait.

"A Most Wanted Man"

Corbijn, who has complemented his photography career with two other patient and visually advanced dramas, last smuggled this slow-burn approach to suspense with "The American." But whereas that movie coaxed George Clooney away from his suave demeanor to play a frumpy killer consumed by inner turmoil, "A Most Wanted Man" allows Hoffman to go out with not only one of his best performances, but one that epitomizes his strengths.

It's often a bad sign when American actors attempt foreign accents when their imitations are automatically at odds with familiar faces (think Leonard DiCaprio in "Blood Diamond"). But Hoffman settles naturally into the part just as Corbijn's dreary atmosphere accentuates it. If the movie falls short of its potential, the pratfalls stem mostly from weaknesses found in all le Carré adaptations, from "The Spy Who Came In From the Cold" all the way through "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy." While several offer wonderfully sophisticated tales of espionage gone awry, they also showcase a curious tension between character development and plot. Carré's narrative style is dense with details that have nothing to do with its best moments. Hoffman, whose greatest onscreen bits transcend the particulars of each scene, embodies this recurring conflict.

Still, Corbijn delivers plenty of layered sequences designed to play against our sympathies. While the clandestine Muslim finds aid from human rights lawyer Annabel Richter (Rachel McAdams) and a reluctant banker (Willem Dafoe), Bachmann is always one short step behind them, and eventually catches up. His excitement is infectious; his endgame less so. Not unlike Jessica Chastain's steely-eyed CIA operative in "Zero Dark Thirty," Hoffman enlivens the plight of an operative consumed by the high stakes work to the point of delirium.

And so the central allure of "A Most Wanted Man" rests with the actor's face. In one key scene, interrogating a potential accomplice, we see him gazing at the back of his captive's head while plumes of smoke from his cigarette drift by. He speaks a few crucial words that seal his intentions, but the full weight of his scheme plays out in a textured gaze so detailed that could have remained there a minute longer. Elsewhere, he dashes out of a nightclub at the tail-end of a desperate chase, emerging in an alleyway practically shaking with panic. Hoffman makes the character's investment so clear that it works in congress with the plot to build toward the devastating outburst of the finale, which is about the best recap of Hoffman's thespian skills you could ask for.

Hoffman is such a domineering presence that the rest of the cast struggles to keep up. Nina Hoss, one of the few actual German stars in the cast, does a fine job as Bachmann's serene and calculated co-worker, but junior agent Daniel Bruhl feels sadly underutilized, while both Dafoe and McAdams are too mannered for parts that find them acting against their best interests. Dobrygin, as the Muslim target, suffers from bland material that relegates his character to a prop in Bachmann's scheme. Robin Wright surfaces in a handful of scenes as a cunning American agent, but she's mainly a symbol of the menacing forces that Bachmann must dance around to keep his own focused strategies in play.

Above all, there's Hoffman. Through passing references to an earlier incident that overshadows his career, and glances of him hitting the bottle, "A Most Wanted Man" gradually fleshes out the character's background. There are hints of his repressed sexuality and heavy loneliness, but much remains up for interpretation. Hoffman embraces the opportunity with the same relish he brought to cryptic schemers in "The Master" and "Before the Devil Knows You're Dead," among many other brilliant performances.

Though le Carré's novel carries a modern hook by exploring the tattered intelligence community in the wake of 9/11, Hoffman imbues his character with an elegant quality that goes beyond topicality to suggest the timeless empathy within us all. That's the essential quality that made his career such an outstanding run, and more than anything else, why he'll always be missed.

Grade: B+

Roadside Attractions and Lionsgate release "A Most Wanted Man" in New York and Los Angeles this Friday.

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Reply #175 posted 07/23/14 7:56pm

JoeBala

The Okayplayer Interview: Comic Genius Paul Mooney Talks About Doing Stand Up In 2014

Paul Mooney talks about doing stand up comedy in 2014

In case you didn’t get the memo, comedy wizard Paul Mooney is on the road again, playing a rare series of bicoastal stand up dates. The Okayplayer generation may know Mr. Mooney best as Negrodamus and the archetypal ‘black dude’ of the “Ask A Black Dude” sketches on Chappelle’s Show. But those (brilliant, hilarious) moments are just the tip of an iceberg of comic genius which extends far below the placid surface of Mr. Mooney’s mercurial smile. His career began, in fact, with the fairy tale beginning (literally true in this case) of running away to join the circus–The Charles Grody Circus, to be exact–famously becoming the first African-American ringmaster in U.S. history. He hit the heights of comedy fame as Richard Pryor‘s writing partner, providing material for Pryor’s SNL appearance, the groundbreaking Live On Sunset Strip album as well the biographical film Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling. Mooney was also head writer for The Richard Pryor Show and In Living Color, in which roles he gave talents such as Robin Williams, Sandra Bernhard, John Witherspoon and Jim Carey (among many others) their first breaks.

More recently, he co-starred with Damon Wayans (not to mention Mos Def and The Roots!) in Spike Lee‘s film Bamboozled and is currently working with Showtime on his appropriately named live taping The Godfather of Comedy. If you’re in Oakland, CA you can catch him tonight or tomorrow (Fri April 18 @ 8pm & 10:30pm and Sat April 19 @ 8pm & 10:30pm) at Yoshi’s Jazz Club and then he touches down in New York for a Mother’s Day Weekend appearance at B.B. Kings on Saturday, May 10th. Okayplayer could not pass up the opportunity to pick Mr. Mooney’s multimillion dollar brain on how doing stand up in 2014 compares with comedy eras past, how the current political scene informs his new material and whether he’s ever met an Obama clone. Speaking by phone from his home in Los Angeles, Mooney is as thought-provoking in conversation as he is in his comedy and commentary, and gave us a glimpse of the restless–often subversive–intelligence that drives his humor, as likely to question the assumptions behind your question as give you a straight answer. Hit the links below for ticket info and read on to get Mr. Mooney’s answers–and even better–his counter-questions.

Okayplayer: I’m curious to know whether you find that the material you’re taking out on the road now is similar to what people have known you for in previous tours. Do you find that it’s evolving–is it still of a very political nature?

Paul Mooney: It’s of the nature of honesty, that’s what the nature of it is! Someone had asked me the other day about what were the best times for me. The best times for me is now. It’s what I do, it’s not yesterday. Yesterday is the past. And it’s never tomorrow, it’s always today. Tomorrow never comes. It’s always today. It’s what goes on today, and it’s wonderful today because it’s so exciting. It’s exciting, everything’s exciting! I love the times now, I love it.

OKP: When you say you’re excited about what’s happening now, does that extend to the political landscape and the changes we’re living through?

PM: Well there are no changes. Everything’s still the same. Nothing’s changed politically or racially but the weather. Everything is still the same. We’re still on planet Earth, aren’t we?

OKP: Think so.

PM: Yeah, so it’s still the same. It’s just done in a different form now. That’s all.

OKP: As someone who’s equally famous for your own voice as a stand-up comedian and commentator on the one hand and also as a writer for others, do you find that you have a preference between the two? Is one more satisfying for you?

PM: No, I wear different hats and every hat that I wear, I wear well. It’s just what I do. It’s all I’m excited about. I’ve been on both sides of the area so that’s why I’m very aware of what goes on.

OKP: It’s a very different climate for comedy these days–do you find that the audiences you’re meeting when you go out on the road are different than previous eras?

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Paul Mooney talks about doing stand up comedy in 2014 (Bamboozled still)
Paul Mooney in his role as Junebug in Spike Lee’s 2000 film Bamboozled.

PM: No. An audience doesn’t change. An audience is like a pack of wolves. They don’t change–but they can become one.

And also, people put plants in the audience. Comedians do that all the time, they’ll put plants in the audience, or they’ll bring their own audience. They’re all good at doing that.

OKP: You said that nothing’s changed but the weather, politically speaking. I wonder what your thoughts are on some of the big questions of our day. The clash between Obama and Putin, for instance…a lot of people are saying that Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Crimea is embarrassing Obama, that it makes him look weak.

PM: Why would it make Obama look weak? I don’t understand that. Obama’s a politician isn’t he?

OKP: Definitely.

PM: And isn’t the man you just mentioned a politician?

OKP: That’s true, although not in the same sense, I guess. He’s not somebody who needs to court popularity in the same way that Obama does.

PM: No, they’re all in cahoots. Don’t you ever kid yourself.

OKP: You think it’s all agreed upon?

PM: If you go right now and jump on Obama and beat him up, that other man will jump on you and beat you up.

OKP: So it’s a club, in a sense?

PM: Yeah, of course. Go try it and see what happens to you.

OKP: I’m definitely not gonna try that.

PM: I’m sure you’re not! (laughs) –‘cause you’ll get your butt whooped. Listen, those politicians in that White House, you think they call it the White House by mistake?

OKP: No…

PM: You go there and you mess with them and you see what they do. Listen, after they all finish, they sit around and rehearse their lines for the next day. They’re all in cahoots.

OKP: Do you think Hillary Clinton will take that spot in 2016–or does it matter?

PM: It doesn’t matter. Hillary, everybody’s a part of it. They’re all a part of it. They’re all a part of it. Have you ever noticed the way Hillary dances?

OKP: I can’t say I have, no.

PM: Check it out sometime.

OKP: It does make a difference, though ,don’t you think? Isn’t there a difference between an Obama and a George W. Bush, even if it’s just a good cop-bad cop difference?

PM: No, there is no difference between any of them. They’re all actors. They’re all very good at what they do. There’s no good [politicians] and there’s no bad…and half of them are clones anyway so it doesn’t matter. I’m not kidding, you do know they have doubles?

OKP: Well, we know Saddam Hussein did, so it makes sense that others do. Have you ever met a double?

PM: Oh yeah.

OKP: Interesting!

PM: You could have met one, too. You just wouldn’t know it. Just watch all of them when you see them on TV. You can tell the doubles–the fakes from the reals.

OKP: You say that you’re excited about what’s going on now, but if you feel that the political landscape is as oppressive as it’s ever been comedy hasn’t changed…what is it that you’re excited about?

PM: I’m excited about life. We’re above ground, all of us, so we should be excited. People who aren’t above ground aren’t excited. They’re not here any more. You have to be excited, you’re still living. You’re still a part of this…illusion.

OKP: What about the world of music–as opposed to comedy or politics? Is there new music that excites or inspires you?

PM: Music is great, music’s wonderful. Music’s always been great. Music is great as long as you sing the songs that make white people happy…(laughter) What are you laughing at? What makes you laugh, because you know it’s true?

OKP: I guess it’s just not the kind of criteria I was expecting…

PM: As long as you sing the songs that make white people happy, everybody’s happy. You know? As long as you don’t say “black and white” together, everything’s gonna be okay. Everyone that we know that said “black and white” together, didn’t they have problems?

OKP: Well, probably. But a lot of the rest had problems too, wouldn’t you say?

PM: Mmmhm. The Beatles? “Black and white together”–problems. Those girls? “Black and white together”–problems. No, when you say “black and white” together, there’s problems.

OKP: Sly & the Family Stone I guess I would fall in that category also.

PM: Everybody. The minute you say that, I don’t care who you are–an opera singer!–if you say that there’s gonna be a problem.

OKP: But are there people that made you happy…that maybe don’t get that mainstream, pop culture attention in the world of music?

PM: Well everyone that makes me happy is really world famous…I don’t know any unknown singers. And I’ve always liked my white people white. I’ve always been that way.

OKP: I see. Not the crossovers, or the reverse crossovers?

PM: No. Look, what’s the word you used? Crossover? Isn’t that a trip, crossover?

OKP: Or “blue-eyed soul” is another term.

PM: Crossover, what a word…”2-4-6-8 we don’t want to integrate.” You keep singing that and you’ll always be famous. Hello?

OKP: I’m still here!

PM: I thought you were gone after I said that. I thought you fainted or something.

OKP: Not gone, just speechless.

PM: Right. The minute you start talking about black and white together, a hush comes over Jerusalem. That’s the way it is, you can hear a rat pissin’ on cotton in Georgia.

OKP: I don’t think I can think of a better kicker than “a hush comes over Jerusalem” ! –and honestly, we’ve already talked for more time than we have…

PM: No problem, I appreciate it too, but listen. Just try to be honest, and give people a hug and pass it on. That’s worth more than anything else.

OKP: I’ll take that to heart.

PM: Just give somebody a hug and tell them to pass it on…and watch how they look at you. They’ll think you’re up to something, they’ll think you’re some kind of freak. Go out and try it right now.

OKP: I might just do that.

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Pass The Popcorn: Blackstar Film Festival 2014 + Tickets & Passes

The 3rd Annual Blackstar Film Festival Kicks Into Gear With The Arrival Of A 'Do The Right Thing' Inspired Trailer Ahead Of The Festival  Which Runs From July 31st To August 3rd In Philadelphia.

Okayplayer.com is proud to partner with the Blackstar Film Festival ahead of the 3rd annual fest, which runs from July 31st to August 3rd in Philadelphia, PA. The festival “celebrating films by and ...n diaspora” is set to return with an amazing round of films. The screenings will include regional, national and international film premieres from filmmakers representing over 20 countries. The festival places the spotlight on sonic innovation, achievement and exploration with the announcement of this year’s theme, Music Is The Weapon – a Fela Kuti documentary and philosophy near and dear to our hearts. Til Infinity: Souls of Mischief and Time Is Illmatic are amongst the films slated to be screened at the fest. Blackstar makes its highly-anticipated return in bold fashion with the arrival of the official festival trailer shot and edited by Rashid Zakat and Maya Yu Zhang. The trailer features Melanie Cotton paying tribute to Rosie Perez with a spot-on performance that will undoubtedly excite Spike Lee fans, especially as people around the globe continue to celebrate the 25th anniversary his classic film Do The Right Thing. Check out the trailer below to get the latest from the Blackstar Film Festival. Take a look at the 2014 schedule and purchase tickets and festival passes via blackstarfest.org. Follow @BlackStarFest on Twitter to stay up to date. Stay tuned for more from the Blackstar Film Festival.

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REVIVE: Don Cheadle Pays Tribute To Miles Davis + #MilesAhead Indiegogo Campaign

Don Cheadle Launches A Campaign To Fund The Forthcoming 'Miles Ahead' Miles Davis Tribute Film Via Indiegogo.

Don Cheadle has launched a campaign to fund the forthcoming Miles Ahead film – his planned tribute to the life and works of legendary trumpeter Miles Davis – via Indiegogo. The campaign follows news that Cheadle would be stepping to the plate to direct and star in a film about the iconic musician whose razor sharp tongue and innovative ear made him as irreplaceable to the jazz tradition as he was to music at large. Don Cheadle makes an even bigger move to translate Miles’ musical philosophy to viewers by bringing Herbie Hancock, Robert Glasper and Nas aboard to oversee and contribute to the film’s soundtrack. Don Cheadle launched the campaign with a very detailed description of his intentions and hopes for the film:

Music has always been one of my passions. Since 6th grade, when I started listening to my parents’ Miles Davis records, his artistry has been an inspiration to me; he was someone who only ever followed a path as a runway to create a new one. Surprisingly, Miles’ life, his passion, his creativity, his fire have never been brought to life in a film and the fact that his family has chosen me to do this now is an honor. I want to tell a story that Miles himself would have wanted to see, something hip, cool, alive and AHEAD.

Check the footage below to watch the campaign trailer and get a little taste of Don Cheadle putting in work on the horn. Learn more about the Miles Ahead campaign and donate to the film via Indiegogo. Get more on Miles Davis and stay tuned for updates via REVIVE.

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Another Jimi Hendrix Biopic Is In The Works Starring Anthony Mackie

Pass The Popcorn : Another Jimi Hendrix Biopic Is In The Works Starring Anthony Mackie

Anthony Mackie is the latest Tinseltown personality being tapped to give us a take on Jimi Hendrix’s timeless swagger. According to The Wrap, Mackie will star in yet another biopic treatment of the guitar deity, which is being penned by The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel writer Ol Parker and will dramatically differ from John Ridely and Andre 3000‘s own piece All Is By My Side. Though it bears the same central figure, Parker and Mackie’s take on Jimi’s legacy will chronicle the last seven days leading to his death, as opposed to the AlBMS’s focus on the year leading to his astral take-off.

There’s no word on whether the late great’s catalogue has been gifted to the project, but given the timeframe of the film, it seems ever more integral to incorporate Jimi’s original score. Now that the film — which was formerly titled Crosstown Traffic – has been given a second breath, it will be interesting to see how it develops as AIBMS begins its roll-out, premiering in theaters nationwide on June 13th. We’ll have more on Jimi as details unfold, but in the meantime, you can get your fix of Jimi bio mania with an exclusive clip of 3 stacks doing his best Jimi thing below.
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John Singleton’s Tupac Biopic Picked Up By Open Road Films

tupac-the-musical-broadway-lead

Open Road Films has acquired the rights to the long-awaited Tupac biopic from director John Singleton and writers Jeremy Haft and Ed Gonzalez. The film follows the life story of rap icon Tupac Shakur, from his early days in East Harlem to the height of his visibility during the east coast/west coast hip-hop beef and his untimely death in 1996 on the Las Vegas strip. The film produced and financed by Morgan Creek Productions and Emmett/Furla/Oasis Films brings John Singleton’s relationship with Shakur full circle as he helms a project that brings Pac to the screen once again; Singleton directed Shakur, who played one of the leads in the celebrated 1993 cult classic Poetic Justice. Singleton will produce the film alongside James G. Robinson, David Robinson, L.T. Hutton, George Furla, Randall Emmett, Tom Ortenberg, Peter Lawson and Afeni Shakur. Open Road Films has reportedly committed to a wide-screen release of the film in at least 2000 theaters. Casting will begin shortly for the production, which is slated to start production this summer in Atlanta, Los Angeles and New York.

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Reply #176 posted 07/24/14 7:51am

JoeBala

'Manhattan': TV Review

Manhattan (2014) Poster

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WGN America

The Bottom Line

A gripping, strongly acted series well worth seeking out.

Airdate

Sundays at 10 p.m. on WGN America, beginning July 27

Cast

Ashley Zukerman, David Harbour, Daniel London, John Benjamin Hickey, Olivia Williams, Daniel Stern

Creator

Sam Shaw

A compelling slice of shadowy American history that should help WGN America win new viewers.

It's a sign of robust, almost embarrassingly good fortune in the television industry when the arrival of yet another show worth watching could make viewers wonder where they'll find the time to watch it.

You can count WGN America as one of the new players in the scripted arena who is doing better than expected. After recently launching its first series, Salem, a genre drama about the witches of Salem with some freaky turns in the history, WGN now adds the weightier and impressive Manhattan to its résumé.

Created and written by Sam Shaw (Masters of Sex), and directed superbly by veteran Thomas Schlamme (The West Wing), Manhattan kicks off with two gripping episodes that highlight a strong cast.

The series’ title refers to the Manhattan Project, the United States' effort to build a nuclear weapon that would not only win World War II but, for the scientific dreamers who made it happen, perhaps end all wars.

The government recruited a horde of the greatest technical minds on the East Coast and secretly moved the scientists and their families to P.O. Box 1663, an unmarked outpost in the desert of Los Alamos, New Mexico. "Welcome to nowhere," a Native American tells the wandering young scientist Charlie Isaacs (Ashley Zukerman), a winner of the prestigious Forbes Prize plucked from the Harvard physics department.

He's the boy wonder, wooed by two competing camps inside Los Alamos (the project is so secret even the vice president doesn't know it exists). He signs up with Dr. Reed Akley (David Harbour), who, thanks to his ample staff and high-quality equipment, heads the team with the best chance of coming up with the bomb design that will please Dr. Robert Oppenheimer (Daniel London). On the other side is the passionate but angst-ridden Dr. Frank Winter (John Benjamin Hickey).

Winter has a ragtag crew of scientists and lacks Akley’s cool demeanor. He also appears to be succumbing to the pressure of building a bomb, becoming more insular and distant despite calm guidance from his wife, Liza (Olivia Williams), who has a Ph.D. in botany from Barnard and never expected to be relegated to a supporting role for her husband. In contrast, Isaacs' wife, Abby (Rachel Brosnahan), is younger and less worldly, but is immediately unhappy about this strange, harsh life out in the desert.

Another standout in the cast is Daniel Stern as scientist Glen Babbit, who recruited Winter from Princeton and backs him at Los Alamos despite his erratic behavior.

What Manhattan has going for it is the built-in tension of the arms-race scenario: If the American scientists don't build the bomb, Germany will, and in the meantime hundreds of American soldiers are dying every day. What you might think would work against Manhattan — the fact that the Manhattan Project was successful and relatively short-lived, so how can you sustain a series? — was explained away by the show’s creators, who, at the recent Television Critics Association summer press tour, noted that even though the story is based on facts, only Oppenheimer is a real figure. Everybody else is fictional, and Shaw’s ambition is to create a sense of life at Los Alamos, where secrets, lies and the hardships of being cut off from the rest of the world begin to take their toll.

Though Salem was enjoyable (and odd), it was clearly a genre drama with limited appeal, whereas Manhattan aims to paint on a larger canvas and flaunt an assured sense of identity. With 13 episodes set for the first season, it may be time to find out if you get WGN America in your cable or satellite package (odds are you do).

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Reply #177 posted 07/24/14 8:30am

JoeBala

Amy Winehouse In Rememberance

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Reply #178 posted 07/24/14 10:04am

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Micky Dolenz and Alice Cooper: Hollywood Vampires Re-Unite

MDALICERAINBOW

(Photo credit): Donna Quinter

Monkee Micky Dolenz, a member of the infamous Hollywood Vampires, re-united with fellow-member Alice Cooper Monday night in L. A., as Cooper performed at The Hollywood Bowl.

The legendary members-only club (which included John Lennon, Ringo Starr, Harry Nilsson and Bernie Taupin) would gather regularly at The Rainbow on Sunset, in the 70’s. The two are standing in front of a plaque honoring the club and its members.

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[Edited 7/24/14 10:11am]

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Reply #179 posted 07/24/14 11:18am

JoeBala

Bruce Lee and James Garner

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